Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 24 Dec 1885, p. 7

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The man who receives the moat letters as day in Washington is not; the President or any member of his Cabinet, but a pension attorney, whose daily mail frequently numbers 500 letters. A Chicago street corner lot that was bought thirty years ago for less than $9,000, has just been leased for ninety~nine years at an annual rental of $35,000. A ten- :tory building, to cost a round million, will be erected upon it. “ It is absolutely impossible,” said Lord Rosebery in) recent Address in Scotland, "thatix- V. future war could ever take place “‘11 the United States and England." The physicians of Sanford, Florida, have signed an agreement not to visit any pa- tient who will not pay their bills on the first of each month. Those falling will not be attended until the bill is settled. It is believed that in ten years Yankton, D. T., will be an inland town. In front of the city, where the river ran twenty feet deep five years ago, there are nbw 100 acres of land six feet abave high water mark. Ordinary army signalling, by waving flags or torches, can transmit only ten words or so a. minute, spelled out by letters ; but an adaptation of the Morse tele raphic alphabet, now generally employs , has more than doubled this rate of speed. All employees of the New York, Penn- sylvania. and Ohio Railroad whose dutles require them to bbsarve signals hsve re- cently been examined for color blindness, and about four per cent. were found to have defective sight. One of the oldest and most lucky passenger engineers was found totally blind to any difference be- tween red and green. «1' k.etnes have just been brought to ,_ A _ .’ the cellars underneath the old courts or law, at Guildhall. London, where they have been hidden for many years. They formerly stood in front of Gulldhall Chapel. and are life size representations of Edward VI. Charles 1., and his consort, Queen Henrietta Marla. All three possess great artistic merit. . The fruit trees in Santa. Barbara are be- ing dug up and English walnuts planted in their stead. During the recent cold snap at St. Louis men were watching along the levees all day and night ready to step on the ice the moment it was able to beat them, and stake out a “ claim ” to an area. for cutting. Such claims are always respected. The late M. Bailliere, publisher of some of the most important of modern French medical works, personally conducted his business for nearly Seventy years, and worked until within a few days of his death â€"ln his 89th yearâ€"although he had become blind during the latter part of his life. The residents aiong a. lumber flame in the mountains above Chico., 051., have a novel way of getting their mail. It is started on a. raft from the head of the flume at regular dates, and the people below watch for it, take out what belongs to them, and then send the raft with its precious cargo on the way. An object of ublic curiosity, near New Philadelphia, hi0, is a man who never shears the wool from his sheep, or plucks his geese or “ rings” his swine. He says it issinful to interfere with nature. His own hair and heard are never show, not are his nails cut. Every untensil about the farm is home made. A rustic visitor to Burlington, Vt., spent Thanksgiving Day on the horse railway, making the trip of four miles twenty-two times. In his recent work on anthropoid apes, Dr. Hartmenn of Berlin admits that “the most fanatical advocates of the doctrine of descent are becoming more and more convinced that man cannot be the issue of any extant form of nnthropcids,” and says “ that hypothetical being, the common an- cestor of man and apes, is still to be found â€"-a task assigned to paleontology.” ANew Haven boy recently, “for fun," inserted an advertisement in a lccal paper for a husband. A Western farmer answer- ed it, and the young man wrote at length, describing himself as a handsome, middle- aged woman, with a. long bank account. The gmnger came on last week to see the woman. He is now after the young man with a suit for fraud and loss of time and mam; The London Standard says that the pop- ulations of Paris is