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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 1 Mar 1888, p. 2

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 ^-^^: lliliiiiPPPiPiPii^^ wmmm ^m MIL m QUEEB LAHaVAaES. SaTagea Talk bj WlilsUlBS-Same â- â€"•then Ptaeh Vtas«n. in the Dakota Bliswd. The mm •hone fair in the dear, ciiflp al^-Dikot^ •» In wlntS »nsy to odd. they lay, Jf tried by an Eaet- But Ch»mber8 wm a Western man, on the frontier asedtoroem, ... a *^ And hie boys went alongr, wiUi a laugh and song, to help drive the cattle home. The old man's eye caught the gleam on high ol a sullen, yellow cloud, _j*„-_ And lo. the lij^* faded out from the sky. and far on the piairie a load. Fierce roar waa heard, and with never a word, save '• Home. whUe the storm ^ows r He sped ons boy back, whUe he kept the track with the other lad and the cows. The air filled op like a frozen cup, each drop had the point of a thorn, Each gasp for breath seemed certain death it grew black, though the hoar w%s morn They etaggered on with faces wan and courage grown almost cula x.. â-  "Lie down, my son, my darling son, and this coat about you fold." But the man in anguish walked up and down and and tumbled at last to his knees, For the coat that wrappel the boy so warm left the father bare to freezeâ€" And he felt the cold hand at hU heart " Up, up, KneelT^ a moment by my side and let me hear yon pray." Their prayers went straight to heaven's gate, and at dawn the foithful bound .. Bayed for the rescue till the boy by tender hands was found. His father low in the drifted snow lay stiff, and yet stillhe smiled w v j ji j As though in death he seemed to know he had died to tave his cliild t iwMe At the last meetiiig of the Berlin Anthro- pological Scciety, Lieut. Qoedenf eldt, a Ger- man officer who has lived on Gomero Island, one of the Canary gro^Pt described a whist- ling language which is nsed by the inhabit- ants. The language does not consist of anj arbitrary series of signals or soonds it is described as ordinary speech translated into articulate whistling, each syllable having its own appropriate tone. The G omero uses both fingers and lips when wh'stling, and Lieur. Quedenfeldt asserts that he can carry on a conversation with a neighbor a mile off, who perfectly understands ul he u sayini{. The practice is confined to Gomero Island, and is qui.e unknown in the other islands of the Archipelago. The adoption of tha whistling language is said to be due to the peculiar geological construction of Goroers IsalDd. It is traversed by numerous gullies and deep ravines running outin all directions from the central plateau. As they are not bridged, they can only be crossed with, greac difficulty hence a man living within a stone's throw of another in a straight line has often to go round many miles when he wishes to see and speak to his neighbor. This, it is conjectured led to the adoption of whistling as a useful means of commnni- cation, which has gradually assumed the firoportions of a true substitute for speech. t is described as being anything but un- pleasiog to the ear. This reminds one of the drum language of the natives of the Cameroons, mentioned in Buchholz's book on the West of Afiica, by means of which the most complicated mes- sages can be conveyed to villages at a dis- tance when occasions necessitate it. For this purpose a peculiarly shaped drum u em- ployed. By dividing the surface into un- even halves the instrument on being struck may be made to yield two distinct^ notes. By these and shortening or lengthening' the intervals between each note, a code is es- tablisned, with a regular sequence of taps, strokes, and intervals capable of expressing every syllable in the