Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 20 Dec 1888, p. 2

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The dispute which has been going on for‘ a. number of years between thosewho think that there should be no exemptions from taxation and those who think that churches and church property should be exempt has received an unexpected illustration from a decision made the other day by the Court of Queen's Bench in England. It has been decided that bequests to heathen missions and to the education of the children of missionaries are not charities in the sense contemplated by the Income Tax Acts, and are liable to be rated for income tax. The London Spectator. of the 10th of Nov: The London Spectator, of the 10th 01 Nov- embnr, discusses the‘ subject with its wonted ability, and with arguments which apply with much force to the claim made here for the exemption of churches and church pro- pertz from taxation. ,1 LL- I.:..A nrnnfn!‘ kw uvul UnAnulvu. (U, “ Ought Charities of the kind created by Mrs. Batea' will to pay income tax or not to pity it? We feel no doubt whatever that they_o_ught t_o_p9.y it. 1,,_-.: _.........1.-. An Han envy unsuu Lu ya, u. “ This opinion is not based merely on the doctrine that all charities whatever ought to pay taxes. We do, indeed, hold his doctrine most strongly. It is of the very essence of a charity that it should be a free gift. If I am rated for the relief of the poor, or for the building of churches, or for the education of children, my contribution is in no sense charitable. I pay, not because I wish, but because I am forced to ay. Now, in so far as a charity is exempted rom aying taxes, it ceases to be a free gift and comes a tax. The charity is richer by the amount of the tax. There is that much more money to be devoted to the objects of the charity. But by whom is the additional money contributed? Plainly, by the tax- payer. A given revenue has to be raised, and taxes are calculated at the figure suffi-r cient to raise it. \Vhenever any single tax- payer is excused there is a deficit equivalent to his contribution to be made up by the re- maining taxpayers, and this extra payment of theirs is simply an enforced contribution to the excused charity. None of the argu- ments urged in defence of the exemption touch this essential point. The object of the charity may be as excellent as you please ; it may have the best possible influence on the community ;_to contribute to it may be . 7‘ ____ kl: me Cummuulby , up uvuuuvuuv .v .- .. a moat admirable and economlcal way of spending public money. But all the same, toexempt it from taxation is to transfer that much of the burden of supporting it from the voluntary giver to the involuntary. The taxpayer is made to pay for the main- tenance of! charity which is professedly maingaingd by somebody glee. 1 L,, -L-.. mmwwu- .. “ The law as it stands does not tax char- ities. Mr. Gledstone’s arguments in favour of doing so have never‘been answered, but the opposition to them has prevailed all the same. We are now confrontefl by a differ- ent inquiry. Allowing that charities are to be exempted, is the word to be taken in a restricted or in an unrestricted sense ? “ The answer to this question is as! , simple as the answer to the last. Assuming ‘ . that charities of some sort are rightly ex-{ 1 empted from taxation, this exemption ought “ , not to extend to religious charities. So 3 long as the charity is limited in the wayi just specified [to the relief of bodily need or suffering and to general education] the tax- payer is at least troubled by no doubts as to the object for which his money is taken. He does not deny that hospitals are good ; things, that almhouses are good things, that schools and colleges are good things. All he pleads is, that he ought not to be made to contribute to them merely because it has ‘ pleased other people to set them up. But when it comes to religious charities, the taxpayer may have the gravest possible doubts as to the object for which his money is taken. There are some people no doubt, ' who have an impartial interest in the; spread of any form of Christianity. They allâ€"so they argueâ€"do some good. and though some may be better than others, ‘ any one is better than none at all. But ; this is very far from being a universal doc- ; trine. A great number or persons are 0: a quite opposite opinion. They are not all prepared to admit that all religions are good. They ridgidly confine that compli- l mentary statement to the religion