Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 24 Mar 1882, p. 6

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The Charge or the Heavy Brigadeâ€"Bala- klava. October 25th. 1354. ' The eharze of the gallant Three Hundredâ€"the Heavy Briwaue! _ Down the 1111i? down the 11111 thousands of Russians, Thousands of horsemen drew to the valleyâ€" and stayed. For Scarlett and. Scarlett/s Three Hundred were riding by When the points of the Russian lances broke in on the sky ; And he called, “ Left wheel into line I" and they wheeled and obeyed. Then he looked at the host that had halted, he knew not why And he turned half round, and he bade his trumpeter sound “To the charge!" and he rode on ahead as he waved his blade To the gallant [‘hree Hundred, whose glory, will never die. “ Fellow, and 11g the hill !” Up the hill, up the ill followed the Heavy Bri- F1 ” "slight, ' Like drops 01" blood in a dark gray sea ; And we turned to each other, muttering all dis- ‘ maycd: “Lost are the gallant Three Hundred, the Heavy Brigade !" But they rode, like victors and lords. 'l‘hrou *li the forests of lunccs and sword In the can Oil/he Russian hordes J L._.. . u. my .w .- v. V They rude or t \ stood at buy ; Struck with ths swordâ€"hand and slew ; Down with the bridle-hand drew The foofrom the saddle, and threw Underfoot there in the (my; Raged like a. storm, or stood like a reel: in the wave of stormy day; Q. Till suddenly shock upon shock, Staggered the nmss from without ; For our men glrlloped up with a cheer and it shout, ' And the itussiaus surged nml wavered and reeled, Up the hit]. up the hill, up the hill, out of the field, Over the brow and away. glory to nm-h and tn all, and the charge that the) mzulc'. . : Ilun-«lred, the “.0qu Glory to J.“ the l'iil' Glory_»tur , , Bi Jamie! ‘ The three hundred of the Heavy Brigade who made Liiis mmuus chm-go. were the 50015 Greys and the act-mid squadron of tho, inniskii- hugs, (110 1‘0] Limiur 01' Line Heavy Brigade sub- b'cqucntly \i' 'ling up to their support. The three were J‘Iiiiui,»b‘czu‘ietL's aid-(le-camp, who had been riding by his Sid u. and the ti‘mnpetcr, and Shezng, the orderly. who had been close behind him. [mum to New York Independent. Tales of Adventures that Brought to Mind Others Equally Remarkable. \Vhile a. number of skippers were waiting in the Barge oliiee at the Vl$a.ttery recently, the converaation turned toward adventures and accidents that full to the lot of seafaring men in general. “It’s been my experience,” a red-Jueed man said, “that it is the small things in life that do the finest damage. Some few years i had aseeond mate that; had sail- ed with me when we were both boys and off and on ever since. He might have been a master years ago, but he would drink. \Vhat that man went through was a. can- tion. He was cast away ltalfa dozen times, and twiee he had to eat hunmu flesh to save himself. Once he fell from the mizzen roy- al yard when the ship was lying to in a gale of wind, hut we picked him up and lost two hands in doing it. In fact, he seemed to bear a charmed life if any one ever did‘, but he was finally killed by afish about six in- ches long. X011 may laugh, but come aboard my vessel tonight and 1’11 show up the log. W'e were bound for Bermuda with a load of coal for the Hovernment. \Ve were bowling along one afternoon with a ten-knot breeze, and {LS it was smooth we had the ma. Ii hatch open to cool the ship. My mate stood by the eombings of the huteh when all at once ten or tuteen flying fish came abort-rd ; not these soft kind with long wings, but what they call gnrnards, with heads as hard as a. rock. To 111le“) a long story short, one of 111cm struck him on the forchcad such a blow that I heard it at the wheel. He staggered a, minute, throw up his arms, and fell back- ward into the. hole and broke his neck.” “That certainly is a curious case,” a. Swede said, “and I can add one to it. In the spring of 1880 I arrived in Boston from Liverpool. We came to down by Fort \V'ar- ren, and after everything had been made snug, the men shipped and went in swim~ ming. I stoodon the quarter-deck watch- ing them, and noticed that the water was full of jellyfish, so I sang out to them to look out for