Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 12 May 1882, p. 2

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“ \Vhat ails that maid 2" said Spilkins. As he met a. passing fair, And saw her eyes, ’neaLh “wave” and "crimp, \Vhich o‘cr her forehead dangled limp, Give forth a stony Stare. “ Methinks,” said Wilkins, scm'nfnliy. As he tesscd his head in air, " She has no brains to cudgel, And so she bangs her hair." “She formerly showed the name 1‘ lying Sprite on her sham moldin’," said Capt. Trumbull Cram, “but I had that gouged out and planed off, and Judas Iscariot in gllt set thar instid.” "‘ ’Strornary craft," replied the captain, ashe absorbed another inch and a half of nigger-head. “I’m neither a profane man or an irreverent}; but sink my jig if 1 don’t believe the sperm: of Judas possessed that schooner. Hey, Ammi‘l" The young man addressed as Ammi was seated upon a mackerel barrel. He (lelib- crately removed from his lips a black briar- wood, and shook his headwith great gravi- tiy. "The eup’n,” said Ammi, “is neither :1 profane 01' an ii‘reverend. \Vhat he says he mostly knows, but when he sinks his jig he’s auers to be depended on.” ‘ u .- . ,r my.“ _ - , Fortified wiiah this neighborly estimate of character, Capt. Cram proceeded: “Youlurf at the idec of a schooner’s soul? Perhaps you hcv sailed ’em forty-odd year up and down this here coast, an’ ’quainted yourself with their disposmons aii’ habits of mind? Hey, Ammi‘t” "The cap'n.” explained the gentleman on the. mackerel ling, "lcm coasted an’ hex fish- ul for forty-51x year. He’s lumbered and he‘s iced. \thn the cap’n sees fit for to talk about schooners he understands the subjeck.” “My friend," said the captain, “2L schoon- ur buss. soul like a. human being, but con- :adcmbly broader of beam, whether for goml or ' evil. I ain’t a-goin’ to deny that I prayed lur the Judas in Tuesday ’11 Thurs- day m’cnin' multin’, “rock 21ftcr week an’ mumlx :xf'curnnmth. I ain’t zl-goin’ to deny Elm-t. l iutcx Lutl luxumm l‘lympton in the ‘z'autlc for her rcdcinptiun. lb was no use, n‘V irlum! : cn‘n the dragon’s powerful p'ti- 1k r " l \(ntitrml to inquire. inwlmtmunncr this had nvmifcstml its depravity. Thu ‘l'y' \xi'cll tln‘cu masts. and a (lemon 0;" tl'mu); nui‘i‘dtn‘o \‘.'hl\:i1 I mzziiwi was 1110 smi'y m it demo)! of ti'muhvi'y \ii'ch thi‘cu masts. and a jihhnum. 'i'hu ii‘lyifig Sprite was the firstthi'cv-nms- m i:\'(>i‘ huiin at, Ncwnggeu, and the lust. 1‘. \Whoul; Jchcir heads over the experi- n‘v it. "Noguod 4:)» uoaue of null wui‘lmcx',’ the}; said. "it’s Cantra‘ry f0 natur. Two masts is masts enough.” The Flying Sprite began its career of base improhity at the very moment of its birth. Instva of launch- ing (luccntiy into the element for which it was (105 J led, the, tim quash-r SCilOOllul‘ dumpedthrough the we. ' into the mud and stuck there ibrihz‘cc 1»; is. causing great expense to (1110 owners, 01' whom Capt}. Trumbui‘i Cram “225; one to the cxtcnt of an undivided third. The oracles of Newnggcn were continued in their foruhodings. “Two masts is musis enough to sail the sea,“ thev said ; “the third is the devil‘s hitchin’ 1305i." ‘ n. - ~n -. r 7 . . . V - 0n mlic lll'st Voyage 0t Llie Flyingr bprite, Capt. Cram started her for Philadelphia, loaded with ice belonging to himself and Lawyer Swanton : cargo uninsured. Ice 2' ‘worthifli a ton in l’hilu. lelphia ; this particular we had cost Capt. C 'am and Law- ei‘ fiu‘auton 85 cents 1). ton shipped, inelud- in: sawdust. They were happy over the pruspeet. The Flying Sprite cleared the port in beautiful shape, and then suddenly and silently went to the bottom in Fiddler’s Beech, in eleven feet of salt vater. It re- quired only six days to float her and pump her out, but owing to a, certain incompatibil- lity between ice and salt water, the salvage nsisted exclusively of sawdust. On her next trip the schooner carried a deck load of lumber from the St. Croix river. It was in some sense a consecrated cargo, for the lumber was intended for anew Baptist meeting-house in southern New Jer- sey. If the prayerful hopes of the naviga- tors, comhmed with the prayerful expecta- tions of the consignees, had availed, this voyage, at least, would have been success- fully made. But aboutsixty miles southeast of Nantucket the Flying Sprite encounter- ed a mild September gale. She ought