Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 3 Mar 1882, p. 6

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Womens Shoes‘Mx-s. Vanderb1Lt's Plans â€"Somps, &c.. arc. A London correspondent says: I suppose the aceouohement of the Countess of Rose- bery was a matter sufficiently important to be reported by cable. A son and heir! Lucky little pink rascal, lying there all un« LfOXISClOIISlll his lace-trimmed crib craving no- thing but frequent imbibings of the fluid lacteal, how little he is aware of the fact that he is lord something or other, his {ath- er’s son ; though that is small matter com- pared to the other circumstance~namely, that he is his mother’s bairn, and as such, a knight of the Red Shield, and that not a ship floats the ocean, nor a crop of grain is sent to market in all the wide, wide world, but that in some way, sooner or later, part of its profits will accrue to the money-mill of his ancestors in St. Swithin’s lane. Yet, as fine an inheritance as he derives from his pecunious mamxna, without which all the rest would , be deprived of its savor, is (or so I should fancy) a splendid physical constitution, Miss Hannah de Rothschild was anoble example of robust girlhood, and her children should be by rights of such vig- or as to form a living proof of the falsity of Dr. tichardson’s assertion that the world of civilization contains no entirely healthy baby. The residence within whose walls the young heir has entered a world which he will find all padded at the angles for him is Lansdowne house, in Berkeley square,which the earl of Rosehery has rented for a period of years from the Marquis of Lansdowne. It is one of those very large ancestral houses of which a few yet remain unharmed in Lon- don amid the mania for improvement and rent collection. Scareely a chimneyâ€"top of the house itself can be discerned by the passer as he strolls throught the famous old :quare, renowned, Since Fielding and Rich« nrdson’s day,as an aristocratic locality of the most ultra distinction. A high brick wall encompasses a most extensive garden, from which in thebudding May time there issues a tangled mingling of luscious odors which surpasses for sweetness the two corners in Old Bond street where the unceasing fierce rivalry of Atkinson and l’cisse and Lubin is carried on. And just beside the high pro- tecting wall, the prmnl,c.\olusive wall,therc is one of the prettiest little public walks imaginable, a “right of way,” obtained by the people from the peer for eonvenience’s sake, a narrow lane uhich your'umbrella, would find thelmundaries of,with its handle and its forulmlying down in the path before you. This is Lansdounepas" gcdcading to May Fair. it would be (ziliieult to find a, pleasanter spot to pass a life of leisure in, I should fancy,than Lzmsdowne house. Mean- time, the ground for the Earl of Roscbery‘s new tnwn residence is being rapidly cleared. Thom. \« ho have seen the plnns of the proâ€" jecteu lllleSth say that Loiul “(Reba-y is going to show the world how a Rothschild should live. ‘ new The architecture of tliO house will be ona parwith that (ii Smile of the noblest continental palaces, and consequent- ly far sui'passi Hp any residence in London, even those occupied by royalty. The site is a unique one and one which no doubt Lord ’iiosebery Considers himself fortunate in having: been able to, acquire. The south front will “give” upon the gayest and most , bustling part of Piccadilly extension, just opposite Sloane street, while the north front will overlook the whole of the most bounti. part of Hyde park, with the animated car- riage drive at Rotten row lying directly out. side and under the balconies. Charles Reade has for many years been so fortunate as to own a little box at this spot, and one of the, most striking enjoymnnts connected so fre- i fluently by the invitation to tea, dispensed so frequently by the kindly romancer to his American friendsjs the contemplation of the exquisite purl; View from the back windows of the ln inc. l the physician it is a. grave matter: often en- tiiling ill-health for the rest