Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (2), 10 Sep 1885, p. 6

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 ;-.-WgS;;»^«: FOBTHEFABMEE- A Harrest Song. Th. odor iiraet of new-mown h»y I. waf tad o'er the Und Piled high the iheftves of golden gnto. Walt tor the thwdier" huid. Wid^ biHowy fleldi of oorooplBI Their banners bio»d »nd gtean. With plenty'l promlie gr»ven bright On each, in gbtterisg dieen. The letfyvinebendi low with weight Of juicy clMtere f »lr. Springtiine'B glad prophedeo frffUled The bnidened orchard! bear. O'er all the land brown-handed Toll And patient Thrift have wronght Iay after day, till dreama have been TofoUtmition brought. Yet not to them all praije be glren, Notall to Toil aid Thrift â- ' Who gives the increase," un to Him Our grateful hearts we lift. Who can the richly varied store Ot goodly gifts behold, Nor say with leiael'a prophet bard, " Thy works, how maiiifold '.* Let the Boys Bee the World. " la it alive " " It moves." " When did it get in " Are soma of the remarks we happened to overhear not long ago as a crowd of neatly dressed, " fly " young city gents passed by. Glancing across the street we at once saw the object of their merriment Honest John Howman had come to town to see the sights and from every indication, was not going home withoat having accomplished iiis ob- ject. Now John Is one of onr acquaintances and as he crossed the street and approached we asked, " .John, why don't yon pull your pants out of your boot tops, and raise your hat oil your ears ' Can't you see those fel- lows are laughing at you " " Let 'em laugh they are a pack of yer city dudes and I can clean out the whole crowd," said he grind- ing his teeth and shaking his formidable fist No doubt of it, John, but wait a moment suppose one of them was to go home with you, wou dn't you smile to see him milking cows with that suit of broadcloth wouldn't it amine you to see him pitch hay in a July Bun with that stiff hat and choker t" " Vou l)9t your life, I'd like tog-t one of them on a harvester for just one day. I'd make him laugh out of t'other corner of his mouth. Id show him that it is better to hiive a pair of legs that are useful, than om amcntal. " Wait a moment John, lel me tell you something you are not in the least Inferior to these boys all the difference is, they are educated dill'erently frim what you are. Your shoulders are briader, your chest is better developed, your mouth is not deform- ed by the use of tobacco and liquor, there is a lock full of business in your face that at once rec:)mmends you mucli better thrn all the letters you could carry, were you In i|uest of a position. The point we wis'u to make in this boys raised on a farm as a general ru'e are n. tallowed an equal chance in edui ition with their city causios. When they go to town they feel out of place. They would give anything to le able to walk alonj; the street and not feel that everybody is loo'cing at thttm. Iftheyoijly knew whether to put their hands in their pockets or hold them straight down, they would huve learned one very useful lesson in ease and comfort. If they were educated to see the difference, the shrewd clothing merchant could not palm ell his last year's coat and two year old vest with a hfttof still more ancient pattern upon them. We say give the boys a chance. If yon live near a town aid all do now â€" let Tom and I lari^ and Rob atr?pd school there one or two winters and learu th^; ways of city life, liut, one objects, we can't afford to send our boys off to town alone, they would get into bad company, leam to drink and fall into all the attending evils of city life. To such we would say, some time they are going to go out from your door to meet all these temptations, and if they liave been kept too strictly, without any chance to see the follies of evil or leam to avoid the snares, they will be the very victim the sharper is after they wi)l suddenly find themselves turned loose in an nnexplored pasture full of snares so artfully concealed by the most tempting baits that he who stears clear of them is.in'eed a favorite of fortune. The boy who is kept too cloiely haltered to the farm sickens to it. He longs to go to the exciting scenes of the city where he sees mcst people wearing good clothes in fact he never