to have weathered it with perfect case, but she behaved so abominably that the church timber was scattered over the surface of the Atlantic ocean from about latitude 40 de. grees 15 seconds to about latitude 43 degrees 50 seconds. A month or two later she con- trived to go on her beam ends under a gen- tle land breeze, dumping a lot of expensive- ly-earved granite from the Fox Island quar- ries into a deep holcin Long Island sound. On the very next trip she turned deliberate- ly out of her course in order to smash into the starboard bow of a Norwegian bark‘ and was subsequently libelled for heavy dam- ages. u t was after afew experiences of this sort that Capt. Cram erased the old name from the schooner’s stern and from her quarter, and substituted that of Judas Iscal'iot. He could discover no designation that express- ed so well his contemptuous opinion of her moral qualities. She seemed animate with the spirit of purposeless malice,of malignant perfidy. She V'le a. floating tub of cussed- ncss. A board ofnautical experts sat upon the Judas Iscariot, but could find nothing the matter with 1101' physically. The lines of her hull were all right, she was properly plunked and coiled and calked, her spurs were of good Oregon pine, she was rigged taut and trustworthy, and her canvas had been cut and stitched by a God~fearing sail Dainty maidcn, dark, yet fair. Gay Queen Mal), with regal air, If, perchance, I've been me free, Sending my devoir to thee, Let my passion be my plea. “ That was an cxtraordinur ' name ” said , May 1 say. yet not be hold, I prefer black hair to gold, I prefer black eyes to blue. Why? Forsooth I thoughtyou knc w 1 Both of these belong to you. THE JUDAS ISGAR|0T. Why she Bangs her Hair. Her Last Cruise. [oo<¢.v>ooyi" lud<®>> 00‘ Mabel. maker. According to all theory, she ought l to have been perfectly responsible as to her keel. In practice, she was {rightfully ‘ cranky. Sailing the Judas lscariot was like drivinga. horse with more vices than hairs in his tail. She always did the unex- pectcd thing, except when bad behavior was expected of her on general principles. If the idea was to luff, she would invariably fall off; if to jibe, she would conic round dead in the wind, and hang there like Mo- hammed’s coffin. Sending a. man to haul the jib-sheet to Windward was sending a man on a forlorn hope; the jib habitually picked up the venture some navigator, and, after shu- king him viciously in the air for a second or two, tossed him overboard. A boom nev- er crossed the deck without breaking some- hody’s head. Start on whatever course she might, the schooner was certain to run before long into one of three things, namely some other vessel, a fog-bank, or the bot- tom. From the (lay on which she was launched, her scent fol" a good, sticky mud bottom was uncrring. In the clearest weath- er fog followed and enveloped her as misfor- tune follows wickedness. Hcr presence on the bunks was enouqhto drive every codfish to the coast of Ireland. The mackerel and porgies were :11 ways where the Judas Iseari- 0t was not. It was impossible to circumvent the sehooncr’s fixed purpose to ruin every- body who chartered her. If chartered to carry a deck load, she spoiled it : if loaded between decks, shc dived and spoiled the cargo. She was like one of the trick mules which, if they can not otherwise dislodge the rider, get down and roll over and over. . In short, the Judas Iscariot was known from Marblehead to the Bay of Chalcur as ‘ the consummate schooncrotion of malevol- 1 once, turpitude and treachery. After conimanding'tlm Judas Iscmiol; for five or six years, Capt. Cram looked full twenty years older. it was in vain that he had attempted to sell her at a sacrifice. No man on the coast of Maine, Massachusetts, 01‘ the British provinces would have taken the schooner as :L gift. The belief in her do maniac possession was as firm as it was uni- \‘crsal. Nearly at the end of a season, when the wretched craft had been even more unprofit- able than usual, a conference of the owners was held in the Congregational Vestry one evening after the monthly missionary meet- ing. No outsider knows exactly what hap- pened, but it is rumored that in the two hours during which these capitalists were closeted certain arithmetical computations were eli'eeted which led to significant results and to a singular