HWipf?:.»¥«f*-f^^P^'^SSR|f^§ LADIES DEPAETMENT. FUrtmg at FnU Speed-Young Old Ladlesâ€" Tbe VIUe'B laflaenccâ€" run for the Girl*. Tlie Wife's laflaence. Two gentlemen, at a large reception iu New York last winter, were discussing one of the foremost politicians in the country â€" a man who, whether in office or out, always keeps himself prominently before the public. "I knew him at college," said one of -the gentlemen. "He was a man with a clear head, extraordinary memory, and much per- sonal magnetism. But 1 can not understand why he chose a public life or has pushed Himself forward bo persistently. He was a lazy, thoughtful, visionary fellow, abso- lutely destitute of ambition." " I can tell you the secret," said the other. "You will see it in his wife's nose. There she is Did you ever see a more peifect incarnation of energy and love of command Napoleon would have chosen her for one of hi? marsh- als at first sight." His friend was amused at the guess, and said, presently "There is another of my old classmates, P. He was a thin, ambitious, scholarly fellow, with re- fined tastes and hi^h aims. He now is a fat, indolent animal, without a thought, appar- ently, but his cognac and terrapin. Who is to blame for that " " His wife's mouth and her money. I will show her to you." He pointed out a gross, voluptuous, woman, richly dressed. "P.," he resumed, "has liv:d in idleness since his marriage. He was not strong enough to carry the weighi of so much wealth and so much vulgarity, They have borne him down. He will never rise." Young men at school and college are very apt to be enraptured with a sparhling eye, a rosy cheek, or some charm of manner in some young women that they happen to meet. They are hardly masters oi them- selves and a moonlight night, or a songj suddenly tempts them to ask the charming creature who has bewitched them to share their future. They do not consider that she will be the most real, active force iu their whole lives, almost irresistible, with power to drag them down or to lift them up in body, mind, and soul. Flirting at FnU Speed. "Sights " exclaimed the conductor on the Third Avenue Elevated railroads in reply to the query of a reporter of the New York Tribune, concerning the effects of the warm weathtr on the road's usual panorama. " Well, I should say there are sigtits. Did it ever occur to you that New Yorkers are the most independent and natural people in thLâ- ^^orld? If they want to say a thing, they say it and if they want to do any- thing, wbj' they do it. To have their own way is as natural with them as to exist; they care little for what others think about them, and in their own pursuit of happiness quickly resent being inttrl'erred with. Dur- ing the hot weather the passengers are taken into the tamily ciiclea of Third avenue as if they belonged ihere 1 y right of membership. One mcmi-iit you s;t down with a family to supper; the next y( u assist a mother to spank a rebellious youngster, a second later you are iiitereatecl lu ihe adjustment of a libbon then the olJ-man drunk again ap- peav=. A social gatijeriug conus along a wedding soinebo.iy iu tears a connubial battle joii see a kiss snatthed audaciously frctn pouting lipn, while sometimes there coints the iieari-tobching picture of little white hands claspe i over the breast of the little stiff body on the bed, with the little (lead face as white as the little sbroud. It is pretty hard to keep one's eyes away. ' " Especially when there aie pretty girls to be seen," suggested the reporter. "Well, yes. Though 1 am out of the market myself," replied the conductor. "I admic theie is great fascination for the eyes in pretty women. Do the trainmen flirt with the young ladies ou the road Certain- ly, some of them do. Why not Some of them have their regular salutations â€" some of the best. looking fellows often get from forty to fifty between Chatham square and Harlem bridge â€" from young women who watch for them with a regularity that must be hard on housework. The majority of such flirtations are from private dwellings or apartments. Shop girls are afraid ot the foreman's eye, and we have had several re- strictive orders issued about noticing em- ployed women on account of their employ- ers complaining at headquarters. Some grumpy bosses put screeis before their windows, and others watch closely and fine the young women heavily if they catch them flirtincr with the trainmen. But, bless you, they can't stop it. A girl at a machine breaks a