Bonents ef the zakuska stand. On entering for dinner everybody gathers informally around these tables, and helps himself at pleasure. A battery of decanters also stand upon each table, and makes the choice diï¬icult between the national wodka, hitters, kommel, cognac, liquor and the English genevre. Having stimulated the a petite by the zakuska, everybody takes a gees at the table. Soup is ï¬rst served. he most popular and expensive of all Russian soups is prepared from the sterlet, a ï¬sh from the Volga. But the favorite with the Czar and the family is what is called “ schtschi,†the pronunciation of which is perhaps best expressed by a violent sneeze. This is the quintessence of all Russian soups, and, next to brandy. the dearest thing to the stomach of a Russian. The receipt for the way it is prepared in the imperial kitchen isa precious inheritance and is kept a state secret. A rough idea of it may be given by :‘saying that the very largest and tenderest - possible piece ofrmutton is cooked together with the juioiest iece of beef and a quan- tity of onions, gar ic, cabbage, beets, beans and other vegetables and herbs. Another sort of soup which often appears upon the imperial table is called "Otroska," and consists 'ofa sort of conglomerate sauce made of pears, apples, plums, barley and groats, in which swim little pieces of meat, herring and pickled herkins. The Czar isparticu- larly fond 0 chicken cutlets a la posharski â€"made of bashed chicken fried in'the form of outlets in bread-crumbs and eggs. He is also fond of porkcooked in milk and served with a sharp sauce. The Czar specially likes ï¬sh prepared in a great variety of ways, pickled cucumbers and capauns. He always eats in full dress uniform, and the same is required of all who dine with him. ll aha in the clty or country abldc, I! the. whlch 8110 loo '3 {or and covets forever, The big. elry closet, er oy and her pride-â€" The roomy, clean closet. t e well-ordered closet The blx, elry closet, her Joy and he: pride; The house mey be Reflect h-om gel-rot to cellar. Weltlill‘shted, we aired. with cold water and .. o ; Andy 3. to the e e 01 the temlnlne dweller. I! o oeetleee, In u l1 l1: were not. ‘ How on she hoe Bonk like e dove than 11 wounded Bow oft one bee secretly mumbled and sighed. Because eh_e yew not. though with on else eur- The big. air oloeet. her toy end her pride I The roomy. o eon clout. the well-ordered closet, The blg. airy closet, her joy and her wide. Fond husEbatndï¬, who lain would have home be' en on For 33“; en'd your: Eves all comnlete ah a. w o e ‘ To read In, to write in. to sleep in, to feed in, Forgot not the closet: so dear to the soul ; But build them in corners, in nooks and in oran- n es. Wherever a. closet may harbor or hide. And give {.0 your lam-ye. your Katee and your an en The big. eiry closets, their joy and their pride- The rloomg, clean closets. the well-ordered c one a The big. ei'ry closets, their joy and their pride. Peculiar Feature. ol the Table at Peter- honâ€"Some National Dbl-es. In s ite of the troubles which plague his life, exander III. is blessed with a healthy appetite, and he is as fond ol the national Russian cuisine as of the Russian customs and manners which he is endeavoringto revive. The Czar'e dinner is inevitably preceded by the national “zakuska,†a sort of preface, or introductory lunch, to the regular meal. The zakuska consists only of caviar, herrings, smoked salmon, sardines, smoked goose, sausages, cheese, bread and butter. Raw beets pickled in brandy, introduced from Denmark by the Empress, are often added. Little round tables are distributed in all nooks and cor- ners of the dining hall, and upon these, in golden enameled‘plates, the various com- ,1A_3 n_ -_l.