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Woodville Advocate (1878), 28 Jul 1881, p. 7

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Ottawa is in no way behind other places and has a mystery ; it is a. young woman .who is in the case. too. \Vitha young man she entered one of the" main avenuesleading to Rideau Hall, laughing and chatting, and then turned off into the woods ; nothing more is known or suspected in that connection until a team with two men and a female shrieking 5‘ murder 1" is seen (by a policeman) rapidly driven along the highway. The policemen follows, attempts to shoot, finds his revolver Wlll not go ofl‘, he retires to the woods, and subsequently the outrage goes on. Now the detectives have found a woman's hat, a cotton dress and a petti- ooat on the line traversed by the vehicle. At present it looks as if some diabolical act of foul play had been committed, of which a woman is the victimâ€"ii not mur- der, an outrage scarcely less brutal. Three valuable livings have lately become vacant in England b the deaths of two clergymen who were ormerly members of the House of Commons. One of these gentlemen was not ordained until he was 60, and, of course. merely took orders to get the income. In the case of a living, now split into three, of extraordinary value.‘ an army officer came home from India, qualified for orders, and duly passed into Reassession of 835,000 a year. There would a tremendous ado were such proceedings to take place nowada .s. very much more being expected of tie clergy than was expected thirty years ago. The Hon. Mr. Gr mstone, who lately died, was probably the last ex-M. 1’. divine in his country. Prof. C. F. Fraser. of Halifax, N. 8.. a. short time since received from his brother, Mr. J. A. Fraser, 1!. member of the Mounted Police Force, a fire safe or match I) made of buffalo skin, curiously orimmente with beads. ete., and significantly made in a she to represent a. headless man. Sit- ting ull presen (1 him with the match sale, which he ed carried through the were as a souvenir. A despatch from Kingston dated last Monday night says: On Salturday a young Rochester girl named Pearl Reed received a sentence at the Police Court of two years in the Mercer Home for drunkenness,dis- orderly conduct. masquerading in men's clothing and vagranoy. This morning Mr. J. McIntyre entered an appeal from the decision of the Magistrate in the case. It willbe held. for one thing. that there has been a misinter rotation of the law. in consequence of which she suffered unish- ment.. Pearl Reed is now in jail, ressed as persons usually are when incarcerated in this place. Her luxuriant hair has been shorn. She refuses to give her proper name, not even to the Inspector of Jails.‘ She don’t want her folks in Rochester to know of the disgraceful conclusion of her trip to Kingston. Look at me nm with those woud’rous eyes. Wh are we doo ed to the gift of speech ile you are silent. and uweet, and. wise ? You have much to learu~you have more to teach. Babv mine. A Young quan Spin-incl Away in Ollnwn. And again a. softened thought of Dora came to her husband. Of course she loved them. The little villa at Florence rose before him; he saw vividly, as though he had left it but yesterday, the pretty vine- shaded room where Dora used to sit nursing the little ones. He remembered her sweet tience. her never-failing. gentle love. ad he done right to wound that sad heart afresh by taking those children from her ? Was it a just and fitting reward for the watchful love and care of those lonely years ? â€"â€"A- . _ _- _ ' He would fain have pardoned her, but he could not; a'ud he said to himself again, :11 In the hour of death [â€"1 will forgive her an." 13% mine, with the ve. grave face ere did you get at royal calm, Too staid for joy, too still for grace ‘2 I bond as I kiss your pink, soft palm ; Are you the first of a. noblor rage; Yaqqoznatrom £11.? reaionononeasq, And gazing awhile wohere the semphs dwell Has given your face a tglory and glowâ€" Of that brighter lun have you aught to tell? I seem to have known itâ€"I more would know Baby mine. Yen}- gnlgn. blue eye§_1_1a_v_e a far-ottyench, now?"st Ladyh'arl “I