thread, or jumps a stitch, or some- thing that necessitates her leaning her head down sideways, at just the right angle to give the youngmanwith the cap, who is look- ing cut for it on the platform, a fascinating smile." " Do these flirtations often have results?" " Indeed they do. I know nearly a dozen traiiimen married during the past two years whose acquaintance with their wives began in passin;^' tiieir wicdows on the cars. At firt the girl flirts for fun, and piobably remembers or thinks nothing more of the young man after the train has passed. Then she gets used to seeing him and misses him when he does not show up. It soon becomes an open book for the rest of the hands, and they recognize her and can tell her by her anxiety and disinclination to flirt with others just how far 'gone' the young woman is. If it is reciprocal, all the rest of the boys take a respectful interest in the afi'air. They politely touch their caps, or sympathetically jerk a thumb over the shoulder in the direc- tion of the solid man, as they pass the lady. Sometimes a genuine courtship, in which neither knows the other's name and not a wcra is spoken, will go on lor months be- foie the parties meet." Yonng Old Ladies. There are few old ladies in the fashionable world nowadaj s, says the World, and there need not be any. Women triumphantly pass for 35 who have recently kept in commemor- ation their 50th birthday. True, there are always a few friends with inconvenient mem- ories who could mention the exact date on which the 35-year-old bicentenarian first opened her eyes to the b'ght and then there is the record in the old family Bible But, fortunately, the first dare not tell, lest a question be raised as to their own a^e and as for the old-fashioned book, like many another old-fashioned thing, it is not priz€d as an antique and therefore does not adam the drawing-room table or betray iTa word, women on the down-hill path of life may and do practice the art of rejuven- ation witnout fear or trembling. Art com- petes with time, and victory P^ches on the banner of the restorative artists. Years in passing are no longer permitted to mars their progress on a woman's vuage with crow's feet, wrinkles, scant locks, faded complexion, and toothless gums. Specialists in the varied departments of rejuvenation are ready with preventives and restoratives at a moment's warning. The mstant a woman feels she is on the decline she has Lu- to call in their aid. Ladles'i Fun. Female pagilUts should wear "poke" bon- nets. A flirt's heart is like an omnibusâ€" always room for one more. Liisette "Wei, Gertie, how pleases you the trumpeter " Gertie "Oh, good 1 but his kisses taste a little after brass." Milton says " Beauty stands only in tne admiratian of weak minds," but then every- one knows that the poor poet was blind. A woman can sometimes do something without damaging others, but when a lady undertakes to help herself some man has to sufler for it. A Hamilton man, whose wife knocked him out of bed in a rage and bunged his eyes, tells his friends he is suffering from m- flamatory room-mate-ism. A young lady being told at a recent fire to stand back or else the hose would be turned on her, replied " Oh, I don't care; they are striped on both sides^ anyway." A Precise Fatherâ€" He did not object to his daughter joining a musical society, but gently insisted that abbreviations were coarseâ€" ' Philip Harmonic sounds more genteel, my cxear." Discarded lover "Yea, I felt terribly when she jilted me." Same (after a pause and sighing): " And, do you know, I had hardly begun to pay her attentions when I learned through a bookkeeper in a bank that she had §300,000 on depcsit in her own right." " Papa," asked a little 6-year-old daughter of an up-town physician, "wasn't Job a doc- tor " "I never heard that he was why?" "Because mamma said the other day that she didn't think that you had any of the patients of Job." A Eeloit doting mother, who has long lived on dry land, recently took her daughter to the " River of Rock. " To |a confident she expressed her mind "I never saw a girl like our Sary Jane. I worked two hull days on her bathin' dress, and don't you think, she got it wringin' wet the fust time she put it on " A year or two ago young A. aged 25 and impecunious, married the widow B., agei 40 and possessing a comfortable property. A day or two since they were inspecting their new house. "Tidy little property isn't it " remarked the geneleman. "Yes," remarked the lady, "but it wouldn't have been here it it hadn't been for my money." "True,' saidA., camly, "neither would you." To this indiscreet remark may, perhaps, be at- tributed the court plaster that adorns Mr. A. 