!55'^s^5^ri?^r5^7!^p?^ " TUE CRI OF THE OUTCAST POOR." scenes ana sights in London Slums. From this remarkable pamphlet which has attracted no little attention, we make the following extracts :â€" ••Few have any adequate conception of what the pestilential rookeries are where tens of thousands of the London poor are crowded together. To get into them you have to penetrate courts reek- inrr"with poisonous and malodorous gases arTsing from accumulations of sewage and refuse' scattered in all directions and often flowing beneath your feet courts which the sun never penetrates, and which are nevL-r visited by a breath of fresh air. You have to ascend rotten staircases, whicli threaten to give way beneath every step, and which, in some places, have al- ready broken d..wii. leaving gaps that im- erif the limbs and lives of the unwarv. V' .11 have to grope y( air way along dv\rk and tiltliy passages swarming with ver- min. Then, if you are not driven back !,y the intolerable stench, you may gam admittance to the dens in which these thousands of beings herd together. Should you ascend to the attic, v.dier â- at least some approach to fresh air might be expected to enter from an open or lu'oken window, yiu find that the sickly air which tiiuls its way into the room has to jass over the putrefying carcasses of dead cats or liirds, or viler abominations still. H'-re is a hole in the wall which has been repaired by the landlord. He has done it by nailing a few jiieccs f an old soap- b..xover the place, andbr this has put ;!']. a week upon the rmit ' And this is tiie best paying property iu London! Tliree sliillings, four and sixpence, and (is. a week, is readily paid for one of these liurrible rooms. Houses that have lieen f.ndemned y the authorities as unfit for liabitation are very gold mines to sleek sjH'Culators, who fiUteii upon the wretcli- ..â- iue.^s tif the poor. •'Everv' room in these rotten and rcek- i;i_- tenement-houses is family, sometimea two. bave been found a fatliel '•Tliere are those who endeavor to live honestly, and they outnumber the dishonest, but what are their wages ' A child 7 years old may easily make lUs. oa. a week by thieving, but what can he earn by such work as match-box making, tor which 2id. a gross is paid, and the makers have to find their own fire for dry-in-^ the boxes, paste, and string He- fore he can gain as much as the young thief he must make 50 gross of matcii- boxesa week, or 1,200 a day, which is impossible. Women, for the work ot trousers finishing, (). c sewing m linings, makinf' button-holes, and stitching on the buttonl.) receive 2id. a pair, and find their own thread. For m; id Ire'.i and fi'Ur pi^ occujjieU by a In one cellar mother, three n anotliei' rmau A MAN ii-1. wr.ii wife just recoveiing miinemeiit, ami tlie h 11? half-^i bLMl and are s: i people iiiiiiil i.,ichen, and in tlie .-asML- ro!m. cniitaiiis father ell, t \vm In â- icre -•- ;â- ' 'I '.u .er. er^ SM AI.I.-I'iiX. from her eighth eliildivu running L'dN'ered witli dirt. living in one un- a little dead child Anotlier ai)art- her. mother, and .six .if w.ioiii -.ivv ill with scarlet Uiiit'icr niiij brothers and I rum 'at. ve. V .I'thov Vi I ni'ct iu t VL-a and slfi le c.ir'-v r "-â- _â- c -M-cther. licr ebildl o\'i-!iil jV h- all L'L-.ehe.s c r.ud.siiui .ir.i !â- .1' iiii ii.Mui-b,. l\']i b.'u'k jlaisel';.' .U ,.;i!iy cases ma â- le unlieahliy '.veil in tliesc 1 b'ked as voii b iwnwiU'd, Here is a n into the because she ;!.r:il piu'iiKSes until w '.L-;i the pi»'r little ur;'.:i! if tl'.LV iiavo not .â- ,hulr^'rfb-ev. hire. In uv lU'.dr Viorse by •fjupation.s if '_h'i.-o vv'iio ihitatioiis. He;-" you are lite-.'bv the ;.i!- l:iilen with ret. Ml .1 tin- skins of â- , r.ci iinimais in i urier. lie.- tb 1; ving mateli-boM .- ,.;..,..