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ERREUR(S) DE NUMEROTATION Vol. XII, No. 9 SHAWVILLE, CO. OF PONTIAC, P. Q„ THURSDAY, ÿ«al and (Smtal. I.agafta? re.d bros*.. a™,™, m Beit quality and largest stock of scythes, "on P0* wu in her office she refused snathes forks, rakes, handles, etc., at 10 P*t it on the pound that dancing _ ____ G' Fred Hodgins'. was mentioned on the hill, and she being MY BUSINESS AT QUYON. I£°ppd " U t0 0tller mvestments that will Occupy all my time, Hobb..tauZukti»i«,t „j ,w -rr % wholesale liquor license m the town for a term of years. Siw OZT f°L^kind? mhl#d R. c. picnic, uST*.-T A. LEBDBR, JAM HOPF Ar r* . day last They drove to Portage da Fort regular bain going east in the rooming, I °~w te no" Oilc,otl'and of u. Ottawa Auxiliary Bihi.goci.'ty, otuw., Ont. | The Clarendon Roller mille are at Dree-1hour ,lter. with the Oreeernt and Bmer I , . / Ha.alwaye on hand acomplete.tock of Wil l IAM e. , ,a------------- ent undergoing extensive repair, and im- f*d .herow> «Jri» «d Barrett e brae. , Ue* thst Jou .cennot «®-«S eEHSF frr/ï:~:ra- »ottawa< —BEHE EHE' : with ear.. I The DrhL buckled on his proférai tfford llrol>° P™®* with the harnesa again, and wUl be found at hi. Th* ***** tbeo ,tood importing start manity. eeiuiig I mearm a saving m the buying of our goods mhb BtlllKfS BbÜt 0tUw.N K1ITHPrlnc,Pel- 33 OConnor Referring to the progress which is being Hop step and leap, in which the winner ferST"" £ «££& pip* **eald, contractor, has finish- The Emeralds and Crescents took the J,d fl1" contract at Killaloe and has moved Sold, at half past two and played a nice . KF The Shawville Marble and Oran- V1 s mern *nd ^ams to hie upper job at match of one-soda-hall* hour's duration, ite Works, Alex. McDonald, proprietor. ..n* ^a^0, w.T,^e ra^e lre D0W kid three I The Emeralds won by a score of two to tome out a superior class of work in Mon- ?!1,es **** Klll*loe. OBrien will have one. _____ uments, Head.tom*, etc. Prices reason- h,e completed by the end of the The prise for leg rolling brought forth THE ARCADE, able. month. All his rock cuts are about fin- no competition ; but not to disappoint . ^ ,elltid- the spectator» in this regard, Mr. J. A "R. NT "P T? TOT? m T on, « j ,, I The demand for binder twine here last 9'DwuWI gave a very clever exhibition, A -LU 1 ^ . N 1,1) A f| 17 I w«®k was unprecedented slnoe that com m.which he proved himself an adept at * lUUUuUJ U Uu U ÜUF l, I modlty came into use in this section |llu8 kind of exereme. ■“■wAkA IA U IQ seiged with would-be customers. Mr. J. »the neighborhood of Quyoo. Conatd- . [ are honey from the Yarm Apiarym H. Shaw, here, who advertises the Star- eriMe ^alay occurred before the boats got ei!her canted or in section boxesfor T5%warn A 1 J gJU L l,n* brand, has found the demand much ™dy to row for the starting point, which Bale at H* Shawe- ■wi VwUi mJSLy A 2 S'il w* larger than he has been able to supply, or w*s situated on the opposite shore, about Conductor Nelson Moore removed his * w obtain from the factories. a mile distant They finally got off, how family from Fort Coulonge to Aylmer ----- In North Onelow last week three people er*rm0ch to.*ha ^ ®f.the crowd, but Mond.y. , _ I were eeriously injured through a run*w»y I rt *I Mr. H. Hobbe has embarked in the The Sandbag ITot Used wsoidenl- They were Mr. Rutledge hi. ^wt was reached, hamew making bueineu with Mr. T. W. 6 a0U* I wife and eon. It eeema the son was at Bat ,.th^ *T" J*hnrt 0fder» both | Boyle » manufacturer. work with a binder, when he disturbed a J£J* *£**^"ÏVP* *hI Come and hear Rev. Father Chiniquy Said to be an Everyday Occurence ufÆV °" wemrstrwt' ftpssg--Usss&m ? *irr*rfcSS SS e knotter of the machine, which gashed her , lroe> of , PrK)r , ®.M. Me Latest reports regarding the condition severely about the breast. I .* of *n egan 1 double I of the young man Lafleur, of Otter Lake, J. Armstrong house, Main 8L SbHwvilie. prominent citizens being the victims. woods early this fall, so that the greater .................................... " 907,20 denoea of «angrene as reported. gr tssvsrfifi-B -jh I * ^ *«- Shoes Trunks Tallies etc. the other side of the line. I concluded the AUG. 23, 1894. !... D.uîîW.