#5 CV RED CLOVER BEES »# faree TlLL TUE YALUE IS8 aEXHUAVXTED, â€" JAMES INXXE®. M. J THE . Dominion Life Assurancé Co‘y, MHead Office, _ â€" _ Waterloo, Ont. Authorized Capital $1.000,000, THOS, MILLLAID, Mas®aoiNG Dirkctor Tuis Guiik~P COTGit CURE promptly cures where all others fail, Coughs, Croup, Sore Throat, Hoarseness, '\Nhoopiug Couzï¬ and Asthma. FPor Cocsumption it has no rival; has cured thousands, and will CURE YOU if tokenio time, Sold by Druggists on a guarâ€" ertee. For a Lome Back or Chest, use SHILOHS CELLADONNA PLASTER.2%c. â€" Have you Cztarrh‘? This remedy is guaranâ€" teed to cure you, Price, cts. Injectorfres. Cure SICK HEADACHE and Neuralgia 1n 20 miwu rss_ a o Coated Tongue, l)n{n- nes i un in the Side, Constipation, I L Liver. bad breath. To stay cured and regu ate the bowos. vERy MICE TO Take. Price 25 Cenrs ar Da&ua SroRes. Caiz tha Scars Remain AGENIX H Sold by Simon Snyder, Waterloo, CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? For a mmr answer and an honest opmkua:hm to K‘ UNN & C€O., who have bad ne.rlé y years‘ experienice in the patent business. ‘ommunicaâ€" tions strictly confidential. A Handbeek of Inâ€" formation concerning Patents and how to obâ€" tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechanâ€" leal and scientific books sent free. _ _ i tLoy‘t Deposit at Ottawa $50,000 saunbsnndoodh 6iopitind M957, uros othcers, will cure you bpoolul meuice in ine meren afge s t aint special notice in the Scientific American, and but ced to the inyeantce efhis aplcedia paeee, ingued weentt. clexantiy rustrated has bf fhs the ':-« ' 0&:1& & :enule o M ol Pn tage @% mm-m=" .-".'.1 ‘/'04151'4 of ter HILOH‘Ss/R2CATARRH KA T/ JÂ¥ 4/ POWDERS Huigh THOS. HILLIAR] ManagingijDirector FOR PURE HONEY bynt 2&4 y w "s ! T Paid up Capital $64,400 ) Barsaparilla d, no other. â€" AYVTED. _ Apply now /‘i’:ii‘y to P ccaucuIntld, P‘uL, " NOR fuptess® +ge more thiin y own case. Twenty years 515 0." the age of 38 yours, 4 led since. Only the sears remain, and the imomory of the past, to renind me of the good UJa has done me. I now 1 in LCl pare favorably with r occupation. e years in force it eren for failure to Dominion Life is a ) pay â€"like a bank ulitiumal. No reâ€" ns, remaning in HIt, KUMPF Esaq., VIC Eâ€"PRRESIDEN policyâ€"holders is in three clussesâ€" ul womenâ€"giving trua benefit of its stimonials which I ricdicines performe Livod, ctg.," writes ts Jumes Smith running certain instead ty pounds, and have heen on the irs, hiiwe noticed ised in all parts ways tike pleasâ€" id for me." REMEDY., 0., Loweil, Mass soumt plans o 3 originating in ly is uke and ; spres. an could id it was Aud any one could also see every evidence of wealth in their surroundâ€" ings. Their own carriage, with two | magnifi¢ent horses was with them for | their daily use, their costumes were of ‘ the most cestly inaterials, their jewelry wrs superb. _A lady‘s maid attended ! th.m, and they cccupied an entire suite of rooms at the ouly hotel. _ Friendsbhip led to intimacy, and Mr. |\ Randall did try to fascinate the heiress | whose simpering prettiness covered a | cold heart, and a very common place ' mind. â€" To dress well, to be a c ntre of | attraction for bowing beaux, were the He was a handsome man with a colâ€" lege education, the instinects and manâ€" ners of a geotleman, and kindly in feel ing ; but he was goodâ€"natured, trustful, and too easily influenced by whoever took the trouble to dictate to him. He found Grantley at the height of summer sexason, and his ow n attractions were readily acknowledged by the ladies who danced with him,flirted with him, strolled on the beach by moonlight with himw, and accepted his graceful at enâ€" tions with smiling pleasure. It was here that he was introduced to Miss Susan Herte and her niece and supposâ€" ed heiress, retined and graceful ; the younger one lovely in the freshness of her youth, a pretty, blonde face and sleoder figure :the elder one stately and dignified, showing in every word x culâ€" tivated intellect and strong common sense. Just on the confines of one