Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 14 Aug 1884, p. 7

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 Tmr w or thetlSLllL, ^OSe THE DBUSES. ^_, of Many SaaredBa Hlstar:- "•" e^ AsaoeUrtUHi. .^^ f^ r â-  -« two diiy»* eiptriencta tk. ik*^ I 1- mT two d»y» eiptrienct I'^^S were in [the highest H nd pictnKsqne, and enabled â-  .n onnsnal insight into the tionwithArbd*. iBematrioi. t^F' •Mtiie farti degree and aal^iMMi, th^i^^k^ i^^ me t» the 99irm. Thk gyM»t!i« â€" ~~,i m ' nnnsnai msigni into cne mannera «»beea, where the oavw we oOtodn^^i^ •» ^ttitoms and r. l.gions observances of the |t »" here^aJao. thaVHerod the cSSs nation, roy stay at tbu shrine of their hU iamoni fight ivlthl ike ioUmb^^4»S T-. was by no aeans deetitate of »'ale their lens in the eavM imuil^^^ "^e" -terest, T^^ ^iUage of .g- «,ldier. in bXJS^S^^ which iMntfce immediate neighbor; ||Wdair. *^^!*"»^*"â„¢ 1 .WM4*tennin«d to MMh m»-;^« iJ«..«»^ tothewminit. «tf ihe^ky STSSiS ajttui. .^oramUing up tiw steep, roty hiU- waes,we found ooraelTes at last dOued to leave our hotaes and mska oar waron foot over the hnge blocks of baaaHfe which are "•tohivaw iaaltaped, r tor thw crir ^«U to th« irioeity a l in 1389 the horse tobe '«de. Them' 'ooedacccV e heboas aoj 'a ew Xh, be the prodnct Qwh the mart ntof witch » er|ent' oockatdce,, house, and, ath-darting i I^atnralista be eeighfceentlici 'h savaatLu 'Qe Aoademie ggs attfibotad m to adiaettie full part of w iictaft dehiaSI. Bspeot, and w«i iractivetode^ able to diabdig. from the l^oo lunting msB and Qreqaoat,toa f swue. Indeed ithority of ttia â-¡as, mainttinei diments ofevfl tiia opinion, and ay animals the snt-ally at the :eatare8 to oar sntly, a French forch the ise. A6KHJY. i Tortoradfer Items. boghter of the lire, 0, who 19, 1875, by* er life haviag Df the aymp- nineteenth of hai attracted prof easion, the ;he case is nn* phenomoia, wever, recaUi this canaty, s it is feared ang girl, .who Col. Gang* of Livingston bitten in the Her life ce, year aftv as bitten, her ollen as they irj:c::ed, and tnat fol'ow- to her blood, a then grad- ;h unvarying violence a )3e recarriflg ng increased rd up nnder the next re* ible to bear Dxysms, and f Miss Run* feared that the dreadad 'JJtlie tomb of the piophel^ forms the 1 of m^^y Bacred and historical sseocia- while it is in itself a place of unusual cf siluation. jl,e overhanging rocks on the other jthegor^e, imnaediately opposite my were ssveral sepulchral chambers, all itional buiying-places of people more or jjirtoriea!. Some of these I examined. ^rgest was one entered by a doorway, 50 had recently been inhabited, for the lework ot a wooden door to it still re- ed, it was supposed to be the burial- liOfcneof Jethro's danehters. We are ']°by Josephus that his family followed Israelities, out of Midian. It's last oo- ,t was an Indian hermit, who had lived in solitude for three years, when, ig tired of his seclusion, he had gone to abeut a year ago, married tht:re,snd tely disappeared with his wife no knew whither. ^boat a hundred yards from the Neby It issues from the mouth of the gorge a ijoaa spring, which in fact forms the of a brock that ultimately finds its ^into the Ssa of Galilee. It commences its leficent course, however, by fertilizing a area immediately surrounding the ,where flourishing gardens of oranges, IS, figs, apricots, pomegranates, and fruit trees impart ^n air of luxuriant ty to the