îra....... CHANCE IN A LIFETIME FOR SALE, -FROM THEBritish Markets of fourteen packages just received at THE ARCADE STORE, ARNPRIOR, ThU large lot contains the following Excellent Values in Linen Goods, Bleached, Unbleached A Colored Tabunou, Napkins, Doylien, Ta- ARD BUREAU SCARPS, TOW- iiij and Toweling*. BLE Quyon, Que A BIO REDUCTION IN MEDICAL HALL, o: remain We know and yon ihould know that _ means s saving ___ ____ 16 înd thk wh7 jou pay fess'when bu Ml OF OTTAWA. rsssL. BLSCTKICITT. Capital Authorised " Subscribed " paid op $1,800.000 1,487.000 1,204,980 587,116.601 Beat SECOND FLOOR FOR Head Office, Ottawa Branches Millinery 4 Diwrtii. Arnprlor. Carleton Place Keewatln, Pembroke. Winnipeg, REID BROS. A Savings Bank In connection with each °f iwA General Banking bailneastransacted CHARLES McGEE, President np- 6B0. BURN. Cashier DENTISTRY. T\R. DANIEL McPHBE, Resident Dentist. Am- AJ prtor.graduate of Toronto College of Dentil Sur- A. Rondelet, of Paris. France. Nitrous oxide ia. Ceealne and Freexing.Oas and Electric Vibrator, for painless extraction*. UT Pull expenses allowed to eoplefrom a distancehavlsgdentaloperatlons. ARTBin McConnell. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Main 8t. Hull, month b* St ®hewTllleflr,t Thursday of each on 8. A. IHcKAY, B C L. •T Will be In Hhawvllle from Monday till Friday of ar h month Quyon the second Tuesday of Maurice Chevalier, L*L.L. ADVOCATE, ose SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO COLLECTIONS. Visits i every mon„ Quyon en second and last Wednesday of 3 th. Dr. W. C. DO t*Vl UNION HOUSE, mHOMABLAKO,Proprietor, Hotel Isiltuatedon I Our Salesmen 8Î6 "held UD A Corner of Main and Clarendon Street», Quyon. ... r Tb «* public will find this houae tolly up to the require- m establishment everv dsv bv ta regarding accommodation and comfort. Table . * J J ad bar weiisuppiied. «Bues meets all trains. tomers who are desirous of obtaining c lis- some received it appears that Mr. J. K. Mal- ta, of Pembroke, had seized certain pro jpevty of Mise Oahill's for a note which he ■upported by Rev. Will,.™ Boehart and m*ny well creed «mptimeet, by thow been legally done. Inthe evening Mr. Mr. George Biggs. After the interesting m et tendance. Malien was wen in town w ith eome of the ceremony a .umptuoue and elegant wed- ----- .took which he had seized. d,"8 l*mlU6t wPartaken of > about As further evidence of Me thank» to Great indignation ha. been aroused I a hundred guest., after which a pieacant the many friends who worked so ener both on the Island and in Pembroke over and social time was .pent till the hour geticnlly m securing the carriage for him the hearties, conduct of Mr. Mellon, who came for the departure of the happy eou- at the Quyon en Tuesday Inst, Mr. D might have .pared the feeling» of the rel.- WELLINGTON St.. OTTAWA. t°w^ir horne,V Port»Kedu F'ort- ^cLean gave a hell in K.nrana hall on tivc, even if he had no respect for the I > .The bnde was the recipient of many Fnday evening atwhtohiti. .tated there desd body, by having the «tie adjourned j P.S.Mailorders promptly attended to. | handsome and costly presents .-Pembroke were three hundred persons present. A when hi» rights could have been fullv Standard. I most enjoyable time was spent. j prote ) id. skiff GRAND CENTRAL HORSE, *. ». Tnrpaln, - - Prop., ) PONTIAC HOUSE, Shawvllle, - - Çue. T. Lindsay & Co nPHIS HOUSE, which opened on the 15th ± of September, is first-clam In every re- spect, being roomy, neat, comfortable and equipped with every necessary convenience. Commercial men will find the accommoda- tions for their businessman that can be de- sired. Guests treated with courtesy and civ- I lllty. Bar supplied with only best b..... Ji _■ liquors and cigars. Good livery, and free 'bus to and from all trains. 0, UAJLDVt JELL,------ PROPRIETOR, 266, 267, 269, 271, 173 and 276 rands of

