Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 19 Jun 1884, p. 3

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He that gives gond advice. builds with one hand; he that gives good council and example, builds with both; but he that gives good admonition and bad example, builds with one hand and pulls dawn with the other. Strength must be found in thought, or it will never be found in words. Big sounding words. without thoughts corresponding. are efl‘orts without effect. Any work, no matter how humble, that a. man honors by efficient labor and steady ap- plication, will be found important enough to secure respect for himself ana credit for his name. When Gen. Havelock, the pious soldier. at length arrived at Cawnpare. and repaired to this Assembly-room, he found himself just thirty-six hours too late. The floor was still nearly ankle-deep with corgnlating blood, while shreds of flesh and tufts of hair told of the barbarous violence that had been administered. The cuts on the walls that had been made with the butchers' knives werelow down, showing how the poor victims had crouched before their assailants. In the meantime the sick who had been left he- hind at the entrenchment had also been slaughtered. There were many other mas- sacres in the country round about that were as shocking, but none that were so whole- sale. I have talked with men here who saw, as mere boys, the forms ofEuropean women cut open, a bottle of gunpowuer inserted while they were still alive, and then the whole body blown to atoms. How different is the Cawnpore of to-dw l These scenes that were so bloody in 1857 are now the fairest spots in India. Loving hands and an appreciative government have caused lovely flowers to spring up out of the ground that was so drenched with in- nocent b100d, and marble memorials tell the sad story--â€"(‘orr(spondence New Orleans Times-Democrat. It is amatter of regret to every sympar thetic traveller to know that this inhuman monster Nana. soon after disappeared, and has never since been heard from ; so that he probably escaped the punishment he merit~ ed. THIS MOST SHOCKING DEED should be carried into execution, lust by any chance a. rescue should be eflected. But even the cruel Sepoys rebelled as; the thought of such a. crime, and Nana. had to hire five butchers of the city to enter the house and professionally cairy out his will. This they did, the five men consuming an hour and a half in taking the 206 lives. They were paid one rupee per victim. or in American money, about $85 jotntly, for the bloody deed. Then by order of Nana the mangled bodies were dragged to a well in the immediate vicinity, and cast down, the dying with the dead, into its crimson waters fifty feet below! The eager prisonexs marched down 10 the river, and embarked from the Gate Cnowra Ghaf. No sooner had they been loaded upon the boats than hundreds of unseen natives opened fire upon them. Their boats were stranded, and although they did their best to return the fire and get off, they could but become easy victims :0 this, the foulest instance of treachery on record in military history. Only three men in all that company of 1,000 escaped death, and but 206 women and chiluren were left. Among the massacred were a few Ameri- cans. These 206 women and children were then dragged to a building which has gone down into history as the House of Measure. They were crowded into two small rooms, twenty by ten feet in dimensions, and kept there until July 15, when, by the order of this same Nana, they were every one slaughter- ed. Nana. had heard of Gen. Havelock's advance, and while he boasted of the strength to vanquish him in battle, he gave orders that Accordingly the people who were not sick emerged from the eutrenchment and confid- ed themselvw to the protection of the trea- cherous Nana. It was understood the sick should be returned for. A Visit to the Scene or “ The Blackest ' anme in Human History." Cswrfiqe is a. thriving manufacturing city of some 120,000 inhabxtmts. In commenial importance in is only second to