landscape not common in parts. Among these gardens is one ichwas purchased a few years age by Sir Montefiore and presented by him to Jevs o( Tiberias. Here I went at the ktion of the overseer, and, seated on under the spreading arms of a fig tree, ned, while I sipped my coffee, to his and then I went in search of ruins. found seme immediately adjoining the len. What had evidently once fo;med of an old Bj zantine church was here ledinto a mosque and upon one of the (s was a curious Cufic inscription. In m of the other gardens were traces of nidations, indicating that in old times I'tin mnst have been the site of a consider- k town. It is about two miles from the 13 of Irbid (which h no doubt the Arbela Josephus) and is probably the Caphar ittfaof the Talmud, but I find no mention the Hattin ruins in the memoirs of the llestine exploration fund, nor of the Cuflo icription which. I found. The way to Irbid i across the plain, on which, a collection seven basalt stones in a ring are called e "Hijaret en Nnsara," or "stones of,the iiistiars," becarsa tradition has it that Taa he: e that C iribt performed the mira- of the seven loaves and two fishes. The plain was now waiving with grain, would it be possible t) imagine a more itile or luxuriant np'aria. On its margin, here it breaks off abrap 1/ n^o the mar- lions gorge of £1 Hamam, wnn its preci- tou;sides rising 1,200 feet sheer up from e little strtiaiii which which trickles at eir ba;e, are the rains of Irbid, interestins; containing tbe lemains of the oldest wish synJagcgue probably to be found in llestine. The steep hillside which slopes down to ;e of the cliff is very rocky, and imerous sarcophagi are carved oa the sur- of the natural slabs. The largest asnres from six feet to six feet five u ches igand one fee!: two inches detp, being Md at the head and Eqnare at me foot, kich is slightly dc eper. Tuera was a ledge t round to receive the slona cover, and a Jnnel made to keep the surface water om tunning in. They were of all sizes, evidently, for small children and been artifiaallyiaup?rim^i^ "on t^^ top Of another, ao as m form a rocky raunart .. • â€" â€" â€" â€" â€" "ooky raunart of immenae solidity. Both cre^ta hadrat â- ""P^P^riod of remote antiquity, been thus fortified. Beneath one of them foondatioD and ruiiia of rp wto appcitra to hkvemn '*6rt»i«hbows df STl-.^^ „ «« 2«iatlnuitiagj»rtr«. One evening. wSi "Wed tk*. baMOy that she ci^ up her nding.whp and gave it talSrow tke hasd and eara. Tiam .,. ,, o â€" .mm wvwHL •!« â€" â€" 1000 farowht abovt aa «uc«y Btrewn around theae ain^ar peak*. «Plantion, and in eoona of eame tke On reaching the top we found that thevhad H°"*!" ^^^ » whksh Ifaoo ^t ^*^,*o Jw^e Malembiselle Ea«nie to wife-a letter whiL-h th« »ni:h«. i^JT?! «„ we:e the -.u- u ^u ,. ^.â„¢"" ®* "» ancient town which the mhabit^nta call "Medinot ei In- '^V wefleb," or "the ruins of tiie long tower " °* At the lontheast of the hill ia an oblons cavern cut in^the rook and cased with cement, whick may formerly have been a ciatem and not far from it are the foundations ot a bnildi^g which tiie nativea aay was a Christian cbnrcAi before the conquest of the country by the Moham- medans, who subsequently converted it into a mosque. Nothing could be more striking than the view from the summit of the high- es* horn. Inimediat^ly bereath na, aome MX or seven hundred feet below, t looked down into the gloomy gorge, with the white