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ERREUR(S) DE NUMEROTATION

Vol. XII, No. 9 SHAWVILLE, CO. OF PONTIAC, P. Q„ THURSDAY,

ÿ«al and (Smtal. I.agafta? re.d bros*.. a™,™, m

Beit quality and largest stock of scythes, "on P0* • wu in her office she refused snathes forks, rakes, handles, etc., at 10 P*“t it on the pound that dancing

_ ____ G' Fred Hodgins'. was mentioned on the hill, and she being

MY BUSINESS AT QUYON. !£ I£” °pp”d "U t0 0tller mvestments that will Occupy all my time, Hobb..tauZukti»i«,t „j ,w-rr %

wholesale liquor license m the town for a term of years. Siw OZT f°L^‘ kind? “mhl#d ““ R. c. picnic, uST*..«

-T A. LEBDBR,JAM HOPF Ar r* . day last They drove to Portage da Fort regular bain going east in the rooming, ™

I °~w te no" Oilc,otl'and

of u. Ottawa Auxiliary Bihi.goci.'ty, otuw., Ont. | The Clarendon Roller mille are at Dree-1hour ,lter. with the Oreeernt and Bmer I „ , . /Ha.alwaye on hand acomplete.tock of Wil l IAM e. , ,a------------- ent undergoing extensive repair, and im- f*d .herow> «Jri» «d Barrett e brae. , Ue* thst Jou .cennot «®‘

-«S “ eEHSFf”rr/ï:~:ra- »ottawa< —BEHE EHE' • :

with ear.. I The DrhL buckled on his proférai ?° tfford llrol>° P™”®* with theharnesa again, and wUl be found at hi. Th* ***** tbeo ,tood

importing startmanity. eeiuiig I — mearm a saving m the buying of our goods

mhb BtlllKfSBbÜt 0tUw.N K1ITH’ Prlnc,Pel- 33 O’Connor Referring to the progress which is being Hop step and leap, in which the winner

ferST"" £ «££& pip***eald, contractor, has finish- The Emeralds and Crescents took the

J,d fl1" contract at Killaloe and has moved Sold, at half past two and played a nice . KF The Shawville Marble and Oran- V1 s mern *nd ^ams to hie upper job at match of one-soda-hall* hour's duration, ite Works, Alex. McDonald, proprietor. ..n* ^a^0, w.T,^e ra^e lre D0W kid three I The Emeralds won by a score of two to tome out a superior class of work in Mon- ?!1,es **** Klll*loe. O’Brien will have one. _____uments, Head.tom*, etc. Prices reason- h,e completed by the end of the The prise for leg rolling brought forth THE ARCADE,able. month. All his rock cuts are about fin- no competition ; but not to disappoint . ^

,elltid- the spectator» in this regard, Mr. J. A "R. “NT "P T? TOT?m T on, « j ,, I The demand for binder twine here last 9'DwuWI gave a very clever exhibition, A -LU 1 ^

. N 1,1) A f| 17 I w«®k was unprecedented slnoe that com m.which he proved himself an adept at* • lUUUuUJ U Uu U ÜUF l, I modlty came into use in this section |llu8 kind of exereme.

■“■wAkA IA U IQ seiged with would-be customers. Mr. J. »“ the neighborhood of Quyoo. Conatd- . [ are honey from the Yarm Apiary—m H. Shaw, here, who advertises the Star- eriMe ^alay occurred before the boats got ei!her canted or in section boxes—for

T5%warn A —1 J gJU L l,n* brand, has found the demand much ™dy to row for the starting point, which Bale at H* Shaw’e-■wi VwUi mJSLy A 2 S'il w* larger than he has been able to supply, or w*s situated on the opposite shore, about Conductor Nelson Moore removed his

* w obtain from the factories. a mile distant They finally got off, how family from Fort Coulonge to Aylmer----- In North Onelow last week three people er*r’ m0ch to.*ha ^ ®f.the crowd, but Mond.y.

—, _ I were eeriously injured through a run*w»y I rt *“““ I Mr. H. Hobbe has embarked in theThe Sandbag ITot Used wsoidenl- They were Mr. Rutledge hi. ^wt was reached, hamew making bueineu with Mr. T. W.

6 a0U* I wife and eon. It eeema the son was at Bat ,.th^ *T" “J*hnrt 0fder» both | Boyle » manufacturer.work with a binder, when he disturbed a J£J* *£**^"ÏVP* “*h‘ I Come and hear Rev. Father Chiniquy

Said to be an Everyday Occurence ‘ufÆV

°" wemrstrwt' ftpssg--Usss&m ?*“ i“rr*rfc“ “ SS SS e

knotter of the machine, which gashed her , lroe> of , PrK)r , ®.M. Me Latest reports regarding the conditionseverely about the breast. I .* of *n ™egan 1 double I of the young man Lafleur, of Otter Lake,

J. Armstrong ■ house, Main 8L SbHwvilie. prominent citizens being the victims. woods early this fall, so that the greater .................................... " 907,20 denoea of «angrene as reported.

„ gr tssvsrfifi-B - jh I * ^ *«-

Shoes Trunks Tallies etc. the other side of the line. I concluded the

AUG. 23, 1894. !... D.uîîW.îra.......

CHANCE IN A LIFETIMEFOR SALE, -FROM THE—

British Marketsof fourteen packages just

received atTHE ARCADE STORE, ARNPRIOR,ThU large lot contains the following

Excellent Values in

Linen Goods,Bleached, Unbleached A Colored

Tabunou, Napkins, Doylien, Ta-ARD BUREAU SCARPS, TOW- iiij and Toweling*.

