Grimsby Independent, 5 Jul 1888, p. 5

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want to nilauds; * . v _ YOur Hatn; : it in the han L)t«]y d‘ODf-' want to buy Frivate /; to 1 0w on 9 o nteent o ‘ i WHICH No. § BHOUINHE:: Uys @(ght, avorsion to socia:. To# itude, listlessnesg nn.; {tayate? Epression of spirits, Tidnli®. >r loss of the semina‘! finid â€"+n ition, emanci: Hon, batrenros: bling, melancholy, disknrLing mes innocencly acquired," Jj t function war s in consequien lums unite in ascribing to + which come under thceir noti ness, incapacitated for the e rarly vice. If you are advanc ‘0Uu are broken down, physica ance and folly, send your add: look Form on Discases of I ommunications to M YV.. L. visdom lives in a fool‘s paradise, aim. 1 pr es â€" ant to h ts *> a&A> W Amings, Brain »‘§oria, LAX BE SCs ctcea Buttoft" F100 it ‘Europe on t] Cet& Gimps, Dress Linings, Button Hooks, Hose Supportet" hn the water befth instant, to purchase his Fall and Winter Supplies. He a great vrriety OVRA is declared by Russia and France against A }1strlzn and as. â€" The Carpetsqods of which he has too much. Just see the Velveteens, goods, and W atking 2 £1reat gale this season, the styles are No# and beautiâ€" mark their Carpets jl1 not buy Carpets except from houses who make thens t require in any trame when they arg not over Fourâ€"frame. Lafl‘les ie very best makers‘ gf House Furnishing Goods at the Right H}‘)use. ‘lhe ater the Door East of’aS and suit the ladies exactly. King Street East, Carpet Window. ‘ 3 & n s a0 h iesns B GhiImseY, ON T. %> Conveyancing of all Kinds Ders in fes. ‘Ihe immense reductions in the prices of long Hsts) 91 249°°° a/rfg" t Thexew styles of Millinery, Mantles, Jackets. Jerseys, Mantle: Cloths, is . Flow&s, Hats, Bonnets, Gloves, Hosiery, etc., aTC attracting thousands inggs of Gmds will be marked down next Monday so as LG TUU them of ces, Initifulnew styles of Bonnet and Sash Ribbons, Ladies‘ and children‘s All. W ofGoodkete., all marked away down in many cases les§ thian half the 8. The umw»D; Slapestry Down, Wilton Down, and remnants of Carpets going igs, SeersuchOotel goods arrived this weekâ€"â€"Pink Chambreys, Cottonades, hmings, Brat, Vittoria Lawns in Black and in White, Linen Collars and ‘Europe on t] Set%& Gimps, Dress Linings, Button Hooks, Hose Supporters n the water befth instant, to purchase his Tall and Winter Supplies. He a great vrriety OV 2L is declared by Russia and. France against Austria and 3s. ~The Carpets"JOdS of which he has too much. Just see the Velyveteens I Carpeta <C _ To l s his «onsom: the styles are new and beauti 1 l) oo on Ees Mow tocks of Goods at the use must Go VA NK advertisino You 2 vuy or gsell V Apply to > buy Choice Apply to Ta7 a Hand: tesidence 1 ands of XCT.IDT) > EDT in the prinei TA T3 Want RKIITDOT» i1 rameemmemnswseanee #@.â€" 47 WellH CURES CUnEAR: anrd V c } i')y sflg‘; efil_ihgcessespecmm vo k ighost mesttcal aut ‘ Hvallod" y medy. Pr} s Mediecine deo ce ; 1 viog $&2p M ivben bainpianicaciaal | 1B irFaDuse the Ereat majorit c incompetentfot the ardic ife, No, 8 offers an ©scape & 2. 8 will give you full vigor y 7, from garly indiscretion,,t ts in Stamps for M. V. LvEQ. ind secure from observatio cllingtom Stâ€" E., Torom; ?ANTEED. HEAL Thg SICK, im g of vital 1t64. and abuse th InCcomnet toms of this t force having ; the superints, long lists s. Jerseys, Cu:; sts: of koods lately , eys, Mantle Cloths, ittracting thousands o as to run them off anncu ues e cmmincims~ de Bf & is un 'O'rOD ttr CC of a he sea was running high and splendid, and Atyo young painters, inured to toil and dtgromed to danger, thoroughly enjoyed Wag\id magnificence. A storm to them Roteg rtudy in action, They could take most eley of its fiercest moments. Alâ€" the pyjsy waye broke over the deck ; and bots,, "©8 little Afudâ€"Turtle, with her flat like q Wa centreâ€"board keel, tossed about Watep oaln . shell on the surface of the & timg ir drove®sher nose madly from time F“HIHpb E0 the crefRt of a billow, to emerge ind dr; ant N8 mo ent later, all shining "‘ugh (fif“’g Wib‘h.o- sticky brine, in the deep was o tfhe othi 2 sailt(rlne.l l:fa.inting in such 6 1 1 s _ ,ZO0urs il_ Nply impossible ; but ‘ They had meant to make V AITCSOUSANOT ¢ before evening ; but halfâ€"way down, an inâ€" | f Gident of a sort that Warren Relf could | ; never bear to miss intervened to delay them. They fell in casually with a North Sea trawâ€" } ; ler, disabled