__.2._4 Bow doc to the heart 0 the housekeeping woman Are amnion: 0! which so few architect. tell : Nico children, good servant: and piouty 01 room in The well-mud man-ion in which they must dwell. But of: of the blessing! hind Fortune on give The plant of all plants for the house‘ is the ivy. If one has a piece, a bit only six inches long, with time and patience all the rest will follow. This piece may be had of a friend, or any nurseryman or florist will send a small rooted plant or some cuttings by mail for a small sum. If the plant has roots, plant it in a pot in good soil. If it has not roots, do the same and it will soon make roots. for it is one of the easiest of all things to grow from cuttings. Slow of growth at ï¬rst, if given large pots as the roots require, it will in time run to be trained over the window frame, up the corner of the room and along the cor- nioes. over picture frames and everywhere, and make a drapery so beautiful that no one will ever think of the pattern of the wall paper. One oi the ï¬nest displays of ivy we ever saw was in a very old Dutch house, one built in the early days of New York State. _'1‘he parlor had all_ the heams exposed, and these beams and the heavy window frames were all dra ed with a pro- fusion of ivy. Any one. wit a very small outlay and time, can produce equally ï¬ne effects. Ivy out of doors will bear quite a severe freezing. but in the house. if in a state of 'rowth. it must not be allowed to freeze. f the soil is kept moiet, and to remove the dust. the foliage is gone over oooaeionally with a damp a use or cloth. a. plant a foot high will be at ing of beauty, a. plant a (dot high will be ethin of beauty, qne twenty feet h‘igh‘ or 19113 wil be a w_on- dér b! grime and"cheerful‘hessrâ€"American Agriculcurl'st for October. When we were young, ssid Sir John Lubbock recently, we knew that the lee and had spots. the tiger was striped, an the lion tawny; but why this was so it did not occur to us to ask; and it we had asked no one would have answered. Now we see at eglsnce that the stripes of atiger have reference to its life among jungle greases; the lien is sandy. like the desert; while the markings of the leopard resemble spots of sunshine glancing through the leaves. a (hunt 0’? milk to spare. |Wevget the milk an ask hootioualy it itisoows‘milk. "Oh. yes. air.†And then with sweet simplicity, “ We 'koep the oowa' milk separate from the other." ~8woet simplicityâ€"We hail thn passing milk waggonï¬ngi ask the " boy â€_if_‘ he 1199 -Brooo.ded plush is a novelty. The but designs are Iago roses and leaves. HOW THE CZAB DINES. llnvc You Started the Ivy ? The House with Close“. A Beautiful Canadian Girl Ruined in Chicago. (Wednesday’s Chicago Times.) Less than sixteen months ago Mary Ann Ccfley, a girl not over 20 years' of age, came to Chicago from Whitby, a town east of Toronto. Canada, on the line of the Grand Trunk Railway. What induced her to wander from a home, no matter if its roof was on a level with the earth. and drift into a great city. the under- current of which has hastened thou- sands of her sex to the vortex oi ruin, is not deï¬nitely known, beyond the statement that she was ambitious to assist in supporting a widowed mother, and. it possi e. establish afuture home for her- self and a younger sister. To-day the shapely form of Mary Coffey is fast becom- ing part 01 the earth of Calvary Cemetery. whi e her younger sister and brother have scarcely dried their tears over the new- made mound which covers their mother in the village grave-yard on the northern shore of Lake Ontario. The man who commenced her destruction and the abortionist who completed the job are yet at large, but it the police department does its full duty in the case it is hardly probable that either will enjoy the boon of liberty many hours beyond the time when the ink that prints this copy of the Times has become dry on its surface. The unï¬nished portrait of the dead girl that now rests on the easel of an artist on the top floor of the Metropolitan block, at the corner of La Balls and Randolph streets, sustains the statements of those people who knew Mary Coï¬ey from childhood, as well of a goodly number 0! business men with whom she came into contact during the present summer, while modestly soli- citing their custom in the purchase of one of the many articles throwu upon the market by that method. that she wasa type of womanly beauty, splendidly developed, with a ï¬ne face and pleasing manners, but altogether inexperienced in the devious_ways of city life._ As already stated, the girl was poor, without friends to look to in this great city, and the day after arriving here she readily accepted a situation at a mere pittance in a necktie manufaetory on East Madison street, near the corner of Franklin. It was while thus employed, but several months after her arrival, that she met a young man known among his associates as ‘ Harry" J acoby, a messenger employed by the Adams Express Company. The girl’s friends have no hesitancy in charging her down- falltoJacoby, and regard her early inti- maey with him as the beginning of the trouble that led to her death. Some of the medicine administered to the girl by “Dr.