1: V 7 'L. »‘-n‘ Q! 7 dub If pot; end she went shout ln lt for daye. The telegram from Theodore’e mother st morning end night were the only rullying point. of the long duy. All the rent of thotlnenhemln 3 due of wretched- ncu. Whnt Theodore was Iuï¬'eringl Whet burning, whet distress, whet pain, and what longing for her presence, her touch, her voice! Oh, no, noâ€"ho hnd add shove-not to go to himâ€"he hed thought Ihe m intrusive, indetieete! ‘ But all. knew better! He never thought 16! And oh. I! he Ihould not recover! Ilholhouldldieâ€"und with. the ï¬lm be- “ mau- doubt u to his thought of her! IITheodore should dieâ€"the hue Wehookhertothehart. Oh, the Mumbï¬hodmryltretchof life-â€" and rho-030m. AndtheremAnne M remain when 11:0 1:. You will not loan this homo! I m lurprhod It you.†And Enilh m tarps-[led It her-elf, torch. matte ho: room in n Itupor of neck obedience. She “and in the neu- indeed! tht could be more so? For Theodore has no constitution whatever. And the telegram says ‘very ill’. I hope he hes good nursingâ€"it ell depends on good nursingâ€â€" “Oh I must go there!†guped Emilig “You! Emilie. hove you neither sense not decency? You! And sftersll your father end the doctor hsve ssid! You will not go over the threshold. The ides o! eddinz to the trouble in thst house! Theodore must hsve snticipsted such s went 0! delicacy on your part, for his mother ssys in this very telegram that it is Theodore's express desire that Emilie; stead. Theodore had the fever. “1 have hen expecting it!†cried Mn. Marlboro’. “It was time something un- fortunate heppened in all Theodore’e good luck end yours. And this is unfortunate, â€" One morning Thedodoro did not come; he did not come the next morning; on the third morning a. telegram came in- Emilia M: an upper window where she stood strayed in her cloak end hat, defy- ing Priscilla Arlington. And Emilia, after her outburst, went proudly and gently about her duty in making the time pm for Anna and the boys. “Go away!†she cried, thrusting out both hands as she sprang from the cab. “Don’t come near me! Oh no, you mustn’t!" she exclaimed, dashing past. him and up the steps. “Go to New York, to New Orleans, anywhere! Only don’t once to see me for a. fortnight!†And she smiled on him enchantingly, and re- gardless of the Berkeleys sud Arlingtons. who might be at their windows, she kissed her hand, and opened and shut the vesti- bule door. And then Theodore, more to escape Priscilla Arlington’s eyes than anything else, plunged into the cab, which was waiting because it had not been paid for, and told the man to drive him to the club. And there, seeing a man he wmted to meet just duhing off in his sleigh, had the cab turned about for home. Theo- dore relieved his feelings, however, by coming down every day and talking to there, coming up the sidewalk and almost at the foot of the steps, was Theodore. (Continued from last week. And Emilia threw on her sable cape, and ran down stairs, sticking the pin into her but as she went, and called a. cab from the corner. and told the man to drive off as she slammed the door add let down the window, to drive away, to drive anywhere â€"well, up to the Fensâ€"no, out Chestnut Hill way! And she let the air curl round her and cool her blazing cheeks and ï¬lm her; and after three-qusrtets of an hour of this license, she told the man to tan: about, and just as she reached home, @119 Eamdimz Emit. LINDSAY. FRI!) iY. AUGUST 25, 1893 I Bold throughout the world. Pox-7:3 D3176 1:0) Can. Comm, solo propa., Boston. Ls-“An Mmemood and Skin,†mailodizee. ‘ 0.