“I but! but I vow-wow! Moon-m he'll shut up now . Ever! bone In my body what. my head it 1- "0 'er the cum wold. Gflnnm .11 over his two at the way we no nlémz told! You be}. e _ u__ho_u¢ him lurking 'way down un' mum“ in bra," And 3 dipper of water 10, 000 degrees Faunheit I Manning. uunicJeven-uhoohuï¬uch thoughts w... -_ ~â€"â€"7 , , _ my devoiloni retardâ€" Oold any.) ! 'gishimsethO ugh tampmï¬hninod ‘11:. city a 1mm Rm. on mm.- no. . sound is hand. In. the bov~wow~vow of that dog. chuuod up In the next door yard. All through the and! noun 0! the night he bu bow ed. and howled. and howled, While ugqqelzhtgon ppqytno the! â€on. wd the neï¬ghbou devoï¬t they soow'led. A: may turned. and turned gun, in am: "An “tempt; to sloop. And “10113 (9: . flying 9nd A stone. 3nd 3 pool 'â€"_ itiï¬udioï¬zi déo'iii ‘ But! bu'k! but! bow-wow-womwow-wow wow-wow! And (polypvgn plock it strikes three. 0):! muly bony as lead-- Surely the people who own am dog muutbe ,_ 1--. -"a M~ vâ€" -- , _ dad, ofdrï¬nk. bi am. Four o'clock! sud there); the sun coming up 75030 El Hindoetan And wondered ugun u the psuonoo of the long- Iufloring animalâ€"man. I think of an gnqlopt shpnfl, who was "soddeu IWALLOWED A LIZABD. AI Almost Incredible Story from Dutch. A despatch from Detroit says that Peter Lamenmf 360 Atwater street, is the victim of a most distressing accident. and autism untold agony of body and mind. Two years be swallowed a small lizard in a glass water, and the animal has lived and flourished in his stomach, growing to large dimensions, and entailing great misery on the proprietor of his strange abode. Mr. Lemon is now 60 years of age, and has dwindled from 175 pounds (his weight at the time of the accident) to 73 pounds. He now looks like a living skeleton. He has tried all known means to get rid of his tormentor, without success, and now expects death to relieve him. The liï¬rd can be felt with the hand just below the ribs and above the loins, and when t‘ken hold of can be heard to “ squeak " or cry. A system of poisoning has been resorted to of killing the creature, but it continues to thrive. It circulates about the stomach, causing Mr. Lemen great fun, and Mi these {imee he vomits'pro- ugly. _'1_‘he “result iguto make 1|in _ve_ry weak. The lizard will remain quiet for several hours at a time. and then begin his antics, apparently invigorated by his rest. Mr. Lemen can only rest when the lizard does. The position most conducive to rest is lying flat upon his back. The unfortu- nate man is a native of Montreal, but has lived in Detroit since he was 15 years old. Upon the publioetion of the recent case in Iowa. of a young girl dying in her lover’s "me, overcome by excitement and the tervid pressure of his embrace. the young Indies of an interior town of New York called a meeting, and after fully consider- in the matter unanimously adopted the to flying preamble and resolutions : Whereas. it is reported that an Iowa girl died recently In her lover's arms. whlle being hugged, and, whereas, judging from experience we believe such an event to be utterly impossible, therefore. Resolved, that notwithstanding said report we are still in favor of hugging. We prefer to run all risks of death rather than have the beautiful, lovely. delightful, perfectly elegant custom abolished. Resolved, that aoopy of_these resolutions be sent to the Those who aim at pleein at the command of mankind the means 0 flying throu h the air are not at all discouraged, as t 9 many moieties established in various countries for the promotion of aeronautics abundantly attest. Dr. Bell Pettigrew, at alate meeting of the Balloon Society of Great Britain, held that “ one of the main difliculties in the way of constructors of machines for aerial transit was the want of a sufï¬ciently powerful and light motor, and in the use of compressed air for this pur- pose he saw a probable means of doing without the heavy steam or electric engine. Aerial navigation might well seem Utopian to the mass of mankind. It was not, how- ever, on that account impossible. It was a question of time,perseverance,and ingenuity, simplya very complex hysioal problem. and the data for its so ution were being slowly