decidedly decreasing, Last autumn there were nearly 115,000 fewer inhabitants of the French capital than four years ago, and this dlminution bears heavily on the cab and omnibus cem- paniea. Apparently the thief abaentees are the foreign r-sldenta and the poorer working class, who can get food and house room cheaper outside the city. During the last thirty years the con- sumption of malt liquor, which had been very inconsiderable and confined to a. few localities, has greatly increased in Ireland. Brewing in the last century was in some parts a. very flourishing industry, but when the duties on a barrel of corn brewed into ale became nearly double the duties on the same quantity distilled into whiskey the latter became the popular tipple. A railway is building from the Southern Pacific’s main line to the celebrated Cinna- bar mines, producing quicksilver, in the neighborhood of New Almaden, Cal. Great difficulties have always been expe- rienced ingetting cheap and suitable trans- portation to and from these mines. Don- keys have been largely employed hitherto. and at onetime many of the camels now running wild in Arizona. were used there. The business of painting the huge signs upon fences and barns which assault the eye in all parts of the country is in the hands sf a few contractors in New York and Chicago. One firm in N. Y. cizy spends from $10 000 to $20,000 a year in this way, paying from one and one-half to two cents a square foot for the work. The bigger the sign the better. Many can be found reach- ing 30D x at in length, and the biggest of all (at L‘fewark, Ohio) is more than 800 feet long and contains only o_ne word: Mr. G. W. Child’s particular ducal crony, the Duke of Buckingham and Chandos, has just received the present of a portrait of his bride from the magistrates of the county of Bucks. The Duke’s father was ruined, and in his youth the present Peer had very hard times, against which he bore up most pluckily. The halls of Stowe, which contained the finest are treasures in England, resounded to the hammer of the auctioneer, and for many years the empty VARIOUS TOPICS. At a meeting of the French Society of Medlcsl Jurisprudence a. case was reported of a child who had diedâ€"so stated the certificateâ€"of strangulation, which had also caused a rupture of the heart; and the latter fact wens confirmed by the autopsy. The father of the child was accused of having strangled it, and was placed under arrest. The Court ,was not satisfied with the medic Al evidence, and summoned Professor Bronardel, who stated that the rapture of a healthy heart can never take place after strangulution. The Professor then examined the heart and found ulcerations and an aneurism in its well. The father was at once acquitted. A story went the rounds at the election time in England that a Roman Catholic chaplain was secntly lodged at Hmfield House, and mass priva’ely celebrated there. It seems there is just so much foundatiz n for thls story as may be discerned in the fact thata French clergyman attached to the Cathedral of Notre Dame, at Rouen, Who is writing an ecclesiastlc 1 history, ha:- been for some weeks the guest of Lord Salisbury, who not only permitted him to inspect the valuable historical documents of the Cecil family. but offered him the hospitalitles of their ancient dwelling. There is a great deal that is funny in names. Names are sometimes comical in themselves, but eftener they become ridicu- lous by their association. Thus, the name Asa Poor might excite our pity if we con- sidered what the name might mam. But to see the sign, “A Poor Shoemaker,” painted without any punctuation, as one is said to have been hung out in New Orleans, would certainly provoke mirth. Announcements of engagements and mar- riages may bring names into strange connec- tion. A happy fitness is seen in the union of a Mr. Catt to a Miss Mew, and of a. Mr. Tee to a Miss Kettle. A famous Irish bull is that of the orator who, in delivering a eu~ logy upon a. man of learning, closed by say- T‘In fact, gentlemen, he was a great man, a very great man, gentlemen ; he was the father of chemistry, and brother of the Earl of Cork.” No words are better suited ho the urpoae of the