†Townsend, of No. 185 South Clark street.is in possession of the occupants of the premises at No. 195 West Madison street, whence the girl was removed to the hos- pital of the Sisters of Mercy, where she died on August 31st last, and the day fol- lowing was buried at Calvary Cemetery, as already stated. The proper authorities will now no doubt take possession of these effects, as well as the medicines prescribed by Dr. Townsend, and thus try to establish the charge made by the friends of the dead girl that she was foully dealt with. Mrs. Soden, whose husband keeps a restaurant at No. 173 West Madison street, claims to have known the dead girl and her people in Canada, as well as to have closely watched the movements of Mary from the date of her arrival in this city until her death, and she states that about July 12th last she disappeared from her boarding-house for about a week. Miss Coï¬ey, on returning to her boarding-house, explained to Mrs. Sedan and her friends that she had been visiting relatives in Ottawa, Ill. She seemed to the ladies who gave her case attention to have passed through a severe week’s sickness, and her manner of answering the questions put to her gave rise to the direct suspicion that she had been in the hands of an abortionist. It was between her recovery and the date of her death that she made application to be reinstated in her original position in the store on Madison street. She was then with- out money, and being refused her old posi. tion she sought and received the charities of Mrs. Scden, to whom she conï¬ded some of her troubles, and, it is believed, the causes that led to her sudden disappearance and illness. On August 26th her illness as- sumed a serious form of fever, and the visits of Dr. Townsend to her room in the residence at No. 195 West Madison became frequent and, it is said, noticeable for the arded manner in which they were con- ucted. Mrs. Sedan and other friends of the girl, on learning her dangerous con- dition, and suspicious of Dr. Townsend’s former connection with the patient, called in Dr. Plecker, a reputable physician, who has an office on the corner of Halstead and Madison streets. Dr. Plecker is now absent from the city, and therefore his statement of the case is net obtainable, but it is said that he peremptoril refused, on learning that Dr. Townsen was attending the irl, to prescribe for her, or to meet im. The day before the girl’s death Dr. Townsend was refused admittance, it is said, to the sick chamber, and Dr. Plecker, being notiï¬ed of the irl’s dangerous con- dition, went in, and, nding her in a high fever, recommended her removal to the Hessital of the Sisters of Mercy, where she ied. Her younger brother came on from Canada and was present when she died, and it is said received from his sister a confession of the wrongs committed against her, but, desirous of shielding her memory at home, and besides not having means to prosecute the principals in the foul deed, he returned to his home in time to attend the funeral of his mother, who had been advised of he daughter's death. For some reason the Clar street employers of the girl gaveout the statement, in answer to the inquiries of parties desirous of know- ing what had become of her, that she had died very suddenly, and that her body had been removed toCanada. What led to acou- flrmation of the sus icion of foul lay is the ‘fact that repeate( attempts mve been ‘ made to secure the effects of the dead girl. The ladies, however, in the house on West l Madison street, whence she was removed to the