's countenauce. Twoannecdotes from a London correspond- ent's letter "A young American lady was expressing her ardent desire to visit Strat- ford-on-Avon. 'What in the world do you want to go to Stratford for, MissX.?' in- quired a young Englishman who was pres- ent. 'Are there any good races there?' An American acquaintance asked a young Swiss if he had gone to seethe falls of l«Ji- agara during his tour. ' I really do not re- member,' he answered hesitatingly. 'Ni- agara â€" ah, yes â€" that is the place where Blondin used to walk on the tight rope.' " Sic VosNonTobisDramatisaris, Writers! â€" Wife of his bosom (just home from the play): "And then that darling Walter Lisson, looking like a Greek god, drew his stilletto and delivered, oh such an exquisite solil- oquy over her tomb â€" all in blank verse â€" like heavenly music on the organ " He "Why he's got a voice like a raven, and can no more deliver blank- verse than he can fly." She " Ah, well â€" it was very beau- tiful, all the same â€" all about love and death, you know " He " Who wrote the piece, then " She "Who wrote the piece Oh- er-well â€" his name's sure to ba on the bill somewhere â€" at least I suppose it is " Honsebold Arrangements Tbree Hnn- drel Years Ago. What would servants in the present day say to such a code of rules and regulations as was adopted three hundred years ago in the household of Sir J. Harrington, the translator of " Ariosto?" A servant absent from prayers to be fined 2d. for uttering an oath. Id.; and the same sum for leaving a door open a fine 2d. from Lady Day to Michaelmas, for all who are in bed after seven, or out after nine a fine of Id. for any beds unmade, fire unlit, or candle-box uncleaned after eight a fine of 4d. for any man detected teaching the children obscene words a fine of Id. for any man waiting without a trencher, or who is absent a meal; for any one breaking any of the butler's glass, 12d. a fine of 2d. for any one who has not laid the table for dinner by half-past ten, or the supper by six a fine of 4d. for any one absent a day without leave for any man striking another, a fine of Id.; for any follower visitiuq the cook Id.; a fine of Id. for any man appearing in a fcu'i shirt, broken hose, untied shoes, or torn doublet a fine of Id. for any stranger's room left for four hours after he be dressed a find of Id. if the hall be not cleansed by eight in the morning in winter and seven in summer the porter to be fined Id. if the court gate be not shut during meals a fine of 3d. if the stairs be not cleaned every Friday after din- ner. All these fines were deducted by the steward at the quarterly payment of the men's wages. â- The men who do things maturely, slowly, deliberately, are the men who oftenest suc- ceed in life. People who are habitually in a hurry have to do things twice over. The tortoise beats the hare at lasi. There is no better test of purity and true goodness than reluctance to think evil of one's neighbor, and absolute incapacity to believe an evil report about good men, ex- cept upon the most trustworthy evidence." Importaaee •* «••*â- • We are not aware that any ««mate has ever l^en made of the actual cost of the public rLu of the United States, or that ?he exinw of providing their has ever been Stemp^Tby a^y burefu of ^i^J^.j^ee we make the rough estimate «*t they nave r^t^least seven hundred million dollars- ^ohllu much more-while unknown mil- UoM Me annually expended in attempting toTeeTthem in repair. If the money were o^y well applied, it would be an expendi- ture of gre^t profit and economy, as every- thing which the farmer dde- off his own land is ereatly affected by their condition. All his^^y loads of surplus farm P'odacts are drawn Over them, and it makes some differ- ence to him and to his horses whether those loads are conveyed easily over hard s.nooth surfaces, or dragged through mud and agamst stones vnth severe labor to the team Jatigue to the driver, and wear and breakage to the wa^gon. Every week he. and his family, morf or less, go to the village for number- less errands, or to church on the Sabbath, and the good or bad condition of the roads seems to affect every fiber, pleasantly or un- pleasantly, of their feeling or nervous sen- sations. On an average, there is at least twenty miles of travelling