language. AH the natives understand this code and so highly elaborated is it, that a chief can by its means summo n to his presence any village whom he desires to see, intimating to the latter at the same time the purpose for which he b required. In this way, too, mesfiages can be sent from village to village over wide stretches of country â€" the drum- mer in one hamlet transmitting to the next the gnals hehears â€" an d with extraord'nary rapidity. Buchholz had proof on one occa- sion of the utility of this drum language and its capabilities as a medium of communi- cation. The negro who had charge of his canoe obtained leave one morning to attend t« some private business of fhis own, which *ook him to the other side of the river. The man remained away, an unreasonable time, and Buchholz got very angry, as he was waiting to leave the place. Another negro suggested that tbey should drum for him. The drummer was sent for and instructed to inform the missing servant that his mas- ter was very angry with him, and that he was to return at once. In a few minutes the man returned with the inevitable apolo- gies for the length of time he had been away. He had perfectly understood the ' message drummed out to him, as Buchholz ascertained by inquiring of him. Equally curious is the so-called sign lan- guage, or finger speech of Oriental trawlers, largely employed on the east coast of Africa, in the direction of Zanzibar. Walking through a market place in this region of the world, the traveller will often witness a strange sight. A couple of grave, long- bearded Ar»bs will step aside, each will put his hand up the -others capacious sleeve, and the pair will then begin apparently to pinch each other's fingers for a few minutes. Often the performance will be varied. One will unroll his long turban cloth, oi perhaps lift up his long mantle and then cover hia hand, and concealed beneath this the pinch lug of the fingeis will proceed as before, The initiated know that this is a method of bargaining by means of a code of finger speech understood by Eastern traders from southern Arabia and northern Africa to the borders of Persia. It has been adopted in the first instance for a simple reason. In the Eat, ' especially along the coast of the Bed Sea, Zanzibar, and southern Arabia, all business is transacted in the open air. And in all such transactions the bystanders, idlers, riff-raflf, and meddlesome busy bodies â-  j^^^^g jj^^^ generally contrive to have a good deal to enthusiast say, tendering their advice to both buyer ^he road bed has been graded for nearly and seller. The unwritten etiquette of the the entire distanie between the Oxus and East requires that such friendly counsel g^^^^^^ ^j, with the completion of the should not be resented. But as the mer- bridge, the work of hiying the track will chants and dealers find It an unmitigated j ^j^j^ proceed. Within the next three nuisance and a great hindrance to busmess, ^^^^^ ^^.^ expected that the trans-Caspian they have adopted a ccrtam code of finger ^^jj^^^^ ^^ ^^ completed to Samarcand L^ht in Darkness. BY PHCKBS CART, Do we think of the light and sunshine. Of the blessings left us still. When we sit and ponder darkly And blindly o'er life's ill. How should we dispel the shadows Of still and deep despair. And lessen the weight of anguish Which every hea.