them, because they sting some- times. Soon themen commencedto badger or e another about jumping, and finally, the Ci)( k went aloft and out on the foreyard, and off he jumped, coming down like a shot. “’12 waited a second 01' so, expecting to see him, but he didn't appear, and we becoming al- armed, I went aloft so that I could look down on the spot. About ten yards under the surface I saw him kicking and thrash- ing about as if he was drowning and entan- gled in something. I sang out to the sec- ond mate to lowur away the boat, and with a long boat hook he soon hooked on to the man. The crew dragged hirh up, and with him a jellyfish that was twice as big as the big umbrella. we seen on the stages here. In the middle of the fish, tangled up in amass .u. n. __ s rcamcrs was the man. \Ve- had him 0 ) out; on short notice,_you may be sure, and he was a. bad sight. Everywhere the stream- ers had touched 111111 was a red mark. He W'hcn our own g TENNYSON‘B NEW POEM. SOME SEA STORIES. [904‘OPM1 good rod coats sank from came to after a while, and said that the ani- mal must have been swimming along. seven or eight feet below the surface when he struck It in jumping down. It measured nearly nine feet across, and the streamers must have been more than 200 feet long." “That reminds me of an experience I had when a youngster, the Captain of a. Spanish brig said, “before I went to sea. I was a diver, not a wrecker, but a pearl diver, ahd unm, uuv u. "vanvn, Vuv w I. w- “H -_, ,..,,, a hard business it was. We worked off the Mexican and Panama coasts, principally on the Pacific side. Sometimes we worked al- , one, but generally on shares, and sometimes on regular pa . \Ve went to the grounds in small sai ing vessels, and took to the small boats and covered as much ground as ossible. Each man was provided with a asket, a weight, and a knife. For sharks? Yes, but it’s a poor defense, because it is almost impossible to swing your arm with any force under water. The best weapon is a short spear. When you reach the ground you strip, catch your feet in a big sinker, take the basket that has a rep a for hoisting drop over, and soon find yourself at the bot- tom. Then your business is to knock as many oysters off as you can and pile them into the basket before you lose your rwind. It’s a. terrible strain, but I could stand it in those days six minutes, and I have known men that could stay down ten; but it’s sure death in the long run. If the ground is Well stocked, you can get twenty or more shells, but it’s all luck. When the basket is full, it is handed up and after you come up for your wind, down you go again, the sinker having been hauled up by a small cord for the purpose. It was on one of these trips that I ran foul of the animal that gave me a lasting fright. You’ll smile when I say that it was only a starfish, but that’s all it really was. I made my first trip that day all right, but on striking the bottom on the sec- ond trip I saw a big shadow over me, and something moved along like a huge bird. It was onlya devil fish, one of the big sting rays that grow about twenty feet Wide in that country, but it gave me the shakes, nevertheless. When I went down for the third time the water was nearly sixty feet ’deep over a coral bottom. I went down with a rush, and landing on the edge of a. big bunch of coral, swung off to reach the bottom, something seemed to spring up all around me, and I was in the arms of some kind of a monster that coiled about me, waved its arms over my head, and twisted about my body, arms and legs. I tried to scream, forgetting that I was in the Water, and lost my wind. It was just as ifa plant had sprouted under me and thrown its vines and tendrils about me. There were thousands of them, coiling and writhing, and I thought-LI had landed in a nest of sea snakes. I gave the signal as soon as I could and made a break upward, part of the crea- ture clinging to me, while the rest, I could see, was dropping to pieces. They hauled me into the boat when I reached the sur- face, and pulled the main part of the animal from me. It was oval, about three feet across, and the five arms seemed to divide into thousands of others. Of course there Wasn’t any rele danger, but the