decision. On the forenoon of the next Friday there was a general suspension of business at NC- waggen. The Judas Iscariot, with her deck scoured and her spars scraped till they shone in the sun like yellow amber, lay at the wharf by Capt. Cmni’s fish-house. Since Monday the captain and his three boys and Andrew Jackson’s son Tobias, from Macker- el Cove, had been busy loading the schooner deep. This time her cargo was an extraor- dinary one. it consisted of nearly aquarter of a mile of stone wall from the boundaries of the captain’s shore pasture. “I calklet,” remarked the commander of the Judas Isea- riot, as he saw the last bolder disappearing down the main hatch, “thar’s nigh two hun- dud’n fifty ton of stone fence aboard thet schoon’r.” ' Ire Was wasted over this unneces- t of ballast. The owners of the Judas Isc iot stood up well under the con- solidated" 1' of the village; they returned {vitticism lior wittieism, and kept their so. cret. “El you must know, I’ll tell ye,” said the captain. “I, hear tlmr’s a stone-wall famine over Maehius way. I’m gein’ to take mine over’n peddle it out by the yard.” On this line sunshiny Friday morning, while the luekless schooner lay on one side of the wharf, looking as bright and trim and pros- perous as if she were the best-paying mari- time investment in the world, the tug Pug of Portland lay under the other side, with steam up. Shehad come down the night before in response to a. telegram from the owners of the Judas Iseariot. A good land breeze was blowing, with the pro- mise of freshenng as the (lay grew old- or. Uonjee ' sary amo At haltpnst seven o’cloca the schooner put off from the landing, carrying not only the captain’s pasture wall, but also a large num- ber of his neighbors and friends, includlng someo the solidcst citizens of Newaggen. Curiosity was stronger than fear. “You know what the critter air," the captain had said, in reply to numerous applications for pass- age. “Ef you’ve a. mind to risk her antics come along, an’ welcome.” Capt. Cram put on a white shirt and a holiday suit for the occasion. As he stood at the wheel shout- ing directions to his boys and Andrew Jack- son’s son Tobias at the halyards, his guests gathered around him we fair representation of the respectability, the business enter- prise, and the piety of Newaggcn harbor. Never had the Judas lseariot carried such a load. She seemed suddenly struck with a. sense of decency and responsibility, for she came around into the Wind without bulking, dived her nose playfully into the brine, and skipped oil" on the short hitch to clear Tum- blerisland. all in the properest fashion. The Pl steamed after her. The crowd on the wharf and the boys in the small boats cheered this unexpectedly orthodox behavior, and they now saw for the first time that Capt. Cram had painted on the side of the vessel in conspicuous white letters, each three or four feet long, the fol- lowing legend: Hour after hour the schooner bounded alone; before the northwest wind, holding to her courso as straight as an arrow. The weather continued tine. Every time the captain threw the log he looked more per- plexed. Eight, nine, nine and almlf knots! He shook his head as he whispered to Dea- con Plympton: “She’s meditatin’ mischief 0’ some natur 0’ other.” But the Judas led the Pug a. wonderful chase, and by half-past 2 in the afternoon, before the demijohn which Andrew J ackson’s son Tobias had smuggled on board was three quarters emp- ty, and before Lawyer Swanton had more than three-quarters finished his celebrated story about Gm“. Purington’s cork leg, the schooner and the tug were between fifty and sixty miles from land. Sfiddcnly Capt. Cram gave a grunt of in- telligence He pointed ahead, where a. blue line just above the horizon marked a. distant THIS I ‘1” HOONER JUDAS X' ‘AIHO' mm A\\'II)E BERT]! ! ! IK.