1 « ' t TOBEICN ITEMS. ul Dr»^^ (r.Rooms -Horse Marines â- \lneer corps of Great Brit- ain _Tlie Mines of Italy, Ac, Ac. .rd .j^r hi3 been passing himself ofiF â- """ jn a^ Manchejter. He has pro- ^â- '"^•.^'emD'z^ marriages, and various '"•1,5 ti k! I"'em3=lv-e3 ia aa awk- ""'(^â- a'li^nt. The police discovered P.'*/V»l,e delinquent decamped, but up aud captured at Yar- ^ffas.'i-i;""^^',j^l3',jj,ent; ^jn be very ae- T' ,„ho attend royal drawing rooms â- â- ^' â- 'jijsitisfied because the queen i' nuted the I'rinoess of Wales to re- ' h guests, and merely sends Princess ' to gather the gossip of the cere- â- v ani d tell her what everybody wore, .^^. much of the comely person of 'â- ' the professional beauty, was visible '"â- j" naked eye. " jffcpaper cbserver in the Soudan de- '•^bat every effort yet made to repress f'j've trade has only "increased the l^iiips of the victims, and that a with- ",] of interference, even if unaccompani- 'r other measures, would be a humane ge finda reason to hope, however, • cent events may give a real death- â- ,5 the trade. (fjsfcrmeily supposed that hcrse mar- ,,^-e at least as mythical as the Greek "jtili: but all thai seem.s changed. A ie'zra"' "'°'" ^^"" informed the world .n'her day that ' 'some of the marines are Vj counted," Thus a horse marine is '%zir a myth, but a stearn reality. So .of one vMish the moat chevished illus- ;ioi oar early days. jii;eot the claimant's friends called up- cim the other day at the Portsmouth .t prison, cne of whom announced that B3i in posstssion of an ofhcial document (.â- lic' that Artiiur »rton had been in a ;;:;c asyhirn since 1S71. The claimant ,uA to ent( rtain any propoEal with re- sce to hia IiLunjial position, determin- to delibirate in the matter after his ierition. :ince lii^i, one of the clerical alderman r.onie, hag called the attention of the e to the fact that many children, ,;ifri!ig in the streets of Rome, have â- c cruelly abandoned by their parents, -c come from the provinces and leave eirciiiklren to take care of themselves. ;r.8,i5 irifested by these little ones, who iie a 'living by selling matches and help ij-f 11 the racks of the vicious classes. r.rcent events in the Sjudan do not 'ap- i: ti have excited much intereft among ;t[a;iv3 journalists of India. They con- â- :n!-r:lves, as a general rule, to a dis- ;:;:'j:; oi the probability of the employ- r.;o: an Indian contingent against the â- .1.-, and to protesting that the expenses i:c:] a ccntijtient should not be charged r.n-t India â€" which country, they main- .:, r.as no interest in the campaign. ;:;w niiihts ago at Vienna an English- :;:3ine i Caniberland showed to a select ;;y in the crown prince's apartments most â- .:e spiritualist tricks, explaining after- i-inow they were done. He guessed his tEranerB' thoughts, and led them to ;tct3 they were thinking about. Ifhe Tn prince and princess, the Archdiifee iaer and his wife, and several adjutants led through the palace in tbia man- e press of Switzerland is at last lifting ;!ce in protest against the manner in 3 certain notorious anarchists abuse ght of asylum in the Helvetian repub- A nuniber cf socialist agitators, who itrit their country â€" mostly G-ermany^ 3«ir country's gojd, have their abode at ;Q;and several of the Swiss news- r3 ci!l ip3n the Zurich police to take â- ' measures against these men. "eArlcan explorer, ilaj. Serpa Pinto, ^^ught a duel with Viscount Robcrddo :wtugal. The meeting took place at -po itrande, in the suburbs of Lisbon. 'â- 'â- i were the weapons selected. Tae 'inflicted live â- wounds on his antagon- "' J, ajtoraiug to the conditions of the â- -' v,ai uiiligcd to continue till the .-â- â- '•ana m attendance declared that one -tidversarics couU not continue the con- 's L'aneLcl XiLb'?, an isolated mountain .