wav nn Lot 53. Con. 3 rsons. found hunting wilfbe presecutod u 3 Ad. UR PRICE LIST. MOB," Dru ggi st me Beautiful she just to 30, 40 and and a good 3.50. a yard. our HENRL $00. in cardi- and black. a of Artimus equalled by xcelled by nelettes plaints '. Bl LLIXGS, Owner 406 {B BY GIVEN that ic and res passers. I Cold; and Pork TORONTO Farmers, Thrashers and Millmen 3.8. B. cures Biliousness, Sick be, Sour Stomach, Dyspep- ' Constipation, Coated Tongue, ' Complaint, Jaundice, Kidney base, and makes the blood 'Ih, red and pure. It is a highly :13 Engines, Horse Powers, L‘MOI’S, Mowers, Reapers. “"0111†and Cross-Cut Saws Med, Filed and Set. ““11 prepared to ï¬ll orders for aShingles». Wigwam SMITH, nccntrated vegetable compound. ne teaspoonful is edose for adults; Ito 30 drops for tildren. Add the let yourself. EDBE PROPERTY ’03 SALE 91in Tom 0F buxm, In «WE MAKE -- nace Kettles, Power Shaw Cut- Hot Air Furnaces, Shinglc hinery liuul Saws, Emery mines hand or power; Cresting Sole Plates and Points f3! dxtferent ploughs m 1138. 038.5ng Hrs tor Flour and Saw Mills. “y "rimâ€. including a valmblo W 7 B ck dwellin , g. and many double 1:513“: "$1 be sold in one or more lots. he; “15°. ion. 2. w. G. 3., Township of Im' 00 “PM. adjoinmg Town plot. Wes taken for part put-chm mm, in Applnoumms moon, ‘ Edge Hill PA up“ over eleven years I can“ may with Dyspepsia and tried every- “1 could think of, but got no relief all ,wted using Burdock Blood in I had only taken one bottle a l commenced to feel better. and puking ï¬ve or six bottles m fly well, and have been so ever a. I feel as if B. B. B. had saved we." Mas. T. G. Jovcn, Stanhopo, AT THE BRICK FOUNDR ners’ Kettles, Column/s, Chan?!) Ends, Bed Fasteners, Fencing, ifllakers' Supplies, School is. Fanning 3-H†Castihgfl, It Castings and Builders’ 399' m6 â€8'11““ the lndneya and help “now 03 the poisons from “I. D ’ to W m A. Bro'n. P. 0- Box m, D? 1" . "For years I mined from 0" “pom trouble which caused me much , I heard of Doan’l Kidney Pill! 5’70" . box of them at Switlor’l Dru. Before commencing to take then m gable to button my 311000 on W‘ of my swollen condition, hm “gun. I had @1118th the ï¬rst box I con“ umwithont Inconvenienco. I have no' second box and have no hedttnoy In“ - ' ' mmendln‘l.’ 008.11 3 denoy Pill. 1C #0 . h Kidney at Dropswal trouble.†"1;,â€ch box. 3 for 81.25 ‘11 an m Kidney Pill 00., T’oronto. gt ' __-.._â€" -- “â€"â€" isrersm. "WE REPAIR-- mwwwmw FOUNDRYMAN the auï¬ering Ind disease in the world comes from “10 kid- neys. YO‘ 110' 10' people there no who take anymoflheu 'delicate little organ. Backache, 13m. backheadacheuJiat- lessness, all signs (I kidney trouble, at. almost nniveral. Dr. Wau’: Blood lam Pills. 9!]0130 in] FUNERAL 0F GEN. GORDON. HONORS FOR THE GALLANT DEAD BY KITCHENER’S ARMY. An Impressive Sceneâ€"Blunt“ Requiem A.“ the Ruins of Khartoum “ [Inden- tle Canqnerl'u; Enslxn «t In» own People. Geo. Stevens, writing to the London Daily Mail from Omdurman, thus de- scribes a touching incident :â€" The steamersâ€"screws, paddles, stern- wheelersâ€"plugged their steady way up the full Nile. Past the northern fringe of Omdurman, where the sheikh came out with the white flag, past the breach where we went in to the Khalifa’s stronghold, past the choked embrasures and the lacerated Mahdi‘s tomb, past the swamp-rooted palms of Tuti Is- land. We looked at it with adispasâ€" sionate, impersonal curiosity. It was Sunday morning, and that furious Fri- day seemed already half a lifetime behind us. The volleys had dwindled out of our ears, and the smoke out of Fourteen years next Januaryâ€" yet even through the humiliating thought there ran a whisper of triumph. We may be slow; but in that very slowness we show that we do not forget. Soon or late, we give our own their due. Here were men that fought for Gor- don’s life while he livedâ€"Kitchener, who went disguised and alone among furious enemies to get news of him; Wauchope, who I’OURED OUT HIS BLOOD LIKE WATER at Tamai and Kirbekan; Stuart-Wort- lay, who missed by but two days the chance of dying at his side. And here, too, were boys who cou.ld hardly lisp when their mothers told them that Gordon was dead, grown up now, and appearing in the fulness of time to exact ten thousand lives for one. Gor- On the steamers there was adetach- ment of every corps, white, or black, or yellow, that had taken part in the vengeance. Every white officer that