sees those who wear poor ones, he is so struck with the flash of gold chains, high hats and polished shoes. How much safer it is to let him see and taste all these things while you are able to hold him in check, than to rush him out alone un- guided by love's irresistible reins, to tnm headlcng into them. Besides all boys rais- ed in cities do not come to ruin, nor all boys brought up on farms become angels. We hope if this tiuds its way to the household oi any eturdy old farmer who takes except- ion to its doctrine, that he will reply to it. Ai OoMn-Boand Hoow. PmlMUytiiereDUitMtaad VamSMttf* « •Mth b the Uttk idHid «{ IiMaa d'AonalMk Ihiaapw^of aoUHid, vhiiA b only MMB bOm long and rfx wide, Uee •Imoatiiiidwi^ between Afriea aad.Sonth A m e ric i, aad » thoniMid milM wmth of tbe eqnmtor. Whea Napoleon waa imprieoned on St, Helsaa, It waa thought that ^he lonelieat place in the world had been asaigiwd to him aaapriaon. Bat St. fielena b fourteen hnndred mllae nearer a oootinent tium Tristan d'Aocmha. Many hnndredi of miles of ocean lie between itaad the naallest Is- land nearest to it. Tristan, in short, is a tiny oasis in a bonndleas wildemeaaof water, go from it in wMch direction yon will. It is a rocky and cliff-girt littie isle, with a solitary mountain a thousand feet liigh rearing itself from the midst. Weeks and sometimei even months elapse, withoat so much as the film of a ship's saillidng es^ed in the distance from its shores. Yet on tUs lonely speck of rock and earth there lives a bright, chesrfal, thrifty Chris- tian community which is, seemingly, qolte happy in its isolation from all the rest of the world. Thereare abontahnndred inhabi- tants, all Englishmen and Englishwomen. The oldest nhabitant is a man of seventy eight, who was wrecked on the island fifty years ago, and has ever since dwelt there, and has become the patriarch of the little company. An EngUf h capttun, returning from a long voyage in the course of which he anchored at Tristan, has recently given a very inter- esting acconnt of the ccmmnidty. Those who compose it are one and all fanners, cattle-raisers^'uid shepherds. In the valleys of the island ire fertile fi4ds, where pota- toes mainly are grown. On the slopes were grazing some seven hundred head of cattle and as many sheep. The food of the people consists for the most partof beef.mnt- ton, fowls, potatoes, and fish. As to the dwellings, they are described as being kept very clean and tidy, as we might expect from English people, and the people themselves are healthy, robust and long- lived. They have whaling-boats,and are very adventurous in their sea-roaming after whales. They somestimes row as far as twenty miles oat to sea to intercept a pass- ing ship. It la often the case that that region is as- siled by mighty tempests of wind, while the island is snbjected at times to what are calldd " rollers" â€" huge masses of high-raised water which fairly inundate the lofty shores. Tristan used formerly to prodnce many fruits and vegetables which can no longerbe grown there. The reason of this is that the island is overrun by rats, which escaped from a ship that anchored there, and which the people have never been able to extermi- nate. The people have preserved the cnstoms of their Knglish native land. In the centre of the settlement stands the little English church, to which all the inhabitacts repair on Sunday meming. Thus the church-bells of England and the prayer and praise of the home churches find a faint echo across the leagues of ocean which stretch between the motherland and the lonely reck of the Soath- em seas. The people-!^ Tristan, solitary as their is- land is, steadfastly refuse to leave it. They look npon it as their .^home to some it is their native land. Xbt ships which now and then tonch upon its shores in vain offer to bring them'back to the haunts of civiliz- ation. They have grown to love their lone- liness, and to be content with a lot that is strange and pathetic indeed. gipdas mast know mws of the.tatao tbMt other folks d«. or howeoald Oa* gill have pieto'vd a^ fabm Ui M tnljF r* HanaoBBtu* is, indeed Ml af waakaaaa I tooaftsBBbdfcvas ««Mk«widMtob«liOT«. m m%* â-  â€" ?