punster than are many of our nmiliar names, and no words have citener been de- graded to his sex-vice. The name of Theodore Hook, a. famous wit of the last generation, was made the subject of a very clever pun. A gentleman was asked whether he knew Hook. house, which could not find a hirer, was strictly enclosed to everybody. “Oh yea,” was the answer, “Hook and Eye (I) axje old crgnips.” It is related of two gentlemen, one named Fuller, the other Hawke, both fond of a joke, that the former asked the other What was the difference between an owl and a. hawk. Hawke replied,-â€"“The owl is fuller in the eyes, full:r 1n the head, and fuller in the body ; in short, he is Fuller all over." A'nother old but very good instance of pun- ning upon a. name is told of a M r. Gunn, who was called as a witness in a judicial court. After his examination the counsel said to him,â€" From this it appears that the Earl of Cork mggt have_ been run uncle _of ghemgstry. “Mr. Gunn, you can now go 0E.” The judge saw the pun, and either to avert the effects of the shot, or to improve upon the joke. gravely added,â€" A young collegian, in the Junior year, was packing his valise to go home for the Christ- mag Eglidays. “ What tare you taking your new meer- achaum for? it will be broken,” said his chum. “ I must risk it. I told Jenny about it; : she must see it.” “ And your diagrams ; what do you want with them ‘3” “ Well, Jenny would like to see if I have Improved. She is very much interested in my‘ diagrams. ” “ 0h, Jenny knows all about the sports ! She is impatient to examine the prizes. You ought to hear her talk (I touch-downs and serves. It would make you laugh. Such a soft, little, shy thing as she is, too !” his eyesfhining with tender p_leasur_e. “ Jenny” was considered at school but a dull scholar, and she “ had no talent for lan- guages or music,” her teachers said. She was not a brilliant or a pretty girl. But she kept herself very near to her brother. She always understood his games ; knew What “ the fellows” thought of each other and of “ Prex ;” knew all about J ones’s average and Pet s’s chances of the scholarship. She was never so happy as when smuggled close by his side, listening to his wordy, earnest, and usually selfish, confidences. Other girls leagued together, with secrets, or talked fancy work or flirtation. Jenny gave all her leisure time to her brother. Who can estimate the restraining power which this friendship and confidence had on the lad, keeping him back from any thought or action which he could not tell to this homely, loving, innocent )iatener ‘3 Neither he nor she ever knew that there we such an influence at work between them. How many simple. unselfish souls go through life, too dull to do great or clever work in the world, only giving sympathy and afi‘ection unsparingly out of full hearts. The world rates them cheaply, but God knows them as the faithfullest of His mes- sengera. "‘ Ana you are packing up all your medals ! Layg-fiinyia prizes, too A” > What are you to your brothers, girls? Pert, snubbing tyrants, or lmtimate friends, who will makathem always believe, for your sake, that all women are good, and that God is real and near? The Roman newspapers protest against the revival of the Drama. of the Deed, which was again celebrated this year upon theCam p0 Santo on All Souls’ Day. The custom had been discontinued for fifteen years.â€" ever since the nationalization of tne capitel of Italy. Some pious persons thought that it would be a pious deed to restore this spectacle. Skulls, bones, and entire skele- tons were collected from rifled graves, and a piece called “ The Vision of Ezekiel in the Valley f Dry Bones" was exhibtied. The real impiety of this odd union of reli- gion and stage was made the more manifest by the loudly expressed suspidon of some naturally indignant persons that the remains of their kinsfolk had been employed, among others, for the th‘ atricul representmimw "Sir: you 'are diséharged.” What’s in a Name ? His Sister. In the northern Rocky Mountains, in Mantana, on the stream that runs between Chief Mountain and the main range, and high up in the mountains, I came on tiny cabin so small that it looked as though it were