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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 30 Oct 1889, p. 3

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@Uauatliau 'jtatt~~· WEDNESDAY, :l ) fAOl'S OO NC.ERNING WHALES. AS YvU 1 .KE 11'. Oae of t i:e lat e S ir Fiauoia lJ ,yle's awee t eet 11nd mosb touch ing pot m· '" ~ s a ha.llail (which, I believe, b.e ne ver publi~ heci ) lrnvi n_g tor its subj rnh a fole t old t u hii·· by s. fair descendant of Mrs. J :.> rdan, th~ fo mons actre~ a, whose eqaa.1 Macroe. i y used to say tha~ he had ntiver ti66n on i he urage. '.!.'his tale rolatod that one winter de.y Mrs. J (Jrda.n I passed in her carriage a poor woma.n uiaging with feeble volmi in tbs street, whose &tony look of hopeless misery touched the successful e.otreee' tender he»rt. Sbopping her car· riage, Mre. J orde.n t etld her foo tman to invite the poor wom&n to call a.b her a.ddress in a street close ab ha.nd. The two women were ooon a.lone together, Bnd the poor street singer iold her sympathiziniz inberloou tor thllt she waa. a widow and had j t1st been turned out by her lo.nd· lord, togebher with her starving children, Into the frostbound street. Mrs. Jordan quickly borrgwod the wret.ohed woman's ebawl and bonnet and the shirt of her worn dresu, and patting them on, told her to waib by the fire un tii she hcreelf returned. In a few moments t he silence of the street was broken by a hea.venly voic~ issuing clear and oween from the throa t of the moet ex· quiPita ball!ld singer ever heard on the Engll~ h boards, From beaea.t h a t attered bonuet, from wlthin a gret.sy shawl,· Tha.t unebbing tide ol mudo filled with llfe the souls of all: And t he touc\i as of a. spirit t·o their fl at t er· ed puhAs clung , With a strange enchanting rapture, as t hat ragged woma n sung. Arrested by a voice the like of which they had never hear1, tha workmen pa.used on their homeward journey to thrust pennies 0 resently the win· into bhe eioger'e hand. .c dews of the houaes that she passed opened epontaneouel3, and a stream of silver fell ab her feet. For tbree-qua.rters of an hour she continued to go.bher in the money harvest, whiohinoludedeever»l gold pieces cont ribut· ed bv carrio.ge folk, (.Chen she hurried to the starving widow's side, restored to her t he bonnet, shawl, 11nd gown, and poured a. flood of money int o her Ja.p, The ballad ends : Not in va.in from ou~ her bosom had tha.t music tpi;renfJ leapt, For beyq~ her ea.rth-bc.rn hearers sbar · c rowned angels smiled and wept : And a eolemn utterance fl oe.bed from our Father'a place of resu, Lovers of their fellow ·cree.tures are the be· ings I love best. Confession of a Famou~ Freebooter. T antla Hheel, the Bold Robin Hood of the ~ntral Pto'finoes, Indi·, has mu.de o. full ·mmfession. Flfteen yoara a.go he lefbhis vii· lage and t ook up t he ooonpation of cultivator of land. H e committea some minor police offenoe a.nd was sentenced t o a. yea.r's lmprlsonmenb in the Nagporo Gaol. He was eu bsequen .ly imprisoned in J ubbulpore Gaol, and on his r elease settled in Holka.r's territory, bat was forced to t e.ke refuge In the jungle t o escape arrest const· oorisequen t on i. b lse oha.rge of robbery. He oa.rrled on petby depredations for o. year, and was arrested a.nd imprisoned in K llun· dwa G&el, whence he man10ged t o ~c~pe, He then for med a da.coity b11onc1 :11nd com· meoood robberies on an e:deneive scale. His first da.oolty w1" accompanied by murder n.nd his men nex t pillaged 11.ud burnt a vn: f..ge. In one of his raids a policeman's nose w.a cut off. Subsequently Tautia. raided on Pokur, wbMe he ou1 off the nose of a woman who h11od helped to betray hlm and he rc1bbed her daught er-In law of all her j &Wela. Ab a robbery in t he B ehub district h e ll.gain cub 6 ff a policeman's nose. For t he la.et two y ears, being much har,u :n rll1i DREAUS. · ccr. 30, 1889. , J..ess Known About tho Largest Animal tllau About Sonic lhat arc llllcroscopic. VICE '1'0 MO'l'IIERS.