Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 30 Dec 1882, p. 4

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Amenities e! the Transit. wars. 1 jamin once 2" :1de Harper. As fodist'a question this as Harper could passibly have a“ an mm month". 0-" an Dram. salted. Nevertheless, it brouth matters to Infield: otnlghi, Fly! to mine ancient lover. to the red-faced lorddufi: 1431 reader! my a pertactfrlght. flow lbw trial onc‘s "nontoxic: ! Sol be glad tom Once estate the “i new Vulcan! Can he have moon is! I must look j erl 1 met -'. Men folks are so tickle. I‘m no cwczerl rile-r; let me see: More than live were years Mill {aria-l from my admire. May be hols (siting-5J1 “unlit-2's. Thcrc h: , is. as red as are ; Drinks too much sea moisture Ibnvo heard flow vulgarity per-spire! wt. What. Ma'am Venn-i. whom I lmrcn‘i new since seventeen sixty-him»: scooter isshe grown than in the days I askkd her to be mine. Why will the baggage out a Of a satellite dnenna or a chaperonlng moon: And yetb‘iatselenu more neighborly. and I should a non of the acurriest description to rrfusc a chance toapoon. Than. the fairest being that my beams have green to shins upon. Princess of planetary partly. «in sweet and star-eyed on:- 3 \ lSCS. Come to my arms. my arm. my ions.- lost oun'! I've come to spend the day with you. Don: look at my back hair : That horrid Mars h.. l rumpled ll. 801.. That blush nukes you more fair- vzxus. Those dreadful men on earth are wiring hard as they can stare. . t'I‘l! reflected from his now, the li‘lllDlH old bore ll l god throuin spec: with- n 1901.. She'll stay to lunch, confozln l ir-r. see no more Of her Intrusive Impndcnrc before two llmllE- and-tour. â€"~â€"â€"â€"‘»40> «Hm- DOCTO_1_’. BEN. An Episode intiic Life of n For- tunate Unfortunate. CHAPTER V.â€"â€"(CU,\'TI.\'('ED.) summing To Bridge Ilill, Ifarperand two or three mill-men followed the rather gurulous and imaginativo boy. Anent the cuff-button, Matthew Bryan finally asked, “Were it wet, Will 2“ " Yes; it were a-loyiu' in this hole, in a puddle." "Then," said Matthew, “tain't no use a- stsyin' here. He put thntthcro button into the hole adore four o'clock, when it begun to rain; an’ my 0 inionis, some one below has £00k him in or shelter. They be queer folk, some on’cm, down there. They mought take him in nu’ leave him stay all night, un’ never sivnify." To the cottages the party went, and lost another hourâ€"an hour ill which some of the princi :11 characters in the coming drama were ressing and otherwise preparing for a second act. The hour poem-d, and Harper rctulned to the mill-offices, bullied and disconccltcd. Here he found an anxious consultation going on between Mr. Hollins and some of his per- sonal friends. “ News, llarpcr I" father. “None, sir,"rc ilieu IIurpcr : “and I don’t know what to ma c of it." Harper walked up and down the room for a minute or two, and said. “ I am almost ashamed to mention it, Mr. Hollins ; but Mr. Benjamin had some trouble once with an old woman who hangs around here with bag and hook. She is always to be Seen hereubouts in the afternoon, but no one has laid eyes on her tn-duy. I am going to find her." It was certainly a slcndcr thread upon which to hang llupcs which \lcro growing so leaden as Ephraim Hollins'. lint what will we not build upon, in an oxigency? :50 Mr. llollins said, “ (i0, Harper, and probe the matter to the bottom." And the words were hardly out of his month before he dropped Harper's suspicion iH unworthy of another thought. Harper and his companions msdc but .1 three minute walk of it to a but which had been originally used non shelter for tho lu- borcrs nudu lock-up for their tools, when the mills were built, and which Carney Du- gan, the old woman of bug and book, had converted with her own hands, and by the application of bits of old mortar and bucks on handfuls of mud into a ll 1if~$1\'8g0 scin- blanco of homo. Knocking at the rickctty collection of boards which served for u. door, llurper was greeted with the shrill. qunvcring cry, "Ilav u come? I knowcd ye. would. l'csb ycrself m, Thomas." iisrpcr “ ushcd himself in ;" and Gurney. looking at ill“ in the dim light of n grimy candle, took her elbows from her knccs. lift- cd herself up innstrtrtlcd way, and exclaim- ed, "Oh, murthur! “but is dish 2" Harper was alt-rt to every movcmcut and every word. Without giving the woman n moment to collect herself, ll" asked " What did you expect. Conn-y? Were you expect- ing to see me 3" "Sure, I was not, .\lislhcr llairpcr." " Didn't you say, ‘ Come in. '1'liomns‘2" “ An'. isn't ynrc name Thomas 1' nn' didn't I see you t'rough thiui holes 3" A little frame-work of suspicion which had hardly taken shape in Harper's mind fell to pieces at this : but he rallied, and threw another shot at Carney. ” Carney, burn you sccn .\lr. Benjam- in 2" ” Well, 1 hr\' dhin 2" "If you have, Carney, you ought, to tellus. Conic, old women, be good now, and tell us all about it." Was liar-poi- conning over the tales he had read of dark deeds of revenge, which such creatures as this woman had been known to commit? Was he thinking that he stood on the verge of a discovery which would make Millin ion tremble with horror? lie never could brou litgto acknowledge it, but he was under t e influence of just such thoughts: and be determined to be crafty, and to drag the secret out of this defence- loa and solitary old uomau, rindâ€"mot lllli match. "Don't. be in sich haste, .\listlicr fiai or," said Carney. “ It's not for dbo likes 0 you to any 'olo woman' to inc, whiu yc‘rc n\ln' favors." “ No offence, Carney.“ “Olliucc or no oiliuce. .\livtlicr ilairpcr, carry civil \vnrruds in ycr mouth whin ye’rc visitin'dho ladies, an' don't be so familiar wid me Christen insular. either." "Well, then, .\lrs. Bogart"â€" “ Dhat'a dhe cramc o' politeness " "Come, Mrs. Dugan, tell me where you law Mr. Benjamin ; that's a gocd Ill )p'.