but surely accumulated." One of these days the pee le of this country will come forward and elp their relatives over famfl'y of the deceased and also tothe newspapers for publication. the way to determine .whether aerial navi- gntion can or cannot be made an accom- plished foot. The Earl of Ceithness, who died lately at the Fifth avenue hotel, N.Y.. had a strong liking for mechanics, and in his younger days worked for sometime in alsrge en- gineering establishment in Manchester. The London World says that he used to tell with some pride that. although he then lived a mile and a hall from town, he always walked to his work, ready to begin at6 o'clock, summer and winter. and was never a day late. He was patentee for several inventions, including an improve- ment on the tape-loom. for which he re. eeived £500, but he always said. had he been a business men. he should heve made a (oi-tune by it, es it has been so generally adopted, and such an immense saving has been obtained by its use. Among his other inventions were a gravitating compass ; a reed locomotive, with carriage (in which he, along with the countess. travelled on one occasion from Inverness toBsrr ll Castle at the rate of some sixteen in on an hour on the level road, creating quite a sensation); a machine for washing rail- way carriages, etc. The number of hampers containing deli- cacies of ever conceivable kind. which were fgrwarde to Canon-street for Lord 33556366167; after? he beam 0 in. was inomdiblo;they unmounted, it in said. to thousands. and were mostly addressed in ludiu' handwriting. Havorl guys he'hu ï¬nally secured the am for h a new theutro in Chicago, und groupigujp 039$ uppn‘i} on. o}_ tho ï¬nest mméu’m’mngp‘in the world. up in die next door yud. The! Will Take the Blah. Flyln‘ Machine. Con-Ina. Volvo. 01 M Night. â€"J. LAWSON. The following remuksble on» was ner- teted in the repairs lew deye ego. A helliï¬ mean dontmm Dubhn by the Emer e133; Committee to serve write on Lord 11' more's property et Abbey-lode. Hr. Collett sub-eaent to the property. accompanied the beilitI end an escort 0! two submnetebles of police. The pert were attacked by e mob 02 men no women. the letter severe! times striking the Dublin boiliï¬ with s wespoï¬nown es e “stone in a. stocking." The n strip- peer. Collett end the bniiff of every utiele of clothing. and tore up the bits. The police and constables threetenedtoï¬re their revolvers u n the mob. Then the letter cautioned t em not to do so. or the whole party would be murdered. Subse- quently e msgisterisl investigation was held in Abbey-teale. where thirteen persons were charged with the offence, and after at trio], lusting ï¬ve days, the risoners were yesterday fully _eommitted or trinl st the yosterday fully committal for triul ut the gut Mm,_hu_l being rqfuaed._ On pgch day during the investigation I. force of ï¬ve hundred military end polioe from Limerick were present, and yesterday a troo of the 29th Eugene were etqned 7 by e xpeb. an of fresh milk before her openfll'Outh. he abstinence was begun, and Friday being the ï¬fth day Mrs. Elliott, feeliï¬ ravenous and supposing her lodger u hungry, had a pan of the best mik o tainable brought up, ï¬xed herself in an inclined position, her heels higher than her head, with her open mouth close over the milk, but the snake refused to be beguiled. and the aroma of the milk overpowered the hungry woman, threw her into convulsions. and induced such dangerous sinking spells that her physicians brought the fast to a conclusion and compelled the patienttoeat. The failure of the experiment made Mrs. Elliott sicker than before, and she despaira of ever being able to outfast the snake. Her inability to starve out the snake has produced a state of mental anguish which the doctors say will lead to insanity. The people were char ed and dispersed by the tgoopa. Writs no not sumo been served. A Snake In a Wo-u’n Stomachâ€"Bulls" - I. um": Ill- 0:". Mrs. J. B. Elliott, of Mount Vernon. has been ill for six months with a mysterious ailnggnt‘ wyjoh the 12331 _pl_1yaipngps are llon-lble Situation of. Familyâ€"Sick and lie-dune. A despatch {rem Detroit says a tek’ible case of sickness is reported from