b'i " is Gan Hardly Express Sufficient crat nude to Hood's Sarsaparllla. 'H.1, ll-mlc. \ V1. wl' Mcsr: M th" [mum trial." .l-nsl qty-k. Omar Almost a Complete Wreck HOOD’S Hood's Pills mm hvreills, wustipation. immune. biliousrtess,rnekhvadache, indigestion. In Dre, 'r way? , Bq* «u tll' Common As Well as Ever After Taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla RED CLOVER 'pero' an. my uuul', um! on row.“ Tare 57-31 .uJEFTTMS remedy Is "In; teed to cure you. Price. 50cm. unbeaten. 'autg Mann: Cocoa CURE promptiy we. there all c_licrs {all Couchn. Group Ion Throat. H_cars?ner.s, \Nhooping 'cGi'u"is Ind Asthma. Fur Consumption it " no Hvtl' [as cured thouaacdr,nnd wilt can: mu 'il (Jam time. Sold by Dragging on I guar- mxee. For a Lame Back or 2aut'. SKULOH'S BELLADONNA MAST! Me. Cw SICK HEADACHE and Neunlgi: I 20 MINUTES, m a L .m-d Tongue, Duan- nw sh, -rtt t- , tIll In the Fide, Cousttpstion, " _ d L ‘wr 1m! “train. '10 Hay Fund and frm", II m- tr Ar , year we: ro will. PRICI " - " DRUG Sronll. Bn-or an honest. can write to llt In“. & “Lego lave had harms: your a caesium man: “has. no my ottett5aerottal. A Handbook of In. f mm". Paul!- and how to ob- tat Manta-co. Hangman!“ Mal Ind mum-e boob mt. PM his: than than t On. mum and mucous: :5. â€male aerial. and an an m “a. 8ll14i1t45ttt,l;1tl'.P84 my»; 'r'ifFTR?rr'i'i2 of." Sold by Simon Snyder, Waterloo, Cured of a J3gLoN'tuhiymmttg an comm min rirar. Sarsaparilia d's MM xmrlih a trial.thl.ling at the .i*1.1iiii ' "t mu as nothing ln'ipm! mo 11m. th crA Gr, r,, I got relief after the iv. I kw: on mking it and used tive un now :1. cured man; never felt better. mully rucummuudml 1iood's Sax-53pm Iowe mv H" to it and hair» this may. mm oft-mun: when to give it a fair .lusm‘x Minn. Norwich Ave., Wood- POWDERS FOR POI! Ham aftrtr tret GURES 1- 1: " l-y duly to lot you knot , s i_.purill;t has dune for m uuhIWl \\i!‘.1 summer complair um» to do nnyihlng. I tried s',tutmul to gut. no relief. Then m nf tho grip and was left in .1. m “Pllk I could warm-1y work I worked 'mmisery. The doctor :t‘ulnunso. My ki hu-yi \u-ro mum“. l tutu] mm of .Nour ml", and on Numb; it \Lucidcd to Tororfto, Ontario. Serious Disease. Cum what is Gov, :1 as C', tV years, and for days pt a. :x $10 to straighten myself : 111m: weeks; during um HUN"! and derived 1m boge- '.t1crsaparilia advertiser! in 1 to try a. bottle. I (mun! "ishedta'tc'niv,r halt ota mm he 1;; Irma KARL}; tho first ito try another, arvl mum: Ef Crip REMEDY. - ‘Tho first time that I saw the young woman of whom I lune spoken I was carried away by her charms. Few women possess the beauty of form that is startling and overpowering; so the first gunce-that seems to a Irina as if he had suddenly met the creature he was hum to love. I experienced that sensation and that shock. ‘1 was introduced to her. and was more deeply smitten than even" in my life. She made me her slave, and it mus both terrible and delicious to sub, mit thus to the reign of a woman. It is torture and indescribable felicity at once. Her look, her smile, the little Lendrila of hair round her neck ruffled by the breeze, every line in her face, her slightest movement, captivgted my senses and ensuared and drove‘mu dis- tracted. She took complete posses- sion of me. It grieved me toUe her veil lying on a. chair or her' gloves thrown carelessly on a sofa. Her toi- lets seemed niatohless in my eyes, .and no other woman ever wore halts more becoming than here. 7 Fm; women are made to endure the crucible test of the bath. Tluiirftgure stands reveyled from ankle mi throat, As they emerge from the embrace of the briuy waters, either their shortcom- ings are nude plain to the eye or the munded contours of form and limb are enhanced by the clinging, dripping garments. 