they} themselves profess. Consequently, to ex- empt missionary enterprises from taxation is to force them to give practical efl'ect to a doctrine they repudiate. They might be ready enough to give charitable aid disguis~ ed under the name of taxation to the prop- ‘ agation of their own creed ; but when it comes to the propagation of other people’s creeds, it is adifl'erent story. Why should members of the Church Association be com- pelled to make up the definit in the income tax caused by the exemption of some Soci- ety for the promotion of Ritualism ‘3 Why should strong Churshmen be placed under similar pressure to compensate for the defi- cit cansed by the exemption of a College for ‘[ training of Dissenting ministersl - | uvuni u “ Again, even those who hold that all: forms of Christianity are good, may still be' of opinion that they are only good one at a time. They may be quite willing to pay for the propagation of any missionary enter- ' provided that they are left free to stipulate that the process of evangelisation shall only be broneht to bear on those who are not already furnished with a gospel. | Missions to the heathen, yes ; but not mis- sions undertaken by one Christian bod for the conversion of another. Why shoul the man who thinks Catholicism and Protestant- ism e nally good, find money to help to make oman Catholics Protestants. or Pro- . testants Roman Catholics? Neither, as‘ he holds, will be better for the change ; yet he ismade to pay other people’s taxes in order. to bring it about. Nay, more, he is made pay other people’s taxes in order to bring about, not one of these changes, but both. The State is so anxious to encourage con- version, tnat it sets up a see-saw, and pays Catholics to convert Protestants, and Pro- testants to convert Catholics. It is extraor- dinary that with the present dislike to con- ‘ current endowment, and of any rate that can by possibility be turned to denominational purposes, this most sinzular form of con- current endowment, this direct taxation of the community for the most aggressive ends that a religious denomination can propose to itself. should have gone so long unchal- lenged." Does not the same reasoning apply with full force to taxes on churches and church property? Why should the man who would not willingly propagate Roman Catholicism contribute to do so by paying a portion of the sum hv which taxes are increased through the menpllon of the churches and church pmpe. Iv belonging to Roman Catholics ‘3 or why s 101.1 1 the Roman Catholic through the same c “we help to teach and 3 read Protes- ttutlfinl ‘.' The true and only ru e as it seems t; us is mat there should be no exemption Taxation. from the liability to taxationâ€"4th“ all pro- perty will contribute in fair proportion to whab'all have had the benefit of. Tobacco contains an scrid, dark brown oil, an alkaloid, nicotine and another substance called nicotianine, in which exist its odorous 1 and volatile principles. This description of the active principles of tobacco is (i impor- tance to smokers; for, when tobacco is burn- ed, a. new set of substances is produced, some of which are less harmful than the nicotine, and are more agreeable in effect, and much of the acrid oilâ€"a substance quite as irritate ing and poisonous as nicotineâ€"is carried off. Those fire produced substances are called, from their origin, the “pyridine series. " By great heat the more aromatic and less harmful members of the series are produced, but the more poisonous compounds are gen- erated by the slow combustion of damp to- bacco. This oil, which is liberated by com. busti'on, is had both in flavor and in effect. and it is better, even for the immediate pleasure of the smoker, that it should be ex cluded altogether from his mouth and‘air passages. . ‘ ,s A _:-.. :. “Aubulnrln snot by attacking a few, "functions essential to it, beginning at the =system either succumbs or survives. 