would sooner ypsrawith my life," he replied. ‘ I am not ngon to strong ex- prosaions, mother, but even you could n_ov_or guess how my life is bound up in “ Then let me any one word. Ronald,” said his motherâ€"“ remember Dora loves them so dearly and deeply as you do.» Just think for a. moment what it has cost her to give them up to you? She must see them soon, with your full consent and permis- sion. They can go to her, it you will.” " Vnn ru-A riaht mnM'mr " hn mu'fl nfltnr “ It had better be in London,” said Lady Helena. “ I will write to Dora, and tell her. The very anticipation of it will make her happy until the time arrivesâ€"she loves her children _so denrly.” " You are right, mother," he said, after u few minutes. “ They are Dora’ 5 chil- dren, and she ought to see them; but they must not return to that farm- houseâ€"I cannot bear the thought of it. Surel they cnn meet on neutral groundâ€"at your ouse. any. or in London ; and let it be at Christ. “Yes," said Ronald. gravely. “I am proud of my children. There is no taint otuntruth or deceit there. motherâ€"they m worthy of their race. I consider Bea- trice the noblest girl I have ever known; and} love my_sweet__Lilly just as well.j’ now] ” sajq Lwdy Eat-1‘ “ I am {Iery leased," said Lad Earle. “ Next to you. nald, I love Lione Daore; his frank. proud, fearless disposition has 9. out. chum for me. He is certainly like strioe. How he detests everything mean mdlalsg, jusfiya she @968! " den. and then asked him to join us at Eulesoourh Kc almost 'jum ed for joy.’ u the children say. He will allow us in 5 week or ten dsys. Lionel will come with (Ooutlnuod {tom second pus). clued he could not go to Lyuntou, the lino was full at work-people. He did not Scotland. and was as homeless as s wsslthy {bung {not With several estates could we] be. allowed him to bewilder himself with conluudexcuses and blun- A Girl Masquemdlng In news More. “ Y9!) wgujd 90t_lik9 t2) 'part with them n' ANOTHIS. B NIYS’I‘E BY. To be continued. Baby Mine. Baby mine 7 In his recent discourse on the Robertson Smith case, in Edinburgh, the Rev. Bald- win Brown said: “ I have never seen any- thing in the way of the advanced criticism which ever tempted me to believe that the substance of the Book of Deuteronomy was the work of a late age of Jewish history. I hold that the book must have been writ- ten by a man familiar with desert experi- ences, and for a people fresh from desert wanderings and Egyptian life. The whole atmosphere of the'bookâ€"and that it is next to impossible for the most skilful manufacture to imitateâ€"breathes of the desert and of Egypt. After the Jews had been brought into contact with the great Oriental despotism, all the imagery would have been in quite another key' had the book been written in those days. Then the Jews had entirely lost sight of Egypt and the desert; and the acknowledged literature of their later days bears the strongest traces of the influence which the Oriental «civilization had exercised on their imaginations. an influence which it would have been simply impossible for a writer of those days to suppress. I believe firmly that the advanced criticism will return to the belief that the books of the Pentateuch were sub- stantially the works of the age which witnessed the wanderings, with large inter- polations possibly, which it willbe the work of the learned and reverent critic to trace. But did we need the reassurance. we might find it in the manner in which critics of the very highest eminence, who distri- bute with sublime uncertainty this passage in an ancient document to one writer, or one age, and that to another, wrangle over the distribution ; and while professing that the indications are indisputable, take precisely opposite views of what they mean." Commenting on Mr. Brown’s discourse Dr. Peter Bayne writes: “We should, we confess, have liked a rather warmer and bolder appreciation of ro- gressive Biblical science, as exemplifie in Professor Smith's lectures, than we meet with in Mr. Brown’s sermon.” The worshippers in the church at Wind- sor, where the Royal Horse Guards hold their church parade, were somewhat astounded, not to say scandalized, recently. to see