Bhe Straitord. Times. Télephone No. 21. *. "AVEBNESDAY, NOV. 12, 1590 ' Straford Tim #, when sent Way send panto wo tetdy 2 Fk clos eae oy mail, should ¥ Ueber, Hank Cheyur, o¢ Draft, or Express «may Order. mh i Li b publishes wehscriber Wes he -potinet" by = ae Wishes his paper stepped, and arrearages must paid Ph Always give th, nam of th Post-o ffi eto which pour pa er 4 sent. 6 _ Mrrove.--_We wake them ; das ang" tag Soar we will cheerfully correct them you will te to write us good-naturedly ; ua o* but if you then w Pa pod my A a not complain to one elec, or Jet i & Gtk a make right tice that we may Publisher will accept dverti cept those of a strictly legitimate class Ad- = can be had on application to * Adve "g ", Publisher «ill sot hold himself re ible for any errom which may appear ta legal Adventoanents: ' fhe Publisher «iil not bold himself responsible tor views expreased colunin : Sia Advertisementa without specific instructions ono feeerted. until forbidden aad charged accordinz!). 4 * Adverisementa should reach the office by noon at latest to ensure publication in Au Chang s 7 7 A 7 ta be haaded in or notice given that a change will boon, ta. ensure bange being made, . ; The Name and econ haath greece Berney ecrompany a communication, pa bat as an evidence of ood faith. _ Ketivrate th Pavtieee vavvt De at reamed to : E.J.MNEITL,. Managing Director Telephone War in Peterbore'. be the. a intention business at half the rates charged by the Bell Telephooe Company, and paying « ers of the Beli Telephone Company ever | Teceived, has apps y discovered after "work haw bern done," ae the amount of its pt their business, and all new sub who are likely to remain #ith phone connection 1s one, asno complaints were made of the , service In feterboro', which was exceltent; wad the regular rates charged- are At the towest in the world tor E. --~ ~ a * >» take the trouble to make a few enquiries ae could find ont in five minates thst the item rent and valaries absolutely necesrary for t roper conduct of the business "would alone eat ug the revenue of w per-rate Company, ieaving nothing whatever for the equally necessary ex sex of heating, lighting, stationary ferent cn cost of construction aod allow anor for depreciation, sccidenta and dam- agos, sad laxt, but not least repairs, Ia addition to ordinary repsirs-a heavy and contionons expense, one good storm Will often do damoge enough to use up the surplus revenue cf asingic Agency years --Adv't, oT Mining News. experts note that cholera neve bowels oot tes earth, but hao- ind it to use '« Extract of Wild Strawberry for bow! complaints, dysentry, diarrbwa, ete. It is a eure cure. tH 4 uf iy ii i FE FEL = propoeel i - am B. Fred report was s + T. Wileoa on whole. r i which created 4 oh. the King of Spain. To be revenged for xchanges of will) Hr with the Venetians, causing them _ to, 'st him A Hunting Expedition. i 5 ' The hunting scan of IRST ferry tm | Some of Extravagant Uses to Which They With a company of hun Mave Been Pat. bes ep sopra Cop low ' he mt : Mi lack with deer wher on When Alessandro di Spina, of Florence * ™" B™ pas i ; ? morning near the clew of the season we invented spectacles he could never have found:a-big anow had fa!! 'ny dus ' wel " s f m a "6 22009 'a 4ai/ of Bs sat , pEtiokmsins cs they mand be, used as previous night, and seo after it was tient Marks Of social position and intellectual woah to sce fairly, a settler whose superiority by some of the mest civilized : " SPECTACLES AND EYEGLASSES. ing the r -- ee +3 7 as "s pee - ., Sianty was near cur Quarters care in "'pations of the Girth, Yet, strange as it _ eat haste to tell us tat thers was a bir May appear, they have-been put to this >, a : : 4 y SP ' 3 : yu ,frosh bear track betwoen his shaniv aid extravagant use. In Spain, during the seventeenth cen- tury, the wearing of apectact! sexes Although they were not necessary, many | the cow stable. In a minute everything was bustle, Not one' of our company had seen a bear that fall. Here was fun. *A fresh bear track,' kept them on while eating or atten ling i, Rifles were examined; "a hells Slipped pulsic TACHine, Sash ae theater, eoqs 2 and off we started India' fie, with SMrisand bull fights, 80 that the wearers ithe hilar'ty that every banter can under- stand on such an occasion. Coming to etrack, sure cnough it was a 'big un' es by both wae a mark of social eminence might command respect from those of th. the lower orders with whom the inight é ' be compelled to come. in contact. wand