â€" â-  â-  SmBBAMft J09BIAIJBK n THE WJBW- B Mwr •! wn iFsPs mat a totil Imtl ApriaMli^* «aa â- p M«t Md JKO)^^ for Poultry in Nairow Qnaiteis, Hens like to have their liberty and to roam over the garden and fields and to se- lect their own nesting places in the bam or among the bushes or grass in the vicinity of buildings, butthe pro fits to their owners under such circumstances are not always sure to be satisfactory. Hens in the garden are gen- erally unmitigated nuisances, surely so if they ar« your neighbor's hens. Many per- sons seem to think that ponltry cannot be profitable unless they can have their full liberty, and can obtain moat of, their living from what they can pick up while foraging on their own acconnt. But this is a mistake, Hens running at large, unless closely watch- ed and cared for, seldom pay very weU. They often have to scratch too hard for their living, aid what eggjt they lay are largely lost, or in some way,wasted. Then the chickens get canght by hawks, foxes or other animals of prey. If hens can have good pore air to breathe clean water to drink, and soitahle food in abimdance, they will get along with very little room for exercise, and wHl pay, weU in eggs for the table. But if saving eggs for setting, it would be better to give more, exercise, that the chlokensmay be more vig- crous. We only alloda to this experiment, a forcei one on onr part, to show how small a rangea few hens can be kept on and yield a generons profit for the care and keeping. Almost every family has waste sonqpa frtni the kitchsB that could be utilized in no bet- ter way than to feed to a small coop of lay- ing hen% Gipsy Foitrme-Telling. Too mary cf ::9 hare so pronounced a vein of superstition that, in spite of the protests of reason, we ascribe some weight to omens, drraiiiB, and utterances of the fortune- teller, The latter, however, is always allowed a le- nient judgment by his victims like the or- acles of old, he may deliver.ambiguons state- ments, which the credulous are only too an- xious to twist into conformity with facts. A gentleman about to deliver in London a lecture on gipsies was accosted, on entering the public room, by a respectable-looking man, who at once referred to what he con- sidered the miraculous power possessed by gipsy women, of revealing future events. "I know that these gipsies can reveal the future," he declared, "for I had my fortune told by one of their girls in Greenwich Park, more than twenty years ago." "That is a long time since. If you have not forgotten what the gipsy told you I should like to hear it, ' "Well, sir," began the man, "then I will tell yon that twenty years since, I was single, but one day I happened to see a young wo- man whose appearance and manner produced such an impression on my heart that I re- solved to make further acquaintance with her, let her know the state of my feelings, and ask her to become my wife. Jnst about thatj time, I was one day in Greenwich Park, when a gipsy woman wanted to tell my fortune. I consented, and gave her a piece of silver, which, yon know, they al- ways expect before they b^n." "Oh yes, that is their custom. But tell me what the gipsy said to you," "She said," continued the man, "I should be married to a yonng woman who was good- looking, and very fond of rae, and would make me an excellent wife. But this was to me the most remarkable and strangest thing, that the desoription she gave of thi hidr, eyes, noss^ mouth and complexion my tntnre wife tewered to that of tlie woman I had .i^ â- " ot whom I just now." 'But did yoA'Diany the person the gi] described to you " 'I am happy to lay I did and so yon see, sir, the gipsy waa right to begin witii." 'But what more did she tell yon " 'A dozen things besides," he replied, "She told me I should prosper in bodnesL and become a man of some importanoeâ€" far inatanoe, a town councilman and that my children would marry well bat also Oat I should have a good deal of troable." "Ytm manied, it appears have yon any children, and have they manlad well f "Well, now," said the man, heritatingly, "on thatonajgnnt, the gipsy, Imnat admit was not qi£a dtar. We had bnt ooa ohUd and that died in its infancy and-I regret to say I loat my wife about six yeait rittoa, Bntas ton^ridngintiia wodd, I thiak'lt in a fair wsT Cor that. IhaTebesaaasMn- ger of Osijaiish Tsatcy dning tt* hat twelve ysai% and I can asMre yoo, Ftb MSB in my tinw aa