- .,...1. till ,1, superriuou.s rabliits. rats, (tog.' heir prepanition for L- smell 'fl jastt. pulled md the iiid of mingling with other -i.kly liilnis, iiNurpowers you or it may :;l- tlie fragraiiee iif stale fish^lr vegetables :...: sold on the jirevious day and kept in -;;e loom overnight. \Mio can vrimder -b;it young girls WiUuler oh' into a life of i.imnrality ' W!io can winder that the â- iiblie-hoiise should still be 'the Elysian ' i Id of the tired toiler " •• Immorality is but tlie natural out- ' -lie of conditions like these. 'Marriage,' i: lias been said, 'as an institution is not •,.,hionable in these districts.' And this :â- , ..lily the bare truth. Ask if the men ;,i,d women living togetlier in these rook- ries are married, and your simplicity â- vill cause a smile. Nobi_)dy knows. No- .•â- 'dy expects that they are. INCKST IS COMMON i.n.l no form of vice and sensuality causes -urprise or attracts attention. The only eiieck upon communism in this regard is jeal.iisy and not virtue. The vilest prac- lie â- â- ; are looked upon with the most mat- te' .f-fact inditlerence. Entire courts ;-.re Idled with thieves, prostitutes, and to have king men's shirts they are paid lOd. a dozen iawn-tennis aprons, 3d. a dozen babies hoods from Is. Gd. to 2s. Gd. a dozen. In one house were found a widow and her lialf-idiot daughter making paillasses at li'd. each. Here is a woman who has a sick husban.l and little one to h.ok after. She is employed at shirt finishing at M. a dozen, and by, the utmost eflort can only earn (id. a day, out of which she has t, fin.l her .wn thread. Another with a crippled hand, maintains herself and a blind husband by mateh-box-making, tor which she is remunerated on the liberal scale mentioned above, and out of her -^d ii -ross she has to ay a girl a penny a crrTss to help her. Here is a mother who has taken awav whatever articles of cloth- in.' she can strip from her four httle children without leaving them absolutely naked. She has pawned. them, not b,r drink, but for coals and food. A shilling is all she can procure, and with this siie has bought seven punds of ctals and a foa of bread. "The child-misery that one sees is the most heart-rending and appaling element is these discoveries and of this not the lea.^t is the misery inherited from the vice of drunken and dissolute parents, and manifest in the .STrNTF.]). MrssilAl'EX, A.NH Ol--TE IJIATir- SO.MK o])jects tliat we constantly meet in these localities. Here is one of u years old picking up some dirty pieces of bread and eating'them. We go in at the doorway where it is standing and find a little girl Some Facts about Peanuts. Tf as some people believe, Africa sent a cursTtoSniSc^ in slavery, she certam- fy coSerred a blessing in the "^-e^^J pVlar peanut which S^o^'J^ jf throughout the Southern f gio"« ^^^*J^ shall soon be able to cut «flF then: now larcre importation altogether. fn vir g'nia they are caUed """^3" ^? '^^ Carolina, "grourid peas" ^^. S^V* J^^^^^^^ lina, Georgia and Mississippi, PP^i«" Alabama, "ground-nuts and m len ssee, "goobers." The preparation of peanuts fo^ the mar- ket is an interesting operation. -Iheyare first put in an immense cylinder, from which they enter the brushes where each nut receivesfifteenor sLxteenfeetof brush- incrbeforeitbecomesfree. Afterthiscleans- in° process the nuts drop on an endless belt which revolves very slowly. On each side of the belt is a row of girls- black, white, tan-colored and crushed strawberry, some of them-whose duty it is to separate the poor nuts from the good in nessee. GBKATXST DISCOVJWY 8INC« 1492- For coughs, elds. 80.e throat bronchus Sl^es notbinc equills Dr. Pierce'a " Go d. :nredSl Difcu^ery." It is aUo a great blood purifier and s-reiigth restorer or tome, and for liver complaint and co«tive condi- tions of the bowels it has no equal. S )ld by The one who lifts his go on to await liere is ycmr mother ' ;i:i ;uiri. ..lie I li" â- â- iited convicts. In one street there :.ie â- '•" houses, o2 of which are kimwn to be i .ithels. In another district are 43 ..f tiiese houses, and 428 fallen women and girls, many of them not more than 12 years of age. A neighborhood whose ]) ijmlation is returned at 10.000 contains 4 )0 will) follow this immoral traffic, their .