w“. DllMOllDS AND RUBIE§. .. 4.?» w .._‘ CHAPTER III. There was a very curious atmosphere in the house the nutfew dlyli'EvenGecrge became sensible of it. ' . " " What is the matt‘érT‘he‘isked his brother. " You and Cordelia look as if you had been at a funeral." -~ The ï¬rst time he put the question 1/de Hestherhloom made no reply ; but, when he was pressed for an answer, he said quietlyâ€"~ " There is something the matter, George; I may be obliged to tell you what it is in a few days. But'don’t "ask moanymorenow.“. . 2 ,. . « 'Iheie secmd to be ,no; science among'the ~servsuts urine of them left ', the houuhulti wentop just as usual.‘ Millrw-ssflw only person‘rhb showed any signs of distress : but then ' her knowledge,“ » the luswas sufficient ' to account for that." ‘Loi'd'fleatherbloom could not bring himself to believe she had anything to do with the theft; she hadbeen a valued servant‘ in the flea! therbloom family long before she was Indy Heatherbloom's own maid Her fatnzfy had been on the Heatherlsnd es; tate for generations. This wps the ease with all the ser Iauta in the house, croopt some of the younger onch Mrs. Riddell, the housekeeper. and Grant. then-11hr.- Lord Beathsrbloomâ€"Jf the thing ietoo had both been in the household between, thirty and forty years. ‘ †" ‘ " After some days of waitin andanx- ‘ -' I‘naée nsvér told you that ‘Mrs.‘RfddelI mirrorwhsee Flcsshed been trying their: on, “Q? the dressing 31bit.- was some very pretty jewélry, Evident y new. ' " m ‘,‘ Do ypu think," said Lady Heather- bloosn, altars moment's Laure, " that Floss can do this sort of thing out of her disgrace? l‘uked Delve :p-dcyt; Floss has not run i'ntodell‘t."'« \ ,5,‘ “Karen: of‘het' allowancé, pz'rhaps,†returned Lord Heatherbloom uneasily - Wmhml-We often auri mantel that. Foss never seemed to like siting merry; are l hsv It vr-miJimL-s left a ten pound note @fliifï¬iu‘g‘m‘bfe in hersitting mount" . - a “ A’wn pound note 2 iii-aid I‘dy'iflea- Puttboahove in a pan over a moderate ; time. flierle scornfully- t "H in hiive l lire. " you lefutheye 1mm "; “ “’No'ne, for ejé'ineislg‘able time,†cou- fesaed Lord Heatherbloom. - "‘ Shé cannot give less than Isixty unds r ,er re tw t ' tte germinal Led? sasheibloiiimg‘ian’ you can. tell, as Well as l, the value of that jewelry,_which is all quite new, and which] kno‘w' George has'not given'ï¬et'." Hon doirou know": .. . “I asked him. II»: has never given her anything but wher engagement wring. The fact is, Floss's head is turned; , I dare sayI was to blame. She was unac- customed to, all these things when she came here :‘she wanted to have them for her own.†, ‘ , “ Don't theirs-ice about it,†exclaimed c..--.._.. awful. X ,We must have,nothiniz but facts. saw Floss have the house that night the ions hosit'ation, Lord' Heather lootii call- dismay-emsweï¬pr v. ed inthe services alone of the best Lon; don detectives. This man went to work very carefully ; he considered that Lord Heatherblooni had done well to keep the thing so quiet He spent} day oc'two making acquaintance with the men in the stables, who frequented a cutain public houle behind -the'ml_mioo. 3i; gouty know the fooiman and the bu on, but despite an immense' patience, be con o learn nothing. At last. he came to Lord Heatherbloom: ;'._‘ - I ,‘ r, 3 fl ' . ,"f Therein nothitigmore to lie drmn id - o i this way,‘ he said. “ You had Lmt: 51f- nounoe the loss, and have all the av! v ants searched and questioned.'? . The next day was one‘ long to be re- membered by the whole household.“ The" police came in and searched the servants' rooms and boxes, whileonenfter another was questioned and cross-questioned, by the detective and his chief. Lord Hen; therbloom stayed for some time with them ; but there was such a total absence ‘ of anything like a‘ clue that he felt faint, knowing that crushed rose to be in his pocket book, and went Naway to his study. f Hers. lite 'in the afternoon, came “the detective, and with him Mrs. Riddell. , “ My lord," said the oflicer, “ this we- man knows something; but 1 cannot get it from her. She says she will tell no one but your lordship." . . “ Leave us alone then,†commanded Lord Heatherbloom to the officer. \Vhen he was gone, he turned to the housekeeper. “New, Mrs. Riddell,†-_he said, “tell me what you know ; keep nothing back, I beseech you, for this â€"- is a very sci’lous affair l" “ I know it, my lord. and I made-up my mind this morning I would tell this ', to you, but to no one else, my lord, un- less you wish it. That is for you to (lo- eldeâ€"the incident puzzled me very mucliat the time ; but i never thought it could be of any importance until now.!',' †‘r r “ ,~ ~“ Tell me what it is,- ’dddell," com- manded Lord Heatherhloom ; “ don’t keep me waiting." ' “ The night on ' which those jewels must have been stolen, your lordship and ‘ ray Ldy and Miss Floss were home before three. The ca'rrisge'woke' me as it drove to the door, and I looked at my watch. I could not go to sleep again ; l'm get» ting an old woman now, my lord, and sometimes I can't, when I'm wakened in the night, and when I lie awakel can't help getting ' nervous. Often Listich hear some one about the house, and get u to wake the men servantsi It was so tst night: a little after four I started up, certain I heard a step or a sound in the corridor below. Of course, there's your . lordship's rooms there, and my I lady's and ML- s Floss's; and yourlordship, , 'I know, does move aboutlato sometimes. ' But, 'kuowliig the valuable things there are in the house, I can't help getting up _ to seq th’is about. when I. am roused: I did that night. I I crept out of my room and leaned over the balusters, Soon there was another sound, and a moment later 1-saw Miss Floss come out of her lsdyship's dressing room door. It was daybreak, and I could quite distinctly see her, wrapped in her long gray silk cloak, with the hood'drawn‘right down over her face. She went softly down stairsandlet herself out. at tho front door.