'tihe was married. Her huIband came every Saturday ami departed on Momhy. I was not in the last. con- corned about him nor jealout of his relauon to her. No living mun-6 ever seemed of less consequencb to me than this man. y soesitkd. Inirer ttit more museum, mu m. 'orrstr)ovuriaidattetesuii dchdm$gnoh 1101 ‘wrduu' m’m- \. "I have often been in love like most men, but out-r in my life I wits quite hard hit ', " met her at the seashore-iEtretat about l:1 your: ago, not lo g after the war. There is nothing uiiore de- lightful than that beach in eat'ly mor- ning at bathing hour. It is not. very textensive, is curved like th hi newline and encircled by tall, whit: cliffs, pierced with singular holes cal xl 'The Gates.' Oue of those cliffs is e ll)rlll()US and stretches its gigantic loiigtirizto the water's eilsr,e. 'l'lw other is m nd and tlat. The women swarm over |this nar- row strip, with its pebbled walks, and transform it into a brilliant wirdcn of summer toilets of within walls pf rock. The. sun shines full Upon thte coast, over psrusols of every imagin ble col, or, and over the sea. of topaz liiue. It i, a jolly picture, enchanting) to the (2Y0. Close by the water's "lge the people lounge in tltesand,watel/ing the bothers M they come tripping down in their tlannel bath when, whiph they discard with a pretty [novel ent as soon as the white fringed “Vail†play mound their feet. Thou theylrun in with mutt little steps, while, while the water sends thrills of a delicious chill through their veins‘ l so 9y ho pretty md'lo gruorf WNW. 01wâ€)!!! "uh! I my friend, have grown olll with- out noticing It. I was always guy and and jolly, vigorous and all that. For, when one looks at, himself in the glfss m'o-ry day in the year, the munges: of age are: nut apparent. They ate slow and rrgular and “Turk such gradual changes that the tnuv,ition is lint not- iceable. We, can hardly perqeiye It. To sew it plainly, one should not. look ium umirrur for six months at least, and them mh, what, a shock I , at this hour Was crowded with (people. The, soft breezes that sweep through the streets of Paris on warm summer nights fanned their cheeks, inviting cheunzm go down among the? trees; somewhere, anywhere, to drdwu of mounlic streamq, inspired poems and, chanting nightingale; j _ Outs of tfem,, Henri Simon, (aid to his campanioa with a. profound high". q feel that 1 am growing old, my friend. On such a. nighp as Mus in days gone by I was keenly aliv¢ to the pleasures of existence Twilight I have nothing but regrets. Life is short at best 5 He wm n. man shout 45 year) old, a. litt. e smut and quite bald. _ The other, pihre Carnier, lot his senior in yea.“ by any means, I, more sletuler and unto nus, replied " 'And the mmwn, old fellow-how I pity tlu-mi All thew happiness, their Imwer, [In-iv life, is in their ireauty,and that lasts but ten veurs at lyest, ‘As for myself, i grew old without suspecting, it i ‘I leughc myself still a youth when I was near 5†years ofage, Fiat! from 1utirmities of any kind, t was gpingr my Way. h nppy and eminent. But glue revelation of my dvulme came upon me in such a. simple yet startling imtmuer that I felt the- effects of the shbck six months afterward. "l'hen I 4ccepted my fate gracefully. , The two friends had ftnished their dinner. From the windows of the cafe they overlooked the boulevard,) which 'Ah,, how I ldved ur-ueiho In. GOOD-BYE. " ua, at. Mas. wtyor't Scornnm SYRUP he. been used by millions of mothers for their children when teething. If disturbed st night and broken of your rent by a nick nhild tihtt and crying with pin of Cutnng Teeth an " once end get a bottle of “we. Window’- Soothing Syrup" for children teething. It will relieve the poor little mtfremrr immedi- etely. Depend upon it, mothers, there in no minute about it. It cure- Dluhoee, regu- letu the Itonnch and bowels, cure- Wihd Colic, softens the gums and reduce- tntum. mation, And give- tone and energy to the whole 'rum. y “In. Winslow’- Soothing Syrup" for . teething in {we to ttt New PIP-9W0 ensem- -___ "_-___. w.