Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Woodville Advocate (1878), 16 Jun 1881, p. 7

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Win it be over to-dw or to-morrow '2 Will it [at {or a week, or a. month. or c you: This tunes mm. is neither a joy no: t sorrow, This waiting that in not a hope no: 5 {our ? While I all waiting the and drawn um. “will come baton I am dud some day; and: I 1991. I woutiez. who? it is tiers ‘! "fifti- 1; $877!)? ih'ifiigi him do they Seem. And indeed I am not. tired yet, I have strength to wait what is yet to see, W991. the_hqur_e I know '1“qu tqrget. nu.” . Aviva. - ..._~'. [u coming man! "'86 iblng “way. In It only that watching Ins made me weary. And that beln wear has made me dream ’3 Bqt 19 gqulgml o wor d in not. so dreary. , ,dr ALA_ __ r..- _-x *, ‘L‘.. __.w“ The end offitheiwiitch that is set for ine. It in the end that has made me strong. but I say when it comes it comes too late ? Then till it came I should find it long; I have forgotten for what I wait. Then why are my thoughts bound up to this BY 3 bond that I halt or feel nor m, Wh lo the world goes by in hole or bites? Do I think that the worldkeepswowh With me ? Yet the end will come and the end will go, And leave no trace in the empty air When it is over none will know. And I hardly think that I shall care. The Wife and Son at a Man Who [mines Himself the Son 0! God (Rushed will: a Bucket. A despatch from Crisfield (Md), dated Saturday, says one of the most horrible cases of wife butchery ever recorded in this State occurred here last night. The victim was Mrs. Sterling. an estimable lady, her assailant being her husband, Elijah Sterling, a religious monomaniae, who imagined, or retended that he was the Son of God. terling had manifested symptoms of mental aberration for some days, and yesterday became engaged in a religious disgntation with his wife. He claimed that e was Christ, the Sonof God, The ordinary out-side awning for win- dows has its disadvantages; while shutting out the sun, it also impedes the air an lets in all the dust, smells, and noise from the street below. It is supported by a bar of iron pivoted to the sides of the window just below the middle of the sash. Some ingenious inventor went farther and placed the ends in a slide so that it might be pulled up close under the window cap in wet weather. A more re- cent, and certainly more happy thought, is ‘ to provide two bars hinged together, and to provide more canvas, and a different system of hanging. By this modification the Italian awning becomes an American convenience. The new awning may be open at the top and closed at the bottom, to shut outdthe dust {and foulIair, and ‘t’o a stu io a “top ight." t may 6 inf; ‘-' above and below to admit fresh ai: is; the lav“ '9:' part of the sash and to allow . - bmf the room to escape at the the impure MPH" dosed above and below top, or it may be or? and open at one sid‘E‘" ‘70 “0t 33 a “ Wind- sail,” to bring the pas‘s sing breeze into the room. Nearlya dozen'fidlflemm styles of h ' awning can be made 1n 1; '31“; manner, and ’ h the awniu can bdq‘ drawn “P 0W ‘3 93‘? --. :.. --:.§. montage". Tholnven- we lmpuru uu’ \. top, or it may be‘ggdosed above and below and open at one sid‘eâ€""v to act as a. " mud. sail,” to bring the pas‘b ““8 breeze Into the room. Nearly u dozen'fihd'qemm styles of owning can be made in If?“ manner, and in each the awning can mi drawn “P 0W of the wet in rainy weatheb'sé, Th0 Inven- tion, simple as it appears, is qmfife new, and has the merit of a great number' «it useful ornamental applieations.â€"Scribncr . i1. and endeavored to impress his wife with the belief that he was a second Saviour, andmot content with the declara. tion expressed his determination to make her assent to the belief that he was really the Son of God. Mrs. Sterling protested mildly and did everything in her power to quiet the deranged man, and hopingto avoid an altercation left the room saying that she was compelled to go to an upper room for some purpose. This set seemed to transform Sterling from the role of a Saviour to that of a devil. He took up a position at the foot of the stairs. armed with a keen edged hatchet. and as his wife came down made, a deadly assault upon her. The first blow inflicted aterrible wound above the left eye, the second a horrible gash in the back of the neck, and there were besides several other frightful gashes on various