-tria, eight hundred feet high, is slow- -i.Et; into the earth. Already there is " r iTj'bw rdund its foot. The district ;U has once before witnessed a similar '.-"â- h" instability of the earth's cruse. -I'ie F. 'zira did not exist in the time â- hjriiana Ijut 00 the contrary the site â- " -jpicd ],y a to\\n whose ruins have â- -â- '^nd at the bottom of the lake. •-annual return of the volunteer corps â- -it lliitaiu f jr ISS.'i shows that the to- :-;mber enrolled in that year (209, 3G5), 'â- '8 1'lghest in the history of the force. "-â- J.oerf (liicients were 202,428, as ';J'"'\:i7t, lu 1^82, and 219,152 in •"e largest number previously record- ^â- 'itne percentage of efficients to en- â- -.vvas '.i';.r,;i, r.-ainat 96.1G, and 96,08 â- ;.'«o previcua years and the percent- • B-en present at inspections to ecroU- -â- a-;o higher tbaa ever before. ;- §facd gentral staff of the German :,navinp uqw jompleted its history of ..â- ^!^^°""ermanwar, it has been resolved it. ^3me thing, on as complete and ;•; S'ltasive as scale as possible, for the Mo^?t °' i-'rederick the Great. Marshal •â- â- V' ^^^ therefore issued an appeal .uhr°k ^°" '«^* °i" loan of all hither- Jiiahed documents, maps, and plans, ,fiJ"^^, °'i the subject which may help -Dat,7f"° ^^^ execution of their huge â„¢iotie task. •it^ ^T '°*'"o*i"ced into the House :fraQ„°f ^Ji'ch ia designed to remove a '6frenn 7, visitors to the Highlands l^-evelt y complained. Its object is 'u'day 'sitorf, who go in search of lisof is"f,*"°° t° the glens and moun- -ies and r ' ^^"^? interfered with by "-ii bein " u ^^P^" without reasonable â- ^ doubtli "v"^- Ths passage of the ""â- it is 7 ' ^^^ an interesting debate Tae i^'^^'^Pated. "««ee 'f ° "Ministry of agriculture and J^ed 4oT!;*^ that the sulphur mines '^, anlT'°^ '"' t*ie lead mine 8,- OOn li-, ^^\ zinc and iron minea 4,- "jach; that 589 mines are at m now. J lite, 't^" a total output of 70,619, 't^lBate ^^w 1881 has been the most StoloQ ^8^^"g mining accidents; Workmen employed 126 acci- dents happened, resulting in 184 deatha an^ 121 seriously wounded. The m^wltel ac cident recorded is one in the su^hur mi^^ Lonion Truth tells the following _«'A week or two ago one of our best-knovra P3.ra8ses gave her maid a month's noticT acoompau,mg the warning by a slap on th^ w\ Tae -naid said nothing at the time but brooded over her wrongs. Oa the da^ that her month was up, after sbe had re ceived her wages an,d ter box.s hid been placed upon a cab, she went up-stairs an i commenced to 'do' her mistress' hair. Hiv ing dettly fastened it to the back of a ctiair she calmly proceeded to administer a series of slaps to the somewhat highly- colored cheek, which were ready to her hands i^en, with a low courtesy, she took herself Bears and Wolyes. It would ba difficult in all nature to find two wild animals so diametrically opposed in appearince. habits and character, as the bear and the wolf. Yet it would be diffi- cult m all poetry to find two animals more intimately associated. The shambling fruiteating, retiring, straight-forwarJ and mild mannered bear, has nothing in common with the agile, flesh-preferring, aggressive treacherous and ferocious wolf. Neverthe- less, in poetry they are as punctually and arbitrarily bracketed together as larks and linnets, or apes and asses. Bruin has had to suffer much in conse- quense, first of all, of the ignominious fa- miliarity which its dancin:; and being bated have induced and, secondly, of its unfortu- nate personal appearance. But when it sets itself going after any one it wishes to catch, the bear displays an agility and ad- dress which those who have been hunted by it declare to be amazing. And when it wishes to get beetle -grubs out of the ground, ants out of their nest, honey out of a