“ .-'W""'"fee"-'"%"-"9e. -e ' T 'gtottttse totthtt told iiiiiUGiEGriairi. “a , mm' 'au.' 'lltth"tl,t;'t, Sag: Wanna?» aii,i'i, l't2',',h'iitt; i?!b'il. “‘11:; ii'i?iiril, . l, odd. Dam-inc: in: a"dhd'at'rardirr I Winn knife! nu. mu ', 8mtetiti.-abar m} ywyypi quad, tf you 'In the evening when I was alone I examined my face a long tune in the mirror and ended by recall- inng my mind the picture of myself as I had been in bygone days, with brown moustache and black hair and a. young, fresh face. But now I was old. Farewell !--Guy de Manpamnt. 'I lodked at the child and discovered in her some of the old charms of her mother, undtfinable as yet, unformed and in the bad, and life seemed to me nothing more than a. rapidly passing train. _ We arrived at Maissens LUltte. I kissed my old friend's hand and part- ed from her 'with a. few trivial phrases. I was too deeply moved to speak. q am much changed, I know, but it is only natural. I am a mother now- nothing but a mother-a good mother. Farewell to everything else that is passed. I did not think that you would recognize me or that we should ever meet again. You yourself are not as you used to be. It took me some time to decide whether I was mistaken in my surmise. Your hair has grown quite gray. Think of it--l2 years is a long timo. My old- est daughter is nearly 10 years old.' 'She, too, wadtouched, and she talt. ered ', ‘It seemed to me that I had. known her but yesterday, and to find her thus again! lt was impossible I A violent pang rung my heart. I rebelled against nature and her brutal, iniam. ous work of destriction'. I looked at her with frightened eyes. When I took her hand in mine, tears, dimmed my vision, I wept for her youth; I wept for her death. This stout, wo. man was a. stranger to me. 'It was she! This stout, common woman, the mother of these four girls'. I eyed the'litple creatures with as much astonishment as I did their mo- thvr. They had followed her; they had taken their plums in life, already half women, and she counted for noth. ing-she, who had once been such a marvel of delicate and coquettish charms I This lauded three months, when I mu culled do America, yhither I “out with a. crushed and broken heart. IN. en awa/y from her I mu her slave will. Yrars went by. I could not forget her. Her charm: were constantly be, fore my eyes, and in my heart. I cher- ished her memory with a tendernes- that bad grown calm, and I loved her as one loves a dream ofa most beautiful and enchanting thing. ‘Twelve years do Jot mean much in the life of a mm. They pass almost unnoticed. One follows upon the other, slowly yet swiftly. Each is long, yet soon at an end. Although they multiply rapidly, they leave few traces behind and vanish so completely that when one looks back upon them there is nothing left to remind us of their tlight, and age creeps on without warmng. ' She blushed a. little. ‘Mme. Julie Lefevre.' ‘I was startled out of my wits. For amoment the earth tseemed to reel around me, and a. veil was rudely torn from my eyes which made me see things with terrible heartrending clear- ness. 