1 depressing Cigarettes are responsible for a great amount of mischief, not because the sm .119 from the paper‘has any particularly evil effect, but because smokersâ€"and they are often boys or very young menâ€"are apt to use them continuously or at frequent intervals, believing that their power for evil is insig- nificant. Thus the nerves are under the constant Influence of the drug, and much injury to the system results. Moreover, the _cigarette smoker uses a very considerable ' amount of tobacco during the course of a day. “ Dipplng " and " snufiiug " are semi- barbarities which need not be discussed. Not much effect is obtained from the use of the drug in these varieties of the habit. Nicotine is one of the most powerful of the “nerve poisons” known. Its virulence is compared to that of prussic acid. If birds be made to inhale its vapor in amounts too small to be measured, they are almost instantly killed. It seems to destroy life, but all of the center, the heart. A significant indication *‘ of this is that there is no substance known the Its action on the heart is by far the most noticeable and noteworthy symptom of nicotine poisoning. The frequent ex- Al__‘..l.,\_’~ which can counteract its effects: gnaw-a! on. Smoking in a. stub of u pipe is particularly injurious, for the reason that in it the oil is stored in a. condensed form. and the smoke is therefore highly charged with the oil. Sucking or chewing the stub of a cigar that one is smoking is a. serious mistake, because the nicotine in the unburned tobacco dis- solves freely in the saliva, and is absorbed. “ Chewing " is on this account the most in- j urious form of tobacco the habis, and the use oi a cigar holder is an improvement on the custom of holding the cigar between the teeth. auunuuuuu .v. .4..- r_.r..,, a large scale. \Vhen Europeans first visited New Zealand they found in the native i Maoris the most finely developed and power- ful men of any of the tribes inhabiting the islands of the Pacific. Since the introduc- ‘tion of tobacco, for which the Maoris de- l veloped a passionate liking, they have from ‘ this cause alone, it is taid, chome decimated ; in numbers, and at the same time reduced in 'atature and in physical Well being so as to be an altogether inferior type of mamâ€"C. “K Lyman in New York Medical Journal. us unvvuuu r vvvvvvv istence of what is Dknown as ‘l‘smoker’s heart” in men whose heelth is in no other respect disturbed is due to this fact. AN EXPERIMENTAL OBSERVATION. In an experimental observation of thirty, eight boys of all classes of society and of average health, who had been using tobacco for periods ranging from two months to two yea-rs, twenty-seven showed severe injury to the constitution and insufficient growth; thirty-two showed the existence of irreg- ularity of the heart‘s action, disordered stom- achs, cough, and a. craving for alcohol ; thirteen had lntermitting of the pulse, and one had consumption. After they had abandoned the use of tobacco, within six months’ time one-half were free from their former symptoms, and the remainder had recovered by the end of the year. . 2... L..--..A Luuvvwnvu w, w.“ v..- v- ._V _, , ,, A great majority of men go far beyond what may be called the temperate use of tobacco, and evidences of injury are easily found. It is onlv necessary tohave some record of what the general health was pre- vious to the taking up of the habit, and to have observation cover a long enough time. The history of tobacco in the Island of new Zealand furnishes a quite suggestive illustration for our purpose, and one on Something to drink and a good cigar are with some men leading essentials toward ao- clability. Other man have a natural anti- pathy to both and yet can he sociable and polite. The following anecdote illustrates the way one gentleman took to teach another that such was the case. Mr. Perry was an old Southern gentleman, exceedingly polite. He would go out of his way at any time to avoid offending a. neigh- bor or a- friend. One day a neighbor met him on the street with : “ Hallo, MrLPerryl iwaégdtfizvgâ€"6igéâ€"ifi'ibiget a dunk, Come in and Ewe gomechigg." â€" . n z,,. “Think you, â€"-â€", I don't care for anytying,” waa_the apayv‘er. .‘S H :.__4. 3" Butagoxfiéqixvmfiénd take something, just for qopiability’s aakq." ... ‘.'r n “ All right, if you don't want to be soci- able, I’ll go withont drinking," growled the friend, and he silently walked along in the directmn in which Mr. Perry was travelling. "-“â€"1;Ivt;vjvâ€"fvvvaa13tm£37i)e sociable, but I can’t drink yvifihjoqz" Presently the pair drew near a drug-store when Mr. Perry broke out with : “ Mr. â€", I’m not feeling at all well, to-dsy, and I think I'll go in this drugstore, and got some castor-oil. Won't you join me?" “ What, in a dose of castor-oil 2" (‘ Yeall) , “ Nsw, I hate the stuff,” saying which, a chill went over the man as visible in its ef- fects to Mr. Perry as if the ague had seized him on the street. “But I want you to take a glass of oil with me, just to be sociable, you know." The friend still refused, when Mr. Perry said: “Your sociable whiskey is