of a life-time. And as to the “graceful shape” of a wasp. waisted lady; that, too, only exists from the mozlz‘shz‘s point of view. Then as to the low- ex‘ limbs; whyan they merely to be conceal. ed from VinV by flowing skirts ‘3 decency is honored, but why‘no‘t healtjh? “ran” wool. J” " "J . ‘ ‘ . have the wsccm (h‘n'cn downwards untll displacement follows, 15 qmte a, trifle from the 7nml£st€s pomt of new, perhaps ; but to len coverings to the lower limbs are quite as desirable for the softer as for the more re. bust sex. Next, as to hats or bounets; cum. men sense, as representing physiology, has never attempted to seriously discuss a lady‘s headdress. It is scarcely possible to ob- serve the windows of a lady’s 011t~fitter’s shop without weeping ; and the only things which prevents laughter in front of a bon- net shop is the prices. A lady may sufl'er from severe facial neuralgia on exposure to cold; but if the goddess of fashion decree that the bonnet shall be worn on the back of the head, she must suffer patiently till the reaction to poke bonnets arrive ; then she will have a temporary respite from her agony, till the next change again leaves the facial area exposed. She may have sen- sitive eyes; but no shade of head-dress shall protect her from the sun’s piercing rays, un. less broadâ€"brimmed hats happen to he ([0 (a mode, If her skin is sensitive and given to blister there is a legion of cosmetics adver- tiscdwat prices which make a serious in- road on a lady’s pin-money. To beautify the skin and clear the complexion it is not essential to Wear a suitable head-dress; the mediate settles the form of hat or bonnet, nd if the cosmetic-vendor is benefitted y a v v . _ marks of the 11175 are nsxblc after death ; that is not “111]111'10115 pressure. ’ Neithcr is displacement of some of the less fixed or- ;ms “injurious pl'vssuw" I suppose? To An Infant Born with an Extra Large Silver Spoon in his Mouthâ€"Cor- sets and Bonnetsâ€"How He got Her. WOMAN GOSSIP- «g m .. “1,5 3 . 3211143918. James Dunlap, of New Haven, Conn., ap- plied for :L pesition us farm hand at Deacon Eidri e’s farm, in Lansdale, Pa., twelve you.» ago, and was put to work. Eldridge had a daughter 16 years old, who became fascinated with Dunlap, and after an av quaintance of two years he asked the dea- ron's consent for the daughter’s hand in mar- riage. The deacon objected because of Dun- lup’s penniless condition. The girl promis- ed to gain her father s consent or put an end to her unhappy existence. Dunlap left the farm, declaring that he would some day re- turn a mun of wealth and influence.He went to \\'yorninrnr territory, where he obtained a. situation as driver on a stage line,and at the end or five years he purchased a half inter- est in the business. By shrewd financier- ing and successful speculation he cleared $20,000, which, with the profit from his business, gives him the title of being one of the wealthiest residents of \Vyoming. He is also one of the heaviest stock holders in a new railroad enterprise. He returned to Lansdale one day last week,after‘ an absence of ten years, and was married to Miss Eld- ridge. The wedding was a grand afi‘uir. The bridal couple go to New Haven and thence to “'yoming. The bride has rejected many offers in the past tenycars. She is the belle of Luelmwanna valley. Miss Hortense is working a, Beautiful Piece of Embroidery. It is a motto in green and gold. It asks What is Home \Vithout a Mother ‘3 When Miss hortcnse gets it Done she will give it to her Beau, who tends a Dry Goods Counter, You cannot see Miss Hortense’s Mother. She is in the Back Yard doing the “‘00th “fishing. By and by she will he Bringing in the Coal for the Parlor Stove, because Miss Iiortensc’s Beau is Coming To-night. A turn in the tichthe filSt quarrel after nmrria‘ge. The Gainesborough ha t was first worn by Mrs. Gaines. It is as old as her first law- suit, and at a theatre is much more difficult to see through. “I I thought I was going to become gray, I know I should die!" exclaimed Miss Springle. Vthn she turned gray, she did dye, sum enough. Avoid that which you blame others for doingsays one of on 1' wisemen. \Vell,things 11m e come to upretty pass if a man can’t kiss his own wife. \Vherc one woman scans the horizon for signs of the dawn of a brighter cm, ten are scouting among their neighbors trymg to borrow salcratus. She said: “I do Wish I could read French. There’s an item in French in the funny col- umn of the paper, and 1 know there’s some.