and distressed by last night‘s | ; gale, now scudding under bare poles before | , the free breeze that churned and whitened | j the entire surface of the German Ocean. | The men on board were in sore straits, | j fhough not as yet in immediate danger ;|, and the yawl gallantly stood in close by | , her, to pick up the swimmers in case of seriâ€" | , ous accident. The shrill wind tore at her| mainmast ; the waves charged her in vague}. ranks ; the gaff quivered and moaned at} the shocks ; and ever and anon, with a belâ€" : lowing rush, the resistless sea swept over j her triumphantly from stern to stern. | Meanwhile, Warren Relf, eager to fix this stray episode on good white paper while it ) was still before his eyes, made wild and rapid dashes on his pad with a sprawling hand, which conveyed to his mind, in strange shorthand hieroglyphics some faint idea of the scens as it passed before him. «* She‘s a terrible bad sitter, this smack," he observed ina loud voice to Potts, with goodâ€"humored enthusiasim, as they held on together with struggling hands on the deck of the Mudâ€"Turtles * The moment you think you‘ve just caught her against the skyline on the crest of a wave, she Llurches again, and over she goes, plump down into the trough, before you‘ve had a chance to make a single mark upon your sheet of paper. Ships are always precious bad sit: ters at the best oftimes ; but when you and your model. are both plunging and tossing together in dirty weather on a loppy chanâ€" nel, I don‘t believe even Turner himself could make much out of it in the way of a sketch from nature.â€"Hold hard, there, Frank ! Lnok out for your head ! She‘s going to ship a thundering big sea across her bows this very minute.â€" By Jove ! For a couple of months at a stretch the two young artists had toiled away ceaselessâ€" ly at their labour of love, painting the sea itself and all that therein is, with the eyots, creeks, rivers, sands, cliffs, banks, and inlets adjacent, in every variety of mood or feature, from its glassiest calm to its angriest tempest, with endless paâ€" tience, delight, and satisfaction. They enâ€" joyed their work and it repaid them. It was almost al the payment they ever got, indeed, for, like loyal sons of the Cheyne Row Club, the crew of the Mud Turtle were uot sucâ€" cessful, . And now, as September was more than half through, Warren Relf began to beâ€" think himself at last of Hugh Massinger, whom he had left in rural ease on dry land at Whitestrand under a general promise to return for him ‘in the month of the decline of roses, some time between the 15th and the 20th, So, on a windy morning, about that precise poriod of the year, with a north easterly breeze setting strongâ€" across the North sea, and a falling barometer hreatening squalls, according to the printed eather report, he made his way out of the outh of the Yare, and turned southward More the flowing tide in the direction of hitestrand. 9 ht Ne : ARERIME NTE D0 COd o 200 * vile Relf, in the in heW ‘v;g holding hard to OX gh? left arm, and wit! R#W*" "_â€"_o his drawingâ€"I Meanwhile, Warren Relf, navigating the pervasive and ubiquitous little Mudâ€"Turtle, had spent his summer congenially in cruising in and out of Essex mudâ€"flats and Norfolk broads accompanied by his triend and chum Potts, themarine painterâ€"now lying high and dry with the ebbing tide on some broad bare bank of ribbed sand, just relieved by a batâ€" tleâ€"royal of gulls and rooks from the last reâ€" proach of utter monotony ; now working hard at the counterfeit presentment of a greenâ€"grown wreck, all picturesque with waving tresses of weed and seaâ€"wrack, in some stranded estuary of the Thames backwaters ; and now again tossing and lopâ€" ping on the uneasy bosom of the German Ocean, whose rise and fall would seem to suggest to a casual observer‘s mind the phyâ€" . aiolo%ical notion that its own included crabs and lobsters had given it a prolonged and serious fit of marine indigestion. 1 wonder how the smack stood that last high wave !