the rest of the congregation stand u when the Prince and Princess of Wales an other members of the Royal famil entered the sacred buildingâ€"an aoknowle gment of State su remacy which the extreme High Church c not brook. But outsiders were greatly pleased when the Prince appeared In full uniform at the church door at the head of his fine regimentand marched with them. A sealed car on the Canada Southern Railway at St. Thomas recently was found to contain a tramp who, had he remained much longer a prisoner, would have died of heat and suffocation. The sale of Queen Victoria‘s yearlings has of late years generally brought forward a very inferior lot of animals. This year, however, the contrary was the case; the yearliuge, although the majority of them were small, realized an average of nearly 31,000 apiece. Dean Swift. heal-in of a. carpenter‘s falling' through a son olding of a house which he was engaged in repairing, remarked that he liked to see a mechanic go through his work promptly. Leaving Winnipeg on Tuesday, we pro- ceeded to Portage la VPrairieâ€"68 miles west on the C. P. R.â€"â€"now the west ter~ minus of that line. The Portage is prettily situated on the batik of the Assiniboine River, and in the midst of the finest agri. cultural country one can imagine. It has now a population of about 1,500. and is rapidly increasing. no less than 160 houses having been built there since last January, and mills, hotels and warehouses are going up in all directions. Business warehouses and stores particularly are in great demand and command almost tabu- lous rents. During our stay in the Portage we were the guests of our old townsman, Dr. Hagarty, now one of the largest landed proprietors in the country, b whom and his good wife we were most ospitably-entertained, and who daily tookus for long drives through the surrounding country, where we called upon a number of farmers formerly from Ontario, who 'all speak in glowing terms of the country, -and not one of whom did not xpress an opinion that it was far ahead of ntario, and that he .would not return here on any consideration, preferring even the winters there to these of Ontario. The farms there range in size from 320 to 640 and even 1,000 acres each, and not afew farmers have now from 100 to 300 acres in wheat, all looking magnificent, and promis- ing from 40 to 45 bushels to the acre: which will be marketed at the Portage at from 700 to 900 per bushel, being at present werth 900. The C. P. Railway now running into the Portage has greatly increased the value of farming lands in the neighborhood. Earms that could have been bought a year ago for 810 per acre, now bring from 815 to 820, and are steadily increasing in value. Concerning the rumored approaching departure of H. 1%. H. the Princess Louise for Canada, an inquiry at the office of the Allan Line office. London. was answered by the statement that no a plication had been made for her aooommogation on any of the vessels of that line. Many of the principal wholesale houses and manufacturers of Ontario and Quebec either have re resentatives or branch ware houses in innipeg, among whom are Messrs. Turner Co.. of Hamilton; Fo - erty dz Bro.. of Montreal; John Campbel . of London; the Oshawa Cabinet Company. of Oshawa; King dz Brown. of Toronto; Harris. Son 6: Co..of Brantford ; John Wat- son, of Ayr; Gurney. Russell Co.. of Dundas, and many others. all of whom appear to _be doing a rushing business. Auction sales of real estate are very numerous. and the amount of property changing hands daily is something enor- mous. To give an an idea of the value of real estate in at cityâ€"on the day we arrived there a pimperty having a frontage of 117 feet on ain street was sold for $95,200, and on the following Monday another lot ohan ed hands at 8725 per foot. exglusive of_buil _ ings. ‘ Manure. George M. Gunn and John Boultbee. of London. heve returned {ram a trip to Manitoba. They report to the Free Preu as tollows: THE GREAT NORTH WEST Antiquity ol the Pentateuch. Sir J ulius Benedict on June 29th gave at St. James’ Hall, London. his forty-sum annual concertâ€"an experience that has pgobably never been equalled \Py any muei~ clan. Samuel Moore, son of John Moore. aBlair farmer, was working a horse hay rake, when the animal kicked him with great force. The unfortunate lad died soon after. He was a brother of the Messrs. Moore, of the Novelty Carriage Works. 