. The .- was much anonhieti, but 1:. nnnnnhan uyluun I-m wnnhul $35-I `" WW-' W """" `' "'"` "" 3'7.}Z"in' `ii-XiIaT"'\2 u'Z3"1n.",."}'i" _ `gpgjggof gxxunagpmmgglfggunggqgo. t_.enanc{hphui|a. than in &oihn , I s- IQ. -c-- -E- -- ~Blectrldlan. conuuiuonauaga Bloch-lcFI_xtn'uI |svrcutIIs?`r3 Go'1w!n' Insurance Engporium - _L_ -gun;-._.._ -_.-_ Sp:-oinl Aont.Klnshm. 0Q.*!3_E,TTf3..E&.P!!BE~l KEEP..-JWHT Payment: tn policy-holders lncroond 0150.- 4.`.9.!M. or over 14! per cent. In no former you have such mugnloom results been attained. The company ha`: ll splendid position for an experk-n<-ml man in Emntern Onmrin. All nnmmunicmiona to be urldrenod to W- J. FAIR. Inspector. Kingston. Assets inurouod $915,315.28. or over spu- cont. Gash lncomoinorens(d880.309.I|, or over 10 p 31- cent. ` Naw insurance issued lronuod $519,110.00. or over 18 per cent. Total insurance in force increased 01,714,785. or over 10 per cent. Ronvid 'o'MAnoh'or Buildings . over Reserve Fund incretuod |196,'I0l.00.or over 10 per cent. D. F. ARMSTRONG. Kccp the Home Bright. M. the and of 1398. oompnmwlth that cl 1305. shows the following rnultu : Ihe North American Life Assurance Co s Position and you will find them. Their reputationis world wide, and the) can only be procured in Kingston -13- from I60 to _l3K{i3n,I Or any city in the world and ask for P D CORSETS }STEACY'&STEACY The Albert Toilet Soap co.. ms. ` lontreal. ` 4 care and skill in making and the best materials are the reason. THE _PROOF- .Its immense sales. ~ cm-an Prlndua t womum semis. %Baby?s Own 8069- Pretty walls go u long way to wards having it so`: The most beautiful effects known in Wall decoration nro produced by Wall Covers and fresco tints. vvuv-u nun. ..~...-v --..-... Sherwin-Williams wall coloru, 5 lb. package. 25c. ,_1 /1:... __.___...J 1).]... ' 'f;1E""5{{y'}Jop.uea Kaise- mino. 51b. package. 25c. A I-L__A:_. - nr. __.1 nun.-u. v a . I1.-v---b.., _-.. Ohurcl-n"s Alnbastine -250. and 506 per package. To Glasgow, To Dublin. To Berlin. To Paris. To New York. To Boston. there is; no bettexfi soap made than our Good Quality. Low Prices. Prompt Dollvory. squuo Dotllng. sud I107 unounu no onu Inuuor. no .:.*.`*..::'.r....-=.1..`*.n:':...."'*l7."ZF.':.;:.9 | Ill1`.l.I h BITNNTNGIIAI. '1 "FOR W 'l|`03- , royal commiuiou mu enquired into """" than (o|) oft non:-ring `ox-Iodn oi agri- hhi eulurl doprulhn In ucltltlnvull "`:,`g; mm: tthdqnaI_o|1rundI. . ._% men `If ..-<|..9h-r-. A `III!!! II. H10 ffl. 01 N10 Illli W. J. FAIR, Inspector. B0 ||(`.(`l'IPl'.'|l0 I-D9 IMIVIIICO In Tellt- To obtain this ranlt. the sin of the holding: or farms were lncnuod In In land and Scotland. 2) This none:-' our 1 had t.._ho aoat of running the m tigomlnmt xpuld-in up you 1 nanny _. n - moat. universal in ' land. cent. (2). thin movement wndu In Iloldln was much more npld t n In and whom long Inna In tho rule. , ~ A thin mt. thn I-gnarl, nf Mu Inst plea in prnol. - r ,wny rent has owed to advunovin mnny parts of England since 1897 is owing to the measure: punund by the landlord: print to that date. in order to accelerate the advance In rent. Tn nhOAII| this 010:" Ohm sin: A? Oh. lllIlpl68 In |)l'UUl 0| (HIS. 'l`hc n[rri- ulturnl depression thnt pre- vnils in Canatiu in common with all other protected countrit-s, arises in the main. from the efforts made by the governments of such countries through the medium or protective tariiia against foreign manufacturers. to reserve their own farmers for their own manufac- turers` trade. This ayhtem enables the manufacturers 01 the vnrioul protected countries to oonliscatc the farmers pro- tita. The proof 0! this ties in the fact. that farm land values. which always risc or fall - in sympnthy with farm- eru' profits. invnriuhl shrink nftor pro- tection is introduce __ or increased in any country. This is true *0! France and Germanv, where no "Northwest" exists, as it is of Canada or any other country where any new {arming tis- tricte are ening up. The fact that farm land: noroase in value after the mluctitip or abolition of protective duties is further "root of thin. Eng - lend. Japan, the inited States. since the Wilson bill was passed. are exam- ple: in proof. Wllv rent. hnn mum] to ndvtxnmn INLSII OI flll uur ll(`lIVIlIQ'S. INIVU lIl('TEllS' ed as n result. of ma over uuoolomling intr notion of lnl;or-sn.vin[: nppllnnuea so lurked durhm lhn \'it'.mriun em. Pnrls of England and Scntlnml, the Chunnel Islands, the Isle of Man, the Straits solllements, New South Wales. the most of the crown colonies, um ex- nmplos in proof of this. 