Calcutta and Bombay. It furnishes the railways center- ing here with more traffic than any two or three interior towns put together. Its greatest notoriety, however, ls associated with its past. Here was perpetrated what many have called "the blackest crime in human histtry,” the horrible Cawnpn‘emas- sacre. I shall only review the incidents of this massacre, which are necessary in connection with my visitation of the scenes which in mvolvéi. THE MASSACRE OF CAWNPORE Various soporifics, the sundry dietetic and regimenal expedients have been tried, with variable success; but the most successful remedy for persistent sleeplessness, I found to be a. mental one, at the mention of which, I doubt not, many will exclaim-I-I mean, reading in bed. Dispensing with bed cur- tainsâ€"with due precautions to make the candle safe (self-ext.nguishing, if need be), it should be placed on a pedestal behind the held of the reader, as he lies on his right side, with back to the light, which falls on the book or pamphlet before him; which should be amusing or interesting, but not exciting. My common experience was that thus the mind, gently and pleasantly occupi- ed by subjects, which drive awsy worrying and wakeful thoughts, becomes calmedâ€"in half an hour or so I began to feel sleepyâ€" put out the candle, and fall asleep! But I cannot recommend the plan without again emphatically enjoining the proper precau- tions and limitations in its use. People of wealth and rank can commend good habits by showing that they voluntarily choose them. The great mass oi thoughtless and ill-taught people are sure to covet what they see is sought for by those who have means and leisure at their own control. A wise and exact economy is at least as desir- able in the management of a revenue of thousands of pounds as in the Outlay of a weekly wage of a few shillings. Thrift and economy are not merely special virtues for the poorâ€"an erroneous idea of them which springs from the false conception that they mean little beyond the not spending money. Nothing is further from the truth. Economy does not mtan keeping money, but exchang- ing it for its utmost value. The best things of life are human love, physical health, mental enlightenment and tre:dom of action and in so far as money is laid out to secure these blessings for ourselves and for others, it is not spent, but invested at the most usurious of interests. Now, it happens as a matter of course that rich people are often those who have the faculty for making, keeping and saving moneyâ€"a. faculty, like all others. likely to be hereditary. A sen- sible woman once said : “I go to my rich friends to learn how to spend.” Nor is this contradicted by the fact that misers have often spendthrift sons. A spendthrift is only a. miser in the budâ€"the root of miser- hood and spendthriftdom being identicalâ€" to wit. the seeking of our own selfish plea- sure instead of our duty and the good of others. Bow vast are the periods of life alloted to the longevnl trees may be judged, says Mr. L. H. Grindon, from the following list of ages known to have been reached by prtri. archs of the respective kindsâ€"Elm, three hundred years; ivy, three hundred and thirty-five years; maple. five hundred and sixteen years; larch. five hundred and seventy-six years; orange, six hundred and thirty years; cypress, eight hundred years; clive, eight hundred years; walnut, nine hundred years; oriental plane, one thou- sand years ; lime, one thousand one hundred years; spruce, one thousand two hundred years; oak, one thousand five hundred years; cedar, two thousand years; yew, three thousand two hundred years. Grains of the different kinds proiuce al- cohol in about the following proportions. Corn affords 40 pounds of spirits of the spe- cific gravity of 09427. containing 45 per cent. of absolute alcohol for each 100 pounds of grain : wheat, 40 to 45 pounds of spirits ; barley, 40 ; otts, 36 ; rye, 36 to 4‘2; buck- wheat, 40. Now 40 pounds of such spirits equal 3% (3-5) gallons of Government proof spirits. Taking ccrn at 56 pounds