just as distasteful to me as my sociable oil is to you. Don’t you think I’ve as much reason to be ofi‘ended with you as you have with me?" The pair heartily shook hands, the dialogue was circulated in Covington, and Mr. Perry was never invited to drink again. The Use of Tobacco. MISCEIEF OF CIGARETTES. Why Take (“Tense '2 The lste‘AXfx-ed Bunkhouse, of Dulinqton, whosg personal estate amounted'to $1,853 400, b2(l\l£‘ntHed $5,000 to the British and Foreign Bible Society, the treasury of which is not in an overflowing condition. Dr. Nansen, who has just crossed Green- land on snowshoes, is about; twenty-seven years of age and considerable over six feet in height. He is a " Norseman ” every inch of him. He has a magnificent breath of chest, and a Well-proportioned figure, which shows to advantage in his tight-fitting blue woolen suit. His face is long, his brow is broad; his eyes are blue, and his mustache and closely-cropped hair fair in colour. Lawrence Barrett contemplates a grand revival of “ Macbeth" for next season with Edwin Booth in the title part, which would seem to decide the fact that the actors would remain together another season. They are great friends and every night after the play they are seen walking aide by side down Broadway. Each wears a high shiny hea. ver and a long ulster of soft, dark cloth reaching to his heels. Mr. Leonard GroverI the dramatist, it is said, has been in Ludlow Street Jail, incar- cerated for the non-payment of alimony. It is seldom a men can earn enough money to square up his debts in Hotel de Ludlow, but Mr. Grover went to work, wrote a. play, sold in, and paid up, and he deserves a good deal of credit. Some very eminent literary persons have had opportunities of earning money in prison cells. Miss Amanda. Delmas is one of the most successful sugar-planters in Louisiana. She is a creole, and was brought up to a life of indolence until the wheel of fortune took a backward turn, and she was thrown upon Dacxwuru burn, nuu nuv nun tun“... at... her own resources. To the surprise of her friends she took the situation by the horns, and undertook the management of the plan- tation that belonged to her. Every morning Miss Delmas may be seen riding horseback with a big sun-shade over her head, inspect- ing the gangs of workmen on her estate. "Queen Margherita, of Italy,” says a St. James‘ Gazette writer, “ is the most delight- ful object possible for our eyes to contem- plate. Her face is so spontaneously interest- ed and vivacious that it might belong to any highborn lady untrammelled by cares of State; her smile, her bow, her ready words, are the perfection of art, or perhaps rather the unlearned perfection of a royal nature. At the Bologna festival I saw her every day, and every day I became more entirely her slave. Her enjoyment of the ceremonies in which she took part. her brisk attention, quick words and looks and laughter, were a revelation. To see the Bolognese students swarming round her car- riage, and even catching and kissing her hand in the furore of their loyaltyâ€"to note the round white daisy bonnetâ€"gave one an absurdly romantic heartbeat for a second or two. ‘ Queen of Hearts' rose to one’s lips instinctively. Her dress is always beau- tiful, becoming and suitable, and this con- junction means a good deal even in a queen ; it is not over-gorgeous or too complicated, an1 1ears“ into which Italian taste sometimes fa . Jay Gould's wife was comparatively rich when she married. Her name was Martin, she was the heiress of a rich grocer, and upon going into wedlock she was possessor of something like $80,000. That was just about the time of Jay Gould’s first opera- tions in New York. The history of her fortune, here told imperfectly, but for the first time. is blended with her husband’s colossal accumulations and yet is separate. Mrs Gould lent her $80,000 to her husband, and he used it in the beginning of his career of prosperity. For a while the outlook was not good for repayment. Gould calculated his chances carefully and his ventures turn- ed out productively at length, but first along it seemed as though he would lose every dollar. Indeed it was not until he fell in with Jim Fisk, and they together captured the Erie Railway, that his wife's. thousands began to multiply themselves. ‘ That was the capital with which he worked at the outset. As soon as he could do so he separated her property from his own and carritd it along in separate investments, altogether with her aesent and generally at her direction. She