fright it gave me lasted for months. The starfish is common enough and known as the basket- fish, and it generally grows two or three feet across. I probably landed on top of that one) which at that time was the largest I had ever seen. I afterward saw.the body of one that was washed ashore on the Isthmus that must have had a spread of thirty-five feet. Their power of grasping is considerable, but touch them in a. certain way and they throw off their armsâ€"in a. regular showerâ€"and are soon reduced to an oval body.” “T11th yarn ziliouttlic flying fish,” another skipper said, “reminds me of an accident that happened to my brother. He was 11 Cornwall miner in his early days, but get- ting tired of it, he eame‘over to this coun- try and settled in Bloomington, 111., years ago. Among his goods were two of the old lamps or glims that he rigged on the head in the coal mine. He used to wear this' thing when he went to milk his cows, and to do anything at night when he wanted to use both hands. One evening he Went out Witha. party coon hunting, and, as usual, wore the ghm. They were crossing a bit of a. clearing when up started a covey of quail. At once the light went out, and my brother gavea yell. The rest picked him up, and nearly killed themselves laughing. The light had attracted the birds, and they had rushed at it, one striking my brother on the month. Another hit the glass and landâ€" ed in the lamp, while two or three more struck Jim on the stomach. He came out with a black eye, but I reckon he never heard the lust of being laid out by a. quail.” _.__4uw <4flbe>ooDnâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€">â€"« A Pompclian Woma . 011 J an, 24th the skeleton of a. woman with a child vms discovered in Pompeii in a narrow street about twelve feet from the level of the ancient pavement. It Is well- known that the catastrophe of 79 A. D. commenced with a. thick shower of small pumice stones, by which the streets of Pom- peii were covered up'to the roofs of the houses. Stones were succeeded by ashes, which be- came solid owing to the successive showers of boiling water ; and these ashes now form the top layer of the material which cover the ruins of Pompeii. Most of the unhappy beings who remained in the houses after the eruption first reached the town made their escape through the windows, but the great- er part of these fugitives could have taken but a. few steps, and must have been quick- ly suffocated by the poisonous fumes. With one arm the woman whose skeleton has now been found was clasping the legs of the child, whose body shows contraction in the arms and legs and a general emaciation, which leads as to suppose that. the child must have been very ill. It was a little boy about 10 years of age. Doubtless the wo- man Was the mother of the child. Some jewels found on the female skeleton indicate a person of condition ; two bracelets of gold encircleditlle arm which held the boy, and ~ 77 r .1 v on the hand were two gold rings, the one set with an emerald on which is engraved a. horn of plenty, and the other with an amethyst bearing a. head of Mercury. _v_4fln4‘o>yo4Pâ€"â€"â€" Tm: offer of $5,000 to the inventor of a “ humane cattle-car” has brought out 700 models, none of which come up to the mark, howeycr. What seems to he wanted is a car carpeted with \Vilton, furnished with mir- rors, and roomy enough so that all the old cows can have lower berths. , NEWS IN A NUTSHELL. Five Minutes Select Beadingâ€"Summary 01 Foreign, Domestic and War Itemsâ€" Conolae, Pithy and Poipted. A number of Ottawa. capitalists are form- inga syndicate to operate in North-west stocks. A young;’ man named Henry Thomas was burned beyond recovery by lighting a. fire with coal oil. A mineral company has been formed at \‘Vinnipeg to develop the resources of Lake of the Woods. Illicit whiskey sellers along the line of the C. 1’. 