Oereseo, near Marshall. A family named Weaver, eight in number, living on an island in the centre of a large marsh. were found nearly all down with malignant scarlet fever, in destitute circumstances, no covering upon the feet of the children and scantily sup- 9lied with food. The atmosphere was infected with miasma and the marsh water used for domestic urposes. When the physician called one o the children was <1 ing and beyond medical assistance. Soon a ter death the body became black. Three children died twenty-four hours after. unable to d' ose. The lady believes a snake which e swallowed while drinking from a. spring last fall has remained in her stomach end grown toagreet aim. She says she can feel it moving about and bite her. Her physicians sdwsed her to fast for ten days, and when the snake should get real hungry to coax it out by he ' g a pan of fresh milk before her ope th. Nap-neck Smallest Lady on Record. Robert street is noted as being the most proliï¬c street in town, but her glory is not conï¬ned to that juvenile distinction. This street can also boast of the very. mallest lady in Canada, it not on the cont, ent, in the person of Miss Amelia Spencer, daugh- ter of Mr. Hazelton Spencer, 124 Robert street. She is in her 16th year, is 3 feet 6 inches in height, and, though stout for her inches, weighs only 42 lbs. From the fact that she has not grown any in height for several years, she has likely attained her wth. She is perfectly well formed, and n all respects except size a fully developed woman. She is bright, brisk. intelligent, but reserved in manner.â€"â€"Napanee Stan- (lard. A brilliant falling meteor was seen in the heavens a little west of north about 10.30 o’clock last night. When the meteor was ï¬rst seen it was falling slowly,leavinga brilliant train of considerable length behind. but soon it burst and sent the ents flying in all directions, the color [the main body and of the fragmé’ut being changed to a beautiful rich green The brilliancy of the fragments had scarce! faded when another explosion follow , the color of the main body and flyln pieces changed to a beautiful red, almost azzling in ite brilliancy for a moment, then the main portion ain assumed its natural color and was not to viewâ€"Worcester (Maes.) Spy, of Tuesday. The late Dr. Pnhehon lived in a beauti- ful villa in Brixton road, not far from the residence of Mr. MoArthur. who re resents Leicester in Parliament. and near y 0 site to the palatial residence of Mr. er- man MoArthur, who is Lord Mayor of London; There is a very large Wesleyan Methodist chapel in Brixtpn_med. “er. Punehon ver often preached there. The neighbor): is ooon ied with residences of city megnetes. on Welleyeniem has thriven very oonsiderebly in the looelity. In feet. two of the prettiest chamber; in southwest London belong to the Wesleyan body. In both the eervnoe of the Prayer- book is followed, and in one there is n chancel. A Tmmmnn Cor. -â€"Two old men ed Hugh Hamilton and J amen McKin who have been living' in Beard' 3 vacant foundry on the Eu plenude in Toronto. umelled loot ni gpht while drunk. and emilton etmok hie oomgenion over the head with on iron rod in iotin} a. fearful gash on the forehead. extending tom the roots of his hair to the need. Constable Rose. heel-in of the affair. Went to the spot 9nd_fou_l_1 McKinney lying nearly insonaible in the yord. He W Hunmon sud took the two of them to tho contra! stationgwhero the police bond ed the wounded mon‘a hood. Atthopo court he'd-5y Hamilton was ï¬ned 025 um! costs. A MIT]! OF A DIAIDBN. DEATH AND DIDEASE. A Meteor Explode. Twice. A FAITING MATCH. IRISH AFFAIRS. 'IIIII PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION. “M W“... M Next Your“. *wâ€"fl-mnflmnlu Brood-ed â€"Ilocao- of loom-n. Tomato. April Barâ€"The adjourned meet. ing of the oounoil o! the Outuio Agriculâ€" turd and Arts Amolstion was held yostordstidtornoon st their rooms. Toronto. Among 0110th were the president, J. B. Aylosworth. 