per bushel, rye at 56 pounds, wheat at 60, bar- ley at 48, oats at 32, and bmkwheat at 5‘2, these grains should afford the following quantities of proaf spirits per bushelâ€"Corn and rye, each 1 96 gallon. or about 2 gal- lons; wheat 2-1 ga‘lons ; barley 1-68 gallon; oats 1-12 gallon ; buckwheat l 82. Eiucation has made rapid progress in Spain within the last quarter of a. century. Smce the passing of the law of 1857, which, among other things, provi ied for compul- sory education in tne case of all children be- tween the ages of six and nine, the number of schools and scholars has more than doubled. Of the one there we re in 1850, 13,- 334, and in 1878, 29,038, while in the same period the scholars increased from 652,163 to 1.633288. An organ with 174 registers has been built for the Cathedral of Riga. It is work- ed by an Otto gas meter of 4‘horse power. Its largest wooden pipe is ten metres 1012 with a. cubical capacity of 2,000 litrts. It is said to he the largest organ in the world. The number of cigars consumed in Ger. many during the past year amounted to six milllonfl oi the aggregate value of 250,000.. 000 marks and a total weight of 36,565 tons ; while the quantity of tobacco consum ed in addition reached a. value of 4'2 500,000 marks and weight of 36,595 tons. J apan has at present 155 miles of railroad â€"â€"from Yokohama. to Tokio, 18 miles ; Kobe to Olsu, 58 miles ; Tsangaria, in the Provmce of Oomi, to Sekigahara, in the Province of Mine 41 miles, and Tokio to Koumagai, 38 miles. There is besides in course of con- struction a road to unite Maybe-bashi t) Tokio a distance of 84 miles. During the past year the average quantity of water supplied in Lonion amounted to 145 000,000 gallons per day. Of that enor- mous volume as much as 72,000,000 gallons, or nearly one-half. was taken from :he Thames, while of the remainder nearly the whole was derived from the river Lea, and but a. comparatively small fraction from deep wells sunk into the chalk. In each 3f the last two years there were more than 26 000 unaddressed letnra de- tained at the General Post Office in England. In this batch was enclosed in (32h year about £6,000 in cash, checques, or some other form. M 'nnesota. ha.) no less than 7,000 lakes, which take up over 2700,000 acres of tar- ritory. The meat consumption of Londcn is about 6,500 tons a week. This includes beef, mut- ton, and pork. Illinois has 255,741 farms, Ohio, 2‘ and New York, 241,058. The new City Hall in Philadelphia. has al ready cost $8,241,609, and is non yet: finish ed. Remedy for Sleeplessness The Lessons of Wealth. FACTS AND FIGURES. “40>” 247,178‘ 0111 how tired and weak I feel. I dou'g beuova I vi). over get through this Spring house~cleamng 1 Oh you you will if you take a bottle or two of Dr‘ Carson's Stomach Bitters to purity your blood and bone up the “sham. In large how“ 50 cents. A good part of duty is expressed in the simple imperative, remember. In the hurry of daily life there are hundreds of things left undone which ought to be done, and in the majority of cases it is not wilful neglect, but forgetful neglect that is to blame. Anything like moral sentiment is entirely unknown among the followers of the Mahdi. For magnanimity or forbearance they have the utmost contempt ; even the Mahdi would be murdered were they not restrained by superstition and a lack of appreciation of their own power. ACTS OF BARBAROUS CRUELI‘Y, Of which European newspapers have had so much to say, must not all be laid at the door of the Mahdi. The most of them were per- petrated by his frantic followers, whom he could not control and against whom he has become almost powerless. Through the brilliant \ictory which the Mahdi won in June, 1882, near Mount Gion, over Jussuf Pasha, sent with a. large army to subdue the rebellion. a.an others a. young Tyro- lean, Josef Herxidor er by name, who by somefaccident had drifted into Jussuf's army, became the Mahdi‘s prisoner. This Tyrol- ean the Mahdi made one of his body ser- vents, and intrusted him with the care of his tsohibuks and his