.h‘ culty has; been got over, and the new bridge is 1:) have a double line of rails. Another improvement which it will have over the old brid e is that it will lint. Ln no hill. T e “ Fair City of Perth †strongy objected. to the old budge being erected on the ground that it would greatly impede, or obstruct,sail- ing vosnula up the Tay to that city. To evade rim; objection the bridge was‘cono structcd higher than there was any neces- sity for. ï¬-tranuu to say, the same city has been um: energetic in its endeavors to get this new bridge still farther reduced in height. (Tvmsnierable improvements have also been introduced in the general lay ofl. or route. of the bridge, and apparently every llz'CC.L'Jll.itlll taken against all winds that can possibly blow, even in that land of hurricanes. In designing the old bridge the engineers seem to have been most afraid of the strong east winds which there sweep uninterruptedly from the ocean, whileit war; a west wind that caused its destruction. Some people were afraid that the new bridge was not intended to be really n. new one. but merely atinker- ing up til the old bridge. There is no ground, however, for such an alarm, as the old one is in no way to beused,exce;i? where practicable, as scaffolding, and W) be taken down as the new one proceeds. In all, the new bridge will contain eighty- four arches. from land to land. Com- mencing from the Fife side there will be ï¬rst four brick covered-in arches. then follow girder arches resting on malleable ‘iron pillars to the Dundee side, and then more girder arches resting on cast~iron illars. These arches vary in width from 45 feet to 68 feet. Eleven are 245 feet, two are 227 feet, one 162 feet. thirteen are 145 feet, ten are 129 feetï¬inches, one is 127 feet 6 inches, ten are 120 feet. One is 118 feet, twentydive are 71 feet, two are 70 feet and four are 68 feet, beside the four brick arches. Four arches in the centre are 77 feet in height above high water mark. Great precaution has been taken against the ‘ action of the very strong river and tidal current which flows there. The pillars supporting the girders will rest u n a, foundation of cant-iron cylinders, fll ed in with concrete, to within two feet of low water mark. From that point to eight. feet above high water mark the foundation will be of brick, and will also be ï¬lled in with“ concrete. Excepting those In the ver “centre each arch will have four‘ gir ers. Those in the centre will have on] tiff: Tho double line of rails will be lai within them, as in the old bridge. The superstructure again is of wrought-iron plates. varying in thickness from three- eighths to seven-eighths of an inch, all firmly braced together. On each side there _wiil_.be a_ parapet ï¬ve feet high, which, The death is announced of Alexander Macdonald. Liberal Member of Parliament for Stafford, England. Deceased has had a most eventful career. He began life as a miner. his father having also followed that eccu atiou in the coal pits of Lanarkshire. Boot and. He began to work when but a mere child. educating a miner's child in those days being regarded as a useless pro» ceeding. Before he had reached manhood however. Macdonald developed a love of reading, and by earnest stud , with what books he could lay h a hands on, spelt his way to consider- able knowledge. At this time the miners of both England and Scotland worked long hours and were paid wages not at all com- menaurate with their arduous,disagreeab!e vocation. Macdonald soon became a leader among his fellows. IIe inaugurated local unions among the miners, then be extended his influence to the formation of county associations, and eventually the entire mining community in Scotland and alterâ€" wards in England moved whenever he saw ï¬t to o mnsel it. B his advice over 100.000 men have beeninown to strike at one time, and a word from him has set them all at work again. For years. he has been Secretary of the Miners'Associatiena. devoting his entire time and attention to the welfare of his constituents. He has enjoyed a handsome salary, and by his savings tunussed enough of wealth to leave to his family an estate in hisnative county. Latterly. he has re resented in Parliament the town