parts of her body. While Sterling was engaged in his bloody work ason of thewould-be murderer came to the assistance of his mother, whereupon Sterling attacked him in a sav- age manner. While he was struggling with the boy Mrs. Sterling, covered with blood and in an almost dying condition, dragged herself to a neighbor‘s; house a short dis- Sarah Bernhardt is again the lioness 0! Paris. Alexandre Dumas. jun.. went a 3 anre to see her diaembarkmmd, on shaking ' hands, exclaimed : “This is a. return from it the other world!" tance away. Youn Sterling received a severe wound from t e hatchet, but before the blow could be repeated managed to escape. The old man returned to his room and set up a demoniaoal yelling. He was finally secured and sent to jail. The latest report tonight represents Mrs. Sterling in a dying condition from the efl‘ect of her terrible injuries. Haveriy‘s new theatre in Chicago is to have a peculiar feature. which the owner thus describes: " I have constructed two fashion boxes. which are a novelty, and which I think wall take well. These are one on either side of the stage, built level with the floor.aud so arranged that the ladies occupying them may be seen entire] . By this means they are enabled to isplay their toilets. This is the purpose of the fashion boxes.” The vaiuetion list for the present year shows that the clty of London. with its fixed area. of one square rnile, bee increased my“ u...- v- ‘_- .. in value during fine leet five years more rapidly than the whole of the rest of the metropolitan district. where fresh miles of streets are built every year. The reteble value of the city has risen during the last five years from five millions to five and a. half millions, or nearly 17 per cent. Cohhem Hail, the seat of the Esrl 0H Dnrnley, has just been the scene of a. strange suicide. A waggoner named George Edwsrd Stephens, was missed for s short time. and was afterwards found hang- ing in e loft. The msn who ionnd him did not cut him down but ran for the heed mekeeper. who, in his turn, did not out im down. but sent for the police. When out down Stephens wee dead. -os _ .e ‘1‘: â€"v"_ fl--‘__-_7 V â€"-When a statesman on fishing the papers record the hot wit a hurrah. But who ever helm of the fish? A MANIAC'H FURY. Improved Window Shade. Alma-emu" Notes. A Vindkuve Vance Priest Oran-1m a Eleni-elm" Decline of Babies. (Bombay Queue.) A Psi-see priest oi the orthodox type has taken strange revenge on the reformed sec- tion of his old. He is ssid to have waited patiently many yesrs to hatch his plot, and now. assisted by his own ohildren and e Dustoor J smssfijee. one of his own kind. he hes carried is point __muob to file of chagrin of his adversaries. He married off the other day seven boys and seven girls, all saidto be his own grandchildren. and varying from the age of 15 years tol5 weeks. Nearl a dozen of these hapfiy brides and bri egrooms were married y proxy, their mothers going through the ‘ceremony for them over again. accord-i ‘ing to a custom which is said to have been introduced among Parsee villagersirom their Dhed neighbors. These brides and bridegrooms having been fed on milk and apparelled in the “swaddling clothes of infancy" were, says the Rost Goftar in a very graphic account of the proceedings, subjected to the interesting ceremony of marriage; and it is said that the lust?)' cries of the marrying couples, blended wit the petulant shrieks of their mammas in the vain endeavor to silence them, and all this combined with the hurried recital of Zoroastrian ritual by Dustoor Jamaspjee and his six venerable colleagues, produced such a concert of music as to render unavailing the efforts of the native band in the _compound ot the church to make itself heard. Then, in the second ceremony of after night. for Parsee orthodoxy insists on a con- firmatory ceremonial (just as a second meeting of the shareholders of a bankis held to confirm the roceedings of the one held the week before ,the scene was greatly improved by the endeavorsto keep awake the fourteen innocents who were being bound for life in unbreakable chains. The ‘ dustccr and his colleagues are said to have‘ varied their tones from the highestto the lowest key incessantly to interest the chil- dren, and at last whave muttered the ritual over at a surprising pace, for fear the words of the holy writ should not be heard by those in whose behoof they were uttered. Thus, says