-liies varj- from 13 to 50 while the moral n e .gradation of the people is deplorable. Some idea may be formed from an inci- dent which was brought ti; our notice. An Eiist End missionary- rescued a young uiil from an immoral life and obtained f r her a situation with people wlu) were L'oing abroad. He saw her to South- ;!mpton, and on his return was violently abused by tlie girl's grandmother, who liad the sympathy of her neighbors, for liaving taken away from a poor old â- W.Miiau her means of subsistence. "The miser}- and sin caused by drink in these districts have often been told. In tlie district of Euston-road is one public house to every 100 people, counting men, Avomen, and children. Immediately around one chapel in )range street, Leicester square, are 100 gin-places, most of them veiy large, and these districts are b-at samples of what exists in all the lo- calities which we have investigated. Look into me of these glittering saloons, with its MOTLEY, MI.SER.VBLE CT.OWI ond you may be horrified as you think of the evil that is nightly wrought there, but contrast it with any of the abodes which you find in these fetid courts, and you will w-onder no longer that it is growded. 12 years old. 'W 'In the mad-house. 'How long has she been there r 'Fifteen months.' 'Who looks after you " The child, who is sit- ting at an old table making match-boxes, reifies, 'I look after my little brothers and sisters as well as I can.' 'Where is your father " 'He lu'.s been out of work 'three weeks, l)ut he has gone to a job of two days this morning.' Another h(mse visited"" mtained nine motherless child- ren, ue motlier's death was caused by wiiiie.ssing one of her children being run over. The eldest waft only 14 years dd. .Ml lived in one small room, and there was line bed for five. Here is a poor v^â- oman deserted by her husband and left with three little children. One met with iceident a few days ago and broke his He is lying im a .shake-down in riier nf the room with an (dd saek inuii.l liim. .\:k1 here in a cellar kitchen. are nine little ones, without food and .scarcely any clothing. •â- These wretched peoi'Ie must live soiuewliere. and it must be near the eeiitie-: wiiere their work lies. It is no- torious that the Artisans" Dwellings act has. in S' ime re:-])ects, made matters worse for them. Large spaces have bet'ii cleared of fever-breeding rookeries to make way for the building of decent habitations, l)Ut the rents of the.se are far beyond the means of tlie abject poor. 'They are driven to liuddle more closely together in the few l.-:ithsonie places left to them, and so Di\es makes a richer harvest out I if their misery, buying up property con- demned a.s unfit for liabitation, and turn- ing it into' a gold mine because the poor must liave shelter somewhere, even though it be the shelter of a living tomb. The State must make short work of this ini(|uitious traffic, and secure to the poor- est the rights of citizenship the right to live in something better than fever dens, the right to live as something better than the uncleanest of brute beasts. This must be done before the Christian mis- sionary can have much chance with them. Meanwhile, tlie committee of the Coii- cfreuational Union have determined to commence operations in three of the very- worst districts in London, in each of which a mission-hall and other buildings will be erected and a house-to-house visi- tation will be organized." ones. Those of the nuts that "pass the next room, where more, girls their arrival and put them in bags which, when filled, are sewed up and branded as ••cocks," with the figure of a rooster pro- minent on each sack. These are the ^o. 1" peanuts. The poorer nuts, which