many i^ and downs aa aar- bodyofiiTMnage; aottatyoB na The firrt Hindoo lady who into trade has opened a bookstece in Bom- bay. Edward Everett Hale reitorateo Bolwsr'a abortion that three boors of dafly brain worit as ample to get from a man the best that is in him. The English Isnguage is oondn^ Into by the natives of IndU; and. owing to their sources of leariing, they leave out and pat in Hs like Englishmen. The residence of an Omaha woman oon dstsof anold organ box, with a dry goods box for an extension, and a broken milk oan in one aide for an oven. In seventy-five dties sad towns of Wi- oonnn, since the liquor license fee was raised from $75 to $200 a year, the number of sa- loons has fallen off 432. But the amount received for licenses has increased more than $234,000. Frank Jame:, ^ia Missouri bandit, b far gone in consumption. He says that ho has received hundreds of offers from shown! en, but that he b too old and feeble to leam how to act in a drama illustrating hb exploits, as frequentiy proposed, and he b too proud to become an exhibit in a museum. Madame Sarah Bernhardt b now forty- five years old, and it b tald in London that she looks her age. On the stage her face b unpleasantly painted, although paint and powder hide the wrinkles. Tet thbremark- able actress and woman has still a strong hold on popnlar favor, and it b beUe ved that her American engagement next year will be brilliantly saccesafal. The discovery has been made that Mormon missionaries do not let their foreign con- verts know of the polygamous doctrine of tbe Latter Day Saints nntil arrival in Utah. A full set of Mormon books and tracts^ used in England by a preacher, cont^ned no mention of plurality of wives, and a mar- riage service in one publication included the familiar provuo of one wife to one husband. The production of slag wool and the in- dustrial applications of the article appear to be largely on the increase. By the action of strong jets of steam the slag is transform- ed into a fibrous, whitish silicate cotton, which, being minerab, b incombustib'e, like asbestos it b advantagrotisly and ex- tensively used in England in.tbe corstruc- tion of new houses with Mansard roofs, tbe space between the interior lath or pacelling and the exterior covering of zinc, slate, or tin, being filled with thb slag wool, the effect being to protect from the rigor of frost in -winter and from Intense heat in summer. It b also said to preveiit freezing and burst- ing of taps, spouts, and the water pipes if these are covered by the wool in winter. Anew sugar b^now obtained from the seeds of the Lauras persea, a tree growing in the tropics. Ttib sngar has on previous occasions been noticed by chembts, but was supposed by them to be mannite. It b extracted by boiling alcohol, from which it crystallizes on cooling. Its point of fusion b 183.5 to 184 degrees,' while that of mannite b twenty degrees lower it b very soluble in hot, less so in cold water, and even in concentrated solution it has no action in the polarimeter; on adding borax, however, to a four per cent, solution, it gives a rotation to the right of 0.55 degree. It does not reduce copper solutions, and b not fermentable. Boiling nitric acid con- verts it into oxalic acid, without the pro- duction of mucic acid. There are also some other chemical characteristics peculiar to thb new sngar, 1* â- â- â-  fc He Wanted to Enow, At Willis a tired-looking woman, leading a freckled nosed, tow-headed, ten- year old citizen of the United States, boarded the train and sat down with a sigh that sounded like the exhaust pipe of a tug boat. The boy stared at the passengers while he crowded a green apple into hb month Having stowed the cholera bombshell away in the secret recesses of his internal econ- omy, he screwed himself around on the seat, looked hard at a perspiring fat man across the aisle, and said " Say, maw, why don't the keera go " "Be quiet, Johnny," sail hb mother, as she pulled a red bandanna from her packet ^d blew a blast on her nose that went echoing and re-echoing down the able like a glad cry of a full grown Apache with an important case of cholera morboi and two scalps in hb belt. "Maw, w'at's that fat man's name ' "Idunno." " Wat ma-Ie hb hUr^come out, maw Oh 1 maw there's' a skeeter on hb head I Does