‘ M1 Blemishcs, falling hair and aim. p10 baby rashea prevented by Cudcm Soap. uCflUU cult: “CAVV†‘1‘ Weakness Wm and numbness. Wonders, and its cares of tor- turing, disï¬guring, and humil- iating humors are the most wonderful ever recorded. to a Speedy, permanent, and economical are, when thebest physicians and all other rem- And yet lives in ignorance of the fact that a single applica- tion of the CUTICURA REME- DIES, wiii, in the majority of mafford instant reiief, perb mit rest and sleep and point EMILIA’S CAB. Outlaw-a Remediqg; Instantly relieved bye. Cutl- cum Plaster, bemuse it vi. mlizes the nerve forces and henge cures nervous pains, Works complotad his christian: you. A mambo: of a well-known 0 kn†1mm. 8mm. at 5 mm. duo-tor hnvtna hehllon tho Realms and Tenor balm Knne. Bonn. Hall. McCilntock, Richudo, Balohor. (onlo- ; told. Keno! ond McClure hod become known in oonnoouon with the for north; nod he won I "won who had retired to Addison road out! his Orkney moor when ‘ho world beau: to hear 0! Non- and Markham. ond Nordonnkjold. and Grady, ond do Lona. Yotho wu vigotono enough] noo my mouth: mtoorldoluln tho axioms of the Stood-rd tho plun- of Nonoooond the "ports ot Pony. Dr. Bab Wu born in 1813. I0 can he bod turf, Good eeevaae to mean. ‘ The d eelh of Dr. Ree. which occurred on Monday afternoon. eeye the London Stead- erd of July 26. ee hie reeldence in Addleou Gerdene Norah. removal the lee: cf the older eahaal at Attic explore". For yeere hle etelwerl ï¬gure hee been ec temlller to the hequentare at the Geographical end other meetlnm. end he elven looked ea young. theb it weeeametlmae dunanlt to remember that he belonged to e out gen- eration at teevellen. Be wee exploring the Araua "alone when Frenklle wee um ellve. end wee the lemme: Mend of Perry. «Slap-on. of Bleak. at the Rceeee end a! Blaherdecn. Be hed wan greet tune by the dleaavary ct the are: lnduhlhble practe l Or. Is. Ind all And. “mungâ€"ma “But efter we come back you can be with me so much, dear. Oh, how pleu- ant it will be! And guy, guy as Venice at the gayestâ€"you shall see! I will come for you every deyâ€"exoept, of course, if the horses are luneâ€â€" “Then I can take 3 cab,†said Ann. “Oh, Anna! Alone in e cab! And no one known how much fever there may be in a ceb! Oh, don’t ever take a. ceb, Anne!" “Yea," said Anna, “that in all very well for you to my, going 8'3]. I have to stay.†“Oh, Anna!†exclaimed Emilio, the next day, already a faint color on her cheek, already able to walk about. “The image and the superscription are Caesar's. As long as she is in authority, just obey her. And she is going to be in authority â€"the great, storming, hateful, warm- hearted creatureâ€"till you are out of the house, and afterward. Oh, if I had minded her that fatal day neither Theo- dore nor 1 would have had all this suffer- :weï¬" And then there was a silence, whether the lips were mnï¬ied in kisses or 3 coat. mél’; And “Oh, Theodore, you won’t want me any more when you know I gave the fever to half the town. in that cab!†And “Oh, Theodoreitake Inaâ€"take mo And just then the curtain swayed and ported, and there stood Theodore, tall and fair and ï¬ne as ever; sud there was s stir and a rush and a glad cry, and “0h, Theodore. you have come back from the dead!†And “011, Theodore, it was I, it was I thst gave you such a blow!