cigarettes. In a later expedition a lady from Paris, the Wife of a French efliter serving as Major under Hicks Pasha. also fell into the hands of the Mahdi. Her husband was massacred with the rest of the male prisoners, but she was installed in the harem of the Mahdi. He began with a. school which he started in Temaniat, about thirty miles north from Khartoum, and removed afterward to the Island Abs. in the \Vhite Nile, south of Khartoum, where he taught his idea; and made a. number of proselytes. Io Abe. t'ie religious funactism of Mohammed Achmed was fully deveolped, and it was at this place that he first assumed the name of “El Mandi,” which means a man who has been shown the right way by the Lord. As early an 1880 he commenced sending out letters to the Arabian tribes in the neighborhood. One of these letters was also received by s for. mer business friend of his in Kessalai “ You must know," he wrote, “ that the Lord has selected me to be the great successor, and that the prophet, the arbiter of life and death whom the Lord may bless, has pro- claimed me to be the expected mahdi, and has placed me upon His throne over all the princes and nobles. And the Lord is with me himself, and has placed the insignia of my mission on my face. These are the warts upon my cheek.” By the latter tok- eu, besides some others, according to tra- dition the Math was to be recognized, hot the writer is fully convinced that these warts on the right cheek of Mohemmed Ammed are not natural but artificial, produced by a tonsorial artist in his service, a native of Mecklenburg, whose name is Schandnrper, and is said to have been a. circus clown at one time. The many Mohammed Achmedâ€"this is the original name of the Mahdiâ€"lived as a dealer in animals, and not as a. carpenter as some have stated, in Khartoum, amassing quite a. little fortune. An Austrian who has lived since 1835 in Kassals in the Saudis, near the Abyssinian frontier, carrying on an extensive business in furnishing Wild animals to menageries, zoo- logical gardens, etc.. has written a letter to the Neue Wiener Ta7eblatt, in which he give some interesting details about the per- son and surroundings of El Mahdi, with whom he has been personally acquainted and in business relations for a number of years. He says : lglau lor liruun, having to pass on their way a wood about twenty miles in length. The man drove his horses, and the woman lay covered up at the back of the waggon. 1n the wood, at a. lonely portion 0! the road, a band of Zingaris set upJn the fur- mer, killing him, stabbing him in several places with their knives. The woman re- mained quiet, probably struck dumb with terror, and the murderers did not see her. She escaped by lying still in the waggon. They next stripped 013' the clothes ol the murdered manâ€"who was dressed in his national garbâ€"tossed the body inside the waggoa, and having dressed one of their comrades in the ClJLhefl in order to allay Suspicion, the band withdrew, and the was;- gon went on its way with its new driver. The remainder of the Zingaris betook them- selves to the woods. You must know that at fair times the Austrian Government has troops patrolling the high-ways that order may be maintained. The wife of the mur- dered man remembered this, and hung out her handkerchief saturated with her hus- band‘s blood at the rear of the waggon. A gendarme saw it, gathered his com~ rades, stopped the driver, found the murdered man’s body, heard the wife‘s story, scoured the neighboring forest and seven of the gang were captured. They were brought in chains to Inglau. tried, and executed.” " Old stories are sometimes worth retell. ing," said a. gentleman recently. “ When I was a child, ten years old, I remember a terrible murder taking place at a town in Austria, named Iglau. This place, at which I was born, is in Moravia, near the Bohemi- an frontier. The tragedy happened in 1850. I remember visiting the Ingluu annual fair, where merchants had collected from all parts, some from the Tyrol. Switzerland, others from various pérbs of