-t must bear I The clouds may rest on the present. And sorrow on days that are gone. But no night is so utterly cheerless That we may not look for the dliwn And there is ho human being With so wholly dark a lot. But the heart by turning the picture Hay find some sunny spot. • For, as in the days of Winter, When the snow-drifts whiten the hill. Some birds in the air will flutter And warble to cheer us still So, if we would hark to the music, Srme hope with a starry wing In the days of our darkest sorrow Will sit in the heart and sing. Things B ever Done- BT ATTAKAPAS Greater deeds than have ever been seen, Brisrhter songs than the poet has sung. Are the things that are dreamed and tried, I ween. But which have never been done. The fairest picture the artist paints Is hung on the wa 1 of his brain On his canvas rests but the shadow faint Of what he wished to attain. Abnve success hovers ever the thought, Marring sadly its bli^s Better than this was the thing I soughtâ€" Better, far better, than this. For, strive as we may, we cannot grasp The visions that lure us onâ€" They are ever held in our mental clasp. And our best is never done. But this fancy does oft my senses woo That perhaps in the world to come We shall find the things we have tried to do But which have never been aone. A Bridge Across the Ozns. A little over two weeks ago last Wednes- day the first train of cars crossed the long bridge that has been thrown over the Oxus River in Russian Central Asia. This struc- ture, which is nearly a thousand feet longer than the Brooklyn Bridge, including its approaches, spans a classic river, of which Very little was known thirty years ago, except through the* writings of the old his- torians, who described the exploits of Alex- ander and Tamerlane. The man who ten years ago had predicted that to-day iron rils would stretch over wide deserts and the upper course of the famous Oxus, which had been reached in modern times by only three or four diseuised white men, would looked upon as a visionary which they exchange when bargain signs, wnica uney excnange wnen oargam- ^^ ^^^^^ running from the Caspian Sea to mg. with their hands concealed under their ^^e capital of the Mongol conqueror. sleeves or turban cloth. Each finger and each joint of a finger represents a certain figure. So the pair can bargain by the hour â€" as they often do â€" to their heart's con- tent, and none of the nouy and gaping busvbodies around them be any the wiser for it. Progress nnder Difficnlties. Dakota Immigration Commissionerâ€" Say, my friends, you are interested in the future prosperity of Dakota, ain't you Dakota Citizen â€" In -what way " You would like to 8«^ population pour in upon us by the milliodt^ wouldn't yon Of course you would. Well sir, we have had sixteen tons of pamphlets printed, show- ing the marvellous agricultural, horticul- tural and floricultural resources of this wonderful section and calling upon farmers everywhere to sell out and come to this garden of the gods. But we need a little help to get these bewitifnlly written treat- ises before the public." " Oh Want money for postage, eh " " No, we've got that fixect But the train which is to bear them to the outer world has got stuck half a mfle from the station, and we want yon to ahoolder a shovel and This road is remarkable not only because it pushes far into inner Asia, but also because some tmique problems in railrotui construc- tion have been solved by its successful pro gross. Many engineers said a railroad oould not be medntained througb the shifting sands of the Kara-Kum desert. But Gen. Annen- koff, by covering parts of his roadway widi ' clay, by placing in his embankments layers of the branches of a desert shrub, and by cultivating along parts -of the route many I thousands of desert plants whose roots retain I the sand, has thus far maintained his road bed without. deterioration. The problem of a water supply was tolved by bringing water in pipes from motrntains that skirt two hundred miles of the route aiao by canals from the Murghab, while artesian wells are the souroe of supply between Merv and the Oxus. In a region