†And “Oh, Theodore, how can you ever forgive Thd‘angouncemehi was a tonic, if one might judge by the color that suddenly OVOtht Emilia’a face. are made. You ought to know me. you ought to understand me better. Emilia. But you will have the chance still; for I have made up my mind that I can never manage Anna and Mark and the rest if I haven’t more complete authority. And so I em going to marry your father. †“I was afraid one time that I had!" cried Mrs. Marlboro’. “I should hove taken into account that you are as frail as your mother was before you. A prettv burden Theodore will have of it! And yonâ€"yon ought to have more sense! However, one must take people as they me E†It had come at last. Emilia cried to her- self, her eyes staring out of a face whiter than a curd as if they saw a ghost, an ac- cusing ghost. It had come at last, the end of her tempers, her proud spirit, her obstinate rebellions, her malign nature that had so hated this woman set over her â€"ind she had killed Theodore! And wrought to a pitch beyond endurance, neither sleeping nor eating in all those ‘ days. she fell fainting, not heeding Mrs. Marlboro’s last words, and was herself in bed and in the doctor’s hands, half un- conscious, half delirious, wholly hysteri- cal,from one week to the Other, with nerv- l ous excitement and fever. 1 When, one day, pale as a white rose, she was taken from the bed and into anorher room, the lace and ribbons of her wrapper seeming to have as much life as she had, Mrs. Msrlboro’ directing it all and hovering over her with great, on..- stretched hands, “Oh, I may have killed Theodore,†Emilia said, looking up at her piteously, “but you, you have killed 1 died of this fever it is your own temper that would have killed him. Theodore got into that cab which you went to drive in, that morning of your tantrum when you were forbidden to lesve the house, regsrdless of every one’s safety as you were, going in a cab that a. dozen other people would use in the course of the day, ‘ and giving the fever, for all I know, to} half Boston. However, Theodore is ‘ better.†n “I don’t wonder you are concerned“ said Mrs. Marlboro’ one day, when, wi her own hands, rho had brought son :oth to Emilia. “There, take all 71 can of it; it is very nice. Yes, you oug] to be concerned. For if Theodore ha died of this fever it is your own temp A FAMOUS EXPLORER. seemed to he: now to hove no tune in themâ€"it was only two or three nights ago that she and Theodore were singing that “N ightingalo songâ€â€"and nowâ€"oh, she might never hear his voice ngnin! down in the dmwing room, the tunes of the “fencing m: ought with some koonoot mono ohou o! tho north. Dr. ammunition to Na degeoo or K. D.. no A doctor 0! Inn of Edinburgh, 3 follow o! the Ron! and cum ooolotioo. and non ‘ thonoooo o oonooulor o! the Royal Goo- anphiod Sooloty. He woo Mod to o Condimlody. who survive-him. Though on odmhblo noontour. ho oonld mm In mod“ to who any wk worthy o! No put Manon u I tunnel-1o North Anetta. out! o! tho not noon: at Mo:- muou which he pol-and mending m "moo-lawman hod puood noun.) Oroodion. Thio onm he ohored with hio men. end ogoin resumed hio pooition in the Hudoon' o Boy oervioo. Thio. however. he left no ooon oo hio penoion could he oeoured. end for oome yeoro he took on hio rooidonoe in Conode. At o lotor doto he come to Englond. end took o oonoiderohle ohoro in the buoineoo oi the coupon, end ‘in oohonxeo tor the development oi their territories. Ho 1880. when the Atlontio telomph woo looked upon oo hopeleoo. ho oooompenied the Bulldog expedition. which oumyod o route from Ioelond to Green- lond oud oorooe Dovio otroit ior o oohleo end in 1%! crooeed Anerioo to explore the oeoobilitieo ioroline which the Hudoon'o Boy Componv propoeed to oonotruet ocroro their torritorieo. On reoohina Vonoonver iolond ho woo entertained ot o pnhllo dinner in Viotorio. where o otreet heero hio names Dr. Ree ooon otter thio dote uttlod permanently in England, though otill buy with o voriety oi ooouputiono. , In nddibion to the Geographic-1 Society's medal “to: his tune: of Boom: ml at the coun- oi