of Hts ord. and he was one of the few members who had his salary paid_by his constituents. It has of the wind. The old bridge during its brie! existence was very popular with the travelling public. Her Majesty the Queen passed over it shortly beiore it: destruc- tion. With a double line of rails, and every uppeureube of greater stability and safety, the new one will be still more popular. besides adding in the beautiful dbéeamnoé 0! $130 briglgg. will help _bo_ bypak ghq forge action was dictated by aelllah motives. and his later stylish mode of llfe in contracted with hie early eï¬ortn to secure the welfare of hia fellow-miners. Be that an it may. the minern of England and Scotland are indebted to his early efforts on their behalf for mueh of the prlyllegen whiph his aulur paid by Ina constituents. It has been mi that Mucdounld’a whole course of fliey now enjoy. When he Began the agitation to secure the amelioration of their condition, they were little better than serfs. At the present time they have nehieved an influence in the community which makes itself felt whenever they choose to exercise it. Their social condi- tion. too, exhibits a remarkable improve- ment when compared with what it was a quarter of a century ago. The plhun for tho new brid? our the Toy. irom Newport on the its nido to Duudco on the Foriar side. hove now boon tin-Hy adjusted with the British Bond of Trude, and stain are being taken tint the orooiiou a! the ridge may be immodistoi commenced. it is now univerully “unit til“ the greatest objection to the old bridge wu we weakneu and general flimdnepl of the htructuw. through being comm on single narrow pillars to be“ only line of mils. This was done because a Caledonia“ Railway would not join the North British in the cost of ita creation. Ind w [n'oVeuL the former oompsny shim. ing running; powers over it. _'.l‘h‘is dim- It is mmounood. from Peru that Admiral Montoro, oomnmndinu the only formidable Peruvian ioroo afloat has accepted tho onition of Vice-President in the Calderon Overnmont. Tu t: N I: W 'I'AY 3.1.0.. Propu- o! u Notubh 3m lam AN EVENTFUL LIFE (â€JD-ED. Another correspondent. writing from Southwest Point. Anticosti, under date of Nov. 2nd. says: The cause of the distress is the failure of the ï¬sheries and the par- tial failure of the potato crop. The prin- cipal food of the people has been potatoes for months, and that of the cor watery kind that the island generalï¬y produces. and in consequence there has been a great deal of sicknessâ€"diphtheria and low fever â€"and consequently many deaths. The people have been recently assisted by the Government and saved from starvation, but they are nearly every winter in a chronic state of starvation. Several fam- ilies have left to join their friends in Wis- consin, and the rest of the people at South- west Point are preparing to leave for there or Manitoba as soon as they can get the means to go. I regret I cannot give fuller particulars. I livea long way from the principal seat of population, and conse- guently from the greater portion of the istress. As an illustration of the extent and va~ riety of the advertisements which crowd the columns of the well~patronized journals of the day. it has been said. with but little exaggeration, that it the whole or our modern civilization should pass away as completely as that of some of the ancient monarchies it would be possible for the historian of that distant future to reproduce in his pages all the most prominent features of its art and its literature, its politics and religion. its com- merce and its trade. from the advertisin columns of some of the great newspaperso our times. The very fact that the present is emphatically an advertising age shows how keenly the importance of the subject is appreciated and how strong is the general faith in this method of bringing the buyers hundred, And there'have been ï¬fteen deaths from scarlet fever and diphtheria, which is unusual, the island being generally a. henlthx place.