'I`hn nnri ullnrnl do-.nrv.-z-ainn that turn- unul ICIU DI` IUUU. (I) III lll5lf|UlH lll England and Scotland where the na- tural tendency of agriculture to adapt itself to its ever-chumring market has not he/en interfered with by arbitrary restrictions. rent. and tithes have ven- tinued to advance to the resent time. (4 It is well to remember I) connection with the whole question of agriculture in England. or indeed in any oountry. that laboraaving machinery has in- creased the prolluotiveness of labor ap- plied to nmnufnuture at a. much great- er ratio than labor applied to agricul- ture. (5) This accounts for the greater fall in the price of manufacture!` pro- ducts compared to the price of the raw products of the land. This greater in- vreaaed produotlvmiess of labor applied to manufacture is mainly owing to the ohvious fact, that in the ease of the roducts of the mine and forest. the ahor-savin devices can he applied con- tinuously, ame Nature haying done her work a ea ago, whilst for "1 he raw pro- zluets 0 `the farm we must still await the time allotted by that ever generous dame before we can apply our smart in- ventiona. 'l`|.n -anon-..l infnrnxnnn I`-Ant nhnan uh- VCIHIOIIE. The natural inference from those ob- vious conditions would he that the pro- fits of n riculturu should have In- creased t c world over in proportion to the greater ratio modern improve- ments have cheapened nmnufiu-tured products compared to form products, for to profitably utilize their aurilus products [nrmers must. exchange tin-in for something they do not or cannot produce. An ll mnnr nf Tm`! in thnnn nnnnh-i.I.| 3 IIo lvlvwrllvuuvlvuu nun urn v u --u . I `>`..o."'. :J. c':':?o'.'. 5" '$ .`."....n"' "1`.."u`%'i1 piano` &. l`0(lll(`8. As 9. matter of fact, in those oountri:-.5 where the ohenpening effect, of modem- improvements have not been inurfornd with lay protective tariffs. or the nu- tm-nl tendency of n. rivulture to adapt itsvlf to tho ever own ing conditions of its market. have not on prtwnntod, the profits of the tillers of tho soil.the lmsis of all our nolivitivs. have increas- xul nn n roan nf lhn nunr nnnnlnrnlinn at tar e. A re vrence to tho list. of prices in Encrlnnd, 31) covering the free trade period wil disvuver the fact. that. l\ general full in Dritzus occurred. Tlmt` this full in prim must: have lncre-Lsod ` the profits in agriculture in that coun- tr is be and question. for the price of at then ttinga the farmers uro uhli ed to exchange their surplus products or. fall at a 31-0 ter ratio than the price of thin pI`\ )d vta of the farm. This would necessarily leave the farmer with 0. lurgar margin of profit--at the luwur range of prices. Thu nnlv nxmntinn In this full in mice 01 prices. The only exception to this full in price in favor of the farmer xvmrrent and ti't.hos. These itums utlvanct-.(l ranpidly until 1879 or 1880. (1) In districts in Fnu-lnnrl nml R:-ntlnmi \\ h9I`l-I Hm mi- ten. least. The vplue of agricultural land being the best index of the nation`: prosperity (3) the Import.nnce of tracing in gen- eral full in farm hmd values to its proper cuusa, is of vital importance tn the whole community, whether the land is owned hy tvrritoriul lundlnrds. as in England, or by the actual tillers of the soil. as in Canada. The distress in England amongst the farmers which is usually attributed to the low prices induced hy this competi- tion free tmde invites, will be found to nrisu in spite of the benefits low prices ttlwuys confer on the community ntAlur%e. I-nnnn In