walls of the Neby Shaib contrasting with the black basalt rocks, its terraces covered with groups of brightly costumed Droses- their songs they danced in circles reach, uig us on the still air of evening, and beyond the modern village of Hattin, surrounded by orange groves and fruit gardens of the most bnlUant green. Stretching away on aU other sides were uplands of waiving grain, till they either sunk away iato valleys or terminated at the base of hills which rose abruptly above them. To the northtast the precipitous sides of the Wady Hamam, honeycombed with caves, formed a vista through which appewed in the distance a green strip of the plain of Gennesareth beyond it the waters of the sea of Galilee, seventeen hundred feet below us, gleamed in the setting sun. From its eastern margin iQse the steep cliffii above which ur the vast lateau of Jaulan, once the grazing lands of the flocks and herds of Job, whO^ a line ol conical volcanic peaks, backed by snow-dad Heimon, closed: the prospect. â€" Cor. New York Sun. A fiOCETKOUNTAIN STOBV, de. names 1 I be a lie; re go about ot only g*t !d be thor vould be ss as bMi be affected, ireotlywd )lan. Too mperstoili rway, vd Toneh thi* solid witk it wai wtH risttoO* in a square Jprt^*^ ohantn^ ngar, •â- â-  jin i^ â- â€¢ ualy if l' niniatiri» \B,bnt l» Bible dsr to do A inoS«a«5' kneas aai aU m nu'ae •! Dd moat to do â-  ia toeafr ain,tt .beohar Ititnda* e aaw* me, bies. But the most remarkable tomb was e which opened out of A DEEP ROCK-COT CHAUBEB, lich appeared to have been in connec- nwithawine prees. The ante- chamber nned a sunk court, about twenty-feet by Ji, and contained a earcophaaus. It opened to a tomb containing six loculi. My guide « the Jew who had entertained me in the Wen, and who was well versed in local Witions. He informed me that hgre were supposed be buried four of the sons of Jacob, he I not know which, and JtHshabed and "*!. He also pointed out to me the tomb »e Rabbi Nitai, who was supposed to 'e built the synagogue I had been examin- 8, and who was a native of the place, and •ed about 200 years B.C.; also a mound of ?a covering apparently a rock tomb, "ch he declared was the burial place of â„¢, the J on of Adam; but, although from '"a habit I am accustomed to swallow a " amount of traditional information, I "unable to push my credulity thus far. " described, however, by the Abbe «»n. A. D. 1561, as being in a cave a spring to which a flight of steps led The tombs of Zera^ and Zephwiiah pointed out. Indeed there we places in Palestine where in the same 'ited area such a number of distinguished fwnages of sacred history are buried as in neighborhood of Arbela or Irbid. I do now include the tumbs of the nnmer- â-  labbis whom the Jews hold sacred. If "as a character for sanctity, it must at »Jne have had a reputation for strength. z",." position it mnst always have been J^»ry stronghold. Josephus tells us, «a Life, that when he was governor of «lee he fortified it, and hud np stores of f*" here and it is without doubt '" »n, re the ^; " ' ouu v IB wiinouc aouDS ine ^e ArdeUeof the Teutonic knwhts (1250 "•). the D. being an error for B, aa it is ^^u i^ connection with Tiberias and Jâ„¢, both places not very distant. "e only biblical reference to this place by Hoaea, when ke aaya: T*ftt made unio ?, '^^ tumult arise among thy Zi '^^ *y fortresses shall be ipofled C»°*^ "PoUod Beth-Arbel in the day of okin* ^^ â- *"»^ h«e