followed his lead, as a rule, though at times she indulged her own fancy or judgment. Thus her wealth grew along with his, until three years ago, when she demanded an accounting from him. She jocosely declared that she wouldn’t trust him any longer, and that she meant to retire trom Wall street to set him a good example, if for nothing else. Gould had his book- keepers figure up his wife's interest exactly, and took all of her stocks, bonds and other securities ofi‘ her hands at their market Value. The yield of this to her was over $2,000,000. She invested the money in Government bonds and other securities of undoubted solidity. That is her personal fortune, and the understanding of er intimate friends is that she will devise it at her death to her daughters. It is said that Mme. Judic, though still popular, has become too stout and her voice is really gone. It is twenty-five years since the first Sun- dav school was opened in Boston. There are now 30,000 scholars in that city, under the care of 1,200 helpers. as they are called, of both sexes. ,In Germany the entire num- ber of Sunday school children amounts to about 230,000 with 11,000 teachers. Many of the German clergy still regard the Sun. day school as an unnecessary institution. A tremendous big thing in the Why of a. monster gun is being ngade. It is to be a 200 tanner, and is being made at the Wol~ wich Arsenal. The special machinery requir- ed to lift it upon its carriage will cost quite $110,000. Its projectile is to weigh two tons and when it is mounted on some point of the English (out, it is expected to dlop in- to the sea 4,000 pounds of shrapnel every five minutes to a distance of fifteen miles. This will make an invasion more then ever a thing of the future, when the English Chen- nel csn be swept from the shores nearly all the way to France. At a recent meeting of the British medical Association one doctor said that he knew cases where sensitive children had been punished for seeming stubbornness which had been mere nervousness, and that ex- tremelv nervous persons had ultimately been found in nsylnms owing to their having been misunderstood and punished by teachers. The same speaker said that there are a great many children that would be none the worse if they never learned to read and write He thought if 80 or 90 per cent. of the children were taught these elementary acquirementa, it would be enough for all practical purposes. MEN AND WOMEN. meefing of th.e.Br_itm1_1 Medical Alas ! how easily things go wrong, A sigh too much, or a kiss too long And there follows a mist and sweeping rain, And life is never lhu same again. Alas 1 how hardly things as right 1 "l‘is hard to watch on a summer’s night, For the nigh will come and the kiss will stay, And the summer’s night is a. winter's day. And yet how easily things go right If the sigh and kiss of the winter’s night Come deep from the soul in the stronger ray That is born in the light of the winter's day. And things can never go badly wrong . If the heart be true and the love be strong ; For the imist if it comes, and the weeping rain . Will be changed by love into sunshine again. â€"GEORGE MCDONALD. The Vicar of Halifax, England, has no fewex than 36 livings in his giin. Levi P. Morton is the wealthiest man ever elected to the Vice-Presidential chair, re- presenting $20,000,000. " A man with a new idea. cannot be too care- ful of it. It: may get away from him and become original with someone else. Thread from the fibre oi the nettle is now l spun so fine that 60 miles of it weighs only 2% pounds. The same fibre has tor some time been used in Europe in the manufacture of ropes. ANew Jersey men. aged 83, and a New Jersey woman, aged 76, have been married to decide a bet on Harrison’s election. The giddy bride bet a wedding with the frisky groom that Harrison would not be elected. The Eifl'el Tower in Paris has reached the height of 583 feet. The one hundred and twenty-two metres (400 feet) still to con- struct will be terminated before the end of J anuary, 1889, at the rate of eleven metres per week. ‘ It is denied that the Rev. Alexander Fownes Luthrel, who died recently at the age of 96 years, was the oldest vAnglican clergyman in England. Archdeacon Phil- pot is 98 and the Rev. Bartholomew Edwards 99 years of age. Sweet flag; (calamus) is claimed by Dr. Haigh, of Granada, Kan, to be an agent that will relieve and stop persistent hic- congh in almost any case. He directs the patient to chew a. small piece of the root. It never fails in his