Wolluion And Voicorh Lads, the £10,000 cloud by panama“ in: tho am intelligence roguding the his of Funklln wu unwed to the 3.11mi patched. Winterina in 1853 et Repnlee Bey, the iiret yeer'e work reenlted in the survey of the Quoieh river. eo nemed by ‘ Ree eitere piece in the Orkneye. In the spring of 1854 he etruckeoréee the lend where Deere end Simpson thought e chen- nel exieted, seperetinu Boothie from the meinlend. Hereannimenweremet with, end in the come of conversation told the tele oi the ioee of Frenklin’e veaeel in much the me deteil thet enbeeqnent dieeoveriee conï¬rmed. end acid to the perty plete end other erticlee belonging to the long Iniee- ing petty. They, moreover. deeiered thet. though the expedition hed deserted the ehipe in 1847, membere oi the perty were ‘ living three yeere leter. Thie newe wee‘ ea importent thet, eiter eome‘ further exploretione. Ree returned to Enmend with the intelligence. which wee the eenee- tion of the entnmn oi 1854. I ed to eooompeny Sir John Richerdeon. the ‘ intimete friend end former compenion oi SirJohn Funklin, on e eeereh expedition tor the Etebne end Terror. down the Meo- kenzie river end eiong the edjoining eoeet. Alter en intereeting summer ecu-eh. end e winter et Fort Conï¬dence. the expedition returned to Eoglend without keying obv teined eny tidinxe oi the mining ehipe. But before ieeving, Sir John Bieherdeon eeeepted the ofl'er of Dr. Ree to continue the eeeroh elone over e pert oi the coat which the party hed not been ehle to me in the summer of 1848. Thin wee Victorie Lend end Wolleeton Lend. Hie voinntery teak wee aocompliehed with euoh eueeeee thet,thonah the exploretione begun did not reeult in my dieooyeriee heerina on the Frenklin expedition the petty ï¬tted out in 1853 wee eminently fruitful in ettein- 1 in: the mein object for which it wee dee- i 1 Accordingly, it was only in the ï¬tness of r things that John should enter the Hudson ; Bay CJmpany’e service almost as soon as I he had taken his diploma in Edinburgh. Rae's nominal dutv was that of a surgeon.~ ’ but the doctor soon drifted into the trader. ‘ and before he left “the country" he had -' attained the rank of chief factor. In 1846 , the Hudson’s Bay Company resolved to justify its position along the shores oi the Polar sea by doing something for the dis- covery of the north-west passage, by ex. pioring the supposed bay reached some ‘ years earlier by Deane and S.mpson. to (he ‘ east oi Fury and Hecla strait. Ben was put ‘ in commend of 13 men, and ordered to start for Fort Churchill, in Hudson's Bay. and make their way to Bepulse Bay. and then ï¬rst up the western and next up the east- ern coast of the Gulf of Alrkolee. by means of boats, dragged when necessary over “ portagee.†At Repulse Bay the party wintered. after the commander had pro- cured a stock of provisions by hunting and ï¬shing. principally reindeer and salmon. They lived for part of the time in a snow house, but, except for cooking, they had no fuel during the whole of the winter. Next spring six of the expedition started north, with eledges, and travelled along the west shore of the gulf of Akklone. reaching the vicinity of Sir John Boee' mos‘ southerly discoveries. thus forever putting at rest its supposed communication with the Polar sea. They now set off for the coast across the land. in a tiresome march through the soit snow and across live frozen lelree, in about latitude 69 deg. 26 min. N., until an islet was reached by Bee alone. From a rising ground he iound the water to be actually an ice-covered semi studded with innumerable islands. and stretching for a long distance ahead of him. It proved to be the Lord Mayor's Bay of the Victory voyage and the islands those which Sir John Ross hed named the "Sons oi the ‘ clergy of _the Church of Scotland.