1n the choir; George Grshllm. Brum ton; G. Moore. Berlin; J. C. R kart. . P.. St.Csthulnes; H. Psrker. oodstook;Jsmes Your: .M.P.P.. Gnlt. prosidontof tho Meohsnics’ nstitutos Assoolntion of Ontario ; Otto Klotz. Preston. vice-president of the Moohsnios' Institutes Association of Ontsrio ; Rev. B. Bur-not. late of Hamilton, presi- dent of the Fruit Growers’ Assooin» tion; James Mills. principal Ontario School of Agriculture, Guel 11; William Brown. rolessor Ontario 800101 Agri- ouyzpre. uolph. ‘ A _ _ The question of standards of registration for the Herd-book. to which attention was drawn in seven! communication, was retemed to e specie] committee com sod of Prof. Mills end Messrs. White, rury eniGeInegie. the discussion of stock raising. and as to how best advance the interest of stock raising, and for the discussion of the cultivation of grain respectively. The prize~taking essays to be read at these meetings. That at the annual meeting on the 23rd, in Lon- don. the desirability of holding examina- tions on agriculture. live stock and kindred subjects at convenient centres, and the granting of certiï¬cates on the results be considered. ProfessorMills to read a paper at this ‘rneeting. The report was adoPted. Mr. Dru‘i-y presented the report of the Fianna: Coxpmittoe._v_v_hioh wu_adopte¢_i. receive $4 per day during the time en aged, and the assistant superintendent 3 per day. That there be but one superintendent in the ï¬ne arts department, who shall receive 83 per day. That the association offers two prizes for the best essays on forestry; ï¬rst prize of 830, second, 820. That two prizes of 830 and 820 be offered for the best essay on the best methods of restoring the fertility of partially worn out lands. essays not to exceed twenty pages of foolseap. and to be sent to the secretary not later than the 15th of August, the prizes to be awarded by a special committee. That the evenings of the flat and 26th of September during the exhibition be set apart for the holding of public meetings for a]..- 12..-.-__:-_. -A-L_-I_.__,_, Mr. Rykert'presented‘ the repoftraf the meeting of the Executive Committee with reference to the exhibition grounds in London. Applications from the following named persons for the vacant position of secretary to the association were read: Henry Wade, Port Hope; H. H. Swinford. Guelph; James Campbell. Longsborough; H. 001- well, Toronto; E. H. ilborne, Uxbridge; R.L.Denison, Toronto; W.Elliot, Toronto ; W. D. Hunter, Meodowvale; William Johnston, Toronto; D. 8a MoLean,0range- ville; Abraham Devitt, Waterloo; George Sneath, Midhurst; Alexander 8. Monroe, Toronto; J. Gordon Mowat, Gelt; Arthur L. Willson,_M.A., Eglinton. - > _. Mr. Saunders read the second reiwort of the Special Committee of Inquiry. Amon the xeoommendntione therein contains were .the following: 1:1"? galaxy of_tl_ie were am following: The salary of the guperintgndpntpf the exhibilsion grgundl} to be 8150. instead of 8200 as formerly y; that he be allowed fourteen assistants at $3pe day, and fourteen osretekere st 01. 50 a. dgeyr y. The salary of the seeretsry to be ï¬xed at 81. 200; that of the sssistsnt- secretary 8750, to take eï¬eot on the 1st of May next. The superintendent of the arts dey‘pertment to _....-. '..-IA .._.. .1-_j..____. LL A- _.-_ __, a; #_1 After a. 'Iarge 'mfmber of ballots, Mr. Wade was elected. Mr. Rykert moved that the prize list in this department of Dairy Products remain the some as last year, viz.. $1,000, provided the two Dairymen’s Associations contribute 8260 each as usual.â€"Cmied. Mr. Young presented the spacial report of the committee appointed to arrange the prizes in the Art Department, showing very little change from last year‘s list. T112 report yes adopted: Mr. Saunders sugéssted that as painting on porcelain was now 9. popular art among ladxes, prizes should be offered for that class of work. Also that prizes be offered for non-{Ming photographs. These suggss~ tions werq‘adopted: _ 7 Mr. Rykert thought the Executive Committee should be empowered to make extra efforts to make the exhibition ï¬nan- oiglly e_greeter_eqooess. deiirable things as might be imagined in connection with the exhibition. They tended to_ {minke pepplp _ov_'erlook_ the real of the proviioial show, which was to a neat» the people. ‘ Mr. Rykert moved that the secretary and Mr. Hopkins be appointed to make arrangements with the railways tunmng into London for greater accommodation.