we fl«B rinwa* wto the caverns witii whidi tto face »oa fS^l*« cliff ia perforated, wkfle the " "^e edge of which we stand ia UTKKALLT HONKTCOMBXS theae subterranean abodes. They^m Vi!" «t«»t, and arepladed over each ui.diSerent stories soma an walled j«aO^ leiT;r"j™°' storiea some are waUed »'mg doors and windows. Some idea ^^ jextMt of thia aingahur â- a*Kal,*jr.S5L. be formed from the tli^ It |^ l^StST^ J^ of containing six thojriknd^^ â- ^â- â- ^ oommnniosle wfli eMh other bj I ZSS A Feenllar ^Xzperlenee. Blissfully unconscious of impending ad- venture, a gay party of Chicago pleasure- seekers started out from Maniton Springs recently. It consisted of five eqnestruns â€" viz., Mr. and Mrs. Ernst Hall, Miae Sadie Biitss, Miss Grace and Master Hall, acom- p»nied by Mrs. F. T. Sherman, Mrs. H. L. Tl^j'T aad little Goodwin Thayer in a bu^g M 8. Thayer holding the lines. The d«tiij; uu chosen wras a tableland 'beyond 'Glen £,r« "called "the Mesa," a Spaoish word for p atean. A glorious cantar was enjoyed through the "Garden of the Gods," and the bean ifnl valley beyond, reaching as far as ' G fn Eyrie," the charming pro- perty of Gill. Pdlmer. A murky, thnaten- ing sky excited seme remarks, but as simil- ar cloud effects had clustered aronnd the distant hilltops for several days without twinging the much-needed rain nopurticnlar apprehension was lelt. At "Glen Eyrie" the loid i.uin?d a^roptly, making an atcent up the side of wuai t our Chicago residents was quite a steep hill, the road being cut shelvms; out of the hillsidfi. Away to the south, where the mysterious beauty of the gatevtay to the "Garden of the Gods" loom- ed up in its silent majesty, a cloud of whirl- ing aust was observed and commented on, but no suspicion of what it 'portended en- tered the minds of our uninitiated novices. With many an exclamation of d^ight at the extreme loveliness of the valley view, backed by the gardens of the "Bockicis/' and with many a jest and a laugh, the puty rode gayly up the ascent, when just on the summit of the hill, on the brow of the preci- pice, a terrific wind struck them. With the natural instinct of facing sc foe, the equestrians turned and headed their horses to the hurricane; but the ladies in the bng»y being in the rear and the bnggy-top affording the greatest reaistanoe to the wind. they resized at once their danger and sprang at once from the vehicle jiut in time to bid adieu to hats, handkerchiefs, dnst* ars, wrap J, etc., which soon sought a more sheltered locaUty in the valley below. Mr. Hall, bareheaded and almoat blinded by the fury of the gede, spransf from his horse, and just succeeded in catching the frightened animal in time to {Prevent ois presipitatti^ himself and the buitgy after the other port- able property. Graspmg lum with one hand and his own â€" an excitable, nervous horse â€" ^with the other, he succeeded in forc- ing them away from tiie brow of the hill, Little Goodwin Thityer, aged 7 yean, a slight child, was held down to the ground by his mother, or the wind would certainly have carried him over, while Mra. Skahnan clung with great jnesenoe of mind to the slender bushes. The littie moontain -pony Gracie Hall rode seemed to take it all aa a matter of oonrae, and halted stubbornly in the most daogerona apet lot all, browsing contentedly, while the diild waa apparent- ly in the ipreateafe dangw. The vioMnce of the itonn inor ea a e d steadily for aiiOBt