- Are you di ·e d"at night and broken of your re1 by a sick child suffering and crying wit. pain of Cutting Teeth 1 If so sand at once and get a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup." For children teething, lts value ill incalculable. It will relieve the poor little suffe rer immediately. D epend upon it, mothers ; there is no mistake about it. It cures Dysentery and Diarrhcea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gums, reduces In:fla.mma.tion, and gives bo:ie and energy to the whole ey~tem . " Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup "$!for children teething is pleasant to the ta.ste and is the prescription o~ ?ne of the oldest and be~t fe~11le physio18:ns and nur11ea In the U~1ted States, a11d 1s for sale by all druggists through the wol'ld. Pl'ice 25 cents a bottle. Be sure and 3.-Bk for "MRs. WINSLOW'S SooTHING SYRU.P .' and take no other kind, Of all t he modern t cieu tlats engaged in the work of inveBtiga.tion, perhaps none have a.dop~erl a field more peculiar and ent ertaining than Pt·cf. Ftedel'iok W. True, of the Na.tional .Museum. Prof. True is a younj( man , but he has already opent five years of his career as a Ecientiet in looking up one eubj eco- wbto.lea. "The res.eon tba.t my attention was direct· ed t o thia s:i bj ecb partioula.rly," eaid Prof. ['rue to a r eporter, "was the fact that rn little wa.s known to soienti6o men concemfog whales. The worka on Z()ology either oreat· ed the whale with a few generalizll.tions, or ianored lt alto;;:ether. My pu~poae has bllen t~ o~ver this field as well as ib poBBibly oan be done with such sources of loforme.tion as are i.vaila.ble. I spent fourmonthe in Engla.nd and ~he oootinent cf Europe In the study of 8 W'hen the m~pl ·' turns t o crimson, And the ~i>··· fras jg gold: Wh en t hu g~nt i i>n 'a in ~he meadow A nd t tte ao1"r on the wold: Wben the mnon is lapped in vapour, And the night is frosty cold ; When the chestnut curra a.re opened, And the acorns drop like ha.ii, And the drowsy a.iris sta.rtled With the thumping of the fhl~ With tbe drumming of the partridgo, And the whistle of the quail ; Through the rustling woods I wander, Through theje'\\ele of the year. From r.he ye.How uplands calling, Seeking h ~r who etill is dea.r ; She is ne»r me in tha autumn, She, the beautiful, is near. Through the smoke of burning mummer, Wben the wee.ry wings a.re still, I can see ber in the va.lley, I can hear her on t he bill, In the splendour of tbe woodland&, In tile wh iEpor of the rill. F ol' the sh ores of earth and Heaven Meet, and mi.ngle in the blue; S ue oa.n wande r down the glory To the plac<>r. that she knew, W here the ha.ppy lovers wandered Jn the days when life was true. thin~ when d ays are sweetest, And t he world is wholly fair, She may sometimes steal upon me, Through the dimness of the air, With the oroaa upon her bosom And the amarant h in her b ..ir. · six ths.tfr(qllent thecoasb of North America. J a.re well known, and the majority of these of forms which have long been under obaervation. The number of species whose habits, "a.riatlons, and distribution a.re thoroughly understood is still smaller. The !Ue of the whale is pa.seed with bat little of it being visible, and it is not an approachable animal. Consumption Surely Cured. W hat fo known of its life hae been obtained (ro THE EDITOR : - "t long ra.nge,i.nd many errors have thereby Plea.Ee inform your rea.ders th!l.t I have crept in. All the roml'.nce a.bout · a positive remedy for the above named THRILLING ADVEJSTORES ditea.se. By its timely use tho~aa.uda of in the capture of the who.le has h a.d h· hopeless cases have been permanently J da . lb is still regarded ae a dangerous cured. I sh!!.ll be glad to s. e nd two bottles oc~u ati<>n. You will hear no more s~oriu of my remedy FREE. to .any of v~ur rel'.deu of b!i,d ha coning a.nd the smoking line they will send me runnm'( · out rpover·th who have th· E conrnmptrnn d p 0 if dd . e b ow, the boat towed by eir xprees an · '. a r~ss. a. l eviatha.n at lightning speed, a.nd all those r i:espectf1!