each week for tne members of a single famUy. It would make a difference of five dollars a week, every- thing counted, whether this teaming and travelling is done over a nice, comfortab.e road, or through mud holes, sloughs, ruts, and unbridged streams, or against stones. Five dollars a week amounts to $250 a year, a snug little sum to tax the farmer with and when this sum is multiplied by at least five million owners or drivers of horses, carriages, waggon" heavy teams, etc., the aggregate cost would be something over a billion dollars Does any one say this is too large an estimate Then proceed to detail and show in what particulars but do not blindly and ignorantly say it is wrong with- out careful examination. Suppose, however, we admit that it is double the reality, is not the six hundred millions every year, expend- ed directly or indirectly by our people, worthy of more attention on the part of patriots, statesmen, politicians, officeseekers, public spirited men, writers for newspapers, agricultural journalists, and in fact of every one who passes over a road So long as our puDlic highways in most parts of the country are made and repaired with so little interest and so little thought, â- \ie must suffer an enormous loss. We would like to ask how many of our readers, who drive or ride over the common roads, never see a loose stone, or a fixed stone, to strilie, jolt and batter every passing wheel, or who do not see hundreds of them which might be removed with the expenditure of a small portion of the road tax How many never saw sods and muck scraped into the road bed, to form a highway or " turnpike," which would be excellent for corn and pota- toes, but which when worked into a mass of mud, or cut into ruts a foot deep, constitute a strange object to be called a " road " How many never saw along the roadsides, thritty patches of thistles, burdocks, mullein John's wort, nettles, etc, etc., ready t seed all the neighbors' fields Until we can find such happy persons in the majority, we hope more attention may be given to cor- recting these evils, although we would not lessen the praiseworthy attention which is now freely accorded to enterprises and in- terests of almost infinitely less importance, but good ii! their small way. â€" Country Gen- tleman. Wba Discovered the Electric Transmis- sion of Speech A book of absorbing public interest is an- nounced shortly to appear in England and this country â€" a history of the telephone of Johann Philipp Reis, with a .biographical sketch of its inventor, by Prof. Sylvanus P. Thompson. It establishes beyond honest doubt or question, by historical evidence, by the reproduction of original documents and illustrations, and by the public records of scientific bodies, that Philipp Reis dis- covered the electric transmission of speech in 1860-61, that he elaborately described and exhibited his telephone in 1861 that he in- vented transmitting and receiving instru- ments, which not only talked and talk now, but which include the essential principles of the transmitters and receivers now in use and that he manufactured, placed on the market, and sold his instruments in 1863, for the purpose of illustrating the electric transmission of speech and song. That an invention so important, made in the heart of Germany, should not have been instimtly perfected and utilized would surprise us in this country, if history did not abundantly teach that inventions complete in themselves often lie sterile until the favorable season and soil are found for their commercial adop- tion and development. â€" Dr. W. F. Channing, in Popular Science Monthly. AdYlM to Coaauapttvaa. On the appearance of the first ^ptomsâ€" « ireneral debaity, loss of appetite, pallor, An Engllsb Beauty. Another newly-discovered English beauty IS thus described in the correspondence of the Philadelphia Telegraph: "Keswick, in Cumberland, can boast of one charming possession in the shape of the prettiest woman in England. She is a bar- maid at the Nelson Wine Vaults in that town. Her name is Edith Twentyman, and she is reported to bs as good and modest as she is beautiful. She has the gorgeous milk and roses complexion that is so rarely seen outside of England, united to splendid eyes full, dark, and lustrous as those of a gazelle' pearly teeth, regular features, with rich dark hair growing low on the brow, and a figure whose fine outlines were not to be concealed by the cut of her country- made gown. She is simply dazzling, and how such a pearl of beauty has been left hidden in this quiet little town is to me a marvel. She is well educated, I am told, paints in water-colors and is perfectly free from all traces of vanity or self-consciousness. Had she been born a Frenchwoman, she would," ere this, have dazzled the pubUc in some mute role in one of the great spectacular pieces of the da\ /J' '^•i!.