BLEQuyon, Que

A BIO REDUCTION INMEDICAL HALL,

o:remainWe know and yon ihould know that

_ means s saving ___ ____16 înd th“ k wh7 jou pay fess'when bu

Ml OF OTTAWA. rsssL.BLSCTKICITT.Capital Authorised

" Subscribed " paid op

$1,800.0001,487.0001,204,980

587,116.601BeatSECOND FLOOR FOR

Head Office, Ottawa Branches Millinery 4 Diwrtii.Arnprlor.

Carleton Place Keewatln, Pembroke. Winnipeg, REID BROS.A Savings Bank In connection with each

°f •iw—A General Banking bailneastransacted

CHARLES McGEE,President

np-

6B0. BURN. Cashier

DENTISTRY.T\R. DANIEL McPHBE, Resident Dentist. Am- AJ prtor.graduate of Toronto College of Dentil Sur­

A. Rondelet, of Paris. France. Nitrous oxide ia. Ceealne and Freexing.Oas and Electric Vibrator, for painless extraction*. UT Pull expenses allowed toeoplefrom a distancehavlsgdentaloperatlons.

ARTBin McConnell.ATTORNEY AT LAW. Main 8t. Hull,

month b* St ®hewTllleflr,t Thursday of each

on

8. A. IHcKAY, B C L.

•T Will be In Hhawvllle from Monday till Friday of ar h month Quyon the second Tuesday of

Maurice Chevalier, L*L.L.ADVOCATE,

ose

SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO COLLECTIONS.Visits i

every mon„Quyon en second and last Wednesday of3 th.

Dr. W. C.

DO t*Vl

UNION HOUSE,mHOMABLAKO,Proprietor, Hotel Isiltuatedon I Our Salesmen 8Î6 "held UD A Corner of Main and Clarendon Street», Quyon. • ... r

Tb «* public will find this houae tolly up to the require- m establishment everv dsv bv ta regarding accommodation and comfort. Table . * J J

ad bar weiisuppiied. «Bues meets all trains. tomers who are desirous of obtainingc lis­

some

received it appears that Mr. J. K. Mal­ta, of Pembroke, had seized certain pro jpevty of Mise Oahill's for a note which he

■upported by Rev. Will,.™ Boehart and m*ny well creed «mptimeet, by thow been legally done. In’the evening Mr. Mr. George Biggs. After the interesting m et tendance. Malien was wen in town w ith eome of theceremony a .umptuoue and elegant wed- ----- .took which he had seized.

■ d,"8 l*mlU6t w“ Partaken of > about As further evidence of Me thank» to Great indignation ha. been aroused I a hundred guest., after which a pieacant the many friends who worked so ener both on the Island and in Pembroke over and social time was .pent till the hour geticnlly m securing the carriage for him the hearties, conduct of Mr. Mellon, who came for the departure of the happy eou- at the Quyon en Tuesday Inst, Mr. D might have .pared the feeling» of the rel.-

WELLINGTON St.. OTTAWA. t°w^ir horne,V Port»Kedu F'ort- ^cLean gave a hell in K.nran’a hall on tivc, even if he had no respect for the I > .The bnde was the recipient of many Fnday evening atwhtohiti. .tated there desd body, by having the «tie adjournedj P.S.—Mailorders promptly attended to. | handsome and costly presents .-Pembroke were three hundred persons present. A when hi» rights could have been fullv

Standard. I most enjoyable time was spent. j prote ) id.

skiffGRAND CENTRAL HORSE,*. ». Tnrpaln, - - Prop.,

)

PONTIAC HOUSE, Shawvllle, - - Çue.

T. Lindsay & ConPHIS HOUSE, which opened on the 15th ± of September, is first-clam In every re­

spect, being roomy, neat, comfortable and equipped with every necessary convenience. Commercial men will find the accommoda­tions for their businessman that can be de­sired. Guests treated with courtesy and civ- Illlty. Bar supplied with only best b.....Ji _■liquors and cigars. Good livery, andfree 'bus to and from all trains.

0, UAJLDVt JELL,------ PROPRIETOR,

266, 267, 269, 271, 173 and 276rands of

I

SOME INTERESTING ITEMS.rsnos’s mlllury portrait of the Duke of Wellington. The fine glass chandeliers in

SmSSSsSSEs ~r; f"(immonde which epsrkled on the breasts Lettuce and onions, eaten Just before re- and necks of breve men end feir women, tiring oenee sleep.the gorgeous uniforms of the officers, the Boiling ter, epplied to mesonry, makes it handsome Windsor uniforms, the oriental impervious to water.

Tke Unesn's Liberality le Haeasters -An I iplendor of the Indien attendants, end geven thousand insects ere required to Army ef lira Empleyed la Hekla* ! the scarlet coate of the servants and the ms^e one pound of cochineal.

r~-.. ::::: isssas .mmïs .tar*A command performante at ^ the blue end gold roof looked down end Photographs have been taken of the hot-

Castle ii a greet event, not only in the lives tom of the see, fully five bundled feet belowof the artiste who ere honored by appear* At nine precisely the door at the back the surface.ing at court ; but in the lives of the Royal* leading from St. George’s Hall opened, the The red wood forests of California have

Md courtier. th.me.Uree. who lookupon euch . bre.k in the monotony of their ,,sning on her .tick, up the raited gradient triosetUntio 0lbl„ hlv, beeneiietence with elmoit the chlldleh delight ,0 her .eat, acknowledging the bow. of the U|(J> bul v ur(0 tfe |n u„. The other.