the Ros: ‘Goftar, was performed a farce to which, lwe are afraid, a defective code of laws imparts all the force and efieot o! a legal marriage. There appears to be a general notion prevailing that a Parsee marriage of infants may, by the Parsee laws. be rendered invalid if the married couple object to their union on coming to majority and before consummation takes place. But really it is the other way. An infant marriage, solemnized with the sanction of the parents of the bride and bridegroom. is as binding as _a marriage of grown-up persona. Then what. if allvor any of the fourteen infants now married ofi should not like their union ? A case has just been decided, of some importance to journalism, as the English judge, Coleridge (upon appeal), laid down clearly the principle that the privilege of publication of reports, not unfair, of what took place in courts of law was absolute, even although it reported statements by witnesses which were untrue, since the ewdence given by a witness in a court of law was not actionable, as his privilege was absolute as to anything which as a witness he stated on oath. He also re ferred to a case which had been carried to the Lords,in which it was decided that com- ‘ ments uponafair reportwere privileged, and that the report itself was protected, and comments which did not go beyond the report were protected also. Therefore, with regard to the case then before them, he said the article complained of by the plaintiff did not appear to go beyond the report, and though the statements might have been untrue in some respects, they having been contained in a report which was protected, the comments upon them, not going beyond the report itself, were also protected, and therefore, on that ground, judgment should go for the de- fendant. . BAD News ron Wu‘ss Dsrsxnns.â€"As the earth keeps cooling it will become porous, and great cavities will be formed in the interior. which will take in the water. It , is estimated that this process is now in progress so far that the water diminishes at about the rate of the thickness of a _pheet of writing paper each year At this ; rate in 6,000,000 years the weter will have s unk a mile. and in 15,000,000 years every u "see of water will have disappeared from tme face of the globe. The nitrogen and oxygen in the atmosphere are also dimin- ishVing all the time. It is in an inappreci- 31,10 degree but the time will come when the lair willhe so thin that no creatures we knovv could breath it and live; the time will (come when the world cannot support life. That will be the period of old age. and when will come deathâ€"Richard A. Prado."- Mr. Edward Pickard Hall, who was editor A! the Maidstone Journal duringi the late Loird Beaconsfleld's contest for aid- stone, says: “ Mr. D'Israeli was seated with this. in my editorial room. on the old premises 0 the Journal, dictating to me his ad ress to the electors. On coming to its cloa . I was about to write his signa- ture, wher he said. ' Leave out the apos- trophe; italooks 30 foreign ; write it one wordâ€"Disraeli. ” And thus it has been written ever since. A few days ago the Courier made mention of the fact that a bald eagle had swooped down from Lavender‘s Mountain and carried off a game cook from the farm of Mr. John Coleman, near Rome. After the eagle had soared some distance above with its prey the game bird was distinctly heard to crow. Well. strange to say, three da s after the rooster had been carried off e returned to his home in pretty fair condi- tion, being only slightly disfi red. His hack feathers were as smooth y down as if he had never been snatched bald-headed hi a bald eagle. _He is now sock of the wal in the FlEtwooda.â€"â€"Rome Courier. There or {our descendants of William Penn now l ving in the United Stoweâ€"Dr. Penn Geeknll Bkilleonâ€"who still receives from the Pennsylvenle Trust Company his income from the Penn estates in Irelandâ€"â€" Colonel Peter Penn Gaekell Hell. and two boys rel-Md to the Penn family through e __ -AL -_- The Limits to a Newspaper Report. {Hi-r .5835 bothers. [”980VING (IN "880". A Booner’. Aerial Journey. The Fast [peed of a Tech Have- u Boy's ll“'e Dr. E. B. Sheaplci h. o! the Philadelphia dc‘ Reading Railro 's surgical staff. has under his care a young atient whose escape from a terrible deat was nothing short of rovidential. A week ago last Saturday illie Stitt. aboy of about 16 years, who resides with his outs on