‘ H usktd the feverish un' ahposin' A- what girl.” "How polite vc're gmwin'. .\liitncr 1i ‘ r! I won him on dhe Bridge Hill.‘ "\thn 3" i “ Oh-h-h-h, ~~-~.iich a power 0. axin' questions 2 , They should make u cin- au-taker nv ye, or an ixciuoian: ye're as glib as o'er a lawyer in Dublin. it's first, "did ye aee .\Ir. lienjamin ?' an" dhin it's ‘ 17km (lid ye are binil' on” now it's ‘ Who). did 'eaee him 3' . Maybe ‘e'd like to km trig seen him. And film:- seeii him. So I Riley‘s, rauc't for all, Mather liairptr. I seen hint on din Bridge ,Hill. beyant, at the o‘clock. an' i moo inc ways to “’iddy Mick's, she dint Inherit-atria married inycaaOornuck. an‘ mo a-takin‘ up Will Barney Dam. an' dhsy drugnd me, .lhcyl did. an' dhepnste he nim booted it. an' new diiev‘re all gone dhe ways or dhia wicked wurruldâ€"ohoo! ohoo lâ€"yis-ilir. an' I men to. ways. i has. to \‘viddy Cor. nick’s. to liin her count he: moniesâ€"she couldn't rise no higher no: twilw makes a ohiilia'. an' "â€"- "h'evrr mind than new. Carney.” broke in ; " but Mina about Mr. Benjamni. “'13: n: so doing!" , “An'tfln'dheu. to be we. on wan o'- glbinahtleb. Aa'whteiumld he bode. azimuth- aim-salmon out av his poor headâ€"db. peer asythr!" "Days-not bro tmblewith Mr. Bu» a fruu'z. Cimey Dugan do know much more about Ben than one had yet revealed, 1522:5617: the: she meant to reveal, more than the proverbial wild horse could have «lnggcl out of her jca: then. But she scect’ cl danger in Harper’s question, and pro- cl: dad to fortin bin-ck. So she blurted out. n l' l [cricct rest: and iiutcralncu: â€"â€" ‘ Upon mt. hopes of glory. Misthcr flair- put, 1 MCI) him twicc'r-an'l was coming :0 it, but _vc stopped inc W111 yer qnistions. Wnnc't on dz.- II-i'lgc Hill, at t'rcc o'clock ; su' aftlicr, down be "i ompsoTI'S, at half-past urin~onlv half ml...»- :.:o." said Conley, throwing int.- llirt‘ but plan”. an em- phasis which lbs intended in produce an if- fact. " Only half an lt-‘Ill‘ ago I" reputed Lint" per, instantly making a inovcnicnt towards the door : while a gleam of cunning triumph barely touched the woman's I'I'JC, darting then into the dark" corners of her soul to rev-:1 there. They took their departure, Harper and his followers; and, not a hundred yard-I army, the flame of a man crcnchcd un- ken 1’} the "our; shorluw; whiln they " cil. pail; Carney closed her luttered, creakin door, she flung her hands wildly over her bad. and presently sat down by her empty fireplace, and rocked herself to and fro, wailing snl muttering by turns. She rose at last, and piccd the shaking Door. ex- claiming, “Oh, will it nivcr lave met Is dbe blood of nlur-llicrcl men to be always flowin' by me, nn‘ mo niver guilty uv wan sin lc drop? 0 .\fothc: uv hiven, it's haird to A: dhc victim uv other men's sins. 0 Mary, on' i‘cthcr, on James, nn' John, pur- tict inc wid ycr sings uv glory! 0 Barney, Barney, two: you oil the foul deed, :in’nic dhat suffered all Illxcwyezirs by it ! An' now, maybe, llllICC':llt blood“ flow again, an' I’m in it. 03:, let me lure dish murdhcrin' country, on~ go over dbc say to mc own land and nu.- own payplo 1" Such powch of mind and body as are brought into full and passionate play, on such an occasion, are soon exhausted, par- ticularly in the aged and volatile. Sugges- tion, too, is a powerful lever in the changes tlic‘t conic to men's thoughts; and the men- tion of her wish to go over the sea lcd this woman to cease her wailing at once. Go- ing to a corner of her cabin, candle in hand, she thrust hcr lingers intoahole in the floor- ing, and draw out two old pocket-books, whose contents she proceeded to pour into hcr lap. CHAPTER vi. 'ruosms ‘nscnsr. For the completeness of the story. it is now requisite that the history of Thomas Macros should be unfolded more at lcn 4211. Place upon the cusol the portrait of a tall, well-made man of five and twenty, dark almost to swarthiness, of line figure, with an educated air, in scrupulously careful butnot tlnmliiicd toilet, quite the homme ilra (ufiiircsâ€"uud you have a. tolerable eve-like- ness of Thomas Mucmc. The mind-likeness, that mental image which is. like the photo- graphic busts taken in Paris, made up of many pictures taken at all angles, you will have to build up from the pages which fob low. As you look at Macros for the first time, he would make so vivid an impression upon you, that you would say almost at once, "I like this man almost intensely,” or, "I hate this fellow without thinking twice nbcuthim.” Precisely his way of judging you too. I f be was vivid in giving, he was equally so in receiving, pcrsoualimprcssions. 110 would look at you just once, and his mind was made up. If you attracted his good-Will lit first sight, you might count upon him he a. friend, and ii warm onc, un- less; in after-times yourcourse run too strong- ly counter to his. 11' be neglected you on first acquaintance, the chances were, that he would never take the trouble to fish you up out of the pool of indifference. . All-crac‘s father tins one of those Scotch fishermen who wcrc to be found in the northern counties of Ireland, especially in Lou-lomlcrry; the descendants of Scotch I’i'csbytcriuns, who left their homes and crossed tho Channel in pcrsccuting times. His mother was one of those [fiscal/inns whom travellers from other countries sometimes marry because of the glamour which their dark beauty costs over the stranger. To the family‘slmltut llriurlop in Derry, ’Iholuus Mac-rec tlic' older brought this foreign Wife. .\'ho endured a short, fierce light with new and strcngc customs and mannersâ€"of both men and natureâ€"and finally succumbed, and died of hemorrhage. But the Uiscnyuu woman was kept in incin- ory by the likeness to herself of n six‘ycar- old son whom she left behind her, a boy whose physical being was a mixture of Northern sturdincss and Southern lire, and whose npcccii was It jvirgon of English, Garlic. Trish and Lulmriun. .