it hurt fat men when ikeeters bite 'em " The woman took an invoice of snuff, while the boy squirmed around and fixed hb eye on a fashionably attired lady who was engaged in the classic pastime of chnm- ing a honk of gum. Hb lower jaw dropped two inches as he gazed, and then he poked hb maternal ancestor inthe'ribs and inqoired " Maw, b that woman chawin' terbacker W'y don't she spit T Yon albrs spits when yon chaws terbacker, don't yer, maw? Say, maw, w'y don't the keen go I" The. woman took another invoice of snuff and remarked â€" " Shut up drat ye, or Fll host ye " That settled himâ€" for four secon d s. Then he gazed at the fat man and U if Wat makes that man aa'fat, maw Oh I he spit on the floor I If thb waa your house you'd peel him fer it, wooldnt yon, maw Spose he's readin' lioat Injuai T Say maw, w'y dont the keers go " Then he tiristed around, got down and humped himself ovsv tbe arm of iii» bX man's seat and said â€" "Yon aint my ps." "No, blast yoat" howled the sniw; 'if I waa I'd shoot yon. Now yon go and sit down, and doa't say anoUMr -wmd or lUeatyoo." The boy winked hud, shnfflad Us faat upon tiie floor, aidlad baek into hb saat aod ramaiksd: â€" "Maw, w don't tiia kasn go T" A man in • body part of lowB had hciia fever in MsnqMnoe of^ads^aoffab wifs, and, fltt l o oo Ti i Mg eonid not wmiHnn ar iHisus hahadborbdlMr. Dntiag tfili Inltnal tht tiireo peiMM who had asdalsd In tha fat*, attmd. \mcf darfrew a gam, tha wldowar dng orsr moatei a f anra fisid bsfsM fiadiag tha MM^Jti* azpaiiewsain ia«W«atsBtowa inwhlshlwaa pc; IwdrttharawiaiK had ttoMMltd iBiiw U^Bgi of vy BO one would have sa^art tfaaymetms. I had no fiienda, and I ao- tiood that when I got ofi the train tiM bond waaaottiieietomaetmo. Igotaohanoato workanam»ningpapsr. It used to go to press before dark, so I had my evodnp *o myself, and I always liked that part of it first rate. I worked on that paper a year, and ndght have cootinned if the proprietors had not dhanged it to an evening paper. Then a oompany faioorporated itself and started a paper of which I took charge. The paper wse published in the loft of a Uvery stable. That b the reason they oaUed it a stock oompany. Yon oonld come np the stairs to the office, or you could twbt the tail of tiio iron-gray mule and take the ele vator. ^^ It waant mueh rf a paper, bnt it cost $16,000 a year to run it, and it oame out sU days in the week, no matter what the weather was. We took the Assodated Press news by telegraph part of the time, and part of the time we relied on a copy of the Chyenne inoming papers, which we got cf the oondnctor on the early freight We got a great many special telegrams from Washington in that way, and when the freight train was in Ute I had to gu ,S3 at ^riiat Congress waa doing, and fix up a column of telegraph the best I oould. There a rival evening paper there, and soma times tt would send a smart boy down to the train and get our special telegrams, and sometimes the conductor would go away on a picnic and take our Cheyenne paper with him. " Sometimes the Indians would send in an item. It was most generally in the obituary line. With the Sioux on the north and the peaceful Utes on the south, we were pretty sure of some kind of news during the summer. The parks used to be cccupied by white men winters and Indians summers. Summer was really the pleasantest time to go into the parks, but the Indians had been in the habit of going there at that season, and they were so clanbh that the white mn couldn't have much fun with them, so they ded-ied that they would not go there in the sommer. Several o( our best subscribers were killed by the peaceful Utes. "We had a rising young horse-thief in Wyoming in those days who got into jail by some freak of justice, and it was so odd for a horse-thief to get in jail that I allnded to it editorially. Thb horse-thief' had db- tingnbhed himself from thecomoion, vulgar hnrse-thieves of hb time by wearing a large month, a kind of full-dress, eight-day month. He very seldom smUed, bnt when he did he had to hold the top of his head on with both hands. I remember that I spoke of him in the paper, forgetting that he might criticise me when he got out of jail. When he did get out again, he stated that he would shoot me on sight, but friends advised me not to have