Bydenham street. above Colum ia avenue. had been watching a game of baseball at the Oakdale grounds, the entrance to which is closeto the Cumberland street crossing of the Reading Railroad. So engrossed was he thinking of the play that while going down the slepe on his way home e ailed to notice that two trains, one going out and the other coming in. were fast approaching. The one-legged flag- man at the crossing. who is located at the least dangerous point, says that he gave a about of warning; but however this may be. the boy stepped on the track just as the up train spanned the crossing. and in the twinkling of an eye he was thrown fully twenty feet into the air, coming down again on the soft grass some distance away. l In an unconscious condition he was con-1 veyed home, but the doctors, to their sur. yrise, found that he had only sustained a ractnre of the ribs and another of the leg. On which part the blow which tossed him into the air took efiect the medical men are unable to determine. Either he was struck in the ribs by the engine and broke his log by the fall, or vice versa. Dr. Sheep- leigh says that such an escape was probab y without parallel in the history of railroad- ing. and that it was mainly due to the fast speed at which the train was goin . Had its movement been slower the chil would certainly have been crushed into a shape. less mass. At last accounts he was pro- gressing as favorably as could be expected. â€"Philadelphia Record. Position in sleep is of great importance The food passes from the stomach at the right side, hence its passage is facilitated by going to sleep on the right side. Water and other fluids flow equally on a level. and it requires less power to propel them on a level than upwards. The heart propels the blood in every part of the body at each successive beat. and it is easy to see that if the body is placed in a horizontal posi- tion the blood will be sent to the various Parts of the system with greater ease, with sea expenditure of power. and more per- fectly than if one portion of the body were elevated above a horizontal line. If one portion of the body is too low, the blood does not return as rapidly as it is carried thither; hence, there is an accumulation and distention, and pain follows. If a per- son goes to sleep with the head but a little lower than the body, he will either soon wake up, or will die with anoplexy before morning, because the blood could not get back from the brain as fast as it was car- ried to it. The savage uses a log of wood or abunch of leaves,civilized man a pillow, and if this pillow is too thick. raising the head too high, there is not blood enough carried to the brain ; and as the brain is nourished and invigorated by the nutri- ment it receives from the blood during sleep. it is not fed sufficiently. and the result is unquiet sleep during the ni ht, a waking up in weariness, without re resh~ ment. to be followed by a day of drowsiness and uncomfort and general inactivity of both mind and body The Elan Who Watched. A day or two ago, soon after the hour of noon, an individual who seemed to be laboring under considerable excitement entered agrooery store on Michigan avenue and asked for a private word with the proprietor. When the request had been grantedhe explained: “ Ibelieve myself to be an injured hus. band, and I want to verify my suspicions by watching a house on the other street. This I can best do from the rear of your store. . Have you any objections to my taking a seat back there by the open window?" The grocer granted the favor, and the agitated stranger walked back and took a seat on a box of codfish and began his watch. His presence had almost been forgotten when he returned to the front of the store with hasty step and quivering voice and said: “ Great heavens l but I'll kill her I Yes. I’ll shoot her through the heart I” “ Your wife ?" " Yes, my idolized Mary ! I can no longer doubt her guilt, I’ll be a murderer in less than ten mmutes l" _ The grocer tried to detain him, but he broke away and rushed around the corner. Not hearing anything further of him for half an hour the grocer began to investi- gate, and he discovered that fourteen rolls of butter, a crock of lard, two hams, and other stuff had left the back of the store by way of the window at which the watchful husband was stationedâ€"Detroit Free Press. The Grand Duke Nicholse Constantino- viwh. who is accused both of Nihiliem and semi-lunacy, and ' who is to be confined in the fortress of Dunebnrg for the rest. of his life, is described as a. brave, clever, exceed- ingly_ handsome and feeo‘inatgng men. Eli‘s _ n..