lkn Hal nf nu-in-nu in formers of the m3'uuars' support. .4 How firmly the idea has been estab- lished in the public mind of Canada. that free trade has injured agriculture in England. is iliust.rn.ted by an odi- toriai on the subject in the Globe at the twenty-first November,'1898. ud- mitting in the main the protectionism contention tint the low prices induced. by the competition free trade invites has reduced farmers` profits. A rnfnrnnnn tn nnv nnthuritv nn MI`- I nus reuucea mrmers pruuls. A reference to any uuthority on as- riculture in England will prove t at the profits of this iuduatry in t at country increased steadily for thirty- seven ours after the first great move tower s free trade took effect in 1842. (1) The fact Hml. farm rents stendiiy lncreued during this period (1842 to 1879) is proof of this, for a yearly ton- uncv is ulmost. universal in England. (2) Consequenlly rants udvzuica or con- tract from year to year in sympathy with farmers` profits. 'l`.hn mlimr nf Hm (llnlm n.~z.~mnma tlml. wnm tarmonr pronrs. The editor of the Globe ussunms thut. o, Lwenlyone years` lease is the usual tenancy in England. This is contmry tn the (act as regards England. where the depression was most keenly fultr. Lung lenses (ninleer; 'ours) mm the rule in Scotland, where tfm depression was * felt. least. ` 'l`hn xvnlun nf nnvrinnllnv-n1 lnnul llninu` |C"lIIIIlI`l-III: ' 4 , Ottnva. April 22.-(To the Editor): Probably no motor has had mofa lu- tluancb of lath year: in retarding the nprud or wonomlo truth angst. tho (Arman I the world. than lm `artist- ent. manner ruteotlonlata ln al coun- tries have to erred the arlculturululo- prouion in England to the hanlt.hycnnl- petition tree trade has lnduoecbln that country. Thin. in :1 measure. has robbed re- country. This, in a measure. has formers of the manners` support. Hm flu-mlv Hm iulm hm: [men unauth- acononrc srmn. Louder: Lanouhlro `Lita-e uuranoo company. n..n-un-on A lh-AlnAn HIIIIIAII WEI rnetunupa uaxaf `nf~guua`_I';o gam- ` OULTUIII IN ENGLAND. "".";uou .c[ the mine: of the lat -uni mmmlnlon um nnnlr hm Lop: Luna 4:: an lilo In lcotlnl when the bupnulon u tut nun-- A` i'nr.IuoIIu3 In!` Hi! Ann: II Oouoqitnu in an Auclon ol the III- IIQI .I,n-n-It-nu-A. 5 .'l'|II plot)! 0! MI Illlltj Ichll III! OIIIII OI I- :-3;.::-:51.`-..:'.:.:;-;;::.-: gr .3 but 1 mnsluu olhlcll-III hlqolu. . All WIND ON Dioyolu have 04501:! I - new xf bl um: ' ` ...`.`."'.!.`.: '.`:.'.`}.3"."Y:8..:.z". .9. at ! and min In nulnnlnn man -Inn Ila A.-glut Laggin- I II!!! 0-poms Innnllj. `bum:-In mu no no I-point booth; :- .":'.'r ::a:.:`'.*.:- --*-e-"2 hdwne Theda um. wonder: remove the own. 332'.'..'"""%'-;,~`i.'." 3'. """3"_"` 43$ Viol for 933m Bold y W. Medley. They no oneiroly vogohblo. They not on tax: Hm mddmwoluwmlomdiuturhnoo I0 I N , - I pnuon. Thu, nnvnr Thaw SA mun: cm. a . K ERR ID. R. iodxogfsamlnuuda '*..~`..'1".`".`.;`.`.`;n::`., .f .:`..z'.J`. .: don lophono No. In. Blungtsh Idver.Oonalpnu6h or Imgulsr Bnwalc Ara thn Prnnnuunrn nl An- BENURBN BIEYELESI when Are Pins and Pmo-Iut Dr Agnew`: Liver Pm: at 200 a vial haul in Demu:d-'1`ho Silo Bordon on The Phondmon cl. nurvuua. nuu nurvuuanonl mllel you (`lyi- po Mo, either one renders you minnblo. so than limo pills euro both. - Tn innnrn ntinfnntinn nnvcnnn Ivnnr IA- I0" I? IIDNQ Pull GU70 D05. To innuro satisfaction mean your to: and oobe from Just. Red on & Co. :: wr encn century. Why agriculture in Enginnd has not enjoyed its full ahuro of the wonderful prosperity and expansion that has full- en to the lot. of m-nrv rhnr :mi...o.... pruuparuy anu expansion that has full- of over? other industry since! 1879 is evidantgv owing to the la ndlorda' notion priur 0 and since that (late. and nut. to the com- tilion free trade inducaa, us wu um aft. to inter {mm the editorial refarrod to uhove. I1 \I' A ullI\uw|'1\\v 11. \vAr5H1Nu'1`UN. I. Mulhnl|`s_djctinn:1ry of slulislics. 2. Encyclopedia Britannica. vol. Lug- riculture. 3. "\ i'enltli of Nations." Adam Smith. 