are separated by tlie giris at the endless belt, are all picked over again the best are sintrled out and branded, after being put in the sack, as •'ships." The ".ships" are not so large nor so fine m appearance as the "cocks," but arc just as good for eating. The third grade of nuts is known as ••eagles," and the cullings that are left from tlie "eagles" are bagged and sent to a building where the little meat that is m tliem is^extracted by a patent sheller. This "meat"â€" for by this name it is known to the dealersâ€" is put up, clean and nice, in 200-pound bags and shipped for the use of confectioners and manu- facturers of peanut candy. There is also an oil made from some of the nuts, and in this specialty, I am told, a large trade is done by wholesale drug- gists. Of the peanuts there is nothing wasted, for even the shells are made use- ful, being jmt in immense sacks and sold to livery men for liorse bedding, and a very comfortable, healthful bed they make. 1 see by one of the Atlanta papei-s tliat a mill is to be built for the manufacture of peanut fiour, which it is said makes most excellent biscuit. In jiarts of CJeor- gia I have eaten pastry made from pea- nut fiour and it was excellent, resembling cocoanut in taste somewhat altliough much more oily and sweet. The kernels of the xeanuts are crn'und between ordin- ary millstones tlOBS druggifits. A tip-top man hat. Yoi.ng, middle-aged, or old men, Rttt-nnE; from nervens debility or kindred afiictions, ehonld address, with two stamps for ia-ge treatise, Worlds Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo. N. Y. An oat is better than a wink to a blind horse. WHAT'S S WED IS GAINED. Workingmex. will .cjnomize by employing Dr P.erct's Medicines. Hw " PLasant Purgative Pellet," and "Gclien Medical Da every" cleanse the^blood and B/.stci.i, thus prevent iag fevers and other bcnous dis.ases, and curing all scmfuloua and other tiumors. Told by diu^gists. Returning boredâ€" The defeated candi- date on his way hmne. Mrs. J. McPnee, Appin, write.s ;-Duriiig the last eight years I ha--^ used almoi-t eve.y medicine recommended i:." Biliousness, but Found nothing* qual to Cars m's Bitters, if you suffar trv it. Price 50 cents. A King street store advertises "Real imitatiim lace." Tostlmomal from WR B. C. I.U.VIY. of Wiasjara Falls, Out., ahlgbly respect- ed citizen, having lived uearjjrnm- monavlUe and at the Falls for the past 50 years Niagara Falls, Oct.. Oct. 20tb, ISS:). J. N. ScTiiEKL.vND Dsar Sir, â€" for the past year my brother, Wm. Lundy, of Lundy's Lane, has been a great m: il'erer from Rheumatism. By my auvicc ho procured Dni used G bottles of your preparation " llheunia'iiio" with this rcsaltâ€" that he i« now quitr' fnit from all rheumatic pain, and able to attend to his buriaes' Your mtdiciue. ' Ktieuina'Jne ' has also beiii of groat b.^netit to myself. Snne weeki ago I was taken w.t 1 a most severe attack of Sciatici. I sttlircd su..h pain that I cjull not move or leaAc the li Ufc. I ]mrch;ued ami u.sed t\^o bottle..* of ' xti-ieu- n.atine." In my oase also the meuiciue was a ou:ces^ fur I am completely euied and as well as ever .„ I have every confi- dence in " llheuma^inc" inatie complanits, and h it t others. Yours truly, (Signed) B. C. L.NbV. '• 1 claim the right of way," .-^ays the hay-.scales in tlie street. Catarrh â€" A New Treatment whtrehy a Permanent Cure i.- cffbcte-l iu from ou.^ to throe applications. Particulars and treatise free on receipt of stamp Son, 305 King-St. W' st, Tlie age at wliich many m.