that is deatitntc of fuel, and where the cold is at times intense, pe- troleum has been utilized to drive' the loco- motives and to heat thesixty rMlroadJstatioQS I along the way. I Riuna may indeed be iHtnd of the Bocoeai, now well assured, of her unique^ and aston- ishing experiment in railroad boOding. help dig World. it out of the mow. ^ilOnu^ He Knew What He Was Talkin«r About. The Far^Beaohing Perfume of a good name heralds the oUum that Putnam's Painless Com Extractor is a sure, certain, and painleai repiedy for coma. Fifty imitations prove It to be the beet. At druggists. Curate (vudtinff a poor cabngAn down with bronchitis)â€"" Have yon been in the habit of going to chnroh T" Poor Cabby (fsintty â€" ' Cant say I hev, nr; bat" (eagerly) "I've dmv a good many pariiee tiieie, air I" The Point of View. ,t lot rf every perwm'o time is de- tomaUng facee »t other penons. The unmitigated respect of no one man ic ever given, very long, to any other man. No man ever thinks himself wrong--not even when for poUcy's sake ho admits hun- â- elf to be in error, It is always the other fellow who reaily is mistaken. When two or more persons are ^eed, on a given point, tiiey warmly applaud each otiiert wisdom. When they disagree, they feel contempt for each other, even if tbey don't express it. Idiocy, pig-headednessor crankimn marks evesy man whose tenets diflfer from ours. The society man snufe up his nose^at the scientist, and tiie scientist looks with disgust on the society man. Each regards the employment and diver- sions of the other as a waste of time. From the social point of view, the scien- tist is a dry, musty old fogy and from the lattor's point of vitw, the society man is a bnttermilky, rattle-pated ass. Both are right, and both are wrong. This may sound paradoxical, but it is not. Everything depends on the point of view, and it runs all through life in every direc- tion. All earth is either a heaven or a fool's paradiseâ€" just as you happen to look at it. The daw likes his own voice better than that of a nightingale, and the donkey can't understand why his outlines should be less admired than those of a blooded horse. Several critics attend a play, and no two of them agree on its merits. A book is published by a famous author, and some people call itinood, and some call it bad. Women of taste differ on questions of dress and deportment. One person prefers beer to coffee, and another cheese to oranges. It is wholly a matter of where you sit, as to whether yon see most of the heads or the heelsof a ballet. Nothing is judged according to definite standards. There is no system of reasoning by which to reach just conclusion?. The giddy, fooUsh old world, plethoric enough of some things, is badly barren of others, and cMef among these is the lack of appre- ciation of ethics. Now, all things are matters of personal warp and bias â€" all points of view. If a man has corns, he thinks they are aw- ful things and if he hasn't he laughs at the fuss which others make about them. The tramp thinks that vast riches should be legislated against and the millionaire thinks that the laborer has as much as he deserves. The reformer howls against the abuse of power, until he has power to abuse; and the preacher moralfzes against yielding to temptation, until somebody tempts him. Man owes his narrowness to being more familiar with the contente of his own hide than he is with the individuality of others, and to thinking that becatise he is himself, he must, necessarily, be nearer right than those who differ from him. All men are either fools or philosophers, just as you please and all life is filled with wisdom and goodness, or evil and lunacy, just as you l»ve a mind to accept it. There is no way of