bee tree, ftuit from a slender bough, or birds' eggs out of a nest, it shows itself to be as ingenious and skillful as any other animal that has to live by its wits. To get, for in- stance, at the beetle-grubs, it scratches off the upper earth, and.'then sucks them up out of the groundâ€" an application of a scientific process which no animal without a prodigi- ous reserve af air- force could hope to accom- plish. When it wishes to empty an ant hive, it knocks the top off with its paw, and then, applying its mouth to the central gallery of the nest, inhales its breath forcibly, thereby setting up such a current of air tnat all the ants and their eggs come whirling up into his mouth like pactets through a pneumatic tube. When robbing bees it does not get stung, and when after wild apricots or acorns, it not only balances itself with all the judgment of a rope walker, but uses its weight very cleverly so as to bring other bought within reach of its curved claws. Nor while doing this does it conceal what it is about. Oa the contrary, when sucking at an ant heap, or grub hole, it makes such a noise that on a still evening it can be heard a quarter of a mile off, and when up a tree, and not alarmed, it goes smashing about among the boughs as if bears were not only the rightful lords ot the manor, but as if these were no such things as enemies in the world. m » â- â€" â- â-º-^ â- â€" .â€" Bains of the Tuileries. Th" blackened and charred ruins of the palace of the Tuileries, which remained fgr twelve years an eyesore to every visitor of Paris, have at last entirely disappeared. The boarding rt rutins, but when this and the wooded erections, which temporarily serve as offices for the general post-office un- til the new jbuilding ia completed, are re- moved there will be nothing to break the view from the Louvre right up to the tri- urr.phal arch at the head of the Champs Ely sees. The site of the Tuileries, as is well known, was in the sixteenth century a field for the making of tiles, and outside the walls of Piris. Its connection with royaly dates only from Valois times. It served as a country-house for Liuis of Savoy, Catha- rine de Medici, wife of Henry II., who made grta' improvements on the building. But even after it assumed the appearance of a palace the Tuileries was seldom visited by the kings of France. It was only after the outbreak of the revolution that Louis XVI. took up his abode there, and his stay was of short duration. Napoleon made this palace his home as first consul and as emperoi^ and effected ertat alterations. Louis XVIII., Charles X., Louis PhiUippe, and Napoleon III. followed, each making changes of differ- ent kinds. It was during the reign of Na- poleon in. that the Tuileries was connected with the Louvre and the magnificent square completed. Tne only large ruin that now remains as a remembrancer of the '"semaine sauglante" is the office of archives, on the opposite side of the Seine, Why it hai been allowed to remain so long it would be difficult to say, as it appears to be less injured by the fire, so far as the outward walls and columns are concerned, than any of the buildings which suffered through the "bloody week" of 1871. The new Hotel de Ville on the.site of the former one is now completed, and a very handsome building it is. All the depart- ments of the municipal councd are installed in their rooms in the new edifice. Crockery Waking. Crockery-ware has many namesâ€" pottery, delf, crockery, china. The Chinese under- stood its manufacture a long time ago but as far as we can find out, the art of making it was known still earlier-among the peo nle who lived in Palestine before the tmae of Moses. The ware was of a very rough, rude sort, but it answered every purpose It was at first made of clay, mixed with water, and baked hard and brown, ihe Chinese, however, learned how to make it in more beautiful and delicate style as far back M 185 years b. c. The finer kinds were first introduced into Europe about the year ^^The calcined flints which makes the fine white cups ««i saucers w» discovered bjj potter named Astbory. In 1720 ne was travellina from his native town to London nn hoM^ baS. and he found tnat his horse's eyeS^rrdec^d. On the way he stop^ p^efat aninn. »d asked the ho.tl«rto^ wbas he oould do for his horse. 