hospital, have taken the resection ‘ that none should meddle with t iese until .such time as the trunk and its contents ‘Went into the hands of the authorities or the friends of the deceased. There is an abundance of material evidence at the hands of the police. and their duty in this case seems clear, since, should they not THE OLD STORY. A cut belonging to a. lady bf Jersey City Heights awoke her mistress hurriedly at 2 o‘clock at night. She etc 1 d going out upon the landing, saw a ‘ 'sn upon the stairway in the not of striking a match. Seizing the out, the lady threw it upon the burglar. who ran into the street shrieking with pain from scratches on his face. A chicken hawk swooped down into the garden of Charles F. Boshen, West Troy, N.Y.. and captured a. single sparrow out of the flocks that frequented the premises. That very day all the other sparrows dis- appeared; ' A dog that bears through an ear trumpet and wears spectacles belongs to Patrick Nichols, of Milwaukee, Wis. This animal is said to be 35 years of age, and has lost his hearing and sight, and his master for his ' many years of ï¬delitv procured these aids to cheer him. A set of artiï¬cial teet are also being made for him: - A fox caught a hen of G. W. Walden’e, of Alexander County, away from home in apasture ï¬eld, and dined on her. Her breed of chickens stood around the next morning sorrowful, lonesome and uncared for, until a young rooster came to their relief and took them in charge. He has scratched for them, oluoked for them and cared for them ever since. nhtilthey were hatched, and is now 106%- ing after the brood of four little chicks. A mother sparrow tumbled a. little one out of its nest in g tree in Hartford. and 8. out started for it. Two birds attacked the cat with so much vigor that she was com. polled to retreat. prompt! in this matter. the perpetrators of the {col crime, if such it proves to he, may be brought to time! justice. The case has in it some features t “rival the Jennie Gunner mystery. and will probabl prove a companion-piece to the severe noted abortion cases that have been unearthed in this city during the past halt-dozen years. It certaimy affords the police an easy ï¬eld i for operations. .1 8:31;: «:1 hi3. and Bonus. 7 â€"Embroidered plush is fashionable for A turkey gobbler of Lincoln, 111.. drove a! “bl" 0°va° ban from her neat and sat, upon the eggs! â€"What 31"? the dimensions of a ““16 M ,A___ 1-4. lnlhnm rnnm 9 The 2-year-old child of SJ. Drinkweter, of White Plains, N. Y., while playing in the street was supposed by his dog to be in danger of being run over. He jumped into the street and threw his front legs about the child and endeavored to pull it to the sidewalk. Finding that he was-unable to accomplish this he pushed the child down and spread himself over it, with his fore legs outside, in which position he remained until the horse and carriage passed. A man attempted to cross Caddo Lake, Texas, in a. skiï¬ containing a quarter of beef. when he was hotly pursued by a school alligators. Eight of them tried to upset he boat, but by hard rowing the boatman reached a. cypress tree, seized it and abandoned the skiff. The next day two ï¬shermen who were crossing the lake heard his cries and went to his assistance. The alligators attacked the rescuers, but by e. dexteroue use of their cars and a double-barrelled shotgun they succeeded in keeping the enemy at bay until the unfor- tunate man, more dead than alive, could be gotten out of the tree and rowed safely to shore. A wren built her nest in a box on a New Jersey farm. The occupants of the farm house saw the mother teach her young to sing. She sat in-front of them and sang her whole song very distinctly. One of the young then attempted to imitate her. After proceeding through a few notes its voice broke and it lost the tune. The mother immediately recommenced where the young one had failed, and went very distinctly through with the remainder. The young bird made a second attempt, commencing where it had ceased before and con. tinuing the song as long as it was able, and when the note was again lost, the mother began anew where it stopped, and completed it. Then