fresh' too. Bee towards 6 long, "etary SOIT oT a Young monk w ha, hay. arrow swamp bed . on it entered. This ing accomplished somé diffictlt task, was win was soft, wet = springy, filled prothised by the prior any favor which nines -- _. _ . rie 'The it was in his power to grant. Ho gravely) * "0 eaering ane red replied that he had long yearned to be per-! watt ee ram iatien complete F Sov mitted to wear spectacles. This request! *™ inlet. } -- yr ely e-preisin ps evidently gratified his superior, who, | 22 across a beaver dam and around we with an air of satisfled pride, said to the: young monk, Hermano, ponga las ojal-i . . as" ("Brother put on epeetucion"®, The Bet by. it was Gare woe concession filled the recipient with such) {te of us that one should Sillew the joy that he forthwith fell on his knees, |e: and two patrol each side of the and kissing the hand of the prior, earn-|2¥amp, keeping --_-- * nhc party who estly expressed his gratitude for so great| ould"keep ERA, Which Phaaas wtike an honor. There is another story which) the past of honor and pee Ganga. shows how highly the right to wear these! But who should do it? Each one was ornaments was esteeinad. It is said that) 8 ol hunter and - dead shot, and each when the Viceroy of Napies, the Marquis 0 89Xious to go in, Louis Frink, speak- d'Astorgas was having his bust seulptar-| 8% for himself, said: "Boys, Um the ed in marble he was most careful to have Mest. I've met grizzlies under rather bis bess and largest spectacle put in, as! ing circumstances out. West, he thought it could not bea good likeness 304 though this isn't a EMIzzIey, going if these neossary appendages of nobility in there may offer an old_ time sensation Were omitted. "jon a small scale," and it was so i er _An this. century, the size. of the spec-, The patrols got their places, and rink tacles was also a matter of important started Tiana _ pruce "led "stowty, and consideration just as-carriages and men- C2Utiously; peering under the snot cor- Servants are nowadays, "Asa man's for- ered rose bushes. Silence reigned; mxne- tune increased, so did the size of his thing was sure to happen and that right spectacles. the-Countess-d'Auinoy-4, bo matter what. the of.axoute, "asrutes usthat-as- men rose--in-politicat and social rank, the spectacles, too, rc higher and higher on thelr noses, . She that swamp, he could pot run the pa states, from 'pe observation, let on either sides without being killed. that some of those worn by the grandeea Being on somewhat higher ground we were as large as her head, and that for Could see Frink. He stopped a moment, this . reason these great personages ob- then bringing his gun to an 'aim' and tained the sobriquet of ocalea. These bolding on a little, fired. I heard the glasses were for the most part made in 2Wful how! of the wounded bear, and Neus 'd-the.: ~out-of-re», at nce saw by the shaking bushes and | venge, played atrickon the Spaniards. |™™bling snow just where 'The Marguis de Cueva, with two other is nobles, had undertaken pre of Venice on fire by means gone out of the jungle. and must be very bear to getaway. Ifhe did not die in 'on , the number of these) Se bear. would heat to explosion, 3 i blind tveir wearers. It is said that tthe; ly. and _ =. ro ag hal ag: = at explosion. actually occured, but --with. no. ed to Krink s a. AO more disastrous" comeynencethan~the- before we reached the soft ground came burning of the eyebrvw., eyelashes and 8nother shot. But on we went, right on. hair of the wearers, a circumstance) Then Frink called out, "Don't hurry, it's which made" the Spatitants"-very trate, Ml xight now. -We found the bear lying within eight feet of where Frink deliver- withdraw their custom for ocales from'@? bottrs*ots,~He-was fatty aware of his' then forever, danger, but decided to hold his second Tt would Seem that the English caught' Sot till he. was sure. if possible, to kill, this quaint and gidiculous custom from aed he had panna for only one before Spain, but, not to appedr slavishdy imi-/ State wontd-be om-him.