ten minntes, during wiuch the utUe party push- ed forward to a safe apot, aH havfa^ dta- moanted. Fortunately t^ hones bdiaved well, ateadiog firmly, tiiongk avidenOy. Arigktaned, or we aoi^t hav«{ had sAOUjUungp mwe serious to okronide tIi»B a severa firi)dit. Soona brisk showar of hail added tp their diMomfort, as b^ thia time all kaada im» km, the lamaiiiing hats having g^ly cavwted over into tha vaU»r l%e rain and hvl faU hroMgit a sluht abatement of the .wind, and Mr..Jaalltod the prooeaaion, Jby^tkirtiBe a â- Â¥ttf4aiga9d and WQci-bi^ntf looking oomnMHty, dotm n» hill to "Gite Ey^' triiac* • 1^ witfbonw and reEmdunenlia ]lirwe Napoleon expressed .-Bmoiselle Eugenie to J letter which the mother lost no time in making pablic, and which is now reliiri. A ?r?^ â„¢ *•»• *«**'«• *»« ^a*- U.'l* z5 «^' â- ^o«w*»gto"Sylvanecte," ttje future Empress was muck persecuted by iNapoIeon before he made her his propoesd •»a»riage, aad it is rebtad t that on nie 1^.J°° be was so enraged beoanae she irouw not grant him a rendezvousâ€" asked for wkUe tkey were out riflingâ€" tiiat he put apArs to his horse and gallopdd away, liv- ing her to find her way home through the forest as best she couBU The poor girl lest her way, and did not rsach ;tke p^ue un'il nmeo clock in tke evening, "when all the guests ^atod the domestics were thorouffhlv slirmed for her safety. ' What Makes a H«ue1 It is an excellent thinjt to have a well- kept house, finely appomted table but after all, the best cheer of every home must ccms from the heart and manner of the home mother. If that be cold, and this ungracious, ail the wealth of India cannot make the home pleasant and inviting. Intelli((e3C3, too, most lend its charm it we would have home ain Eden. The severe style of house- erder neatness ssldom leaver much margin for intellectual culture a simpler style of hving and hooae-fumishing woald set many a bonded shive at liberty, and add vastly to the oomforta of all the household. There are cabin homes that have been and are xe- membered witi pleasur.d, because of the beautiful, loving presence there and state- ly homes without it are but dull and cheer* less habitaticns. aoa a Si remedy. It otires «â-  the heal, fact it is eqi internal roned tb of the ^Soli by (frag^ttla.V,Juiite cent*. Try a cample bottle of Nerviloie^ rnlylO.c^^ Take no substitute. V^^d^^lMgMlig^iwroc wMillhat noosoed firoaa the fabwatnrisa is mtno^uaro- dibromsBBcadioitrobaiBol .Tbadisooveivr'i J||Seo.i^l|u|^aIl»x__., offer to Mnd^tnnr celelKn£d SKciSo- Yoltaic Belt and «tfker Electric Appliaoces on trial for thirty dajm, to men (yoorg or old) afflicted with nervona debility, loss of viti^ity and OHuxkpod, and all kfaidred trjubha." Mde^oflbeiihujiliBm; BearaUfla; paralys-s, and^.maay other diaeaaes. Com- plete restoratiea^ haalibi vigoraiid niti tT hood guaranteed. No rii^ is incurred as thirty days trial is alkwed. Write them at once for i!)nt%rated pf^nphlet free. Diffarenca between tbe Hosse of L»rds and thfrHouaeof ChmmOBs â€" air the differ- ence bet xeea abiUty jmd .nobiJIity. wdl Mad happr, U they onlr aaedlr..Oikno?i »om«S Bitten «oeMionl]7- It is • ipleadld Blood Pnziliv atOnvKi^fiOoeiiti "wwu ^totbw F3RBKOI.OOT. BXamNATIOlM tilVHS it WALIAOE M aSOIT. 12 Qneen St. W., Toronto. THOs. Oau^wat k Cb., Cotton, Woollen, SU.k Cu pet. »ad Wotsted BSnttle Mshew, Pnii4M. Ont no Qnr Nun Street. Moatteal. baportanoC ^l!