'It Séemcd to me that only a. few yeam sppnmted me from that delight- ful season on the beach at, Etretab One, day last spring I went to dine with friends at, Muisuns Lafitte, Just as the train was about to start aportly munron entered the coach I occupied, accompanied by four little girls. I could nut help looking curiously at, this large, rutund, motlmrly creature, whose face was like a. full moon under a. beriblmued hat. She puffed and painted from the exertion of her hur- tierl walk. The children began to bubble, and I took out my newspaper and cmnuwnced to read. As we pass ed Asuiercs my neighbor suddenly ac- costed me '. ‘I beg, your pardon, sir. Are you not, M, Unmier I' 'Yes, madame.' ‘She laughed with the contented laugh of a cheerful woman, but there was just a. tinge of sadness in her Voice. 'Do you not recognize me? 'I hesitated. It seemed to me that I had seen her before, but I dould not tell when and where. I answered '. 'Yes-tuid, no-l certainly know you, but 1 cannot recollect your name.' I An For Over Flu] You“. A few years ego a. vessel was wreck. ed off the northwest coast of Ireland. Crowds gathered on the beach to wit. ness the scene. A few brave men came fox-weed end‘ put out to the 'tthurt; After e etruggle they “mailers k through the surf end the wetc cried, ' eve on them? Are they all and? Ahoy graham, 'Yee, all but one; .if we had steybd for him,. ell would have been lost.’ In- ateetly eetelwert'fel v stepped out from the growl and tie Volun- were tt2t,,t,att,ittt Bit the ttheh', why: ' Vtohim told _ ' its ease» been hot " Cain anything else be ‘juat a good' for you to buy? Don'r you believe it. a Up to a certain point in the progress of Consumption. Dr. Pieree's Golden Medical Discovery is B positive remedy. But delay is dangerous with Consump- tion. In all the conditions that lead to it, the ‘Discovery’ is the remedy. With severe lingering Coughs or Weak Lungs, nothing acts . so promptly. Every disease that can be reached through the blood yields to this medi- cine. The b'orofulous "ections, of the lungs tlmtU called Consumption is one of them. For this, and for every other form of Scrofuls, for all blood-taints and din-demand all chronic Bronchial, Throat, and Lung "eetioms, the 'Dis- mwery' is the only remedy so certain that it can ixsgatsranteed. If it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. It cannot' be denied that the influ. ence of climate upon health is great, and it is in recognition of this fact that physicians send patients suffering with pulmonary diseases to great distances for ‘change of air.’ but when the suf. ferer happens to be too poor to act upon the advice his lot is hard indeed. But it is not necessarily hopeless. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery can be had at any medicine store, and to it thousands whose cases were considered desperate owe their lives. as' the ectuel body of the ani- mal. It is worthy of note, too, tint as the wool contains considerable sul, phur, this is also to be provided in the food. Every time the sheep is under- fed, or sutfers from any other cause, it appears in tho wool, the fibre of which shows a thin place in it, and each of these weak spots represents a fault in feeding, or other part of the manage- ment. This weakness in the fibre is ruinous to the wool, as it causes it to break in the carding or combing, and thus become too short tor the spinner, and fit only for felting. This defect is known by the woolen manufacturers and buyers as 'break,' and makes it unsaleable. Consequently, the matter of feeding, and the regulmity of it, are special points to be regarded by the shepherd. Yet it must not be supposed that the wool only suffers; the sheep must necessarily suffer, for the damage to the wool is only one of the visible signs of injury to the whole animal. Taking into account, says S. Henry in the American Agriculturist, that the wool has only one-MU, as much water in it as the fbsh, it is easilv seen that it requires tive tines as much