1%. R. in British Columbia. are being arrested. ' A fire occurred in a house on the prairie near Winnipeg during a severe blizzard. line of the inmates were frozen to death. By anitro-gfycerinc explosion in the GP. railway works in British Columbia,on ‘Ved- nesday, one man Was killed and another in- jured probably fatally. A suit was entered in Montreal by some parties who are as yet unknown,in the name of the Attorney-General, against the Mont- real Telegraph Company. The recent incipient fire in the Custom House at. Montreal is alleged to have been the work of an incendiary. An investiga- tion will be instituted by the Govern- ment. The police have arrested Thomas Buckley at Quebec, aged only seventeen apost oflice messenger accused of having stolen and opened certain letters containing money. Mr. \V. \Veir, the wellvknown Montreal banker, secured $20,000 subscribed capital to start the Montreal Meat Market Com- pany, with which to supply meat to hotels, ships, etc. There is a great deal of excitement in Montana Territory because a. sheriff and as- sistants have been captured by Canadian Indiana. A large detachment of United States troops has gone to the scene. Miss Sophia. Allan, a young lady, has 011- tered an action against her father, a. clergy- man at St. Vincent de Paul, for arrears on an annuity of $10 per month which defend- ant had failed to pay for some time pdst. A terrible explosion of nitro-glycerine oc- curred on the Yale»Sa.vona. Railroad. Hugh Craig went into a, tunnel where explosives were stored to get a fuse. Suddenly a tre- mendous explosion shook the ground for miles. Craig was blown to pieces. Thomas Williams, standing 150 feet away, was fa.- tally injured. John Dawson and Jos. Du- gan, Canadians, were slightly hurt. The damage to the works is considerable. UNITED STATES. The anti-free pass bill was defeated in Iowa Legislature by (35 to 31. ' The story of a bloody fig11t_between a sheriff's posse and Jessie James, in Kansas, is pronounced untrue. ‘ Grief-stricken at the loss of his wife three months ago, Isaac Richardson, aged 89, cut his throat yesterday, at Pine- Grove, Michi- The bill to prohibit Chinese immigration has passed the United States Senate. An amendment was made to the bill prohibit- ing: the naturalizatlon of Chinese. A despatch from thtle Rock, Ark. re- ports terrible destitution in Dasha county, Ark, in consequence of the floods. Over three thousand people are utterly destitute, and absolutelv starving. Heart-tending accounts or sutfering comes from the inundated districts along the Mis- sissippi valley. Thousands of people are on the verge of starvation, many subsisting on the decomposing carcascs of drowned cattle. Td add to the trouble, it has been raining incessantly for the last two days, and the rivms are again rising rapidly. The Tunisian cavalry pursuing the natives who murdered nino Europeans have kllled several of the band. The Austrians have captured Ubli, which was undefended. The insurgents have been driven back to Matjagreda. A party of Russian Jews, who are in pos- session of considerable capital, are emigrat- ing to l’zmlestine, where they intend to en- gage in farmina. A force of Boers who attacked a station in charge of Chief Montsivas have been twice repulsed with heavy loss, leaving their com- mander upon the field. Gen. Skobelcfi‘has been received by Gen. Ignaticfl“, who, while feigning to chide him, laughed heartin at the former’s Paris speech, apparently regarding it as a good joke. The death sentence of the woman Jaki- moff having made a, badimpression in Russia, her name was stricken from the list of con- demned and replaced by that of a. lieuten- ant. The situation in eastern Europe is excit- ing the gravest appi‘ehensi011s,aml a. general impression Seems to prevail that war be- tween Austria. and Russia. cannot long be postponed. On the London Stock Exchange there is a fall in nearly all European securities, the decline bcing attributedko a belief that Rus- sia. has refused to render to Germany a satisfactory explanation of'Gen. Skobelefs now celebrated speech. In replying to a toast to his health at the Savage Club recently, the Prince of \Vales said : “I am well aware that your club con- sists of gentlemen connected with literature, which art, with journalism, and with the drama :‘ml I can easily understand how you must enjoy these convivial meetings, after the long and arduous duties of your respect- ive callinqs. Gentlemen, I am given to un- derstand that your qualifications are that you must belong to literature or art, and also that you must