-He also remen- tative, they adopted the eyegiass, that beres| he had no. good knife and a vain decoration of a. man's face which "ithout a revolver, should the affair Coleridge described as "a piece of glass develop into a band to hand fight, as stuck in a fop's eye to show that he ras W2 quite likely at that moment. These acoxcomh." How many'men wear chis "ings passed through his mind during curious ornament for affectation, it were Me ten-seconds of time between shots, useless to speculate: but it is kz n-that but he Tat ERNE Se good hunter, in the greatest majority of cases it is worn "4 had immense nerve. It was a_big to give the wearer a superciiious air Job to get our caine to hard ground, from which the-in- dais- inordinate vawity amis, ¥ Hence it was takenon an ox-sled to our takes for w dignified one, and without, S@tuty. which he would be unnoticeable among? That nicht seated around the camp the thousands of commonplace beings fire the events were all talked over and with whom we daily come -in contract! Frink was indeed the hero of the hour. For a time this single piece of glass was' much in vogue, but it has by degrees given place to the eye-sight drnament--! . The American who is said to have the pince-nez. This 1 the eye gear which' made the banjo dear to England's prince is most affected by actors, or men who isin New York again, aad his adven- wish to attract attention to their puny,tures in London, where he climbed from individuality. .-- pavement to the drawing-room, are In Germany the habit of wearing spec-jexciting enough as his friends tell them. tacles first began in affectation, conse-}His name is Ruby Brooks, and quent, it-may reasonably be presumed, }years ago he was the in banjo on the int hich existed t L i of Miss Minnie Stevens, now @ in London society as the wife a we The Prince of Wales' Banjoist. --_ to London and met with disappointment after disappointment. He attracted no attention; got no engagements; had no pnpilsand was walking the stfeects one gloomy thinking of how it would feel to jump off Waterloo bridge, wheri*whom should he spy but his former New York pupil, Mrs. Paget. She invit- ed him to play in her drawing-room, and in afew weeks he made a fashionable | i" that the monopoly of the sale of specta- cles ia that country he would be mone-' tarily rendered happy, inasmuch asthe revenue lie would derive from it would supply all his wants rs up in the Das) 'soon ascertained that the game had not{ There was-not.one chance in fifty for the |. the bear was, | for Frink. knife} pean rr ler "were. in--favor-ot | Pacific than to_the Grand Trask. The Le had Capt. Arthur Paget. "Brooks went over | IN 4 BATH OF ROILIXG FARNISA t | Me Bieetty Woman Almost Parboiled by Parting Frain. { -- Exeter, Oct. 31.--N'ta William Doe undertook to rer ca pot fullet warnich thy bettam: dropped aot dows over her . Beler 2 fms 'a she was terribly i Piper eas oleo-bedty dthrough the prevent cond 5 + Dew she realized thet she hed killed her bueband the at- tempted to commit suicide, bot was pre- w@erfere, Vi vented, Myra, Williams is ia jail. j eS | Whatisa aay's labor? i One day's work for a healthy liver is to: secrete three and *« half pounds of bile. If the bile secretion be deticient, constipation enaues ;if profuse, hilicusness and jann- | dice arise, Bardock Blood Bitters is the | most perfect liver regulator known ia med- ' icine for preventing omd curing ail liver | troubles MeCabe Says He's Concerted. --- { : A repert from Woodstock states, "that"! the Saivation Arius as eeual hed services H atthe Wardetok gaol ca Sar! y ond ! among those who geva testimony was} George SeoCabe, the gotarion ATs locked up a che sViog set Bre tu Ee ge of havia wi Rr: dL Wentey -Booit ; declared that he was in gaol om a charge of a crite ci which he was as innocent as a obit unborn : t wre Christian and had gove through the process «f convertion. Seabee imperisl Feder ation. Wiil present an oppertunity to extend the fame of Dr. Fow sa Eataet of Wild Strawberry the unfailing remedy for chol- era, cholera morbus, colic, cramps, diar- rhwa, dysentery, and aH summer com- laiuts, toevery partofthe Empire. Wild Straw bezry never fails. The G. T. R. Shareholders' Annaal Meeting London, Oct. 31.--The Grand Truck Pe meeting , waa ie Sir Henry Tyler presiding. He said he at- tached no importance to the threats of the United-Staces to.abolish the Cayedian railways in carrying through the States, but if enf. would be more injurious to the Canadian + hau img the half year's work, he eatd the only bad feature was the low rates ob m report was adopted after some discussion. The People's Mistake. People make a ead mistake often with | <on- 1 tual cure at any stage-of constipation, docs not warrant us in neglecting to ure it at the right time, Use it pow. Oe Hanged Lime, in His Barn. od well-todo farmer of i tilivs worth uf fo catirot. cd Wednesday, and eve of his neighbors r bediiag hit zt Hives since that times went + wee af everything was all $ the first to find him. : Scout's die Evidently Desereed Hanging Pe ry, Ga, Oct. 98.