of our large manufacturing towns there stands an iwmposing resideunce of brown stone, elevated by terraces above the road,surâ€" rounded by stately trees, and with a wide extent of garden stretching on all sides. I had been employed in panelâ€" painting one of the large bedrooms. for some weeks, and my cur«sity and inâ€" terest had been excited by the fact that the master of the house, Mr. Josept Randall, was a tall handsome iman of less than fifty years, while his wife was certainly twenty years older,and a very feeble old woman. At thirty he found himself a bankâ€" rupt, Gut of business, und without any detinite prosvects ; and while he was seriously considering suicide as a way out of his difticulties, he received an inâ€" vitation to visit an @ld friend in Giantâ€" ley, a pretty village near the sea shore. objects of her ambition,and her converâ€" sition never rose above the level of the smallest of small talk. Though he had always seemed to lack business ability, Mr. Randall was no fool, and be found hiwself evening atter evening turning from Miss Mxxwell‘s vapid talk, to the fresh, strong mind that shone through her aunt‘s conversation. Miss Harte was an accomplished musician, with a rich contraltw voice, and love of music had always amounted to a passion with Mr. Randall,so there was a strong bond of sympathy there. From early boyhood he was a ne‘erâ€" do well, _ Money ran through his fing ers like sand, and after his father, his grandfather, and bis uncle had each started him in business, only to end in failure,the family decided that he would never be good for anything. ‘Go ir for the heiress, Joe. ‘They say the old lady is worth a quarter of a milâ€" lion and Miss Maud is ber only relative. Any one can see that they are devoted to each other.‘ Yet never were any young couple more seemingly devoted than this oddâ€" ly coutrasted pair ; and I, living in the bhouse, with constent occupation there, certainly had good opportunity for witâ€" uessing any watrimonial differences, had any existed When mwy work was done, I returned to my own home, and several months later, by quite an accident, not necesâ€" sary to record here, I learned the story of Mr. Randall‘s marriage, Bob White, Mr. Randall s friend, af ter the introduction, spoke his mind with frank if vulgar freedom : The summer wore away pleasantly, and it was only when closed cottages .nd a deserted beach told of departing guests that Josegh Randall asked himâ€" self how his summer flirtation was to end. _ He was not a conceited man,yet Maude Maxwell had let him see plainâ€" ly that she bad a preference for his society and attentions. Yet he shrank from the prospect of a wife with no idea above dress and gayety, however richly she may be dowered. Loving neither in the true sense of the word, he certainly found more pleasure in the society of the older lady and then a little demon of policy whisâ€" pered to him that, after all, the money was Miss Harte‘s, and, with her social pasition and real attractions, she might marry, and so deprive Maude of her supposed inheritance. It was true that she was old enough to be his mother ; but a handsome woman and one so thorough‘!y tasteful in dress, could alâ€" ways appear younger than actual years rnrnnud, andâ€"he liked her ; he cerâ€" tainly respected and liked ber. | | _ For two or three days he hesitated. OOING AN T~TEIPESS. BY A NNA SHIELDS _‘You may notâ€"liketohear my father‘s opinion of me Joe, though he meant it for a complimentary one. He always said I should have been a man, for I had a true business head. For ten years before he died he was caralyzed and I was at the head of the business, the weaving of carpets in Wâ€"â€". He left me a competency, which was stolen from me by a dishonest trusteg,and I should have taken up some Ooccupation to gain my own living had not Maude been left an orphan and implored me to live with her. 1t was scarcely a life of depend ence, for she needed me, and her lavish gifts of clothing and jewellery I acceptâ€" ed in the place of the salary anyone else in my place must have beeu