\t the ngcof ten the buy bud bccomc the terror and the pride, at once, of all that country. His restless mid not ovcrthought- ful father mvoko then to the fact that. his son needed an education ; and, on one of his periodical flights to the more congenial at iuosphcro of the South, took the lad awn from llriartop, and deposited him at Mons. Dideron's school. in Geneva. For two years the father wandered, and the son studied. The summer lxcn‘. suggest- ed .1 flight northward then, and the two Tut-muses again joined old Adam Macros at liriartop. All the way holncwurd the elder traveller coughed and sighed. The old homo stretched out its welcoming arms to him, drew ii in gently to its embrace, and, without a murmur, tllcold mun closed all his earthly accounts, mid “Farewell” to his son, hill in one short month was gone for- over. Old Adam scomcd notito know of the ex- istence, even, of the young nephew thus loft upon his hands. For four years the b0 roamed the country or staid at home, at his own will, working with hands or brain as the fancy took him, familiarizlngbimself with every tradc sud occupation known to the men of that region. He was every one‘s admira- lt)ion, and in some respects evcrybody’s zinc. At last an exploit on Keoghâ€"the saving of on almost drowned woman's lifeâ€"made him a hero. llis uncle actually heard of him. and for the first. time took notice of him. lie so: to work to examine the lad-â€" “nzctapbcesicziliy," us in: expressed it , and within a week sent for his lawyer, and in- formed Thomas outright that he had adopt- ed him, iutl madl- liim heir to Brier-0p. In thcrumc breath in: added, “ 1)idymus"-thc old man im‘cd Scriptural names, and looked upon bis nephew as fairly entitled to any appellation borne by his scriptural Thomas-â€"-" liidyuius, ye nuun bukes !" “ Whtrc 3" cake 1 young Macrac. “Ouywhcrr ya like," was the old man's rcplv. Thomas decidrd on Geneva. Lions. Di-l- evon’s was the only school he know. To lions. Diderot: he wont, therefore; and in one 'cnr and eight months he suddenly tin- ish his studies in oviolcut tit of wrath at poor old Monsieur, dclivcrcd a startling val- guc to ! currence, certainly, and not to be taken ua model by other youths: for not all youth have Scotch fathers and Basque mothers. nor have many such uncles 3; Adam Mn:- “’13. c he Waugh-going to do something. He was on fire, and could not brook the slow pro- cess of learning a langua e vctb by \erbLor a science fact by fact. -'o KCiIOUi-btlllulng was large enough to hold him; 20 he took the whole world for his school, and almost every man he met for his temporary school- master. He hid the instinct at a bee : be sucked nectar from cverytbinr he touched not mere nectar of pleasure, but of know- ledge. lie went to Paris. find in two years knew that City thoroughly. Its art-treas- ures pleased him for a day, its shops for another; its myriat labors on behalf the late; and stomachs of men set him to ughing outright ; and lastly he took a look at the dissipation of the capitol. its panith women, its costly alruScmeuts. its \ ile debaucherics. pronounced the \l‘ll’ le tiling beliu, and flew away our the rails to limescls. lie followed up the original itinemrv, receiving everywhere kind letters from 115v uncle, always advidng him to be a ngllfiv'lllau. “ Be a gentleman, be a gentle. main."-â€"always this, and little e3sc. Appar- ently his uncle cared nothing whether he ever learned to conjugate a Latin verb or to even name the sciences. . Mrcrae made short work of those North- ern cities. The fit seized him, and he turn- ed southward. Across connry he travelled to Nice, to Marseilles, to the Pyrenees:then westward till he drove into Fontsrabia one evening, and as.de for the name of Labo- ziquc. “ Laboziquc, my lord 2" and the innv keeper of whom \Iacrae was making inquiry at once become obsequious. “ The Labo- ziques are all nobles, my lord, grand people. â€"is he s Labozique 2" No, but his mother was. “ Ah 1 signer, my lord, mousicur, he has the Labozique c 0, very true." Out upon one of t e mountain-roads Mac- rse found a whole colony of his mother’s re- latives, all Lnbcziques, all “nobles.” and all driving mules, mending plongbs, cutting poles for new pruning-hooks, two of the w0< men doing a week's washing. Away went Macrae again to the north- ward, and suddenly knocked at the library- door at Brim-top, and went into his uncle's arms amid a. polyglottal routing of Adam Macrac, and half a dozen servants of divers dialects. Ill-re Macmc staid fora fortnight, drank hot Scotch whiskey with his uncle, smoked a pipe, awoke one morning with a. sensation on of death gripping him here and there, went down stairs and quietly said " Good-by ” to Ada/n, and was off again. The whole secret of this restlessness was that this young man simply needed some- thing to engross him. but what did he know of professions in cccupntions '3 About this time he took to reading. llc would pick up anythingâ€"a granunur, a his- tory, a biography, :1 gcometry-â€"dovour it in few days on the railway or in his room, and toss it out of the window. It was a strange way to get an education, but he was getting iir. Hr went tc Monaco, and thinking that where men and women looked so fiercely in earnest there must; be something to do, not down to rouqc ct noir. “ Fa’ vo' jcu, m’sienrs," cried the croupicr; and, just to see what it was like, Macrao put some silver p'eccs on the table. The croupior presently raked a corresponding number of nupolcons dcxtcrously in front of him. Macros was struck with the absurdity of the whole pro- ceeding, arose, and. left his napoleons lying there, twenty tongues calling after him, “Monsieur ! monsieur !" “Aux psuvrcs,” he replied, and went out ignorant that those pieces went to the poor ~rulcr of Monaco. A oin he went up to Geneva, possibly With half a mind to go to M. Dideron,pay for the windows he had broken, and ask M. Dider- on to help him to digest the great mass of knowledge he. had literally been gulping down, and become n schoolboy again at; twenl . But M. Dideron was dead. and 11. Fidcron reigned in his stead. Macros did not know M. Fideron, and re- tired from the door of the “Gymnasc” dis- appointed. Something drove him now to the moun- tains. He had always hitherto clung to humanity. This time he would try Nature. He went into the forest, took up n. wood- cutter’s axe, and worked till his arms :iclicd. He was dull and tired for three days ; the solitude terrified him, and he flew back to the cities. Somelho'nq to do .’ was the cry of his soul; something useful and practi- cal to expend all this burning energy upon. Until he was twenty-one this undiscip- lined youth travelled, keeping up his vain, unwordcd search. One day, in hurembcrg, he stool: looking up at the Frauen Church, almost laughing at the strange architectural industry displayed in the two-storied porch, the rows of odd little windows in the gable, and the funny bclfry. Why this church should huvcuttractcd his attention thntdny, when he had passed ,and re-pnsscd it fifty times before with hardly a. look, he could not toll. But the Fates were in it. They had given Thomas Mscrae time enough for scliool‘going; they had work for him to do now. As he looked, a voice at his side startled him. Of late ho had begun to be crltical in the matter of femin'ne beauty. He had an ideal of face and figure and voice. This voice, which only said to a half-elderly lady in black, “110w beautiful l” was the ve voice. He was so startled that he looked its posscssor squarely in the face, and be bold! It was the very face. He scanned :lic figure unobtrusively, and it was thcvcry l are. “ Something to do now !" he said almost He began by following the two ladies, at a respectful distance, to their lodging. It took him but a few minutes to ascertain that they were Mrs. and Miss Hartley, on their way from Italy to Liver- pool, nnd that their luggage had already mm: on, marked, ” Cure of Steward ‘ Prin- cess Adelaide,’ steamer." In another hour a telegram was on its way to certain London bankers. "E passage for me by Adelsi c, this trip. aloud. ‘ Princess THOMAS MACK“; An English newspaper was easily ob. thine-l : and Macrae learned from it that he had yet nearly two weeks to spend in Europe, and, further, that “The Princess Adelaide" was One of the steamers of the Royal Family Line, and was destined to Quebec. The next morning the ladies had left Nuremberg, their host said, intending to make several short stops, and tbcnpost on to England. Tllitbcr went Thomas Macrac, not once thinking of any noasensical following of these two ladiPs. The files within him had suddenly been banked. IIiI energies wen: solidifying fora mighty effort; his im- Bticuw was quelled. He stopped. in ndon long enough to ascertain that his passage was secured, and went 0:: to llrisr- t0 . ‘Il'hc days flew by, and in due time Mac- t trouble with the lad v.4: that Lucky Ind Unlucky Hues-Wrecks and The stoziqucs are Euskald-‘nac. Monsieur - l Steam 0f] the Atlantic. The Immense Satinâ€"1;"- or tin-c lud- Collisions. In the concluding article of his series or 1 papers entltlcd “Notes for a 11131,?0' 5" Steam Navigation," in the ['nilrd berm." Mnuutiur for Dcv‘eluimf, {m- A-lrnzrsl Giorge H. Prsbla United States .\n‘ty. gives a valuable cemplicstion of statrstlcs concerning the loss or life and properlyln steam vessels on the Atlantic Ocean. due; period covered begins with the first trip 0! i the steamship Siffw‘, in 1833, and ends; with the close of 1379-4 srtv years.- llmé tables are compiled from records in the archives of the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company of New-York, and are as full us‘lt is possiqu to make them, some of tho earlier disasters having passed almost out 0: mind, leaving no data behind from which to lilng of the loss of life. The whole number of vessels lost in these 40 years was 14â€"}, or an avenge of between 3 and 4 vessels a year. Of the number of lives lost even an approx- lmntn rsfiumtc cannot. be made, for many of the veg-cislos’: were never hour-10f. after leaving port, and the number of their_pas- sengcrs and crews cannot be ascertained. The first steam veasrl lost on the Atlantic was the frendcnl, a wooden ship of 2,306 tons, sailing under the British flig. She dis- sppearcd mysteriously, as many vessels have done since, and nothing was cvcr heard of either the ship or her passengers. This was in is“, and from that time until 1854, 13 years, only one life was lost by the wreck of an Atlantic steam vessel. in 1854, how- ever, a second vessel mysteriously disappear- ed, nnd her 450 passengers and seamen were all lost. This was the C'in of Glasgow, another wooden vessel, of 1,609 tons. This was a disastrous yrnr for transatlantic navi- gation, f0: i: was in 185-1 that the Arctic was sunk. 40 miles of Cape Rees, carrying down 562 pasecngcrs. The Arctic belongs to the Collins Line, and was an immense wooden ves (:1 for those days, being rated at 3,000 tons. She was sunk bv a collision with another steam-ship, the Nesta. From 1554 to 1860 there was enough great losses to make people timid about venturing their lives or their property on the ocean. In August, 1854, the Britishivoodcn steam-ship Her Majesty, from England for Quebec, dis- sppeared, and all on board were lost. The Pacific, of the Collins Linc, disappeared in 1856 with 200 souls, and Li’- Llllonnais, a French ship, was sunk by a collision in the same year, and ‘200 lives were lost. The Tempest disappeared in 1857, and .111 were lost ; in 1858 the German ship Austria was burned, and 5331ivos were lost, and in 1860 the British ship Hungarian was wrecked off Cope Sable, and 505 lives were lost. ' After 1360, however, there are compara- tively few entries of “all lost]: and many more of “all saved.” The great disasters of the 40 years ili which such