-“ a: umuâ€"wvâ€"v .____ __., , ' a , , a wife has been permitted by the Czar to fol. low him to Dunabur . During his exile at Orenburg he fol in love with the remarkably beautiful da hter of the local postmaster. In spite of t e order of Czar Alexander II. that he should break the connection, the Grand Duke betrothed himself to the girl and persuaded the priest otavillage church to marry them. The Czar was so ofiended that he ordered the name of Constantinovitnh to be struck out of the list of the Imperial family, which is prayed for, name by name, in all the churches of Russia. Shortly belcre his death, however, the late Czar rescinded this order. A London cable ssys: Hon. Alexander Mackenzie is in Geneva. but returns to London on the 10th inst. Hon. Oliver Mcwet and {smily will roceed to Edin- bnr h to-mcrrow. Sir ohn Mscdonsld's hes th has greatly improved. end he is now able to attend to several business matters. He feels much cheered by the opinion of Dr. Andrew Clerk thst he is suffering from no organic dimes. His Ehysicisns recommend him to rooee‘d to nnbridge Wells end drink t e waters there. w ich are said to be very beneficisl for silments such ss those sfiectin Sir John. He will probeblyiollow this vice. It convelescence continues as rapidly es ihitherto, he will shortly return to Csnsds. TOUIBD LIKE A BALI” Podium In Sleep. m- Audnclou Bu-pe When Under Ilen- Major-General George P. Buell. now in the city, tells an interesting stcr of the recent escape of “Billy the Ki ." The Tribune's readers are well acquainted with the daring exploits of this bold young desperado, who, though not yet 21 years old, has already killed nineteen men. He is a slight, boyishJooking fellow. and one would never suspect from his bright, youthful face that he could be murderously inclined. Billy belongs to Silver Cit , New Mexico.where his mother now resi es. He says that in all his ‘murders he has never yet killed a man without good cause. The story of his iarrest last fall, his trial and sentence to be hanged, and his removal to Lincoln, near Fort Staunton. are well known. He had warned the authorities that he would make his escape, remarking, “You know. boys, that in order to make this hanging a suc- cess you must have me there. and I don’t intend to be present." He struck his guard over the head with the heavy shackles that were upon his wrists and then snatching the revolver from the belt of the guard he quickly ended the latter's life with a bullet. He then coolly walked up to the house, just across the street. where the other guard lived. and, picking up a shotgun. seated himself to await the guard's return. A few moments later the latter, unconscious of any danger, strolled toward the house. A voice called out, “Hello, old fellow." $1.19 eua!d,_l°°k°d '99. 9°51 5W 1.31"? “I? Kid with the gun in his hand. A second later there was aloud report and the guard staggered, dying from a wound in the side. To make sure of his work Billy sent the contents of the other barrel into the guard’s body. This made the second man that he had killed within ten minutes. Dropping the shot-gun he entered a rear room, which was used for storing supplies and armed himself with half a dozen six- shooters, 9. Winchester repeating rifle and all the ammunition he could conveniently carry. The report of the gun had caused quite a number of people to assemble around the building, and when Billy appeared on the porch every man reached for his pistol. With his Winchester rifle at his side, not raising it to his shoulder, Billy began to shoot and the men began to ‘scatter. “ I am fighting the whole world for my life,” said he. “ and I mean busi- ness.” He then ordered one of the men to get him a horse and a file. He mounted the former and with l the latter filed off the shackles upon one of his legs, and not stopping to remove the other, tied the severed manaole with its chain to his belt so that it should not impede his movements. Not a man in the crowd dare draw a bead on him, and saying that he did not intend to steal the horse and would return it. Billy started out of the town in a gallop. Before he had gone far the horse “ bucked ” and threw him. He jumped up and at the muzzle of his pistol com elled one of the