†, ; ~ Lord dleethbrbltloimdcsned back in n 'his chair and ‘passed his hand over his face ' †Any more, Riddell l" he said after a moment. “I went back to my room and looked out of the window. I could just catch a glimpse of her, but- she kept very close to the wall. I am almost certain there was a man waiting to meet her at the corner of Park Lane ; certainly he had been standing there before, and he disappeared when she did. I saw nothing more, my lord ; but I did not sleepagain. A little after five I heard a slight sound on the " But how could she get in again 5‘" “ There's a latch key, my lord, alwayr in the drawer in the hall; she could undo all the other fastenings and take this key with her. She must have chained and bolted the door again when she came “1.. There was silence for a few minutes. Then Lord Hostherbloom spoke. ‘ “ i am very grateful to you, Riddcll. for telling this only to me," he said. “ Never breathe a word of it. to soy other living soul. And now will you go and send the police otlicers to me i" She did so. The men came, hoping to be put on a new scent. To their amaze- ment, they heard that the sï¬alr wss not to be investigated any further. Theywerc rewarded for what. they had done, and . told to lot the matter Cr vp. I Bu: the excitement in the household had made the matter. to a certain extent, public. The newspapers were full of the mysteriOua disappearance of Lady Hea- therhloom's diamonds. But, as absolute- ly nothing was discovered about Aer) lose, by degrees the jurors» in the story died any. . One day Lady IIeathsrbloom sent for her husband. He found her in the drawing room, walking reetlesaly up and down. “ Floss is out," she said abruptly: “she has gone shopping somewhere with Mills. 1 want you to come with me to hardnes- ln- room." Lord Beethcrhlooen said nothing, but followed his wife. He dreaded knowing mammals; _ Timur. morn- ing. The dressing room was left just as it badbseu at her departure. Chairs, couch, all were muted with lovely duesfsbria; two beautiful tuilstteswsre lying near the I‘ll" Mid ' (100? “in†"My 50m)“: {wanted me to look more worthy of ...'~.‘ ‘ -htL~IE&YB- thehousa}:'...crisd .. Lady Heather-bloom. "What do you mean '3" ‘ C I _ V r ‘_ ' “ Ridden? was .wskéful that night : vo'u we Vere all home byitllreit. ’ well, Riddell saw hloss go out of the house about four, wrap ed in her long gray clopk. .with the hooddmwu owed her face. AndiBiddellssys Labs came tout of: your dressing room." Lady Heatherbloom 1Sui-med very pale, and Est-ed agaitattthe ,p r obtrusi ( et stifenigt‘i were‘fhiliifg 2 “.1 r“, “ Then that was why you stopped the inquiry and sent the police away .1" she said Fin a hoarse voicefvery unlike lien usual iioftto'nhs. ‘3‘ ' ‘_ r" 1 ‘l‘ ‘{ ‘ ' “Yes: {hat’was 'why‘,“ he answered gloomily. Then he added rousing himself -- “ But now we must do something. I did not tneauto let it go on muchtIOnger‘; only [was ‘w’niting, for more evidence! ‘1 shall speak to her to-day. She must not remain in this fancied security. Of course. the thing must befâ€"hushed up en- tirely ; unless she confesses and helpsv'us to recover the diamonds, we must. let them go._ But, in any case, George's en- gagement must. be troken off.†“ George said to me last night.†said Lady Heather-bloom, still in the same hoarse voice, “ that he could not believe any livmg woman was half so good or half so lovely as Floss." “ Poor George," murmured the Earl “ poor George 2 But it must be. Here she is ! Cordelia, don't go away. The girl makes me a. coward-my 01d faith in her mchs mvehafraidfli’ h , mm __ Ԡlilo-as was running lip-stairs to her room singing softly as 'she came. She we're a pretty,-. lighticolored walling dress; and as she came to Life door and took off her show but she looked the sweetest, most innocent: young creature imaginable. A glance at LidyflIe'at‘lié‘l'blooin's†'pé’le facé silenced the song on her lips ; when she saw the Earl standing within die: room 'the faint color lib.th bit-arenas had brough ti) her fnco‘fitd'ed from it. 2 Tnere was a painful silence. Lady Hen.- therbloom regarded Floss with a. strange cold look ; Lord Heather-bloom too look- ed her earnestly fur a moment ; then he turned his eyes away ; her sweet beauty distressed him. I c . “ Floss," he‘shi‘d,‘ "I want to speak to you †~- “ What is it ‘2 " cried the girl. “ What is the matter? the ! " _ She came into the room and laid her hat upon the table, aud-unfastened a little kerchief which was loosely tied about her throat, but which seemed to her to pre- vent her breathing. For a moment it seemed to Lord Ilea- therbloom that he could not speak to her now that she was before him ; but, as he expected, his wife’s presence kept him to the point. He determined he would not be made foolish by the beauty of this fair girl,.tliough, in his heart, he would have inked to go blindly on, cheating himself into a belief in her iniiocencs’; but he'knew that, for his brother's sake, thlscoward- I09 \viisimpossiblo.†" ' ' ' " “ Tell me, Floss,†he said,- “110th it you are able to have so many pretty Uh, do “tell things ?" r v Floss followed the gesture of his, hand and looked round the roo’m.‘ 'She colored solittlo.‘ hesitatedrand "looked from him toLady Heatherbloom. . .v "‘ Tell mb,"lie ‘c'ontinusd, ‘h‘is‘manner suddenly becoming more sternâ€"â€"" I mlut know 3 You have spent a great deal of money lately ; I have a good reason for asking you where it has come from." edFloss flushed crimson, and stammer- “ Iâ€"~l supposeâ€"from you 3†t Lady Ileatheibloom turned away from her impatiently. . “ Front me 'l" he exclaimed angrily. “Tour allowance would not cover this kind of expenditure." “-_1 know that l" rcturncd Floss eager- ly. Z " But i thoughtâ€"l thought you Gmrge ; I suppose you did not. want peo- ple to think he was mariying a poor girl ; and l tried to please you â€"†. ‘.‘ Tricd'tn please me l"- Cried the Earl.» “ \Vhat does this moan] C(Hlllti >ou cx‘ plain yours'olfl I ask you aherc lot; the money come from .' ’ â€" - t Flossli‘okod again from him in La'y Hoathriblmm ; then she saidâ€"c “l don't know." - “ Don't knth 'icpcatedLord Heathen bloom “Floss, try to make a better tale than this I" “ I cannon." she said plteously. Lord IIcatherlilooui looked a: her with an expression such as she had never seen on his IKIIHII)‘ into before such as puns} a "0 mi»: hail ever ft on ill-arc. (T0 in: \‘USTINl‘l‘Jl ) _.