-lly, Dr. T. A. SLOC~~l, 164 · deta.lls that Illuminated the old time stories V\s...::._Adel:l.ide st., Tor0 nto, Ont. i of the sea. Now wh11les are ldJl,d with a bomb la nce, fired as 11.ny other l ~~j ·> ctile, at Special Announcement. a. moderately long range. I t caNfoa 11n ex· __ plosive substance tho.b detonates. when the W e have made arra no-ements with Dr. j ta.nee enters the body of the w_ haJ.a. ['hat n . " · is t he modern way. T he wha.le 1e generall) B T . ~: Ken~~ll H Co., p~lh~er~. of · ~ harpooned afterward In order to ma.ke it fast r e:i- ise ~m e orse an is ~seasee . and unless this Is at t empted bdore the whale whtch will enable all our eubscnbere to I is de ...d h is no~ troonueU. with &nj' d;;.ngs:r." obtain a copy of that valuable w ork free j "What 11re some . f the .popular fo.l!aoies by aendiug their address (enclosing 11 two· I in regard to whale&? cent stamp for mailing same) to Dr. B. J. "In the firs~ pla.ce the greatest of them all Kend:1.ll Co., Enosburg Falls, Vt. This is t h at the whale is a fish. It is a mamml\l book ia now r e cognized as standard with none of the oharacterlatics of o. fish! ex authority upon all diseases of the horse, oepb that it .exists in the Wl\ter. An animal a s it.i phenomenal salt! attests over four that nurses its young, and hv.s rudlmencary million copies having b een a'old in the hind legs, could hardly oorreepond to a fish In a.ny respect. I n almost every cut of o. past t en years, a. sa.1e ~eve1· b e f ore whale you will see the a.nima.l Epou tlng a tro· ;re a?hed by_ any pubhcat1on m the same mendous volume l)f water from hie blow1 p er10d of time: We f~el confiden~ that holes. This ia purely a.n fm!lginary habit on -0ur patr ons will appreciate the worn, and the p art of the whaleg, The blow-holes of be glad to avail themselves of t his op por- the Y'l'hale correspond t o t he nostrils of other tunity of obtaining a valuable b ook . anima.b, When it comes to t he surface. t o It is n ecessary that y ou mention this i breathe, ex pels bhe air from its lungs w1bh paper in se nd ing for the "Treatise." ' a violent effort. Its nostrils are apt t~ be This offer will r em.iin open for only a slightly under water, and the r ernlt lB a .!lhort time. column of spray of water. When a wha.h _ __ _ had been harpooned so that its lungs hlld been penetrated, ib ls likely that the whale To Oorre. s pondents. spou bed blood and water through ite nostrils, -. I ti.nd this bas confirmed t he original error W e charge 10 cent s a line for all notices . when the sailors observed it at close ra.uge. of Anniversaries, Concerts, L ectures, and "Another popular error," co?t inur.id P i of. ·e n t ertainments for hich n o printing has True, "la th ~ti a.ll whalea iurn1e~ed wb:t.led d h' ffi bone The two gre11b claBSifico.t1ons a.mong h ·th toothed a.nd the whalebone b een, or 18 t o. ~ or er~ at t IS 0 ce, when .an adm1ss10nfee 1s charg ed or col· w ~e t~ are e . t k Th h · d vane 1(8, l eo t 1011 a en. 0 e sa me arge is m a e TIIE EPER])( WHALE for all business notices appe aring a mong -~ items. C0rresponden~s will kindly is a toothed who.le, and the 'fght '!ha.le is a. s t ate this to all applicant s for such notices whalebone whale. The wha.lebone sn a vood· and whenever possible forward the 1ized whale is wortl:L several hundreds of amount with the n otice, 0 r state to wh om dollars. lllhe toothed whalee roa.lly h&ve not account h to be s ent. tf. much ~ee fat their teetn. aa they cannot chew t _ anytb10p: with them. T hey a.re merely a - row of points that serve to p:ra.ep a. fit h or P';? 0i;:1e_;1~bout eighteen speoies of the fifty· · 1 Inebriety Among R ussians. S TORE ..A.ND D WELLI.1\ G .FOTl AR · A hb' b h b · SALE.-'l'hat fine new store a nd rOlll~ . usatan re_ ls op · :.s een gpeakrng dence, elegantly fl.ttad for Merohant 'I'ailnr ru· his mind very platnlv concerll!ll g h is country. ]fancy Dry Goods now occupied by Mr. Jolm men. "Yon never see," he sai <' , "a.n intoxi- Lyle. Apply to WM. H. I VES, Bowma.nville. _· -_tf_ · -------------~ oated Jew or German, while Raasiaoo will _23 fall over the gin cask r~ther than no~ drain · wA NTE D.