†Bee 3 1 1 had simply crossed a peninsula of the gulf of Akkolee, and proved that the shores which had witnessed the disaster of the Victory. the eastern shores of Boothie. : were continuous with the mainland of 1 America. This peninsular he named after I St: John Ross. and the isthmus after his f nephew, the still more celebrated Sir J emee l Boss. After some further discoveries. the < party returned to Fort Churchillonthe 31st 1 I of August. 1847. Rae was. however. not long permitted to remain idle. for next summer he no order- Iolehnedhilnu hermoetdielinzuilhodeon. His mother wee e notehle women. who is believed to hue wanted to S': Welter Scott much 0! the plot which he deerwud embodied in “The Pmte.†For it“: while living in the honee of Cieietron,on the other eide or Cieigtron roede. tint ere entertained the famous noveliet, and told him the tale of J ahn G-Jw. who had been born in that house. end imended looting it when. in 1872, he turned up 3t Simmon- ln commend o! a pinto bxig. The Bee boy- were unnum- irom their childhood with ï¬rearms end boots. THE CANADIAN POS T LINDSAY ONTARIO, FRIDAY AUGUST 25 1893‘ 1 land. feast-ate- but for an electric punt apcbe of lighting the town 11de nur- ket (tee library, technical schools and Rafter the street lungâ€"Now York rouroo of v mam t. A fiestmctor meg. towp of W: .9" $113- A distinctive progress In gun-mnnn is recorded. A gun has just been test ‘ in France. which. upon trial. has iven 1most remarkable results. It is 0.3 inches calibre and over 47 feet long. To this enormous length the wonderful initial velocity of its projectile is attrib- uted. This velocity reached the phe- nomeusl ï¬gure of almost 4000 feet a. lecond. surpassingsll previous records. The introduction of whose destruc- tors is dread: working a revolution in municipnl msnsgement in may cities. It ins tnken some little time to emble peopletoreslixethetnotonly need the refuseouownsud citiesbenotwssted, but that it an â€tn-ll! be_t_umed into _s ‘ Suicin the word to the deed repeet, as you face each ï¬nger. the following rhym line which refer to all the ï¬ncere): . gm little thugnb is. one ; 1e intin n r, two; The Soliddlegï¬ngeg: three; The rin ï¬nger. (our; The litt e ï¬nger. ï¬ve. I take them. Take them snugly all in bed. Sound asleep; let naught be said. Silence l Do not early weke them. Born into the world with each child. as every mother well known. is the love of the rhythmical, which is but the in- fancy of countin . and develops into it. â€"Kinderzarten ewe. How to Put 3 Little One Pleasantly to Sleep. . In this play teke baby's hand. or that of an older child (for this play is a favor- ite with children even after they have reached the age of tlu’ee years). and In, the thumb in a natural position by the foreï¬nger, With the nail somewhat raised ; then lay each or the. little one‘e ï¬ngers in succession on the palm of the same hand, taking care thet the middle joint of each ï¬nger does not extend be- yond the tip of the thumb. Lay the ï¬iigere as flat as peesible: tiny hoppers emerge from their egg-ca m, and presumably creep out from their luminous dornicile. and later on in the season these broods of varying numbers and all sizes are to be seen among the young stems of the plant. their beaks in- serted, their pomted heads invariably in the same directionâ€"toward the top of the branch. Even though in flight one of the midgets is seen to alight in vio~ lence to the rule. he instantly recognize: his mistake, nnd_quickly glides round to the orthodox position. The insect is the tree-hopper, and is but one of many equally curious and mimetic species to be found among the smaller branches of various trees and shrubs. The mother insect builds a. frothy pa.