- thing Improper in it." Mrs. Langtry, having heard of Oscar Wilde’s experience in America, does not think she will come. She fears that the American people have grown tired of lil- 1. 1163. Hamilton school-girls have got so that they can walk a mile in twelve mlnutes. Each one is provided with a. gong, the same as a hook-and-ladder truck, and it is only now and then that anyone is killed. Snifi'kins was perplexed yesterday when two women, each with a baby in arms, got Commodore Vanderbilt’s widow, says a New York letter, came originally from Mo- bile, and had a great influence over the commodore. She has lived a very quiet life since the commodore’s death, spending most of her leisure in opening love letters and prosecuting the charities which he under- took. She frequently sits up with her seew retary till midnight answering the letters“ not the love-letters. The number of pro- posals she has received for her well-endowed hand since the commodore was taken from her side is estimated by those who are near- est to her to be between five hundred and two thousand. Man) of them are accom- panied by photographs which wildly and vainly endeavor to set forth the charms of the writers. The missives furnish no end of amusement to the family at No. 10 \Vash- ington place. But Mrs. Vanderbilt, though barely 36, and it prepossessing woman, de- clares that she will marry no more, and she smiles upon no suitor. Gossip~many-eyed and many-tonguedâ€"is not even busy with her name. A tar-heel from the western Carclinas is among the most recent who have sought her hand. He naively and in- nocently assured her that he had knocked together :1 little euhin of his own and if she Would only be his he “would support her as lo: ' e lived. ” Take the most recent fashion of shoes. The heel of the human being projects out- ward, or rather backward, and gives steadi- ness to “the sure and certain step of man.” But fashion has decided that the heel of the boot or shoe shall get as near the centre of the instep as possible. Instead of the weight of the body resting upon ’an arch, in the modern fine lady it rests upon pegs with the toes in front, which have to prevent the body from toppling forward. Then the heel is so high that the foot rests upon the peg and the toes; and the gait is about as elegant as if the lady were practicing walking upon stilts. In order to poise the body on these two points a bend forward is necessitated, which is regarded as the correct attitude of the “form divnie.” It is needless to say that there are few ankles which can stand this strain without yielding; and it is quite common to see young ladies walking along with their ankles twisting all ways, or per- haps with the sole of their shoe or boot es- caping from under the foot and the side of the heelin contact with the ground. \Vith such modern improvements on sandals (which allow the feet perfect freedom and play) the present Mademoiselle, when she attempts to run, is aspeetaclc at which the godsâ€"Arch, not quite that, but at which her mother might well Weep. thereby, why, there is no great objection to that. Is not- the lady of fashion one of the fat kine,on which the lean kine can subsist? gland the mdiste plays into her fellow-trader’s lands. what is Home Without a. Mother. Commodore Vanderbiu’s vWidow. He Won His Bride. Women’s Shoes. SCRAPS. London Fir M. A large mob of wild horses is descried, coming toward the riders, over a distant rise. As they draw near and see themselves headed by mounted men, they wheel sharp- ly on one side, and, with manes and tails streaming in the wind, and their flanks shin- ning with moisture, they gallop off in anoth- er direction, but only to find enemies