of the elements ot nutrition for each pound weight as the ibsh, and thus, if the Mece of a Merino weighs fifteen pounds, carcass, after shearing, weighs seventy five pounds, equal quantities a food are required for the production of each. This is perhaps, Fever thought of by any feeder of the Bock, for, so far, it seems to be completely ignored by all writers: upon sheep husbandry ; and vet the import. nee of it is paramount. The common ignorance of these urgent de.. mands of the deeee tor special nutri. ments is, doubtless, the cause why the slwep suti'ers so much for the exhaus- tire, requirements of wool. A, the fleece must be supplied after the ani- mal itself, the wool suffers while the sheep swipes, at hast to some extent; and as the wool cannot exist without its necessary accompaniment of the yolk and grease, which naturally pro- tect it from injury from the rains, heat, or cold, this is to be considered as call. ing for the requisite nutriment as well The bree; of o hundred-pound sheep nuke. up ten per cent., or more, of the union-I" weight. and it consists of a greater proportion of the moat exacting elements of nutrition than the flesh of the sheep does. Flesh has 75 per cent of water in it ; wool has only 15 per cent. The flesh has inits dry matter the following elements, and wool has the quantities ret opposite to them. Thus the composition of flesh is: Cam bon, 51.83 per cent; hydrognn, 7.57; nitrogen, 15 01 ;oxygen. 21.37 ; when," 4 23. Wool : Cuban. 49.65 per cent ; hydrogen,6,83; nitrogen.†31 ;oxygen; 22 ll “whoa, 2.0;sulphur, 2.0. (Hannah- "ttttence, on "milk. “But Who I. .y Brother." rams _ mm mm. tstuat ‘blen lie-tarot doom} added, Ifypu muw‘ 'But'hehroke Every single action of our life caries in in train either a. reward or: plumb- ment,however little pre are disposed to ndinit that such id the can. Do Mfg duty, fight tau-day's temp- tation: Donot "than and dishes your-alt In? fiGratrt to things'you WM; could not under-um if "ii; ' 'r f .. .' V _ 8,(,1't7,'/,s,sn' the'powet'm chub. 1etitji,tittte _ttrth'.l.st?f MW The craft of a baby is at least on a par with its cruelty. Give way never so little to a young hopeful in long clothes, and for every inch given it will exactan,ell, 'Walk,with one for ten minutes in the middle of the night, 'just to quiet the, poor little thing,' and in a week you will be in good training to walk a thousand hours. Trot; once or twice on your knee, and the simule ing pony will thereafter be in request during the day, until at last, between the equestrian exercise by daylight and the pedestrian feats by gaslight, you will be ht for the position of high pri- vate in a marching regiment of either infantry or dragoons. As cunnitur as malicious, there is nothing so gratifying to your baby.as to travel at other peo- ple's expense, and no full grown Jeat. my Diddler ewer practiced the art more successfully. i There is but one way of escaping the inllietion and that way is never to be in It were easier to shake off iifir, Men of the Sea than one infant t t has acquired a taste for midnight exc11rsions and diurnal trots. Babies are the most persistent young jockeys that ever rode a free horse to death. J A BOON T. HoRtgEMEN.-0ne bottle of tag lish Spawn Linimcm completely removed a curb from my hmm. I take pleasure in recom- mending the re edy, as it acts with myster- ions prompbness in the removal from horses of hard. soft or calloused lumps, blood spawn, tiplinta,ururtte, awecuy. amines and stamina. George Robb. Farmer, Sold by Ed.M.Devitt, Markham, Ont One reason {vhy ani, people find it so hard to lead a Christian life is be- can†that @eva 50 little to it. The world may not understand God's rebukes, or my put on uokind con- struction upon them ; His children cm- not, for they know "God is love.'