hands. Isaac V. Williamson, the wealthy Philn- delphia bachelor Quaker, has completed his plans for his projected industrial home and school for poor boys, and selected a. board of control for the institution, in which he intends to invest $12,000,000. John M. Goring, of 'Wappinger’s Falls, N.Y., has a. sage palm with quite a. history, whichâ€"added to its great age. 150 yearsâ€" makes it a v&lua.ble plant. The palm was originally grown at Mount Vernon, and was once owned by George Washington. One of the discoveries recently made in Central Africa. is a village of houses built along a street and having gabled roofs. The inhabitants are of a superior order of intel- Pigence, keep good order in the village and sleep on beds raised above the ground. A wanderer somewhere in the wilderness of New York has a ring whose like is not to be found in any country, 8.8 in is set with five diamonds, respectively red, blue, brown, cmary and coffee colorâ€"colors which it is out of the jeweller'e power to match. You couldn’t; find a man if you were to search from “China to Peru" who can make so many false prophecies in a given time as Wiggins. says The New York Herald. N at that: he gets things wrong on purpose, but that he never gets them right by accidentâ€" +his it is which makes him illustrious. The Emperor of Russia. exhibits at Cop- enhagen an immense dinner service of Dres- den china, which was manufactured for him a few years ago at a cost of £10,000. There is a different: scene of Russian life on everv piece, and every variety of Russian uniform and costume is represented. A New York Herald interviewer professes to have interviewed Mrs. General Harrison on the subject of the use of wine at the White house under the next Administration. Ac- cording to this authority Mrs. Harrison re- marked that 'her husband will attend to that business. The natural inference is there will be wine. Dr. Wilkinson, of Mooretown, 011b,, tells this story : The other day a couple of lictle girls came to his ofiice to be vaccin- ated. One of them undertook to speak for the other, and explained : “ Dnctor, this is my sister. She is too vonng to know her left arm from her right, so mamma washed both of them." The Empress Frederick brings to Eng- land the insignia of the Garmr which was worn by the late Emperor, for delivery to the Queen, who, it is understood, intends to confer it upon Prince Henry of Prussia. The Garter insignia of the late Emperor William was returned to the Queen by his son, when her Majesty was at Charlotte]:- burg last April. _ .n on Tchey say‘of Colonel Dupree, of Georgia, that during the late canvass he went up to a perspir'mg farmer, who was ploughing with a stubborn ox. and offered to take hm place while the ploughmau went for water. The offer was more than accepted, for the farmer stayed at the house till dinner, and the candidate ploughed three hours under the hottest sun of the season. In The Liverpool Memory a merchant captain gives an account of his rounding Captain Born, in a prodigious sen. He took from the masthead a measurement of some of the waves, which he asserts to have reached the height of 65 feet. Hitherto forty feet has been accepted as the greatest height to which water will roll. &nd anyâ€" body who has seen an Atlantic wave of that height has had enough of wave to bat him for the rest of his life. A Cure for Dxunkenneu. m'pplum hnbn, dopaonmnla, the morphine bib“- nervons prostmtion ca‘usedby the use 0! tobacco. wakefulness. mental de xeseion, softening of the bum, ew., premature 01 age, 1033 of vitality OMEN by over-exenmn o! the brain and loss 01 natural strength. from any cause whatever. Menâ€"W‘mg' oldur middle-agedâ€"who are bloken down from any ,nnhfiabove 9911565, or_:ny cause not mm above. ., , v .Jmu'. send your address mid 10.021189 in stamps for Lubon'l Treatise, in book form, a! Diem 0/ Han. Book! sent sealed and secure Ircm observation. Address I V Luna: 4'! Wenuwton street East. Tomaha- 0n:- For births, marriages and telegram”, an English paper substitutes hatches, matches and dispatches. AS YOU LIKE IT. RIGHT AND WINDS“. No lengthy edsertisement is necessary to bolster up Dr. Sege’s Caterrh Remedy. 