getting at any of it definitely, for there are no balances to weigh it in, and no standards of measurement. There is nothing, anywhere, but the point of view. Curiosities of Oourtahip. v" A California miner having amassed quite a fortune, was returning by ship to New York, to visit old friends and to find him- self a wife. A young woman on board the ship serving in the capacity of nursery governess to the family of a merchant on board, pleased him much by her neat and modest appearance. H therefore introduc- ed himself one day, and broke the ice of his purpose with one reckless plunge " Ma- dam, my name is my parents and family reside in New Hampshire I have property amounting to $200,000, and expect to engage in business in â€" â€" r. I am a per- fectly temperate man, and I can give you good reference to testify to my general up- right character. I am unmarried and want a wife will you marry me " The lady took in the character of the suitor at once. "Thank you," she said, " I will," and on landing they were forthwith married. How the Princess Louise, of Savoy, ever recovered from her humiliation after hav- ing offered herself in marriage to Charles, Duke of Bourbon, only to receive a grave but positive refusal, few women can under- stand. Ladies, however, are permitted to assist a bashful wooer when Either he fears his fate too much Or lus desert too small. Who fears to put it to the touch Or win and lose it idl. More shrewd still waa the young lady â€" and more daring â€" who told her admirer thst she was a mind-reader, and could read what was going on in his mind at that mo- ment that he iranted to propoae toher but did not know how to do It, wmoh, of oonrse, relieved the young man from Us embarrass- ment permanentiy. A veiy bashful man having succeeded in winiung a wife, a lady relative teased him to tell her how he ever plucked up courage enoi^i to propose. " Now, tell the trath, N " said she " Did not the lady have to do tiie courting for you!" " N-no," answered the gentieman; "but I own she smoothed over the hard places for me. And this aeema to be tiie ladies' mission in oourtahip â€" ^to smooth over the hard places. One stormy night aboat fdmr numtha ago alittie girl oame into a buniW up town where tfisre waa already a boy wee or four Tears old. One bad evening tliia week the uther and mother were going ont and the boy wanted to go alou; mini take tlie baby. To thia tiie nwther objeofesd atremroiiaiy, and for a fiiuil aigimui^ die aaid " But, m^ aon, don't yon know we oan't take little aiater out snob a atCMrmy night aa thia?" " Wen, I don't care," he nnliod. It ir Am «Mi tko Vnezpeoted Bepartee. A Buaaian Udy had been invited to dine with M. de TalleyrMd at Ae time when he waa Miniater of Foidgn Affidra, but waa nnfortnnately detained an lionr beyond Iier time. The fMni a he d gneata were la tlie anlkaaad kept looking Kttharwatdhea. When abe anfrad at IsM one (rf the eom- pany aaid in QnA to liiia«i^bor "When a womaa ia aaitlier yonag not beaatifol ahe Coir HO MOM. Wataon'a oongh dropa "•^.^ j" t^! world for the tiuoat and "f*^" ^•J*^' aneqnalled. See that the lottera B. T. W, are atamped on each drop. There is nothing under the face of the sky that can be quite so stuck up as a sheet of three cent stamps when it tries to. HwB CtonoH Coaa cures in one minute. On the wedding tour. He (sentimentally) â€""Darling, do yon love me better than your firsthusband?' She-" Certainly, my dear. He's dead." Ocean Steamship PassenK.ers Via New York should take the Erie rail- way as it is not only the shortest and best line, but lands people close to the piers of the leading steamship companies. In buy- ing tisketa, ask for the Erie. Jn high featherâ€" A new bonnet at the theatre. __ iTcimrci