4. Re in of the royal commission on the agricultural depression in England, (I89(lk, R Ill,Il|'l`\I fiflv vnnv-ta` 11' nnlinnnl Donn E. Adams. Deep Brook. N. 8.. uyn: I have teuen Nor-we Pine Syrup with grand reeulte. I he 5 very bed cough for ve weeks and could not no re- lief, but after taking one bottle of Norway Pine Syrup I was entirely cured. It in the greatest cough medioinein the world. If n are nervous or dyspeptic try Cur- ber a orve Pills. Dyspepsia makoc ou nervous. and nervousness mute: you yu- nonhlo. either ans random vnu mlnnhln. (man 5. !ulhull`s fifty progress. Ii. Rmtm-`u -llinlnrv rnces In Mngmnn. 7. Last. report -t the registmr-gen- oral, (England). 8. Encyclopedia Britannica, vol. eight, liinglamd. 9. Enrvnlnnnnliux Nrifnnninn unl In-nu- nnguulu. D. Em` olo edin. Britannica, vpl. twen- ly-one. `ot and. FWLTSSOPHYI was nrsl. exercised. (ti) l`hl.~.u privilege, like the privilege pro-- tevtion trunforu on our munuiaoturur. rnnbles the landlord to confiscate thu farmers` profits however mat they may be. Since the days of enry farm rents_ in England have increased one hundred and (our-told. or from the average or acre of 140, 6) to 014.62 (8) in 18 3. The amount 0 fold neces- sary to purchase a buahal 0 what i- orensed about; seven-told during the In- terval. (l) Taking these figures as a bash. the actual advanne in rent was over fourteen-told. nearly 500 per cent. for each century. \\'hv mrrimnlmm in l`.nnl.....l 1.... .t..a rugress. 6. Ro5ter'sHisl0ry 4 Prices in England. 7. Lnsat. rnnnrt, pf rue-rs DI"()llL3. It follows from this that no matter how fast Enplish farmers profits in- crease. distress must overtake them at regularly recurring intervals in the fu- ture as It has done n the peat during nnd since the dnvs of Henry VIII.. when the privilege 0? the landowners to charge the occupiers nn advnncinu rent was lrst exercised. (6) This lwiviinnn, mm Hun m.:..n....- ...... . ig. tilt the Emma tho nulls: hofdo intlhin tho main, unwed HI` Glitch o! `t o dapnuiogidllt. wu the-tcnuxntn of the Inner in nu: thqt anlud mat. lnut. _ ` j A moment`: oomideution at our ovm surrounding`: will convince -us tlllt trlni: ll_`.ll.IIl'Il tendency of ncrloultura ln all countries. lnoreulnu ln doulty at rom- mlon. must be toward: lutunnlvo arm- lnz. which involve: nmnllu holding: -for its highest development. Since Grant Rritnln mlnnt.-cl frag Owing. on the ones hand. to the mono- poly 0| the land of England by unu vlaas. the early tenancy. and the arm nvnilahle or Mllnge steadily decreas- ing owing to the onurouchmem. of the towns. parks and hunting rvsurvoa; and. en the other hand. a oonstunt increase in (ha number of farmers seeking to rent Um land, lhetundnncy of rentis to increase at a greater ratio than far- mers` profits. \ ll. fnllmx-u frnm thin limo .... --u-n-- ~\[ . D.'m..'-..E.5`...".`.`.` *>m.T.T`wT, u can IITQ. 101- um mcnosc development. 851165 Great Britain adopted (no trade. England In: increased noarlinlflo per omt. in demity of pulatiou.( m sixteen to fhirty mil ion) (7). \\7hnn nll oh. r....a.. ...... ......I..--.n x.. sixteen to fairly million) (7). When all the facts are an: led in connection with the pruont immi- lioa of the English farmeranud -their landlords, the iutrus will be lound to nrise from the arbitrary action-oi the landlord: in preventing agriculture there; adnptinw itaaif to tho gradually changing condition of the market. con- sequent on the increase in density of ponulnlion. . "Ma Ihniu am 1... n........x.._ _-..4..-I IIIIIUOII. "bis they did by throwing several farms `into one and imistinu an :1 non- ditlon of tenancy on the cultivation of certain crops (8) tfn are no lancer the moat pmfitahlo to raise in nonun- try so densely populated as England now is. This short-nichtad rmnnn nr try so uenlaly populuwu llilillnd short-clghted notion of the landlords has not only prevented their own incomes immeoainu in pro- port ion to the general increase impres- perlty of the country, but has struck in severe blow at Eng end`: creetnels by gertly depopulstiug her rural districts. heir not on has also givenwuheok to the progress of free trade ideas in the colonies. thus promoting the dlint;e- ration of the empire. Disintegration is inevitable if protection is continued. as the history of our own empire and that of Spain teaches. Anol her fur-reaching evil has arisen in consequence of the notion of the English landlords. 