†Operating on a llan Who Swallow“! Ills False Setâ€".1 Fat-l Result. A despatch from Troy. N. Y., says about eleven years ago William Farrell, than a resident of this cit , swallowed two false testh and_ tllq rul? er_ plate attached! tlle substance lodging in the lower part of the oesophagus. Two years ago the obstruction became so flrml wedged that the suï¬erer was wholly unable to partake of anything but liquid lood,and even that caused so much pain that Farrell frequently pre- ferred to last for days at a time. Farrell returned to Troy from Omaha last week, and yesterday the teeth and plate were removed by making an incision In the neck behind the ear. dissecting the windpipe by an opening of about three inches, and another incision in the gullet. The patient rallied alter the operation. but began to sink in the afternoon and died inafew hours. and the sellers. the employer and the em- Eloyed. and all the departments of the usiness world face to face with each other. So thoroughly is the present generation im- pressed wnth the value of advertising that it is no longer a question of how little 5 business man can do with, but how much he cannot do without; so that it is no longer to limit and abbreviate his business announcements, but rather to stud to extend. am lit and vary them as mue as possible. n t nose days it has become a are the most intelligent of our population. Those leaving are obliged i0 sell all they possess. and at very ow prices, as potatoes are 20 cents per barrel. One man sold a splendid new boat with four sails for 813. Pee is have no mone to buy with. I am fr ghtened some of t em wil starve ;" most of them have only potatoes for their food. though some families have a little flour. I know some families of nine or ten who have only two barrels of flour to feed them during the long winter of seven months. and they will have to put up with what they can get, for there is no way of assistance and nobody on the island can give them food, for others have but enough for themselves and the Government has several times helped us, giving 8200 after the ï¬re last summer which left fourteen families shelterlese. On other occasions they forced the Govern- meutto assist them. They are so near starvation that they broke open the Govern- ment depot, and by saying this I do not wish to attack them. hey are all honest, laborious people. and they would have starved otherwise. And whole families had to live on clams for weeks. As to assistance. it would take hundreds of barrels to sup ly the demand. The number leaving the IB and all told is a reoBguized hot. that the ï¬uainean men who does not advertise in lost. and thus, in the eager race of 00m etition. the people of en- ergy and the eop 0 who succeed seize upon every methm of advertising themselves to ihe world which ingenuity 01m devise or en- terprise suggest. An Ottewe correspondent telegrsphs: From private letters Just received I gather the following statements regarding the distress in Anticosti. One correspondent. writing from West Point. Anticosti. says : “ The excess of poverty revulllin is sensed by the failure of the tie eries.w ch this seeson turned out s total failure on account of the high winds and scarcity of bait. ,There are twenty families leaving this tell. having been granted b the Gov- ernment 1ree_ passage‘to Que . _ They Another sosndsl is reported from Dor- desux, Franco. Anumber of aristocratic young mun are com romised and there will be probagly strenuous efforts made to hush up the whole affair. The offenses range from organized burglary to violentssssults of an outrageous kind. l‘he sosndsl was no secret for some time past. but it appears the authorities had not the moral coursgo to stop it. on Their WI! 80 the I'm Gm: Linda. A doapuwh from Quebec uyu some 25 funnie- of people {tom Antloostl thrived in rt by the steamship Nspoloon on Batu:- ty mormng. The poor ple bud no means of subiatonoo on thoio and. 3nd will gmb‘bl be sent up on the (migrant lands y the ovemmont and nuppli with food and need until next summer. One of the fmnous dinners at Delmonloo‘a (N. Y.,) was the "Gram! Bwnn" dinner. A lake wan built upon the centre of the table. in which ï¬ve livo nwansnwnm. The dessert was served In nwen' 3 egg shells. out out. of marble. The table wna abed of mean. Ill! TEETH IN "I8 STOMACII. ITAISVING umuumn. The Age of Advertising. umping and bailing to keep them rom going to the bottom