pass. Stmptomsâ€" Moisture intense itching and stinging; most at night worse by soratcUng. If allowed to continue tumors form, which often bleed and uleer- Swathes OwnnwT stops heals ulceration, and in is equally effl- DB. SWAYNK ate, becoming very sore. the itching and bleeding, many cases removes the tomoora It is oabious in curing all Skin Diseases. a SON. Proprietors, PhUadelphia. Swaot's Oiki MBHT can be obtained ol drugg^. Sent by maU for '*°*' A. P. 386. PATENTS For Saleâ€" ninstrated descriptive Cat- alogue tree. R. Chamberlin, Toronto. WORK FOR ALIm 030 a week and expenses paid. Valuable outfit and partioalars free. P.O.VICkEKY, AaguBta.Maine. GOOD AGKNT8 WANTBD over the entire Do- minica Address, GEO. D. FBKKIS, 87 Ctaarea Street, Toronto, Allan Line Royal Mail Steamsiij^ galling during winter from Portland every Thnrsda and HiJUax every Saturday to Liverpool, and In mr. mer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, oalUnt at Londonderry to land mails and passengen fa Scotland and Ireland also from Baltimore, via Ha!' tax and St. John's, K. F., to Uverpool fortnight!' during summer months. Xhe sleameia of the Ola* gfow fines sail daring winter to and from Halilat Portland, Boston andPhlladelphia and darlngniir mer between Glasgow and Uontreal weekly OlwgC' and Boston weekly, and Glasgow and PhlladelpM fortnightly lor frei^t, passage, or other ntormatlon apply t A. Sohumacber ft Co., Baltimore S. Ounaid a Oo. Hallfaz Shea k Co., St. John's, Nfld.; Wm. Thome ton a Co., SL John, N. Allen k Co.. Ohioofit Love a Alden, New Tork; H. Bourlier, Toronte Allans, Bae(fe Co., Quebec; Wm. Brookle, PMlad' phla: H. A. Allen Portland Boston Montreal. Colonists' iTrains. THE Canadian Pacific RAILWAY Will runSittlers' Trains to all points in MANITOBA, DAKOTA, THE NORTH-WEST, British Columbia and the Pacific Coast, Leaving Toronto, N. N.-W. Station, Brock Street, at 9 p.m., TUESDAY, FEBT 28TH, and every Tuesday thereafterduring March and April A colonist Eleeper will be attached to these trains. Make early application to agent for what cars and berths you will require. S3-feet cars supplied for colonists' movables. No Customs delay or expense. No quarantine. ' No transfers. For further informa- tion see agent, or write COLONIZATION AQENT, no King Street West, Toronto. $9,999.00 GOLD TO BE @IVEN AWAY b order to Introdnoe mj Nnrserr stook throui^ OTrttiie United States and Canada, i will gtre awsv VSgOM ia gold as foUows, to the parties seadbw mo 14 Three Cent Canadian, or 31 Two Cent Amvlean; Poetase Stamps tor any one of the foUowlna oolleo- tton of plants or bnlbs, which will be sentby mad' (postpaid). In April nest, sad goarsateed to SRtTS In goodoondlUon re.I.â€"t Hardy Bases. S.â€" t ErerbleoaslncBeses. Sr-* Hardy CIlasMasBesce. ' «.â€" SHaUlas. I.-C Clladlolns. •....S Hardy Crape Tfaiea. *•â€" S Baspberries. 4 each, Uaek aad red •.â€" M Strawberry Plaats, 4 ehelee kimda. -j^J««SP«_S,tt stamps enclosed as r«inssted shore, fur pUats, will be nnmbered s« th^ oome to hand, wd the senders of the first thirteen hundred letters trill reoslTe gttu as follows 1st. -ttM tad.â€" IM Srd.â€" M M The aezt The next The next The mext 4*, Seaeh. 418, t 8M, 1 AnsrBO,Mtonssad letters hars been reeelTed, the ssntes^menezt eleren hnndrwl letters wOl re eslTe gifts ss follows .^ S!*»*»» â- â€¢.•»»•«*. M neaext IB, !• each. ffi neaext 4*, B cm*. M The mext 4TS, t each. SB The mext BM^ leach. Aft er ma thoassad lettsn hsTo been receiTed, the 55Mt e( the next one thoossad letters wiU receive lifls as fallows: .t â€" â€"i- letters haw been reoetved, the -H. -^TTftt*J»e «t etoren hundred and nine Irtters wu leesne fUls as follows I any aoaibsr eC Umss far say Is ssaLI wlU send la April a oCiril panoas who are antt- on gh t to be panotlua." WhMrssmoii ' /-ft » good deal abanmimt I night she oome hare." ;â- â-  â-  ..