$a* .favOajiiA. ^ScliSSa EAHSATS. prRB PAKIS GKEEX. KoOiins hsntirnnfniiiiil iiiiilii iiffixilliii fia flirt n iflii FotktoBoea. ThesaieetiBtlteehaapest. Paint aad Ccdor Sfonutaotoxcn, H oneaL IfHAT^SttittrDRlNK! lame Froit Juice. Oordial, moat! wholesome, delieioas m sssrsCdsi^^^^b^i^ 'Avonto. MACHINERY.! BonshoMt Blkcksmith'So^, Woodihop, and Dvell- ing Hoaae, 1} land, goodiguden, stable and woodshed FaU^ health «^ oanae for aelUag. ^pply Box 79, ^^. MEN WAiPrTbr^ teas to eoBsnmers. Send stamp for parti Toronto. Fighting Peecaries. A peccary is in all respects a hog. He looks, smells, tastes like a hog, and is a hog, but for a thintr of indomitable conrags of the lower type, for a fcatter of qiienchless fury, and for a fighter to the last throb of his hta-t he bai no parallel in the animal king- dom. Thw never begin a war, but when one is ase aued the entire drove rush to the attack as ihoi rusk when martial vigor urges them. Each be ad -like eye is a fire spurk tusks are protruding, the eohinated spine sfraightened, and woe to the wretch who falls into their path. Gored, bitten, torn, tiamped npon, and eatehup, to the very last shreadof his clothing-â€" such is the fate of the. man qaurht by a drove of angry pec- caries. With the same fury they asault a wolf or a%ta3k r bull, and neither the wolf nor the bull caa stanl up as^a'nst a charge Of half a dosen peccarkn. Both know this and flee in tsnror from the field. Catamiâ€" new naatasfsit Perhaps the most eztrarordlnary success that has bean achieved in modem seleaoe has been attained bv the Dixon T^eatmeat of catarrh. Ont of 2.000 patients treated dhiihg the past six months, fully nbiety fiet ceatTfiare been cured'of this stubbcan malady. This is none the less startUng when it is remembered that not five per cent, of the patients loesentinti; themselves to the riegular inaotitioner are benefitted, while the patent medicinse aad other advertised cures never record a cure at ail. Starting with the claim now generally be- lieved by the most scientiflc men that the disease is due to the presence of livinff parasites in the tlssuesi Mr. Dix- on at once adapted his cure to their extermination this accomplished the catarrh is practicaUy cured, ami the permanency is un- questioned, as cures effected by him four years ago are curee stUL No one else has ever at- tempted to cure catarrh in tliis manner, and no other treatment has ever cured catarrh. The application of the remedy is simple and can be done at home, and the present season of the year is the most favorable for a speedy and permanent oUre. the majori^ of oases bSng cured at one treatment. Sumsrers should cor- respond with Messrs. A. H. DECOk St SON, 905 KingHBtreet Wsst, Toronto, Canada, aad endose stamp for their treatise on catarrh.â€" Jfontreol 8tew Cremation n making great strides in Francs where the Prefect of the Seine mean to establish Siemens f omaoea in aeveral of the cemeteries in Paris, and proj[Ksas to cre- mate all persons whose remaitis are not claimed by their friends. If thii experiment proves successful, the Government i^ pro- bably intioduee a general bill on cramatijn in the Chamber, bm the Connoil of Health io now omaidrring the different waya of de- tsetmg traces of poison. OhIhowtindMid«MikIfMI,Idon'»bdlefe I «U thraiisfatUaSsclii«]uiiu»«leMiii«I.Oh 1ARTY WANTED TO PUBOHASE OARBIaGE JL shops 24 z 118 feet; doable stoop, with offioe 34 x 60 Ucksmith's shop, 20 z 42; Inmber, bam, and shed, hone bam, two aaras of lai^ wish dwalUns hoise soit- ablefortwo small famili^t; two oistrnis, cellar, and well; situated stltaks'OflllittiK'f our iotres fnnfBSHe- rnir, on waip siwreUed road; good localitr, where a ' buiiness trom$SjafO to tlOLOOO leFiaimam is doM. TN^ premises aitf now lb falt,blali^t5i(^ will be soVJto gfOdT liTe.muiata~oaigUn. HAxatntD AsbliV -BeHertllei â-  Tf n „ i n.i 1.