of the sea. On the morning following. when the gals had moderated somewhat, it was found that the Uranus was still in sight, and she was boarded, and what stores remained, with the nautical instruments and the clothing and effects of her seamen, were transferred to the other. The water was found to have risen two feet over her keelson. The ves- sel's seams were all open, and the sand, ballast and oakum were washing out. Before being abandoned she was set ï¬re to, and when seen last had burned almost to the water's edge. The Uranus, which was built in 1870, belongs to Tensberg. Norway, and was on a voyage from Ostend to Mus- quodoboit, N.8. WA paragraph is now going the rounds of the press referring to certain changes alleged to have taken place in the Toronto press. This announcement is in part correct and partly incorrect. It is quite true that Mr. James Fahey and Mr. Ker- naghan, of the Toronto News. have left the management of that paper; but it is a slight mistake to say. as most of our con. ‘temporaries have done. that Mr. Kerna- ‘ghan has ioined the staff of our excellent ‘oontem crary the Toronto Telegram. Mr. jKernag an has. on the contrary, been engaged on the staff of the Winnipeg Sun. and will arrive this evening to enter upon his duties as city editor of this journal. Mr. Kernaghan’s abilities in a special line are not equalled by any writer on the Dominion press. As ahumorist he has few equals in America. and his treatment of satire or athos is acknowledged to be unappro ed in the circle in which he has moved. His poems have been, many of them, of exceptional merit, and that one in particular on the death of General Garï¬eld was voluntarily commended by the venerable chief of American literature as the ï¬nest tribute that had been paid to the ;departed President. The work of Mr. Kernaghan’s pen will. we have no doubt. soon make itself uainted with the appreciation of a class 0 intelligent readers such as favor the Sun with the liberal support for which we are indebtedâ€"Winni. peg Sun. ble gale was blowing at the time, and those who would attempt a rescue in the awful sea that was running must expect to run a terrible risk. Brave men were not wanting, however, for ï¬ve of the Templar’s crew, including Thompson, the second mate. stepped forward and volunteered to make the venture. A moment later the boat was lowered over the side, the ï¬ve got in, and the journey to the sinking Uranus began. 80 ï¬erce was the storm which was raging that at times almost nothin could be seen of the wreck. and it was t ought that the rescuing boat would never reach the helpless crew. Now and then, as it was seen to rise on the top of some huge billow, the oarsmen were cheered on by those they had left behind them. Some- times, so long would they remain from view in the trough of the sea, it was thought they had disappeared forever, but at last, atter a full hour's hard work, the disabled vessel was reached and ropes were flung to those on board. The boat could not get near enough for the men to drop in, and singly, with ropes tied securely around them, they jumped into the water and were speedily dragged on board. When halt the number had been taken oï¬ in this way the boat returned wrth them to the Templar, where the same means which had been employed toget them from the sinking ship were necessary to land them in safety on the other. The second trip of the five heroes was much more dan erous than the ï¬rst. The gale, which h been all the time increasing. now blew with terrible fur , but they never wavered. and at the end 0 four hours had the whole of the crew of the Uranus out of their perilous osition and safely deposited on board the emplar. The,capta1n and mate of the wrecked barque had been crippled in the hands and feet, before their ship was fallen in with, by the exertions they _ had been_ put to The newest mode of making a lad ‘s shirt is a notable instance of the {n- genuity of the French feminine mind. Oh] when the wearer walks about it a just possible to perceive that she walks in two garments instead of one. It is probable that the ladies who prom~ seeds in these strangely designed dresses will quickly attract attention. from the {act that the shape