*~(JI fog bunk. “She smelt 11-. an she run for it,” he remarked sententiously. “Time for busi- 9) mass. - Then ensued a singular ceremony. First Capt. Clam brought the schooner to, and transferred all his passengers to the tug. The wind had shifted to the southeast, and the fog was rapidly approaching. The sails of the Judas Iscariot flapped as she lay head. to the Wind; her bows rose and fell gently under the influence of the long swell. The 1’ng bobbed up and down half a hawscr‘s length away. Having put his guests and crew aboard the tug, Capt. Cram proceeded to put every- thing ship-shape on the decks of the schoon- er. He neatly coiled a loose end of the rope that had been left in a. snarl. He even pick- ed up and threw overboard the stopper of Andrew J ackson’s son Tobias’ demijohn. His face wore an expression of unusual solemni- ty. The people on the tug watched his movements eagerly, but silently. Next he tied one end of a short rope to the Wheel, and attached the other end loosely by means of a running bow-line to a eleat upon the rail. Then he was seen to take up an axe, and to disappear down the companionway. Those on the tug distinctly heard several crashing lows. In a moment- the captain reappeared on the deck, walked deliberate- ly to the wheel, brought the schooner round so that her sails filled, pulled the running howlme taut, and fastened the rope with several half inches around the clout, thus lashing the helm, jumped into a dory, and soulled over to the tug. Left entirely to herself, th'; schooner 1'oll~ Cd once or twice, tossed :1 few buckcllsful of water over her dancing bows, and started othow 11rd the South Atlanfiic. But Capt. Trumbull Cram, standing in the bow of the tugboat, raised his hand to command silence and pronounced the following farewell Spcch being sentence, (loath warrant, and funeral oration, all in one: “l am’t advanciu’ no theory to ’couut for her cussedness. You all know the Judas. Mebe there was too much fore an’ all to her. Mehbe the iuiekerty of a. vessel’s in the fore an’ off. and the vartue in the squar’ riggin’. Mebbe two masts was masts enough. Let that go; bygone; is bygones. Yonder she goes, earryin’ all sail on top, two hun- dred ’n odd ton 0’ stone fence in her holt, au’ 3. hole goodtwo feet acrost stove in her belly. The way of the transgressoris hard. Don’tyou see he: settlin’ ‘3 It should be a les- son, my friends, for us to profit by ; there’s an eml to the long sufferin’est mercy and un- lessâ€"-â€"â€" Oh, yer makin’ straight for the fog, are ye? “'ell, its your last fog bank. The bottom of the sea ’5 the first port you’ll fetch, you critter, you! Git, and he (lflwd to ye.” This, the only occasion on which Capt. Cram was ever known to say such a. word, was afterward considered by a committee of discipline of the Congregational church at Ncwaggcn; and the committee, after ponde‘ ring all the circumstances under which the word was uttered, voted unanimously to take no action. Meanwhile the fog had shut in around the tug, and the Judas Iscariot was lost to View. The tug was put about and headed for home. Thedamp wind chilled every- body through and through. Little was said. The contents of the (lemijolm had long been exhaustedymtoim'la distance to the south was hea~ ' firyals the hoammlrisblf in of n ' Yéyedmert g"I 110115296173? feiler’s well underwrit,”said the captain "grimly, “for the Judas’ll never go down aforc she‘s searched him out’n sunk him." “And was the abandoned schooner ever heard of P” I asked, when my in‘ formant. had reached this point in the narâ€" mtivc. The captain took me by the arm and led me out of the grocery store down to the rocks. Across the mouth of the small cove backing his house, blocking the entrance to his wharf and fish-house, was stretched a skeleton wreck. “Tharshe lays,” he said, pointing to the blackened ribs: “Thar’s the Judas. Did yer suppose sheid sunk in deep water, where she could do no more damage? N o, sir, not if alltho rocks on the coast of Maine was piled onto her, and her full bottom knocked clean out. She come home to roost. She come sixty mile in the teeth of the wind. When the tug got back next mornin’ thar lay the Judas lseariot across my cove, with her jibboom stuck through my kitchen Win- dor. I say sehooners has souls.” â€"7#-â€"‘u»«o»«-râ€"â€"â€"~~â€" A Real Old-Fashioned Love Story. Forty-eight years ago John Saunders, one of the wealthiest cattle lungs of Montana, who was then a poor youth, with nothing to recommend him but a spotless reputation and a brave heart, became enamored of a Kentucky belle, whose father was a rich man. His tenderness was reciprocated, but the parentof the young lady refused his con-' sent to the marriage, and was inexorable. Young Saunders was too honorable to press his suit in a family where his presence was unwelcomed. He sought an interview