- Men to take o rder11 fo,. it to its drega. Thev are str ong in time" of Nursery stock. onSalary orCommission. wa.r a1~ d great excitement, but in p eace I can m11ke a successful Sa.lcsman of a ny 0 1." · they smk ioto helpl6saness and instability of who wiJI work and follow my inetructiono I d d I d Will furnish handsome outfit t ree, and Pli y m n an mora e, a.n instead of being at your salary or commission every week. Wr lto. the head they are at 1J};e t ail-instead of be- for terms a t once. E O G&AHAM,Nuraeryman, Ing above they are below the obber p eople of '.l'oronto, Ont. 42. l Ow"' Europe." These remarks hav.i been re.celv- 1 .., edwithmucbdiefavorininfluentialquarters. F A!~M F O R ~ALE. -15 acres of ~at So. eon, 3, Darlmgton, on the Town Lme - W > JlilllllW!lW t wo and a. half miles from Oshawa. Well feDced with ceilar rails, s plendid orchard, AHM lN PIOKERING FOR SALE. good f1·ame house. two barns,etables, carriage -O"e of the beat farms in Plokoring for house and other ou tbuildings, two goo<l wells ea.le conto.inl,n~ 25 acres, a ll 0- t which · re h nrd water; a lso47 acres on lo t 27 3rd con., 1 ~ ~ Da.rlington. half way between Oaha.wa. a.ad c eared a.Id rn high sta te of cultivation. On Bowmanville in a. g ood sta te of cultiva.tion; thi J1r1~:ft aes are good dwept~g house an d Belonging to the estate of the la.ta William _ °-11 nd nc:s and two wells. Tb:ts propel'ty is Hanoook. For par ticulars, etc .. a pply to A ~Ltua.tPei kon lot 15, b, f., one fX!Ile and a ha.It W . HJ. HANCOCK. 61 L!lke View Ave., '.l'oronto, ;om o ering villa.ge, hB;lt a. mile from Grand Ont. 'Irunk Station. three mt les from Pickering Harbor, and six miles from Whit by For - -- further partic ulars a pply to J ..n rns PICKARD ; 0 on the iiremifles, or Plokerlng, P.O. 29- t l ) F 6 a I · by private sa.le, or willexcha.mre for A D p roperty, all h iij property in Newcastle, ' consisting of Stores, H ouses a nd J,ots and H 0 MEST valuable Orcha.rd, the homestead one. of the most complete In the county. 'l'erma .I A BEAUTIFU L -OF- - - iS -ff - -t--T ____t _____ oron o. 0 of B. OH AN DLE R , Newcast le, offe rs. farm. bein1~ "'[j1 ~ 125 ACRES easy. 36tt l I So I adjoining Village with Railway Churches Schools and the Leading Market of the Count y: tf1rst class Buildings, larg e Orchard.good bush, well wa terea, everything complete. 0 One of the Best Farms in Olarke for Sale. EING P AR T OF LOT 26, CON. G, containing 100 acrna. more or less, on which are good dwelling nnd outbuildings, good orchard, well fP.nced and watered. ::!plendid soil suitable for grain or stock i.nd in. first-class state of cultintion. Close to village of Kirby where are post office, (daily miu l) c hurch, school, et.ore, blacksmith shop, otc. Will be sold on easy terms . .Piowingpossessiou at once; full J)Oseession April 1, 1890. F »r fur ther particulars call on or a ddress \\·. 41-tr. 1 PAT1'ERSoN, Owner, K irby P 0 . SPECIAL BARGA.IN? Must be so to close out an E sta.to, partly cleared. bala nce bush. No buildings · cheap; good title and U n mediate posses·io n; apply a t once to JI S JlllTc.;RE u ,, R eal E ·tata Agent, Drayton, Ont. ~arm and town properties, all sizes kinds and pn cea. for sale, rent and exchange, Mnney to Ii !-4w loan at terms to suit. I ALSO ONE HUNDRED ACRES ' B Once"t o see her, e.h ! t o m eet her, And t o hold lln gently fas~, Till I bleesed her, till she blessed meTh<lt were hap piness at 111.st, That were bli~s beyond our meetings In t he autumn of the past. - BAYARD U'AYLOR, 1 1 I I · b w . I I i I ~E ,,.., p " '·R APTESFU'LS - COMC F OORTCINO G. owtohre kr lk b ioddowonf Ps_tre~yth'raona~.ho~~~~e~~~i!r~ o~~ny llJl!led by bot h t he Central Province and " H olkar 's police, he got tired of his junon the lower 3aw. lrhere are no molars gle wand erinf;(ll ; he was gro wing old, ana. hie · · among the teeth, an~ t hey cp,nnob grind t~e eyesight wa1 ±a.iling. On firat commencing · food. Then the ja.w ia not hung 1!0 that st his career he