be good fellows. I be- lieve that I can hardly aspire to the first qualification in order to be a. competent member; but, if you will allow me, 1 will be the second.” A Princely Good Fellow. DOMESTIC. GENERAL. A recent British Parliamentary report gives a comparative statement of the reve- nues of several European States, from which it appears that Austria (not including Hun- gary) has direct taxes of £7,762,553 ; indi- rect ones of £21,406,978, and miscellaneous ones of £4,726,447, or a total tax’ of £33,- 895,979 (about $67,429,500) for apopula- tion of 22,132,684 souls, whlch is more than $7 for each man, woman, or child. Hun- garians are somewhat better off, the total taxes being £19,965,263 (about $99,826,000) and the population 15,608,723â€"say $6.50 1 per person. But the Austrians and Hun- garians are taxed much less heavily th'an their neighbors in Prussia, Where the total is £56,42l,875, and the population 27,251,- 067â€"showing an average of about $10 per person. The French are still worse off. The totals for them are £107,303,975 of taxes and 36,905,788 of population, or about $15 of tax per head. This the people of Belgium, a. neutral country, free from war and Nihilism, nearly equals, their showing being, taxes $314,911,502, and population 5,476,939., Better 00" than any of these people are the Russiansâ€"or apparently so, one should say, for the burden of a tax list lies not much in the amount of it as in the inability to pay it. The Russians pay £60,- 362,731 in taxes, several millions more, that is, than the Austria-Hungary people, or the Germans and Poles of Prussia, but they outnumber their neighbors by tens of mil-i lions-‘the l’russians, by 45,000,000, the Austria-Hungary races by 34,000,000. For these $300,000,000 of Russian taxes there are 72,692,000 people among whom to divide them. Thus every European Russian pays a tax of $4. while every Frenchman pays some $15, and yet Russia is internally the most disturbed great country in Europe, and France the most peaceful. -â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"-‘n40hMDâ€"â€"-â€"â€"â€" Art and 011. The Norfolk (Va.) Virginian of Jan. 16, 1881, refers to the remarkable cure effected by St. Jacobs Oil in the case of Prof. Crom- well,â€"â€"known the country over for his mag- nificent Art Illustrationsâ€"who had suffered excruciating torments from Rheumatism, until he tried the Oil, whose effects were magical. ~The person recently arrested at Moscow is the editor of the famous journal Lenct, which has been préacliing the distribution of land to the peasantry. He is not a. 'l‘er- rorist but a simple revolutionis‘c. He has (long been sought by the police, and is now in prison in St. Petersburg. Nine Europeans, journeying from Tunis to Gafsa, have been murdered. The \Villson Line steamer “Apollo ” has been sunk off Ushzmt in a collision ; six per- sons drowned. TheCzarhas expressed a desire to avail himself of the approaching birthday of the Emperor William to make a. public manifes- tation of the continuance of friendly rela~ tions between the two empires. The new cardinals to be created will in- clude the Archbishops of Seville and Algiers and the Patriarch of Venice. Electric (not Eclcetric) Oilâ€"The two words have very different signifieations, as will be seen by reference to \Vebster. The Eclectrie oil has no claim to Electric properties only by the picture on the wrap- per. which looks like beg ring the question. The popularity of Briggs’ ileetric Oil is such as to induce unprincipled persons to appro- priate all the law will allow to them to do, The proprietors of the original Electric Oil have no claim to the words “Eelcctrie” or “Thomas,” but to the words “ Briggs’ Elec- tric” they do lay claim, by right, as they have made them of value to themselves. ri‘he sales of Electric Oil are increasing daily. Have You Tried It ?