-._ .ac-.â€".oo-â€"-â€" r - Suicide or a Connecticut (“an A few days ago at Norwich, Conn.. lady died, and her pet cat has since committee solute l-y ruining itself to death. it had be: u grca‘ly attachrd to its ntls'rcss, and after her duth reunion! ab- u: the room in which the b aiy lay until the funnrsl After that it retired to a lLfty beam in a shed and neither moved from that'p- sitiou nor'took fudd. After i: had bee “no feeble the family moved the ani- mal into the housS, but it declined food. uid as soon as it was given its liberty ro- tired wiupemh on thebsam, where it ..__.....- ... ‘ “n _. Timely Suggestions. ‘ The bones that accumulate every yeari on the farm after the fall bupeheri'igi shouldlbo car-«folly saved. An easy way for fa: more tn reduce themis urputth the phosphate. Governincnt follows : of bhyberry thilow, two pounds harnessvdrc using is as two quarts of Castor oil, then while on the tire our in one ounce of lamp-black Mix well and strain through a ï¬ne cloth to remove sediment ; let cool and you have ., as line a dressing for harness or leather any kind as can be had. , Where the watering place is far from he stab: cattle will often sufl'ei." from .hirst “in cold: weather1 rather than go thropgh the cold blasts to get it. 'The' Extremecold of the water chills them so 'th‘at they will not‘drink is: much as they should. The best way to Water cows is from a oistern holding the rain-water that falls on a barn. In a basement the cistern can -eesily- be protected from freezing. If made outside the barn the cisterii should be deep in the ground and bankcdrwitlr earth. In this case the water must be pumped out. In a base- ment, cistern water must be drawn with afaucet, and just. enough left running to supply the demands of the stock. Ths-doors.for.pigzpsnsshonld be swung on stout hinges from the top, so they will close as the pigs go in and out. The door should always. swing itself shut. H'héaplhce above the trough should be occupied by a close ï¬tting gate swinging hinges from above;; so a}; tab pwing ove‘rl uh trough w'htle t_ o swi is: 8 ng puns; of at ,‘oaiaiflién .b _ securely fastened. his arrangement,“ besides its convenience, will save its cost ' a very short time in the swill that ‘17 old othef'gvlse be spilled". over the pig's ‘hhad’ . ' ’ ' . Horses should be bedded with chaff or finely cut straw: _ This will absorb the liquid dr ppin'gs better'tha‘n uncut straw will. ' "lghe inauure' in this fine condition will ferment very rapidly,and with a very little heating will, be .ready to spread evenly on the land. I If ‘horses are bedded with'coarsé straw' uthe fermentation will be uneven. Some parts of the heap will be dried ,up and f‘fii'e-fanged,†while the centre straw is notingoodt condition for spredding. « ~ ~ .'~ -’ . J '- .v Sheep are selling in some places in the west fr-v: 50 cents per hand. Now is a: good nine to go into sheep husbandry. These depressions In prices of sheep and wool never last long. “’001 is an article always In demand, and our country has never yet produced sufficient supply for our own use. ' ‘ Cutting down the llayuiow. The usual purpose, says the Tribune and Farmer in cutting down a haymow in winter ism make the- work of pitching the hay. off easier than when the whole mow is bound together, but there should be-an object further than this, and that obj act to prevent having the poorest hay for spring feeding. , n .As soon as grass starts in April domestic animals lose appetite for dry feed, and it is at this season that they shoiild have the, best , fodder. \Vorklng horses andmilch cows especially should have at that time the best dry feed that the farm has produced. .. It is a good plan to cut down the mow, so that the bottom of the same will be reached in mid-winter ; this, if old, and has lost a portion of its nutrition, should be thoroughly mixed with the bright hay “the top of the mow, and flavored by sprinkling with the salt water and ‘corn- meal. This we have done with good results. In writing this, the assumption is that there has been, your after year, a ccatin'g of a. few tons, more or less, left lying in the bed of the mow, for it is very seldom that the demands of stock and the supply of fodder comes out evenly, and now and then the farmer will be exoght with the poorest hay of his entire storage left for spring feeding. ' “‘ ' 4 When the foundation of the hay is well up from the ground, and has a coating of clean straw, the bottom of this maybe as good as any part of it, but it is seldom and fortwo reasons. First, the grass put in early is more succulent than that out later, and is more likely to heat and mold ; and,- second, the damp winds awpeptug,.,be‘neath Mia, ~barnhdurimz the wet season will detract more or le's‘s‘fr'om the nutrimcnt of the hay. Of course, all these things can be averted, but they are not always done ; thuefore the sugges- tion to cu: the mow. , . _ After the base of the firsbfed part is' reached it should be prepared for receiv- ing hsy from the remaining part. thor- oughly cleaned out and covered with straw. We would not suggest throwing down the top of the mow into this place, for probably the last hay put in was not as good as that cut. a week previous. The farmer can tell when he comes to an extra vein. and that should be the fodder preserved for spring use. a It is the habit of some to deposit a ion or two upon the scaffold over the stable for late feeding, but we do not believe the plan commendable, for the gases arising from the stable will contaminate, to a greater or less extent, the fodder abm'i'. If feed is stored'on the scaffold- ing it should . be fed first, that it may i 0.10%}:0 the stable gases and odors. It is no: a bad plan to deposit the poorest. hay .made in this place and use it in cold weather by cutting