hb blood on my hands, and I took their advice to I haven't a particle of hb blood on my hands. For two or three months I didn't know but he would drop into my office any minute and criticise me, but one day a friend told that he had been hanged in Montana, then I began to mingle in sooiety again, and didn't have to get in my coid with a double-barrel shot-gun any more. After that I was always conservative in regard to horte thieves until we got the report of the vigi- lance committee. AVOVB AT A OOBBOBOSEE. A. friM and Fantaalle 8eeae In the Caleny of amstralla. An eye witness of an aboriginal corroboree which took pbce at the Adelaide Oval, Aus tralb, thusdescribesit:â€"" The black men painted in fantastic fashion with white stripes all over their bodies, went through a pantomimic kangaroos hunt with a good deal of clever bnrlesqoing of the marsupul mannerisms. They hopped and grazed, and sat up as kangaroos do, and then treated the spectators to a show 'of hunting the ni- mab. Next they planned a sham tribal at' tack and fight with some effect, and then came that grotesque dance in which the warriors, wearing curious Isglets of gum- leaves. stamp and give their lower limbs a rapid tremulous motion while the lubras keep up an incessant nasal chant and per- petual thumping of opossum skins. The spectacle was undoubtedly a strange one, seen beneath the bbze of torches and the fleeting dazzling glare of blue, green, or red lights. An incongruous element was introduced by the appearance of some na- tives in overcoats, helmets, and trousers and their women in skirts and crinolines, bnt thb was a sign of the social advancement of the people. The dancers, however, wore littie more clothing than a breecholout and a coat of piJnt, a custom calcubted to keep tile domestic draper's bill down to the mini- num. The affair might appropriately be called a whitey-black corroboree, because of the utilization of appliances of civilization in the dbplay. The blacks were frequentiy ap- pbuded, and certainly the scene was not withoat its ^cturesque accpmpiniments and weird effects, the glare of the fires reveal- ing dozens of active, muacnlar darkey figures strangely painted and bedizened, dancing in wild faahion to an accompaniment of a barbaii) chanting, and the whole picture • shown against the darkly ahadowad dbtant'^baekgroond. The majority oftlie natives are more muscutar, pluon, and are better formed than the usual tfpt of abor- iginee,and moat of them came from theCoor- ong, the Uarr«y, and the lake dbtriota, Where their mode of life b he*lthfiil and where food b abundant. Moat of them, from their training attiie missions, tp'.ak exoeOent Engl i sh and are in every respeot anperior to the rest of their raoa." » utm^w mm U m. Ja tha opbalte^ thJinllo^sBUo ^inW^ Aa NiM««Ilad "TliiJi I- M tiM Hifi*- btohMllMk«BTi[l%iWA Wil l â- Ml 9 m Ingowttopoaaihb dhBgnipnait Of «^ beeeâ€" a oalamity ooB^and with wfaiAtlia loaa ol tiM fight WM notUng. Tha a:^raM in tho Congo YaOsy an Borpriaedbytheomdityoflife there. The natlvaa have no dooaolieated beasts of any sort, nor do they raise or oatch any animab to eat, aa they know Bothiog of fleah ai food. No semUsnoe of olatUng b -worn, aod dbt bpraotioallT confined to a ontaaeons pro- dnoU of tha sou. LetkaiifnwimtaBionnriM say, too, that the asgroas there are so low in mentality that any liope of Chibtianizing them must be based on a long and patient couTMi of intellectoal training, they are too densely i^orant to comprehend the simplest statementarf doctrine. " LoTe Sees No Faults," it has been said bat, when a womna b dragged down, emaobted, wan, and a ahad- owof her former self, with never a oheerfnl word, she can be no longer beantiful or lov- able. Natniemay have been generous in her gifts, and endowed her with all the charms of her sex, but disease has crept in unawares and stolen the roSes from her cheeks, the lustre from her eye, and the tun- shine from her heart. But to be weU agam lies in your own power. Take Dr. Pierces " Favorite Preooription," it will cure you thounnds have been eured by it. Nothing equab it for all the painful maladies and weaknesses peonliar tu women. Price re- duced to one dollar. Bydraggists. To the vixens belong the broib. A disease of so delicate a nature as stric- ture of the urethra