a children’s play house. There was aehaft about thirty feet deep, long since abandoned, close by the house. I am a little superstitious about desert-d whine. I know that somewhere in the Rocky Moun- tains there must be a hut that contains a dead man, and I also know that if I passed the hut Wlthollfi looking into it he would come out and run equeakiug after me. So it was essential to examine every deserted cabin I came to, to avert this drea‘ful spec- tacle. AH yet I have not found the dead man, but I will some day. As usual, I «X- amimd this hut. It contained a keg which was half filled wi’h cake»! blasting pow er and ome heavily ruxP-coated 1.0015. The cabin was in the Blackfoot country, and I b liev- that the hopeful miners who thought they had founda valuable mine really found their deaths, On a little hill to the east of the log-en- cumbr red trail which leads from tho sbm doned La Plata mining district of the Medi- cine Bow Range to the North Platte River stands a doubl“ log house. I was quite sure that it was not abandoned, but that its owner, a miner-trapper, was away from home prospecting or trapping; and, as these men are- apt to have so ora- cabins in the same range of mountains, and even in wid - 1y separated ranges, I thought I might meet the owner some day, as I travelled over the trail frl quently. One snowy evening in Late October, when I was exhausted by a day’s hard hunting in down timber, I came to this house [was ten miles from home. My horse was heavi’y laden with meat. He was very tired. I resolved to use the house. Unpacking the horse 1 turned him loose to shift for himself, and was soon cooking my supper. I heard my horse neigh, and then heard another horse return his greeting in a. few minutes the cabin door was thrown open, and in strode a. wiry old man of 70 years. Without a. word of greeting to me he hung up his rifle and then sat down on a block of wood. A long white board hung low on his breast. His white hair hung below his shoulders. He looked at me intently for an instant and then said laconically. “ It is you, is it ‘3" I answered, also laconlcally. “ Yes.” That ended the interesting conversation He sat silently looking at m': with great disappro Val whi‘e I cooked supper. I asked h m to eat. He declined. After I had eaten I went out into the storm to catch my horse. This indication that I was going to leave his house and attempt to get home was more than the old man could bear. To allow a man to leave your house late in the evening and during a storm. is against all laws of mountain hospivality. Barehesded, the old man came to me just as l was swinging the saddle on the horse, and objeated to my leaving his house. He said he would be di graced throughout the highlands if he permitted me to go forth into the storm. He excused himself for his lack of courtesy and want of hospitality, and asked me to spend the night with him. I did so. The storm roared outside. At short intervals great trees fell with loud reports. The old man sat by the wide fireplace and tailr‘rl, not much, but still he talked. I had not found a house with a dead man in it, but I had found one where a man lived who had been dead to the World for thirty-two years. A faithless woman had driven a gentleman t. seek 801308 and hide his shame in the re- mote recesses of the Rocky Mountains, and for the third ofa century he had lived alone among the pines. He was the Hermit of the Medicine Bow Range. Discouraged miners, who have been stranded on rugged mountain flanks, build cabins to shelter them While they rest and 'try to regain their courage. They seek re- mote and unfrequented portions of the high- lands in which to build their hut. Appar- ently they do not reason. It appears to be an instinct, such as is exhibited by sorely wounded animals, for grievoust stricken American miners to retreat into solitude. During every mining excitement, when eag- er men rush into the highlands in armies, there are some men in the hurrying column who are almost ready to lay down their bur- dens. These men have resolved to make thiaone last attempt to secure a c mpetence for their age. If the mines prove worthless, as xhey usually do, and the army of eager gold seekers