'l`he retnrdetlnnot i.he production in England ol those things natural and tllerefore most pro- lituble in in densely populated country has necessarily given an impetus to such production in sparsely populated countries where it is least. profitable. Mun) governments of sparsely popu- lnted countries. including our own. are now givin state aid for the exporte- tion of suv productions, iherelly cous- ing their farmers to neglect the pro- duction of those things that are no- turnl and therefore more profiluble to (I sparsely populated country. whilst. in Euwlnnd many of the hint lords, (the authors of the trouble) tire naklngatnte * aid for the production of things that are not prolitnlilc to mine in :1 country so tiensely`populnt.etl ns I-Inglnnd now t I9. - nugjusu ulvvl .vvuuuyIuUu ul` IFIUIHII Bowel: Are the Proounnoru of Ian! Physical Duordou. ` buhnoduovuuunumoulu sciati- (lronhat. In The World. . In A_.|_._,_ I\__ I'| H. \VASHING'l'0N. ir~Ih\n-urn nf ulul:uI L. ' of Agriculture anal 4.- , 0!!!! 1'0 Al II] e rs M .1 ` and 0:01.. WALLPAPERS in not It): Mv.-ht IQ-moor nnusagnam.-g years` of mu iunnl ........ . "I. ` . . t ,... \ . DOUGLAS Dhm. , 0 |K1rkIatucksg Art 8: pg. |(`,ALL AND SEE - -_.- - --- .. --...__.... iiAaniziaa's Rod emu Apucy. Ill Cnlllllnnlk- `KL ` Oman :1; rwioih not v0|:our.ot&;IlU.`II.l`l1a!0.I`I' ndl_ILlYl. On Wc_>__)d" I_`-'rd m`a_ " Ill IX- Klnc and Gerri??? ill l:)l:n.o.|.'au1Yond law King an. no (iorou! want cs. 03: I f 90 . Hutu`: :11: `l`::,.oor?ahI and Cloud II. . 50155. I I ll 00 UN. lIo \1;uEli::?::,.oor?%hI Ihwl I I8 . rd 8|. 1| hick ::_3'.`Iol:.n'u"`o.|?S'e:;IIo`\,:IoII`IIl31ht. lbw` .. , no - Acnoo en ` mi '1 U 4 for sale. 8: 10: :-':::hAn:: V n u 4.-;--Au-n-.- -g- n -n,-,., ._,_A_ , Lot Mwun Johnson: at! lul on 6 Rome. Mnno. M Llfro-I 8`-g It In` M OIIIO lot 5 bun. K19! an?! G0l`O`:U`:3l:h0llIO..I..O: -2 .;A __-_ ..A A ___._..g uuuF!;:l;q;rII\V_:lYI`g;V,!;!, not human Johnuton dinl 00:40! HINDI. jam ESTATE now. now Dar Sula nr Brahman, sold In Kingston and 0 non inau- sdo by I ruoomllfo drvwl . _ Cook's Cotton Root Compound Jj. 1. oh. nn`u nnfn uunhln 7` Y '1'$&'" `E5: ordln ' ..... - In by far the but dollnr medicine noun . --Iold b drugglm. one Dollar per box.` No. formt id W10 Itto I-do drug 0 . Thtgcpbolhn; t\ ;o boxes, Five No. 1, or No. 2. mulled on add): 0! pried and two 3-cent stamps. IDODD S xmmzv 1>1LLs Dodd's Kidney Pills Always Cure Dropsy, `....`y.---cg: g`v-u qvuuuv If` 151 innings: I_t.. lllllhs Ion to loan at lovli `I900 [Tun 'TiiAn?fm=bAin? . at hbeg} }tthThrout angimdiatitluqlvc-Q`l'lpw manvahti!nai1`Il{Ii'is\I$T % sarllysacrifiocd. 4! 4| .0 Illn- `l`hm- an may undhluthlh H thoour,oofoonm.mptln.|InoulIIIp\i&.1 ltruchcuocm.i_nnugo.cunnotbI`cItd. II protmlng. thudbn. in do what II than iomodlu pow Ihunnlvil Iohll hllllbl. W /mgr;-l Comumptlon In 1 dinguo vrhldl dlql ll M lllsue or thelungs. Ouupn. nouidlnihiun . roplnco that uuuo. Gnu; medicine may nut thcdheasuvcnuhu-out lnnnvhhoil. islonguthoothcrruulnuound. Omllluh an attached. howevei. the victim In doond. Jmit why pooph should risk their um to {lab . dmddluuundpuynxupnnnummm to check It. It In laud to conceive. his mid: mic: prevented than curd Thruurwhlu and seven cold: no In usual foaannmch. A :5-cem home of I`. Glut?! lift!!! LIIIII In! m-mun. will drive then away. It (I. without doubt. the but medlclu hi` all pm-potato bqhnd umvhou. smvrna 1 LoscoA\IB._ 1-.nQnj-n wcn--u1- .-n-nnj--1 lhave been troubled for three years with Dropsy. Could not _ get any relief. My limbs were swollen to a size I could not rest. I was advised to use Dodd's Kidney Pills. I have only used two boxes and I am completely cured. I have no objection in allowing you to publish this so as to help othen. I remain, youre, 0 ' A _._----_ `-..