paid. I was hoosekeeper and chaperon, and we were very happy,but I never dreamâ€" ed that I was supposed to own her wealth, _ Now listen to my proposition. The facto y my father controlled is closed, but I am an old friend of the owner, who carried on the business for & short time after my father died, and found his ignorance of the details swept away all his profits. . I will introduce you to him,and th¢sale of my diamonds will give us surtficient capital for a modâ€" est start. â€" You wih be nominal master as my father was, until you conquer all the intricacies of the business, gain our old ‘customers, and can carry on the whole without my assistance. Until then let me direct and teach you, as I helped my father. When you are a rich man.‘â€"and here (Mrs. Randall‘s eyes grew dim with tender feelingâ€"‘you can buy me some more diamonds.‘ 1t was not a matter for hasty decisâ€" ion. Mr. Randall, remembering his failure, was doubtful cf his own ability, but his wife had her way, and before their wedded life was six months old Mr. Randall was engaged in his new business. Spurred on by an honest shame that a woman had a better busiâ€" ness head than his own. be did what he had nevor done before, threw his whole soul into his business. and was amazed himself to find how rapidly he learned to guide it. Eâ€"corting the lagdies to the‘r Lome, a magnificient country seat on the Hudâ€" son, Mr. Randall wouldinot have been human had he not: congratulated himâ€" seif@pon the future ownership of the wealth so Invishly represented a!1 around him. _ He bhad aaid nothing of his pos tion to Miss Maxwell, goodâ€"oaturedly willing that she should still find a home with her aunot ; but he sometimes thought he would give her a hint about arsuming so much the air as mistress of the house 5 The wedding was magnificent, the honeymoon spent in travelling upon a wedding gitt of a check from Mr. Ranâ€" dal‘s uncle, and ome mornving in cosy confidence, the subject of going home arose. Every day filled his heart with deepâ€" er love for the noble woman who was so true and faithful a helpmate to him; who, with all the knowiedge he lacked, never let one clerk or employee guess her real position. At home, in the evenâ€" ing, she showed him the result of her day‘s correspondence or bookâ€"keeping, and gave him clear instructions for the next day‘s work. | And he, learning all quickly, bad sufficient senses to let her control the entire business, until she herself, after two years of faithful work said : ‘My own house ! I have no house,J 06,‘ For suddenly the truth flashed upon her. ‘Did you think I had money ? I thought everyone knew that I was Maude‘s peosioner. _ Oh,‘ and her face grew very pale, ‘what a fool I have been! I thought you loved me.‘ ‘You were no fool in thinking that,‘ was the roply, as bher husband ‘put his arms around ber.‘ ‘I do love you ! l did think the position was reversed,and that Maude depended upon you, but never doubt my love, If it was not very ardent when I proposed to you,it grows stronger every day that we spend toâ€" gether.‘ . ‘But yet you thought me wealithy "A humilisting faete [ cannot deny ;‘ and then in 4x sudden outburst of confi dence Mr.Randall told his wife the whole truth dwelling somewhat longer on his business attempts ana perplexiâ€" ties than on the hope he had enter tained of a future life of laxurious idleâ€" spofkie ness ‘Where have you taken rooms,dear ? Mre. Randall asked, ‘Or shall we go to housekeeping P o ‘Roows " cried the bridegroom. we nos return to your own house Waterloo County Chronicle, Thursday May 24, 1894.