â€"Is she gone? Did it break over her, Can you see her ahead there ?" s< She‘s all right still," Potts shouted from the fiow, where he stood now in his oilskin suit, drenched from head to foot with the dashing spray, but cheery as ever, in true sailor fashion. "I can see her mast just showing above the crest, But it must have given her a jolly good wetting. Shall we signal the men to know if they‘d like to come aboard here ?" THE THREAD OF LIFE ; « Signal away," Warren Relf answered goodâ€"humouredly above the noise of the wind. ®* No more sketching for me toâ€"day, I take it. That last lot she shipped wet my pad through and through with the nasty damp brine. I‘d better Put my sketch, as far as it goes, down below in the locker. CHAPTER IX. HIGHâ€"WATER. SUNSHINE AND SHADE. bis cert with h‘ * [ can make out the striped buoy by the white paint on it," his companion answered, gazing eagerly in front of him; " but I fancy it‘s a shade too dark now to be sure of the poplar. The lights of the Hall don‘t seem quite regular. Still, I should think we could make the creek by the red lantern and the beacon at the hithe, without mindâ€" ing the tree, if you care to risk it. You know your way upâ€"and down th%ivgr as well as any man living by this e3 and we‘ve got a fair breeze at Our backs, you see, for going up the mouth to the bend at Whitestrand." _ _ 1 All day long, they held up bravely, lurchâ€" ing and plunging on the angry waves; and only towards evening did they part company with the toiling smack, as it was growing dusk along the low flat stretch of shore by Dunwich. There, a fishâ€"carrier from the North Sea, one of these fast long steamers that plough the German ocean on the lookâ€" out for the fishing flieetâ€"whose catches they take up with all speed to the London marâ€" ket, fell in with them in the very nick of time, and transferring the crew on board with some little difficulty, made fast the smackâ€"or rather her wreckâ€"with a towâ€" line behind, and started under all steam, to save her life, for the port of Harwich, Warren Rolf and his companion, dispising such aid, and preferring to live it out by themselves at all hazards, were left behind. alone with the wild evening, and proceeded in the growing shades of twilight to find their way up the river at Whitestrand. * Can you make out the poplar, Frank ?" Warren Rolf shouted out, as he peered ahead into the deep. gloom that enveloped the coast with its murky covering. We‘ve left it rather late, I‘m afraid, for pushing up the creek with a sea like this !_ Unless we can spot the poplar distinctly, I should hardly like to risk entering it by the red light on the sandhills alone. Those must be the lamps at Whitestrand Hall, the three windows to starboard yonder. The poplar ought to show by rights a point orso west of them, with the striped buoy just a little this side of it." Ags: they neared the poplar a second time, making straight for the mouth witl» nautical dexterity, a pale object on the part bow, rising and falling with each rise and fall of the waves on the bar, attracted Warren Relf‘s casual attention for a single moment by its strange weird likeness to & human figure. . At first, he hardly regarded the thing seriously as anything more than a stray bit of flâ€"ating wreckage ; but presently the light from the masthead fell full upon it and with a sudden flash he felt convinced a, oncs it was something stranger than a mere plank or fragment of rigging. *Look yonder, Frank," he called out in echoing tones to his mate ; that can‘t be a bucy upon the port bow there |" N ® ® » % 21 e d ho Lt in e They signalled the men, but found them unwilling still, with true seafaring devotion, to abandon their ship, which had yet some hours of life left in her. They‘d stick to the smack, the skipper signalled back in mute pantomime, as long as her timbers held out the water. There was nothing for it, therefore, but to lie hard by her, for humanity‘s sake, as close as possible, and to make as slowly as the strength of the wind would allow, by successive tacks, for the riverâ€"mouth at W hiteetrand. The other man looked at it long and steadily. As he looked, the Jludâ€" Turtle lurched once more, and cast a reflected penâ€" cil ray of light from the masthead lamp over the surface of the sea, away in the direction of the suspicious object. Both men caught sight at once of some fioating white drapery, swayed by the waves, and a pale face upâ€" turned in ghastly silence to the uncertain starlight. «* Port your helm hard !" Relf cried in haste, ""It‘s a man overboard, Washed off the smack perhaps. He‘s drowned by this time I expect, poor fellow." His companion ported the helm _ at the word with all ~ his might, The yawl â€" answéred well in spite of the breakers. With. great difficulty, beâ€" tween wind and tide, they lay up towards the myster ous thing slowly in the very trough of the billows that roared and danced with hoarse joy over the shallow bar; and Wind‘s freshening. We‘ll have enough to do to keep her nose straight in hbalf a gale We‘re going within four or five points of the wind now, as it is. I wish we could run clear ahead at once for the poplar at Whiteâ€" strand. I would too, if it weren‘t for the smack. This is getting every bit as hot as I like it, But we must keep an eye upon her, if we don‘t want her crew to be all dead men. She can‘t live six hours longer in a gale like â€"toâ€"day‘s I‘ll bet you any money." 