the youn one resumed the tune and ï¬nished it. _ his done! the mother sang_ over the Small Nugget. of Wisdom. Success in duty, whether duty is success or not. Charity is a. ï¬rst mortgage on every hug)â€; poing's possessions. whole series of notes .a second time with great precision, and a second of the young attempted tofollow her. The wren pur- sued the same course with this as with the ï¬rst. and so with the third and fourth. This was repeated day after day and several times a day. Av 3-weet tempar'ia to the household what sunshine is to trees and flowers. :Jualice consists in doing no injury to men; decency, in giving ghem_no ofl‘ence. V The hi; ideas" or unhapbiness of age is oftgn not. mg but tlge _extrg.ot gt a. past: lifp. He {who 05:: ahpptess a moment’s anger mqy prevpnt a day: of sgrroyv. Life is always interesting when you have a. nurppae and {iye in its_ fplfllmeng. . When you. 'oonfer av beneï¬t on a man, yog spoil gt if_ yot} evgr after: sgeak pfjt. .. Hypocriqy' m a hard game to g: y at. for it. is ope deceiver against many 0 ervgrs. To not. min a determination made in anger is like embarking on a vessel during a storm. The powertodo test things general! arises from thewi witolingness todo smal things. It is thought that Miss Rhoda Brough- ton’e strange and striking stor , " What it Meant," is founded upon t e grievous death of Mrs. Langtry’s brother, in India. He died not lon ago, it will be remem- bered. from woun e received from s. man. eating tiger. Mrs. Langtr '9 grief for her brother has naturally 1e her into seclu- sionâ€"a seclusion absurdly represented by divers correspondents as brought about by society’s lack of' interest in a beauty whose good looks were fading. Holyrood Housemhere the Queen stayed during the Edinburgh review, and where she had herself called Queen 0‘ Scot-s while she remained. is a very ugly place, just ï¬tted for the tressons, outrages and spoils to which in its day it has been more than once witness. The ground which the review was held was of var smell 3 ace, the Ian th and breadth o the who 9 being emnl er than the enclosure at Windsor. Count Moltko, old as helmhaa an un- commonly onergetio spirit. He will not retire from active service. but orforms promptly all his duties as cbie of the General Stafl‘. and now wishes for re-elcc- tion to the Gérman Reichatag. f tâ€"Tha man who eats oleomargurine gets a . â€"â€"The farmer who subscribes for a. good local newspaper seldom gets swindled by sharpen. â€"-A barrel of frogs is said to have been shipped from Bellevxlle 60 Alexandria Bay yesterday. â€"Pare.lunes, for protecting fair faces from the rays of the moon, are the latest freak of fashion in Paris. â€"Au oleomargariue selectionâ€"“Fat- inxtza." â€"The prize~flghter peels before he strikes, but the bell does not peel until it is struck. â€"These cool nights favor rheumatic twinges. But the change is very accept- able to all. â€"-It. is vastly easier to break the head of one of your enemies than to break the back of one of your own bad habits. ~Dunnville will probably have a glass factory. ~We wonder if grass widows ever have hay fever ? elbow room 7 â€"-The cotton crop is short, and thin women must economize. â€"â€"It is hard to persuade a. man that a. rich widow isn’t handsome. 7A Dutchman repeated the adage, ‘ Buds mit one fedder go mit demaelvea." â€"Prof. King would like to trade his bal~ loan for a. mule, or some ooher animal that can carry him out of the country. ~It appears that one of the main things in the science of ballooning is to ï¬nd a. stump big enough to tie the balloon to. » â€"-Ah, say! good day. Been away? Yes. but didn’t stay. Some future day. when I get more pay, then I may stay. Day-day. -â€"-A man is known by the company he keeps out of. -â€"The cup that cheers but does not ine- bnateâ€"The butteronp. â€"“ As a. rule genius protects itself,†says the London Spectator. â€"The autumnal tints of crimson. orange and russet are appearing on the hills. â€"Jeff Davis’ book doesn’t sell very well in England. The interest in it is about as small as the interest on confederate bonds. â€"The sparrows are not so numerous as they were. Where have they