â€"Page 2. When he hbad finished his wife j * ‘Shall o M The European nations are beginning to droop and totter beneath the ever accumulating burden of military exâ€" penditure. â€" There is hardly a country among them that is not at the present moment struggling desperately to choke the deficit which is staring it in the face. In England, Sir William Harâ€" court was five million pounds ($25,â€" 000,000) short, which must be provided for by taxation. The Indian empire is proposing to tax all imports, except cotton, 5 per cent ad valorem, to meet its deficit, besides adopting other exâ€" pedients unpopular but necessary. In France also there is a deficit of nearly $30,000,000, about half of which it is proposed to cover by a refunding of loans at a lower rate of interest, and the remaining half is to be obtained by increased taxation on incomes and spirâ€" its, with taxes on succession duties. In Italy, the new finance minister frankly admits the existence of a deâ€" ficit of about $50,000,000, to be met, no one knows how. The country canâ€" not bear increased taxation, and the chances of any minister who ventured to propose serious retrenchment and the disbanding of surplus employes would be practically worthless,. Everyâ€" where the statesmen are seeking with feverish anxiety for new sources of revenue, but everywhere the insatiable maw of armaments demanods more and ever more millions.â€"Review of Reâ€" views. The medicine mentioned is guaranâ€" teed to cure the delicate diseases peâ€" culiar to females, as "Female Weakâ€" ness," periodical pains, irregularivies, nervous prostration, spasms, chorea or St. Vitusg‘s Dance, sleeplessness,threatâ€" ened insanity. To permanently cure constipation, biliousness, indigestion or dyspepsia, use Dr. Pierce‘s Pleasant Pellets. n e ienne se iescs in ZC At last, in despair, I committed the sin of trying an. advertised medicine, Dr. Pierce‘s Favorite Prescription, and it restored me to the blessedness of sound health. I honor the physician who when he knows he can cure, has the: moral courage to advertise the fact." As years robbed the devoted wife of her strength and the noble beauty of middle life, they took nothing from the love of a husbund who knew that to her he owed all his prosperity. He cealized fully the life of indoient luxz:y he would have ied, and contrasted it with the useful one to which she had guided him. A kind master, the f»milies of his work people knew they had always a friend in the head of the vast estabâ€" lishmwent in which tne husband and the father toiled, _ Without children, both Mr. and Mrs Randall extended their charities far and wide, and when gratiâ€" tude met them Joseph Randall said : ‘The thanks are yours, dear. But for you I should be that dreadful‘ object, an aimless, indolent man of fashion, what in days gone by they called an ‘old beau.‘ "I want to give a piece of my mind to a certain class who object to adverâ€" tising, when it costs thein anythingâ€" this won‘t cost them a cent ~â€" I suffered a living death for nearly two years with headache, backache, in pain standing or walking, was being literally dragged out of existence, my misery increased by drugging. A Piece of Her Mind. A lady correspondent has this story to say : | Europe‘s Costly Armaments. Such a Country. A French academician, named Henâ€" rion, about the year 1718 affirmed that Adam was 123 feet, 9 inches tall; Eve 118 feet, 9 inches tall; Noah 27 feet, Abraham 20 feet; Moses 13 feet. At this rate of decrease it would seem that _ we are destined in coming years to beâ€" come a race of pigmies. No informaâ€" tion is vouchsafed as to how Henrion got his measurements. _ There have been large women, as well as large men. In the reign of Henry VIII., Long Meg of Westminâ€" sster, was a famous character. In the course of a journey from the country to London she had encounters with a courier, a vicar, a bailiff, a Spanish knight ind a band of thieves, coming out victorious and siniling from every "scrap." She was thus alluded to by Ben Johnson : There was a giant of Trebbigan whose favorite diet was hot children. He preferred them fried, and used to cook one every day on a flat rock outâ€" side his cave. â€" With his long arms he amused himself by picking sailors from ships passing by the Land‘s End, someâ€" times replacing them if it suited his fancy. _ According to Pliny, a mountain was once opened by an éarthquake and there was disclosed a human skeleton 46 cubits long, or about 69 feet. Durâ€" ing the Cretan war, in a great cleft of earth left by a flood, a human . carcass 42 feet long is said to have been disâ€" covered and afterwards viewed by Lucius Flaceus. TALL STORIES OF BIG MEN. It is asserted by Kircher that a skelâ€" eton was taken from a sepulchre near Rome, in the reign of Emperor: Henry 1I., that was talier than the walls of the city, and that was known to be the remains of Pallas. who was known to be slain by Turnus. According to the same author, another skeleton was found near Palermg that belonged to a man at least four (hundred feet tall. Father Jerome de Monceaux tells of a skeleton 96 feet long that was found in a well at Macedonia whose skull would contain 210 pounds of corn, and one of whose under teeth weighed 15 pounds. | n Maximilian Christian Miller, a celâ€" ebrated German giant, was nearly 8 feet tall. He died in London in 1734. _ History tells of a famous French giant named Louis who was 7 feet 6 inches tall. He had two sisters who were nearly as tall as himself and & brother who was taller. Buffon gives the following measurements which came under hés observation: The giant of Thoresby, England. 7 feet, 5 inches; a porter of the Duke of Wurâ€" temburg, 7 feet 6 inches; Cajamus, of all Ages. © ‘ Probably the biggest giant yarn ever spun was that current among the ‘ early Rabbinical writers, who affirmed that Adam was of such enormous proâ€" portions his head overtopped the atmosâ€" phere and that he could touch the Arcâ€", tic pole with one hand and the Antarcâ€" tic with the other. _ Another person of, great dimensions was Og , who, accordâ€" ing to an Eastern legend, escaped the flood by wading kneeâ€"deep beside the Ark, and one of whose bones served as a bridge across a river, It is also said of Og that "he roasted at the sun a freshly caught fish." â€" One of the most celebrated giants was Miles Darden who lived in North Carolina in 1798. He was 7 feet, 6 inches high and when fortyâ€"seven years old weighed 871 pounds. He was actâ€" ive and industrious up to the age of fiftyâ€"seven, but after that gould not even move about, being obliged to stay at home or be hauled from place to in a two horse wagon. He wore a coat which could easily be buttoned around three nien weighing 200 pounds each When Darden died in 1857 he weighed more than 1,000 pounds. His coftin was 8 feet long: Finland, a Swediï¬h peasant, each 8 feet. Some other |authenticated inâ€" stances are these: A guard of the Duke of Brunswick, 8 1â€"2 feet; Gillitof Trent in Tyrol, 8 feet 2 inches; a Swede in the Grenadier F?Ei of © Frederick William IL., of Prussia, 8 1â€"2 feet. Facts and Fiction of Big Men of Ws To mount a camel for the first time is, for a Howadji, until he gets the hang of it, a complicated and anxious process. The first risk is that the aniâ€" mal will rise while the rider is climbing into the saddle. This he will ineviâ€" tably do if the attendant has forgotten to place his foot on the camel‘s knee. The novice having settled in the sadâ€" dle, which is like a flat wooden tea tray on the top of a hump, and taken a tight grip of the ‘horns,‘ of which there is one in front and one behind, waits in suspense, wondering which end of the animal means to get up first. The action, when it does begin, is a violent seesaw in three jerks, which impel him alternately in the direction of the head and tail, until, if he is lucky, he finds himself 10 feet from the ground. The fifteenth century pilgrim, Felix Fabric so exactly expresses my sentiments about camels that J will quote his reâ€" marks. | He says ;\ â€" No woman is capable of inspiring so intense and lasting a love as one who feels that she is untovable.