63%. Captain Rankin, of the ill-fated Victoria, has been offered a position as pilot in the service of the Merchants’ Line, running between Detroit and Montreal. It is not known whether he will be.a.ble to accept, as the assizes at which he is to be tried in connection with the Victoria disaster commence in September. It appears that through the instrumen- tality of His Excellency the Governor- General the sword which belonged to the gallant but ill-fated General Montgomery. who fell before Quebec on the last night of the year 1775, has been transferred to the Livingstone family, residing on the Hudson River. N.Y., the general having married into that family. Principal Grant has returned to Kings- ton from his eastern tour. \He has been very successful. and has met with great kindness from all the graduates of Queen‘s. The subscriptions to the endowment scheme were quite large. and the romise is that several thousand dollars will come from Eastern Ontario. The Principal will leave short] for Goderich, from thence he goes to Man toba. few hours. The Van. Archdeacon Lauder writes to say that he in rapidly improving, d that there is no foundation for the min; deapatohea sent to the press from Ottawa. John Simons has been for three years on the Northwest Mounted Police, but is now recreating in Gait. He is a son of T. M. Simona. {or many years manager of the Gore Mutual Insurance company. Mr. J. F. Bryan and Mrs. Bryan (Miss Helen Blythe) returned from the east yes- terday, after an extended tour.- They played in Montreal, Brockville, Napanee and other places to good houses. and had a. pleasant trip home per steamer Passport. Fourteen heavy-laden freight cars broke away from a train on the Chicagmk St. Paul Railroad and started down a grade of eighty feet to the mile. A locomotive went in pursuit and made a brisk ohase.but gravity proved too- much for steam, and the runaway cars were soon thundering along at the rate of sixty miles an hour. A~telegram was sent forward to clear the track, but it could not be obeyed quick enough by one train of cars. from which the occupants escaped just in time to avoid death in one of the mbst violent collisions that ever happened. At Connemara. in the west of Ireland, the old women of the vicinity are given the privilege of gathering the wool scratched off the sheep's backs on the stones, hedges and bushes; this wool they then spin and knit into stockings. selling them at 12} cents a pair. As many as 200 pairs are knitted by a person in a season. 1n converaauon yesterday the Archbishop of Canterbury said the last audible words of Dean Stanley were: “I have labored amidst man frailties and much weakness to make eetminster Abbey the great centre of religious and national life in 9. trnly ljberal spirit.” Hon. 8. C. Wood and Dr. O‘Reilly, Deputy-Inspector of Prisons and Asylums, were at Fort‘William on' the 9th instant. The Treasurer is expected to return to Toronto in a week or ten days. ' ‘ Miss Costigan,daughter of John Costigan. M.P., was a winner of a gold medal at Notre Dame Convent, Ottawa. Among her work was a portrait in crayon of her father, and it was much admired. J ustin McCarthy Is the most remarkable looking man of 50 I ever saw. Looks 35 and well-preserved at that. Small man ; rich lightiah brown hair ; full sandy beard â€"spectaolea ; exceedingly trim and neatly out features and general make-up. Mr. Blake has been requested by Lieut. - Governor Wilmot, through Mr. Piokard, M. P. to aooep tthe hospitalities of Govern~ ment Housep during art of his stay at Fredericton, N. B. Tlfe courteonp invite» tion will no doubt be complied with. For the first eleven weeks of the last quarter the mortality in Dublin averaged 26.4’ per 1,000, against 20.3 in London and 21.1 in Edinburgh. Haviu regard to the wonderful agglomeration 0 human beings in London. to its being the greatest port in the world, and to the fame of its physicians attracting patients there from all quarters, the