Austria, and even from as far north as Sweden. Temporary stores were erected by the merchants and much business done. The peasants from the Ty- rol usually came in their own conveyances, bringing with them expensive shawls, laces, and other fine dry g male. The murder I al- lude to was committed by a band of gypsies, belonging to the Ztnaaris,who are numer nus in Austria. The men are fine-built ft]- 1 .ws wizh long dark hair, and roam around the country mending china, making mo lee- traps and s‘milar small wares. Because of their nomadic habits, these Z ngaris have been frequently accused of all sonsoi villan- 163. At the time I speak of, alter the fair was over, a. T5 rolese farmer and his wife left Iglau for Bruun, having to pass on their way a wood about twenty miles in length. The man drove his horses, and the woman lay covered up at the back of the waggon. In the wood, at a. lonely portion 0! the A Few Minutes with an Austrianâ€"A Mur- der at the Inglau Fairâ€"The Zingari and their Discomfortnre and Execution. HIS CAREER AS AN AGITATOR‘ THE STORY-TELLER. Stories of the Mahdi. M<->M M>o¢x A percentage of the Fees applied tawords a re servo Fund. The uuly cash paymeuta required an the time of makinfi up lichon for a certificate. The re- mainder of the Rabi my is made up of assessments at the race of 1‘60 uu each $1.000 upon the mnrriage of mem- bers. l assessmenbs made the first year payable quar- terly. which upon the present large membership secures the pa. ment of a number of Endowments and a safe and re iuble investment for young pao Xe. Sand (or By Laws, and full Dnrtieulare to W. . I ACH. Secretary. London. Ont. 33.90. SLOO‘ For $2.00. TRANRPARENT CARBOLIC ACID AND GLYCEBINE Issues Carbificntes from $125 to $3,0(l), payable on mar rifle at (allowing runs. For 8500. or half Certificate. 84 quarterly duesin Id- vance 0‘75. __Fp_r $17,000 Oerbifione. $6: quarterly dues in advance Cordial. most wholesome delicious and refreshing bevem e. Strictly pure and entirely free from AlcohoL Gold edalOalcutta Exhibition Sold by all dru gists and grocers. Sole proprietors H. SUGDEN EVA S 5: go. Mann-e31. Agents. JAS. H. PEARCE a 00.. Nothing has been found more effective for destroying Potato Bugs. The purest is the cheapest. Mutual Marriage Endowment As’n. â€"HEAD OFFICE. LONDON. ONT.â€" The most convenient meat for farmers in their busy season. These men: are cooked and ready for use. Sold by grocers through the Dominion. Send (or price to W. CLARK. P. 0. Box 342, Montreal. Torbnto‘ DEATH TO POTATO BUGS. ASK YOUR LOCAL DEALER FOR RAMSAY’S PURE PARIS GREEN. SMGKED SAUSAGES. Lime Fruit Juice. A. Ramsay & Son, THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP UU’S WHAT SHALL I DRlNK 100 Grey Nun Street, Montreal. Importers of Brain Pipes. Portland Cement, Chimney Tops. Canada Cement, Vent Lining, Water Lime, Flu" Covers, Whitin&Fire Bricks. Plaster of Paris, Fire Clay. Borax, Roman meat. China Clay. Manufacturers of Bessemer Steel bola. mer a: Bed Spruuu' EINHARDT’S H AIR RESTORER and Moustache Producer. A genuine prepara- tiou which is guaraanteed to do all that is claimed for it. Producing luxuriant whiskers and moustache in six weeks. In bottles safely packed to any Id glee! cfor $1. F. REINHARDT. Mail Building. own 0. highest, as well as she m be ever on the alter to 1 such mums as W)“ 1'.-1ieve relief a. nscessity to our letter from “(x’ovemmtnt asking for a. supply of P Com Extractor, we are things; first that cows 3. seccndly that Putnam's f tractor is recogn'zed b3 2 mos: certan pamlesa. at remedy, for corns, Bawa remedy, for ccrns. Baware of 1:56 arbicls juét 2s gmd, anl use only Pumam’s Ex- tractor. One of the illusions is that the present hour is not the crlt'cal, decisive hour. Wnte t on your heart that every day is the beat day in the year. ach E make Hs i; the richest mm who draw a benefit from the labcr est number of men. of men in tries and In past times. vvnl ' The best in the world for all d15- euses of the Skimon Mun ur Beast. Sold by ull dmggists. W. & F. PQ’Currie & Co. hlghe Girls shouli