large numbers of lives were lost (omitting these given as “all lost”) were the loss of the Oily ofGlas- gow, just mentioned, with 450 lives; the Arctic, with 562 lives : the Pacific, Le Lyon- nais, and the Austria, with 200, 260, and 533 lives rcspcctively;tlic Hungarian, of the Allan Line, from Liverpool for Boston, in 1860, with 205 lives ; the Canadian, also of the Allan Line, in 1861, with 30 lives; the AngIo-Saxon, of the same line, in 1863, With 237 lives ; the Cambria, of the Anchor Line, wrecked in 1870, 1181113 196 lives ; the Scan- rlcria, of the Morgan Linc, which disappear. ed in 1872, with 45 souls; the Atlantic, of the \Vliito Star Line,'\vliich was wrecked in 1873, and 546 lives lost ; the Villa (in Hanre, in the same year, with 230 lives ; the Schil- ler, of the Eagle Lino, wrecked in 1375, losing 200 lives ; the Bruise/aloud, of the North German Lloyds, in 1675, with 75 lives, and the Pomerania, of the Hamburg- Amei'ican Packet Company, in 1873, with 59 lives. Nineteen vessels in the 40 years have lost every soul on board. There was the President, in 1841 ;I[cr Majesty. 1351; the Tempest, 1857; the Il’ecllid 1861 ;tho United Kingdom. 1509 ; the (lily ofBastau, 1870; the Commander, 1871 ; the Mary Church, 1872 ; the Shannon, 1872 ; the Char- ruca, 1872; the Demo, 187:1; the lxmalia, 1873 ; the Anna, 1874; the Colombo, 1876 ; the Ala-icon, 1877 ; the Copia, 1878 ; thc Hermann Ludwiy, 1878 ; the Homer, 1878, and tho Zanzibar, 1879. The first 13 of these. down to the loss of the Colombo, of the \Vilson Line, in 1876, srcnnclassifiedns to ownership and did not belong to any es- tablished lino. Of the 1-14 vessels lost, more than half ware wrecked, most of thc wrecks being close along shore :24 were classified 113 miss- ing, which means that they never reached the ports for which they sailed: 10 were burned, (and in the cases of fire all the passengers were invariably saved, with the notable exception of the Austria, in 1858, when life-saving appliances were by no means up to the present standard, and the Sardinia". iii 1878, which was caused by an explosion ;) S were sunk by collisions an-l stress of weather, and only 3 are re,ortcd sunk by ice. It is more than probable, how. - ever, that a large proportion of the2l miss: ing \osscls met their fate in this way. Only 8 vessels in the 40 years were abandoned ; and in every one of these cases passengers and crcwswcrc all saved. 0f the steam ship lines now in exisrcncc, the Cunard Linc is charged with the loss of 2 vesselsâ€"the U - Iumbia, in 1843, and the Tripoli, in 1872, 1 life having been lost in the first accident and none in the second. Both vessels were wrecked. The Tripoli is marked with an interrogation point at the name of the com- I l l ry puny, as though her ownershipwcrc in doubt. The Ilmmn’s Line’s loss is given at fives- sels;tho \Villimns kGuimi, 6; the Mon- treal, (Allan Line.) 7 : the Anchor Line, 8; North German Lloyds, 4 ; Compsgnic Gen- erale Transatlanthuc, 5;\\'hite Star, 1; \l'ilson, 1 ; Hamburg-American I‘nckct Com- pany, l ; Antwerp Line, I ;and State Line, 1. The National Line does not 5 urc in the tables, having lost only 1 vcssc , ho Scot- land, which was practically in port when sunk, and is not enumerated, and having lost no lives. A High Opinion. Capt. John J. Dawson, late of the llritish Army,iesiding on Love street, between Mun- devillo and Spain', this city, says he used St. J scob’s Oil with the greatest possible advant- age when afflicted \nth rheumatismâ€"A 0w Orlmnn Times Democrat. _.___..__._. .«~ . v At This Late Day. Too. "Why, John, where have you been all night?" was the greeting as he stumbled up stairs. “Comet. party, my dear, that's all.” “Comet party! Why. it ought not to take all night to see the comet." “If you zhce as many comets as I did, 'twould take you, pour weak woman, a whole week. I can it would." ....._.....7..... Something new in alleged Japanese tes- pots is in the form ofa dragon, very hideous to look at, but unique as an ornament. It is believed that no mother-in-law's table will be without. one. Is it quite the thing for bigltlymoral journals to devoteso much attention and cdictory from the walk in front or the; no went down to Quecnstown and boarded 15 sec to the l rile-ring and its prognnthoua, "(iynl:iw:."un<1 \vrnt toxrgiztcr himself at the_llotcl Anglsis. I so very day hr: tell-graphed to his uncle to address him at i’nii, Brussels, Amster-l darn, a! Mom. With dam: and the day iol~ lowing. with two hundml francs in his [woken so: out upon his. travels, as self- ' ed at eighteen :n most Inch at thirty. The Echo of this proceeding were receivul by old Adam .\lsacrac a: first with indifi'cr- en:e : but on second thought, and after re. ceivin a lxtrlc “ in hem‘cal" light upon the so jcrt, he found is nephew's conduct to be quite business-bite and admit-shunl With new-born "Jpcct for the young man. WWO”, Adam wrote him a letter full of woridiy advice, with an noxious] bit of spiritual _ai mill; and. doubtless, for the purpose oi securing atmu‘on to his consuls. added a letter of credit and four thousand francs. Strange to~ say. Thoma Mame was not ruinedhy this adult: on the contrary, it In the making ethic. A very causal oe- gilie steamer. in his iJohn Maura, the third of the Macros lhrothers. from Adam. Thomas knew this ’John Macros to be a lawyer practising in . Canada, but had never mu him. When he (learned, therefore, by admit in uiry, that Mn. and Miss llartlev were on . and . were booked through, by Grand Trunk Rail- luay, to Millington, Ontario. his heart stood stillfor a moment, then bonmled back to a 5 settled, steady heating. 5 "Grand!" laid Macao. in.- with my uncle. The rm. have ar- Eranged it all beautifully. 1 c it read my 1 i, k.» s i m- “ mxrisrml -~â€"â€"--â€".oo<-.