-,-â€" _,, 1 _t. 1.1 111 I I I. Steam Flour ' Oapaoitr 300 barrels daily. New roller piooees; age with large supply of dry stares; also SOD col wood on property; Saw mill adjoining floor mill; G. switch within ten feet of miU; situated in fl"" country. Address Lock Box 11, Li«towel. SttltOMT ,W«tiB|ilMIHe T in r givearm Engine '1 ,, _,- .-, Abtomnmph da. 1 G. O. Iforrison do. 1 8 h p Portable Engine and Boiler ona Skids. 1 .% h p. Horozontal by Northy. 1 do. by Wa- tetMswith pat off valTe, and DO tnginee and boilen of miaDBr dMh,^tbpnN«hlr M«lt*d befora Ipafliic 'Kf£gfiafi.i^Ee3^islhK Tenona% 1 Boggy' Plainer or jointer. 2 band saws. 10 Saw Tables. 1 Fire-Proof Safe. 1 Jeweler'a BooU SteeL ' 1 Book-Btndar'e BaeW Press. 1 HUatb treadb. Burr Portable. Grist Mill. 1 62-inch inserted Tooth-S»w, ao„*e. Sendf«riie7;jstiKo.-9, containing AiU4a- scnption of machinery m stock. H ,W. P£TRIE, Brantford, Qmt. T ' i ' "" ' ' â€" " "â- Â» ' "i: "" â- ' ' 'W •• ' » "" " ia*tfTt7AL itABBtAOB- ^DUWMENP \kBN, Osaea Uertifii irated. Head OiB tM« from 91S5 to ^OO riage, at following rates. For ^00, or half oertifioate. ice, IiOnd( OOO.pa^tl idon, Ont. le on mar- 9*: q|mrterlydaeBinadTance,$0.7Si For ai,000 Certift- oste, $6; quarterly does in adyanee, $1.00. For AMI Certificate, $10; quarterly does in adranae, 92-00, Fo^ $3,000 Oertiflcate, $15 quarterly dues in adranae, $3.tt. The only cash payments. 9k60«R. Assessments on mairiages $1000. ,. Fiat yesM: jqnartcjrly asaeasments abarthip at end of year. nemo And 8e»:-tha.big Bst.ofai' (BiUePiiffc WZfiSON; 33 1 U AM^Strwt. Wsrt. Tolonto^ It%ifi0f^: THE MOD. W sh$r AND BLEACHER Weighs bat 6 pouads. Can be carriedin a small raUse. lUiistmtion. fhows Hssftine in Jwilar. .Satisfaction, goaiaoteod w moasv! rlfaadedwiftb SB dsss. 9 iiMMw aisvKiKv vvR. ns^Q^citlcnu, Washing made lislit and easy. ' Vk« douira baye Oiat pare iMtenera which no other n)o4a«f wMhiaf«an pro- duce. No rubbing required, no ftietloaJio: ioJinre the^ fabric. A 10 year old girl can do the wasmng as well as an older person. To plaoe it in every hoaaahold tki pkicb has bsen- BXDVCZJt to (2.60, and if not toand satisfactory, money refunded. See lAat the **Obiadii Presbyterian,"' sa^ aboat itâ€" The Modrl Washer and Bleacher which Hr. O. W. Dennis offers to tbe pabUo has many and viklugble adTantages. It is a timr and labor saving machine, â- ohMantial and endnriaab'anAisTery cheap. From trial ia the household we ean testify to its ezcelleneo Delivered to anv express oiBoa in the Provinoes of Onl tario and Quebec. CnaqEesiiaid;^.00. Send for circulars AGENTS WANTED. ijtly paid, opjr oaa ntmi int reserra'SeeomiirwiU'MnoiiB* to tiaoeo'pro viding for a large number of endowments, which plaoei this Association in a sound flnannial position. No con- nection with any similar Institution. Agood savinas ' f for yeung people. Send for By-Laws, ko. W.J- l^oiinion Line of SteamshipSs '*^""'f«y in connection with the Grand Trunk Bailwar C^Banada. Sailing from Quebec every Saturday daring r months, and from Portland every Thunday winter months. Sailing dates from ^tlMl BaooUyn, *TOMMSnw^iMismtt I: QUEBEC TO LIVXaPOOL. Ap^. 