with the girl’s parent, who for the twenty~third and last time told him to abandon all hope of marriage as far as his daughter was con- cerned, as the difference in their social posi- tions was an insurmountable barrier. ,“How much are you worth ‘2" asked the young lover. “ Transfer my property into 1), mil- lion dollars eash,” was the haughty reply. “ Very well,” answered young Saunders ; “ to-morrow morning I leave for the \Vest to carve out a. fortune, and when I can size up to your million dollars I will return and claim my bride, for I know she will be true.” The young man kept his promise after a long and sorrowful interview wit-11 his ina- morata, and with a small outfit, struck out bravely for the Western Territories. Since that time forty-eightyears have elapsed,dur- ing which, with varying success, he has dip- ped into numerous enterprises, from the British line to Sonara. He came to Mont- ana. in early days, and embarked in the cat- tle business with a. firm of Helena, with such success that the firm now owns nearly 20,000 head on the Teton. About a month ago Saunders figured up his assets, conclud- eu he was worth a million, and left for Ken- tucky. He found the love of hisyoung (lays waiting for him, confident and hopeful of his final arrival. The two were married with as little ceremony as possible. They arrived in Butte the other evening, and after a. short visit, Will proceed to their home in the Teton valley. where the groom is greatly ro- speeted.-!2‘1dle Inter-Mountain. A Dangerous Practice. “A recent painful case of death caused by :t hypodermic injection of morphia,” says the London Lancri, “directs attention afresh to the dangers of resorting to this most perilous mode of administering drugs designed to relieve pain. The public should be warned against the przwtiee _of employ- ing remedies hypodermatieally. So formid- able a ‘remedy ’ should on no account be used except under medical advice,and when deemed necessary it ought to be given by practitioners. “'0 have repeatedly urged the profession to discountenance the re- course to injections under the skin, which is becoming general. It is a practice of ex- treme hazard, and we are of opinion that surgical instrument makers should refuse to sell the requisite apparatus to lay persons, and that medical men should forbid their use.” How to Get Rid of an Unwelcome Visitor. “ Rheumatism ” says Mr. A. MrcFaul pro- prietor of the City Hotel, Kingston, “ used to hold its own pretty well, but ‘ the days of that here are o’er.’ St. Jacobs Oil, the Great German Remedy has completely con- quered the rheumatism, and no man need suffer from it longer. I had it badly until A CERTAIN Rmncnr FOR Conxs.â€"This is the universal testimony and expressed by everyone who has nst PI‘TNAM's ConN Ex- TRM‘TOR. Thousands in Canada have used it with gratifying results, and if you will take the trouble to ask any druggist he will give you the names of many persons of your accquaintance who have been radically cured of the worstkind of eorns. Sold everywhere. Safe, sure, painless, and segetable in com- position. Try it. It never fails. Burns and Scams. Are promptly cured as well as all flesh wounds, sprains, bruises, eallcus lumps, soreness, pain, inflammation and all painful diseases;l)y the great Rheumatic Remedy, Hagyard’s Yellow Oil. For external and internal use. l’rice 25c. (‘15). The Secret of Beauty. No cosmetic inthe world can impart beam firy‘to mecvthat is disfigured by unsightly blotches arising from impure food. Burdock Blood Bitters is the grand purifying medi~ cine for all humors of the blood. It makes good blood and imparts a. bloom of health to the most sallow complexion. :1 shox't‘htime ago; but I used Jacobs 011 and was cured, and so can any one be cured m :1 mmilnr manner." r-â€"-~mn +94.@.> oohâ€"u Lil‘s Well. Jean Baptiste Dimte a French roynlist, owning large estates in Lorraine, was, six years ago, accused of murdering his cousin. He was tried, and on circumstantial eviâ€" dence, condemned, and his estates confiscm ted. \Vhile awaitingr execution he escaped from prison, and by the aid of friends was get to the coast, and in a small ship escaped to New Orleans. Coming to San Antonio, he obtained employment a farm hand near the second mission. He fell in love with a. pretty German girl; the neighbor of an adjoining farmer, the late Honore Gre- net, who had becmne interestul in him,lent the young couple $500 to buy a place, and thev married. Last week he received in- formation that another man had confessed to the murder, and his name was cleared of the crime, and his estates restored. H»<¢.»