could t ravel G O miles at a BREAKFAS T. can do anything more t han 11nap. The sh·etoh, b ut now not more t'ha.n 20 The whti.lebono wha.le ueu the fringe of wh ale· f hi · ~i H l "By a thorough knowledge of tho natural I b r d ·he upper J ' aw in lieu of t eeth. \':t eater porb1on o · a t sme wn.s apen u n o . Jaws which govern t he operations of digestion one II oun " . l!:a.r'e territory. He h ad never k illed any and n utrition, and by 11. co.reful appllca.tlon of It strikes a sch ool of Ehellfhb, whscl:L a.bou nd body himself, but had r obbed the r ich to t he tlne p roporn ies of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. in great numbers in the Ilea, and when i b help the poor. Last y ear he diabributed R~ . E11ps ha.a v1·ovided oilr breakfll.a~ ~ables with a. geta bhem iu its mouth it close J its ja.ws. 6 O O O among t he poor on t he banks of t he d L d th h l ·delicately flavored boverali'e which m11.y save us many heav1 dooton' bills. It is by tho '.fhe water ls Eqt1etZa ou.u an ,, e W a e Nurbu dda. R o ha d fr<quently purchased bullocks for poor people. .ffe waa eventually j udicious use of QUOh &rlicles of diet t hat a ·s wa.llows f>Vary,hing that 1s lefb, constitution may bo gradually built u p u ntil How l u g e an obj aot 011.n <\ whale swal- a rreated t breug h the treachery $i Gumpoot ~\~~~e; enoJi~~d~~il~es~ft 8~l,~f% ~e11~~fe~Y a~~ low?" . · R"j poot , t o whom he had frequently given floati ng a.round us ready kl at~a.ck wherever "The throat · lhe lari:,est specimen 18 n oi large sums of money, with wh ich the lat ter t he., e Is a weak point. We mn.y escape many more than t hre..· · nches and o. h,.Jf in dia.me- had p romised t o purchase u. p ardon, H e a. (11t&l sh11.fl by keeping ourselves well for.tifted t er Jonah was o. very small m~n if he ma.de h·d Jat·er\v suffered ·everely from want of with pur" blood and a. properly nourrnh ed ' h h h l · th ~" ~ ~ " ~ · frame."- " Oivil S '1"Vice Gazette." t he r ound t rlrr 'l r~ug a w a. es · roa.. " food an i malaria t hrough sl0eping without Made .simplk with bolling w11ter or milk, " H ave any "1pec1es been ex~ermina.ted? ihelt:er in t h e r 1><in, H e 11tated that other Sold only In Pll.C ets. by Grooors. labAlled thus: " From what we k noVI-, it Is not probable. band s are now committlni ext·nsive robber· ,1~:1~~:~d·~~~~~~.~~;d.~lomruo1tathlc 'llem· 1 F or a few years the right wAbale diso.ppe-ar- ies in hie nu.me. R ·j ua.m, a. native na tive ed t ot ally from t he :North me.r1ca.n coa~ t. magistrate, accused o t par·icipat log in Tan· · None wer e stranded, and th!lre ·a.a no evsd- tia.'s r obberies, h&s been 01 mvioted by the en ce that any more w ·re ln existence. A deesiollfl J ud11:e and sentenced to seven yea.rs' yea.r or two ago one or two !peolmens w_ ere rigorous imp risonment a.nd fined R s.5,000. seen, and now they are reasonably plentiful When Baby w:aa sioi:, we gave her C·torla, ag a.in. Whet her t hey disappea.red because She Has a. Little List, When ahe was a Chila, ehe cried for Castoria, t hey were pursued by manor for somereason we cannot eoba.bliah. Th&b they tota.lly dis A b a Sta.t a et reeb jaweller '11 :- "Here I've 'When sho became Mice, sho clang to Castoria, appeared, however, is conclusive. The fact is, been !or t wo mertal hours trying t o bu:I'. a WI.en aho bad C::hildren, eho ga.vc Uiew Castoria, that when a cer tain kind of wh11le becomes so weddmg pres?~t fo1· Gertrude T- - with sea.roe e.s to ba in d anger of extermination it $25, an d p oRthvelr t he only things I can then becomes unw olita.ble vo ohase it a nd fiud that l really lske are a $10 fan a.nd .a "'I the opportunity f or a. renewe.l of the 'breed $500 miniature I ' . , ""!Ii d bl " "Oa, ba t h 11oven'b you ocen her hat?' Ci.,AR~I FOR SALE - 130 acres com · sa vorll e. "N0 W h · r15 t ?" b ~ posed of eouth part dr rot No 19 Broken I "Do wha.lea ever llleep? ' "y · h au . d .jfront, and is three mile~ f~·om the l 'own of " That Is one of the many thing2 that we ou a.ve evi en~1Y n ot een t o ca11 on. Bowmanville. '£ his is on<· ur the best farms in do nob know. Sperm wha.!.es have been her l~tely. Why shes adopte~ a brand new t.he !JOu~ty or . ham. Ii. is In a high state o! known t o lie on the W!lter motionle"~ for a English fa.ahlon, an~ hM a. hs~ of all the -culttvation a nd is well fcaced On the pre· id bl . d t 't I b thin!?