--Ton Keelf Te, Who wmurdered his father, sep mother, six other members of the family and Mr«. Temp'e Weat, who was staying at the house, was hanged at 14 today. The motive for the crime was Tum Woo!lfotk's enmity for hie scp mother and his desire to have un- disputed postession of his father's pro- perty. He Wes Ruried Alice. Kew Philadetp' ia O., Oct. 299--F. M. Leider, who took an overdose of morphine ' and to have died, was the glass in the coffin broken, i 4 Bowmancilie Elepement. B wmaanville, hae skipped to the otherside ia company council mert-. fog Joeeph on behalf of his unfor- tunate daughter, applied for assistance to }necure quarters for the children in one of the homes in Toronto, success, £ nts AT as fast as he wanted them. doesn't look much over 26 now, but he is 10 years older. "His tall, sligtit figure and dark eyes and hair give hima dreamy artistic expression, and he resoltitely re- Tn former days the rims of spectacles Were made of bone and 1, but this clumsy framework -has given place to gold, nickel and steel, so that a pair of spectacles can now be had which weighs less than ounce. Still, {fuses to throw away on any other musi- the tortoise-shell frame, with iong hand-jcal instrument the talents he believes he was given ¢xpressly fo exploit the once despised banjo. substance, is most in! fasltion for 'ladies' glasses," for with! therm insolent gazers may 'be mx we easily snubbed," and unpleasant acquaint- auces, by an ostentations appearance of nearsightedness, be convenicutly. "cut." is a strange fact that those who have: peed of spectacles are slawest te wear them, though by their timely use a waning oyesicht may be preserved or re- iol, and a pleasant oldage secured to who otherwise would have a gloomy one.-- American Notes and Queries, Loveliest of Eaglish Women." The deseription of the wedding gown of Lady Helen Dancombe, sister of the Duchess of Jeinster, who ts said to be the most beantiful wonian im'England, is quite charming. te -fcown mot have been refreshing in ite orkrtnality. The dress was-of pure white satin, made perfectip plain. The bodice was mide with kigh, fall sleeves, . finished . : with frills of point de gazé, with which Faney Pelargonjums, ~ [the feant was trimmed. The varieties of this section are much} A girdle of rings of sequins weaker growers than the large twice around the waist and fell in ty - passed Jong kiss, and should not be-cut in so ends on. the skirt. _ i eut back to the hard, ripe wood . from the shoul- gonuthnes tobreak. After ing}ders by ropes of white siik and silver, I Cut in Haters by « Sar. Orillix, Oct: 31.--Edward Crosfield, ron ofthe proprietor of the Sturgeon Ba shingte will, was endeavoring to §x a loose Duton the saw without s: the ma. chinery, when be fell across the saw and Was cut slnivatintwo. He lived two hoars. notwithstanding his frightful injuries. o- Chlorefermed a Clerk. eaieie . Eucpinsion Bridge, Oct. 3t.- Gsorze Laninerts, brother of the postavagter, claims that at none yesterday he was seiz.. e? from bebiod by two men, -chlor:foom- ed, aud the cish box containing $143.58 stolen from the eafe. Lammrtte wee foand lying on the floor wncomions halt aa heor ister, : Onrelesmess With «a Gute . Fieeltion, Oct. 31.--George Ross, ton of John Bors, -ke +AS--cat sheoting in the woods pear the village when the gaa' accidentally went off, and the charge of shot entered his arm the > ing out at the sheulder, 'He is very low) but may recover, ae ~ PRSEMAS's wokm rowpsxs are safe in all and p Worms 1 'Slee ; : } brated by Longfellow iqcbis peer, } oR } | ! Varietios To ives easily, mix a small quantity of baking soda with your brick dost, and sve if your knives do not polish better. Paint spots may be removed: from } kind of } parts of honia. ' Pr clothing by saturating. with ecal turpentine "ait spirits "of arn? Mrs, Hannah ¢ 'ook, who discovered in eand-bank the skeletan that was cele "The A Brice Kills Her Metarwd S 1 in Armor," diel lately, at Fall . i River, Mass', aged nearly ei shty-seven Bradiord, Ala, 0 Lost night Mra, ve, When teusdente vente cd. uf Joka as ' ee sepke, | years, ,hen fourteen Years old, she a ' . 