men to catch 3his horse, w ich ' he remounted and rode away and has not since been seen or heard of. It seems almost incredible that one man could take possession of a town and make his escape in the face of a score of armed men ; but such is the fact, Billy is said to be a master of the use of the revolver. He is a dead shot and can shoot quicker than any man in New Mexico. He can use an ordinary Colt’s revolver as quickly as another man can a self-cocking pistol. He shoots with his left hand as accurately as he does with his right. and his aim with a revolver in each hand, shooting simultaneously, is unerring. With 8. Winchester rifle he can shoot as well with the gun at his side, without apparently taking any aim, as most men can shoot in the usual way. His ‘ equal for the quick and unerring use of . fire arms has never been known in New Mexica. It is believed that he is now in ' the vicinity of Fort Sumter, he having a ‘ sweetheart in that locality. «saw of Dcuhâ€"Mnnclloun Skill with the Final. Trieycling has become the fashionable pursuit of the young men in England, and as the ladies never fail to follow in the wake of fashion when set by their admirers. the tricycle has been adopted by them with the greatest eagerness. At first it was con- sidered “ rather fast” and looked upon with shyness, but ever since the newspaper account of the ride taken by Her Majesty and the Princess Beatrice, each royal lady mounted on her iron horse and careering gayly on the high road and through the green lanes round Osborne, all sample has been banished. It is urged that no danger can exist. as the Queen, who is a heavy, fat lady. was enabled to sit her steed with as much ease and confidence as when in former days she used to prance so proudly on her high mottled horse before the troops at ‘review. And so professors of the bicycle and tricycle abound in London, and the 1 racing and chasing along the suburban roads at twilight and the laughing and chatting as the iron coursers shoot by, give quite a new aspect to the solitary walks around London. TE Detroit, Mackinac and Marquette Railroad Company now 010000 000 00010 even 1,000,000 001000 or the Choicest FARMING and TIMBBBBD LANDS in the Northern Peninsula of Michigan. Déatlned to be the beat wheat produoln region in the world. ties of Chippewa, Mackinac, Schoolor t and Mar-quanta, and the beat agnoultprq} lauds n the State of Michiggn. MAJ.-- .. (“.1 ..... Manhlnm l the De“ nouwunu nuuun m wuv uuw v. .....,....,..... Among one in the counties of Chippewa an " burnt or cleared " lands. These lands offer many advantages over the Prairie lands of the west,” the timber lands adjoining insure a supply of fuel at little cost. The col being a rich clay loam of eat depth. The timber remaining upon the land being generally snflicient for the settler’s use in uilding and ioncing. These partially cleared lands are now offered at the low price of from M to $4.50 per acre one. fourth cash, and the remainder at purchaser's option, at any time within nine years with interest pa able annually at 7 per cent. oads are being opened through these lands and no better opportunity has ever been offered to men of small means to secure a good form, and intending purchasers wi be wise by availing them selves of this chance before prices advance, as the lands are being ra idl taken and settled upon. The lands more immediately on the line of the Detroit, Mackinac arquetto railroad, from the Straits of Mackinac to Marquette, are more heavily timbered. and are almost universally good agri cultural lands. leaving s‘plendid farms when the timber is removed. The iron and lumber nterests of the 11 per peninsula are of such magnitude as to call for all the charcoal and lumber that the timber an wood n n the lands will produce-this will enable the settler to make good wages while clearin the lan . Lumber mills and charcoal kilns will ebuilt at various points along the line, and inmaces are now being erected alon the line of the road at Point 8t. ace. The great demand an good prices for labor. both in w nter and summer. make these lands or ticular y desirable as homes {or the r man. The lands adjacent the railroad are oilered at pr see from 05 upwards, according to locat on, value of timber. etc. The lands are at your very door, and ‘ are being ra idly settled by Canadians. i Fer pamp lets. maps andother information. address. W. 0. STRONG. Land Commissioner, - at) Newborn