â€"The Cenâ€" tury. Sntmon‘s CURE is sold on a guarantee. Tt cures incipient Consumption. It is the best Cough Cure Only one centa dose; 25c., 50c., and $1.00 per bottle, Sold by Simon Snyder, Waterloo, To know some women is to know the whole sex. They seem to combine in dazzling bewilderwent the virtues and vices, the charms and counterâ€" charms, of all womankind. A married woman is always wiser than an unmarried woman; but it is often the wisdom that comes from disâ€" appointment, sorrow and discontent. Many a woman who has made a man ughappy for a time by declining his ofâ€" fer of marmage has, afterward, earned his eternal gratitude for her uiscernâ€" ment. 4 ard and liver) under his arm and carry them about as he pleased (in spight of all resistance) about the guardâ€"chamâ€" ber."" | Every woman bhas an ideal hushand before marriage, and a very real one after it. Derby Plug The Coolest And Most _ Enjoyable Smoke Ever Produced. Most women are inclined to be very lenient to any offence on the pirt of a man which he can wake them belhieve springs from their attractiveness. ‘A camel has a small head and is without horns. It has big and terrible eyes and always seems a sorrowful and troubled animal. Its eyes are like fire beacons, and big reflections shine in them; for whatever a camel looks at seems great and huge to it, wherefore it seems to view everything with wonâ€" der and alarm.. When, therefore, a man goes up to it the beast begins to tremble so that the man perceives that the beast trembles because the man coming toward it seems to it to be four times bigger than he really is. Rheumatism racks the system Hke a thumbâ€" screw. It retreats before the power of Hood‘s Sarsaparilia, which puriGes the blood, ‘Had not God so ordered it, this aniâ€" mal would not be as tame and disciâ€" plined as it is. When it screams, beâ€" ing in trouble, is opens its mouth, shakes its head, and raises up its long neck, wagging it to and fro, so that a man who is not accustomed to it is disâ€" turbed and: frightened.‘â€"The Nineâ€" teenth Century. © 3 ’ho'}:;u: n A good name is more potent than thrones ONW_H;CHâ€"_THEGOODS doms. In business a good name is vital. ‘The ARE WRAPPED. Priestley is a synonym for what is dciicate, dy 5 beautiful in Black Dreéss Goods. In England i: i, > hold word. Priestley‘s dress fabrics are worn by the well di.. , . Great Britain, while on this side, they have #:tained to gencral iavor ; should buy no other black dress goods till they have seen Priecstiey‘s, â€" + to an unequalled durability, a beactiful draping quality. | Womenoftaste y ‘ what that fmeans in the success of a costume. Lo 10 m, 44 FSLAME BACK> $%+ I Camel Riding. Men and Women when 4 THE NEURALGIA,PLEURISY, SCIATICA AND RHEUMATISM o rarsaszism | (CURED EVLRY TINE D.& L. MENTHOL PLASTER .s, Priestley‘s Dress G It not unfrequemtly happons th« good cause is injured by the ext statements are contradictory argunes of its defenders. For instance, iti sowmetimes attirmed that nothing is ier than to tell the simple and un guiged truth at all times and that.the fore iinsincerity is left without thes dow of an excuse. This is.certainlt unguarded statement, to speak of i the mildest way., _ I would be moreor rect to say that few things are m difficult. There are two scrious dific ties in the way of this apparently s ple virtue. â€" One is to discover whati exactly true and the other is to kn when, where and how to tell it I more a man cultivates his judgm and éducates his conscience the m fully he will appreciate both these d# cultiee. It is, doubtless, e»<v eno for the unthinkingg and loguâ€" us m to blurt out,in season and out uf se whatéver happens to be u; permost his mind, but when, for thiat reason, h boasts of his truthfuiness we can h« ly agree with him or even #pprove his ‘Arankness, "as long »s we sre awatt that be has neither t«ken the pains U assure himself of the truth of whit I¢ utters) and has never taken into 6 count that,«lthough the truth, it might for many reasons, have been tetter ief unsaid, No trains are now running over tht line of the Great Northwest Centm: Manitoba, owing to the =mall «mousl of freight. & Sirsâ€"I have used your Kendall‘s Spavin ( with good success for Curbs on two hore 1t i8 the best Liniment I have ever used Yours truly, Avotst Froomm Price #1 per Bottic. For Sale by all Drugzists, or address Gyntlemenâ€"1 bought a splendid bay horeq Mmpn{owflh a Mpa Â¥in. J goilim for§3), 1 Kendall‘s Spavin Curg. The Spaviu is gope and I have been offe $150 for the same b I omly had him nine