â€"If so you can testify to its marvellous powers of healing and re- commend it to your friends. \Ve refer to Briggs’ Magic Relief, the grand specific for all summer complaintsvdiarrhoea ,eholem morbus, dysentery, cramps, colic, sickness of the stomach and bowel complaints. Get Out of Doorsâ€"The close confinement of all factory work gives the operatives pallid faces, poor appetite, languid miser. able feelings, poor biood, inactive liver, kid- ney and urinary troubles, and all the phy- sicians and medicine in the world cannot help them unless they get out of doors or use Briggs’ Botanic Bitters. People have no more right to become dyspeptic, and remain gloomy and miserable, than they have to take poison and commit suicide. If the stomach becomes weak and fails to perform functions, Burdock Blood Bitters will speedily remedy the trouble. 6 Keep the Feet Dry. This is the season of sloppy weather so productive of colds, and lung troubles ; neg- lected cold or damp feet is a great source of these difficulties. Cure your cough with Hagyard’s l’ectoral Balsam. Pleasant to take and always reliable. I Forty Years Experience have tested the Virtues of Dr. ll’islar’s 13cmch 0] Wild Cherry, and it is now generally acknowledg- ed to be the best remedy extant for pulman- my and lung diseases ; embracing the whole range from a Slight cold to a settled consum- ption. Were it not for its merits, it would long since have “ died, and made no sign.” No article ever attained such unbounded popularity in so short a time .as Burdock Blood Bitters, and that too durng the ex- istence of countless numbers of widely adver- tised hitters and. blood purifiers. It is evid- ent that this medicine begins its work at once, and leaves no desirable eil'ect unattain- The Cost or European Governments. once, e'd. \V'hcn you feel a, cough or bronchial affect ion creeping on the lungs, take Aycr’s Cherry Pectoral, and cure it before it; be- comes incurable. Deserving of Praise. Too muclycannot be expressed in favor. of that unsurpassed remedy for coughs, colds, asthma, croup, sore throat, and all luvvg complaints. If you suffer from neg- lected colds, tr Hagyard’s Pcutoral Balsam. The cost is trifling, only 25 cents. 5 Eternal vigilance is oft en the price of an umbrella. FOREIGN NOTES. :w4-Owom‘ rw<0>N< _ To Gonnumptlven. "Golden Medical Discovery " is a, con- centrated, potent alterative. or blood»cleans- ing remedy, that wins golden opinions from all who use it for any humor, from the comp mon pimple, blotch, or eruption, to the formidable scrofulous swelling, or ulcer. In- ternal fever, soreness and ulceration, yield to its benign influences. Consumption,whioh is buta. scrofulous affection of the lungs, may, in its early stages, be cured by a free use of this God-given remedy. See article on consumption and its treatment in Part III of the VVorld’s Dispensary Dime Series of pamphlets, costs two stampS, post-paid. Address VVonLn's DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. Bufl‘alo, N. Y. A Lady Wants to Know the latest Parisian style of dress and bonnet: a, new way to arrange the hair. Millions are expended for artificial appliances which only make conspicuous the fact that emacia- tion, nervous debility, and female weakness exist. Dr. Pieree’s “Favorite Prescription" is sold under a positive guarantee. If used as directed, art can be dispensed with. It will overcome those diseases peculiar to females. By druggists. “ WHAT is that man yelling at '3” ifiquired Tommy of his younger brother. “ At the top of his voic‘e," replied the little one. EVEN the beautiful diamonds is mide lapidaries to be frequently impure. It is only diamonds of strictly temperance principles that it is safe to bet your money on. \Vorkingmcn will economize by employâ€" ing Dr. l’ierce’s Medicines. His ” Pleasant Purgative Pellets ” and “Golden Medical Discovery” cleansa the blood and system, thus preventing fevers and other serious dis- eases, and curing all scrofulous and other lmmors. Sold by druggists. “llinc illae lachrymae. â€"â€"Master Tommy (returning from the funeral)â€"“ Why did Uncle Jonas cry so for, Aunt? He cried more than anybody?” Aunt (grlmly) : “ Of course ! Most of the property is left to him, my dear.” - \Vill be found invaluable for all purposes of afamily liniment. Immediate relief will follow its use in all cases of pain in the stomach. bowels or side; rheumatism, calla colds, sprains and bruises. For inter and external use. It has no equal in the world for what it is recommended. For sale by all dealers at; 25c. per bottle. 