could be spared from duty was there, fifty men picked from each British battalion, one or two from each unit of the Egyptian army. That we were going up to Khartoum at all was evi- dence of our triumph; yet if you look- ed about you, triumph was not the note. The most reckless subaltern, the most barbarous black was touched with gravity. \Ve were going to per- form a necessary duty, which had been put off far, far too long. our nostrils, and to-day we were going to the funeral of Gordon. After nearly fourteen years the Christian soldier was to have Christian burial. don my dieâ€"other Gordons may die in the futureâ€"but the same clean- limbed brood will grow up and avenge them. The boats stapped plugging and there was silence. We were tying up oppo- site a grove of tall palms; on the bank was a crowd of natives curiously like the backsheesh-hunters who gather to greet the Nile steamers. They stared at us; but we looked beyond them to type you know in Cairo or Alexandria --all stone, and stucco, two-storied, faced with tall regular windows. Now the upper storey was clean gone; the blind windows were filled up with bricks; the stucco was all scars, and you could walk up to the roof on rub- ble. In front was an acacia, such as grow in Ismailia on the Ghezireh at Cairo, only unprunedâ€"deep luscious green, only dr00ping like a weeping willow. At that most ordinary sight everybody grew very solemn. For it was a piece of new world, or rather of an old world, utterly different from the squalid mud, the baking barrenness of Omdurman. A facade with tall win- dows, a tree with green leavesâ€"the facade battered and blind, the tree ' rthâ€"-â€"there was no need to tell us we were at a grave. In that t disconsolate and the staff stood in the Open space facing the palace. Then, on the rootâ€"almost on the . ing, soul-uplifting bangs marking tune, the band of the 11th Sudanese was playing the Khedival hymn. “Three cheers for the Queen I†cried the Sirdar; helmets leaped in the air, and the melancholy ruins woke to the first wholesome shout of all these years. Then the same for the Khedive, The comrade flags stretched them- selves lustily, enjoying their own again; the bands peeled forth the pride of country; the twenty-one guns banged forth the strength of war. Thus, white men and black, Christian and Moslem, Anglo-Egypt set her seal once more, for ever, on Khartoum. OOH. yet still he loved his garden. The gar- den was a yet more pathetic ruin than the palace. The palace accepted its doom mutely; the garden strove against it. Untrimmed, unwatered, the Oranges and citrons still struggled to bear their little hard green knots, as if they had been full ripe fruit. The pomegranates put on their vermilâ€" lion, star-flowers, but the fruit was small and woody and juiceless. The figs bore better, but they, too, were small and without vigour. Rankly overgrown with dhurra, 'a vine still trained over a low roof its dwarfed leaves and limped tendrils, but yielded not a sign of grapes. It was all green, and so far vivid and rerfeshing after Omdurman. But it was the green of nature, not of cultivation; leaves grew large and fruit grew small, and dwindl- ed away. Reluctantly, despairingly, Gordon’s garden was dropping back to wilderness. And in the middle of the defeated fruit trees grew rankly the hateful Soudan apple, the poisonous herald of desolation. The bugle broke in upon us; we went back to the boats. We were quicker steaming back than steaming up. We were not a whit less chastened, but every man felt lighter. We came with a sigh of shame, we went away with a sigh of relief. The long-delayed duty was done. The bones of our country- men were shattered and scattered abroad, and no man knows their place. None the less Gordon had his due burial at last. So we steamed away to the roaring camp, and left him alone again. Yet not one nor two looked back at the mouldering palace and the tangled garden, without .a new and great con- tentment. We left Gordon alone again can led the rustling whisper of the Lord’s Prayer. Snow-haired Father Brindle, best beloved of priests, laid his helmet at his feet and read a me- morial prayer, bareheaded in the sun. Then came forth the pipers and wailed a dirge, and the Sudanese played, “ Abide With Me.