-- map cunt. won: cunt. vlu atom! non ' 000$ IIUQOI I0- pua-nhsI`u_t` of what. guy prloou Don`! uh an-o &.`:.".:_"3"`"" 3*`"'.. io PSY I or`a'tr`l?"5.`.' No. for .- 1.-.; 4-11.- . VVIIUII I\I'VI VIIIIIVIIUIIC Is the 021! Info, nlilblo monthly me icing on which Indies can depend In 'IO hour and time of and. T: -....-no.4! In Q-Adan-can Ala. zurrnun Jonas, Ottawa, Ont. IUUV CW `UNI! U] db "CCU! .rI.'::.1)g.c t` OUIID IV *:."'......"';': .....-....._..._un..._...... ..-~ - %%3.-"'3* 3`-`-`*?~'i HIITCI Iiufflu ` Bound Id Rod 3 1 I Own nml u:?un.t t%.ono m'3'1::n orlnu. '. It II o! ..'.':."'...`a.".&'..n.."`.x...'.:1'.: : ...."" .. .a".`:. : ._._.______ _ _ AYKRO D. .. I4. .8. Do not .-...-..~:.:.m ":E-.,*:;':d:=.:." phone 510. In noo.11bY`ork. `ti. .- I.*r.'.-'L Hg. 1. HIRE. B ` AIBIBIIR. . Pub 0. Oommluionu (gt- 0 %1'Il In Milo for nu in 1. `:::.~ my Ihln. to: M run one `h 2-r '_V-v'v -yvvv . -. _. _ * I , "IIOLIOI 333`. PHIbuB I;i0Q" .'." In ABUIIITIUI on out `do : qI'to.i-: `G::n:: cults. iuxito $1"; otlloi. - -np-'p---u-----n--n. ". M$AMMON. .-_ 1I_I|-... nL._l-a-_. lob Mum. I A1101-IITEOTURA L. IIEDIGAI. cam 8. .LIv:nv.-wt-I3 INSURANCE. FIQANOIAL. FURNITURE H-I'II4LB OUNNDIGHAI. Monk. ton and Dlutrlo '"'5:tI`rAL. BN I.0.P. BB. LAT! gmlntoudono xm-tori Gono- Ooronor lot on: 5nd oousztry occunlod by tho Into DI. un- - LEGAL Innuuuunu lungnon unno- ronor upl by DI . nu ` o. . - ._....-..._...~ --- I.Illl'll-B. WWW` boa. ' ._..-a..._.. .. lid.` --v----_v- V -.__.,..._' 7 ::'E':E`E'.7 .::':.'::*.'i.::`5-I-.*3."T"`= iAInl.AIrn mm rnnnmmt inn "..$" "'s." ...'.`."..`.{"' I2.-".i'..".; IWCIIIUIIIIO II 331$ IT PHI IIII IIUWII :'.'*'J.`u?`.'s;`.:.{.'.e.....':u" '.'."........""".`."`.3 Anna R. owut. i Ilmlhtunum which b about an nomng. III II III IIVI VIII? Ill ]ll1llUIlll|nl TI." Nadia: to any D AnmmnIo'n noun are not for the young person. But neither In IiIIIlI" or "Booonoc!o or IAI1." A Gnrluqfmtule about than Iubelphckot uthmbuuua mun; nndoupfoi-by an III WIBIUHI IE, IIIIIIIIKI. lUl' UIIU III! BUD` MI they drained. for the fur gu-menu 8h oy`\von, for the fair w'b_men they en~ Joyed, for alltbelr nhnghten and Intox- Intiona, their oxtnugnnces and axoeuaa, Ilnoothey formed In me these the some: it which -thou. 0 beauty of the world. and vastly and ptoloundly min-or thy- nlt as In In use And profound nu." Hauling on any D'Annnnn|n'n naval: an tululnl [jinn nuns: with sun Dmnuunnio In artisan and put him down unndu. Annnvnh Int. hnhnnni than UIIIILHL" But side by side with such poetic pan- occur revolting descriptions of the most horrible Iocnca, such on his picture of the nhrinc of tho.Virgin at Lourdoo and the ghastly crowd of pilgrim: who go there. His ogotiam oquala his ccnoualilm. Hi: heroes are always himself and he has them onolym with nmrilinptrmkncu All thl |IIII|0ll'_l. Each book. in fact, in little more than c monologue in which tho cu- thor describes his thoughts and his {cel- ingu. There in nothing concerning the psychological phenomena of love which he doe: not dnrc to dissect; Bo glories in his own vicioucneu and in one 0! his recent ham}. an-IQ.-. UVVII VIIJIUIIUIIUDU Illll III Ullli Ul IIII IIHMIIU book: wr|tII= "Pnlno. be to my ancestor! who. from remote oontunoo. have tnnnnittod to me their rlohund tonld blood. -Pnlsebe to them, now and forever, for the glorlona wounds an annual. tor the glorious con- Ihpitlonu they kindled, for the {air gob- Inh that drninad. for tha fnlr nnnnnntn IIJIIIII uy um Den: "The wntvr laughed. moaned, prayed. lung. mm .11, aohhed, threatened.-by turns joyous, plnintivqhumble, ironlcal, coaxing. pleading, dejected, cruel. It daili- ed to the summit of the highest rock, to till the little cavity round as a votive cup; it crept into the oblique crevice when named the mollusks; it nnk into the non on-peta of coniiine, tearing them and rpm; an lightly can serpent on a bed IIOI ml pun. i From verse D'AnnunIio turned him at- ` tention to prose and selected the novel as the most fitting vehicle for his thoughts. 