03 all the appetites that curse young men, the appetite for ofliue seems ‘0 me to be the silliest and meanest. " I know ’tia a sin to Bnt I'm bent on the notion, I'll throw myself into The deep, briny ocean," IS the mental exclamation of many a suf- ferer froth headache, indigestion. constipa- tion, torpld lwer,etc, The use of Dr. Pierce’e Pleasant Pellets, however, would transfoxm these unfortunatee, and cmee them to sing, â€" But my spirit shsll wander Throuzh gay coral h were. And (risk with the mermaids. It shall, by the powers I It has nlwsy been considered best to dress according to one's business and position. “ The old Onkeo Bucket The Iron-hound Bucket The Moss-covered Bucket." is very likely the one has that conveyed poisons to your system from some old well, whose waters have become contaminated from sewers, vaults, or percolation {rem the soil. To eradicate these poisons from the system and save yourself a spell of malarial, typhoid or bilious fever, end to keep the liver, kidneys, and lungs In it heilthy and vigorous condition, use I'r. PIerce’s Golden Medical Discovery, the greatest blood-pun- fier of the age. Remember that education like some other things, does not consist in the multitude of things a man possesses. Consumption Snrely Cured. To the Editor,â€" Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy iorthe above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your readers who have consump- tion if they will send me their Express and P. 0. address. Resp’y. T. A. SLOCUM, 164 W est Adelaide St. Toronto, Ont. An E uglish groom gave his bride’s attend- ants the claws of a. tiger, shot by himself. Watson's cough drops are the best in the world for the throat and chest. (or the voice unequalled. See that: the letters R. a: T. W. are stamped on each drop. Ofice always brings obligations and a cer- tain kind of slavery. KNITTING 0 Save Tlme â€"Send tor Illustrabed catalogue of our PATENT Pmmzss CLOTHES LINE. It will be ready very soon. FARMS and Tumors CURED; no knife ; A E book fxec. DRSV MCMICHAEL. No. 63 Niagara SL, Buffalo. N. Y. Toadxito. TORONTO CUTTING SCHOOLâ€"Gentlemen desirous of acquiring a. thorough knowledge of garment cutting should visit us. Scientific and reliable systems taught whereby petfect fitting gar- ments are produced. Circular with full intonnation 31: application. S. CORRIGAN, Prop., 122 Yonge at" ANADA SHIPPING (30. â€" Beaver Line at Stenmshlps, sailing weekly between Mantra} md Liverpool. Saloon tickets,Montreal to Live l, 840, $50, and 360. Return tickets, $80, 890, and 10, nooordjng to steamer and accommodation. Inter- mediate. 830; Round trip ticks“, 860. Steersge. 820. Round trip tickets, $40. For further particulars and to secure births, 9.1eg to H. E. MURRAY, Genenl Manager, 1 Custom ouse Square, Montreal, or tombs Local Agents in the dlflereufl Twons and Cities. MONEY Orders filled (or prices. SAUSGAE o O LIMBS. Forcircu lars address J. DOAN & SON, ‘1 Apnnfn nut ALMA v Seventeen graduates and certificatedteacbers in the acuity. Nearly 200 atudénta last year. Graduating courses in Literature, Music. Fine Arts, Commercia Science and Elocutiou. Low rates good bond thorough work. MoLauzhlau Hall, coating $20,000. now 0pm. Elegant Dormitories for 60 more students. Address . PR‘NCIPAL AUSTIN, B.D. Brown Engines TORONTO ENGINE WORKS, J. Perkins 85 Go. _v'â€"â€"D SUFFERING from he eflects of early evil habits. the man". of ignorance and folly, who find themselves weak, nervous and exhausted ; also MmDLl-Aann and 01:9 MIN who are broken down from me eflects of “use or over-work. and in Advanced Melee] the consequences or youthlul excess. send {or and rem M. V. Lubon’s Treatise on the Diseuee of Men. The book will be sent sealed to may address 0 receipt 0! t _ , Add as W0 3993512329... “’33:- am Mr E. Toronto. Establisn‘ " -5" EMENE gu nuanv BWattiDg Diseases \Nonderful Flesh Producer. IRON AND STEEL BOILERS ANY SIZE. LET'VE'LTJ'BON 41 71:0 47 St. Lawrence Market, Toronto. @5313 g Sold by all Druggists, 50c. and $1.00. FALATABLE AS MILK. JAMES PARK & SON, SEER Fb'i’s‘um: or 71mm. 4:4. mm, RENEE Srfiiawfi. Some special bargains; H. S. MITCHELL, DRAYTON, ONT. Creelm an Bros .. Georg emwn.0nt. Cofl' No More. oung Meln To Lou on Farms. Lowest Ram. No delay. Conespondgpce WI I3; lili’l‘u‘nn, Financial Agn. . 72 King-st. E.. Toronto importation of English Eheepe, Finest Amencan Hog Cumgs. any desired quantitv. Write for E Camusâ€"Season ISSSâ€"Ne ,uulcu Weuin ton at. E. Tomw‘ TARBOX Bnos., Toronto, Ont THE LEADING CANA- DIAN COLLEGE FOR YOUNG WOMEN. ’St. Thomas. - 0nt. .,, u“ PRINCESS AND FRONT STE 0. - Toronto. CONSUMPTION SCROFULA BRON C HITIS COUGHS GOLDS ‘t a. secret remedy. Itiug Hypophos- iau cod Liver Oil, )eing largely in- ‘hysicinns all over MACHINES A. P. 420 BO'AN a son, l‘oronto, Ont.

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