.““"'^uTwh^h h:d'h.e. repuyh.edr heve giren out.

t L pi.niee.mo, buret Into . or.ec.ndo, .nd me The .pul. grow, wild In the Sandwtch which father and mother, bigger brothers tfoe Queen and company sat down ceased. Islands. There are forests of them, mostand sisters, and the servants are bidden at The prelude started at once, and the cur* of 11 . n, n. «I* ted

correspondent. Though the most exquisite music of this its own weight in food.It is generally auppoeed th.t the m.n.gere meet complet, oper. is »'w.*e delightful Q io Vienna .re not allow-

of these performances are very ill requited to listen to and to analyze t her* ne ed loKp,ay |n the morning or evening-onlyby the pre.ent.tmn of .merely nomm.l lh.t on-S.u.r- betWHn midday and euneet.sum. This is not so. The cheque is a sub- ^y an(| jt on|y rfmains to be said While sounding for a proposed bridge atstantial one, far more than should cover the ^at it was listened to with attention and Lezlngtor, Mo., a broad vein of coat wasordinary expen.es of the manager, which ! delight, and that when the Queen, a. I. dteoover.d under the bed of the river.

«££ %%%&%&%Majesty. I hii would he generally ailmit e« fan ou the little table at her right a foot in height, and are perfect in everyby anyone who had the opportunity of wit* hand appreciative hands took it up with a respect.nesting the preparation of the ('astle by the ! will. There were no encores, fni the Bricks made of petroleum, solidified with

are engaged pulling down picture., laying timid ton Uch. % Mule, Haa.an.the late Sultan of Morocco,

;; $ c spprsa ce -rgr rt? ri». — tzzr: -nz szsszi£iL?-~ w...2': tatcssrz ®ci rc&ziwas a young man of good education, who auPPtrs which are proM.lt. by t t u ui werc Sir Augustus Harris and the principal and he became insane,was just upon the verge of business success 0,1 auch occasions, to say nothing of the ^tists, Her Majesty expressing to Mdme. je C. stutte, & 8t. Louie builder, declares

r-—* - - -1 EEHEH %~ujapan a ».»»»«« «...

-..— artaxed to devise means to take their thoughts cagif)n Waterloo Cbaml>er beingaway from themselves. It is well known | given over to the arrangement for “Faust, ’that in prison, the one thing which inmates perforce Signora Duee could not appear

there. This being explained to the Queen,T she gave orders to dismantle the beautiful 111 white drawing-room. Despite the lack of

BT ROTAI, COMMANDdown upon the farmers and dairymen and demand an entirely different guarantee. The standing between the two will be sad­ly injured and somebody is apt to lose. Probably not this season will the farmers be effected by the circumstance, but an­other season will tell. It may be that the creameries took the cream at a reduced rate, with the understanding that poor or no grain food was fed to the cows and they expected to pain, it off as first-class —If so, they are rightly the losers, but they are not apt to repeat the operation many times.

The great lesson of this whole thing is that it does not pay to feed them very lit­tle or no grain. The cream which they give is not good. It does not make first- class butter, and consumers can tell it

Even all of the knowledge

THE FARM. I

A GREAT EVENT IN THE LIVES OF ARTISTS AND ROYALTY.

Topping Haystacks.C. K. BKNTOX, MASSACHUSETTS.

Those who are obliged to store a portion of their hay in stacks, from lack of storage room in the barns, know how difficult it is to build a stack that will remain good until it is drawn to the barn in the winter. This is because it continues to settle while the hay is passing through the process of fer­mentation, known as •• sweating." Hence

. it is beet to topthe sacks after

1 \ I "7/r>. haying, using fc \V// ' * for the purpose

ewa legraes when that can beobtained.uot

cream­ery.

every time.and machinery of the first-class creameriescannot disguise the fact and make the, . „ . L_m_ecream into fancy butter. Frosty food taints which is occasioned in most English homesthe cream and the butter and leaves a flavor by private theatricals in the nursery to

%

cases it t is throw-

rain to ilk is

that is disagreeable, or in many robe the butter of all flavor. I ing money away to buy up frosted gn feed the cows because it is cheap. M too sensitive an article to be tampered with in this way. The lack of grain food is just as noticeable. There is no body or flavor to the butter, and it can never find a wide sale. Will farmers net learn by this year's experience that cows must be fed good, sweet food and a fair proportion of perfect grain feed if they are to reap the highest prices for their cream or butter ?

FlO. 1. LADDER BRACKET.

only because it is of small value for fodder, but also because the broad,tough leaves nat together and shed the rains better than up­land grass.