1°? man took apiece of flintlan I burned »*. ««d the° 80, and it was a success. HOWSOME JbU^NAtlsfs ARE FAlIf Large Salaries «g^by teadlin If^d«i thL^'S^rJ"" ^^" "^^^ ^b*t a ttrili A through the country Pre^s when it.*ft8 an- nounced tbat Mr. VV.H Hurlbert. wZwL of the New York World, was to r^ c^ve tor tirV'Tt ^i~^^^ y«^^- Toe figures were cited to show how far we had alv^cad in civilized ways, when an editor could 00m- mand sucha salary as that. All thi^ oa curred years ago in the "flish timka?' of the country, and I do not know that'the tZ airp e thus set has been greatly followed! but they order these things better iaiEa*. laud by which I mean that newpiapS work is much batter paid for there ftaa ft Am-rica. When Mr. Delane undertook the editorial charge of the London Times he was P"d £4,000, about 20.000 of our dollars. Mr. Buckle, the new editor of that journal, a young man of thirty, without aily prfe' vious experience, commences his official.terii on â- » AN ANNUAL STIPEND of £5,900, or $25,000. Mr. Edward Liw- son, the editor of the London Telegraph, is its owner, and so is n t oa a saiary, but the two senior editor^ of that journal. Mr. Edwin Arnold. »n 1 Mr J M. Le-Sigfe, re- ceive each a sa'ary of $17 000 ia our mwey. The 5to7iiarrf which is nexc in circulatiou of the great London dailies to the Telegraph.. does not pay as well as its mighty rival, fo| the editor, Mr. Mudford, gets only ^1^,000 per annum. Tne Daily News, the organ of English hberals aud the third in circulation of the English metre politan journals, pays to its editor the extremely comfortabld yearly salary of $20,000. The editbi- of the Manchester Guardian, easily the most powerful and influential country newspapar (meaning outside of London) in England, piys its chief editor $15,000, and two inem- oers of the staff, who each write only four' ai tides a week, $7,500. Mr. Stead, the editor of the PaU' Mall Oazelte, gets $10,000, and the l-^ading writer of that journal, Mr. Milner,- is paid, at the rate of $8,000 yearly, fle is a'yonng man, and amuses himself with literary' work, which he need not do if he does not care to, as he possesses an indep-indent in- come from a very large fortune. Some of the weeklies of London PAXS VEllY IIANDSOMELY. Mr. Hutton. who is at the head of the Spec- tator, gets 810,00'J. Mr. Pollock, ot the Saturday Review, receives the same sum as his confrere of the Spectator, and Mr. • Frederick Greenwood, who steers the St ' James' Gazette through the tortuous mazes ' of English politics, gets for doing it $9,000,^ while Mr. F. C. Barnand, who not only* edits Punch, but writes its sharp .Parlia- mentary criticisms, receives $15,000 a year for his double duty. Besides the regular staff of the great dailies there are alwaeys at- tached to each of them sevei al outside con- tributors, who have certain special lines of information. For example, Mr. Charles Marvin, who knows moie about Central Asia and the Tnrjoman tribes in the Merv oasis than any one else in England since the death of poor Donovan, writes the articles which have lately appeared in the London yiTTKs on this subject. Just now England wants to know all about that curious region, as Russia is pushing its way to India by the Merv route, and therefore