? A holy'life has a. voice; it speaks: when the tongue " silent, and is either , a constant attraction or a perpetual! reproof. E It is not necessary to belittle one man, even by implication, to present another in his jest proportions. - _ RELIEF IN SIX HoU'rts'.-iurtrrssstnR Kidney and Bladder din-eases relieved in six hours by the "NEW GREAT Sour" AMERICAN KIDNEY CURE." This new remedy is a great surprise and delight to physicians on amount of its ex- ceeding Iilr0/,t,l,",,tly'l't in relieving pain in the bladder, idneys. back and even part. of the urinary passages in male or female. lt relieves retention of water and pain gt passing italmost, immediately. It you went, quick reliefand cure this is your remedy. Sold by Ed. M, Dewitt, Druggist, - ' At any rate, whatever the defects in the Guernsey breed, these defects can every one be bred out of them, as the defects oft the" Jersey have been. It has been suggested that an admixture of Ayrshire blood would Hie benefic. ial. Even 10 years would do much in that direction, when undertaken with intelligence and zeal. Here is an ad. niirnlile field for the enterprise of some rich man who would help American farmers and dairymen and win enviable fame for himself, as ex-Tie President Morton is doing. At any rate again, whatever the defects of the Guernseys, they do not seem to be shared by the cow Purity, who was one of the premi um best five cowa ut the World's Fair and is a New York Guernsey. _ flit-Darrin“. V . ‘ it was often said during the, Colum- bhurBxpoaition thtst if halt the atten- tiou had previously been paid to the Guernsey cow; that the Jerseys have been receiving during the past 20 years in Amerca, the Guernseys would have made a grand showing u the Fnir, and the Jerseys would not have had things so much theiruywn way. Very well, then, there are more world's fairs. There are country fairs every year. If the Guernsey breeders think their cows better than the Jerseys, then let them go in and develop the red and white Channel island cow for all there is in her. A stockman and dairyman who has looked into the matter says the Guern- seys ai a breed have certain defects, showing them to be not yet fully devel- oped. Guernsey enthusiasts would not of course admit that their pets have any defects at all, bus they can at least learn what defects other people think the cows have. The stockman and dairymaid declare that Guernsey] cows lack vitality. Next they have defect- ive udders, one sided, with crooked teats or teats too small and diificult, to get the milk out of. The udder is sometimes not large enough. Finally, they do not give as much milk as they ought to, considering how large' they are. But on the other hand, Guernsey enthusiasts declare that they make ex- cellent, sizeable beeves. Perhaps that is the reason they do not give such a quantity of milk. - all for Inn-frequent and Develop-en " A WMM'S Fur Gael-hut. Baubles an They Are short Sermon. l Hum DISEASE Human IN 30 Mn: 1 r ".-- 1 All cases ot organic or sympathetic hear, an ease relieved in 30 minutes and quickly um d by Dr. Agnew'u Cure tor the heart L nu Lou '; convinces Sold by Ed. M. Devin. cases, aid what the people of Emmi; want. from the. Government in the mat- ter is not Uiraplit excuses, but fair phty.