allowa of real freedom and ease of movement. The tied-back dresses. which made a woman step as it she were in chains, are now really succeeded by a form of garment which allows of grace and elegance. It has all the advantages of appearing very like a tied-back dress, while it is so comfortable that it bears no real resemblance to that terrible construction. Women will be better walkers and better dancers now that the genius of the modiste has given them freedom, while preserving appearances by means of the panlalom dresses. And no one will dare to cry out against leaders of fashion, as these ladies themselves cried out against the enthusias- tic advocatcs of the Bloomer costume. Fashion is relentless, and ursucs its own course despite all opposition from these outsiders who are not in the great world. Only its own high priests, the dwellers in its holy of holies, are listened to. If they choose to gradual] lessen the draperies which veil the actus garment, until at last the trousers are 0 on y worn and acknow- ledged, none can ilnder them. The pre- jud'i'ceil fair ones who cling to petticaata will then no longer be vote modest. but simply old-!Mlnloned.â€"Lmulmn World. that she had no boats. at once bore down todo his utmost to save the crew. On getting neu- enongh information was posted that t a but no wns sinking and the men on board win ed to abandon her. A torri- Gull-n8 Rescue of I Grow In DIM-Ocean. A Hsliiu dupatob. dsted Inst wash. uys: The bsrqus Templsr, of Yumouth. Cup “in Ssmusl B. Robbins. arrived so Bholburno to-dls'y from Dublin, bringing the crew at the orw wagisn bsrque Uranus. which bsdo been sbsn and at sea and set on ï¬re. stain Robbins reports having sig Med $190 anus in lat 44.10 north, long. 4}. 50 was}... and pcrqeiving her flying a. 41.60 went. and perceiving her flying a. gignpl 9t dingo“. yum! also one_ dengting ~~No, "Matilda." a. woman in not a thief when she hooks a dress. Homo one has been cruelly (lccoivmg you. darling. Punnloon Shh-u. A Slight I'll-take. ammu- PIVI B33033. â€"â€"Thie country consumes 14,880 berrels of kerosene every day. The proportion of servant girls to the barrel has not been determined. â€"-0ur fashion correspondent failed to make mention of it. but buckwheat cakes this season are cut round. of a. light brown color. old gold and amber being the prevail- ing tints used for trimming. â€"“ From the beginning of the world, †said somebody in one of George Eliot‘s books, " it hm;y been the case that it is good {or some men and some womentobe alogne." Gospel truth. And it has been a. good thing. no doubt, for men to let them alone. â€"“ Well, †says an admiring father proudly toafriend. “what do you think of that young fellow. eh ?†The friend. somewhat. embarrassed: “Well, he doesn't look like an ass, you know!" â€"Mr. Whittier declares that every year he receives no fewer than two hundred requests for his autograph. â€"-Ib will cost less to buy snow shovels now than a. month hence. The demand regulates not only the supply but the price. â€"Ella Wheeler. in a poem, says: " Mamma will notleave her home." The; man who marries her daughter is to be congratulated. â€"An opera cloak is of dark green velvet with a. lining of delicate ink satin and with trimmings 0! wide ban a of Russia sable. Another 15 of wine colored velvet lined with salmon satin. One of toyal blue velvet is lined with seal brown plush With a border- ing of silver pointed beaver. â€"â€"A lawyer once I!) a while, generally unintentionally. says what he means and means exactly what he says. This is so startling an assertion that we hasten to produce the proof. A certain attorney who was trying to browbeat a judge and to obstruct the course of justice was met by this awful question from the Bench: “ Mr. Blank. do you know what this court is sitting for?" The lawyer looked into space for a moment and then replied: " Your Honor, I may be mistaken. but my impression is it is about 96.000 a year." â€"-Bome men rather wear a. large cameo ring on their third ï¬nger than stockings on their feet. â€"-The astronomers have detected a red sgot on J upiter’s face. Jupiter should take t e pledge. â€"-A child in Indiana, 8 years old, weighs 130 unds. He is