-»oolâ€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€" {sis alreadyuarii in“ many clam t e scarf -â€"represent a tin 0 Emporium big ears. and 0: its side Istamped the figures 2‘2. Andria- everybody I Theyâ€"â€" seafront pocket were letters to j % ’3 “ I will study 3 o, future as well as if it were printed in a .a mule’a tail. lie was a good boy, i has gone to meet his grandmother. Our Wilde aarfpim are the newest and 1h! ‘2": lira-lulu as new improved and per! Mam-hymn are called Oscar “'ilde andI'ill. bull~nwkcd. beetle-broqu heroes? it is preo tended that such exhibitions and exhibitors are quite awfully disgusting. They give them publicity, however, all the same. Testimonial from Mr. W. s. “'Imfl'. of J. 0. Winner tr. Son, Manufacturers of Agricultural l t :- Imp an"! ” “mallard. Ont. July 28th. iii). .1. .\'. Sutherland. lie-1.: r Sinâ€"I take pleasure in hearing testbnony to the cmmcy of your Ilhenmailnc. Last spring I was com- iet dlnbled with Rheumatism. and tried ‘ mirage romance. baths. kc. and anal] heard yourcnw. I purchased and a three bottles or it. and it eifeafigaezpinicte‘fnro, for t had return 0 tense um. I hm 1:11". W. s. “153‘ Ell. A boy lately attempted to tiea Itnot in No poisonous drugs enter into the position of Carboiine. a deodoriud extract of petroleum, It is the perfection“ the chunu‘t'a art, heydiid a pendvutnm mime the haironbald beads. . [any that havcbeczi put to others. is a bad thing. but Dr. I‘icrce's “Favorite . Prescription" icertain cure for those . iwcakncsses which embittcr the lives of so in) l Bitters, .GUNS ‘ HUD but be 1 ~ ~ “'-"« s. )JII" . nga). take Dr. By druggisis. .\'cvcr answers qnstions in general com- I l v 1 l l Favoritism deserves its name. It is a ful maladies and any women. Of drugglsts. “'hen a Russian is too lazy to scratch for a living he has himself arrested for a Nihil‘ ist. Bring entirely vegetable, no particular care is Dr. l‘lcrce's uired while using “Picasahiql’urgative Pellets." They oper~ ate without disturbance to the constitution, diet, or occupation: For sick headache, constipation. impure blood, dizzmcss, sour eructations from the stomach, bad taste in mouth, bilions attacks, pain in regional kidncv, internal fever, bloated lcclmg about'stlomsch, rush of blood to head, t-uko Dr. Picrce's “pellets.” By druggists. FOUR Huxonnn SHAD were caught. the other day by three gentlemen of Philips; burg The Source crunch n1 Temper. ’ When your husband comes home in bad humor, jerks off his boots, and appears to y be generally miserable, do not attributed to business cares or hard times, but to its real causeâ€"those terrible corus which are constantly annoying him. Award to the wise will be sufficientâ€"buy a bottle of Pcrxsn‘s Psrsnnss Coax Ex'rmcron. ii is , corns will be quickly and painlessly re- moved, iind his gratitude will ounbounded. Putnam‘s Painless Corn Extractor sold evcry- - where. . The signal service station on Pike’s Peak 1 .~ is 14.000 feet above the sea. The operators will have to provide themselves With long fish-lines if they catch anything. If your hair is coming out,'do not murmur over nnlisfortuno you can so easily avert. Ayer’s Hair Vigor w.1l remove the cause of your grief by restoring your hair to its natural color, and therewith your good looks and good nature. "\Vhy did you hide, Johnny 2" said one boy to another. “I hide to save my hide," replied the other, as he hicd away to a se- cure spot. ACure for Group. There is no better remedy for Group than Hsgyard’s Yellow Oil taken internally and applied according to the special directions, this is the great household panacea. for Rheumatism, Stiff Joints, Pain Inflammation &c. 23. Said a miserable little Cincinnati boy who had just received a scolding from his father : “Ma, 1 wish I’d never been born." “\Vhy, Charley?" “well, I think l’d beans. better boy.” Daughters, Wives, Mothers, look to your r l v health l The many painful and weakening . diseases from which you suffer, ilcspuirili of a. cure, can be remedied by that unfai ing 5 regulator and purifying tonic, Burdock Blood 5 Ask your druggist for proof. 20. | The Captain-General of the Philippines reports that, after a severe ‘hurricane, the cholera, which was of nbnd type, nearly dis- appeared from M snila. A Wine Maxim. “A stitch in time saves nine, not. only in making gnrments,butalsoinmending health. If Hngyard’s Pcctorial Balsam were used in the earlier-stages of Colds and Coughs,muny a “stitch in tho side" and many a case of torn lungs might be avoided, that neglects l, rapidly devolopo into irreparabl) Consum- ution. 21. “You see, my child, this tunicâ€"mo ofi the wonders of creationâ€"ho furnishes the best combs that are made, and yet he cannot use one, as he hasn’t a single hair to comb." ii Notice. Each bottle of Buicos’ ELECTRIC 011. will hereafter be accompanich by u corkscrew, as it is important that the cork should be preserved and the bottle well corked when not in use to retain the strength of the medicine. It cures Rheumatism, N curalgis, Liver and Kidney complaints or of the Uri- nary Organs; cures complaints arising from colds, such as Sore Throat, Brouchitis,Diph- therin, Cough, Asthma, and Difficult Breath- mc. ' A cable dispatch that “a mine was dis- covered in a street in Moscow, Russia,” was - headed by an innocent journalist hend~ I writer as “A bonanza. in Moscow.” 11’. T. Bray, Pharmacist, Winghom, Ollt., writes that the sale of Burdock lllood Bil- tcrs has very largely increased in that loc- l ality, and adds that he hears very favorable opinions expressed regarding it, and, if time . permitcd, couldsend many names of benefit- cd parties, ‘1“ Though not much of u conversationulist, a unite might get; along very nicely in it spoke factory. Scuoromcsllunlons.â€"'1‘he qus'rls'l: has cured many cascs of Scrofula of five, ten, and twenty years’ standing, where the pa- tient has had many physicians, tried many of the known remedies ; and. after trying the Viral-2115's, the common remark is, '.