extraordinary low average death rate reflects great credit on the authorities. Lbrd Colm- bampbell (brother of the Marquis of Lorne) and Miss Gertrude ylgod w_ero_ margieq ygstgrdax. ‘ T113 Princess Louise and tho-Duke o'f Argyll were present. The Bishop of Kentucky assisted at the ceremony. Mrs. Shields. wife of Mr. John Shields. on contract " B," C. P. R}. died at Rat Portage on Wednesda. afternoon of an affootion o! the brain tor an illness of a His Excellency the Governor-General has consented to hold a. reception at New- market, next Thursday, while on his way north. He will arrive at Newmarket at 1.30, and will receive and reply to addresses from the Mayor and Corporation. called to Europe' by lamily aflllocion, and will probably be away three months. Rev. Mr. Lowry y. of Brnntford, end tamil intend to leave that cit about the 3rdo August, and to make create the place 0! their future residence. Mrs. Issac Burpee {all u Fredericton on Tuesday, and sprained her foét so badly thac ahe' 18 quite unable to uée it. She returned to St. John yesterday morning. Prof. Robertson Smith has, it is stated, intimated his intention not to enter a. pulp it till the General Assembly’ 3 decision in his case has been reversed. Two of his prinoifial lay supporters have left. the Ohm or are about to do so. Rev. Edward Huringwn. Canon of Enter. in dead. Dr. O'Donovnn is the Daily News corres- pogdentjmgrjsoned qt gen: The Garfield fund his now reached 0151.000. mdont 1m rimmed at Merv. _I_%e_v.- J; (hwy2 of_ G_l_autox:{l, I!“ beet} Penal-I. Ann! «I an Bull-h Aclor In New howlsâ€"Sentenced Io Blackwell's Islandâ€"Ills Sad story ltd-as Friends to Ills Beliefâ€"Gull“ Ills Release. The story of. the English actor Fairchild, as told in the New York police court on Tuesday. was heartrendiug. He recounted how he had left his wife and four children in London to settle sfiairs and started for America in the steerage ol the steamer Sardinian. On June 30th he landed at Quebec. after having endured all the dis- comforts of a steerage passage in a crowded steamer. He then went to Montreal, and. accompanied by Mr. 8 arrow. Manager of the Theatre Bo al of t at city. journeyed toward New ork to find employ- ment. He had just 810 and about twenty letters of recommendation to prominent men. He at up at the Astor Place Hotel. met with isappointment on every hand, and finall called on the Bug- lish Consul, who said e could do nothing, but sent him to the St. George's Sooiety.‘ This was the last hope. but here too disap- pointment met him. He had been living at restaurants for fifteen cents per day for two weeks. and then was pennyless. He was too proud to sing on the street without a disguise, and could not ask for a penny, but thought that i! he was disguised to re- present an ed lnan and sang some nice songs u n e streets some persons might drop a ew pennies in his hat. He related how the disguise was a success at first. saying with tears. “ I would not have done this had I not been starving." But on the occasion of his arrest he came nearly being injured by the angry mob who perceived the deception. He said he had only eaten a crust since Monday. When he received a sentence of six months on Blackwell’s Island the prisoner broke down completely, and sobbed bitterly. ' A London Minister who Denounces Pulpit Bemllonalism. Rev. J. H. Robinson (a well-known Methodist clergyman) delivered an address on the pulpit at the meeting of the Minis» terial Association, London, yesterday. In the course of his remarks he said: How, then, has the lowering of the style of pulpit preaching come to pass ? I answer this question honestly and according to my Judgment, while at the same time I entertain as high an opinion 'of. the piety, fervor and usefulness .of the parties ‘I refer to as any other person can do. I believe that some worthy so-called revivalist, together with some worthy ladies who go about the country lecturing, have had much to do with the deterioration of genuine pulpit eloquence. They have told anecdotesâ€"laughable storiesâ€"and have dealt largely in carica- tures. They have ransacked family rela- tions to find the pathos of deep human sympathies; they have gathered