hasten away to other fields, these discouraged men, these veterans of many mining campaigns, lay down their weary burdens. As one says, so say all. I am weary. I will go no further. I can live here. The diggings are lean, but I can get get sufficient gold out of them to keep me in flour and clothes. I can trap a few bea- ver and shoot my meat. Here I Will stay. Here I will die, if needs be.” They do not build their cabins closely together. They scatter in the difierent gulches, where the gravel carries gold in small quantities. They meet at long intervals. One by one they regain their courage, and leave the lean diggings to prospect for better. But one or two may remain. Those become at- tached to the solitary life they have led. They are hermits. They are through with the world. They patiently await the com- ing of death. For the Babies It is not uoceaaary to buy corn cures. Men and women shouliremember that t’utnam'u Painless Corn Extractor la Aha only safe, sure and painless crrn remover extant. it does its work quimiy and with certainty. See shat the Sig; nm‘n N, 0 Poison & Co. appears on each ‘nr'atuz. Beware of posion- ous imitations. _“ I bog your pan on, hut arenjt you mis- There is something unpleasant about a de- serted cabin. I never occupied one of these abandoned huts unless the weather was ex- ceedingly severe, preferring to spread my blankets beneath the pines on the thick car- pet of needles. But if a single house has the power of producing unpleasant sensa- tions, that produced by a deserted mining camp is uncanny. I know of nothing that will cause hemesickness quicker than to ride into an abandoned village at dusk, and to find houses, stores, saloons, all emp- ty, and streets grass grown, with, it may be, a deer boldly feeding where many man once wrought for fortune. taken ‘2" courteous- 5 mil; 8. gentlrman to a pretty shop girly wnzl‘ Whom he was dealing. “ I am a mias, but not ynt taken, sir, she replied, with a bright blush, and drooping eyes: Som‘v Incidents of Li (e in the Rockies. MfiUNTAIN RoMANCES AMES. HOLDEN & 00., JAMES LINI‘ON & 00., JAMES POPHAM & 00., JAMES WHITHAM & 00., mm. T. SLATER, William Stevans makes what he calls a confession of the manner in which he mur- dered his afifianced, Bertha Duckwitz, in Chicago recently, for which crime he wan ar- rested near Orion. The other night he 31‘} in the kitchen with Bertha at home until alter 12 o’clock. When he was ready to go she stepped outside the door and walked with him to the front gate. They stood tnere talking for some minutes, and when he started to leave she followed him down the sidewalk. Then they walked back to the yard. He took out his razor, which was in a pasteboard case. “Bertha asked me what it meant, ’ said Stevans “I told her it was my razor. She wanted to know what I was carrying it for, and I said Iintended to take it to a shop to be honed. ‘Let me look at it,’ she said, and she took it out of my hand and opcned it. “How would you like to do this 2’ she asked, drawing the razor across her throat, just in fun. I That’s easy enough to do,‘ I said, not meaning anything wrong, find I took the razor away from her She didn‘t want to let me have it, and I had to work to get it. I CAUGHT HOLD OF HER and pushed her up against the corner of the porch, and then made kelieve I was cutting her throat. She didn’t make any struggle, and I didn’t know 1 had hurt her until she gave a gasp and I felt the blood on my hand, Then I was irightsned, and, as I loosened my hold on her, she dropped in a heap. I didn't know she was dead, and tried to lift her to her feet. I spoke to her, and as she didn’t answer, and was limp, I saw she was dead. It was over a minute before I could believe what I had done. Then I laid her in the position she was found and stood perhaps ten minutes look- ing at her. I wiped the razor on her skirt, and when I got home I washed the blood from my hands, and, saying good-bye to my mother ax..d Josie, started up toward the Grand Trunk junction. I am awful sorry I killed her. I wouldn’t have done it fLI' all the world. We had always been the best of friends. I don’t remember that W8 ever had even a little quarrel. We talked about the wedding while