†Perhaps lips did twitch just a little to see the abony heathens fervently blowing out Gor- don’s favourite hymn; but the most irresistible incongruity would hardly have made us laugh at that moment. And there were those who said the cold Sirdar himself, could hardly speak or see as General Hunter and the rest stepped out according to their rank and shook his hand. What wonder! He had trodden this road to Khartoum for fourteen years, and he stood at the_ goal at last. _ Thus with Maxim-Nordenfelt and Bible we buried Gordon after the man- ner of his race. The parade was over, the troops were dismissed, and for a short space we talked in Gordon’s gar- den. Gordon has become a legend with his countrymen, and they all but deify him dead who would never have heard of him had he lived. But in this garden you somehow came to know Gordon the man, not the myth. and to feel near to him. Here was an Eng- lishman doing his duty alone, and at t e We are i] gentleness, e C. Simmons. v. y'â€" God governs the world. and we have only to do our duty wisely, and leave the issue to himâ€"John Jay. Good taste rejects excessive nicety; it treats little things as little things and is not hurt by them.â€"Feulton. No man was ever so completely skill- ed in- the conduct of life as not to re- ceive new information from age and experience.â€"Terence. N arrow-minded and ignorant persona talk about persons and not things; hence gossip is the bane and disgrace of so large a portion of -society.-'-Sheri. Be not merely good; be good for something.-â€"Thoreau. Evil is wrought by want of thought 3 well as by want of heart.â€"Hood. Our ancestors have traveled the iron age; the golden is before us. â€" St, Pierre. We are indebted to Christianity for gentleness, especially toward women,â€" a INSTANT PERIL OF HIS LIFE be good for ROUND [HE WH0l[ WORM} WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE FOUR" CORNERS OF THE GLOBE. Old and New World Events 0! Interest Chron- Iclod Brieflyâ€"Interesting Happening: at A peer cannot resign his peerage. Crabs two feet in length are often seen in India. Police Court statistics show that Cornwall is the best behaved county in England. San Marino, the smallest republic the world, has an annual revenue £3,000. Italy produces annually 70,000,000 gallons of olive oil, the market value of which! is £24,000,000. There are enough paupers in Lon- don to fill every house in Brighton. Charity organizations existed in Egypt 2.500 and in china 2,000 years ago. Tea is cheap in China. In one pro- vince of the empire good tea is sold at ll-4d. a pound. There are supposed to be something like athousand murderers at large in Great Britain. The Lord Mayor of London receives more than $1000 letters in a year, most of which have to be answered. The largest organ in the world in the Cathedral of Seville, Spain. has 53 pipes, and 110 stops. The deepest mine in the world is the Lambert mine in Belgium, which is 3,490 feet beneath. the earth's surface. While boring for coal at Barrow a bed of salt was found at adepth of ii? fleet. The bed is said: to be 70 feet, 10 . There are said «to be in London alone 8,000 children who are feeble-minded, as distinguished from idiots and im- beciles. In an exhibition at Dresden are col- lected a number of boots, shoes and slippers once worn by emperors. kings queens and princes. The cheapest railway travelling is to be had in Hungary, where it is possible to go s distance of five hun- dred miles for Os 8d. The mummy of a Pharoh which re- cently arrived at Marseilles from E811“: was charged import duty at the rate for dried fish. Italy leads in the number of crema- toriea. having twenty-tour. America has twenty-two. Germany tour, Eng- land three, and Franco two. Capital sentence cannot be pro- nounced upon any criminal in Sweden until aconteasion of the crime has been obtained from him. i About 0,000 persons are employed by the London hospitals, and of this num- ber 1,8†are honorary medical officers, who receive no fee of any kind. gg Are yona victim? Have you lost ho P Amyon contemp mar riage lood been dieeeeetf?o Ha “$3.5 ,xï¬Eégï¬mmziflmaa m it ha. am to, 1.2.3:: mm do a, “in“... . LIA mu FREE. No matter whohas treated write tot-fan honest Opinion gzgggtsigrge.‘ Charges reasonable. BOOKS FREEâ€"‘ (madden Monitor" (illustrated). o F Diseases of Men. Incloae postage. Scents. Sealed. ‘ WNO NAMES USED WlTHOUT WRITTEN ONQBNT. PRI ? w . d'cine sent 0. O. D. No use on to. or nvol ï¬géxeg... Eggrlg‘gï¬hg confidential. . Quasaon last and 0001: of, float-s “It 0". "S if, monk, Fruga- 4» 't’m r- KEHGAN No :43 SHELev s'r a 5 ‘... 