9 The peaceful solution of the recent Hayâ€" tian troubles shows that old President Saloâ€" mon is an ingenious dipiomat. Having found two of his Ministers concerned in a plot to overthrow him, he hired them, as the story brought by the Yantic goes, at $5,000 each to consent to beibanished. So, banished they were, Secretary F. Manigat, of the Interior Department and of Public Instruction, to Cuba, and Secretary Logiâ€" time to Jamaica. . A less original statecraft would perhaps have shot them offâ€"hand ; but they had zealous adherents who might have instantly sought to avenge them. A revolution in Hayti is always in order, and it is a long time since an oldâ€"fashioned reâ€" volt has occurred. Recognizing this fact, the energetic and skilful old president baffied it by varying the ordinary rude method of dealing with malcontents by that of voluntary and paid exile. Their comâ€" patriots could hardly) take umbrage at this liberfi a.rra_ng ement for foreign resiâ€" de s 3 fringsfed thot Uho prosout peace is only temporary., "Pr&é&Adent Salo: mon, who was chosen in 1879 for seven years, and again in 1886 for seven years more, has been extraordinarily successful in keeping himself in power ; but the burdens of taxation constantly prompt to revolt. Many of Them Taken from Placesâ€"Others from Occupations and Personal Traits, Not only countries but counties and towns were a fruitfal source of surnames, writes Prof. N. H. Egleston. John from Cornwall become John Cornwall or Cornish. Richard who lived near a piece of woodland was spoken of as Richard it or near the wood, originating the surnane Atwood, or John living near a hill beame John Hill. So with Underhill, Atwidl, etec. John living near a clump of oaks ras John atten oaks, abbreviated into Noskeg ; or William who had pitched his tent ot cabin near a notable ash tree was known & William at the ash or William atten ash, which easily drifted into Nash. So, too, Thomas who lived near a small stream (or in Anglo Saxon a becket) was Thomas at the becgkct, and thus was named the martyr Tromas a Becket. The most common termintions of English surâ€" names taken from pltes are ford, ham, le&, and ton. Ford is fron the Saxon faran, to go, signifying the »lace where a stream could be crossed. + The corpse was one of the two young girls he had seen that day two months beâ€" fore sitting with their arms round one another‘s waists, close to the very spot where they now lay up, on the gnarled and naked roots of the famous old poplar. Frank !" he cried o‘:: in a voice of hushed and reverent surpriseâ€"* never mind the ship. Come forward and help me. We must take her on board, I know her ! I know her ! She‘s a friend of Massinger‘s." In the name of Shalespeare‘s birthplace we have a memento ofthree different cras of English history, viz. the periods of the ocâ€" cupancy by the olcBritons, the Romans, and the Saxons. 8/z is an abbreviation of strata (street), the nme by which the great Roman roads were nown,. Ford telis us that one of these rods crossed a stream, and Avon is the name wich the old Britons or Celts gave to the stam. . The billows broke, and curled over majestically with resistless force into the trough below them. Its undertow sucked the Mudâ€"Turtle after it fiercely towards the shore away from the body. With a violent effort, Warren Relf, lungingforward eagerly at the lurch, seized hold of the corpse by the floating scarf.;:It turned of itself as the hook caught it, and displayed its faee in the pale starlight. A; great awe fell suddenâ€" ly upon the astonished young painter‘s mind. â€" It was indeed a woman that he held now by the dripping hairâ€"a beautiful young girl, in [a white dréss; and the wan face was one he had seen before. Even in that dim halfâ€"light he recognized her instantly. ' ‘ The word lea, leg or leigh, signifying a partially wooded fid, served as the ending