and sprinkling with l corn and oatmeal. l l l .i Full Price for Grain. i A corrnspmnzlont gives the Dairy and l l’urm Jounuil the following valuable _ auugcailhus; We wish to give some ‘3 gem-rel information to the farmers of the great northwett in regard to the wheat '(l’up and limv to dispose of tlcir cheap Wilt-3'. We know and believe it will be lwc-rth ii;i;‘.ions to the country where thr-m is In" lc-s than twenty nixllions ‘rcje‘czed wheat to bodisposcd of. I: Will have a midsiuy to add 20 per cent value :to their letter grades of wheat. . In the yes! of 18113 we bought wheat in ‘ )Icl‘iwin county, Illinois, at 95 cents per bu-lu-l. and fed i: to our hot-s. ground land steamed, or. rather ground and put I Une gallon of neatafoot oil,twoi ,ï¬nd they will have to sell rejected and ' Xe 3 wheat for less thsn‘x'io to 80;cents _ cl}! twdveycus experience in finding above. the stowand-spreadtheir ashes. This l and in lamegugagltiï¬fwmï¬umï¬â€˜ihvfl ' loses the ammonia, but it a: ' least saves; rice or .3; huhdnd hcsgwgaher ‘5': ope lumc.) we never had a caseof cbobm . l were buying in. ftom our neighbors and ‘ Qf beam“: “70 P’J‘md‘ 0‘ beef “310'- ! mixing the same . with our hogs all the When thoroughly dissolved add! that we ï¬nd ‘an averag i qualitythore, l f l t into rats and poured boiling water over" iwhile warm, and by actual test laixteen . we realms Beenta per ‘for‘them.’ was“ tlsth‘e best llech-l Hr, usingit thanert day before soaring, pn ducod . ands of.pork for every busheli .. . . . fed. an in“ k nun“ m 128 can“ per,{ing i. so as to have it Justlcvel with the ; “mid. Diwemary Mcdiml Agw‘jauou, bushel; aeitwua year of high pricedl and, live weight, lnraovansttr Cumâ€"One cupfulnf producing food for huge yet known? sugar, butter the sins of an egg, one cup .4 walk «as “us- calico. Now it transpires that there isn't a s-.. 0...?- ' livery bushil of No. 8 and rejected wheat as good for feeding cattle. fraction of phosphorous in ï¬sh. People ‘ 003,000 out of this great crop of wheat is’ in stud: of brain food will have to chew friction matches. . properly fed to h s, wheat will i from 10 to 2‘0:csut°sgper bushel, and‘owliï¬l .14.“. Muwy’ï¬u‘mflmnfnénn misc.“ "Net" t "'" " i the above directions. and minis it exiuallyi “ Not at all. ‘ “I. up how. if 20,-is man ever lay on. ‘ane alkaloid, the (liciiic, a compound anywhere in tEe‘groat northweszf- ‘ We also believe the above wi- of ‘feed- ing a‘sur‘e preventive of cholm,fhe:her you feed warn: warm sitar beuizvcooked or any ozher kind of grain-4!, thinusb among our hogs, while there was. plenty of chulem raging all around us, and we The Deadlyfl‘ea. WY. Mattieu Williams, in a series of articles cu food and cookery’iu Knoiclrdge has ï¬nally came.t0‘tea,'.'and' there he hit: allioiviLfnsdgpeo lo in a tender spot. , In trhth,‘tho scion me view ~of what‘ ought‘ to be easempndfhowlt should be prepar- ed, is so at variance with what we do eat, and the manner of ‘its preparation, that one is led to marvel that there is a sound digestion or an unimpaired stomach, 'in all civilization. » As a matter of‘fact,'in view of the startling revelations as to the deadly character of our customary foods, it'is'to be wondered at that we are noran extinct race. According to Mr. Williams of all the life-shortening, brain-destroy†ing articles which man is using, tea is one of the most dangerous, destructive and deadly, This is the infusion. which Cib ber apostrophizes in fervent words : “ Tea, thou- soft, thou sage, thou sober and venerable liquid ; thou female tongue-running, smile-smoothing, .h'eart- opening, wink-tipping cordial, to whose glorious. inspidity I owe the happiest moment of mylife, let me fall prostrate,†Nor is Cibber the only writer who has invoked panegyric to aid in expressing admiration of this “ cup which.cheers,but_ giving back an.) , not inebriateb ;" literature is interspersed with lsudatiohs of the bowl" over which fair women gossip, whose gexlstence isvfar greater than the area of civilization, whose inspiration cheers the souls of the millions of China, and carries. warmth through all portions of the frozen steppes of Siberia and Russia. ' The active principle of tea is, a “ crys- belonging to the same class as strychnine, and a number of similar vegetable poisons†This is the chiiracter of thedrink which is served at least once a day, on every table in civilizstion. That which delicate women by the million sip is a deadly alkaloid, of the same class as strychuinc, a drug so deadly that the mere mention 'of’its name sends-a-shudder through :the listener aswould the sudden appearance of some hideous reptile. _ The “ essential action of tea is to‘ waste "the system, or consume food by promoting vital action which it does not; support," and worse than this is the fact ‘tliai, White arsenic, a deadly 'poison, will=produce the some effect on the human system as ten ; that is, it}, like tea, checks the waste (if-tissue,- and has the effect to make †food appear to go further." The uritcr takes up the matter of toavstimulaticn, and shows that it acts the samo‘as'tobii'cco, the betel-nut, hashecsh in certain quentiries,nnd various other producers of cxsltation, all of which Mr. \Villlams lumps together under the head of “vice-drugs.†..._.__.â€"â€". s._.-. An 1' iidcrtnkcr's Terror. On Saturday night about 8 o‘clock the corpse of a young woman wrapped only in a sheet was found lying in the middle of the road at Seventeenth and Morgan streets, St. Louis. The. only clue ,to identity was a scrap of paper with the we" " ‘ Dalton " written upon it. T12, ted tlo grcatsest curiosity. ’On %ur{£§3 fulferiioon Dr.