so thoroughly master the science of housekeeping that they shall be competent to teach their servants to carry out their plans, or. if need be, to throw themselves into the breach with ease and confidence, and, unassisted, carry on the household mzuhinzry without a. jar. Brains are is necessary in housework as in anything else, and an intelligent woman can master chry detail a great deal quicker than her loss cultured sister, but those details should he studied in the leisure of her girlhood, and not when she has the responsibility of a. new home making on her hands. This is like a physician going into practice before he has studied hi.‘ profess on. \Vomen rush boldly into enterprises which it takes men years to p:( plre for. All our girls cannot expect t) mxiry moneyed m'n, nor can they be sure, in the uncertain condition; of our modern life, that men who are rich to-day may not be piorand struggling in a. short year or two; and, surely, these men have a, right t: expect that the woman they place at the heard of the lone they have, in many csses, toiled hard to win, shall be able to fulfil her duty towards that home in the true spirit, bringing it to a. full comprehension of its cireu an'l duties, and an ability, EC far as it coull he gained by conscientious study he- fore-h. n l. to perform these duties Well. & an .I. w u .Luuun.‘ GUARANTEED PURE. Price Law For Future Delivery. Copland 8câ€" McL aren, MONTREAL. LOUR AND SAW MILLS FOR SALEâ€" st Lakeside, county Oxford; brick building 40 x 50 ; 25 storeys high. containing three pair mill stones and all necessary machinery for flnuring and custom work : saw mill 35 x 60, capable of cutting 5,000 to 10.000 feet per day all driven by new ISO-horsepower Buckeye automatic cut-ofi engine; (H acres land. house, stable driveâ€"barnl good fruit orchard; sheds and stsblmg for farmers teams ; price $8,000; terms. $5,000 cash, balance on mort- gage. G. DALRYXPLE. Lakeside And get 3 sample copy of TnUTn.trse. the best 28121588 Weekly Magnzine‘ published. See the big list of reward: or answering Bible Problems . FRANK WILSON. 33 k 35 Adehslde Stream WestJToronto, Canada: mas-Si. JGHN_igHIBITIUii.-1asa Leather Belting, Fire Engine lose, «to. Four First Prizes and Two Diplomas. The highest of all Awards for Leather Belting. and Fire Engine Hose were accorded by th Jud as at the St. John Centennial and Dominion x- hihitinn tn umer Kr. gunman Mantra-n] nv. m y About Paint and Color Manufacturers, Montreal nmu MERIDEN BRITANNIA 09., éigvétflflwwfl NW.“ é’iW £13m New York. Meriden (CL), Chicago, San ancisco, London, (iiâ€"fig). BRANCH FACTORXfCor. Cannon and Wellington Streets. Hamilton, Ont. $2,000 Certificate, $3.000 Certificate, EELSOAPI ’or my Biliom ntzavcln Litters. It. renders t]: a a splendid Spring suotber Pill shall go down 11 en. “when I can get such a] ' from “Hovemmn g for a. supply 0 Extractor, we a] s; first that com dly that Putnam' Brains and Housekeepers Complain as we may Dr 10!: in life, we cznto‘: deny that exempt by theIr positit n fnom the lot of pafn and suffering. Tne as well as che moat humble, must Is the best inithe market. THE MONTSERRAT the is W!“ 1'.-1ieve when pa' essity to our comfort “(I'overnmtnt Hausa. ( macne Producer‘ A genuine pregna- uaraanteed to do all that ii clmmed ug luxuriant whiskers and moustache In bottles safely packed to any Id F. REINHARDT, Mail Building. INCORPORATED ugn‘ze paml Burton's All Healing $15; quarterly dues in Idvnnca $10; qumterly dues in advance TAB. AND GLYCEBINE are reminded of us are universal b} all I. an! n who knows how to a labcrs of the great- men in distant conu- ed to ask special attention TRADE MARKS. The name and Trade Marks an ly imitated ahuuld he I: an! tee to the public that. our BEST IN THE WORLD. mlâ€" suffering. Tne most humble, must » fake advanhge 0H 6 when pa'n "lakes' â€"â€":) MANUFACTURERS or (zâ€" {ans 3, O htawa," tn 1m’s Pain] 2; s throat again, said mph and plessant Dr. Carson's Stom- Pure and Coal and Large bottles 50 ales 5.5 mt 182 Milan Line Royal Man Steamships. S}i_1jn_g__during winter from Pprtland everx Thursday. ncient guaran- wzu'es are the To place in every household nu: PRICE HAS Elli REDUCED to $250. and if not. found satisfactory. mane refunded, Bee viz» the “ Canada Presbyterian" a about it.