&· she wants given her d1aplayed on m tees there ie a stone fl welling, t wo !&rge cons ar11< e perso , 11u l can on Y e 11 "' ll t bl · t b d · th t ])arns ·and other out·bu'ildlnga, with stone gues3ed whether t hey are asleep or not. a ma. .a . e ill e rawmg r oom, so a s tabling for cattle and l'.!nrsee, throe wells ~nd I A whale oould nob sleep under water for a.ny all her v1s1tors c:i.n exa~lne !~for themselves th , time It has a o11>pacity for s tor - and mark off the art1olea ,,bey profor to four clsterna, also wm~·m1ll for pumpmg l · ' · It · l f t" · b 0 t two 'Water. For further partwulars apply on the eDg 0 · 16 p remises or if by letter to HENRY MANN Bow- 1 ing a. gres.t deal of air in the blood vessels gived. a std .r P 0 9i"° d rn i man ville 31- t.f I thab fill t he neck and are found well down ;ya.~ s 1 ong, an a go penc iee eel< e though the hody; but at the furthest this it. could nob Iasb H more thllu a half hour, when "Are a.11 t h f articles menuioned exp< m· it would have to come to the surfaC'e bo eive ?" blow. It is assumed thatJ mimy of the l ower . ' ' Oh, dear, no ! . Some ~f t~em a!e, but 1 forms of life never sleep ; but in t he cane others ~re mere triflee. I t s h h:e t hrn: - A ' 'ff A..:NTED, 1· of the whale I do not know that tha.t p oiot gold _tl_nmble, a Ste~nw11y baby ~rand p umo, - has ever been investigated. It will be a e. wr1t1ng Oil.MO, a p1ur of sleeve !mks, a glove Having done business in Canada fo~ ~h.e past ong t ime before we know all that it ia buptoD~r, u. P,ea.rl necklace, " l!l.ce handker· :39 years, our reputation and respons1b1 hty ere necessary t o know u.boub t he rovers of t he chtef, Ell ver f~lks and spoons. a. gold pen, .well known. \Ye pay s11:lary. and expenses j sea l t ia indeed stra.nge tha t while the silver tea &tirv1ce, and so on. Gertrude told from the ate.rt, 1f evorytlung ie aatlsC a otory. · · ' h · l h f th · · d t No previous e:x:verience required. . Write us , external and internal peculiarities and the n~e s "Ill near~ sure 11r t\ er muen s 0 tor ~erms! which are very liberal, before en· : lile-hlstory of numberless ingects and minute g_1ve h er t~e pllmo, and ah a examines the gagmg,w1th any other firm., . . j ..nd lo.vly a.oimala h ave b een t horoughly lll!t fi rst th~g every morning, h oping_ t 10 see REFERENC:Es.--Br.o.dstreet s or Dun ·w 1man · ... ted f th t b t a cross u.aamat t he 'b ;1,by grand ' but it s nob & Co's Commercial .Agencies, well knOWL to mvesu1 go. , _me.ny o ese grea eas e "' · business men ;· or Standard Bank, Col borne, have been en tirely neglected." there T y et, , f hi · dd" 1 Ont. " " ll er.D s a. ways a. as on 1n we mg presen t~. Lut year wa.11 a la.mp year. No CH A S.E B R OT HERS' COMPANY, Nu r Hei·ymen , T he longest horse-c111 · l!ne in t he world wm bride of ·88 'll'ill ever need to buy a. lamp if connect Buenos Ayres wit h outlying towns, she lives to be a hundred . COJ,BORNE, _ _ _ ONTARIO. and , when completed, will ex.tend over two "And thia year. W hy, t his yea.r it's 37_ 6m, hund red m!let!. The r olling stock consists oandleeticks. '.l!lhere is a flood of candle· ot five sleeping cars eighteen fee b long, eMh sticks of s.11 kinds and sizes and valuea. wlbh six beds, which in the dt>ytime a re , w ula XIV .,' · R auaissa.noe,' · Wedge· rolled bir.ck t o form seats : four t wo-storied wood,' , , L eeds · and · Sevree, ' they j ust carriages, two platform cti.rriages, six Ice pour in on the brides, u.t le11.s b on those who waggona, four ca.ttle trucks and 200 goods dcn' b follow the n 6 w fashion, and there aro LOCAL .A.GENT FOR ! vans. lots of g irla who won't. T hey sa.y It seems I t costs about two 11nd 11 half cents 11 week too much like asking for things. And it'a t o feed a hen, and it cost s that amount true one can't help having a little feeling of Bu t it 's fooliah."