‘ It acts differently. works differently. from any medicine I have ever taken.” Vlzcznxs will clcunsc scrofuln from tllc system. Try it. Among the recent arrivals in Philadelphia is a gorilla preserved in alcohol. Although dead, the animal is in excellent spirits. THE GREAT GERMAN R E M E DY FOR PAIN. Itelieves and cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbago, nscrucnn. HEADACHE, TOOTllACllE, SURE THROAT. QUINsv. swnhuxos. srnssss. 5i Sonnets, Cuts, Bruises. Fnosrnrl‘ris, nvnxs, scanns, And all other bodlly aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Sold hyall Dru tannd Dealers. Direct one in li languages. The Charles A. Vogaler Co. imukvoonnaro) noun", IL. us. i. “Pf-ill DAT can be made by agents. male or female. 0. \V. Ill-ENNIS, Toronto. - I'BBBR STAHH.â€"ADDllE-‘IS it. If. COX. _ . .z,|.Kinv-‘3F.l‘«_“‘~1<zmm--mnuvanws ‘ ATCIIE‘T repaired. Trade work a special- _' _____ _iy. A. Bsiunnsilsnlgiigel. 1;. Toronto. 111115. SHEPPARD. )Ianuf'rol Masonic and other Society JefielsJél Kin 1-1.. Toronto. 030.10. - m. .l. n. as... 1.155;", 1' liter. Bic" Djlctorin-st" Toronto. Send for free illustrated usin- Bl E s logos to it Y ill It, the J ewclcr, H3 Yonge Street. 'I nronio. finipwfi'ion rfiwl’srulfi‘o‘urviiu L the Owen Sound dry dock. Steady clu- v - stnlsviil_lrnsx~_liiecrgroan_lle.fly . Rifles Ammunition, Fish: Tackle and all kinds of Sporting coda. W Mc DQW ALL. cor. It’lgawxjofieorgejta. 1295*!!! to RICE TICKETS. 8130\V CARD-‘5. WIS DOV:v 811.1038. .\e‘vm designs. send ior pricelist. l". \VlLuaus. I King P..Toronio. “"“"’én°‘rninm.w * .\'e‘vT‘Y’c-ii liiinui‘ [y other Cardin,“ n. J. sin. mew“: Bmvat‘tfiepot. Toronto: ‘" GESfis'wKSTiff'Evi-zlii’iviinifiTi-im l our family Bibles and popular anbacrl : 4. books. Sand for circulars. C. It. PAIlll-S I ' CO : Steam Printers. Toronto. l k m .. . .__ _.._.._...... ._____,,.e_..,. m" l ‘ ‘irifiiO'vEfiiuissnv COLLEGE. ro-g i ' tI J . the natural hair restorcr and j pm ONTO. Strident- can enter from Oetolnr PROF. SMITH. 5..“ MIL, ___p ‘ any dollars. ssanus imu AID WIATIOI. Provide tor familie- ineue “WPAUI. Sac-«I7 Kasai. West. Anna wanted. ‘, l.’ Liliana, or enduring from in ‘ty of '~ blood. or weal: lungsand tear «$31.6» (screfulous disase of the In l'ierce'a “ Golden Medical Dismvely" and it ; will cure you. ‘C l Smith « (Successors to t 7" Corner Yonge 85 W if n r TO THE TRADE : Watchmakars and Jewelers. Drugoists, Hardware Merchants, W111 find our stock of HDLIDAY In all Departments we have S ENTS. Note the folluwmg :~ WATCHES AND escortsâ€"rim. Ga, “'atchcs, Fancy “'ood, Gilt ‘ JEWELRY DB PARTMBNT.â€"â€"Diamon ‘ v and Vest Challis, Diamond Ri BLECTRO PLATE.â€"~Tab!e \V , inclu FANCY GO0D3.â€"Curd Cases, Op and Cases. i CABINLT GOODS.â€"-Wood and Leather Work Boxes, Stationery Cabinets, Best London Goods. AL GOODSâ€"Violins, Accordeons Musical Albums. MUJIC Orders by Mail or Wire Promptiy Executed. Catalogues on Application. SMITH Frunemn. , , Ohrlstmas Goods 1 J05. ROGERS & SONS, GEO. WOSTENHOLM s. SONS. LOCKWOOD IlROS'. PEN . POCKET & TABLE CUTLERY, Ladics' Cutlery Sets, Razors and Scissors in Cases. ACME AND BARRY 8c BERRY HOLLY & DEMAS‘ SCROLL SAW AND LATHE, SAWS, BOOK OF T‘A'l‘. TE lNS, DRILIS, ETC. ROE LEWIS & son, Hardware and Iron CANADA’S GREAT" SKA-rm: “ The Climax.” 5x. “i”.- -, ijcou . my “menu: ' Manpfurturcd by Tim llnwimnr Gun and .‘llnnnicturllig (‘nlupnuy (Limited). and \\ urchmnc. st hinge sin-rt. Factory. Yonac stem Court. Thousands Selling. Particu- lgrs find irllllsll rnlcdvcirculur on npplicnllon. The owl boa bzcomc an orimnmnt to socic~ ty. and tho vullurc nmv bid his time. Keep it in your family. The bc lt remedy for a cidcnts nnl emergencies, for Burns, Scolds, Bruises, Sorcncss, Soro 'I'hroat, Croup, Rhcunmtism, Cliilbhlius, and Pain or Sorcncss of all kinds, is that marvellous healing rcmcdy, llagyord’s Yellow Oil. 19. The saw 111111 at Culgurry has shut down for Want of logs. A Sure Thing 1 In the lrcatmcnt of Chronic discos: with that great system renm'ulor and restorative. ) Burdock Blood Bitters, there is no uncon‘ minty as t“) its action, its curative lowers l uro speedily manifest by its morkcd cll'rct upon the Liver, tho Bmvclsund the Kidneys. Every dose performing its work in u per-l ccptiblomonncr. ‘24. A.1’. 104 Végetifié Purifies the Blood, Renovates and Invigoratcs the whole system. l'l‘s MEDICINAL I'llOl'liIt'l‘iPJ! ARE - lltarahve, Tonic, Solvent 36 Diuretic: ‘ l \‘cgctino is made exclusively from the juices of carefully selected harks. roots and norbsumd so strongly concentrated that it will clfcctunlly orndicuto from the system ivory taint of Scro- luln. Scrolulous llumors, Tumors. (.‘unccr. Culi- ccrous Humor, Erysipcliui Soult1ihcum,Syphl- litic Diseases. Cunkcr, Fa ntncss nt tho Stom- ncb,iind all diseases that urine from impure blood. Sclnllcn, Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism. .‘ourulgiu. (iont and Spinal Com- plaints. run only be ctl'cctuslly «:urcd through the blood. For Ulcers nnd liru )livc Discourse! the Skin, Pustulcs, l’imnics. ilolchcs. liolls. 'l'cttcr. Scnldhend and Ringworm,Vms'l‘iNl-z has never failed to effect u permanent cure. ' For l’nlus in the Buck. Kidney Compliilnts. llropsy. Female \l'eukncss,mucorrhumnnslng from intcrnnl ulceration. and uterine distances and General llcblllty. chctlno nets directly upon the causes of these complaints. it In- vlgornics and strengthens the wholes 'slem. acts upon the SCCI'CLIVO organs, ulluys nfluin- motion, culcs ulceration and regulates the bowels. For Cnlnrrh. 11's )cpsin, llnmiunl (Tosllvc- noes, i’nipitullon o t in ilcurt. iluulnnhc, l’llcs, Nervousncss. and General l'roslrnlion of the Nervous System. no medicine llflll cvcr given such perfch satisfaction as t be \‘e ctlno. it purifies the blood, cleanses all of l in organs and possesses ll. controlling power over the nervous system. The remarkable cures effected by \‘cgclilic huvo induced mun) physicians ilnllopotbccurles whom we know. to prwcribc and use it in their own faiiillirs. In incl, Voccllnc is the best remedy 't-tdls- covered for the above diseases. and is t )0 only rclgfble Illood l'urillcr yr! pinccd before the pu lt'. Vegetine Prepared by H. R. STEVENS. Toronto, Ont. Vegatine is Sold by All Dragging.