tragedies from the slums of our towns and mirth- provoking incidents furnished by extensive travels and a wide acquaintance with man- kind. They have made us laugh and cry by turns; on our knees. one moment and the next ready to dance the polka from excitement and mirth. The world's applause has preceded and followed them. The world and the churches’ money has been showered upon them and the voice within us has said “ Go thou and do like- wise.” Get up a lecture, or a "‘ most elo- quent“ sermon, as the papers call it; get yourself advertised and fairly going in the eerie-comic way. and your fortune is made. Sensation is the thing, it is the order of the day, and_ they shall prosper that love her. Several of the members demurred from the statement of the speaker that pulpit oratory and power was on the decrease, and contended that never had the pulpit grenter power than at pye present day. ' Rev. ‘Dr. Evans said tfiat the Rev. Dr. Wild‘s sermons were composed of “ errant nonsense.” Yesterday,gn reading his story in the morning papers, influential persons sought his release. and their purpose was accom- plished. Letters offering situations, fre- quently accompanied by ecuniary aid, had been pouring in all da from outside points, and various benevolent gentlemen of the city have not been backward in attempts to forward the interests of the unfortunate actor. ‘ We are at the middle .of July, but the house fly has only just embarked upon his midsummer career. Now he winks at us from behind the cubes of cut sugar, or flings himself in playful gymnastics upon the ebon ms berry. Already he begins to skate on the utter dish and love his fore foot in the inkstand; he will presently infest the cream pot and plunge madly into the soup. Later on he pervades every- where. one experienced flydn a bed cham- ber will do the businessof several muezzins, though he wakes the sleepers to anything but rayer; and a family that keeps a fly will ave no use for an alarm clock. Then, with the comingof dawn's roseate hues, the suddenly awakened head of the family will wildly fling his hand across his nose and say things he will be sorry for, while the fluttering bird that woke him sits on the pillow taking a dry wash and musing over the utter de ravity of mankind. For the next six wee at least we may be sure that to Mr. Mallook’s earnest question. " Is life worth living?" the human family will unanimously respond, " Not in fly time,” attending the Royal Commission. This Boer talked very big about his shooting powers, and very small about those of the English. Lady Florence challenged him. therefore. to a trial of skill. The match was arranged. The Boer shot with a Martini-Henry rifle, Lady Florence with a Winchester, at bottlés placed at a distance of 200 yards. To the delight of all the onlookers, Lady Florence hit her bottles one after the otheras it they were elephants. and the Boer went away signally defeated. and with the conviction that if all English- men ean't shoot, some English women can. A nugget of Sold wei hing 58 pounds has been nneartho in Mr. rapeznikofl‘a mine in Siberia. Lady Florence Dixie, who, when last heard of, was in the camp at Bennett’s Drift, cam ing out, and Cooking her own rations witE the help of Sir Beaumont, has re-establiehed the somewhat damaged reputation of her countrymen for shooting. There were there a Dutch Boerâ€"one of the fo_u_r told ofi‘to guard the_Boer leaders 'l‘llfl H'l‘ullY OF AN ACTOR. Amugemems of the House Fly. ' MODERN PREACHING. COUGIIS, COLDS, ASTHMA \VllOOPING-COUGH, GROUP. This old established remedy can be with cant! dance recommended for the above complaints. TRY IT. Hyour merchant has not get If. he can get it ft: you. ‘ JOHN. W. BICKLE ~ A {Formerly T. Biokle g 5013),» . n-__nAA,, The Prince and Princess of Wales opened a new infirmary for the sick poor of Marylo- bone parish, at Notting Hill. on Wednesday week. The building has been erected by the Board of Guardians at a cost of £118,- 000, to accommodate about 760 sick persons. The reception given by the inhabitants 0!. the district to the Prince and Princess of Wales as they drove through the streets was enthusiastic. This is said to be the first