-(Chicago whether she lays four or five eggs in the tha t 11ort. time or stan ds around doing n othing. " Ob· News. - ANDvlously, if slle 111.y s four or five (OI' hetter still six) eggs she pay~ e. good profib for her The erection the ot her day of a monu ment keep. lf a. hen lays two egga a week, one to t he D .>nes who f~ll a t Oversee in Schlespay ing for her food and the other being wig in 1864 le regarded as the firat p ublic OW.lU.A.l.'WVILLE, · ONT profit , obviously, if sh11 lays four eggs in a &dmhsion of complete reconciliation be tween week, one pays for t he food and t hree are t he Da.De8 and their conquerors. OF FICE AT FACTORY. profi t. " A I I I I I" · An old maid, wh o ha.a r ea.d e.bout the re· ocn t invention. of smoirnleu pnwuer, t hink. that some one ought to invent a 1mokeleaa t obacco. B11b such a t obe.cco he.a been in· .vented long ago ; it is known as chewing tobacco. P robably the oldest grain dealer in AmeriCB. is Mr. Otis Munroe, the doyen of the Boston .Cnn Exchange. He le ninety-one yea.rs old, but boarby a.nd vlgorous, and now Have removed to t heir new store, j nst across the tstreet from their old a.nd then does some a.otive work on 'Cha.nga. stand, and by calling on th em, you will be convinced t hat the Mighty Bardebte, whose funny paragre.pha de- Dollar will buy a s much Sugar, Tea and all k inds of Groceries, aq well lighb a wide circle of r ea ders, se.id the other day to a. reporter :·- " I t hink I' shall 3ome as all kinds of F resh and Cured Meats, in t h1;ir "hop, as a t any other · de.y give up lecturing a.nd settle down in a. store in the town. They buy solely for Cash, and calculate to give little counbry parsonage. T b.is is my idea.I their customers t he benefit of it. life and if I had k nown enoagh of th eology I migh t be a prea.c her now." The Duke of Edin burgh is st ill su Hdng over t he m11.rrlage of his nieoo t o the D ake of F ife, t he resulb being f;h11.t the relat ions between himrnlf aml t he P rir oe cf Wa.les are somet hing more t han atrir.ined. H " ia now worrylvg the Q11een abou b the question of t he suoc~ssion to the throne iu the event of t he Prince of W a lee's eons dying withgu t issue. A Baff.i.lo carpenter committed 1ui ~.lde last week and left e. letter alleging all hie In fact, you can get the Cash for all kinds of marketable pr oJuce. rea.son for the 11ot that, having b een engaged in the carpenter tnde for many yea.r11, he ~Do not forget the stand- The West S r.ore in t he White Brick ha.d decided on doing aomethlng higher &nd better. The Bible, he oonthrned, says that Block, directly opposite their old stand. A call solicited a nd pa tron" 'In my fa.th"r's houee are ma.ny ma.naion,' age thankfully received. a.nd some of them must need repairing. Se having been o. 2ood carpenter ou ea.rth he gufs ted he could get along in he!love.n." He t hen ehot himself. Aooordlng t o Dt , Robson Roose, who tells u11 in the Fortnightly how to live to a green old a.ge, wha.tsver be the sphere of ment al aotivhy, no kind of strain roust be put upon t he mind by a. parson who has reaohed six ty · fi vo or seventy y erre. E xcellent doct rine I says The P.i.11 Mall Guet be. The absolute necessity for observing it is evidenced by .the ; familiar inefonoes of Mr. Gladston e, Prince ! Blamuck,bhe 111.bs German Emperor,Cardina.1 [ Manning. M. Thiern and Lord P almerston. The coming sea.son at Del'lin bids ta.ir to OFbe very lively. The K 11.ieEr wants t o ma.ke Removed. ·Removed. CAWKER . &ALLIN They also pay Cash for a l l kin ds of Farm Produce---Eggs, Butter, .J.l\pples, Pears, Potatoes, Hides, Sh eepsk in s, Tallow, &c. CAW-KER & ALLIN. and bega n our V\!E ARE N OVV READY great. Clearing ~ale DRY GOODS and C LOTHI N'G FRID.l~Y, - I P,.)r\"' b · S A L E S ME 7 NI ! JAMES D E Y MAN D omin i on 0 rg ans \.