Mr. Marvin's years of gathered knowledge can now be utilized to his very great pecuniary advant- age. Mr. Archibald Forbes' slashing arti- cles on the Egyptian war in "the journal of the largest Liberal circulation in the world," as the News proudly denominates itself, are admirable in the matter of criticism, al- though he has no personal knowledge of the region in which General Graham's troops are meeting with such an obstinate resist- ance. The time will come when the fourth estate will meet in America with that liber- al pecuniary encouragement it has ,atter a long struggle attained in Eagland. Loved Imprisonment. Almost half a century ago, Charles Dick- ens, in his "American Notes" wasted a large amount of gush and sentimentality over the unhappy fate of a certain convic i with whom he was allowed to converse at the Pennsylvania penitentiary, with the re- sult of making both the prison and the prisoner famous, the latter, whose name was Charles Lingheimer, having been known ever since, as " Dickens's Dutchman." But the great novelist's sympthy for the un- fortunate convict, which would have been ridiculously extravagent even had the latter been all that he was piinted, was, after all, entirely misplaced, for the fellow no sooner got out of the penitentiary tbaa he made all possible haste to got in again, and kept up the practice so peristently that he has never remained outside the walls more than a few- weeks at a time for the last fifty of his seventy-five years of life. A little whild ago he was discharged again, by the expiration of his sentence, but came back t3 the prison of his own accord and asked to be taken in. without going through the foimality of com- mitting a crime, and bring tried and sen^ tenced. His request was granted and a few days ago he died, within the walls which had been h:s home for two thirds of his life. SHORTHAND. The accomplishment of the age. A railroad means o communicating thought â€" A ra'lroad by reason of its expeditionâ€" A railroad by reason of its ease. Complete Bet of books lor self instruction for beginners, post free for 45c. Send for price list to T. A. McINTYRE C!o. Ontario Shorthand Emporium, 34 King 8t Bast. Toronto Is a perfect gem, equal to an Imported French igli Corset; fits like a glove to the figure; very styl- ish, elugant in appearuice, and approved o by the most fastidious. Manufactured by THE CROMPTON OORSETCO. 18 TORK »iTRE£T TOKOBTTO. BSAVBR S. S. JLINJt WEEKLY BKTWKKN Qaebee. atontrral, and Liverpool. CALLING AT QUEENSTOWN AND BELFAST For lowest rates and all partic ulars apply to. B. MUBEAT, BEAVER LINK, lontreal, Qn.^. -^JOommon Sense' Brace Ko ainln on slionlden or tiants, â- re(inl(esnoBUTTON»OK PAKTS w Simple, easy, Qheap, durable. Sent to any address by mailon receipt of •* «0 or 75c. with " little Dorcas*' 4â€" H. N. FISKE and Ck). ,377 King Street West, Toronto. AKDit The Queen's AUNDRY BAR. ASK FOR IT AND TAKE NO OTHER. TSABB MAHK:. ^r BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. MADE BY The Albert Toilet Soap Co. Agents Wanted FOB THE Citizens Insurance Co., of Canada. Established 1864.â€" Capital and Afsets, 81,426,985. â€" GoTernment Deposit $122,000 Cash.â€" As the ComDany transacts Fire, Life, and Accident busines?. a profitable agpnoy is thus offered to those soliciting insurance risks. Special terms to those who have valuable con- nections. Farm property intured as low as by Farm Mutuals. Address. Dead Office, 179 St. J.imcs'Street, IVoiitrcal. i^'Tbe stock of this Company is held by many of the wealthiest citizens of Montreal. Allan Line Royal Mail Steamships. Sailing during winter from Portland every Thursday, and Halifax every Satii/day to Liverpool, and in summer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, calling at Lon- donderry