- rillion for her eggs. In early July the that we can really make “head or tail" ‘ of his queer anatomy. Even thus en- larged it is difï¬cult to get entirely rid of i the idea. of a bird. I have shown a. group of the insects in various attitudes, the position of the eyes alone serving as a starting point for our comprehension of his singular make-up. The tall neck- ]ike or thorn-like prominence is then seen to be a mere elongated helmet. which isprolonged into a steep an le behind, so as to cover the back of t e creature like a peaked root, a feature from which the scientiï¬c name of this particular group of insects is derived, membracis, meaning sharp-eyed, the sides of the slopes being covered by the close-ï¬tting wings,which, thou h appar- ently compact with the body 0 the in- sect. are nevertheless always available for instant and most agile flight. \Ve now discover two pairs of stout legs just beneath the edge of the wings, a third more slender pair being concealed behind, ready for immediate use in ss- socia tion with these buzzing wings when the whim of the midget prompts it to leap. It is only as we on lure one of the lit- tle protean acrobam tween our ï¬nger- tips and examine him with a magniï¬er No sooner do we touch the head of one of these insects with our ï¬nger than with an audible “click" he is of! on a most agile jump, which he extends with buzâ€" zing wings. and iseven now, perhnFs, nping a thorn among a little group of nis fellows somewhere among the large! bittersweet branches. Look! quick! says the writer. Turn vour magniï¬er hither on this green shoot. No thornthis. Is it not rather a. whole covey of quail, mother and young creep- ing along the vine? The tiny insects like a family of tiny birds With long necks and swelling breast and drooping tails, aegily like an autumn brood of “Bob ’ ites. ' \Vriting 1n the August Harper's, Wil- liam Hamilton Gibson tells of "A Queer Little Family on the Bitï¬erswpet.†‘A QUEER LITTLE FAMILY â€"-â€"-â€" Dual-nu" Insects mt Look Like :1 Funny or Bled. With Long Necks lad SIOIHI‘ Brenaâ€"n07 Am the. flop- pen sad Lou! . Merry Lilo. IT DWELLS IN OOVIES ON TWIGS OF THE BITTERSWEET. A GAME FOR THE BABY. l wn-ioorourm [Wuhan 3 «mm an clan-am: 1 ontnlLot-hooauoyon vlnvo s ' “In.- The. Member that Roof. . ‘ rmccvua wow- oonw' I» Input. m flannel suit, with an Eton jacket of green velvet ornamented with bran buttons. Her necktie was of pink silk and she wore 3 pink carnation in her buttonhole. Her stockings were black till: end on her feet she wore black kid ties with patent-leather trimmings. What an American would consider most mnppropriate for n bicyclist were the dipper: which one women wore. They had bow: on the instep end were tied on with ribbon. Quite e menninh coat was worn with this decidedly feminine foot.- geerandnlinen shrt with e sanding caller. II: we: rather inherrnunioue, unednllv no for n Frenchwonnn. her hnir. Accommn i9: her mquiu a pretty girl in a. light green and black jockey cap. She w'ore a boutonnie're of Marguerites. the yellow centers of which were the exact shade of A strikingly stylish girl was arrayed in black flannel knee breaches. black and white atripedshirt. with gentleman's tie, black silk stockings. patent lather Oxi‘ox-q ties. black satin rgfer jacket worn by u very pretty hlonde. The knee breeches were of black satin. also the sailor collar, everything else being white with the exception of the black stripes which encircled the leg of the stocking tohalf wny between the knee and in- step. The satin breeches were a decided improvement on the black velvet one: worn by a companion. The caught the dust from the roads end loo ed 3 dirty gray, while the satin one: shed the dust end were bright and clean. The short puffed apology for a sleeve would be ob- Jectionnble to may. but very little at the bereerm was visible, as she wore logs-med clove». A _ _ spins along. .6. costume which attract- ed an immense amount of attention was rider.