*'® ^^^ probably f oUow the examp i^ of her elder sister, who was as beautiful as she, and who married a good honest feUow in her own station of life, and is now a com- fortable matroD, with a houseful of children. » â- ♦^ â€" *«» â€" _»^ Milwaukee, Wi?.â€" The Daily Sentinel followed by night- sweats measures for relief as senonl chilly sensatfons, and coughâ€" prompt ahsuld be taken. Consumption is scrofulous diwase of the lungs :-tJierefore use the Kwat anti-scrofula. 6r Wood puriEer and ^gth-restorer.-^r. Pierce's " Golden Medical' Discovary." Superior Cod liver oU as a nutritive, and unaurpawed as a pee- toral. For w«ak lung», flprttmg of blood, and :kin4red affections, it has no equal. Sold by druggptB the worldover. For Dr. Pierce's pamphlet on consumption, send two stamps to World's DisrENSAKY Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. No better heritage can one possess than cheerfulness.- Dr Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" is everywhere acknowledged to be the standard remedy for female complaints and weakness- es. It is sold by druggists. •^The strength of criticism lies only in the weakness of the thing criticised. Iecime of Bfan. Impotency of mind, limb or vital function, nervous weakness, sexual debility, etc, cured by Wokld's Dispensary Medical Association, BaffUo, N. Y Address, with two stamps, for pamphlet, f Sorrow is not selfish, but many persons are iu sorrow entirely selfish. It is now*in season to wrm our readers against the budden attacks of Cholera, Cramp Colic, and the various Bowel Com- plaints incident to the season of ripe fruit, vegetables, et?. Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry is the grand specific for those troubles. (2) To live long it is necessary to live slowly, to live happily t« live wisely. Important. When you visit or leave New York City, save Baggage Expressage and Carriage Hire, and stop at Grand Union Hotki, opposite Grand Central Depot. 450 elegant rooms utted up at a cost of one million dollars, reduced to |1 and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse cars, stages and elevated railroads to all de- pots. Families can live better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other flrst-class hotel in the cit What fate imposes men mu3t needs abide It boots not to resist both wind and tide. Copy of a letter received from Dr. R. R. Maitland Coffin, F.R.C.P., c. To H. Suthebland, Esq. Having taken Suther- land's " Rheumatine " myself, I can bear testimony that it will prove a boon to per- sons who suffer from rheumatism. R. MAITLAND COFFIN, F.R.C.P., c. Barton Court, S.W., May 17, 183 2. jj Good fortune and bad are equally ne.HS ' sary to man tn fit him to moet contingenc'ej of life. A Cure for Cholera Morbus. â€" A pos- itive cure for this dangerous complaint, and for all acute or chronic forms of Bowel Com- plaint, incident to Sum'tier and Fall, is found in Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry; to be procured from any drug- gist. (3) Let friendship creep gently to a height if it rush to it, it may soon run itself cut of breath. Billons and Dyspeptic Patients. Take Dr. Hoffman's German Bitters. They act directly on the Liver and Stomach, opening up at once and strengthening their absorbing vessels, eliminating all impurities and foul accumulations, which their laxative property afterwards carries off through the bowels, restores health, making life a pleasure instetid of a burden. By chemists. Price, 50 cents. Wholesale by Lyman Bros., Toronto. True goodness is like the glow worm it shines when no eyes, except those of Hee,ven are upon it. Catarrh â€" A New Treatment whereby Permanent Cure is efiected in from one to three applications. Particulars and treatise free on receipt of stamp. A. H. Dixon Son, 305 King-St. West, Toronto, Canada. He who is fahe to present duty breaks a thread in the loom, and will find the flaw when he may have forgotten its cause. " When all other remedies fail" for Bowel Complaint, Colic, Cramps, Dysentery, etc., "Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry comes to the rescue. " Thus writes W. H. Crooker, dmggist, Waterdown, and adds that "its sales are large and increasing." The years write their record on humtn hearts as they do on trees, in hidden inner circles of growth which no eye can see. A Valuable Discovery.