to land mails and passengers for Scotland and Ireland. Also from Baltimore via Halifax and St. John's N. F. to Liverpool fortnightly during siiramer months. The steamers of the Glasgow lines sail duribg winter be- tween Portland and Glasgow, arid Boston and Glasgow alternately and during summer between Quebec and Glasgow and Boston and Glasgow every week. Fcr freight, passage, or other information apply to A. Schumachers Co., Baltimore; t*. Cunard Co, Halifax; Shea Co., St. John's N. F. Wm. Thomson Co., St Johr, M. B. Allan Co., Chicago; Leve Alden, New York H. Bourlier, Toronto Allans, Bae Co., Quebec H. A. Ailan, Portland, Boston, Mon- treal. Mutual Marriage Endowment As'n, INCORPORATED, HEAD OFFICE. LONDON, ONT. Issues Cprtificates from $12" to $3,000, payable on marriage, at following rates. For §500, or half Certifi- cate, .?4; quarterly dues in advance, S0.75. For §1,000 Oertiticate, §6; quarterly dues in advance. $1.00. For $2,000 Certificate, $10 quarterly dues in advance, $2.00. For $3,b00 Certificate, ^15 quarterly dues in advance, $3.00. A percentage of the Fees applied towards a re- serve fund. The only cash payments required at the time of making application for a certificate. The re- mainder of the liability is made up of assessments at the rate of $1.60 on each Jl.OOO upon the marriage of mem- bers. 12 assessments made the first year payable quar- terly, which upon the present large membership secures the payment of a number of Endowments, and a safe and reliable investment for young people. Send for By- Laws and full particulars. W. j! IMLACH, Secretary, London, Ont. The Newell Patent Universal Grinder, A Dog's Intelligence. James A. Atkirson, propiietor of the Sherman House, Cleveland, Ohio, num- bers among bis possessions a valuable dog and cow. The other evening the dog was noticed running and jumping against the laundry door as if anxious to attract atten- tion. Kate Donnell, the laundry girl, went out 10 see what was the matter, when the animal, looking up into her face, wagg- ed his tail and darted towards the stable. As she stood there he moved backward and forward as if anxious for her to follow. She finally went to the stable, where she foui d the cow choking to death. Mr. Atkinson arrived in time to remove a large carrot which was lodged sideways in the animal a throat, and bat for the intelligence ot the dog would have cost the cow its life. â€" Cleveland Leader. The Weather: Prophet look* '"'"P^^.i^ ^,?lSt The wise man looks for a blood pnnfler that will not r.,n,P hSi ^tem • he can find what he wants m I^. SS^on'^toS bitSsm, the greatertof aU blood pun- flers. In large botUes at 50 centa. The navy blue seal brown olive green and other rich dark colors of the Triangle Dyes are as perfect as the bright shades. They never disappoint the user. IO3. To a deacon caught by his minister com- ing oat of a saloon there is nothing so con- soling as a sign, "Hot Beef Tea "on the stloon window. Award of Gold and Silver Medals, j KBWELLCHAPIB Proprietors, 95 St. James-st. wes Montreal. These Mills save time, grind any kind s^ of gi'ain very fast andwithon beating. Larger ' Size Mills working on same principle With different style of cutter, grinding phos- phates, gold and silver ores, quartz, plaster clay, bones, fish-scraps, bark, o or write for particulars. Please call â- ins oiwac'A-ie.iQ Palmonary Institute Established for the cure ot Ci)ri8uiin)i.ii.n, Bronchitis, Citarrh of Nose, Threat and Lungs, Dyspepsia and Liver CDmplaint, Cancer, Scrofula, Diseases of Skin, Diseases of Eye, Eir and Heart. Cancers and Tu- mors dissolved by Eleotricity without the knife. Galvanism and Faradism, in all their various forms, scientificallv applied to the treatment of Diseases of Women, nervous exhanstion, nervous debility and