4 ’l‘hat nature cares for and entertains he: , own has become an established fact to all . observers. Who does not love the sound of ‘5‘ the brightly seintillating waves leaping:r from the phosphorescent seams thoybrenk against the rocks in lhestnnnaei . ll until Nature herself, weary of the < Harmon, turns the Hum-ling! uni towards the oppposite shore, leavin‘r stranded some hadly- rutilatea snail,whieh wanders solemnly on, Bohemian fash- ionâ€"with all its worldly store upon its back. ()11 the 2‘ same beach may be found our crusta- cean edible â€"â€" the - /,’ Crabâ€"whom", chief .339. apology for exist- ... ing at all seems to to be its ability to furnish a delectable meal to fortunate bipeds. The eral) being covered with a hard, im- enetrable shell, it is not easy to molest or make rim afraid: therefore he wages war in his wate world uneeasinizly when once attacked. Althoug tiny, he cannot )e said to be devoid of understand- ing, having ten legs to assist his locomotion ; this, however , avails lnm little, for, when conquered. he never turns his back to his cnemy,starting into a bold run but, lilfemany politicians during election time, slips oil“ sideways. There comes a. time in the life of this pugnaeious fellow when the years bring him more bone and muscle than he can dispose of with comfort, and he finds himâ€" selfin a very tight place: his shoes pinch him and he begins to realize the practicability of ap- plying to Dame Nature for more room or a house In proportion to his increasing size. Nature slowly responds to the call; but in her own good time provides a. new home, so that the enter- prising little creature does not wander about mmelcss, but is provided for suitably, as was the old sailor, who dropped his rheumatism and (-rabbedness when he applied the Great German Remedy, ST. JAcons 011.. This last, however, inav sound rather fishy to the skeptical reader, and to such we would reply in language too plain to he misunderstoodâ€"in words illustrating fact: that even the waves of time cannot wash away or sealy epithets atl‘eot. S'r..li\<‘or.s 01L toâ€"day has rendered the lives and homes of myriads 0f sulferers ln'isrhler than ever the eleeirit- light can whith peoplepm se toadinir éalongtliewa)‘. St' more happily s 'ed than the old sailor was“ invalid, who wrote thus Concerning his case: the brlghlly leaping: from 14,011,115 thoybr in [he smmm herself, \yuxu turns the $01 the 0pm» stranded .‘ snailnvhb B/ OULDINGS. I'IC’I‘IJBE FHA“ 5'71, MIB‘ _ R0“ PLATES, mum,“ 05, I‘ .. Price List to the trade on application. II. J. lVIA’l"1‘HE\VS &. BRO. 93 '0me F Toronto. SHEEP iotdvgnt-Ww, _, . ##WH “VIALLIUN F0“. H I â€" YOUNG LORD x 1111mm, 2L beautllul bright bay, 5 years old, stands 16;» hds, waighs 1700 lbs., sound. Partic- ulars upp’lyfoi. 13! ' Ml §('l}.lN, Monckton, Ont. FL mus #31111 Afip s‘uv'ns'fii, _ for Sale. (zood water power: in_ South Norwich. Apply to ADAM bl’EhCJflR,Spring- ARTIFICIAL LIMB 1111:1119 lUlfilJ JJLMD Tum bumble, Light, Elastic, and cheap. First prize at Provincia Exhibition, London. Testimonials on applica- tion. Satisfaction) guaranteed. Address J DOAN &, SON Drayton Ont. FUR?§ITURE. East half of lot 9 : in the 3 cons of Albian Township, 100 acres situated 1g a. mile from Macville on the ’1‘.-G. B. Railway. The soil isa. rich clay loam, well fenced. There is a. frame barn. stable, shed, &c., and a good dwelling- house, yonng‘orchurd bearing, and flowing well at the house. The place will be sold and possess~ ion (with whcatplnwing Sum) given new if re- quired. WM. HULL, Mam-ville, 1’. O. Ont. 7‘7numnw mum FOR SALEâ€"The North arcgctting overheated in hot rooms or crowd- ed assemblies, sitting in u. draught, or cool- ing out rapidly after exercise, muflling up warm and changing to lighter wrappings, cold or damp feet. No matter what is the cause Hagyard’s l’cctoml Balsam is the cure for all throat and lung diseases that induce consumption. 3 A CRABBED CBEATUBE. ” CROOKITD HAERTEL.” what‘s Saved is Gained. Hammrd‘s Yellow 0&1 The Causes of Colds Marks manufactured by M. H Young & 00., 13 Wellingtomst- East. Toronto, aggnfs \\'V{1nr§cdf_ OF PREPARED}; )‘A 03 IIAWTC‘ZAmm Jr (30., 97 Yongc Street Toronto. Ont. A. P. 64

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