â€" One of the most valuable discoveries in medical science, for the benefit of mankind, was made when Burdock Blood Bitters were invented. This medicine postively cures all diseases of the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach, Skin and Blood. 25,000 bottles have been sold dur- ing the last three months. Never be ashimed to own you have been in the wrong it is but saying in other words that you are wiser to-day than you were yesterday. "A. P." 136 The stiag ' It is said there ia a ,«. heart, and yet that n.!?"*^ tk.. own for that of aiSthp^»«5db » the sting arisini from th U^t r ly 'prove it if afflici^**^he, ^.^ â- *ry tte genuine and ise bS »u^ " To be impatient aUl^Vf^' concerning whom it » J *^**» of die, is to mourn because t^^ ot boman angel. *%friejj,' Triande Package Dyes t, in three corners,! ^(,^J^^if^^ them from the old fa.hi3 ^i m square envelopes. snTi °""oii all their shades Siff„f °V P. Price 10c. Pnrt,r"";^«on '" f»» S CORN] for Next Sp city. Forsalebyararu- Duty is a power which" r'"'^*" the morning and goes to v!!? '^k night It i^coextemive With.!' our intelligence. '"the,-j Advice i« seldom welcome but advise you to use Caibolbe ""'.*^«l the results will at leust be wi as thousands of baldhpads will"""" The.e two thing, eoni:;^^' may seem, must go together " uence and manly independe^cr'!!:' ance and manly self-reliance. ^J^ ^A wise ruler regards the" rr«. the root and all else grows ourj ' ' root is piety the fruit, brotherj i ' Do not attempt to remai., „ °'" without a bottle of Dr. Fowwr" Wild Strawjerry near at hald'T?" season for Bowel CDmplaints, toft Morbus, etc., and the remedy 21 is tbe unfailing specific. (5) PETERS Toronto (LOUR MILL FOH SALE^I steam power, m western city.built'i FLOUR JVIILI.S FOrIaH FLOUR MILL FOH SALErsf^-a TER power, 5 run stones, bmit^ I splendid machinery, could be convp ' process at a cost of sl.200 finest in Ontario; price, $11,250; convpni^.," MACKINTOSH PETERS " FLOUR MILL FOR SALE-oRU\-o -splendid water power, first-cte„ ery, large local and gristing trade. h» dwelling in connection, G.T.R clo=ehr f8,500 convenient terms. MACKivta'SS 'ERS Toronto. -^^^^MNTOiJl F'_.-_--:.v ...:_ full complement of machinery /orT"' chant worlt. large local and gristiae price. «7,000: lavourable terms M in TOSH PETEKS, Toronto. " FLOUR AND OATMKAL MILL FORI -1 run. good, water power, machine-til merchant and custom work, substantii'iJ roomed orick house in connection- Driwi-3 half cash. MACKINTOSH PEtS"i ronto. " "" ' FLOUR MILL FOR SALE-3 RUV-sn power, in town of $l,m popiilatioa i. ing 50,000 bushels per annum, and local n for all flour, wood clieap. switch to mill' m ^,000; easy terms. MACKlXTOSHPEm Toronto. LOUR MILL FOR SALE-3 RUN-Sli power, with new purilierandallnece machinery for merchant and srristiiigt wood SI per cord price. 53.000, lialf MACKINTO SH PETERS, Toronte. FLOUR MfLL FOR SALE-2 RUN DURING water power, first-cla3sci_ machinery, two dwellings nf tenandsiin gristing 16,000 bushels, good loeil trade, tl railroads price. So,-')lW, half cash. MiCE TOsH PE TERS, Toronjo. AND GRIST MiLL FOS SH n^rkets in the ear 'â- "'a often in a mild spell • weens "and there i '!!:lbfuld not be equall: '"Lrni Where the me; -/Stent salted, green „W acceptable, but i, â- ^t be eaten, and wht (*2^U exist, ^^'"^^y 'l°%piDach.tbe most d 'f: of «Sl the vegetables use ibSedon any good farn •'^ttie trouble. The so. ,Ctheu»eoftheplowi ,nffinfift«"'"'=*""'^V i^tW thickly, coveringit **° u ^( anil Use a rolle "^Some carefully go ove ^Town the soil o^;er goon bring up the plant nidlv and be large enoug ' £ cr October. For [tbe plants, where they £ 1 be cut te^iters are severe, sc foTotber litter between th Iv cover the plants. As ?dfflae so 38 to thm the pla llherest wUl grow all th ijl'to use later. "Sprou riitbemarket isavari3t sthat does not head, ih Tdie anie manner as sp f finds that he has more e consnroed at home, a fe meet with a ready sale a it out at intervals, us the remainder ro FLOUR 2 run, steam power, doing over i bushels per annum, on very favourable te 5400 cash, balance in ten annual instalmenaJ ?400 each, free of interest, .AIACKINIOSI' PETERS. Toronto. MOULDINGS, Picture Frames, lira aad Picture Findings generally^ OULDINGS aad Picture supplied. MATTHE WS BROS. CO.,' Lots], 12th Con., Dawn. 200 acres, mn springs and Canada Southern Riilway. Choi land. Heavily lumbered. JOHN LEYS, rister. fee Toronto. j.,ooo BURRELL'SlUe Nick of the Woods, LumbermaDS fe I Wedge, C:-own, (.'inadian, .