‘ Bauer, of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. called at the Coroner’s oflico and .cxplaincd that the body was tliat'of Mary Dalton, who had died at the Female Hospital, and had been assigned to his college by the city authorities. It had been soci- dentally dropped out of tlio uudertakcr's wagon.while on its way to the college. The driver of the wagon, when he found his load had disappeared, was tut) fright- oned to look for it. The body was de- livered to the college authorities. ' â€".o-â€" Valor of the Ainci'icaiis. “ There were three battles of the late war, all of them greater than the battle of VVa'tcrloo,-â€"~Shiloh, Stone river and Chi- camauga. Each of them were more stubbornly contested and the losscs on well side considerably greater than at \Vatorloon Shiloh I~regard in many re- spects the greatest battle of the world. It was practically the crowning glory of Americanuvalor. Here- were “two .great armies of raw troops who met in the shock of battleland never ’"fllnched. It v'vas the most‘ stubbornly' contest‘ed battle in modern times. “ Once when Sir Garnet Wolseley, the present commander of the English army, asked me at a dinner party at Montreal if' the south could not have held out longer, I replied, ‘ As a mere matter of physical endurance, yes ; but do you know, air, that in the four years of war . through which we passed, the south alone, with its few millions of people, lost more men in battle than England did in all its wars from William the Conqueror to Queen Victoria.’ I spoke with some feeling, and it ended in a discussion as to the reason why the south 'did not con- tinue to fight." N10»«.â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" What Makes Complexion. A pigment under the epidermis makes the complexion. The colored person has a black pigment, the brunette a light brown pigment, and the blonde a still lighter pigment. Win-n there is no pig- ment in the skin an Albino is thn result, with pink eyes, white hair and white skin. Wlienthcre is niii-xccss of pig- ment freckles, molcs and birth marks appear. Freckles are no: alone due to the action of the sun. Some people have them in abundance on parts i f the bud? not exposed to the sun. Trio hair are hollow tubcs, and have asupply of pig- mcnt sent into them which duzcrmiiics the color of tho hair. The pigment CUch from the blood. White hlir may to from absence of pigment or from the T‘f a presence of air in the tubes. r_._ m-“oâ€" a..._... . . L’s Kim BE.\N$.-NL rwicli.â€"â€"â€"'l‘ lkf.‘ small: ,l dies The Crown Prince of Russia. le‘Ind-t'luke Nicholaafwas born May 13', 1368, a: Ca n..th Selo'fCair’s village), an imperild summer pm‘incc. liftecn m lea South'of’St. Petersbutg. This spactbs palace ezsuds upon ul-eENsvai back, «We! even a'ciul lea‘ upon the lawns. , , . Crown piiiccs have so much to learn that the} must begin curly atd,,loseno time: Until his ninth ye the education tended by Madame do Fiotow. one of the a ‘ )ul “honor‘who _ d~iuilowed the rinccss Dagmal' froui'Dtiimark to Rus- sia. - In 1877' discharge was girth to Lieuiutuntchncral Danilovitcli, wh) has arrangcdthe Prince's-hours of instruction in accordance, with those, 9f thejmiliairy gymn'nsiuhis. His re villai-les'sons'a're from eight in' the trim" nguiill three in tile afternoon, but with ,such interninsions that theynever exceed five hours a day. His afternoons are spent in walks with the Emperor, or in oiitdoor S,l0l‘l5,-â€" riding,-swimming, fishing, fencing, gym: orationâ€"cf all of which he is Very fond; and his evenings are ducted to preparing for next day's lessons, reading, and ke p- ing a diary._ . He is an excellent. scholar and linguist ; enters into his studies with much spirit, and speaks fluently Russian, DanishyFrench, German, and English. The c:own' princes of'Eugland and Ger- many may study'if theylike at the uni» Yersitles, but; the heir of Russia. must be educated by private tutors. .Lss: May, upon his sixteenth birthday, the day on which ;the Prince became of age, be renewed hisoath of adherence to the Orthodox church, the Ceremonies taking place in the chapel of the Winter ,Pgilace at St. , Petersl,=ui'-.{h. As heir. to the Russian throne, lie act-cinpauied the Emperor and Empress to'their recent meeting Witllltlle sovereigns of Germany, and Austria.’ . . , ,. ‘ In person the Prince is slight and deli. oately formed, with fair complexion ari‘d auburn hair ;. and he usually wears a sailor‘ costume, which suits his slender figure.» He is a member of the Prcobra- _jpnsky (Transfiguration) Guard, the fa- mous regiment founded by Peter the Great; and by birth. hel'is Attsman (chief) of all‘tho Cossacks of ‘the empire. It is his privilege to wear the uniform of any. regiment he pleasesâ€"St. Nicholas. A Diiiigcroiis Discovery. According to a lecture just; delivered and circulated by Dr. Carter IlIofl'sf, the whole mystery of the voice, its national and individual character, its production, and its perfection, is all it matter of two elements within evoryb'ody’s reach. ‘Fiist- ly,,inliï¬ile ammoninI; secondly, c‘iluvute the society of ladle-'5. D2. Moll'ut, in the coursi of his travels in search of it voice, discovered a first-rate article ani’ong Uni ,brigan'dsv of, the Abruzzi, where tlteatnios» plieije contains enough armmon‘a to‘turu‘ the cobbsgesyellowiu their, youth, and where,†it is'wcll- known, the ladics are much given to share in the exciting busi- ness of thcir 'lords‘ and 'ma'stcrs. There- fore, breathe ammonia and exchange the smoking-room for the tczi-liible, and you will, in the matter of Voice. be even :18 a brigand of the Abruzzi. Tho oxnnplcs cf Fra Diavolo, of Mazaroiii, and of a dozen' similar heroes, will occur to show howl right was the instinct that united a. high tcnor voice with a taste for the road. 0.. the other hand, Mozart positively refusml to make his Den J .1le :i tenor, on No» groundthut tho baritone is the voice or fascination. At any rate it is unquestion- ably certain that a. would-be Fm Diivclo who diligently hung about all the (int v- ing-rooins he could lind, with the solo o“.