kindred diseases. Telephone communication with all parts of On«ario. Can be consulted by telephone when desirable. Send for our medical treatise and list of questions. Address S. EDW. McCULLY, ILD., M.C.P.S.O., M.C.P.S.Q., Proprietor. M. HILTON WILLIAMS, 1LC.P.S.0. %â- -•â- â- -..., â- â- â- - -*â- ' Import Orders. BAB IBON. SHEET METALS. FIBE CLAY GOODS. CHEMICALS AND OILS. Orders to import solicited. Copland McLaren, WMIlnKton Street, Montreal. Wellington Ckambers, CiIasK»w. 88 Paternoster Kow, liOndon 18M:^SO0Hr|lHIBITI0N Am leather Belling, Fire Enslne Hose, Ae. Four First Prizes and Two Diplomas. The highest ot all Awards for Leather Belting, and Fire Engine Hose were accorded by the Judges at the St, John Centennial and Dominion Ex- hibiUon, to KOBIN a SADLER, Montreal, ov- er all competitors. F. E. DIXON CO Hannfactnrers of S tar Klvet Leather Belting 70 KlBg street, East, Toronto. Largfe double Driving Belts a specialty. Send for Price Lists and Discounts Dominion Line of Steamships Running in connection with the Grand Trunk Hallway of Canada. Sailing from Quebec every Saturday during the summer months, and from Portland every Thursday during the winter months Sailing dates from PORTLAND TO LIVBPOOL. Toronto, Blar. 27. Montreal, ApL 17. Dominion, Apl. 3. Oregon, Apt. 34. "Sarnla, a pi. 10. j Ontario, Hay. I. Ratesofpassiige: Cabin. Portland to Liverpool ?50, J60, $70, Return ^, $110, «130, according to steamer and berth, all outside rooms and comfortably heated by steam. Intermediate $40. Steerage, %2i. The saloons and staterooms in steamers marked thus are amidships, 'where but little motion is felt, and no cattle or sheep are carried on them. For further particu- lars apply to any Grand Trunk Railway Agent or local agents of the Company, or to DAVID TORR%\CE A CO., 0«»nflral Ao'p.nt.R. Mnnrr«al AU correspondence must beaddreasedtoDB. McOully, 274, 276, ft 278 JaMs. cor: Rerrarcl TORONTO. Mention this paper. ilarriaise lid ASSO CIA TION. $5, 000 Paid on Marriages. Over $100, • 000 Paid in Benefits to Date. ISSUE IN 1883. OVER $2,000,000. The only Company In Canada that has paid a claim. UNDOUBTED SECUBITY. Premiums Email. Address, W. B. WEBBER, Agents Wantfd. Secretary, Hamilton. RENNIE'S. SELECT Field,Garden, AND Flower THE HANDSOMEST AND MOST COMPLETE CATALOGUE roR 1884 FREE TO ALL INTENOINQ PURCHASERS. WW. RENNIE. TORONTO. 30 DAYS' TRIAL (BEFOkE. I mm (AFTER. LECTRO -VOLTAIC BELT and other Electric APPLIANCES are sent on 30 Days' Trial TO MEN ONLY, YOUNG OB OLD, who are suffer- ing from Nektous Debtuty, Lost VrrALirr, WlsTiNO Weaknesses, and all those diseases of a Personal Nature, resulting from Abuses and Other Causes. Speedy relief and complete restoration to Health, VioOb and Manhood Guaranteed. Send at once for Illustratea Pamphlet free. Address Voltaic Belt Co.. Marshall, Mich. 6URNEYS WARE, ^tmMrd scales. THE BEST, TH!£ STRONGEST, THE MOST RELIABLE. Unrivallwl in material, construction and finish, per- ftC- in r.cciiracy and unoqnalled in durability. Guar- anteed to give entire satisfactiun. THEY EXCEL ALL OTHERS- RAIIiROAD, WAXtEHOTTSE AMD BOLI. Mills' Alarm Money Drawers. ^^ SEND FOU ILLUSTRATED TBICB ISSS, GURNE YS WARE, HAHnTOBr, OKT HAS tKFOBTED 90 PER CEiiT OF ALL HORSES Ever Imported From Franco to Amoriea, Wliose Parity of Blood Is establliihed by theii Beeorded Pedlcrec* in tke Perche- roB Stud Book of Frvaee. which is the only Draft Horse Record u. that country. Hr. Dunham ha? Just pnblished a 25.000 edition of his hand f. o ro e 1 y JiluBtrated I 1 40 pase catalogue I for 1884, containing I descrlptloBK and ped- igrees rmany for 10 geoerationsrot STALUOISiblltES Kaw am kaat. AH Malltoa* ewtruteed Breeder*. Da Page Co., nUnois. (Sendle* wMtotCUoi«o, onO ftf.-V».B'y. I ml '^fi 'i B I "4 far Hi ' I M ',;