4 : stot line r sad, *Surted the third power lodm put up in Jealour ' Sem friends | Utat city, Were c¢ ites Pa . #400 | A corncoh thermometer is very easy to rn ee ie ' oe ee rc make srt is useful and effective. Get 2 as uw um 4 *t moving (er -+ 1 * pl ygahieg lin tage 'i aie re | bright rel or yellow ear--any farmor will sioni', to which he mace a lang ing wis r fi he rep'y tas Wildameren to a bureanlana | FIVe You some to choose fromi--then re- taking a_piste! from-a« diewer, shot her) Move two rows of kernels, leaving a h hea: before thoge+ place the exagt size of a small thermonie 7 ter, which you can buy atany shop where they sell materials for fancy work. Tile the stem with a bow of ribbon to "Match and you have an attractive present roaaly, Miss Ellen Terry's gowns for "Ravens- wood" are triumphs of 'art in so far as thedetails ofthe period are concerned. She wears four different costumes in the play. One is sormewhat quaintly-fash- ioned riding habit of a pinkish shade of réd, and with this she will dona three cornered hat, Another is a corsage and j Craperies of pink brocade, lined with stay, overa petticoat of pale green and white. A third is asimple little dress of pale bine material, made as plain a4 a stage gown ever is, and in all the-greater contrast to the last gown, which is of white brocade and satin. The Totlowiiy aneetote has fast been published for the first time in France. "When Napoleon Third was Courting Eugenie the ladies of his court were bitterly opposed to the match. They treated Mile. de Montijo with marked coldness and disdain. One day, in the park of Compiegne, within sight of her enemies, the irritated girl complained to the Etiperor of tte treatment she~re= and smilingly. When she had finished he story of her grievance he cut off a leafy bough, and, twining it in the form ofa garland, placed it'on Eugenie's head, saying loud enouch to be heard, "While waiting for the other." From that Moment the ladies treated Mlle. de Montijo as their future sovereign. On Talking Slang. This "sermonette" is especially for you, ice -could-be-putia-4 three words: Don't doit. Possibly there mightcome an occasion--say once in a lifetime--when a good sound bit of the funny. But to hear vulgar words used bya gentle girl is almost invariably shocking. I remember passing two girls in the street, and hearing one of them say, "Tl bet you a quarter." It gave meashiver. And when a group of school girls fill their conversation--as, alas! they often with one after another, the effect on an outsider is painfully disagreeable. taiking slang grows rapidly. It is like reporting a bit of scandal, Have you ever noticed if you say an unkind word against a neighbor, how quickly a Chance comes to say another? And with just that came appaliing ease a habit of using careless, coarse words increases, Weeds srom rapidly, There is plenty of good, strong English to give expression to wit, droll sry, indignation or sympathy, with- out recourse to the phrases which belong to horse jockeys, ganiblers, tipplers and vagabonda.--Harper's Young People, ------++0 The third pege of the Toronto Daily-« ' gno ed for ** Want" adve~ ise nen $ Fu went a situation, ® mechanic, * byes ners, tudging, if you baze lo to: os er il yow Wait to" find out where © ove is, advertise in the To custo Dai/y Mai! NATIONAL PILLS are unsurpasted as a safe, mili, yet thorough, purgative, acting upon the biliary organs promptly and Dr. Low's worm sy will remove all kinds of wo 'ns from childrea or adults. ~ THE SUN. 1891. Democrats know Tux Sc has fought in the front for mocratic i never wa or in its loyalty to the true inter- ests of the party it serves with less telligence and disin i opinions ha everyhedy thoula read Tus Sex. . Dal'y, per monsh, POE FON ons: coneencerzcn dcnoianess Sanday, por yaar, Saag tkiy Sun, one y Address THE Co. PERTH MUTUAL F.1.00 .. PRTASLISEES 1802, WY ACT OF PARLIAMENT. Insures Banidings, Merchandise, Mannfacterics ao* alt other description of Insarahie Property, om the case Or premium cote syciem, L2S4ES PROMPTLY ADJCHTED AND ParD, ---- BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Req. M. P., Prosident, Strattord, Orr, Builder, Stratford Sg Reeve, Jamon fi ceived at their hands, He listened calinly [ The habit of f . PROF.DORENWEND * STRATFORD Monday and Tuesday, 17th and 18th inst,, ace AGBION HOTEL, Patis Hair Worka, 108 and 108 ¥ Pt Tine ab, Malt, SS Ducveay, Peremte v6.6 ce cee sc Hamilton.............} id ss * Kote * seu ever F --s 4% OLD COUNTRY MAILS. via Halitax Packet closes every New Y: . eittarra Lobby will be open to box hole ie 3 i E final A. H. ALEXANDER, Special one way excursions to b Columida, Washington Territory ac, October 17th and Slat. Hovember leuk and Soak, December 12th aE oe Ciepowal, see - nae rH i 4 3 mend Sicha,