When the stacks are of considerable size, I have found great convenience in using what is called a 44 ladder bracket. " In the illustrations, Fig. 1 shows the manner in which it is constructed. The upper pieces are of spruce or othei strong wood, two in­ches square. Across the top is bolted a light plank six feet long, which makes a convenient platform. At a are iron pine put through each piece, which serve for hooks. By this means the bracket is hook­ed on the ladder round at any height desir-

DIVERSIONS OF THE BLIND..

Orrn|»atlon They tlml Have, and They Arc Likely to Work loo Much.

Much sympathy is felt for persons who arc born minus some of their faculties, itch

1< w mmH "'ll

rave->ver,

rtWfy vrI;

iM

*

:! ©i .si iff 11VIS I

#I \Ta

Wf"A*

LATEST ABOUT THE WAR.■F'Tns!- ~t

C, * \ s i blnrtr Dcfralrd With a Imi of 5M MenA despatch from Yokohama says:—Fur­

ther battles have been fought between the Japanese and the Chinese and the latter have been defeated. Selkoan has been taken by the Japanese with trifling lose. The Chinese in this engagement lost 500 killed. The enemy fled in the direction of Koshin. The Jape are in possession of \ ashan. The greatest excitement prevails here, at Tokyo and at other large towns, as & result of the victories of the Japanese troops. Rumorshowever, are current here that the Japanese naval forces have been defeated in an en­gagement with Chinese warships.

An imperial ordinance just issued permits Chinese to reside in Japan on condition that they engage in peaceful pursuits.It is officially reported from Tien Tain that

the efforts of Great Britain and Russia to bring about a peaceful settlement of the

putes between China and Japan have led. China in willing to pay an indemnity,

but she refuses to surrender her suzerainty over Corea.

The officials of the Japanese Legation think that to-day's despatch from Yoko-

Japan Pouring Troop* Into S orca-A J»Pannr MrpuUe.

A despatch from Tien-Tsin says “Chinese troops with European officers are rapidly advancing through Manchuria to-

their cells, life becomes almost insupport- ] time and the abundance of preparations j wsrd the (;or„an frontier. The commis-f bywork.ng day ami night had elr,lt “exp.r..no,ug (treat difficu.ty m ob-

Hut these pmonere \\%\tne use o 1 everything in apple-pie order by Friday taining supplies for the troops, China is eyes, and even the sights in a prison corri- night, when Her Majesty and a little party wary in her preparations, but is unsparing dor afford some diversion of the mind, of 46 privileged guests assembled. The in her efforla to succeed in the impending

™-‘: ---“-.J-!* I rSdark cells. 1 rison otficials sa » t a t happy ending when the landlady casts aside j 1 he Shanghai correspondent of the ( en-hours in a dark cell is generally enough to her more aristocratic lovers and marries tral News says:break down the obstinacy of a refractory her head waiter. When all wasprisoner. The freshly afflicted blind man (^ueen sent for S.pnora Duse and Mr, Got . XT .is virtually in a dark cell. All the training, , ütZ| who were presented to her and to &nd Tsag ^aLi Japan is pouring reinforce- all the resources cf his previous life, go lor whom she chatted in French in a most ! n|antl JDl,) f ore*, using for the purpose naught. friendly fashion, expressing her thanks and , *** available fast steamers flying the Jap-

\N omen are not so badly off. It is re- delight that the good reports she had heard ; *nesc ^*8- ^ ,e*1 °* •laPanvM,‘ ,rMmarked in institutions for the blind that from the Empress Frederick were , recently started for ( Irmulpo. Another the narrower life of women is to their ad- more than fully realized. Afterwards started for the north coast of Corea, vantage when they become afflicted. j Princess Henry and the Duchess of Coburg Pr,,(, lina!»ly for ( .ensan,

“ They take refuge in gossip.” said the called on Signora Duse in her room and “ ihe Japanese newspapers are forbiddenmatron of an asylum recently, “and if they presented her, on behalf of the Queen with refer to t^lc wâr preparations or to pub-have exhausted all the known scandals of an initial brouch of diamonds and ruby *I . *nF army news, except such as is sup- their acquaintance they invent others about enamel, surmounted by a diamond crown. • P‘le * by l"e Government, one another.” Hardly bad Signora Duse and her com

Fortunately, in a sense, the greater part pAny left the Castle, when preparations for of mankind belong to the working forces of me next night’s performance re commenced the world, and so a great percentage of and jn doe time were accomplished, those stricken blind are workingmen and All things being prepared by clock-work working women. Work is their great refuge precision and arranged in ship-shape fashion from the contemplation of their loss. j Sir Augustus Harris’ enormous Italian