° The ï¬rst a pcarance would be a little trying. ncomplimentary re- marks would be made. The wearer would be credited with a love for notori- ety, a. desire to attract attention with a quiet disregard for other people's opin- ion. But she might bethe means of con- ferin a lasting beneï¬t upon the girls who islike to make themselves at all conspicuous. For would we not in time become accustomed to the knee breeches and short skirts and consider them as ladylike and proper as we thought the ï¬rst maiden‘s appearance on the wheel unladylike and improper? Anf strikin color or daring contrast of co ors coul be avoided, and would be by a lady. WORN BY A BDOXDE. The French woman delights in the ad- miring glances which a strikin costume calls forth from the crow which throng the boulevard. and is not at all annoyed if many eyes follow her as she of dem'eanor and were as alto ether charmingas their less daring an con- ï¬dent critics. ‘ Of course the French fashions for the bicyclists mil not appeal to the sedate. The old fashioned stick to the tradition of my grandmothci’s class. “’0 doubt if the young irls ï¬nd much to approve of in them. till, one will have to admit that these costumes are much more com. {omble than the skirts worn by the America: bicyclist, which are apt to get eptanglgd in. the wheel and throw the ,,,IJ L, _ tqo, _they had lost pone of that 'pod‘e‘ety am Although no: An Opposed 1'7 the Sedanâ€"Knee Breeches o! M sumâ€"A Ll‘hl Green Flannel Butt. When a. few _of our independent and msible women decided thet the bicycle wualtogether too ï¬ne a thing to be mono land by the sterner sex great was e consternation and numeral! the comments from their more comervetive sisters. But in a short time these re- poseful creatures 71:0qu that the SOME STRIKING SUITS THAT ADORN FAIR WOMEN- A BDONDE IN SATIN BREECHES. m JOY OF SHORT SKIRTS. A MANX'ISH COAT. “'0! Fetch 0†your Beads and get your lam Stock Insured at mnany. minim 1M.â€" .' '66“ Wild bit pri'ées’fb? . Nails, Tar and Building Paper, PaintsLQi/s, flag, Thoroughbred and Farm Stock Insured at 0er Low Rates. HUGHAN 80., Watchmakers and J eweflam BUILDERSE getting your Goods cheap or dear, whether you are rich or poor, to s: Hughan a 00’s Watches. Clocks and Jewelry. also the Iavéy Baby Carriages which we have just received from Chicago, and t1! large assortment of Sporting Goods which is now being exhibited at our store, 45 Kent-:t., Lindsay. I JAS. KEITH'S, WILLIAM STREET. YOU OWE IT 8110 In (all: puod to wdt on her nummua friends and tron hum â€curd m nut-ch- Hume: p. Bowman:- Wmerxm'n dugoodumnohany mmmA. Kidnbothm'aï¬mm Nady. HOV I7. 1893 â€"58. , Mia Mitchell witches autumn the public end her numerous friends and patrons that shell Jun nodved anew end vduuble swat of Summer Mllllnery of the luteet etyiee end Mb. manner STYLES IN DRESS AND HANTLE MAKING. Lewes: atrium WALKING. VISITING and EVENING COSTUMEE. Invites all buyers of Groceries who are desirous of getting a. big dollar’s we: for their money to call at his store, opposite the Benson House. The Finest Brands of Teas. Sugars, Canned Goodsa General Groceries are selling cheap, and everything in the store has been marked down a. notch or two. EAST END GROCER' GRAND SUMMER MILLINERY OPENING. CI.