where ever they turn. At last, in desperation they make straight for the widest gap they see in the circle. The two men between whom they hope to escape leap off their hack horses, which they quickly hobhlo and leave loose, and, mountinzgr bare-backed on the spare one, wait for the right moment for closing in on the flying and already distress- ed baguales as they make their iinal rush. If they do so too soon, of course the mob swervcs to one side, and passes behind the hunter; but, if they manage well, the two simultaneously close in on the drove, boleatloras in hand, ready to east; and at the moment the horses pass, each singles out a good looking colt, whirls the balls round his head, and, letting fly, en- tangles them round both hind-legs so effec- tually that the victim, after struggling on- ward seine fifty yards, is obliged to submit, and falls heavily over. After the first cast the hunter presses on closely to the heels of the flying mob, and, loosening his second pair from round his waist often secures another colt. Then he dismounts, and after tying the prostrate animal’s fore-hoofs close together with some of‘the many raw-hide thongs about his person or his horse, he leaves it, struggling but secure, and resumes his place in the circle as before, in case there is more game still within it. And here let me give a brief description of the boleadoras. for it is these that are used wand not the lazo, as is commonly supposed â€"â€"for catching the wild horses of the Pampa. Three double twisted thongs of raw horse- hide, each about three feet six inches long, are softened by rubbing and working them in the hands, and when in a pliant state are tied together at one end. At the other end of one is fastened a stone ball, covered with hide, and shaped so as to fit the grasp of the hand; and to the other two ends are bound wooden balls, (of the size of a small croquet 0110,) also cased in hide. lrasping firmly the stone one, the hunter whirls the others round his head, and when the right moment has arrived, he lets go, (as a boy does half his sling,) and the three balls twist the thongs around whatever they are thrown at. But to resume, After all the baguales inelosed have escaped or been caught we look after the ostl‘iches, which have, as a rule, remained hiding themselves about the middle of the circle. Any who may have singly tried to run off previously have been allowed to do so; but if a troop should have made a rush, (during the horse-hunt,) three or four of the men pursue, and general- ly bag, .0110 apiece. Many others will drop into the low grass, hoping not to be seen; but the corredores are too keen-sighted and experienced, and galloping up and down, they beat the ground like spaniels, shouting and whistling, until the birds 0 flushed, one by one, and have to run for 1 . On these expeditions any deer and guanacos (a species of llama), are not hunted ; only so when neither baguales nor ostriches have been in- closed. Persons holding policies of life insurance would do well to examine them for the pur- pose of ascertaining if any at the fine prlnt conditions prohibit them from bathing. In Cincinnati a company recently contested a. death claim on the ground that the (le- eeased came to his end while bathing, and that death was not therefore caused by bodily infirmities or disease, but resulted from voluntary exposure to unnecessary danger. The court held, fortunately for the beneficiary in the policy, that she could recover, because the proof showed that de- ceased died from cramp; but there is no cer- tainty that the other courts Will follow the ruling, especially in cases where death re- sults from bathing in a tub, and not in the sea. To persons unaccustomed to the bath, the former, like the latter, would be “a vol- untary exposure to obvious and unnecessary dangers,” and might result in death. VVherc- fore itis best to examine the policies. Mabel is Sitting at ills Piano, and she is Singinga, Song. The Song says he is \Vaitr ing for her in the Gleaming. Mabel appears to be giving herself Dead Away. He is not \Vaiting forher in