-.. PI.A_N""Q S :1 S11.ys & corresponden t :- "He will dezzle . · E urope with t he ~peota.ole of the youn~est - -0 N-great Emperor since the time of thA first N 11poler>n, wbo, like him, professed to want p ea.ca, but carried bis h r.nd on his ewordhllt , 11wift to follow p rovo ~ r.blon with o. t er· r ible blow, The Germa.ns are reported to mix s ome uneasinees with their ent hutiasm and shall continue the same until t he 31st of December. over thia prosp~t. " The met11l of the futu re, aluminium, ls We have '. o strong r easons for this Cheap Sale, viz.: now being made and sold in commer cial l st.- We want and must have about $10,000 before the ' end of quantities for four dollara and 11o ha.If 11o pound, a.nd it is already being used to some exten t t he year. It n eeds quick selling to raise that large am , unt, and for as & purifying a.gent in working ~ron . lb is that reason we will offer Ex.traordinary Bargains in every depart mant,. found th P.t t he addition of nen uo small a proportion ot aluminium t o iron that ill so in fact reductions of 20 to 25 p er ce:Gt. will be made on every article. heavily cba.rged with co.rbon that it cannot 2nd.- We have too much stock by one h alf, and in order to clear be c11.et withou t blow.holes being formed in it, has t he effeot of fixing the free carbon in out the bulk of it, we will ofter goods at t he L owest prices ever seen the form of 11ra.phite while t he iron is pa.eslng in Bowmanville. fr om e. liquid to a solid sta.ge, and that firm,· close gr a.ined a.ud homogeneeus casting s can N. B.---Parties not ready to buy can take samples to show t hus be mlllde from an Ir on th a.t would othert heir friends the Bargains we offer. wise be nl most worthles9, Alumin ium bronze is also befog ma.de t o a limited extent, and a iu miniu m itself is replacing 1111 other meta.la in the mi:.nufoctaro of the finest 36. Bowmanville, Septem ber 3 0, 1889. optical instrument s . . H ma.;y now be taken as certain, t hut if the ooat of produ cing this wonderful metal i~ reduced as rapidly · dur· ing t he nexb t went y-fl va yea.r11 as it has been dur icg the le.st, by t he close of t hat period it will be used more lat gely than !s iron. Trouble ca.unob >J.risa anywhere on the i globe where there ia w~ter enough t o fioti.t ii. vessel, but tho first thing the people of t he loca.iity kno1, a Britfah war ves~el comeB sailing along. Then the d isturbera discover t hey ha.d better stop t he r ow, for if they do 'lot, o. power is ail h and which . will compel t hem. S11.lutllry r espeot for bho g ree.t policeman of the sea.a ha.D, on account of this i obliq uity, been ins billed ir,to the moohavage I bribes and na.tJions. A reoent and striking example of Brit ish rule on t he waves is given ; i a t he story of the negro miners' revolt on the islMd of Navassa, just r eported by the 1 men who escaped tho m!l.11sa.cre. The fact j t hat the wb!te men threatone~l with deat.h i were American s ma.de no d1ffcrenco. 8 0 ! lJ , aoon a.s their plight was known a ) ' · m11n -of-w11r went to their rescue at once. I T he negroas, the report says, were t hor - j ... oughly frightened when they saw the sh ip , a.a d her flag, aud q ufoklv surr~ndered their intendt d victims. A plea~ing feat ure of thin \ · other wiha misera.ble affair was the kiadnees }} a.nd courtesy by the British offioers to t he .! men t hey had saved. r.L'he refngeea were \ reciiived wi th the American flag over nhe i side, and t hey were entertained Ill! if thay were distinguished peopla t ill safely restored t o t heir countrymen. Men of Bribinh birth I.I! and lineage have reaaon to be p roud of t he 1~ Ii E mpire, of whose prestige a.nd p ower this ! ~a.;aeaa affair is only an almost every d a.y inu.ance, I ~~sn<~:~e ~~~~~~:n:~~~~y~f ~~~0:: ~~:~ 1 SE PT . .27th, E LLI S ON & CO. I I I I p arm a cy. ----o---- I sT0vE lllPE J BIGGIJI Baylis' Celebrated VARNISH I +".o r · : p re s e rv 1· n g a nd beaut 1"fy 1 "n g Stov e Piu es and all kinds of . Iror1 k l W orks Dries quickly and m a es no 8 ffi0 . I I l 8011 I Che mist s a nd D r uggis t s . Ohildren Cry.for Pitcher,'~ _ Castoria;

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