3- g" 9333- ;; 0 e . #6339523; 3 =9‘m‘3hsaly I DETROIT, MICH. 5 I A -. Co. t. Chas. Ferry says:â€"“I owem life to Drs. K. K. At If I learneda bad habit. At. 21 ï¬nd an the toms ‘ K0! Seminal Weakness and Spemptorrhcna. $3.1m. 'M POTENO were (1 ' ' .and weakening my ntshtydï¬! married gt VAR|OOOEL1 24 under a vme of my family doctor, but it was s “and experience. In ei hteen months we were divorced. I EMISS'ON} anthem consulted Drs. K., who restored me to manh -bytheir New Method Treatment. [felts new life thrillthrongh . OUREI 2h 11 rves. We were united agam and are ham) . This was .311; yé’am agoO ‘ Drs. K. 65 K. are scientiï¬c spec ' and I m We treat and cure Van'cocele, Emissions, Nervous Dewey. Sen 3 Weakness, Glut, Stricture, Syp/zilz's, Unnatural .Dzltcï¬argas, Sgng‘ _-_l{z°dney and Bladder Diseases. KI," wmmlm, m ï¬dï¬m mwmmr “+321, er ebloasomotmanh while todrnontt . initial melancho enston ()the much turnah'immy but ï¬nd no who. armioom thud!- viotimoagtonndigea'llmï¬gnotnï¬av-mmmm tho work-ho .tho Rthetmdeaandtheproteasiom. RESTORE!) 'ro MANHOOD BY 0R8. K. K. qume Wxxwmna. moms. my. trust: -mwâ€" â€Theft: New Method Treatment chred me {nwé View weeks. | .You feel yourself mg every day. I have never heard of their failing to cum in m 5 WHO NAHES OR TESTIIOIIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.“ WuhLWalker flathBtreet :-“I have ~. SVPH "JR untold nappies fox-(Tm, t‘mï¬lï¬â€™ï¬ygfl‘ ; SYPHILIS EMISSIONS STRIGTURE CURED LATER EXCESSES IN MAM-I000 MAKE NERVOUS. DISEASED MEN I 7 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200.000 OURBD. NO “X WCURES GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUHDED in of is It steel ten; feet square would; be pressed into ablock only two feet square it taken 4,000 miles below the earth's surface. More than half the Lord Chancellors of England during the past fifty years were the sons of poor men. One of them was the son of acountry bar- ber. and the father of another was 3 Newcastle coalheaver. The Persians in 516 3.0. invented a transparent glass varnish, which they laid over sculptured rocks to pre- vent. them from weathering. This cost-- ing has lasted to our day, while the rocks beneath are honeycombed. Berlin is one of the most cosmo- politan of European cities. Though it! is the. capital of Germany, only 37 per cent. of its inhabitants are German by birth. Ten thousand new cab and carriage horses are. among the items which Paris is acquiring for the accommo- dation of visitors to the Exhibition At the sunset hour in Seoul, Cores, a town bell proclaims the fact when the sun has vanished beneath the horizon. No man is allowed in the street after that hour. under penalty of a flogging. can at Rome, with its eight grand staircases, 200 smaller ones, 20 courts, and 11,000 apartments. Its marbles bronses. frescoes, paintings and gems are unequalled in the world, and its library is the richest in Europe in manuscripts. Its collection of sculp- ture not only surpa-es any other. but all others together. the world is the tunnel migration of butterfliee across the lithium 0! Pen- ema. Where they come from or. whither they go no one known To- ward: the end or June e tow lut- teljed specimen; are _¢_l£eoovered flitting It is stated that 40,000,000 dozen egg! are used every year by calico print works, 10,000,000 dozen. by wine clari- fiers, and many millions more by pho- tographers and other industries. One of the Sunday amusements in Havana is cock-fighting. It is on.- tomary at such contests to revive a half-vanquished bird by spraying San- ta Cruz rum over its head. The rum is blown from the mouth of one of the tight directors. There seems hardly any limit to the age of fish of many kinds. In the Royal Aquarium of St. Petersburg there are fish to-day that are known to have been there at least 150 years. Some of them are five times as big as when first captured; others have not grown an inch. There are no fewer than’ 35 tunnels over 1,000 yards in length on English railway lines. Those of notable ex- tent are the Severn tunnel on the G. W. R., 7,664; the Totley tunnel, on the Midland, 6,226; the Stanedge, on the North-western, 5,842; the Woodhead, on the Great Central, 5,297; and Bram- hope, on the North-eastern, 8,745 yda. long. out _to 39:, and u thy any! '1'he largest inhabited building in the world is unquestionably the Vati- One of the most beautiful night- in