and McMillan Building. Detroit, Michigan (From the Denver Tribune.) “ BILLY THE KID.” rent wheat produeln region in the World. These lends are situated in the coun. lecklnso, Schoolor t and Mon-queue, and embroce mony thousands of notes or 1 lands in the State of Michigan. he counties of Chippewa and Mackinac ore troots of what are known as the lands. These lends otter many advantages over the Fruit-lo lands of the west," joining insure a. supply of fuel oi: little cost. The soi being I. rich clay loam of minor remaining upon the land being generally anfllcient for the seitler’e use in Acorrespoudent sends us the following graphic description oi an incident which. but for the promptitude of one men. might have resulted in dire and iatal disaster. The fine steamer (the Helvetia). belonging to the National Steamship Company. left New York on the 7th inst... having a large number of cabin and steerage passengers on board, and arrived in the Mersey yesterday morning. As described b one of the passengers. the vessel and al on board were miraculously preserved from total destruction by the seamanlike conduct of the master of the British Queen. of the Philadelphia line. outward bound. During the early morning on Frida . the 18th ult.. a dense fog arose as the He vetia cleared the Newioundland banks, and the fog-horn had been kept sounding for some hours. This had ceased being sounded for sometime. when about 7 a.m., a steamer (under full sail and steam) suddenly appeared,bearing down on the Helvetia‘s forequarter, and so close was she that the passengers and crew on deck were certain of aiearful collision taking place in a few seconds. The man at the wheel on board the British Queen seemed deprived of power to manage the vessel, and even seemed to put the wheel the wrong way. when the captain was seen in his night-dresstospring upon the bridge, knock the seaman from the wheel, and take his place. Then the sails were seen to flap. the ship obeyed the captain’s guiding hand, while all looked on with hated breath. Scarce twenty yards lay between the vessels when the British Queen, so gallantly handled. answered her helm. and rushed past the Helvetia’s stern. Then there rang out a cheer never to be forgotten. as the hundreds of men, women and children found them- selves saved from a watery graveâ€"Liver- pool Post. â€"When the old man chased him out of the parlor and kicked him over the front gate, J enkine said he was a. coward to kick LARDINE! And for sale by dealers. Ask your merchant to: Lardiue and take no other. ‘ . McCOLL BROS.CO.,TORONTO This oil under the severest test and most active comllgetition was at. the Toronto Indus- trial Exhib tion awarded the highest prize: also the GOLD MEDAL at the Provincial Exhibi- tion,Ha.milton, and the highest award at the Dominion Exhibition, Ottawa, the silver mednL Farmers and all who use Agricultural machin- ery. will save money and machinery by using none but LARDINE. Binkle’s Anti-Bonsumpfive Syrup COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA WIIOOPING-COUGII, GROUP. This old established remedy can be with confi- dence recommended for the above complaints. TRY I_T_._ _If your merchant has not got it, he Siffgétiit for'ygg.‘ :imbehind his back. For a. leading a ecielty. Can be sold in a3 section of Gene. 3. Send poem! card with dress for descriptive circular. 1.. C. BENTON, ST. THOMAS. ONT A Moore'suniverssl assistant and com late mechanic, 1,016 pages, 500 engravings. 1W} mots; best subscription book in the 8market to dag; exclusive monitors; circulars tree. .1 8 BERTSON BRO Whitby. THOUSANDS WILL TELL YOU THAT Aaron’s Ant1dqte__ Sure-lâ€"yâ€"cuvrea Anthms and Bronchitis. Dragging sell it. 8mm FOR A Cmcumm. J UDGE FOR YOURSELE “253,303 '12:: LANDS ON THE LINE OF THE WISGONSIN CENTRAL B. H. Hamilton, Oniario. UUHStLI‘ marriage. Address . Fox ox 3, Fulwnvillo, N. Y. For full particulars, which wil be sent address AGENTS WANTED Dr. A. AARON. Bockhnd, Maine. GENTS m” WHITED FOB Thrilling Dee-c II Sen. achine Oil IN THE WORLD, UIIABLI!!! L. COLBY. Land Commissioner Mllwa nkeo, Wis ASK FOR THE VERY BEST Is manufactured by By sending 35 cents money. with age, height, color of eyes and hair, you will receive by return mail a correct picture of your future hue- bender wife. with name and date at 5611):. w. menu: (qumerly T. Bickle g 399)3 Propriétor. 2‘ f " ' '\.'0 Ch”.

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