>Mbâ€"â€"â€"wâ€"â€"~ For the Eye.â€"â€"~\Ve know of no medicine that has become so popular in so short a. time as the Golden Eye Salve, for inflammation, granulation of the lids, or dimness of sight. AVcr’s Pills contain no croton oil, calomel or mineral. They are compounded of pure vegetable extracts, which have positive virl tues and always cure, Whore cums are pos- sible. 8J1). A Cure For Headache \Vhat physician has ever discovered a cure for headache? Echo answers none. But Burdock Blood Bitters by their purifying, invigorating, nervine properties afford a cure in nearly every case. The health-giv- ing principles of this remedy are unequalled by any similar preparation in the world. Antiquarians say that the umbrella. was inâ€" vented shortly after the flood, and has been the least improved upon ofnll appliances for human comfort, the shape being now as it was in those youthful days of the world. An umbrella is much like a pigeon as to the question of oases- sionâ€"the last one who gets it owns it. '1 ie fol- lowing facts about um brellusâ€"especially the last one-may servo ever render a splendid purpose sooner or later: To ignite your umbrella in a mrk indicates that it is :1 out to chan eowncm. An umbrella carried over It woman, t 0 man getting nothingbut drippings ofthe rain,indieatesoour1- ship. When the man liusthoumbrellaund the Woman the drippinvs, it indicates marriage. To carry it at right angles under your arm signifies that an eye is to be lost by the man who ibiluw: you. To put :1 eotton um brellzi by the sideofainioo silk one signifies that “ exchange is no robbery.“ To lend an umbrella signifies that “l mu :1 fool." To carry an umbrella Just high enough to tear out men eyes and knock oil men's hats, signifies “ I um a woman." To go without an umbrella in a rain-stonn shows I mu sure of getting rhouA matism. and will have to use S'r. JACOBS 01L in get well.” To 1:00 ‘1 a. fine umbrella for your own use and a. bottle 0 ST. .ll-\ cons OIL nlwu s in the house, in case of rheumatism or accident, would signify that you are real philosopher./ n Thle following: communication to tho C(litornl the Salem (Muss) Jewisiar shows how an artist treated hisvisitor: “I would have m'coptod your kind invitation to visit you in your new quum-ix with plcaisuw before this hlld not my old enemy. Mr. 'Tlicumntisni, ounced rm me so suddenly. Ill) .l'l‘lVCKl last Friday, and, without swiping-tn semi up his and, rushed in and graspet mehy the hund with such agrip that in a few huui's my hand and wrist were so badly swollen and painful that i felt as though one of Mr. Ilatch's coal {cums hurl run ovcrmc. Mr. Rheumatism hrix' lmon :1 mnsmnt visitor of mine fnr SDVE‘I‘II] yvzn‘m ho :xlwxiy swells and put on a great many 21ii'x,ni:il;ius: hi1 _ .lfat home, dovounn r my sul» tzmm' 21nd leaving me poor in flesh anc pockot. Lam wintvr he 01mm and stayed two month& 1 id that the next time he came I would i ‘ diet. I was somewhat ntnloss whut , vl him with, but finally concluded to give him three square meals a day of ST. JACOBS OIL-â€" lil()l')1i_llf'._1l00[l {1nd night. 'i‘l "Q {are he i§ (li. gualcd with, and IS packing uphls trunk nnd will leave by to-morx‘mv or non day: says he cannot stop any longer, (15 he has pressing business elsuL where. H0 is a treacherous fellow, and he iu< tends visiting some of our Salem friends: if he do imt give him the same {are that. I (lid and he won’t atop long, J. S. Lizmvovn. FACTS ABOUT UMBRELLAS. K\\- ,- l Worse than War. “The throat has; destroyed more lives than the sword,” by imprudence in eating and intempcrance in drinking; but when the health becomes impaired the miserable dispcptic may find prompt relief in Burdock Blood Bitters. It regulates the bowels,acts upon the liver and kidneys, purifies the blood, and stimulates all the secretions to a. healthy action. (36.) These troublesome complaints, may be apeedily cured by Hngyzu‘d’s Yellow Oil‘the great Rheumatic remedy, which, as an ex- ternal application and as an internal remedy has a, wider range of usefulness than any similar preparation in the world. All drug- gists sell it. 25c. (31) A Boston pap er is in “favor of women voting if they want to.” We should like to see the man who would make them vote if they didn’t want to. OIYLDINGS. PIC l7 FRAMES, MIR- 11m: PLATES, (alumnus, ‘Kc. Price List to the trade on application. H. J. MAT- TH EVVS 8: BRO. 93 Yonge St” Toronto. _ M. Mayne Campbell. ilm‘, etc. 9 \‘lctorin-Hl. v ‘v er. Soliuilnr, etc‘ I "mt-o. Ein- Ncar me P {1.1 R 'l‘ M 1‘ L05ETS.