â€" Carried. The time for making entries of farms oompetin for prizes was extended to the 20% of mm. The time for commence- ment to be not earlier than the 24th of the same month. overturn thin‘fll.“ Mr. Wells suggested to the Council the idea of making special and new railway arran ements in the interests of the exhib tion with a view of attracting greater numbers to the show. ME. ï¬rm-y did not think that what lpight_ :be pgllod monkey qhovys wqre gugh Prof. Brown ave notice of motion to the effect that the egielature be requested to alter the conetitnt on of the association. so that Mecheniee' Inetituteebe represented by one person only, in place of three. Also that no professor of agriculture. as such. be ex omcio member of the Council, and that two of the leading breeders of the pro- vince be appointed by the Council to reprec eetltthaj important Interest. Gm mo 3 tynnt king.give men hostile House of Lords, am no a. corrupt House of Opmmgnl. gigjnoflthq pro- and I will Mr. Leslie was reinstated superintendent of Ebe Hogtianltural pgpnrtmgnt. On motion of Mr. White, the president. Mr. Drury end the mover were appointed a. committee to further the Grange demonstration arranged for the coming exhibition. A Cleveland Presbyterian pnto'r has been aux-aimed before his proabytory (or sending his family to than-ea and balls. The Counéil adjourned. to meet again on the ï¬rst day of the exhibition, in London. (amt Precautio- M Alexander's Outcryâ€"- A Living urban-mu lasso: Rue. Losses, April 29.â€"-In the Commons yesterday Sir Charles Dillre said the Gov- ernment had not participated in the communications exchanged with other Governments, with the various results touching the r' ht of asylum. and the extradition of itioal oflenders. A St. Peters urg letter as a belore the new Czar‘s court was remov to the castle of Gatschina, 30 miles from the oaptial. several hundred artisans of the Preobra- jinsky regiment were sent to make the necessary alterations. At midnight they were assembled inthe church at Gatschina, and were sworn secretly to silence. death or Siberia being the penalty for infraction 0! their oath. Asuhterrauean passage was built from the Cat's room to the stables. where a number of horses are kept saddled and bridled day and night. Sentinels are posted at intervals of twenty yards all round thebuilding. The Imperialhed-room hastwo windows. protected at night by massive iron shutters. which can only be reached from the outside by passing through three ante-chambers. in which are ted eighty Cossacks. armed to the tee . They are allowed to speak and move about in the two outer rooms. but in the hall adjoining the Gear‘s bed-room perfect silence is maintained. The general on duty for the day sits in an easy chair, the Cossacks sit- ting on a divan which runs around the whole room. At the gsneral’s hand is the knob of an electric :pgaratus which rings shell in every gu house within the palace grounds. When the Emperor is about to retire. before shutting the door he removes the outer handle, so that no entrance can be effected until he himself opens the door from the inside. He can- not endure the presence of an armedsoldier in his bed-room. Sr. Pmansnuna. April 28.â€"On Easter Sunday revolutionary proclamations from the Land and Liberty party were found enclosed in Easter eggs distribqu in the streets of Moscow. The reclamation urges the peasantry to seize e lands and refuse to pay taxes or serve in the army. Rents are now being well paid in Ireland. At the Dungannon Quarter Sessions 172 ejectment processes were heard. The mackerel ï¬shery in the Kinsele waters has up to this been the mcat proï¬t- able season ever known. About four acres of plantation near Castlemaine were burned down one night lately. It is supposed that the burning was malicious. An apple weighing nearly a pound and a quarter and 5§ inches in diameter and 4} inches high, was grown last year in Cavan, in the north of Ireland. At the Cork Aasizes Justice Barry sen- tenced two men to twelve months’ impri- sonment for having boycotted a farmer who had paid his rent. Cornamona. House, King's county, the property of an extensive land owner, who, it is stated, has been compelled by threats to leave Ireland, was burned down recently. Ninepenoe was the highest bid for a. cart and pony, the property of Hastings Peat, put up for sale at Traleo, Kerry, recently under a decree for rent. The sale had to be postponed. A petition was presented in the House 0 Commons by Mr. W. H. Sullivan from the Kilmsllook Board of Guardians seeking for the insertion in the Land Bill of provisions for the improvement of the condition of the laboring classes in Ireland. Half the romance of travelling in Ireland has hitherto lain in the necessity of coca.