we were at the gate, and I told her that I would keep the engage- ment ring and get a wedding ring of the same size. I wonder what they will do with me? It looks as if you I xpect I am going to be mobbed. I suppose they will try to make out that I murdered her, but I did s’t.” An American who had lived for thirty years in Paris died a. few weeks ago. He had Long be en known as a lover of rare china. fine editions, and old brasses. His tall, stooped figure and grave face were fam- iliar in all the curio shops of the cap tals in Europe. His most intimate friends suppos- ed that he had no interest or purpose in life but";1 to collect these co mparatively valueless tri es. But when he died, the poor from every court and street in his quarter crowded to his bones, and a cry of mourning went up from hundreds of homes into which he had brought help and comfort. It gm: the-n known for the first ti me how vast his charities had been, and how he had, during his life, systematically stinted him- selt, even in his food, that he might have moAre t9 give awgy. Another case, like in kind, though not in degree, was that of a noted gambler and for ger, who was shot in a. Southern town a year ago. After his death, it was found that most of his earnings had gone to support in ease and happiness a deformed brother, whom he never visited or claimed, lesi; the iil-savor of his own reputation might injure him. ' Louise Michel, the notorious Communist, is said to be a. moat; tender daughter to her agggl mpthgr. Charlea Lamb once,according to Coventry Patmore, expressed himself vehemently about some man whose name was mentioned before him, ending with, “I hate the fel- “Why, you don't know him 1 You never saw him I” exclaimed his friend. low !” "Of course not. How can“ I hata a man if I knew him !” was the answer, as full of truth as of wit. It is only God who can see the redeeming spot in every man’s heart, but it is always there. Our part is to trust to it, to believe in it, to reach the man through it. Imperial Cough Drops will give Posltive and Instant Relief to those sufl‘erln from Colds,Hoa.rseness, Sore Throat,eto.,an are invaluable to craters and vocalists. For sale by dru sts and oonfectioners. R. & T. WATS%)%T, Manufacturers, Toronto, Ontario. Jimmy’s Definition of a Base Burner. Pa (who has been explaining certain facts about atoves)â€"â€"“Now. Jimmy, do you know What a base burner is 2” J immyâ€"“You bet yer iifé.” Paâ€"“Have you one in the house ‘2" J immyâ€"“Yca, sir; ma’a slipper.” We have also complied with every requirement of the ONTARIO BOARD OF HEALTH, and after close examination of our factories by Doctor Covernton, their Chief Inspector, we have received his certificatee. Whereas the reports of the epidemic in Montreal have, for obvious reasons, been greatly exaggerated, we, the undersigned Boot and Shoe Manufacturers of Montreal, beg to inform the trade and the public generally that our manufacturing stablishments are entirely outside and far removed from what is known as the Infected District ; that the extraordinary precautions taken byius render it extremely improbable that contagion can be carried in our goods ; that every employee in our establishment has been vaccinated and re-vaccinated (their families also being vaccinated), and that a thorough examination of the homes of our operatives has been made by competent physicians ; and that it is acknowledged by the Medics Faculty that the combination of chemicals used in the tanning, colouring, and finishing of the leather used in Boots and Shoes is in itself a potent disinfectant. FROM THE BOOT 81 SHOE MANUFACTURERS OF MONTREAL. Horrible Recital. Inner Life. (Signed), ‘ German professor of drawing to new student : “ Just bleeze boint owd vich mm of dose statues you haf'drawn from, den vill I your drawing gritlcise.