0! these he has turned out a series oi three which he calls "Romances of the Rose" and of which `I`hc Triumph of ; Death" is the Inst. On these his reputa- tion is based. They have circulated much more widely than his poems. Of their character little more need be said than that when they were translated into French Perle read them and was shocked. But Paris recovered, and now everything that D'Annunzie has ever written is in great demand in the French capital. T)'Annnn1in'n nnvs-In um undnnhtmllv IHLIW IIUIIIIIIIU Ill um: l`l`UllUll Cllpllalll. D'Annumio'n novels are undoubtedly niooioua, but the oritioa agree in saying that they are not vulgar. as those of zoin i otteu are, while thcynre even more artistic . than De Manpuunts stories. In The Triumph of Death," for instance, be given this beautiful description of the pounds made by the sen: 'l`hn wntnr hmnhnd. mnnnmi, nmvod, GABRIEL WANNITNIIO. tonowea by suerlng, and than mime the reunion. He has checked hit count, but not Mn pen. _ `lfmm vans D'Anm~mnln turned him nt- u Iotllolulyorlllinouuwunuuu-n. ` ' 7 '3E$`-':':A:3 l!l`l.~ANGI.AaInh. ~ ~ Aunt. Kill Strut IIKICUUBKI INIIEUYY. Thenworo truepoetrysnd min these` verses, however. and as they wore followed by others slightly less sensational his writ- ings began to be reoelved with favor, and in A short time he was widely hailed as a new literary genius. His nrst draft oi fame intoximted him and he so once plung- ed into the wildest dissipation. For two l nu tlu-an wanna If. nnnmn-mi that Ian had \ U IIILU IIIU WIIUUIIO ulnupuuuu. .l`Ul' I/WU i ofntlnroe years it appeared that he had a mloned the career of a poet of passion for that of n rouo. But his oxooueo won lullllllln \JUu.IluvU- avuu us: vuuvp av- three learned New York Judges decided that the book should not be suppressed. _9t course this did more to advertise the voihuo, whose title. by the way, is -"rm '1`i-iurnph of`D'eeth," than anything else could possibly have done, and now every one who reads wants to know who this Gabriel D Annunsio is. Well. he was born hotel: 80 years ago in the little village oi Pesceru on the Adriatic. He began his literary cereerln a startling manner and at a very early age. When but 16 years old and it student at Prato, he printed his ilrst volume of poems. Italy has no self ap- ` pointed or oloiai censors of morality, and a wide latitude is allowed to litteratours there, but those boyish fancies were so au- dociously erotic that the budding poei barely escaped prosecution. The poems were entitled Intermezzo di Rime" and in them he sang the pleasures of ` the ilesh with Na, ehamelessness which has only been equaled perhaps by the trout poets of th ` sixteenth century. i Thain rm-A ts-rm nnnm-v and ssrt in than Italy hu tmnlqhod In with the man I.- omt manly nonution. at to: centurion has-Italy produced as out or whouworkn have huh morn than mentioned in Amu-1; ` Ill: mu-_u-.7 circles, but now the emu are iIl't|lki'!'zg about` Gabriel D'All)'IIn!lo, a nun Iln. when vacant writing: have bllninnlluted Into lnglllh. Mon than this, his am now! to bl plilqllnhedln the `Ulmd. State: was Island by Anthony Comntook, who denounced It noun Im- moral book and caused the amount the bookseller. Comutock lost his case, for AI.`_... I.`-....4I \`l.un VA-Is {madman nlnnlilnul ghwatnauounnauunguh '4 _ __ - .- ng,.-n,._ Aj_..I__ GABRIEL UANNUNZIO. ] A Jvotiua rraum lnuasnu THE unsr LITERARY ssuamdu. ' cuvo_-u- Uvuuuu-n. --v- `any... -.__..- It I-Noun` lIylo_-lllI In-nhllo ll-4-A-a 1` W2`- .J~.II.ev- so-| IOU! DEORATION In now 0 ollilllncyour situation. We 0 Q mantis:-.mnnh-dnnlh-gnu! ' A !Re5d3W>1iiI \II\J\-l\oIJ IVVLI VV\a\aI\ `F.l*\Ju\l\lt Gent's Warwick, 1895. .rst- class condition, New York tir'es, new last season, adjustable handle bgr, $40.00. ruums 153 '2-Tun Best-Icon W009.` ALLEN'S SHOES. . . . IN:-lY__? The following second-hand Bi- cycles To-`night or Monday if not. sold sooner: uen_t's wnmvncx, uunlop ures, in A I condion. $35.00. 1896 Gent's Crown, everything in first"-class condition, $35.00. ' '\lJII`l3 (`F!