- OVEJR. 515: ED r Bud wanted, for which the 3105581 ADAM DOBAN ONE DOOR 3481' BENSON HO UHE. IN WINES AND GENERAL LIQUORS Putty, Loo/18, Hinges, etc., etc. OPPOSITE BENSON HOUSE. BYLE‘Z. ONTARIO MUTUAL LIVE STOCK PRICE June; Keith. Hughan Go. J. P. Ryley. S. Devi; «kjons. Insurance Company. 7 can Toâ€. ‘5 Mt. LINDSAY. to yourself, no matter whether you have been dealing with a friend a _whether you think you have bed 54.. ~13†was: ï¬erce nun: {Au- ‘Iak city That-adâ€. â€"rno entrusted yield of when in I II n trifle over 22 bushels to the I ab. 40; barley. 31 : flu. 16. _.B. Msckol. m expo" u-yer luau. w» cut in two bv . .1 In Gilmour 8: Hanson's mill nl Punt. Qua. Wednesdny. â€"'rho religions riots in Bomb q med Wednesday. .nd tor «Vex-.1 III- guests were the scenes 0! deal I n ooqdensed advomumenu lacu sauna. Meta wsuwd. tanm- for d: or am lines) 31.00 cub rnr lhra mom. I: more than dam use chm in mud e. â€chum-om “haul timeout so mercbtna to: but an: by the you R610! made known on or for a an: lDDZiu-Mun. won 8 WILSON. Propz‘hato: '- I’I†‘x-H 6.3- Wxnsov. YOU â€9d n't go to Florid â€'3 AND FOREIGN 1 TEM ’ INTEREST. ‘ on and Hypophosphitcs. ‘ â€"â€"â€"f __,___. mos; , {1-37)vath -' “WinsTREHGTHEN WEAK LURBS.‘ STOP TflE DOUGH, MW CHECK all "STIHG NSEA§ES.' A remr'mlb'w â€"'-â€"â€"-~7 , M pmduoer and it is almost as P: a. a “ilk. Be sure to get zinc gcn‘ Put up in salmon-colored wrappers. mod only by Scott 1 Downs. Kellen! to “not! Wâ€" Phusdelnhh yonm name: B were»: the Nugua PM gland by his teeth mm s Hailey a] â€"Il: u umi-ofliolslly ‘nnouacu ll. Quebec lezlshtnre will be cal “to: the dupuch o! bunk-.55. at November 15. â€"A Vienna able â€para mm c at an Inn been nmetad in Binl Grout. to: muting a. tnde o: In nudhtlng young chudron. sad the “M â€"m big diamond exhibited h m or New York a the World‘ hail†hive been baught b1 Mn. 1 8 Mo for $100,000. A ‘â€"-A†AAA; Will nu WW.“ _ , II -In I ï¬ght between French And men in AlgawMorm. dew thrd. ISL-moo. Wednoadsy a: 1: ' 1 -- -- killed not! than: w mum» â€"-Au election in the Hereford per ha “Inlet Tneedu to ï¬ll the eee VIII-It by the retirement at Mr. M11. Gieietonhn. resulted ln 1 “as even by Mr. Redcun‘e, come 'â€"‘!he department of merine he wing list. giving e Manon the: dete wee 7.“- ~L,fI-1 d “4,129 tons. velued et 8.» .. w o! 8 vessel: end 41.3% Lou mantel 1711! now ad the! the notion of the previous llheflon In reducing the renul t: with the narrower eeeuna mm tune to time nnnonnced. we â€"Semnel Bergen. colored. for ‘ W in The Belly Times a John. N. 8.. visited his mother. I! W. at Pot-ï¬end. TueedI She II 111 net-I old end her I: In. Cums-Inge hen nu her fecal bib 14mm She remer the. were 0! the present eenu Wu number about 130 an the children at her greet-grena- â€"-In the English house of comm nude! non. Einrd Bleke, (II the power of her mejeezy'e V “1899mm“ 0! 100 u ween 2h. prone: we: 01 deciding 1" out! 0! justice. A gflevonq ‘DVE‘TISIXG KATIE Pubhsners’ No ace; “I u- wâ€" v, , u. but there comm! man: when the veto should be put in dough Eons. [001.1an .1 n- .. Look-Ir; Pan-town. 1"" noun s most will“? “in“: I "I“ .80 be won bum: inhuman-Ina. and "n“ "" m-A-.-tl-I duh. cympwmn o malted (our “long men to h N. Danna one of the ps1 hand out at the second no: 3 nuke. t not“ much “to u: ‘ man a every person a ’dI. . All Incident occurred tn ‘ I“ any of a very pecans! M 31ch recently won! ID 33860 Pub 00.. sud V» ,n a». 0%}th wd tutu. '1 ï¬t in the (reenl- :- ulvu: 560' rue. â€a Dank! new - I pd! 0! min. which n___ .wldii (or the m0“- 5“â€. govern! are. manta; 1.50! rio‘. 1r. la. but take as? i 313%