Weeks, so I got $:2) fory $2 worth of Kendall‘s Spavin Cure. Yours truly, W. S. Mazop KENDALL‘S| SPAYIN C Dr.B. J. KrxpaLrr Co.) KENDALL‘S SPAVIN ¢ DERBY PLUG Dr. B. J. KEXDALL Co Here‘s a Pointer OF THE THE B MoST SUCCESSFUL REME Dr. B. J. KENDALL coMFPAM, ENOSBURGH FALLS, VT. i Smoking Tobact? FOR MAN OR BEAST, Certain in its effpcts ind never bli Read proofé below : 6,; 5 cent plug 1o cent plug 20cent plug be sure that the retaild dges not induce you !9 buy any other in orde" that he may make * larger profit. Few Things More Bifferent °_ KENDALL‘s SPAVIN CURE BLUEPOINT, L.L, N.Y., Jan. When you «y J Nt i0 ‘rl MONTREAL * SeriBy, Micu., Déc. 16, 1 ney ud underm urable ‘l Is a h~] “'qu ‘ and ask for & r blisters, poPULAR e _ Rev. pJ. Confess!0" mss it 01 Lo pg 0V C 0 0; 1 haps be celebrated in ~~! % Chi‘dl‘flfl's Aid Societ y med at OQwen Sound. nxedeat.h is announc C‘ Swart s of Creditou, , Enngelic&l Association. i TX cmmmxtnty (A0 Wsmnwch Dec d Mrs. Fry of ves bebind him & ] sisters and a lat ':""g'of the Waterl00 The R janty PDistrict Gleaned a pmm EICha'nges The Om iAS Ball, for W. Totten, boustht j :'::l ' tock opers house as it sties> Wes â€;d.!or 82‘7«) Kest dn -pï¬cisl meeting of the Toron o paslyy tery last week, cisou~~: lt Re prncipaliy in @ projcition | 29 _ «1 Arnwall 161 ® piiPy o & se un oi en L ore were (1) that the«es p $100 legacies to the m ties of the Evangelieal ich the will of the te=! be paid: but which Amed was void under 1‘ t. (‘2) The plaimifl' §ou: ofxwuwrs with the an alnotes which the ex« at they pyever collected ut.ned in B(‘l‘hl) betuot urse when judgment _® vor of the executors. en appealed and the n re Judge Ferguson in ecided against the execu? P the two items menti his is an action bro bler, of Tavistock . . John G Staeble e, and who died : uary ,; 1874, agains i and Levi wWildfor executors of the in G. Staebler, for m of the estate: Th wh were sought to ) Bank of Eon o‘d nexta JUle ent of J udge Lac nerated the execu! otes above mertic rt restored his judgn the legacies. The J e cost of appeal and w. â€" The solicitor fo! h were sought t prs were (1) that ‘100 1egacies to es of the EvaD: h the will of the e executors hen teething. . If dost=©! roken of your rest by i * nd crying with pain of C\ t once and get a bottle of eothing Syrup" for clilo vill relieve the poor little ely. Depend upon it. in mistake about it. . It cur« ates the stomach and Do\ Nic. softens the gums 11 ll«ion, and gi\'cs tone a whole system. . ‘‘Mrs. \\ Byrup" for children teeth the taste and is the presc! gs, Wrxsrow s ed by millions of is v There is a new terro: It goes forth like : whow it may run down It is wore to be drea ear of Juggernaut, beca! sround the square w iile l!ning the corner. Et is more terrible t. With banners ; yea; tham © E.ï¬ with baby buggic _ It isâ€"what need to =~> on a bicycle. & Pedistrians have so: etion against the »=: - hen he goes on a ramp\= vupt into the gutt at him. They can =<:~! #ence and burl hard } u:+ lige at him. They su\ =.< and stick a coal t ean lug ageund s\ > mï¬mm, the World s. Wixstpow‘s So The Girl on the Bicycle Mok est and best femaie ph\ the United Ntates. _ is a bottle. â€" Nold _ Ruebler \> wWOMAN‘S NEW TYRANN! Harding and to the by 14 AND DISTRICT. A NE A ppeal< has asmes and knock ): mud then. They ©~ guos at balf cock * h on the wing, if qu: @r. But the woms: Other thing altogeth: #s long since recoz it is at the mercy of / bmm, especia.. y :‘ Or triple file, and mo Patry an umbrella. ! p aud she is devaâ€"t .With face set as 2z wwith eves as unsec‘!.2 h‘i.‘c('innnv"l "f Faith ce hl«'w;ul\ @ver Fifty O Englunll Iv. and Deceased of PFla ‘with pedals as releutlv=> as th elamp her tolu, ~be sWOOF #treet, and wher s!.< doe $ bunt their Loles, U woosts, and men and chil Lâ€* second stories. if se Bbe in reach â€"Louisyil are ~mli llmnll"’"l" i to Melpless sti ! nunibe se fan mott or . U The j 2| and q'n is constantly who uses this incompar trying mny other prepara T pvidences that AY of exceptiona! mer W A V M 1| The One amet O To phi Ves k M |» H on 0 as lhl {h is W