for many surnamessuch as Horsley, Cowâ€" ley, Ashley, Oakley Lindley, and Berkley, or Birchley. Hayt haw means a hedge, and this has given tHayes, Haynes, Haley, Haywood, Hawes Haworth, Hawthorn, Haughton, or Houton. . Oc:::upations, to:have afforded an endâ€" less army of surnies. This method was used by the Romaiin Such names as Fabâ€" ricus (smith), Pbr (Painter), Agricola (farmer). In Eind a skilfil hunter would adopt thaas Ris surname, and equalily so witch ticarpenter, joiner, sawâ€" yer, baker, or butir, Personal traits s coMplexions, too, gave rise to surnames. rOM the former we have the names Stout, rOng, Long, Longman, Longfellow ; andom the latter Brown, Black, etc. Someental and moral traits were also used to i0te Surnames. Richard * Great heavens !" he exclaimed, turning round excitedly, "it‘s a womanâ€"a ladyâ€" deadâ€"in the water !" Relf, holding tight to the sheet with one hand, and balancing himself as well as he was able on the deck, reached out with the other a stout boathook to draw the tossing body alongside within hauling distance of the Mudâ€"Turtle.: As he did so, the body, eluding his grasp, rose once more on the crest of the wave, and displayed to their view an open bosom and a long white dress, with a floating scarf or shawl of some thin material still hanging loose around the neck and shoulders. The face itself they couldn‘t as yet distinguish ; it fell back languid beâ€" neath the spray at the top, so that only the throat and chin were visible ; but by the dress and the open bosom alone, it was clear at once that the object they saw was not the corpse of a sailor. Warren Relf almost let drop t he boathook in horror and surprise. * S yf> I. of England wastter known as Richard of the Lion Hear The next step would be to derive from s qUu&lity the surname Lyon. Dumley (to wr)â€"And so your hus. dand lost his life falling out of a second. storey window, 1 Hobson ? 4 Widowâ€"Ab, y Mr. Dumley, and was instantly killed. ‘@s terrible ! terrible ! An Ingenious Deplomat. ORCGIN OF sURNAMES., Might Ha Been Worse, (TO BE CONTINUED.) Wife (counting over her change after makâ€" ing a purchase)â€"‘* I guess he‘s given me the wrong change." Husband (savagely)â€"â€"" I thought so ; that‘s the way my hardâ€"earned money goes. Trust a woman to get fooled. Go back to the counter and get it made right at once." Wife retruns to the counter and hands the clerk a $2 bill. Husbandâ€""Why, what have you been doing?" Wifeâ€"“Making the change right. He gave me $2 too much." There are [no old women in Terra del Fuego. Lest this should fcause an exodus from the civilizsd world it would perhapsi{be best to explain why,. When a women gets to the right age, about fortyâ€"five, she is considered to have done her duty. With appropriate ceremonies, therefore, she is either lanced or strangled, and the family larder is replenished with her roasted reâ€" mains. _The women, when they see theitime of sacrifice approaching, never attempt to escape it. They regard it as about as settled a fact as that the wind should blow, and never trouble themselves about it. The Fuageans are not cannibals further than chis. They never eat children, young women or men.â€"[San Francisco Examiner. Guests invited to one of the prettiest wedâ€" dings of the week, writes a New York corâ€" respondent, were surprised to read on one corner of the dainty wedding cards, " No gifts," engraved in a quaint arabesque scroll, which perforce attracted attention. It reâ€" quired some independence of character and some selfâ€"denial to go counter to established custom in such a matter, but the dimpled little bride, who looks more like a sweet, plump, pink and white grown up baby than a person of strongâ€"minded proclivities, anâ€" nounced to her friends when they questionâ€" ed her decision, "I won‘t make my marâ€" riage to Archie a Methodist donation party where all the parish bring in this, that and the other to patch up the salary. We have a circle of three or four hundred friends, and everybody knows that a great many of them would buy presents for us not at all because they love us, but because it is the proper thing, and even if they can‘t afford the tax, they mustn‘t be outdone by rich Mrs. A. or Mr. B." Society people have indeea pushed the gift business hard within a ftew seasons, until there are dozens and scores of young married couples who pinch themselves during Lent and dread the coming June because of the draft the