-irry The parsonage uid the fiour is "bolted" irsifted through wire sieves in order that all the coarse, sharp pieces and the leather-like .skins may be removed. The refu.se â€" if it may be so called â€" makes ex- cellent food for pigs. Tlie cultivation of the peanut will, be- fore long, be one of the industries of the South, and bids fair,in time, to rival cot- ton growing as an occupation, the profits to each acre of land being about the same, and peanuts are much easier to grow than cotton, reijuiring less care and atten- tion. There is one objection, however, to pea- nut fiour as a steady diet. It is said to be very injurious to the teeth, causing them first to turn yellow and then de- cay. -_ â€" *•• « â€" A Lncky Fisherman. la the vast amount of business transacted a the Bdtimore, MJ.. Post Offi.;e. Mr. M, V. Buley. Superintendent of the Mails, is kept exceedingly busy, but somehow he finds a spire hour or daj- to go fishing, and from liis t-xperieiice he ^.ivts his testimony, that St. .Iicobs Oil ii tne best remedy in th world for iheumai sm, sprains, sore feet and joints, bruises, ete. It is the, remedy for lishe.men and gunnf'ra, who should glnays keep a b ittle on hand, -b An The Light of the Future. It will not be electrical illumination say the scientists. That inv-olves too must cost. Electricity is developed by violence that is, by waste and the dis- turbance of attims of matter, which is necessarily expensive. For sensational uses, for spectacles, for the lighting of city squares, streets and parks, where expense is a minor consideration, the electrical light will, of course, be emjiloy- ed but the great mass of the community will never be able to use this costly illum- inator to banish the darkness from their humble dwellings. Nature has been searched to find how light can be generat- ed under the cheapest conditions, and the glow-worm has been hit upon as furnish- ing a liint for the cheap but effective domestic light of the future. The various insects which emit flashes of light in the dark, does s(j with an exceedingly small expenditure of mechanical force. It has been suggested that curtains, wall paper, and the coverings of furniture could be so prepared, that, by a slight disturbance of the air, they would emit a steady but mellow light at a cost of far less than a candle or a kerosene lamp. Scientific men are now at work on this problem, and if it should be successfully solved, it would be a vei-y great benefit to the poor of all nations. A sweet thing in bric-a- Egyptian molasses jug. Important. When you visit or leave New York City save Baggatte Expressase and Carriajte Hire, and stop at GRAND UNION HOTEL, opposite Orund Central Depot, 450 elegant rooms, fltted up at a cost ot one million dollors, re- duced to %\ and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator, Restaurant suppled with the best. Horse cars, stages and elevated rail- roads to all depots. Families can live hotter (or less money at the Grand Union Hotel tha lit any other nrst-clasa hotel in the city. Thj fashionable Susan now v.ritethher nick-name "Sioux." They all tell the same story. Mr. W. Thompson, Jeweller, Delhi, aaffered from Dyspepsia, got no relief until ht used Dr. Carson's Stomach Bitters. He says "it was just the medicine 1 needed. It has cared ne. A nod thing in bonnets â€" A sleeping beauty in church. Mr. R. A. Harrison, Druggist, Dannville, Oat., writes that the Triangle Dyes, give he best satis^ction of any dyes ever sold n that fcectioL^oO colors. All perfect. 10 cents. A sign of an early fall â€" A bar of soap on the celler steps. Fifteen Million of Horses are now owned in America, and more than a million a year must be bred to keep up the supply. The li rarest portion of these are used for agricultural and heavy draft purposes, and such horses bring from §175 to $250 each. It would be impossible to breed them if it were not for the great breeding establish- ment of M. W. Dunham, Wayne, 111., from which goes out to all parts of America more than half a million dollars worth of Percher- on-Norman stallions annually. Professor Cliristisson says that alcohol is a poison for which there is no antidote. A placard at the entrance of the Reno (Nev.) Jail reads " Standing room only." ai a cure fur rli ni- cartdy recomiufnil A. H. Dix. u Toronto 'Canada. A. P. l./J. ^^i"*!!!. m^m GERMai THE GREAT AN RE CURES ,. Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Htadacne, Toothache, Sore Thront.»welllnei».«prain», Braises, Burns. Mealds. Frost Bites, AND ALL OniEK IIODILY PAI.NS AND ACHES. Sold by Druggists and Dealers evervwhcre. Fifly Cents a bottle. Directions in 11 Languages. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO. (SucooMocl to K. VOUELER i CO.) H«ltllllort!, Jld., C. S. 1. mPER CENT. OFF OUK DOhL.VR tweeds makes thf. price 90 cents; these goods are worth $1 .tO. .and mak-^ hpaiitifiil ladies' ulsters. A. 15. FLINT, 3o Colborne Street, Toronto. 10 PER CENT. OFF OUH CKLKHR.VTKD black silk^, that is ourdolhir silk wil; cost you only 90 cents; our $1.50. f^ilk only J1.3,'); all )?ood3 marked in olain tinurcs. A. B. FLINT, 35 Colborne Street, Toronto. 10 PER CUNT. OFF OUH ALL-WOOL Jersey blankets ourS4.50, blanket for $i; see our Diinnannon coverlets, weisrht 7 lbs.. only SI 95, or $1.75, net cash; this discount is allowed on all parcels of one dollar and over. A. U. FLINT, 35 Colborne Street, Torento. an PER CENT. DISCOU.XT OFF ALL IU dry-goods, includlnR new fall stock, all Koods marked in plain flcuros: all {ifoods sold for cash only. A, B. FLINT, 35 Colborne Street, Toronto. PER CENT. OFF GREY COTTONS- or a 10 cent cotton for nine cents; sheet- ings, shirtings, grey flannels, table napkins. A. B. FLINT, 35 Colborne Street, Toronto. 10 10 PER CENT. OFF ALL DRESS GOODS. silks, satins, velvets, brocades.fcblack and Cloored, cashmeres, tweeds, cloakings. A. B. FLINT, 35 Colborne Street. Toronto. WANTED-STE.ADY EMPLOYMENT and good pay given to every lady owning a sewing machine. Material sent and returned by mail. Send one dollar with your application as a guarantee that the material we furnish will be retume when finished. FINDLAY LManu facturera, Detroit, Mich. IB a perfect gem, equal to an imported French Corset;ilt8 like a glove to the figure; very styl- isn, elegant in appearance, and approved of by the most fastidious. Manufactured only by THE CROHPTON CORSET CO., 78 YOBK STREET. TORONTO. HARNESS OIL. BASED ON NEATg FOOT OU. la the finest haniess dreasing made. It softtni; and F. F. DALLEYCO. HAMILTON, ONTARIO, ' ^â- fiole Agents for the Dominion' 5Oc,I^W,fâ„¢?i507 No injurious niineraL'no tvoi«r,; ' irritating acid. " Poison, no Acts on a different DriiiHnin'"7'~-' other Bitters, i^rmcipie from Possesses tonic, aperient airr"'TV- -- tive properties, an.? a priS?fpi^'f«8; soothes the: ifiamed membranes o^*^ up theabsorbing vessels of the Stnm?u^ and Liver, cures Dyspepsia, CatlrS,*"^, the Stomach. Liver UompWr." Btipation, c, 'â- • "-on- sufTered foryears with the worn fnC of Dyspepsia tried physicians aS every remedy advertised without W^ fit. One bottle of Hoffman's Gem.t Bitters cured him. wrmm Wiioiesaie by Lyman "firotheri'-oTj Northrop Lyrtian, Toronto. ' "" -THE- m\u L" OF Offered in ihe Ivural'c next Freo Seed DIclrll:ulion are alone worfh more, at rets';! prices, than the cor.ibinaficn price of boih papers. The WEEKUf AND R ural E^evz-Yorker ar.d the eight kinds of entirely r.csi varieties of Farm, Vegetable and Garden Seeds- ail ens ycer fcr The Rural Ne/.\-Touki: i r^jw i n hs 34:; year, is accepted in r^l! r.r;s of our co'.;r.;r\T,; in 'J:j â- the leading joi^i nal o£ .\g:. culture and altogether r,:i' ' nality and enterprise with wh: THE RURAL'S NEXT FREE SEED DISTRIBUTION, li AS FOLLOWS AND WILL BE SENT WITHOUT CKARCE .. THOSE WHD SUBSCRIBE FOR BOTH PAPER3: FIRST THE RURAL UNiqN_COr^N^_rwei-' year s' selection, from three kinds at fir?' ProUfic, very early, six feet Jiigh;_j££; kernels, small cob. Sever oUcredJorj^_ SECOND CLEVELAND'S RUR-\L K E\VAmKE[- PEA. " I would not sell mystock_toS]000^ says the originator. The rarli^ st_aDd_bgt_ir cultivation. It will not be^ offeredjorjaler. t wo years. THIRD TH E CROSS-ERED _DIEHL;MEDITER- RANEAN WHEAT. ThT haraigUE: most prolific_o£wheats^ FOURTH THOUSAND-FOLD^ YE_-iJl!:Lni: grea t promise. FIFTH HORSEFORD'S MARJCET_GARDE^ PEA. An i^^^^^^^^^ di^te^ g^^^LPJg^" " i^^^^; N^t offered fo^Ia sale. SEVENTH THE RURAL GAR DENJH^^^ One-hundred kinds J mixedjofthedio^ DPal, biennial and pj renniaUowegJoll^ at the Rural Gro mids^ndjmportedjrg^ Europe. EIGHTH TO MATOES of alM hjJlfggL^iS^i â€" â€" ' at the B' gether with several originating a" =; -7â€" .r -^ ...