~~THIS COMPANY .3 automatic closets minister to health, com< mm, and cleanliness ; neml for (zirculun Earth Closet C . I3 Jarvis “from, 'l‘ommo. SHEEP $l5 SEWER WATSH FREE! N. B. Merchants receiving large consign- muan of groceries will 11ml it greatly to their advantage to place them in my hands. By thushaving yourzroods disposed of on arrival in- terest will not, be allowed to accumulate thereâ€" on as broke ‘éLL‘JC will not amount to 30 davs’ in- terest on sugar 01‘ 60 days' on general groceries. Those going: to Manitoba will find it to their advantage to correspond with me. Subscribe for the Colonist News, a. paper giving just Elle information you require: Sample free, Pam- phlets witlnnups,scnb free. Ilolbrook’s Excursion Party, with sleeping cars attached, willlozwc on the 9th and 23rd of May, and every two weeks thereafter, preceded a few days before by tlwii‘ fuss fl‘Ci,ht train arrivingnt \Vinnipeg on Friday. ’lease ad~ drgss w' ‘ ply, A MANITOBA! 1882- D. A. HOLBROOIK,Nbi‘111~x\Vest, Immigration and Real Estate Agent. 64 Kinsmxt cast.’1‘oronw. Also nful‘l line of extra heavyAmH-icnn 011k Tanned Leather Bell 111:5, and Page’s Patent Lace Leather. Fire Hose, Fire Department Supplies T. McILROY, Jr. OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. The largest and only complete stock in the Dominion. Lot 8, in .2!) con. \Vest, “Williams. Lot 7, in 18 con. “'est \Villiams Lot 4, in 20 con. East \Villizum. 06 “ Those farms are all part] y cleared and soil of excellent quality. Warehouse, l0 and [‘2 King-st East. Toronlo. {P ' Write for Price List. Good Farms for Sale AT PARKHILL, 0N GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY. At Blyth, on L. U. & B. Ry., 101 29, i 1- Igulleti 139 acres of first-class hmd; ago“: c caret . At Sholbumc. T.. G. &'. B. Ry” lot, 282, in the 3rd and 4th cons. of Molancthon, 100 acres. INIA RUBBER 00008 At Backwood, on the (S. T. I152, west k lot 31, in 7 con. Nassuguweya, 100 acres, half bush. At Dundalk. T.. (‘. (Q B. Ry" 101.39, ' Proton, 100 acres. J m 10 con' Good terms on any of these farms. For par. ticulm‘s, apply to BOX 964. Toronto BB. in postage stamp: or cash. And if you want we got one of these beautiful ncok~chzuns and mum show your copy of the .IourmzL to your friends and get twenty of them Lo subscribe. Send me the list of names with the five dollars, and 1 will immediately forward you one of these neck-chains with locket attached. Don't, delay, or some one else may he ‘ the 13‘ d befnrc you. A Good Filter. To have pure water in the house every family should have a good filter, the health and comfort depends largely upon the use of properly filtered water. The liver is the true filter for the blood, and Burdock Blood Bitters keep the llVCI‘ and all the secretory organs in a healthy condition. It is the grand blood purifying. liver regulating to- nic. (32) ' Address Addx SS “Lu \sâ€"nnLnufactrurc/(rlfi byfif. H. Youngé‘; (70.. 13 \V'ellington»sL. flair. Toronto. agents wanted. Chllblazns (‘. \V. DENN L USfiMVA ’oAfiTN’ET' 00.. 97 Yonge Street, Toronto. Ont. 'i‘oronm. Ontario. ’l‘ l1 i s elegant Roman Neeklot (in 5 diiferent patterns) will be given to anyone sending us the cash and list of names for twch s u b s c ribers to the Larlics’ Jtmr- m1 1.. his a month- ly illustrated paâ€" per of 8 pages. containing the latest fashion notes from Am- erican publi- cations, and 15 is‘ sued at the low price of twenty- Ilvc cents pm- y e I r . All the newest designs in fashions are beautifully illus. trated in its pages by Lhebest American artists The Lad 17 as" Jou mud also con- tains useful h o u s ehold to- e c ipts, a. short story, and other interesting mat~ ter, besides the. fashion articles for lady readers. It will be sent to a n y single ad- d 1' 6 $53 monthly for one wear On receipt of twenty- ]ive cents, either Broker.

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