Easter and early summer weddings make on their incomes. If matters go on as they are doâ€" ing now there may sometime be a spring exodus from New York into the country and to Europe, comparable to the flight of the May taxâ€"dodgers from Boston, to escape ‘ paying the debts of honor accumulated in the shape of 200 or 300 wedding gifts, to be returned at the marriage of the givers. No sooner are the girls large enough to possess the requisite physical strength chan. they are set to the most servile work the land affords. The child has a panier basket fitted to her shoulders at the earliest possiâ€" ble moment, and she drops it only when old age, premature but merciful, robs her of power to carry it longer. I have seen sweet little girls of twelve to fourteen staggering down a mountain side or along a rough pathâ€" way under the weight of bundles of fagots as large as their bodies, which they no sooner dropped than they hurried back for others. Ihave seen girls of fifteen or sixâ€" teen years barefooted and,bareheaded, in the blistering rays of an August sun, breaking up the ground by swinging mattocks , heavy enough to tax the strength of an ableâ€"bodied man. â€"And I have knowna young miss no older than these to be employed as a porter for carrying the baggage of travellers up and down the steepest mountain path in all the region round about. She admitted that it was sometimes very hard to take aaother step, but yet she must.. And she carried such an amount of baggage! A stoutâ€"limbed gnide is .protected by the law, so that he cannot be compelled to carry above twentyâ€" five pounds, but the limit to the burdens often put upon girls is their inability to stand up under anything more. But the burden increases with the age and strength of the burdenâ€"bearers, till by the time the girls have come to womanhood there is no sort of menial toil in which they do not ll:eal(‘l a handâ€"and quite commonly the chief and. At this several male occupants of the car offered their seats to the young woman, but she declined their offer and said :â€"*" He‘s as able to hold me now as he was before we were married, and I will sit where I am." The passengers were up to |this time silentâ€" ly smothering their laughter, buy the last was too much for them, and one of them remarked, " the car will be thrown from the track unless we stop laughing so hard." Realising the fact that he was making a target of himself the young man rose hastily, nearly throwing his darling wife on the floor, and made a&a rush for the door, saying az he did so, * You take my seat ; I‘ll walk home," and left the car. _ The wife was not dismayed in the least, but sat there quietly enjoying the fun as well as did the other passengers.â€"TRochester Democrat. Not a day passes but some amusing inciâ€" dent occurs on the streetâ€"cars that relieves the general monotony of a ride in one of these modern _ conveniences. â€" Yesterday afternoon as a Ridge road car was coming up Lake avenue, the driver stopped on being signaled by a young man on a crossing not far from Driving Park avenue. The young man was accompanied by & rather pretty young woman who was dressed in a light, airy summer attire and carried a fancy colorâ€" ed sun parasol. The young man jumped aboard the car first and rushed inside, seâ€" curing the only seat vacant, leaving the young woman to follow as best she could, Of course every one expected that he would give up his seat to his lady, but he did not do so, and she, after standing awhile, holdâ€" ing on to a strap, concluded to have a seat anyway, and, withouta word of warning, plumped down on the lap of her escort, sayâ€" ing as she did so, * I‘m as tired as you are, darling, and you will have to hold me until I canget a seat." He gave a grunt of the hog kind, and told her in plain English that she could stand or sit on the floor for all he cared, but he wouldn‘t hold her. Swiss Girus aAs Brasrs or BURDEN. FOHE AND ABOUT WOMEX. No PuacrE ror Oup Wonrrx. TEACHING A WIFE SEXSE. A SExsreer Bripg. A Ho« or a HusBAxD. RIGH LYRewal'ded are those who read this and then act ; they will find honorable employment that will not take them from their homes and families. The profits are large and sure for every inâ€" dustrious person, many have made and are now making several hundred dollars a month. It is easy for}any one to make $5 and upwards per day, who is willing to work. Either sex; young or old ; capital not needâ€" ed ; we start you. Everything new. No special ability required ; you, reader, can do it as well as any one. Write to us at once for full particulars, which we mail free, Address Stinson & Co., Portland, Maine. Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Hardware, Earther:â€" ware, Crockery, Glass, Smoked Hams, Shoulders and Side Meat, Lard, Butter and Eggs. American and Canadian Coal OiI, Machine Oils, etc., etc., at lowest cash prices, Highest Market Prices paid for Butter and EKggs. Just received Car load of new Salt in barrels and 56 lp. sacks. Selling cheap. D EE PSea Wonders exist in thousands of forms, but are surpassed by the marvels of invention. Those who are in need of profitable work that can be done while living at home should at once send their address to Hallett & Co., Portland, Maine, and receive free, full information how either sex, of all ages, can earn from $5 to $25 per day ‘and upwards wherever they live. _ You are started free. Capital not required. . Some have made over $50 in a single day at this work. All succeed. B. B. OSLER, Q.C J. V. TEETZEL, W it io td t century. Not least among the woff 1;3“" inventive progress is a method and "# of of work that can be performed all 0"imp country without â€" separating the woy _ \ from their homes. Pay liberal; any can do the work ; either sex, young or c no special ability required. Capital i needed ; you are started free. Cut this o. and return to us and we will send you free something of great value and importance to you, that will start you in business, which will bring you in more money right away, | than anything in the world. â€" Grand outfi¢ \~_ free. Address, Trur & Co., Augusta, â€" t Maine. uc influence of the moon upon vegetaâ€" tion is an interesting problem awaiting soluâ€" tion. _A recent writer upon the subject mentions that woodcutters in Cape Colony and in India insist that timber is full of sap and unfit to be cut at full moon. tour Nellies and one L yefused to mutilate thq stately Letitizn ‘;;hcte Corday lived in iesoomes HHad. id have gone into history e as Lottie." J . 38 King S treet east, Hamilton.Gas Vitalized Air and other Anesthetios House Blake 8. Eagt Hamilton. The Nebraska State Journal says : "In a list of young ladies who attended an enterâ€" tainment the other evening, as reported by an exchange, there wore four Mamjiâ€"three Winnie, two Sadies, two LiwoJennies, Annies, one Rosie, oneFrgy: All honor to four Nellies and one $ refused to mutilate the stately Letiti®* "isite Corday lived in Cor King & McNab 8ts. Hamilton J OFPUaiL ever% J UutBuaey mire %a.red to do Dental work in italized Air for Painless F _ Grace Greenwood says that all Parisian women are not frivolous, and more than all Beston women are profound. She does not believe that Anglo Saxons enjoy a monopoly of home virtues and practical piety, and she does believe that the great majority of French wives are loyal, French mothers tender, French grandmothers and elderly maiden ladies devout. The Garden of Eden, it is now asserted, was located in Central America. Mme. Alice le Plougeon, wife of an eminent man of science, is the prophet of the new belief, and she claims to have found writings which give the whole history of the human race, showing that America and Europe were then united by land which has since been submerged. Barristers, Solicitors, &o ST. CATHARINES, ONTJ J. H. Incrrsout. i. C. Ry INVENTION Jordan every School Books, Patent Medicinges, Will visit Mrs. Langtry is said to be consilering & revision of her toilet that shall co away with bustles and tight laces, and allow her form to resume the shape that nature intended it should have. Barristers, Solicitors, etc., HAMILTON % 4 C Husband (more savagely than evei)â€""Well by jings, y ou are an idiot." OrrFIcEâ€"Station SE‘EJ, SLER, TEE H, MCDUNALD, , J * Surgeon Denpéfiz MoxrEy To Loax RB. 8. ZIMMERMAN, YKERT & INGERSOLL ZIMMERMAN, DENTIST, H. McDONALD S. CHITTENDEN D. Over No. 8 King Stree East Hamilton. WINONA, ONT. PRACTICAL DENTIST Beamsville, Ont., Vitalized Air DENTIST. . SECORD, "TZEL. HARRISON & OSLER, Dealer in "ville bas nas revolutimiZe}\\ world during the 4C\ he t among the woft;)g is a method and *# o}\ e performed all 0vim separating the wn. â€" \ on Easy TErms. y Rementy $ ‘ every ‘«. er Sa»‘bu! ay> * i)) *# 2 200 its li;;t;;ées. Extraetjoq Beamg x 'â€"flw JOHN HARRISON, H. S‘ OSLER. ONT. and_ yee* | sn s n

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