should only be entrusted to those of large experience and skiU. By our improved methods we have been enabled to speedily and permanentiy cure hundreds of the worst cases. PampUet, references ana terms, three letter stamps. World's D tpen- sarr Medical Atsoobtion, 663 Mahi Street, Buffalo, N. Y. A scientific journal says "few fishes die a natural death." That b not our fault. Jnst as many die a natural death as if we didn't go a-fisliing. The great dbphoretio and anodjve, for coldr, fevers and bflammatory attacks, b Dr. Pierce's Compound Extract of Smu-t- Weed also, cures colic, crampi, ch lera morbus, diarrbcea and dysentery, or bloody- flux. Only 50 cents. Mr. Besiemer's steel process patentshave yielded him $600,000 a year for twenty-one years. The Way of the World. That many with the glad consent praise new-born remedies, especially if they pay a larger {oofit â€" no one conversant with the substitution practiced in thb respect will deny, and when yon are told by interested parties that such and such a preparation b as " good or better" â€" than the great sure pop com cure â€" Putnam's Painlees Com Ex- tractor. Jnst for a moment oonaider if your benefit prompts the advice, ot if the small additional profit secured by the tale of in- ferior or poisonous subiti-utes lies at the bottom of the suggestion. We say then, buy only Putnam's Painless Com Extractor the safe, sure and tesfasd remedy for corns, will be found in Putnam's Painless Ccrn Ex- tractor. N. C. Poison Co,, Kington, proprietors, 111 humor often comes like chemical pre- parations, from a retort. Demonstrated. Sometimes it costs hnndreds of dollars to convince a man very often less b required, but in the cane of. Pobon's Nsrviunb, that sovereign remedy for pain, 10 cents foots the bill, and supplies enough Nerviline to convince every purchaser that it b the best, moat prompt and certain pain remedy in the world. Nerviline b good for all kinds of pain, pleasant to take, and sure to cure cramps and all internal pains. It b also nice 10 rub ontslde, for it has an agreeable smell, quite unlike so many other prepar- ations, which are positively disagreeable to us*. Try it now. Go to a drag store and buy a 10 cent or 25 cent bottle, Pobon's Nerviline. Take no other. To» Xsfle 8te»: Wubs-fi tk« oDi WaaUnv If aelllQe ti T0lit«d that » WM],. woman or clri I jtmn oU, withoQ tha on of a waa t board, can with ev mAiO tolOOpi«i.-i la ombuir. Ageut wanladan averCai ' aontt, • "pntniMEft n^S-^.*^ AT pknd to DniZWthJ eio«a«ii«, oMriKj'ori,!? ^S lW»hdrTow„.ar„^«g;S 65, a perfset mwHTiSj* • 5S»t~.(rivfag^J^ tolodor; mde eaHT,,'** very pretty, nnlqu,, Z/jUfJ 0»«oI Soap, th, ,rM?S^*«iCl soap, awarded ike |^ ^-a jS| I*iKeaie., price S^ ?S«| Aidress. TnTKo.Ci»ol!!*!«»i*| mo3te«l p»pS5*Sf*?a AL-an Liilii^fljjp" 8alUn»duriQj wint- rh-. Z** S aondS,jtoiL?aS»i. M H,F^to Live^li",^^ Coleman's Impmed Plougli HameBS ADirtlD 10 OBCHAED W0»«. No whlffletws to tejare trees Easy on man and taun. foikb« qualities goaianteed. Honey re- tandsd 11 not 2ti3l«»oty after a l»Jr tr!aL Price, no withoat 00 Iws aid brM Si rEVE^^ A CO OOLBOBNE, ONI. CANADA PERMANENT LOAN SAVINGS CO. Inewyerated, A. •. 188S. SnbHiilbedrapltd »8.000 0no PaidapOapUal *2«"9; BeaerveFuod 1100 000 Total Assets. 8,600.000 o mc Ez Company's BnUdlniES, Toronto St, Toronto. The Company has now on hand a large amount of English money .which it b pre- pared to lend on first class securities at low rates of interest. Apply to J. BEKBEEt HASOir, ManaiHor Piraotnr. apply to A. Sciii^ilS*. N F.;Wm. •tSSSiPtS^ AUac Co., CliiSS.i?!!*! Quebec Wm. aidd?ni» Allana^Uand.^i£^ ^i O A U TIO MYRTLE ISMABKB) IN ERONZS.LKTU NOeiE OTHER STANDARD SCA The first of living French Canadian poets b M. Lonb Fechette. The maoafactorers of the " Myrtle Navy" tobacco invito the very closest scrutiny of its quality. The expert whose trained senses teach him to recognize the exact quality of tobacco, and the smoker who judges by hb experience in smokbg it, will both oome to the same coocluston that it U of the very highest quality anywhere to be found. It b made of the very finest of Virginb leaf and U manufactured with the greatest poasibb care. mne monnments to Grant will be erected unless some of the bresent projects fall. Alma Ladies' Collets, St. Thomas, Ont, has full staff and complete courses in Lit erature. Music, Fine Arts, and Commercial Science. Be-opens' September 10, 1885. For SO pp. announcement, address. Princi- pal Austm, B.D. The highest type of charity b charity toj wards the charitable. Prerention Better Than Cnre. Many of the diseases so prevalent in these days are caused by nsing soap containing impnre and infeottous matter. Avoid aU risk by using Pekfeciion Laundry Soap, which b absolutely pure. Ask your grocer for Pebfection. Manufactured only by the Toronto Soap Co. A. P. 245. OUT THIS OUT The New k»-OpermtlTe Sewing Jaciiine! 