18 |J[ir«i»n Save jE^i^SkUaT Quebec to Ufanool- $6fc$80.^^Betani, 990, 910i ^7, «i|,,«eoi M â- sDt. aa ijBojeo. tabag tm staler and berth. IntennadUte 937JV Jowcet lates. The saloons and staterooms iii stnamnrs ^Hdced Chai: •anjO^asMMJlta^^^ Je^t and no cattle or Hbeepls earned on them. Tot tax ' thit particulars apply to any Grand Trunk Bailway or local agents of the Company, or to DAVIB TOKKHNCB dk C«., General Agents. IContraaL iSM^e Koyal Mau SteamsMps. ^blin^ during winter from Portland every Thnraday ' and Tf al -fw metj Saturday h? LtvetpooL and ia sniMmr from Quebec every Batoiday toZlve^ooI, flaUUii UXon* c. w. TORONTO BARGAIN HOUSE, 213 YONGS STBSVr, TOSOHTO. OUT. donderr^ to land mails and (or Scotland I tetwean PorUand and ^laigisw, and Boston andOlaigbw Mtemately; iuM daring summer .between Qnebae aaa cnaaicnr and BoskOD said Glaagow every week. For freight, passase, or other infonnatlan apply to A. Sohnuaoher fcOa.. Baltimore; 8. Ounard ;C!qM.Hialifax Shaa ft Co. 8t John's N. F. Wm. Themaon ft Oa, St. John. N. B. Allan Op, OUoagp: Leve AJden, New York h:. "BonrUerTfOnrnto Allans. Rae Oa. Quebec; H. A. Allan. PortUmd. Boston, Men- treaL • â-  ' â-  aOHNK^S WAKfi, Iprluf honw ninaning i Ohnsyoa e or two U Or. OanoD's BtanMh wiuJffoa^akeaboMle Bittsis to mnttyyonr blood aad naapthe laiea bottles Woaota. AohOdin Lniminiater, Maas., plaoei in the garden a amall piece of lookhig glaas in an nprigkt position, and for a week a apar- row kaa spsiit tkree konrs eaok day offering infroatofit. It will stand and peek away at its reflected self ontil it gets thoroughly ezdted, then run back and forik along the fence, tdien return to itssttw^, asid- «ob- tinoe it .nntU it |alla ezhaoated ud appar- entiy mad. Oh rfeoovcring* it 'n.es' away, only to retam at the same htwr tiie next day and renew tiie contest. Come back ladm with tiie joysimS pleasures of tkat dream time of life when sweet â- nti« cipation gamtahed with farighteat htMl -4he- futnre aa it atietohed oat M'ore na. Only the ideasorsb hoped for tti eiit*ed the heirt Oen. Bat as grotr otitt, to one ahd other cooisa the airakeniBdc. If yoo ahOnld betroal' cdrnSx the nsanat drag stae iad ' bny Patnun's Oocs BiEtra«t(H^ «k# '^nua, *afa, and paodsaa ockn inm- 1 and. yoa irill .be qnieUy reliaved, aa4 b Mp ia os s will aver â-  " C.?olton*do., CARRIAGE TOPS ABE THE Latest, Neatest, Lightest, Strongeat, Cheapest and most Si^lish Top in tha'AiarkiBt. ma ailMr maau yaa see For sale by all the lAili^g Caniage BoildeiB. HaAitflMtued In great vatleiy at ««r, 49* aM« 411 KUg St.. W., Tstante. THE BEST, THE STRONGEST, THE MOST RELIABLB ITnnvalled in material, construction and finiidi, per feet in accuracy and unequalled in durability. aaa» anteed to give entire 8atii£i:tiQn. »«-»â-  THEY EXC EL AL L OTHERS. KAIIiBOAD, WABXHOinx AMD UOA Mills' Alarm Money Bnwen. BSin FOK ZLLTTOOUIBD FBKS IMt. QtJJxtWEYS WARE, ^AMII.T«H. •â- * The Ne^ Williams r cornea tne awaKenmii; sz yno saoua KMibladL not in hearty bnt in feeVwith Sj aaduey maikelL'e mueiabla,gp to nsanat drustaraindiniy a botne of High 'Arm kfaoMno ii now zeoogaiaid aa tha |8«tD£|KacbJiie Of tiu Feiloi after brifftin yoor pa^ Kin|stoli,*1^opV ' 'i I â- ^ 11 'i ;.f 1; M m •i f^i liir I ii^yilBiiiiiiia gtmM f?*!S9^s? ss;.

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