gone ? â€"â€"The Steamship Sardinia!) passed in- ward at Fox River at 9 a. m. to-day. â€"â€"The Khodive. who is deeply in debt» might mortgage a few of the pyramids. â€"â€"Froutage ground in the city of London has been sold lately at the rate of $5,000,000 an acre. Let's club together and buy an inch. â€"â€"At present there are 315 convicts con- ï¬ned in the Central Prison. This number is somewhat below that at the correspond- ing week of last year. â€"The Baltimore Sun tells of a. young lady of that city who gave $10,000 for a husband. Our men come high, but the girls have got to have us. -, ,râ€"A communication about Roy Somer- ville, of the Duudas Banner, and his haunted house escapade, is held over for consider- ation. â€"The bell of St. Stephen’s Church. Toronto, while it was being rung Sunday evening fell withe. crash on to the sxdewelk from a height of over seventy feet. â€"It isn’t because a. woman is exactly afraid of a. cow that she runs away and screams. It is because gored dresses are not fashionable. -Some men make you feel as though the warm sun had just broken through the clouds, while others make you feel as though a sudden east wind, with its arms full of a cold fog, had caught you with too thin clothing on. â€"The cow which was given to Henien on the last day of the Toronto Exhibition by one of his yadmirere at Soarboro’, and which was lost for a. day or two, has been found in the pound. â€"-The most thoughtful man has been discovered in New Jersey. Just before he died he said to the undertaker: “ When on put me on ice do not waste any on my eat. They have already been frozen.†â€"Irate sportsman : “ Confound it! you’ve shot ,the dog! I thought you told me you could hold a. gun.†PM; : " Shure, and so I can, your honor. It’s the shot, ear, I couldn't can, you hould l †-â€"-Presont indications point to Kingston as the city most likely to be selected as the scene of the next Provincial Exhibi- gion. Guelph also puts in a. claim for the onor. â€"-Reform sure to come: “ M dear," said a fond New Haven mother to er child, “ why do you not Pia with the little Jones boy ? " “ Oh, he s orrid. He says bad. naughty words, just like papa. does.†Reform will begin at home in that family. â€"-An enterprising Long Brancher, with a view to turning an honest penny, had a. telesco e put up where it commanded a viewo the President and his room. The observatory wee summarily hustled out of eight. â€"â€"Pnblio clocks cannot be made to keep 00d time even by the aid of electricty. here may beaome reason for it in the climate. Cloak dials scattered through the streets run by electrioity alone have been tried in some European towns without suc. cess. We understand, however. that in -â€"It is not customary. according to the new edition of “Etiquette,†for a lady to accompany a caller to the hall. He must make his obeisanoe in the parlor and offer no complaint if the fair Juno does not tie to anticipate or receive it. ' -A new Canadian guide book says that the construction of tho Desjardins Canal greatly promoted the prosperity of Hamil- ton.†It's a pity it was ever built, when the number of ueeful lives it engulplied and its useleeeneaa now are taken into con- sideration. â€"-â€"The Rochester Democrat says: “The Great Western Railway is doing an im- mense business. The passenger trafï¬c is so heavy that the company are not. ablo to furnish enough coaches. It is more popu- lar now than ever.†TEA TABLE GOSSIP. Paris one thing has been successfully achieved. A company has been formed to lurnish time at small cost to householders. keeping their clocks correct by a process 0! pneumatic tubes. â€"Detectivee ftom Toronto, Hamilton Montreal and other cities are to be sent to the races at Guelph. St. Catherine: and the London Exhibition. to assist the local alias. as a. gang of American and Can iau thieves have started for the above placep._ â€"â€"A deepatch from London Bays seven- teen bende will take part in the music race next week. Prominent emon them will be the ladiee’ band from aim. The ladies receive their ex uses and sbonns of 8160 for their atten ance. Neither the 13th of Hamilton nor the 7th of London have entered. -â€"If