- 14t,1tli,eaurt Of the eerth’e urine 1,500,000 some ere devoted to mob-coo culture. Sir John Thompson has put his i, tot down on the proposal that the wages of civil service employee should. be open to be garnisheed for debt, "on account of the great amount of book- keeping which the change asked for would necessitate as well as for other reasons." Sir John overlooks the fact that it is not a question of book- keeping, but a. matter of right or wrong. Why should the curled dar- lings who dawdle their hours away in the civil service be exempted from tax- ation and from having their salaries seized by the folks they owe money to, any more thun Join Tompkins, the hedgeruutd ditchert Exemptions are either right in all cases or wrong in all lion. N S. Hardy has given notice I that $125,000 be set apart for the H: _ pose of paying to the miners or Produc- ( ers of iron ore a. bonus of 81 per ton of L pig metal. The proposed arrangvnwm l is to run five years, and the payments 5 are not to exceed 825,000 a year. i The woman who comes cloiost to the solution of the servant girl problmn ix the woman whom her servants know is as capable of doing their work as they are themselves. servants of any kind work best and only under direct, ion, and proper direction “quires knowledge. No sandy is mom vrul to a. girl than this. Writers and speakers have done much harm in refering to cooking' as a. homely art; on the contrary no pvarsti. cal art exists which is more graceful, A woman who tith, her home in ""ry sense of the word elicits more my: ap- plause, worthy of all the livivg, tint: the woman gifted of any other quality. This fact cannot be too strongly inr pressed upon our girlm---Edward w, Bok, in the Ladiea’ Home Journal. Many a. girl, after marriage. has wished that she knew less 1 f conic seetions and more about. cooking. The strongest leve of a husband fur a wife is not a~safeguard for the discontent which is sure to enter a home whore the wife betrays constant domestiw in, capacity. It the husband be ti P mas- ter of his business he expects Hr '/ i, to be the master of her home. Wealth does not lessen the rir-utiity of a knowledge of homewaklng und homekeeping on the part of a g C. The largest retinue of servants r. quire a head, and an intelligent cumin“ "a tire largest business requires a 1mmâ€. :ud servants whether in abome or an ceiee are quick to discover ilzcapzuity aud take advantage of it. i8t It is a popular thing in vermin “smart, sets†to scoff at the utility of housekeeping, but nothing more surely stamps the intellectual calibre of a gill than an indulgence in such ferstlser. bruined commonplace. The '.Yr: who believes she becomes fashionable uy be- ing untrue to the best instincts nt' her sex is the girl who tsometimes WhiiPS up to wonder why some women nu- nappi- ly married and she still retains her em- gle bleatustinessf There is no greater iniustice that can be inflicted upon ugirl than for a mot- her mallow a daughter to alter wo- manhood or wilehood without a Pract. ical knowledke of a household and its requirements. I care not how easy her lie-ginning mav be made for her, how Hvyyhing may be provided her by generous pur- , Prttg when she begins her ttew career, nor how many servants she may lune. at her call, a woman is cruelly handi- capped who comes to her own home‘ without an intelligent conception of its! management. ',' NEGLECTEQ 9iiipir. SOAE '7 IT BRINGS COMFORT A ON WASH DAY " oom‘ WORRY! A TRY “compete-Q leu No other smoking; tr; siep1s to have surriic ut.iyersal demand fur a mgd, sweet smoke ii); '.' _ LD Crruu." The ’now a household wor "i,iiii,'i,i,i,i package h, etvmembemftiic fa (tiie0Am _,-.:,-)'. Old Chum _ Plug. If Sh. J ohm Thompson 3.:. i mad: majority to condemn Hw T, :1 L4 mandala)“ it would lune \u'tht 'J eff'tctjust as cheeriully m; It mm ed the Ottawa Free J’rrs-z Irwje? dnce is. not encouraged In Hm 1mm ion Parliament, awn mun upiesa that should be notrprsrtl_ Tm co try does not know whmhm the we er was right or wrong, and m mu ty's decision is of no value R4 a in! cation if his wont sins mm» iv int tenests of ‘he party, Toronto