â€"The Model Washer and Bleacher which 0. W. Dennis ofiers to the public has many and valuah advantages. It is a time and laboraaving machine, substantial and enduring, and is very cheap. From "it In the household we can rear.in to its excellencel" De- livered to any express ofiioe in the Provinces of Ontario and Quebec. Charges paid 8300- Send for circulars. Weighs but. 6 pounds. Can be carried inn small valiu. Illustration shows Machine in boiler. Satisfacfion ggnrauteed pr money rgngdgd; - Washing made light and easy. The clothes have that pure whiteness which no other mode of washing can pro duce. No rubbing required, no friction to injure m. fabric. A 10 year old girl can do the washing the well u nn_older peraoh. _ ‘ fl SE‘AEDARD SCALEm C. W. DENNIS Sailing and Hal: from Que The ate: between altematl Glssgow GEERNEYS & WARE THE BEST, THE STRONGEST, THE MOST RELIABLE- from Quebec ‘ donderry to I: Igeland. Am Nl E, to Liverpaol lurtmg tly during summer months. The steamers of the Glasgow lines sail during winter between Portland and Glasgow, and Boston and Glnagow alternately; and during summer between Quebec and Glssgow and Boston and Glasgow every wgek. For freight, pass . or other mfprmation apply v.0 A; 501.191.142.23 er__& 09-. .Balqure : S- Unfivalled in material. construction and finish. pa- fecb in uccumcy and unmunlled in durability. Gunt- auteed Lu givu entire satisfaction. RAILROAD, WAREHOUSE AND TRUCKS at the sE'jbfifi'Cent'enhim'and’ Damihiéfl’fii: hibition. to ROBIN & SADLER. Montreal, ov- e} all competitorfl. Cunard 85 00., Halifax; Shea. 55 Co. St. John’s. N. F.; Wm. Thomson 85 Co., St. John, N. B. Allan & Co. Chica. 0; Love & Alden, New York; H. Bourlier, oronbo ' Allans, Rae & 00.. Quebec; H. A. Allan. Portfand. Boston, Mon- treaJ. at Lakeside. county Oxford; brick building 40 x 50; 2} storeys high. contnining three pair mili stones And all necessary mnchinery for flnuring and custom work : saw mill 35 x 60, capable of cutting 5,000 to 10.000 feat per day all driven by new HO-horse-uower Buckeye automatic cut-0t? engine; 3% acres land. house, stable drive-haw!)I good fruit orchard ; sheds and atablmg for farmers teams ; mice $8,000 ; terms. $5.000 cash. balance on mo use. G. DALRYXPLE. Lakeside is a perfect gem, eTml to an unperted French Corset; fits like a s: oveto the figure; very styl- ish, elegant in a peamnco, and approved of by tha most faati ions. Manufactured only by ( BEFORE.) (AFTER-l LECTRO-VOLTAIC BELT and other Ewe-mm J APPLIANCES are sent on K) Days‘ Trlal T_0 MEN ONLY. YOUNG 0R OLD, who are men 1%; from Nznvnrs Damn, LOST Vrrm'nr. \ Asnso WEAKNFSES. and all those diseases of 3 PERSONAL NATURE. tanning from Anusns and. OTHER. CAUSES. Speedy relief and complem restoration to HEALTH V1003. and MANEOOD GUARANTEED. Send aé once for Illustrated. Pamphlet tree. Address Voltaic Belt 00., Marshall. Mich. GURNE THE CBOMPTON CORSET 00. GUARANTEED PURE. Price Law For Future Delivery. Copland 81:â€" McLaren, MONTREAL. FLOUR AND SAW’ MILLS FOR *ALEâ€" L 9 ,4. ‘ ,; \ *‘ '\\1;\\ V PARIS GREEN Jgibldd’lfizii' aoj if): _m‘ TORONTO:BARGAIN HOUSE. 213 Yawn smear TonoNTo. our. THEY EXCEL ALL OTHERS. Mills’ Alarm Money Drawers. SEND FOR ILLUSTRATED PRICE LIE. AGENTS WANTED. 78 YORK 3TREET~ TORONTO. eve_ry Ill MllToN. 0N'l‘ 1847 Rngers Bros. A1. Saturda‘y mils and 1 a Baltimo YS 8c WARE“ And get 3 sample copy of TnUTH.free,the beat 28-psge Weekly Magnzine‘ published. See the big list of reward: or answering Bible Problems . FRANK WILSON, 33 a 35 3111 Portland every Thursday, ‘5' to Liverpool, and in summer sy to Liverpool. calling at. Lon- } passengers for Scotland and lore via Halifax and St John's TRADE MARK. BLEACHE: Washer THE MODEL summer months. ail during winger rstou and Glnagow veen Quebec and AND

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