-;.;,,, i^ ts^ysfi^-^'ii^.â€" v.- -ir' â-  â- â- â- â- ' AeladjT and lepliea fai Ae I awemaa has iiie I hacbHiaaa aha ahrif* aiiaipTa!aad ge, '^Whan to dbie wtOi â- boa eoongh.^' ./}^f!^iS(^ ^^'^â-  'tl Nenraigi^ ' ;!^ .sto»*nj" Nervous leadache, Weakness, Diaeaaes.Rheui'ilSl*** •ni all sffectioa.'^^ WEAK NERVES Which never fails. ComaiZSl^ Coca, those wonderful sttoSSL^^ «* ily cures aU nervous disord^^ " ** RHEUMATISM PaINE's CeLEKY CohpocND T.BM.. blood. It drives out the SSc^^! causes Rheumatism, and reto^S?'?*' making organs to a healthTSl'*^ true remedy fbrEheumatiiT^ "» KIDNEY COMPLAINTS PAINE'S CeLEEY COHPOtrUD qnicUynL. the Uver and kidneys to wom^^ This curative power wmto^J^«^ nerve tonics, makes it the b«t »»JJ for all kidney complaints. ^*"' DYSPEPSIA PAINE'S CELEEY COMPOUOT rtn!ngthen,«, stomach, and quiets the nerves oftheTl tivocrgans. This is why it cnw, voiBt cases of Dyspepsia. '«â- â€¢ CONSTIPATION Paini's Celery Compotod isnotacmitt tic. It is a laxative, giving easy and ntoS action to the bowels, EegnlatityinrZw. lows its use. 'â„¢ Beoommended by professions! and h mh.. men. Send for book. ^^ FdcefLOO. SoIdbyDniggiah. WELLSi RICHARDSON CCPna Montreal, Que TORONTO CITTTINC SCHOOL-A OSUil CHANCE to acquire a thorough ImowledR iil garment cutting in all its branches. BorttteSBl to enter. Good cutters are in great demud it nl wages. Terms on application. S. Couisuwl Yonge Street ' ' TKHOKg, tLCESg, ntl CDKED, without tbeknite. S|l cure, no pay. Send Etunitl pamphlet. W. L.'SMITH,M.D.,124QueeDE.,Iongh,l GANGER, On\ n COMPOSITION gold, Antiqne Bim^l ULU) Natural Wood, and other Piiitgreiill Room Mouldings, Frames, etc. Fuitiiigi,b' gravings, Etchings, Artotypes.Arttets'Kttniil^ I Minors, etc. Wholesale and retail. TndeOil'l alogue. HATTHEWS BKOS. A €«., Tsisial GVELPH Business CoUege, Ciaelph,M The faculty has been strengthened, thepRa ises enlarged, and new appliances added. ThcBa- ness Department affords ore of the best connei e^ I tainabie, while the Shorthand Department ks accomplifihed results unequalled in the histoi;^! shorthand. Ladies admitted to all adrantages dM by the Institution. Students ener at any time, ft culars mailed free. M. MacCORMICK Principtl HE LONDON GUARANTEE AND ACCIDENT CO. (ID; OFL0!«DIHI,K Capital, £260,COf). Dominion Government Deposk £65,000. Head Office 72 King St. East, Toronto. Gentlemen of influence wanted in nnrepiaenti* districts. A. T. McCORD, Resident Secretory for the Donumon. CHINIQUY'S FIFTY YEARS In the Churh of price. 832 pages. Romeâ€" 10th Edition-cheapali y,.^. ^. K-sâ€" ACEMTS, Ladies or GeoUm to sell this Vivid, Fasctsatiso and Tragic twot i» eral terms. Addebss. A. G. WATSON, loMS WlLLAED TEACT DBPOSITOET, TOEOSTO. Brick THE MARTIN MACHINE, "ith new improvements, is away ahead of any and every Machine in America. Manufactured o^y by_ H. MARTIN C0.. 90 Maryjt., Hamiltoo, w FOR THE Brick MACHi« Ihafs taking the lead, new or second hand, appl.' AlEX. OOIfi. 61 JfelsonStMTorostt^ BErcs'B Gsscua G* DIN AND F18LJ 8WJ furl8«S. O'Jf^*? tive and priced Catalogue for spring W« nowread5sandwillbema.ledfree^a^«jj; cants, and to customers of last} tar »««- solicitation. Mark-t Gardbsbbsj^i to their advantage to sow onr mcob.^ s EEDS ^^! [cants, and to customers of 'as' I"" ^^j, tnetr aavantage to w»J»ViS$"aliI. JMO. A. BBUCK A CO BAMIITON^ TO TOWN AND VILLAGE NEWSPAPER POBUSHW' -riTE have unexceUed facilities for Oie SAtf^ EXCHANGE of Newspaper offices I r cent Satfcfacticn g^^"*^: "w j..»,i!oi,.r,«iTii« forsaleaiai"" one per vkuh. oauiti-^â€".