f, gum. Purliauwut, with the '-prsur, the Grit portion thereof, Lava eg'to the bidding of the UOH‘I'MM‘LI M106 Of course it did. The k1,,mumms Speaker White's condurt my a been untrue, an] werv {no me The habizuul partisamhiz» l warm" ity impairs the valu- of :1, .muivml tion. _ A climax w-ortho, to Pnd tlw mm of a comic opera was surpied, Fl Sir John Thompson, se-ir-d by Adolphe Caron, invited l’arlmnruz prbnounce a paragraph in In â€It. Free Press 'es scandalous; in“... malicious libel upon the honor, can tet, and integrity of the pin-“kn Seldom does Sir John Thump that man of ahuoa: with-i lu in“?! art, bat, on Wednesday he um um and Parliament was ridiculous ii scene that was devised for (he Hm tion of Mr, Speaker. C For the cure of all Impure blood, the kw Prep-red by Dr. J. C. Ayers; Ctr, Lowell. Cures others,willcure1 -- rrmin0 mo ' Arer's skrssspnrma 1css dam Weigh two hmm‘ml and [rt "3. am in the hest of In“ "is. [l iNI mad " the past tit, y_- j‘ :g Aycr's Sursapurim .v,'sr r' ,, .5 of the Uruted Stat, s. and 5191‘} nun: In telling what gum! II tin] f, “Among the m' nee nu “yard to m ing (LI-m3. cleans“: “1251.1 HUDSON Only the Scars Hem: AYER'S Sarsaparillal loans“. A» to Mr. spunk†20 ll div-uses urj st remedy IS NT. £45 ttnuin, and I y v! the m mu of them Hun {ed the . a CLO t ike the .' name wd and 135 be 'lw'm riglnwng mil 28m mom Only Edam wnnam %t., 'oe? his farm at Mm p, died on Friday, 1: bin Germany in Isl, pd. in 1347, nrrh XL: is“ of that year n, . 0, who survives 1.- their golden Ut'l) They spent tiw m Mnu.whnrv hr “m ‘,\ Maum’herv he Sk l n A raving till be cum“.- 1 by their uprighth y gathered cnrmum id's wealth. He um ting neighbor, am] a gious pmfessiwLHu l' lose a widow, wu-n d 3nd 46 grrsndyhijh" Isle Mrs. Fred. Mum 1. Mrs. J. Kmnméun rUn Monday uf l ke into Mr,ltrn, Ayr, and sum- a ivespazors and e loss is estimat, e clerk “as qu A week 'v,'," last 1‘! lis left h'h hnnu- "I fe that he WED _u:, d eotrideralh li 'slit m and took a {Maw t inquiry there 1;» sbeiug located ir. 1'. cu he Ink not I; m. e mud Heseler f,, rho Electric nun“ “mum Smith. a f, George, drove In ming lust and pu'. shout ll 0.01m". . ival. While gum: the lwsemem nf IE footing am} fell 1 tanet of tuvlius fa: Ill. He livod‘uml lay night, but Wits died. Deanne-d \\ tr " widower wui: Kalarmed i? 1 ird time Mr ll [is lotus from in; '3ir.r).Grrltli,s., meer to “HR-â€1,, eeafield trmrtr1,.: a per day to TM in“. Sam Jones , ".."" "H _ I. J. Fisher and 'peler : M rs l', L G Jackson whom ZWilll Ju'; ' lime the 111-: :communuy In Ir. Humming. k nary surww autiful sight in l Inin gulmrml at', th the head of Ii Bend 25 “501113;! t" ‘ , “Mr bearing tio, v “I Woman Look t m _ In") to IAver “rm _ ; how. sad you will row-1 My plcture, free from i tell worth framing D My to decorate your lithe best in the um mtly out lc postang ' it you leave th- ,‘ ’0‘!“de carers. g local {upm- pan] f James C. Fox. hf Is preaentativ" M thr. . Llly papers died sudl g of the 19th of Apt tion of dispasm. I I Ice in '.,wo fruiernu? _ .0.T.M. for 51mm a â€mt Order of Foo, hieh will at cum I..- ' by. of the Waterloo 't District Gleaned 'i. m Exchanges - loco-I a --.~unln,|.u I Men o' Pillarely impmm‘ -ot this pau- is d _ P.Pyfed u Inning 2 «‘7... at which 1m "eened, they were [ " Ass in Hungary I,i.e,i must haw bud a brid1 'h. “I must no“ peel with ghmil no was airecuasl l in bis face, and Ir in great 41,200) of the family an tft old. Ti r'l1ltl1,t,S, ts', #ri, in the Banal. the mowed tl. and tidelity u; Inn-Iced no "an “I! annix on“ he of Mr. u: 5' rxsporuxi fo to to be a AND DISTRICT. ‘ “riot", “In!“ Cati r If?! t'trr “um comma 11h l I‘ Str- bottle and 3m. hon-Horny. It â€rm“ {mm " H â€M102. ‘ll in reccWn Il rs ll IN ll Il H bili,