^.â- .T o!]jr Experiment uro;ini[-' sale â€" not less lh.injo o'l.i never 1, :., !s'in the p^ FOR $2.75 you get one packeU-^cJL"!!' 'â€" ^^'^^ ion THE Weekly MAit^to^he^ and The RvKxri^-Jo^^B^^^^ iSS£ ADDRESS Toronto, CURRENT eve: t AX.mii '.X. A new Roiiiii-ii Oarlic^i ipdicated.itDesorouto. ih STnst. It cost ,S4,0U0. â- D^v. Arcluleacoii Laudc be appointed Chaplain IJ^aceoftheRev.Mr...-, gon. A. M. Ross, the 1 Treasurer for Ontari.). w,- acclamation for \\ est Hun jnst. The total weekly eaniiii; Trunk railway are rcporte gnd the corresponding \\ j355,583, showing an iiicri It is proposed to establ •vrorks company in Mont re jflOO,000, and applicati( to the Quebec Legislature Incorporation. very fine new Mutlm dedicated at Sarnia on Sui It is a beautiful brick Imil •iccomodating about 1.20 costing over ^SO.OOO. Notice has been given in -etti that application will bt. iuent for an Act to incdri.n Temperance and (iencral pany, with headcjuarters a A gambler named Matl $250 by the Toronto Polii few days ago for iilayin •rame â€" Faro. The ])en;ili under the provision.s ..f law, passed over L'OO yeai .- Frog catching for the market h;xs becmie ouiii some parts of Canada. A Trent, Ont., thousands ciught. The hind leg.s ar eJ in barrels on ice. and Recently a young S. H. Collins, a student Agricultural College, (iu Jenly of hemorrhage â- i i father is a minister in Ki deceased had l)een bur a i country. A recent report sliow.' weeks earnings of th(J railway to lie .^l.'li'.UOU. r)f miles of road in opeiat corresiionding week of ];i inga were 'jtiT.""' and miles 8!t!t. Four inenil eis 1 •â- .1 Tetrault were dr. iv;:vd cross Mitchell's Day. 1.1:1 .small boat during a hea\ The victims \%ere tlie 1:1 children. They le.ive i.ther children. The Canadian Paeili.- coinpleteil aiidinv.orkiiiLr mit of the Rocky Moin heyond Calgary. Tliis i- sand miles west of NN'iiin stated that the entire r^ wi 11 1) eouipleie ocean years. Tlie fine new buildin pleted in Montreal for a logical College, were for the IGth. Senator F. hberal member of the ' The buildings are of stoi 120x80 feet and four st. about 340,000. There are several p; families in Toronto nov has been investigating His impressicjn is that make out a worse case order to enlist sympat soon be a strong outo grants if so many i)aupe1 Another barn burn ti-amps took place at Y' Toronto, recentlv. T ed to Thomas Mulholk was S500, without ir.sin was sleeping there and mischief was done. Al there are simihir accul' causes. The Toronto Cohee 1 haj now been in active li over one year ami the 1 encouraging. A divide has been declared on the beside a sum laiil by for persons are every day se ments at the two house ^lore houses are propos At the presentation ^n address of weleoine ernor General by tlie Council, Lord Laiisdo\\ Iiad been a farmer at but not a very siiccessfi given too much of his ti travel to the neglect 'f "^^Jany other fanners d. Montreal Intends to 1 winter carnival, to com ary. The sum of S10.( tp meet the expenses. tl3ns announced are ai Indians, Norwegian si maux village, tobboga Jike, besides an ice pah last winter was a gran Of ought thousands of s: Saekei-s to the city, A deputation of the â- ^ociation of Toronto, •sntatives of the City C «ie Hon. O. Mowat am ners of the Provincial ^ys ago, asking for h ^omen to vote. The "nself personally not gave scant encoura *»ch measure would be A young boy named V ^n for years driving t *^^ood station, near C ad has recently been