instance in which the opening of a poorolaw institution has been honored by the presence of Royaltv. ‘ Machine Oil The Duke of Cambridge. while at the dinner of the London cahmen. the other day. received a somewhat equivocal oom~ pliment. One of the oabmen. in respond- ing to the toast of the evening. described the joy which he felt at the first eight of the Duke. Hie Royal Highness. said oahb . had a presence and an appearance whic . had he not known who he was, would have. induced him to think that he was a oahman of thirty years' standing. The Duke looked glum for a. moment. and then joined heartily in the laughter which followed. cenuy. in honor or some pagan deity. A it. a. foot deep, six feet broad, and thirty Fang, wee dug. Some five or six outioeds of wood were thrown into the pit end not fire to. As soon as the wood was reduced to living coals of fire the whole was spread out and the fire flattened to the sun-Me o! the pit. The voteriee of Thurmu‘eh the name of the deity) then ran over the of fire the whole length five or six. times, each time cooling their feet'in water. Miss Proudfut is one o! the loveliest girls in Southern Kansas. and a year ago was the recipient of much admiring attention from the opposite sex; but now there is a disposition on the part of the yountm to stay away from her. The change is caused by the fact that threee of her suitors have received gunshot wounds while in her company. It is not known who the assassin is, but he is supposed to be somebody who, being unable to secure the prize himself. is determined that nobody else shall do so. What is knofln as “ treading the fire " was performed at Bangalore. India. re. 0?“!Y‘yifi lionor 0-! gougq pagan dgity._ A And for sale by dealers. Ask your merchant to! 149311116 996 take no other. Bickle’s Anti-Eonsumpfive Syrup This oil under the severest test and most active competition was at the Toronto Indus- trial Exhibition awarded the highest prize; also the GOLD MEDAL at the Provincial Exhibi- tion,Bamilwn, and the highest sword at the Dominion Exhibition, Ottawa. the silver model. Farmers and all who use Agricultural mchin ery, will save money and machinery by gains none but LARDIN E. For a loading Mfaculty. Can be sold in a section of Can Send postal card with In? dross tor descriptive circular. In C. BENTON. ST. THOMAS. ONT I1. TIVE, ros ocmblo emplovmeni for touch- ors during Vscat on, or longer. or permanent. {or few energetic young men in this snd adjoining counties. To those who can show fair success and Ms tability1 expenses. liberal commission and mo( crate an s will [)0 paid. Address with references, Drawer 1. Toronto. £1.11 Mioorlo;1 gnlveml assistsm hind cam lg; moo an o. . es, enmv n facts: but subscgfigtlon book In theglsl’mrkot' to $3“ exclusive terrlto ; circulars free. -I 9 13331308 a: mo ., Whitby. There is but one way to cure baldness, and that is by using Carboline, n. deodor- ized extract of petroleum, the natural hair grower. As recently improved, it isthe only dteeejng for the he": that cultured peo'ple will €89. IN THE WORLD, Is manufacturedvby McCOLL BROS.CO.,TORONTO WI 3 C 0 N S I N s 500,000 Acres LAND ON THE LINE OF THE WISCONSIN CENTRAL H. II. JUDGE FOR YO‘URSELE LARDINE! Hamilton. Ontario. I'd-[1H 33‘ \‘ For full particulars, which wil be sent address British and Foreign Notes. AGENTS WANTED GENTS WAN TED; â€" LUCBA- GENTS :5" WANTED ‘ FOR i Geo. Dew,r'1‘lr'ti\vriélfiliivfiâ€" _A_g_é1'1}.:§§ Yongo 59613399”: Buy- . 9190". General FORTUNES F08 FARMERS. 50,000 Farm. 6.000.000 1cm. Best What Llll. lid: lulu, Choke Timber ‘ Firming. stock hist- . Dairying. Fuel and Inter in 1 “Into. $9.50 per acre andn wtrd. Ono-sixth cash and five annu pagmenta. Ro- duced Fare and Freigh to settlers. ngto f_or “gublicgpiong No. 63." \ Lind Agent. 81;. Paul. Minn. NORTHERN PACIFIC MINNESOTA. CHARLES L. COLBY, Land Commissioner Mllwankea.Wl By sending 35 cents money, with age, heiaht, color of eyes and hair. you will reccivo by, return mail a correct picture of your future has band or wife, with name and date of mnrri o. '. FOX ox 3. Fultonvlllc. N. Y. 1 Million nuns. THE VERY BES Proprfétoi.

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