“ As stages are quickly abandoned with the completion of railroads, so the huge, drastic, cathartic pills, composed of crude and bu’ky medicines, are quickly abandor 91 with the introduction of Dr. Pierce’s " Pleasant Pur- gative Pellets,” which are sugar-coated, and little larger than mustard seeds, but com- posed of highly concentrated vegetable ex- tracts. By drugglsts. For colds, fevers and inflammatory at- tacks, as well as for choleraxmorbus, diar- than, dysentery, or bloody-flux, colic or cramps in stomach, use Dr. Pierce 3 Extract of Smart-\Veed, composed of best: Grape Brandy, Smart-Weed or Winter Pepper, Jamaica. Ginger and Camphor Water. The Arab home is not broken until its fourth year. That’s where they differ from tea-cups. But; then Arab horses are not Washed by the average kitchen girl. In the cure of severe coughs, weak lungs, apittnng of blood, and the early stagts of Consumption, Dr. Pierce’a “Golden Medi- cal Discovery" has astonished the medical faculty. VVhlle it cures the severwt cougrs, it strengthens the system and purifies the blood. By druggiats. The experiment wh:.ch Messrs. Tuckett & Son entered upon when they commenced to make their “ Myrtle Navy“ tobacco was this ; to give the public a tobacco of the very finest Virginia leaf at the smallest possible margin beyond Its actual cost, in the hope that 1t would be so extensively bought as to remuneraze them. By the end of three year the'dem md for It had grown so much as to give assurance that the unecess of the exper- nnent was within reach. The demand tor it to-day is more than ten times greater than it was then and. it )5 still moreasing. Sue- cws has been reached. Laywexâ€"“How faris the tavern from your home? How long would it taku you to walk the distance ?" Witnessâ€"“0h, that would depend upon whether I was going there or coming home.” “Henry, love, I wish you would throw away that booK and talk with meâ€"I feel so dull. (Along rilrnce and no reply.) “ 0h, Henry, my {out Is asteep I" “ is 11;? Well, don’t. aalk, dear, you mught Wake it.” IYSINESS CHANCEâ€"vii)“. afiLEâ€"lun pm]: equlppeu Buwn at business nu ma Ulhy of Guelph; puns a good trade; a splendld ounce; will sell cheap; good reasons for aelliug. For parnicnlars “dress. J. A. LAMPRE Y, Real Estate Agent. Guelph. In twenty minuses, wichonb mil Chapman’s Cale- bmbed Nuuralgn Bowdura. Sample mum: twenty- flve cunts. Chapman. Ouemlsu, London, Out. 70lillN mu), ADDRESS AND TEN IIEYI‘S. mauled Bengougn u anormanu auu 6.1511185! luudtum. L‘oraubu, will lulu; copy Cosmopolitan Shorthwnder, best journal in Amerlca. Prlce, (1.00. Sand for Calendar. ‘, ILD LAND; FOR. SALEâ€"5.5 21,00NCEHIUN 2, Nohfiswasaga, BIJ‘UUG Cuuuuy; luU acres; cue mile tram soayuer ; will make a. flrsu-ulass gmln or dalry lnxm; als: lol 36, 2 Veapra; 100 acres; will be sold cheap; also lot: .15, mum oouudary Saephan, Huron Couucy; 100 acres; wlll be sold cheap. Apply to T. Ema, Barrlsner, Toronto. CIATICA. INFLAMMATORY RHEUMA- T1531, Gout. N auralxia, and Lumbago efiacflu- any cured by a remedy invented by one who was him- self cured by It 8.165! being three years on crutches with sciatica; abundant tasltmonlnls as to its bene- flolnl efleobs 1n above-mentioned diseases; remedy expressed to any address. S. J. LANUASTBE. Pebrolln, Oufl. U ’L‘nen men only 1s righmy educased Who Knows how to use hlmself, who possesses such practical knowledge and such manual skill as will ehaole him to compete successfully wish hls fellows in the busi- nese of me. To impart such education, to prepare such men la the design and purpose of this msulflu- tion. For henna. etc , cell at the college or address. M. ‘MACCORMICK, Pnncipal. Il' 'BU'SINEss UQLLEGE, ARCADE, YONGE ST., TORONTO. Finest rooms in America. Practical in every department. Teachers pushing and an". etic, and know What they teach. Endorsed by the ending business men of Ontario; its graduates are an. lug positions of trust In every city, town and Village In nI-nn'lnâ€" IV n-nuu um“-.-â€" Oéh‘ada. MYRTLE NAVY BRITISH AMERIGAN BUSINESS UQLLEGE, ARCADE, YONGE CAUTION SHARPE & MCKINNON, JAMES McCREADY & 00., R. MOOREADY & 00., COOHRANE, CASSILS & 00., G. BOIVIN. None other Genuine. Neuralgia Positively Cured unprn'im hESSCoLLEGE; uelpll,0nt Operating Wnshlng Miéhlzeaf Ifriyiour'vrvihifiaio «end usyour name. P. U. and express oflioa It once THE NATIONAL 00.. 23 Day an, N. Y Send far flew circu'lar. O'DEA_ Sean‘s”- EACH PLUG OF THE INjBRONZE LETTERS our Prog l'css. IS MARKED 71‘0 antruauoe them we will GIVE AWAY 1,600 Belt- A. P. 260.

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