Two kinds of manual labor are taught to opera company of artists, chorus, dressers, the blind in our institutions—the cane- musicians, and supers with their bags and seating of chairs and mattress making. Just baggages, left by special train from Pad- why these were chosen it would, perhaps, j dington on Saturday afternoon. On arrival be difficult to find out. It is the rule in at Windsor they were met by Her Majesty’s such institutions to require that the inmates carriages and omnibuses, which conveyed spend a certain number of hours every day them to the Castle, As they dispersed to at these kinds of work. One might sup- the various cubicles which have been con- pose that at times this would be a difficult structed at one end of St. George’s Hall rule tc enforce. The contrary has been out of screens, and carpets hung on brass found to be the case. When a new matron rods, and commenced to set their things took charge of one such institution a few jn order for the evening, the whole placemouths ago she discovered that certain in- j assumed the air of a barrack-room, cr Tlie ****** Home or Kr présentamates were ill, worn out, aud, in fact dying, perhaps such a scene as one can imagine lives Adopt* the He mate Bill,apparently from overwork. ; when the picturesque “Sansculottes" took The United States Congress has been in ees-

“l oane-aeat chair.all night in my sleep," po»ee«;on of the Tuilerie., .nd indeed it 8ion over » ye.r and the Tariff bill h.i been one of them told her. , was a curious spectacle never to be forgot-, . v . . n

The matron watched and found that these ten when later a visit to the dressing-rooms n con»erence over & month—what the Re­inmates were working from early in the exhibited the players in their grotesque public wanted was some kind of decisionmorning until late at night, and that there wardrobes slopping soapsuds above splen- on the great issue. Every business interestwa. a general tendency among all under her didly-pvli.hed floor.,powdering and m.king j in the United State, wa, hanging upon the charge to overwork. up their faces with pink wig paste m front I . . ... , . . ® ® ,

“ What can we do? ” they asked. “We of priceless mirrors, while the banners of ,88ue at ^ aalnngton. As the New ^ orkdon't want to sit and think." the Knights of the Garter, and the old Tribune put it :

Rules had to be made to keep the pat- masters' pictures of kings looked gravely “Home manufactures are paralyzsd byz sra, ............................ I......into public institutions or private charities And what an extraordinary contrast is 8toc‘ta ,n ',on(* cannot set prices uponhave within themselves the means to dis- to be fond in the Waterloo Chamber i their goods nor dispose of them to retail tract their thoughts from their misfortunes, during the action of the opera. This fine merchants ; every industry is at a stand- Those who do may find in some places a gallery was erected in 1830 by Sir Jeffrey ! . . . .

| ST'.:women, and for the men who have taken Somewhat before nine it was a brilliant Hava in whi!>h tn rh^Wiii0 it !*

; ii£§üü1 eIsEbés

eg I StoSBSS SSF# ~take up the thread of affairs in their minds from this was the little crimson colored and ® 1 n TH . Skig°.°/aud begin to connect them they become brass-raiied platform, which was also fring- ^ no*°^ectifanimated, and by th. time the reading I. ,d aud decked with exotic, and flower. L ' But up tofini.h.d they are all full of the old .abject, from the Frogmor.conservatories. On thi. iand di.cui.ion. break out all about the were plaçai th. «at. for th. Royalties, ‘f fhlv tho^hT w ’d m.k. 1 *room over politic., religion, the tarriff, or the Queen'» own chair in the centre being y K 1whatever subjects have been brought up- marked by a little footstool and a small ,permost in their minds. table, oa which lay a satin-bound copy of What are all histories but God manifest-

The reading or other amusements that the opera and specially prepared programme in* himself, shaking down and trampling offered, it is found, n ust be done by for Her Majesty's use. Behind these were under foot whatsoever he hath not planted,

outsiders, for the blind are very jealous the guests and the members of the house- —(Cromwell..of one another. They are apt to resent hold, the company bein^ accommodated Of all virtues magnanimity is the rsrest ; any exhibition 1 y one of their own num- with good seats in tiers which rose to the | there are 100 persons of merit for one who her of accompliamnenta which are not com ; little gallery, in which were the upper j willingly acknowledges it in another.— mon to ail | servants, above all being Sir Thornes Law [Hazlitt. ■■■■■

nii. 2. LADDER AND BRACKKT IN VOSITION.

ed,making an adjustable platform on which an assistant can stand to receive the hay from the man on the load, and pitch it up to the man on the stack. Fig. *2. shows it placed on the ladder ready for use. By us­ing this simple contrivance, which a farmer can make in an hour or two, it is easy to top a large s'ack, building it up to a good form. In order that it may be per­fectly strong and secure, it is best not to use nails in its construction, hut fasten it entirely with small carnage bolts.

long for most, except liberty, is work. De prived of work and shut day after day

able.

“According to advices from YokohamaDon’t Try to Heat too Many IronsI know of a nice field of potatoes about

half grown, that has not been cultivated since the last hard rain of 13 days ago, says a writer in the Practical Farmer. The ground is clay and surface dried as hard as sun and wiml can do it. Many corn fields are in the same shape. Crops thus attend­ed to usver pay here. Why not recognize the fact in the spring that along abouthaying and harvesting time mortal man' cannot do more than two or three days work in one, hurry up as fast as he may. Our farmers are not shiftless, as a rule. They work hard and faithfully. They seem to thiuk that this rush and neglect of some things along about this time of year is a necessity. They deplore the fact, but think it can’t be helped. It can be to a great extent.