\III`l\Tt` lUl\I'\I` RB Ill l_lIcl|`IIa bullultlull, "JDu\I\lu I896 Lady's Crawford, good as new, $35.00. vQnA Pgnim` I ..A..'.. An! IIUYV) `7JaI\l`Iu 1896 Crescent, Lady's, on] ridden two weeks, $40.00. ' (`_nnC'e `lint-|I`|:n`r inn! an-50 J. c_gm{INeHAM.| BICYCLE BARGAIN. ~.:.%.a Oak, polish nish. bgel. Ied Hipmr, nicly carved. only .`-.-7.'`:'_:`\'_.. ..:` J REID RI 1}} UHCOIQIOI` ID` INS nltun Iuniloturu. zuusnnnlmss S`l`RBB1'.' - lIJ.llID.Innnr. u v-- uuu nu win, Over-work, ivorry and mantel strain last. 3 ring ceueed heart. trouble, nervousness, eeeplennesa. etc. Milburn`a Heart and Nerve Pills helped me at once and nally cured me. I feel like e new man now. (Signed) Tnougs SlNT7.l.'l., wholesale cloth- ler. Toronto. Ont. Iuppurn. Nevertheless he took it up, and has boon at it ever since. There an) 17 stations be- tween.Bm'nogut nml Sandy Hook. and they are on an nvcrugo four miles upurt Mr. Green has no mums of getting i'rom one to the other (`xcept by walking, and this he does. Starting out , in the morning he walks to the n at sta- tion. holds service; and then piods on to the next one. Ho has been almost frozen to death in snowstorms. swept into the ocean by waves and nearly drowned. mad he often preaches in dripping and half frozen clothes. During the iirsi: six months of his pastorate he held H4 services and resolved $141.78. all contributed by the lite nature REV. JOHN IIENRY GREEN. the Baptist church cu preach. He took the pastorate of three or four small iniumi towns In New Jersey. but he noon longed to get. back within sound of tho breakers. He had long felt, too, that someone should hold services for the benefit oi the iifn sav- ing crews. He knew that the man who undertook the work would be more poorly paid than any other pastor in the country, and he had a wife and two children to Iupport. New-rrhnicnn hn tnnk ll: nn. and has hnan ID Dglll. "zugnu away." WII ulc uulwvr. It was in thin manner that the Rev. Mr. Green began his utrungo pastorate. Ho wan born not in A-om Long Bmnoh 88 year: ago, and his father was one of the old volunteer me nven. By his own eortu young G1-`eon mnnaged to get an education and t himaolt for the ministry. At the age of 88 he began to do missionary work. and a year hour he roeoived a license from a ' ' - -V-7 "-",' , `rho congnaation to which Rev. John _* nan-ynnau at mm. x. J., mlnhtera 1 in onset themoat unique In many:-upset: that in presided our by any divine In the country. Bin ock comInuot_~1-oupa of night llr ulna nmn mush. nanthand.-nlonn uunnu-,7. l_lIl uocx cunlllu Ilyxruupu gightdr Ine men each, nomencl- e Nowhnu alum from Barn: Bully Book. They are that man wit long to no me saving news. {or It I; to the motto! saving the aoulnof the 111': nvdu that` the Ru. Mr. Green. handed!- cstel uln- One __un_dgyA lug! o1gtem_bor_a__young (mg Tun.`- unduy Inn Btptembor a young mu wal_kcd_Into the Cedar Creek mo sav- ing station near Bolmar and mid to the keeper. Captain, I'm I Baptist minister, and I'd like toholdnrvjcu hero in that- 6ln- I I . 111! Ill! WEI muon uliunlluul, Ullli asked the young preacher when he wanted to begin. "Right away." was the answer. Ii urn: in thin manna! than the Rev. Mr. Ask your dmggist for it. u. I. K. CAMPBELL G 60.. Atnntn. Montreal. (:53,1J;?e"'};ii.I:?ei'..}2`aii;.i2 ed. "The load Maker " IS SURE TO RELIEVE. YOU. A _l- -.-.._ J... _ ,9 H. BRAME S| At the slightesthexenion, If your uppeme be poor, If you feel run down,` Try a bottle of "THE BLOOD MAKER" . . . It is I at tonic, and if the direc- tions w th re rd to diet an: follow- ml It TIIA Ituul Ilnlogn H Gent's Wgfizwick, Dunlop tires, 1 .O..(l I`-_;9_ f` _ _ . . . _ . . . . _ . .AL:__. IF YOUR._._;.. HEART FQUTTERS T T9 s_v;` us-"E _A\_/ans. P`uel_t_ and Bang. Ute no other. ` Yew}! know It by the he. KING s'r_REm;. M ork And Worry ,l, _.__..._.._ _,,.l ..___.A- smut. " amt s'i`~n11:' nnmr wmG,~sA*rUn1>u'. 24, .1397. London. Llvorpool and Ole! Pm Iluurnna company. ng-_ :4 -_- _ Ann nan nan I. -A114]... An -LInI-