- sionally making oneself uncomfortable in an Irish jaunting oer ; but the modem appliances of locomotion are extending over the Green Isle. and it is now proposed tohnild a horse railroad to the Giant’s Causeway. The Detroit, Mackinac and Marquette Railroad Company now emu won some even 1,eeo,ooo tones or the Choiccst FARMING and TIMBEBBD LANDS in the Northern Peninsula of Michigan. The case of Boycotting against Father Cody. Mullinavat, Kilkenny, and ten other travereers came on for hearing recently. At the conclusion of the case for the Crown, Mr. Hemphill submitted thnt there was no case to go to the jury. The foreman of the jury here announced that they were of opinion that there was no case against the traversers. The judfe gave instructions to suppress the app suee which followed the verdict. At the Dublin police court, recently, Sir Walter Nugent, hart" well known in sport- ing circles, was charged with having forged a promissory note for £1,600. The bill was 1 ed' in the Royal Bank of Ireland to Sir We ter‘ s credit, and against it he uttered cheques to the value of £1.530. thong h, exclusive of the forged bill, he had no funds in the bank and was not allowed to over- draw his account. The defence was that the forgery was committed by Lady Nugent. against whom a warrant was also issued, but could not be served. The prisoner was remanded for a week Sir Willmm Jenner, M.D.. K.C.B., has been elected president of the Royal College of theioiene, of London. Destined to be the beet wheat pnroduei region in the world. These lands are eitueted in the conn ties 01 Chi ppewe, Mechlneo, Schoolo tend Marquette. and embrece meny thousands of acres the beet culture! lends in the State of Michigan. Among one in the countiee of Chippewa and Mackinac ere trecte of whet ere known es the “ burnt or cleared " lende. Theee lend: oiler many edventeg es over the f: reirie lende oi the west." the timber lends edjoining insure A supply of fuel at little“ cost. The eoi being e rich clay loam 0! eat depth. The timber remaining upon the lend being generally euflcient for the eettier'e use in n_ilding pMid fencing. 74..-. a,, ,, _ .,. .n,_u,.mhA.A, -.-,A,_A“ AA-- Theeé'pmielly cloned lands are now offered at the low price of from M to 84.50 per acre one. fourth cash. and the remainder at purchaser‘s option, at any time within nine yearn, with interest pa. able annually at 7 per cent. a are being opened through these lend and no better opportunitr he: ever been oflered to men oi amen means to secure a good term, en intending purchasers wil be wine by nailing them selves of this chance before prices advance, as the lmde are being ngirgy token and settled upon. __The lung more irnmpï¬ietelg_on the line o_i the__De_troit, Mackinaw _erqu_ette_ nilrogd, from the The lands mom immediaï¬iy on the line or the Detroit, Mackinac a; "afarquezw railroad, "am the Strain of Mackinac to Marquetce, are more heavily timbered. and are almost universally good agri cultural lands. leaving a lendid farms when the timber is removed. The iron and lumber interests of the upper peninsula pro of such magnitude as to call for all in: The iron {xiii lumbe'rTntereste of the'usper pou’iuaul’u’ui’eof‘uuoh magnitude as to cell for all the ohmoel and lumber that the timber an wood iapon the land: will produceâ€"this will onebie tho settler to mono good wegee while cleerin the lam Lumber mills and charcoal kilns will built at verioua points nlong the line. end tun-moon are now being erected elon .he line of the road at Point 8t. Ifnaoe. The out demand on good prices for hbor. both in w titer and summer, make these lends u- tioulu y desirable as homes for the r man. The land» adjacent the roilroodm ousted at p can from 05 upwsrde, nooording to loo» on, nine oi timber, ole. The land: ore it your very door, and orebeing n idly settled by Oeuuiiem. For pump ion, mop. end own informeiion, when, W. o. s'rnonacuna Commune-er, 80 lumen-y and Moll!!!