- ject of refining and softening his voi '3, and no longer permitting it to be brut il, implies a sulliciciilly Comical idea, even without the help ofthe ammonia. thrown in. Itis to be hoped the pH czcding Wll not become too gciieriil. For the connec- ti'on LI those yum cabling-cs with o'xrcl- Ion-cc of voice suggests the Cll'ild piobsrâ€" bllity of their connection with us hr, r quali- ties that. differentiate the Brigsiid of Abruzzi from tongli-voiccd lioiicsty. The young gentleman who came to ice in] search of a voice nllgllL'lm induced, und..r ammonlncal influence, to make suic, at. any rate, of the silver spoons. MOO‘~~OPIO~â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"‘ The Nerve Age. The nerves and their diseases are at- tracting a large amount of intention from modiculineueveryday ; and not, without cause, it scenic. bp-akio‘g at lli‘ighzou the other day, in l)i:ll;tif of the National Hospital for the'l’amlyzed and lipilcptic, in Queen's Square, , Bloomsbuzy. Dr. Cricfiton‘Browno (IV-'t'lfv on the conditions of modern life which mid to produce nervousness, both as a temperament and n diseate; “In tho ,liistory «f civilizs- tio'n,’ he said, "we have ltud ll stone nge, a bronze age, and an iron age, and p ir- allol with these in the history of human development we linvc had a bone ago, 2. muscle age, and a nerve ago. With the application of iron to the in'mufac‘ uro of machinery and the substitution of sit-um- power for brute strength, the strain of existencs was transferred from the mus- clos to the nerves. The sons of Adam cut bread now. not in the sweet of thi ir fours, but in the fever of their brains, and thaws and sinows are of small account in com- parision with nimble nerve fibres." ’llic mortality from nervous diseases app-ms to be advancing rapidly. Apopl- iy, neuro-ccplialus, and paralysis are, accord- ing to Dr. Crichton-Browne, carrying off a larger number of victims year by yunr. They caused 105,185 deaths in the pi-riod of five years 18111.65. and 145,503 malls in the five years 1876-80. 'l‘oose who deny the cxisoncc of overpressure should at least Cullhldicl‘ those ligun s.â€"â€"[St. Jzimes’ Gazette. _... a... . ‘»»-“ Composed of genuine French Grape, Brandy, Extract Dr. I’icrce's Compound Extract. of Smart- Wecd excolls as n reincdy for who,- cliolem morbua. .liarrh'cl dj'ai'iittl‘y or ll“ “’5‘- W‘l’m" “I†n l“ ““ll‘lnll’l‘M-‘l "13 bloody-ii ix, or to break up colds, fevers of mtlnnmstory attacks. Ilcccu‘ TcBCJICilt’B hive shown that, I 2.23m LII\-'2l_v«.'L(.ll.'iL‘ , i wont con: 5. - , . lad. .1..1L;l.,{ with . , chm] iow I,",I|i1; rapid motion has :i remarkaolc all u: in 7 (mg, ,. ; L;- n,. mm, ,, . L. ,l, destroyingtheorganiciiiiznri’icsin“titer. that the diw's" 1-: doc to u... rut].:.il f. Jil- Tiiis loads Mr. )latzicu Williaon to rev mark that tho sicmnbca‘s on the Thames, , of which it mp‘aints have been male hr:- icnzs»: :i'uy disturb :hu bottom, are rrnily l ., wry ‘r.\l...ii7l0 zigvn‘a {mm a sanitary" white bums, put to salt 3’. I3 p n: , in lip-.lhf. of view. :or tile ‘lJIL‘nb agitation do; p \cssol : change the wnur li‘. in the evening, and again nwt morning. and parboil for tso li hrs, in: “rging ti.. rotor at the 6nd of ilio neon: hour Tlnn Pm†“linearly 3“ the “35>â€? ‘3“: ‘3' 5 lowcvcr induced, speedily and permsn- . (“up rm :1. pork scorul on too ; put the boa...s in a! deep dish, the p .rk in the middle, rink-f surface. Add a very little molasses. and . bake at least six hours, raising :he pork 1 toward the last, so that it may crisp 03‘- top. 1 they pro'lacu. The ream-tugs which Ztgl‘.i'u othrmse stagnant canals tnus‘. also be r:-g:irdezl rs great benefactors. : . ,. ’ ‘ " ’ Damp. diseases of eithcrséx, bolt cfparticulars 9 cents, 'v sutly cured. Consulation free. Address, :' in stamps. Buffalo, 5. Y. . ; Several young men were sitting tow gother. and a youg .ady happened to up. i prmah the vicinity. Une “real sweet" two hundred feetmbnvortho water and afghan princes. of which the foilow' of the youug'Gi-and-duks was rope" -‘ of neXi'ly titly years the dissimilarity of ‘ w of Synlurtolhmt and 1 "when, nanny“ m madam Jamaica (ringer, With Lamplior \\ ston- lof living vermin-s m int; uncu, - for: tl‘C‘J attic r,f it» tit-IA. In (lent L’s “L’lui‘CL mi- An omccr and the Lancer. AnkEnglish ofï¬cer lately applied direct- ly to the Amour of Afghanistan for mili- tary till; Harmon: inhis Highntrs'sservioo. and ro..chd a reply signed with the sincei‘s ital after the usual manner bf iniirinryou that there is be mch of service to suit yi u in this dominion. It it: not of custom to Desi-ch foradvsnisgos. But you may learn from the mw-cecdiugs European. from Afghans, and. tin, rt f.,re, yorr residence in any part of thisbdintry app;z:t‘s unpossible. ‘ ‘ “wt-00*- - _‘ 'Me‘custom of pfeseuting canes Atoi our hm meshes been h‘eVi\‘8d.‘ It originated with Eve, who presented a Cain to the first man of that pciiod. , i i, ‘5 Isn't that’Mrs. Holmes l I :thought the spoon gave her up. a‘ho looks well Ullw. ‘ “ She is well. After the doctors gave up her cow she tried Dr. Pierco's ‘Fsvor~‘ its Prescriptiou'» and began to get better right away. I heardhcr say not long'sigo," that. she hadn‘t felt so well in tw only years. She does her own Work and says the} life seems worth living. at last. ‘ \V hy ’ said she, ‘ I feel as it I had been raised from the dead, almost." Thus do thousands attest the marvelous efficacy of this Gui given remedy for female weakness“ prolapsus, lllccniliuu, loucor- rites, morning sickness, weakness of stomach, tei-doiicy to conscious disease, nervous postra'ion, general debility and kindred affections. A lecturer wishing to explain to a little girl the manner in which a lobster casts his shell when he has outgrown it, said : “What do you do when you have outgrown your clothes '2 You throw them aside, don’t you l" “021, no 1" replied the little one, “we let out the tucks l" .Thepdoctor confessed she had the advan- tage of him there. A Sure. Remedy for Neuralgiw.