-" »-â€" .,i. jur good establishments for sale te publisher wanting a P"*°?' _,_- Toronto, i SAUSAGE CA8I ^^ BEST IMPORTED ENGLISH S^H*J»*J American Hogs Casme_..?'j;lfSiS^^ In lots to suit purchasen. Write lor piiM*- JAS. PARKSQN Fmit NURSERIES. Bui H. B. RURD ft Also can offer a few cars specialty -PI-CM8.nM; lupply I«»"l£? ibilJ terms at «h'HAg BurUngton, Ont. J^ttO CATABBft COLD IN THE HEAD, HW Fever.^'f ^RLOTTE M. Y j;flAPTBB XX.-WOI ooM or twioe in a quart ^honertman.Ihave t r^^"'" -II. King u.-r eanae besides Ursul i»**5Srokher'-ailnient h Mr. Egremont, and Hie egent, by name fat Bedoasde, came i le ptooffl of grow pe of the bailiff, who m £o which wPpl»«i'^®., rSd showed Tiim that i 5 n»ke ft thorough mvesl **W"«t. " ^^ bans moderately che _jMelf to invCTtigate. h ^TTo^ moderation, and tl ^too public to be passe .-„ home and eat by. whi STfiulfinch did the work 1 ?tt evident to him that the oflong standing,andcarri«: !«nce of the coachman, of 'IS before M». Egcemo yi houae BtewBrd,â€" and o Indeed, it was the jl^ Egremont had let ygfoaal to connive had br •GSS3?A«einaUwa8Sui â„¢id Alice's heart leapt P husband would be wholly «»a flenius were once depw; "utwould not see it. H to sacrifice the coachmai JIM. with thelbailifiF ai If £id felt none of the pit; lor the pretty, siUy, ha -hters; but as to the 1 the poor feUow had be€ jlthia timeâ€" whatever t been in the dark ages, long idsefield knew its mistress and that was enough to forgathering with the their English prejudice. I CKD show yon facta and Ur. Bulfinch. I daresay, a year or more t â- a improtected rarcase t â€"the fellow only did af tei Xuoe held her tongue then, ia private. "Indeed, I know ;.I am afraid Gregon I found him out in his wine, and the servants' vi von wouldn't listen." "His little perquisites, mj ne, nonsense, these foreign itend to have the morals i native flunkeyâ€" genera ttion either â€" ^they are m I to that but your i does it more neatly, t better servant than the .•But " "Oh, ay I I know you don t knows ids manners to you, Egremont, with a su( her wish she could tn not "Yes, he always isâ€" is n how I see it is under pn Mr. Egremont laughed. ' lee why, you don't considc 'having a full-grown mist him 1 Look here, you iy, but the new felloe the rest of them ehall everythingâ€" Gregorio â- atiaf y you " ,TiB not the money, is a badâ€" not a goodâ€" lo, ho she wants to footman imd coachm you, my dear Edda, ras it who said, ' Vole tumyer.' The Rectory likewise had ' 'idiBmissal, and there Alice had to confes move her husband a] even lashed himsel yon how it ia, Alwyn, good with your house! that fellow." wm not aware what dei «peoc me to do with Wed the elder brother tene. Alice, on her side, Heater and then wonc lie to do ao. For war to the knfe r hia master told hi 'MB own evil conscienc on of servants, ^pressure for his ^i ft on her aa much u. JJ^»wdly deferential, h ' •â- d her in ahundrec ' to thehooaemaids t I to his maetw, yet rt cause of oomj and Miiu her undei isnd he knew very "' fenn of annoyan: â- "•â- ter that any !.*»"tobe removed Thia would hai «* etopefying Mi J Mm more ready t ,â„¢*«»oe while tl ^^the new one v ^â- "Qwawrio. ^fv*i'a was no doub J^P»n profited bi 5eS. A new me****^; B J* •ively be cured. gaaniMteed te r- have tried other ""Sf^To^i Forfuui-ia, win not be disappointed in ^VrfW»«J!"ii5 address. M.f.tXmon.nJf^^jifv** Terento. Canada. Send lOc » »»"' "Treatise on Diaeasea of Han. net ptQT, Dot my boUd up a tiade 9M©f f'l'ri'liiitiifT'if" 'f :p '^^%i:^itFi^,,/^*ii Tiffffli MUi tr.^^Mi^MrS!Sii/::.^^ii ^i-:»-, U SendJ2«2* Nervous Deb^l W beoo Tt^indi nAllaaNos^ at price. "â„¢^ /yi Jol*" TSat GBAY MEDICINE CQ.. Illteen 7«ais, debiUI orer-woi .t-^. cK-M-. l^^^^iiMi^ 1^;^^^ ^r....i-»^-^.-j.-.. -j^^

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