18 THK BHST IN THB MABKHT. IBBW VtMJn I lew VIIKHITHBK t Latest Improved Utachmentt^ igents price for similar macbiiiB %%[ M price onlj 125 eacli BaCofe fanrlnc seod m itamp for onr elesant pbsK and iam^e tt uwtnx. tf Maohlnsagnanoteeatoi Ihraereanaod laDl o lib Ant ladr win Eg a mashiae wUl do woU lo wflN %â-  The Oo-Operative Sewiog la«luae Co. n JAklES ST. aOUTH. HAMILTON Are f ke Bnt. 4f â-  tented by I hi- Fart that tbfl ro are in -ve of our emles Id u-o in the DeminioD than of all other makes comblDed. Hay. Btork and €'â- Â»! B«al*a, FHriHi-rH* CralB aed niil'.v!nilN,Cnmi'H Scales $calr» turUuinettlelH, Honsekerpsri:, CttnsnttIiDl| Interests By pnrphaslnp a pcale, and In hratsl to ffet the hebt. Our K-ale" ar? IdIItw* every particular, .v'.l eizeB RaUtud,1i and Hill Tmrk., iiam Hmil For Bale by the H«r)»ire lMlt(i Instrated Catalogue ind Fiioe Unlo application. GURNEYWi HAMILTON Waebhousbsâ€" Montreal ud If^miM' i iâ€" M mmmi It to the only prepsratlOD of the kW^ tains all the nutritious, together wisi *! ng properties of Vel, and ihe only »l the power to supply uourifihment(oiboi»l nl maicle. UNLT $3.00. THE CHEAPEST IN THE HABKET. Warranted first- class, or money re funded. Send di- rect to mannfao- turers, or procure from your Hard- ware or House Fornishirg dealer. ONLTI Hamilton Industrial Works Co., Manafactarers, HuiiilM| SAMUEL ROGERS CO,, MANUFACTURERS OF PEERLES AND OTHER MACHINE OILS. Oueen City Oil M TORONTO. Gold Medals and First Prizes Wherever Exhib- ited. BUBMB lOB BALK, UHkal^.â€" AU kUOa.-Joa] J. Daut, Onelph. AS* ToiJB cntoon i^ 'â-  DIPKBIAL FRENOH SHOE BLACKING PPMBBKDATBHHIItlBIIBraal iwoansTi* eatliss hattars and one boll. Write bit Isseiti nlos aeJ psdiswa » Q. T. B ak»b. Tf«t«igaj. VALUABLE FAHK FOB 8ALK-100 sens. SI mUsseaat d the of 8L Thomas, M paitlmlan,_BddKss J. J. Lewis, Hew Sarnin. Out 1^ It Is coDoeded bjr aU that tbe Densios fc.~j 1^ Bnsusas COLues, Kingston, Is daservtd- P^ IT the nual popDlar busintss tnining sdtool in Rnptsre ft Hernia Dont be dcactrcd any loafar. Huov away yota old trosaes. aad (•« the best. Ouai^ $10 Reward for tho Convi* ILARDINE: ^IlSff JES OXi^ "»(•• the best. Ouaus •«!â-  â-  mi f^ • sssr.sfisis^jss' s Examine Their Supenor UnSh.X^^ IVKW^IIAII Sssr-a^Ji. â- t*'i-£?*8, n £ n n A K CLurmE, us kui, g^,^ (8aDe AdioiSa Ks^ SBWINO What ia lowini aa the Priory, on bl|^ groond at Staamore, naarHanow, T'r'g'M idt lias bean tnmad into a liotal, and a ooach mna tlian daOy from Cliariiig Croaa, Hm Piiocy was oosopiad early btlia esnturyfaj tkafint Uaiqais of AhsMsa, «li« lived thsnia gnnd aiyk, and sBtartaiBad aU tta osUiMaaef tha fsilod. Hakad « pa«p heiawh«aeaheS M s ayd B»wg«ss*a| aad'if Oay vara nvoNB and vgfy ha abMilsd Ite. salt BistaeofdadttethadldiowittJaBai Porter (aaHMHSi af "Iliadd«n tf Wsv kwOsiap) aadlMr drtv. Iks Daks flf AbOToora assd ttsplaes sad ttea M tt te Qsasa 'l-kiMn. wht^ttiUmtu. Jiftartkstksaaldil. Wfst, « ess »i e, mmt, FOB ndASANT â€" an onT. Clapperton'8 Spool Cotton I Untario Agricultural College wm, BJ^PEW 0» WBSI OOWBKB -^ â€" ' ^^ â- 'â- â-  " ^^Wl ** » i mn s (JTm sIMijyr.l IfOf^UjL, â- "â- â- â- â- % 111 MS Hasili si Wsij IlgifelMSiB SUkssatisia ttsMHlSssto « Bhh Ihsl aperor of iofasele| icaatlej aroby f a| atby( t«f «3S I head I China] Bverti hard Five I ^Prince Lend I Freder^ rted on a lo| ioa of ^.0 JOOU â-  A recent poem fcerewithal and " I Psopls leam wis nersr wakes U] iUagh, A" Indiana edit Itew hard he can't' "» are only 1 I MA when the ^wMegrams ^iewted by h dead soi f ""Ay accou ABtw,,,,,^, _**»p.resn m tap over the fa ** »«jroTed I ».* to wish the •••xdiaBge. â- ^owateo j?**9erk ,J5»*» ether THE E. 0. GURNEY^edH

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