-. Neuralgia is one of the most common and distressing complaints incidental to this climate. It is not confined to any particular season, for whilst most general llljl}0,W'llltr-I‘ seasons,yot nmiiy sulfur its orcruciitiug agony in the heat of summer. In late years this farm of disease has be- come butt: r known, and constqueiitlv the means of l‘clltf have become greatly iii- creused iii numb! is, as well as in eflicscy. Among the most ; overfuliinil penetrating c unbinstions, p‘. c:d within the reach of . the public for the relief of neuralgia, we cin mention 1 «- iemedy equal to or more cortum than l’olson's Nniivitiss Its powcrovcr ', “in is something wonderful, and we udvl .c a trial for iieurulgia,'or any. . other-painful complaints. Ncrvilino is sold by iwl druggists at 25 cents a bottle, also trllzl bottles at IO cents. ' A boy can' imagine almost'nnything ; he can ing an old shotgun about all day with. of firing eta livmg thing und‘bo undo" the impression that he's having n' him! 1.; good time. But all attempts to in '.l ‘c a boy to imagine that he’s killing 1.....oos when he is sawing wood, have proved f utllo. ' Dr (lsrsi u’s l‘u‘munaiy Usual: Drops ihculd he usl-il lnslnmst rrrrylnii‘chnld in Canada it is'ono of Ihc in“! and t‘hfuct c..iigli ruucclcs known. liilaigo bottlis JD 5 I cant: f . young lady writes to an exchange: “IV-tr my part, Ipr: for an evening passed , at li me with a pleasant book to attend- iri l).'.llS, pnrtiaaatid theatres." ()h,cor- t ioly. When a. young lady hasn't ll .1 .221. nor 1‘. new bonint, nor a now walk- ing \ILS'IIIIU she generally prefers to re- 1 llllllll at. home with ii bookâ€"which she is too mud to road. Young Men lâ€"â€"llc.id ’l‘lils. "his; Volti'Ait'ï¬z, Brim (.‘o , 'of lilershail. lviiul! I otcr w s .i l a ir mlulitdid i‘JLlio ’i‘uO-anl’dlfl Ii..l.’1‘ ..i:.? i.‘-’..r Ll‘iC'f‘luc Al‘- PLIANUib on fria‘: for unity days, to lint ')i'l)ls::1\.lf(lll:ltï¬lliiul “itlllltri‘oull 6.1.“: 1 .'...i:i'.y, and u. :nulrul tiniililu». ' ii_:;..;lgi:._ Pfil'ï¬' :' ( UlnplLZ‘ l .o::4 l .’l‘l.'"1"‘..i" " when he found the pigs in the lront yard he got right down to other men's lewl in u minors and ii half, and he didn‘t climb back unt'l he lnil used up may bilcifllll around tho plaice. ‘ Snail: tolmi-m: spurt up in on. pilm \i‘liilt- smoking, with littlc l'l‘ilIJlillll mplosions. This is: ('.tllSUl by the addition o forrign mat in" to zi>~‘i.~l. tin: combustion. \Vlivn ilir- purity of tlo- tobacco is not toiopci'i-Il will; and it liua‘ llt'f3ll proywn'ly loin-n can: of, this combustible forcign lllliflul' is wholly iin~ necessary. l“0l‘Ill 'tiint (filSl' it burns at it lower" tempt-intone thon’nlnmst anything. Nothing of this him] is not-ii in Hooking llw “Myrtle Navy." ' ft lmrns with hi1“l(lyl'nlll‘ lni<tion throughout. A Vii-mom. nmn's motlierdn-law was kille-l by the (are, “lid he got. $22,000 from the railroad company. And yet there are mun jutlv int-an enough to so) that the sonin-law ought to have fell obligated to pity the money to the railv i'oiii company instead of ii r mm. Smpmllnzt. When you visit or have Now Yolk (ï¬lly. sow [luggage I‘.X]'rl'.'l‘..b,lf on (‘nrrlugv liltir. ow stop at :lm 01mm» ' or: “0113, upptmm Uroinl ('t-ntrui Dory. t'Ml L‘ll‘flllll In.“ titrwi up at u m' of one Iliil ion rollni. 81un-lupwuidsponL-y. Euro, ( un pla... 1' ~ valor. Iti'r-luuront twp licd min in. 24-- lion“: f‘alfl. steps M4 clcvntcd :n‘lrunr to all donors. Famous (“in “w l»: ttw for less mono; m Il.r-h‘im.rl llzzfm‘ lift"! t.“ H (Al. um oliic: lira-«low Li 1i 2 in L; w ni'v. Saw, the South licnd (latlf) Tritium: “A 5L: James ll. Gallup iv.i-i mmrictl it :i Ali-Ki litmus Cami-r in Grand lliipidsoi. Winli 1; my. It in safe to hll'y' that ltlltl wulkin; down the matrimonial road it few in- ntlis they will have u. llilll: trotting to do." Osmrrh» fact! In "treat. l'c-rlio, :â€" it." 2991‘. rxtrno us .1 your.†tl‘r.» icnco heels or .swniw: by the l.;x.r. ’lTualn .nt of Chiurrh '_ni1 o! 210:) ins-mu norm: Iiu..i.n inc pr; 11., “mum... fun; ninety pot arm. have been fitted o! tins -«‘.«:u!.»orn llltlln'l)’. fill: in non: of the. ‘: nis urn-entin "I’.ll!f('lflf'f‘ (1h ' l.=ul.t‘.hl‘u at.“ no: fth' pcr (Ll’. lhl‘nnr‘lt" if: gr,“ ' 17-1], whit v" - H... cure to hell had the court; dim-no; l-i iii.- .i [our yum has mm at . . .nccr. nm‘. no .. at (.ncc wispy-x: I. / eytcriiilnntlozz ; 'm». cm! " prnl- i;) mind. at u ‘ Vllf’u'. as oiiim i-:7 .u - fl..‘i‘.3 .23.‘ ' scllly‘ . . LOLLU'Lu .'. . . other lrcsulmtzol 2. r ( u at cutarxh. The “osmium 1.! ii. i a, in mntplvt and can be tone of Leon". rt.‘ 'hc prv'rtu'. 2‘41.“le of the 3m: ‘n ll.’ L'; : Aversion for a spot-sly am. uni n,l Ii. .. ,. . _ :4 _ our knJy ., 1.: Lofts '(‘llld ..' 2.. v 1.: 'D'. :t'illi‘fl'f'il bid oar- ‘ as. A. if. “limits 5. f!'-;‘ -12. .;-.N,as L 4+chi but, lcruhzo. Lennon. and enciw. ctr unease on cuntâ€"Mantras n. 5401' A St. .Iluis rich run drew up a will Which was so pathetically worded that it III-It’d all his relatives in tears. It left all his plain-fly to an orphan asylum. 'E'aid {can and buds uncertain indications of law. ten sir ii. .10:le circulation hops ua ly.-02s "god I understand you have been on a young fellow seeing, as he suppostd, the n: Lac-w sit-1 Lrflwâ€" 1am MM “'4'! ma. ‘ lied Jones : ' to hide as good a bed as; . "I‘m 1 that wu‘ sick, not. the bed." Smith was so taken , aback, that he went on without speaking i the words of sympathy um he intended. l 1...... , ' ,._~.....-.. .s.-...~ .. pout-ami- iii iul’ ’ ““ ell, Miss -â€"â€"-, you needn't: 11:2? af. mess though you wanted to eat me." “Oh, no," replied the ycug lady, “ never eat. greens." ‘ Yea mm set momentum rte-p that mesh “Peo- ’ ' n‘vï¬ideniseoumc. 1 ram. h", ï¬emtflmtwswagchm um" i l ’ ‘\ . ,. .‘Wk 9.? i' ‘ssz%?4’ d’ si‘o'Nsl" i.‘ ‘2 - i. by th Rumbas (was, it 3 . _ to our ‘ " ‘u'é‘hdei lawman :9 usaixugprtnziun :__-~\vim More“? ‘ mmww‘ 9.19995 J“ll: that you c.-n riffyflnti’it’o your a‘pplic’nion the iAniur regrets to of substitutes.‘ ‘ d y w‘heps. Polsflm , i» r. t‘. and h gums. §Tl‘.\l\T, tilt‘xus-tlcltt St )ru o.-1ts.u,l.>unisi.a . . r_ . ..._~ , H_Wu_ . “:1 urchin, Out. SETJillill .. h. .._. .___-_â€"_._â€".. . ‘-".' Corns: Corns: «TefRi ms, painful corus soft oorns. bleeding mrns. haul coins. coins of all kinds and of all rise, are alike remixed in s few ,s of Twain's. Sever tails never luvu deepspds't annoying than the original discomfort. Give Putnam's Painlssec‘siru dnrsrlorid trial. Ben-ire uggtsts every- :on, propr‘s. A.P. :‘ll 1,: :; 11w. 93mm. RealtyEst p Agent. nan. T I to. Mt: In loan. pun a M waged, l‘ntutlm liar hagr‘ u I s co: ï¬lllIllflIftl’I 0 “I m't‘ . snug. page I ‘18 " d iiblq ' r is especial". Eon for on meat: cunts -«fam.