“ Building, Detroit. Michigan THE llllllS’l‘S AID TIE CHI. ""AhTiioIiifuorW ninth" ’ airlines. The on] Me love'lnlfht Inn... At once ill «I. birdie how are. The brush. bu turned with care In 1! 10h hil Kan-ion to declare Are hanging on b I! ; but are he drops themâ€" An from some aid y height of snow Descends the “macho o! wooâ€" ' human†comes down '0 supper, tad-she [tops The Prince of Wales will go to Vienna to witness the marriage of the Crown Prinee Rudolph to the Princess Stephanie. Old time he hurried on tinco then. And tar has In“ that evening. when He deemed mnnmn'l intrusion wu ofllclaua; But now he think, when looking back O'ot life's mm. ohmgeml. vuiod tuck, That hunger or mamma's was most propitious Hobart. ond Bokor Puhu will shortly proceed from Constantinople to England on furlough. Victor Hugo never seems toreslize that he is no longer a sprightly youth. After his birthday festival some one spoke to him of his hevin stood for a. long time in the cold winter r without his hat. But the sturdy old gentlemen hadn't a thought for himself. “Yes.†said he, “ the cold mule me very uneasy for all those good people who came to greet me.†Pensions are still paid by the British Government to two survivors of those who suï¬ered by the rebellion of 17981â€"Mrs. Anne Collins. daughter of Captain Lyster, of the Fifeshire Fenoiblee, who receives an simian rrécei’ {BI 795’ «its; out: win-ted. . If. MIDD TON. 58 out 108: street, New annuity of £18 9s. 5d.. and Mrs. Mary Quin. who receives en annuity of £13 17:. in trust for herself and her sisters, daugh- ters of Sergeant-Major Lane, who was killed. Lord Beaconsï¬eld gave Millais only two sittings for his portrait, but the artist worked quickly enough to catch the sallow, pungent face, thin black locks, black hair- tuft beneath the chin, exaggerated salience of under lip. reï¬ned aquihne (not Jewish) nose, cepacions far-ahead and extraordinary eye, like no other eye ever seen. The pose is nearly proï¬leâ€"an indication of lank, slightly bowed, black-coated ï¬gure. .LVL Household Dyes. 10 beautiful colors. One package for 5 cent.- will make 1 *1!“ ol lint-clan dye or ) pint of lne rid-z Ink. The dye: lave dollar- whcro they can cents. Colors as follows: Black, blue. magenta, crimson, scarlet. brown, orange, yellow, green, violet. Anv o pf‘the agave colon-{mug free. 903} York. COUG HS, COLDS, ASTHMA, WHOOPING-COUGII, GROUP. This old established remedy can be with conï¬- dence recommended for the above complaints. TRY IT. 11 your merchant has not got it, he can get it for you. . » JOHN. W. BICKLE qurmefly T. Bickle § Son)“ Bickle’s Antiâ€"Eonsumpï¬ve Syrup! IDDLETON’S FIVE CENT Household Dyes. 10 beautiful colors. Seed Merchants and Florists Market Square, Ila-man, onion-lo. For fresh and reliable Garden, Farm and Flower Seeds. AGENTS ‘5’ WANTED FOR Moore's universal mum and com 1060 mechanic, 1,016 pages, 500 engravings. ]. .000 new; but subscription book in the motion to dog; oxoiusive tel-rim ; circulars free. J S R BERTBON 5: B30 .. Whitby. nnd cheapec t in in; mirkéi's p'ofom mtéi to an 801nm in 01mm. Address W8. DONALDSON 0 Mount Healy, Ont. For full particulars, which wil be sent free, address ROBERT EVANS 00.. THOUSANDS WILL TELL YOU THAT Aaron’s Antldote WISCONSIN LANDS 500,000 Acres ON THE LINE OF THE WISCONSIN IIEIITIIAI. II. II. Surely cure: Asthma» and Bronchitis. Druggis us sell it. 8mm Ian A Onwumn. Hamilton, Oninrio. Dr. A. “non. Backhand, AND PLASTERâ€" MANUFAC- TUREBB of pure white plasterâ€"the best heapest in the market. Special rates to all 'th’em moot-t Mhubutmgpay? than!" ‘Iolo poo any ; it deter him from can no ruptm :0. be worn: mob maid ï¬lings, oul shackle lovo’l Rf“ luau,â€" Iill mo birdie he w agate. CHABIAEH In COIABY. Land Oommiufloner Milwaukee. Wis “ Ilow Ion-mud" Note- on Hombkt. ASK â€"8END T0â€" FOR PidptlEtor. "1.1-0.