-^coriDg, i I other patleras. SS S -nd for pi iocs, o ' order by letter. WILLIAM D^RLINGCO| HABDWARE MERCHAXTS, Professor Lispinardsi CELEBRATED SKIN BEIUTIFI This elegant Medlcaled Crcanus warrai« an absolutely Snre «iire tor PmP'P^^^^\ Spots, Blolclie§.andaIl 'n?'?!" f ""'"(jaiir on the face, arms or neck. It PO"Yeff i'l' mf^m •:?e: GEftMui°REMEl)t CURES Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backac.'ie, Headache, Toothache, Sore Throat, 8wellinn,SpralnB,BraUes, Bams, Scalur#PMt BlUM, iHD ALL OTIUK BODILY rAIKS ASD ACHJB. Sold by DroggtiU and Dealen ererrwhere. Fifty Genua bottl*. DireoUoiu In II Lan(nacei. THE OIIARLES A. TMEI£R OO. â€" toA-TOOELlBtOOj BalUaor*. Hd. C 8. A. cates all such imperteciion^ i" leaving the skin clear and unblem^ni^^j j; package will cure the worst case,^ no cates all such iniperfections in^^ hi)w"ro°ng standing. I'^a'r'^autif.nnK^i^;^! plexion it is unrivalled, rtfectuaUS r' ^^' all Freckles, Tan and ""'•""'"^^nd "" the skin white, soft and smooth, wi" the complexion to its naturalpuritvau -^^yg.: It is a true remedy, recommendea "^Jd iB clans, warranted perfectlv.liarmlcs»|^^ ^^i use cannot be detected. I'r'cc one ao Sold by all druggists, or '"ailed mp ^, ^, per postpaid, to any address on recc p price. Sole proprietors for Canada ,,-^^ Address THE USWN AUPCOM^^^ ^,. Mention this paper I preparing Trult lor Mj ners are cheats," we the other day. et of strawberries that dbiasestontop, and wl comM, I get a dozen o, at tbe top, while th is ^led with small, gree) are all cheats." T hearing this rema fruit commission h saw seme young m ,jral crates of berri( a lot of smaller baski iferred the berries fr ,ej had bought, and j thev topped them wil with surprising dexteri that all the cheating, u was not done by the f U much " deaconing " for topping) of peacl we do not doubt, yet tl the other direction. for example, those wl je business, and expect to make their brand up it a f uarantee of honest p ednpon at all the mee only recently we jtiona of a fmit-growf Cuolina, in which this was dwelt upon at y is the best policy i! the highest moral ton pays to be honest, 1 are willing to adopt i the first point shot g^ing as many gradi tiie fruit requires, packing shed, the fi pread in the shade, ii il as much as possible, ,t are at all soft are p home then two or â- firsts and seconds, i bobt growers, the pi :e all through. It colored sides of the â- order that the fruit t, but not to select 1 t top layer. Those wl 'ket for the first time, advantage to observe g Krapes for market, ihe bottom, fine large 1 the box filled up with s is done in order that is taken ofi' may pri loe, and if the filling is even if not the most done. But if, as i poorly ripened fruit, W are used to fill up, ie find that his brand i â- market. The fruit- to continue in the 1 ifford to pack his fruit Au?.-.E"^| at the Montreal Horse Exchange a^^^jW a a -„„«,;» thrap, Civdesdale --^ m m S.S. Cynthia, three Ciydes^ale_^^_^^-ai] four majres "pedigreed Th/Â¥ Dai»-,^| class Stock, tne property f ° f or sale t» JS I Glasgow, Scotland, and will be fo^^ ^j^0l lies 8iring to breed from the ygr («f • Clydesdale Stallions a" inarej. ^.g., p information address C. M. ^^^^ ^1. prietors, Point St. Charles, :\Ionir ASTHMA. CROUP, M'"T.iPll BRONCHITIS « leure n^e Kotof aelayamomeBt. f^reronttoi i»4nttet than l"=!i^ly: relics SS ^^ rible. diseases,^and^^^iw.' Information ttuit iriU save man; cure. I. S. JO Kvrco.;s^ Saving Seed C growing of good, s [Will yield a maximur 1 » year beforehand ii acter of the seed. for 1884 and 18! " growing in the 1 â- |«Me. As a rule, ar better seed than h sin his programme ,*i!?^ attention to th J«eettcorn. There is r «e yield of Indian cc TOUnotfarfromtwei ^[6; and the total yield l"dhon seven hundred tne best husbandr good soil, manu "fficulttn raise se *2?' If fine, sound '•«pee. would add y*^ of this crop, yield one hun^ "•^Is, worth « 1^ ^Kvery thinking rl.?* » money inl "•* com, and in 1 He is sufferin worn want of Lthia matter. T for seed, se *t he can find, *• »r*ka« as he plants. A "â- field, and he ^•B «xtea ex «»a la ctoght :^ th« lar i*"rt he harvei ^«wtd for fod( «iZl*0'iy mats gr*»»avMetable "'••Tiiniia crop •ftw it« kin b*«tti^ M •^ â- " i •• ^^ -, ^^^^"' â- A