being tettened to sue- eee David Davis. --No true American gentleman ever brushes his own boots. He hires a woman to do it for him. â€"â€"A man has been refused work in a. Boston factory because. it is said, he was bitten by a. mad dog. -â€"-Ca.rpentera should not leave their tools lying round loose. Sneak thieves are al- ways prowling about. â€"In some Provinces the evidence of a. man who habitually goes ï¬shin twice 3 our will not be received in t e courts. ' he reason for this bit of judicial wisdom is obvious. â€"The old leather trunk struï¬ has worked more reformatione than all t e agitators combined. There is nothing like a. liberal done, and although it makes the boys squeal it does them good. -â€"Aooounts already up our in some of our exohsnges of people ki led by gas from coal stoves. Those who sleep in tightly closed rooms with coal etoves for oompsny. should see to it that the sforesuid stoves and chimneys are in good “ drawing" order ; otherwise they are liable to swsken some mgrnihg in_the " sweet by-snd-by." â€"â€"A Hamiltonian met a rather “ uncer- tain" acquaintance the other day. when the latter said. “ I'm a little short. and would like to ask you a conundrum in mentolarithmotio." "Proceed." "Well," said the “short" man. "suppose on had ten dollars in your pocket. and should ask you for ï¬ve dollars, how much would remain ?" “ Ten dollars," was the prompt answer. W Noiillm With (earn the light [into {ho'm'cliidn} llut I would nulvo to make so pure mnl two The soul rolloctod there-ll I wore you. It Alulryhlmpdq had lg". ppgn my («09‘ , V X)! ymir ahnny 31!)“th moms to um I would not longâ€"M I so vainly do- For countless {Mm guts-l! I waro you. My] If glgq wqu(l,_ (42 Imam gm] tempting now, ~â€"Slobson says careful observation has convinced him that it is only those ladies who have eased their 30th birthde who wear bro ~brimmed lists at the t eetre. He so a the number of elderly ladies who atten operas and other entertainments is greatly on the increase. and “ ou can always distinguish them by their big hats.†"071163“: lo charm thin. 60mm Emma to 300! "pp my Ipn them _l_lna_qred 0'01; a trace â€"â€"â€"It is said election cigars this year are of inferior quality. -â€"And now they tell us thnt bedbug bites cure rheumatism. -â€"-An old mold would never msko a good auctioneer, for nobody would muke her an offer. â€"It Ananiaa had lived in these dc. I he would have passed for a. simple. gui class old man. â€"“ This cottage for ssill †was the sign on a country residence. A stranger pass- ing by asked a woman who was standing at the door when the oott e was to sail. to which she instantly replie : “ As soon cs anygcdy comes along who can miss the wm ." â€"-“Don’t waste your time in clipping off the branches." said the woodman to his son. “but lay your axe at the root of the tree." And the young man went out and laid his axe at the root of the tree. like a good and dutiful boy. and then went ï¬shing. Truly. there is nothing so beauti- ful all ï¬lial obedience. H" I WERE YOU. 11', dour. m e on like yours, woro lauuhlngbluo And In he I- «opths thorn lay n. gllmplo of heaven. I '10le not. gloud will! frqupq thqlr_t_ondor_huo, -â€"Mrs. Langtry in resting in France. â€"-Provioua to 1783 there ware no mules in America. -â€"A Knoxville 'r . ‘i n at aetretoh. ( enu ) g r sleeps 3 week "“16"“ tiyto é'klll ybli'ih Ita’v’n’rlml wn"s, “(1“ gran} thqloqqon may pot toï¬qh you_ ow " ‘i‘b THEME ï¬BE’ï¬ié ï¬ï¬i‘é'ot" dimly {nub} ["1 ho commit. to auto y carry throng My owu hngm nature, dear. I! l woro you. â€"" Advertising is the pole that knock: the persimmon," says the Yonkers Gazette. TEA TABLE GOSSIP. Six hundred dollm are hereby ofleroi in spaohl prizes at the loading min in Ontuio and Quebec. 1km, by Thin old established remedy can be with oonn dance rocommondod for the above com mum TRY IT. If your merchant has not no M, h.‘ can not 1m.- you. JOHN W. NORM! _ (Foymorly '1’. liloklo .9 lion) ‘ Thorley Horse and Battle Food Company HAMILTON. Ont. Is the place to learn business. No Institution oflora equal udvanta. as to y um; men. Student- onmr at any time. or oir ulm'. and specimens of Pennmanship. Adan-cu (In secretary. (nuns FARR.) V invents: the Jidbd Intellect, Btron than: the Enfoobled Brain, .nd lloatoroa Burpr MugI Tone and Vigor m the Ex- hausted Organs. '1‘ 0 ex arionco of thousand! P’QY" 19“!