~ ‘ ANTED PARTIES ()WNINU A I'Oii'l‘ ' Alibi: How Mill talcndcr for snwin the umber off 200 norm of bush innd. For part culurs address, AU'I'IIUIIS I; COX. .\lunu more of Ariillniul Limbs. 9i Church strccl. Tor- 1IOSE \I'ISIIINO TO DISI’OSH 01" 0". purchase a business of any description in t s city or elsewhere should call or send parli- culnrs to C. J. PALIN. (if and 5." King-street East. fluslnt'ss Agent and \‘uluor. WNHLS of" PAH.“ LANDS. CITY AND Town I’ropirtlos. desiring to realise. will find purchasers oysendlnjr me ulldencripllnns. lowest trim-s. on terms of payment. .1. W. (i. WHITNEY. 155th Agent, 1) Toronto strcct, Toronto. mu g_ a ‘ “moms”: CASKET AND UNDER- for sale ; stock about 2,511 ; premises and plant. 32,01); convenient terms. or would take winner wlth not less than 82.”. )I ACKIN'I‘ oil at I'l-S'I‘I‘Jllfi. Toronto. XCUIL‘KION STEAMI-th FOR BALI-3 ~ 1 lsst-runnlngâ€"bullt last year in theatres: out manner for the to heat water ; 62 feet long. It) feet 5 inches bum. feet 3 inches hold : low pressure engine 23 h. 9.. 23 inch cylinder and a set stroke- lcsiharin padding - on! on fuel; burns wood or coal. MCKIh‘I‘OSI it i's'r- Itllfl, Toron_lo. “glitz”. TELEI’IIONECO. pyrtiANADA . r upmchued patentao c enhance: wnlah can be rented at reduced rates for prime line WW. panic: lie-Mn: to obtain Pmiilvel ulna will be furnished on an Mention to the Company atlla Head Office. iontrcal, to, or Manager :ll Telephone ($0.. Hamilton. IIOICE rim-m ACRES-Ii osmium -- -'---~~ ~-~ -~â€"“â€""~' ~*'~-w "m‘ "m ; a: more coan be ready for [p crop no I gut-gt flag. stigma: gratis; . :nmped‘: clay totem: Melancz‘mru vol: «a l . new priceth .0. \ OOUI.A.\li ; mwég “my” ,3 “Mm , um"! um,- caiila and grain (arm in the district; school. stare. poet oniee about one mile; immediate :alwzlzscrea-I'Ileleued lam house with catholic cesium-:3 {William barn with Ian and above built mm. situated on lake weedbush. Thetwoparodawlll too-rpm» mm only. Ben! ud my Sets, Epergnes. Fruit Stands, Der. sert Sets, Toilet Sets and Faailcy'; 31'“ Albums, in l l‘ ‘ Richly Embossed Covers, Meerseh‘ilm ma mey‘jifxfimw Up" l r piece of nbrrtflumsll- in q-uch uumlmr. n. “a, Toronto. TAXI-Sits yup nly business and premises music Ionn. l or U) B." of Ontario Department ger, to B. Wilkes.) lay Bouts Dealers. Tobacconists.’ nil Sunken era and (liners. BS Immune intha Dominion. ALTIES Filll XMASPRES- - 'atches, Ladies‘ and G arbie Clocks. cat‘s whim Neck Chains, Gum. 8. ht Album. ilot Sets Vases; Desks. Jewel Cases, Secretaries, ' Concertina, Harmonicas, musical. Boxes, _~â€"â€"_h___ 'S SKATES, & EXTRA PARTS, MGI‘chants, Toronto. Ollch Ol;nnd young should use “ 'l‘issnslmv, Thp your laugh may be quite merry l Figrant breath shall pass your lips, All. your Teeth shrill pearls eclipse. BI: 'Urâ€"Your system for w. rk. i'ESA, be new Dyspc sin and LivL-rri-imnly Aloud strictly to )llhllll"H in correcting the Hnnmcb, Liver, and Kidneys. Sumplo bottle, 10 cents ; lnrgc bottles, 7.") ccntw. , i riprrnlutnrs' Blur! En El 8 Ad luldo El. Host, 'l'o ronto. \11 kinds of rcnlcstute sold or l-xchnnxcd on connilsslon. Munoy leaned on ull kllldd of tool came at lowest rates of interest. Applh-n- ilons {o'moncy from farmers uspoclnlty. lrnla collccia'l and estates inunugcil in town or coun- try. NILâ€"Best of references on application. "‘IN. ASHAqu \VA'I‘CIIMAKEII. AND. Jeweler, 262 Ynnizo BL, l‘olonto. bus on- lnrgrdhls proxnlscs.nnd grimin inert-mod his stock 11' gold and silver JiiWL-lry. plated wuro. cutlery. cloaks. ivatolles, etc. Flue «took of Jet and garnet jewelry. Hoods imported direct. lu'vory kind or Jewelry ropsircl pr-nnpllymoot- ly. and cheaply. CHRISTMAS s NEW YEAR’S clans In assorted lots, spatially solo-ch ', for 2.50, 50c, 750, $1 and upwards. I’ll-l: by ms'l on ‘ receipt of pricc. The Newest ntvlcu In lllrilulm- t'nrda. SBLBY 85 00-, Booksellers 5: Shitlmicrs, fill Y Not I‘nll lo sand I‘ll’tyrcull Now for the Inillm IIIHII'IMII.’| lul pnui- mumth Illulimll mm-r. containing the sum and sub- stance of all the latest Amvrlcun high priced fashion magi-sues. bur c full page lllunlrutium of all ihcncwcsl My cs. useful must-fluid Imus. short slorlcii, poetry, miscellnnvmm he vellum. uml lots of other ntcrcullnu nmttcr. also our full sluil piece ofahect ninsle In rut-Ii numhrr. nlwo sthclatest and most populnr lhlimuul. (ict' 'wo of 'our friends to subscer and solid thulr subsc_ pllons and your own (01 win "IL, and I'll mull you postim «I lit once an lZIrxnnl silver I'lnlri liultcr Knife or “ride Fork 'wlth ivory lmndlu. Don't lorch in tcllyuur friends [but the Imdlcs' Journal conlnlnn M:- sidc-i the Iushlon Illustrations Ac.. a lull 1.12.}: .,, RANK “ "80!. 33 4' il'iAllt‘IhItlr-FI.. “ MI I i ‘3 TH E. SILVER LIME, Wait Till the Clouds Roll By. Partly Little Thith ILuve ion. The latest I m is :0 ulsr‘soggs in full also short on on y H: CHI ls urn; ; I ', l r the three for ten cents. I x 1 n ’ S. FRAN K WILSON I’l.’flI.I'SIIKIS 33 85 35 Adelaide street West 15”“ finalsflifllci - ,5. x5 5"; v scion; um - a entrBRAm&le'-ODD.MHLW ' cum Nervcuweuin all its aufm. “out ) emery. loss of Brain Powavr ll slit Writ“ We“ we. 12““ a It I" . ENC“. ‘5 I“ juvmiu the laden mulled. swamhm'lfb Knieehled Brain and rratum our in tuna and vigor to the Exhausted Gena-aim: (Egan v In either an. anâ€" u no each order for Twelve mirage; mmpaniod with nu doll we will said our written mice in r. t the ram “thatle does not-enact scum ‘. ltlst e (“paused But Null-Noe la must. Pamphlet seat has by mail to any We Iodiduld‘aaid d - liataatwania box. womtgfla crumbs trees! as neat stock's ’ s 0'.”

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