you went to know what a women really is before you marry her try to catch a. glimpse of her before the hour when she expects company. and before she has put all the pieces of herself together to be looked at and admired. If you can stand that you are ready to be sacriï¬ced on the altar of Hyman. â€"Youug man, be happyâ€"hoot, holler, skiï¬, gambol and snap your ï¬ngers at the nig tmare of a new overcoat for next win- ter. Last fall a Canadian genius shivered awhile. and then reflected awhile, and the result was the purchase of a box of runs- tard lasters. These were distributed aroun his frame where they would do the most good, and while the men with beaver overcoats shivered with cold, he was warm and happy in his shirt sleeves. Une dollar takes you through a hard winter, and you come out in spring fat. THE PRESIDENT DREAMED OF HOME. He dreamed of home. aye, while the clew 0: life so thin and strai§htened drew A breath might sever it 11 two. He dreamed of home! Amid the rose 9! those old_ shadows Death doth gross A great improvement has recently been made in that useful product, Carboline, a. deodorized extract of petroleum, which is the only article that really cures baldness. It in now the ï¬nest of hair dressings. There is an increasing demand for real estate in British Columbia. Labor is scarce. and not. to be had at any reasonable ï¬gure. The harvest is abundant. boxes,ctc., etc. Bond 30. stun mpl’ortmmp pie: gricecgiats. J. T. LIVELY, 4 ket Lane, on, at COUG HS, COLDS, ASTHMA WIIO0PING-00UGH, CROUP. Jesse Seligmau, the rich Jewish banker of New York, started out in life in 1838 as an old clothes pedler, and continued in that business for eleven years. U GRAPH ALBUMS, Watch Chains, Lock- ets, Brooch and Earrings, Velvet Frames, Work Boxes. etc., etc. Send 3c. stun f9r_sa_mples_and _._:-» u...†1 n1 I'IIVHY" .- , 'This old established remedy can be with com! deuce recommended for the above com mints TRY IT. Hyour merchant has not so it, he can get. it it: you. JOHN. W. BIOKLE _ (Formerly ’1‘. Biokle g Son)._ ",, n. Bickle’s Anti-Eunsumptive Syrup I). 'I‘IVE, reareoiable empiovment for touch. on during vncet on, or loafer, or permanent, for n iow energetic oung men this and adjoining counties. To hone who can show fair success and min cebmty expenses. iibomi commission and mm eraiao Min will be mid. Addrou with references. Drawer 1 Toronto. The London Institute for the Care at lmpedlment In Speech has ro-oponed for the Fall and Winter. For oh“- oulars and testimonials from hundreds whom we have outed, address Machine Oil And for sale by dealers. Auk your merchant fox Lag-slim and take no other. " Farméï¬a and all wh'o'uao monitor-31 machln ery,win save money and machinery by using none but LARDIN E. IN THE WORLD, 1’s manufactured by McCOLL BROS.CO., TORONTO LARDINE! 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,Hemilton, and the highest award at the nginion Exhib_i_tiop, Ottawa, ghesllver model. Hamilton Oniafiâ€"tf STAMMEBING INSTITUTE. London. Ont In mist. and EBidand heavriâ€"nEEsT __--- He dreamed of home} Sweet in his ear The sound of rustlinï¬grain ï¬elds near, The orchard oriole'e uted cheer. Before his dim and lidded eye The lake's crisp billow flickered high On azure deeper than the sky. Slipped thence from all u rear and strife, Once more the looks of o lid and wile Shone as the lamps of household life. He dreamed of homel The vision flew Wavered. reshaped itself anew, Smiled, spake, as visions never do ; Still wide of home, he saw instead Its angels standing by his bed Unshaken in;the hour of dread. GENTS" WANTED. â€"- LUORA- ,I VEN AWAY FREEâ€"PHOTO- FORTUNBS FOB FARMERS. 50,000 Puma. 0,000,000 Arm. ‘ D \ But What land. Ilch lesion. Chm Tiller, ! Farming, stock llnlnll . burying. he! Ind Wlter In A Induce. 82.50 per acre andu ward. Ono-sixth cash and ï¬ve nnmm pa ante. Bea ducod Faro and Frelgh to semen} Write for " Publications No. 63." Ger). Dowï¬rraivbll'fi "Kéoï¬'cï¬b Yongo‘ 9%.. Toronto. B. M. owport, Gonml‘ Land Agent. St. ran]. Miï¬nna NORTHERN PACIFIC MINNESOTA. 'l‘. (3. LI VlNGBTON, Special Land Agent for Hamilton. Ont. ASK IIAIIROA! lAIID_8. . THE VERY BEE Son). Proprietor.