the Gloaming at all. He has just drawn a Bobtail flush, and h e is \Vondcring whether he had Better Pull out 01' Stand in on n. Bluff. Mabel “’0uld Touch 3 Responsive Chard in his Bosom if she were to Sing take back the Hand which thou Gavcst. “How dare you appear: before me in such a, condition sirz” she exclaimed. “It’s {DS- thctic,” he replied. “\Vlmt «lo you mean, sir 1’” asked the wife. “You gave a little blow-0111;, the other evening, didn’t you,th:1t you said was a very consummate affair?” “I did,” she replied; “but what has that to do with your drunken orgies?” "\Vell.” said the man, “I’ve been having '1 little toot, too.” They had been engaged to be married fif- teen years and still he had not mustered up resolution enough to ask her to name the happy day. One evening he called in a. par- ticularly spoony frame of mind,and asked her to sing him something tender and touching, something that would “move” him. She sat down at the piano and sang: “Darling, I am lrowing Old. ” A snowball stopped an clopement in Lou- isville. It was thrown by a boy in the street knocking off the hat of the driver of the carriage in which the runaway couple were riding to a. railway station,and thus causing just enough delay to make them miss the train. Thus hindered they were caught and separated by the girl’s father. into a. crowded street~car, and looked as though they wanted a seat. But he was equal to the occasion. He ofl'ered to “holk” the little kids while the mothers remained standing. Said the man as he lay crushed under the fallen wall: "For heaven’s sake get me out of here?” “Are you suffering much pain ‘2” they asked. “Yes,” he replied, “but I don’t mind about that. It’s the row my wife will make about my coming home so late that worrles me.” Capturing Wild Horses. Look at Your Policies. 16': {‘0'} 0‘ OO<«OD>MI 4 . ~4§94n0~p00’â€"â€"â€"wâ€"â€" Golden Informaticn ! Awhile ago, said Mrs. Dr. A. A. Jordan, 51 Lincoln street, Worcester, Mass, one of my friends from the South spoke to me very highly of St. Jacobs Oil. I resolved to try it on my patients, and I must con~ fess that I was surprised at the results. It. has never failed to cure all that it claims to, and I prescribe it willingly and confi- dently to those of my patients who suffer from rheumatism, sprains and all bodily pains. It is certainly a wonderful remedy, and I can highly recommend it. 774» 4a°>oo>â€"-â€"'~ The pensive mule is not usually regarded as susceptible to pathetic emotions. And yet he occasionally drops a mule-teer. . H. “-40. 4.0:) copâ€"7‘ Substitute for Fresh Air and Exercise.â€"â€" Persons of sedentary habits, or who are em- ployed in factories, ctc., require something to assist nature, as confinement and want of exercise )3 sure, sooner or later, to impair the digestive powers. Then it is that nature requires a stimulant such as Briggs’ Botanic or Stomach Bitters. It creates an appetite, strengthens the whole system. It is brought within the reach of all, as it sells at 25 cents a package, and makes one-half a gallon of a. splendid mixture. equal to what is sold in bottles at $1 for three-fourths of a pint. Directions accompanying each pack- age. Simple as steeping tea or coffee. I?“ZZ1€."‘HOVV 'is it that Brigg’s Electric Oil should reach and successfully treat so many complaints ? All nervous diseases yield to its influence in a few minutes when applied externally, and as an internal remedy all are both astonished and pleased. . that all prevalent disease of civilized life, is always attended with a disorded sympathetic system and bad secretions, and no remedy is better adapted to its cure than Burdock Blood Bittm's taken according to special Eirections found on every bottle. 10 “ What every one says must be true.” And every one who has tested its merits speaks warmly in praise of Hagyard’s l’ectoml Bllflitln as a positive cure fot all throat and lung complaints, coughs and colds, sore throat. bronchitis, and incipient: consmnption. 