‘.,1FV‘.‘€U,‘PEF “W393“, . , . ._ COIN! IIS, COLDâ€, ASTHMA WIIOOI’ING-Collflll. CROIII’. ‘and McOomber one of eighteen months ‘ior larcegl. It appears that the two 1women h previous y arranged a lan of ‘eecape, which no o'clock last nig tthey ‘ rooeeded to put into execution. ying together a number of blankets. ‘the women made fast one end to the window of their room. and then attem ted to descend to the ground. McCom r got down safely, but her companion was not so fortunate. for while she hung suspended in mid air the blankets ave way. and she fell to the ground, a istanceotthlrty feet. The poor creature was seriously hurt. and her groans brought the engineer, Sherman. to the spot. The unfortunate woman was at once carried into the Reformatory and medical aid procured for her. In the meantime McGomber had succeeded in reaching Toronto. but she was recaptured in less than two hours’ time by Detective Burrows, whose services had been called into re- quisition, and safely lodged again within the walls of the institute. A Mr. Hal-grave calls the attention of the London Times to the following one of the resurrection of a. tree. A few yearn back a. greet _elm_‘wals._blown down, with a {use As follows: $160 cash at Canada's Greet 1dr. Toronto; 860 Great Central Fair. Hamilton - 030 Western Fair. London: 090 Port Hope: 015 Sherbrooko. P. Q. ‘ 015 Ottawa ' O15 Grantham ' .15 Guelph - .10 Kingston ; no Walkerton - an $10 at oouniy fairs in tho romelnln counties in Ontario. For particulars, see oirou era. IAHMINC the regress of our students. Investigate our am In to have the most thor ough and practical school in Canada. and before spending your money, satisfy yourself that the BHIIISH Over 700 Bummomn have been cured by us during tho put three years. Testimonials. rom all parts of tho U. H. and Canada. Address flickle’s Anti-Eonsumptive Syrup ‘ Tho Modlolnola plenaontm tho taste, nndln no case and under no circumstances can it do harm. Each box contains sufï¬cient for two wook'a medication. thus heln much ohoo or than_ony 0."!91‘. medlglpoyol ~and while! In the cheapest. It. in much better. Full particulars lu our mmplnlot, whlch we doalro to mall two to nnym dross. m-cw. Magnetic Medlclno la sold I) drug lats M; 50 on. per box. or 1‘) boxes for Q or w I be mulled free of postage on receipt of the money, by mldreaalng m-ck’a Magnetic Medicine (70., Windsor. Ont... Canada. bell of earth at its roots. on the property of Mr. Bmyth, the rector of Little Houghton. Men Were set to work to remove It. but when they had sewn of! the great limbs. to their astonishment, and almost terror. the trunk rose up of its own accord, end went back to its original piece. and there it stands to this day. It is throwing out a fresh head. and is pointed out as a curious case of resurrection. TION 3nd Conuvonoan. Now rnmody, um- 10 cents mulled {or ammpnonny gr: of Uanmln or dmma States. Address w. I ARR Drugglst, Toronto. £301"?! FOR LIQUOR ORAVING, INDIOEB p o Auonpud Escape .1 Two Girls n».- the Mom: Defamatoryâ€"one loll-nay Injuredâ€"Tho one: Bonn-rod. Adoring ottempt at mopo wu mode lost night by two of the inmoteo dtho Mercer Reformotory, Toronto, known a Blonds Carrie and Snub MoCombor. Blonde Corrie wu aorvin a term of twelve mopths (or keeping a._ ioogdotly bongo. u-.- An explosion occurred in the Delnniz coal pita. Spain. Fifteen persons were killed and ï¬ve injured. Oerboline. the deodorized petroleum heir renewer end restorer, as improved and erfeoted. challenges the world and eten a without 3 rival among the heir dressings. and is a universal favorite with the ladies. MANUFAGTORY, HAMILTofl, ONT. nunuum On‘z'aï¬a.‘ Sold by all (hugging ovorywboro. STAMMERING INSTITUTE. London. Ont. MACK’B MAGNETIC MEDICINE A “In†IIOAI’ADI. $600.00. AIEHIBAII BfllHEflCMl COLLEGE. ASK FOR Qur method of tgaohlng._ W539]: TORONTG, Is a. sure. prompt and oflootualromo fly for Nervousnou in ALL in; stage!) .Woak Memory; LonothlnPowor l’rostration leh‘ Bwonu, Wanna" and General Lou of Power. It repairs Nervous Waste. Re quopptes thq Jud“! a Hon) Propm