-.lâ€"â€"~ ~vâ€"-~~- ~ -»- Full SéLEvIlMllElt, i‘DAl. A‘Nll IRON 0R}: , Ian ; stock, fruit. and truck farms. fr" 1 es. in al. Fouthiru 3 an" Addict! W T\) is“. A51) 1:. .. . .S‘A Mil-5T1! «li'sn sh“; :N‘Sï¬hll‘hlu‘duuslfl c\t‘r)Ihcl" flout-u ‘ t It If. . . . Tolohf‘. (snails. P,“ «W m.‘ I “AT†s L". r ‘EIJIORAHH'i litiéi} sin! em... m lT-l . lL)‘ thorpivltily ts ht r. . .t"'l‘(‘l~\<I-t A «Mir-‘93 with s'lauin DO. IX 03 ‘IIZIJ (ERA: H ‘N Sl‘t'l‘LtlS. S.‘ hiss L;’l\uuuw-.~Ns§31‘lmlis’l: .\l.i‘ A; u I I‘ll Ii ids. nn til I‘lllu‘! [nails- liliiiil iiiï¬issltsiii. “‘33:â€: Agents Ismul. LuUK I Bl‘h'h'll‘l . Iii". ' St Wu» ‘ New ' ' I ‘ N v _\ mid & Pull in" lhll ' .i _ "mu 3. the . "\‘V' l. y. “- . . I ‘ IFURSALTEDB ' . n a l Flllh‘T-t‘LA Ontario Hr! _ or - ' 4.) sons land in booth Diniicz, ' the inflicts u! SmiJ :- n Mai iloba." of “inch (to rc- has hcin broken and bat L rt Illll season. 3:.) act I. uliichl u . - . " “F‘s ’Xfl“m“sn:vï¬u a sow it e nail on in ii I i . (Orland. Temis'nm- ‘1 â€" "‘N‘Nr ‘hr price _w - -~ _ A s: Iiox likiJ. niloiiunt. I :5 '51; Full if‘vlFl'll‘IYI «I s new Tisttor Marcus 0 llross Cutting. PROF. MOJUY W. 6: P. Curried: Co ' . 110 Grey Nun St“ Mcntieiil. lintsnrtcrs of Drum Pipes. I’urllund l‘cmcnr, Uhlinusy'loxw. Canada Cement, You Linings. “ star Illinc, "u i C ‘vl V . I Inc Bricks, h’l “6t . hm“ ‘nmnu m. t, it n a: ., Esggrnorsmauio mo: ,- Fm (.‘liy. ii. “incisors. SLATE AND FELT RBOFEB, & springs Miinufscturcr and Dealer in Turrrd [-3 II, no In: H dlnu I'a er l‘arpi-i l-‘ol a to... Jopï¬ s I'rlcu. p i 4 ADELAIUK Sr, 1‘ string}... 'l‘ouoivro FOR PLEASANT swine «1,7451»; ONLYâ€" Cla-ppeitdfi's Spool Cotton 1 “farrantei’lI-‘l'ldl' Lam. Infill; tiwinmthonnnv sewmgniiu-nnc. S'so'ï¬ih i 71.. ‘l' l. mu -l ' the lulu-l. itï¬'l’oraalt‘ hf :ilf llryâ€"i-‘oox lh‘lllllil'f'fli, U" liL‘ l'l‘ll li_lC-- lCflAlj'li IMPERIAL . ï¬â€˜ {I .8141th linsl timing: 3‘, the othixriliivgr‘lil. Tool tau ’ gums tplpx-rlmt. ('un-siau-lr) clilld, V o V L u , is lll‘ uonl "lllzkl . ilï¬iiiitXilfiftut‘iiml or mom-y n-fuiolul. 2f) )I‘Ih‘ practical or - ~ ifllil'. f‘irrnlnis friv. Aililrrss Th, lLUANVHli lililAl. 'llll‘His ed. as Atlt'lhillt‘ bf. I'Jasf, Toronto, UHL s llii ’llll SAUSAGES. Tim nio-t cuownlcnt meat for runners In their be" II'MUII. Tliise mats an- cooked and road for use Hold by urea rs through tho l’Jlll'l'lhlI l‘li‘llll for price ‘0 \V. CLARK I'. l) lint 312 filtllli'llh . _ _....._,. .. ., .., "H T't'}.’5 '.' v'tu. .~ . , . v v a ' , A I .ixorrl Cd'lf‘fullVflJOt. autumn. lisniln-ii :r mg. l at I) u mt. l.l . l.‘ l or I. ,Z‘ivvil‘ Ir“ nol won m. lfli‘n‘hffl rmgdgi‘hm ‘1’ I .. . \’,l .‘TIh mi'iunHiil‘lJIH‘ltl... .- rv-mcruiili"Van‘sl l ill .\l l, lino t4 in dllvaoll.b) w 'll' n on" bnysullclcr .. . .L'Cl‘l Marlin: .'I. r. If no (.14; in.†lnrilliml's V . iIfUMI‘ lu-nl‘lllivi'ui ; flint lAirllliiril'l .xnvv ('llplllllgns. :I “W! Lurlllnr-l'h FllulthIN an ‘ocgi noul L'lu.‘u|n‘:»l.£lilil‘y' Culleliltfl'uill’ C(nnpnund ()xyg in! LlNllFAY. .T‘li‘llih‘ll, I’ll lilNH ï¬'l'lll‘lll’l' ,. I‘lt'hl, ’l'..iyhto,‘"\vi‘i »: lll|\l: sullrrml for yew.) _\\ iili lugpopalii gull. mum-m1 nth fl silo“; il:irwl not «of. lill‘.lii or Iiiiliil-n‘ .; thought thorn: mm on lli‘lllf'll' llli‘; flint. I lnll‘il Mlll' r “lulv l ll\‘l"l: mm lllllll"|'-’l to try “I‘u,in]ioliiivl inigi-Ii" of '.'.’l lilnghli'iwt \l'i-ul; l.l llll'rllllivl l‘llV'H\\|il.'slulllll1.|il|ll\ lowll “lth ii, ililtl guiuml sit lirumlu", Jluiu- Cow toiwn om) lll(:lilll'nll'i Mlllli’lll. and fi if! Met- niiru‘i ii oiling-villain no Hg†of rlicmiititlsio, “bl! ulms trim lul iou cirry hintcrfor years. . ‘ dill'l‘ll'llil'iLlll' «mainshwï¬ Running: ln (:unucztuns... ‘ ‘lv Hr Trims Ital. day a! Canada. Ham .; Iv dim «Kiri. datum-i during the anion or 4 on It .ni. In... l iisml i-Vuv. Thumb, diiniri; tho v " 'r :W' v .' ‘u. . .u (let-s hon I-vn 'll ini- llrooklyn, Jim. Isl , D inlulon, Jsls. 2'1. tlnl flu, Jon 94 Ill. .uniiwnl, “ If). 'l'uromo, Jun“!- . . ‘5 . - its) .3}; "W l “Ill-n 'gf .w‘4~;v: M, ' 'WJ, Ili'v, g30, lutungV'flgs} inllul it l ».i no, flu-era's. I‘ “no won.» in steamer- 't~'lsim~r and in 7th. fo‘ Iowrst mics. '1 ho liiloon. ., lulu li' but llltll motion hit. is"! u : .o'“v 1» an Carllt‘rl on them. 1’0. 'unvkul thus: ' on ia- I -.‘ . kl, on) Hrlull ' I ulllvfl lam. ...i.. o.’ '. rL‘ouiwu l hula! new. so, sums! Au Mantras. a A or: moii my; (133171114: MYRTLE".'NAVY is; Minority . lh ‘lilUlh/da‘ LEI‘I‘l‘IlH. sy .321 '7- "11 . w _- L‘lOJdJ OLH-t/dwc 1. . I Allan Line royal Mails fluctuating. nailing during link! from ['o i ' 'llwldn ind “elites any hntiimsy ml." I? Hi n Juan ‘Iou. unvln c s '1')I.t.‘.fll’lh)'I’JLIVI'IMXII, rs.‘.‘ = a'. lsou whilst" inland men's slut nus-n wt- for Kc: mind set (island. Alwrnnn Hummus": fall'bltmii-l John‘s 5. l’.. to Lint,on f unï¬t.) .lmh' so: 'in‘ nix/oils. flu! ‘1'!!!†rs 1: 1hr (1.42pm limo, nil do. i, win“! it ‘4:- ~ . ' 1 Ulst." . slut lids-lot; swl [Memos {.41. ‘ :2: Va llllfiHJI luiwmi. mlrc ILC if»; .w and Hudson and “Juvpï¬nrwh For freight. (MU. (m Olhl‘fï¬t’llmllfl. apply to A. no “"5le ' Inca, Moon; t: .winml 5: (lo, llunhrr; ‘2: .(cl :.~ , .‘fl. John‘s nu“, : “in, Thou-mo. m, .".L .lo;.:., .N'. If , ' r. a: l.'o.. (Int-2 4m; ’n u: h: Aldon. New :lf, liourlicr, ‘i‘ om: ..Allsns, line i (10.. 3 H LAW“: it. New. We ML“. .gn'. cal I) Uh'lsmclu sad Me; or low madman. u: use , f,mn.(,'sls.s,bberp no.1 ; 1. 1M Yuan-ins urns. Yin-us is use-laud Italtlmtm‘r, tussle-l undue Hill Cebu: tum: :v'v milk and laws It mum: in osplwnh lbs! L .- .. than su! nova loot Jilin: 2'. out: and (l 3‘! hi. I. dolls: Ins watch! “Doll mutual», .n MNL‘ULWusL‘Oltm. m Kla‘ cs Km, Toronto. I‘M sale by ling-gm: Mary-Mu. out mun BEEF it .i m an.) pnpnstkt. at ten rim! welsh roa' tame all in. i lumen ll: .. ... , (ML/r1 eluithes‘. in!" . properties of beef, ml the only one phi. w your to supply L;~'.nsi.::.nr.t My trim siut Insects,