7 THE \VAY “to minister to a, mind dis- eased,” is to take Peruvian Syrup, a pro- tected solutign of theprotoacide ofir071,\vhieli gives strength and vigor to the whole sys- tem, restores the digestive organs to the perfect health, thereby restoring the mind to its natural Vigor. IV 116 most noted men of modern times have publicly attested to the value of A) er’s Cherry l’ccwml as a cure for coughs and colds. A Popular Remedy. Hugyard’s l’ectoml Balsam is one of the most deservedly popular remedies for the cure of coughs, colds, sore throat, asthma, Whooping cough, Group, bronchitis, and all pulmonary complaints. For sale by all dealers. {J At the Centennial Exhibition, 1876, the Wheeler & \Vilson received a silver medal. The \Vanzer Sewing Machines were awarded a gold medal (the. only one given to the Sew- ing Machine Trade). The public can decide as to which is of the most value. The VVan- 261‘ C and 1“ machines are all the rage this fall, and debiwvveilly so, owing to their many improvements and general excellence. It continues 30 be the wonder of all strangers that our station presents such a crowd of cars which are standin': either ready for shipment or unloading. The rail- way depots 01 our eastern towns are dwarfs in comparison. Sales quite lively in real estate. One gentleman was olfcred a corner lot in \Vesb Lynne recently, but did not accept, and the other day the lot had been held at an ad- Vance of $650 from former price. The way we boom is a caution. Potatoes are coming into market quite freely. An Emerson Izzlflmmtionnl reporter was in one of the stores and saw a farmer sell one hundred bushels at; $1. Lowyn & Guthrie were the purchasers. The assessed valuation of l’cmbina coun- ty is $768,318, less, perhaps, than 3'; the full value of it to-iluy. Rate of taxation in our county is mills and 2-10 of a mill for in- terest on territorial bonds. Team after team is being loaded at Emer- son with household goods, preparing to move wele and settle on land, and still there is more to follow. \Yllat will it be two months from now. The Pilot Mound Signal hears that there is a. big rush of emigrants coming to Southern Manitoba next summer. Busi~ mess men chicflywill be sure to come in hun- dreds. M 1‘. Simpson of W'est Lynne was offered $500 for lots which he bought for $200, a. few weeks ago. The H. B. C0,, has sold 13 lots this week in \Vest Lynne which will close their sales for the present. Lots averaged about $200 each. Mr. Holes, real estate dealer, has of- fered $8,000 for a. piece of land one mile from Pombina, with a. View to enlarge the town. Emersm‘x is in the first stages of a regular land fever, and one of the most pronounced symptoms is an eruption of real estate offices all over the corporation. Chopping is to begin immediately in the Cypress Hills to get out thencccssary timber for bridging the South Saskatchewan for the main line of the C. P. R. Trapping out west is reported as having been Very successful this season. Mr. Crosby of “rest Lynne refused 5,750 for two lots which he bought a few days ago for $500. Over 500 lots have been sold in Bathgate. The town company have doubled thaprice of theirlots. Axlticipations are rife that the Northern Pacific will be built through ;‘Pcmbina to Huron City. Interesting Items for all Our Readers-- How Things Boom out There. Toronboca-pitalist have been inquiring about the prospects of West Lynne. NORTH-WEST NOTES. Dyspepsia. THE CANADIAN AIR GAS MACHINE. This Machine is for lighting private dwellings, mills. factories. churches. public halls, hotels. Send for circular and price list, or call and ex- aminc the machine in operation at JOSEPH PHILLI Pa“. 8010 Manufacturer, Plumber and Gas-Fitter, 179 King-st \Vest, Toronto. 0? Private and Trust Funds,to loan on Mortgage of improved Farm and Town property at Low- (‘st Rams. Apply to Really. Miller, Biggar w Blackslock. OFFICES :~Ba.n1: of Toronto. Toronto. WATER For wen boring, best in the world for quick sand, hard pan clay, etc. Never was beat: try it. Sand for circular to manufy, 63 Mary Street. Hamilton. Ont. Send for lInsm‘iplivc ('irculm‘. Price List, and Testimonials of BRICK MAUHINES, BRICK PRESSES, AND TILE MACHINES. “'e also make Veneer Machines for Cheese box stuffs, or perforated Furniture. ARTIFICIAL LIMBS vffi’izlffififr‘ififi’fiigfi Elastic,and cheap. First prize at vainum Exhibition, London. Testimonials on applica non. swsracrml {n_x3ujt90d. AGENTS WANTED, $i5 SILVER WATCH FREE! BRICK MAKERS. A Real Necessity. N0 house should be without a bottle of Hagyard’s Yellow Oil, in case of accident. There ifi no preparation offered to suffering humanity that has made so many permanent cures, or relieved so much pain and misery. It is called by some the Good Samaritan, by others the Cure-all, and by the afflicted an Angel of Mercy. 8 .mriziiitomatic closets minister to health, com- fort, and cleanliness ; send for circular. Earth Closet 00., 13 Ju 13 st *ct, 'l‘pronto. By, (PFIJDIYNQS, Ifll‘TE‘lHa‘ FRAMES, 3!! 7 1:0“ PLATES. (’IIROMIBS, «Eu. [’1' 10 Lisuo the trade on application. H. J. MAP- THE WS & BRO, 93 Yonge St, Toronto. < TALLHPN I70]! 5A I‘ll. w YOITN'I-‘u L0!!!) L Haddo. Ahmutiful bright buy, 5 years old, Stimdzs ll}; haud‘;Y weighs 17001bs., 011ml. For particulars apply m JOHN MA‘C ' FURNITURE. the elements is productive of much rhennmtigm among them, and they sntl'er considerably from pains, the result of mid, bruises, sprains, ST. .Lu‘ons 01L is it fitvorite remedy with them men, because of the splendid service it renders them. Captain Schmidt, of Tl‘oniplrinsvillo, Stilton Ireland, N. Y.. says that he has been a great, sntR-ror from rhctnnntism i‘ormany yoursi Iic land severe rhennmtie puins in nearly every portion nfhis body, and Stitl'ored :40 that at times he would be entirely unable to attend to native lmwinr-«zs. lie suid: “ I am quite well now, how< Her, and. us you son, ] mn able to work without any trouble. inttribnte my recovery entirely to M. .IM‘ons 01L. for l felt better as soon as I (tom- nn‘nv'vd to nxe thth remedy: and whenever I feel nnythi‘rrr like riieumznmn (*omingr on, I rub the plum- \. nh t‘ (ML, and it nlw: does what iu (‘lzlilnr‘tl tor iii l’inrlinv. r. .Lu‘or OILdid me so nun-h ;;'/>‘>l, l I it my lnmily to use itwhcnever tlu-yhud :m. m or ('(vldK, and it 1!le done good in t wrv m. ~ when tln-Y have tried it. 1 can M t‘ M: .l.\! m2»: 011. l\' n mighty good rhen» mnt -rvm<dy.nmlldon'tintwndtolimrithontit.” This \‘\"N‘l‘lt‘llt'(‘, is snvh as has been enjoyed not only by _\':u*l:t~n'(‘n and others who follow tho writer, but Ly pimple in (. cry walk of lite and variety ot'pnrsnit the “hole world ove Address. J. DUASI'QSO‘N. Dmvmn. Ont Send 3st. stamp for catalogue. A. T. LANE. P. 0. Box 967 JVIontreaI. Monukion. 0 t ms COMPANY $1,000,000-00. App1y to K IDE AfiV'l) (TGHHVIEIHIE MUTUAL Flllfl'i HNSITRANlll-I ()0III’ANY, 0F 0NTAIHO. Address 0. \V. DENNIS, children. Thousands yet ent sions for loss of finger, toe. eye, rupture, varicose veins or any Disease. Pension- ers entitled to INCREASE BOUNTY YET DUE THOUSANDS. PATENTS procured for inventors. Land Warrants procured. Apply for your rights at once. Send 2 STAIFI farlawa. blanks and instruc- lions. We can refer to tbnunndn or pensioners nnd clients. Address, W. T. FITZGERALD, Pension and l‘nlenl Auorncy, Lock Box 422, Washington. D. C. , ‘IU‘AVMQD v- itled. Pen- PEN SIGN S “E & 80X. W'omlsmck. Ont. J. nmANnoa’, Sacrelm'y, . Toronto. (Intm‘m .CH’I‘ING. BIOYCLES remier. Royal Canadian. Howe. STAR $17 G- E R ‘4 Queen St. E. Toronto BELTS Have been sold, and are 110111;: a good work. Try Lyne. 'USHAWAWCXBINET 00.. 97 Yonge Street, 'l‘omnto. Ont. ‘IIOIISANDS of these (furnlive Toronto, Ontario. F0}.- Soldiers. widows) pdyengs or Columbia. One ofthe most manly {2nd satisfy- mg p 1 e as« ures. as we]! ns the most ngreenbleia y a c h t i n g. The owner of th e yacht is one who gathers the chief com- fort as he s n i i s h i 51 craft for the e x citement of the race, or for the genuine euâ€" Joyment of guiding his 1) e a 11 t 1 f u 1 vessel- over the w ate 1'. Those who 11 [L V 0 th 0 care, mam n g c m 0 1'1 t and work in g o f a; yacht dwell nlniostupon the water. As a. class, th e y a r e quiet, sober, ('arehlfikil‘ t'ul men but their life of exposure to A. P.6l

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