For example, I know one dairyman who baa a large field of corn and another cf

tatoes. With his having and harvesting cannot possibly, one year in five take

care of either. He might do very well, or at least very much bettor, if he had but the one crop to cultivate. Think over these things, friends, if you have not been able to take care of everything perfectly during the rush of harvest time. Profit comes from perfect work, not from ordinary or half-way work.

disfai

“ The Japanese aim ie to attack the Chinese before the arrival of the Man- ham%, reporting the capture of Seikwan. churian corps. refers to the battle of July 21». It is said

“ The Chinese fleet makes no effort to that the Anglo-Russian efforts to bring leave the coast. Fast Japanese cruisers are About peace between China aud Japan have constantly watching." failed. China insists upon retaining her

JA1-AXK4E REPULSED. Suzsrain rights over Corea.Shanghai, Aug:—A telegram has been China was willing to negotiate with

received from Chee Foo, dated August 10 : reference to proposed reforms, but became A Japanese fleet attacked a Chinese fleet incensed on hearing of the sinking of the this morning off the harbor of Wei Hai Kow-Shing, and a settlement is now con- Wei, where the Chinese have a fort said to 8 dcred improbable, be impregnable. The Japanese ships were repulsed at one entrance to the harbor and they are now attacking the other entrance

THE P. 0. SAVINGS BANKCOver of the Peoples Money

Handled at a l ost of Hal gr><> ttll-ln teres! Allowed Amounting to

A despatch from Ottawa says On the30th of Juno last, the close of the fiscalyear, the total deposits in the post-officesavings banks amounted to $25,257,863. At the close of the previous fiscal year the sum on deposit was $24,153,103, the net increase during the yexr being $93,675. Interest allowed to depositors during the year ended June 30 was $835,200. De­posits amounted to $7,524,286, and$7,473,• 585 represents the sum withdrawn. The cost of managing this enormous banking business was but $56,611 for the year, which represents a charge of .23 of one per cent upon the balance in the banks. The cost of management during the previous year was somewhat heavier—one-quarter of I per cent. In 1877 it cost considerably more than one-third of 1 per cent, to man­age the system. The annual statement of Superintendent Matbeson also shows that there are 699 post-office savings banks in the country, an increase of 26 during the year, and double the number in existence in 1984. The number of depositors has increased from 66,682 to 117,020 during the decade. It is shown by the report that the average cost of each transaction, that is, of each deposit and withdrawal, was 24 12 cents. This was a little more than one cent cheaper than the average cost of the past four years.

THE TARIFF SETTLED

Imperfect Butter.Many farmers, and dairymen too, for

that matter, fail to realize that dealers in butter in the cities can detect the inferior grades of the product, caused by poor feed­ing. But just now it would be profitable to read some of the market accounts which report that a good part of the butter sent to the markets this fall is lacking in quality. Several ot the trade papers refer this to the feeding of frosty food, and to the absence of grain feed. So much has the butter been effected in this way that dealers have brok­en their contracts with the creameries, and the irregular butter thus rejected is being offered for what it will bring in the market, generally from two to four cents a pound less than the regular prices.

Here is food for thought. There is nohigh-spun theory here that may containonly a grain of truth with a great deal ofrubbish. It is a cold fact and it is so truethat dealers refuse to pay the market prices.The cause of this poor quality of butter isthe feeding by the dairymen. The cream­eries have contracted to take all of their cream at so much, and in this instance the creameries will probably be the losers They have attempted to manufacture first- class butter, but* there was a defect in the cream and they failed. The city dealers who hsve to supply their customers with the best, know that they cannot dispose of soch butter at prof 'sole rates, and they reject it.

It stands to reason that the creameries caught in this way will not be found nap­ping another season. They will come

A Ship In a ForestA few miles from the port of Batavia, in

Java, there is a ship in the forest. Theship is actually two miles from its nativeelement. It belonged to a well-knowntrader in the Southern Seas, and was carriedfar inland by a huge wave which ewept over the country during the fearful erup­tion of Kratakoa. The vessel was borne with terrible force right into the heart of the island, and when the waters receded it was discovered in a dense jungle. There it has remained ever since, an object of curios­ity to visitors.

are

PEEL! CANADIAN NEWS PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. GREAT MITAIS AT SEA CHANGES IN THE U. S. TARIFF. TRADE AND COMMERCEI

lalemllag Ileus* About bone oftbe «realfolk* of ike World.

How Ike Hew I’nllrd fttalr* Tariff WillINTERESTING ITEMS ABOUT OUR

OWN COUNTRY.THE PERCENTAGE OP AMERICAN

Lord Salisbury turns the sosies at 252 I TRAFFIC BRITANNIA CONTROLS. I Following it a list of the duties under

W ardsville wants a butoher shop. bad a professional income of 175,000, and * ut 1 Ia" t>€en htar(* m recent tunes of Hogs..l>og poisoners are at work in Rodney. oow» having Been made a Baronet for hie British sea power, but it remains for the SheepIog.i-.oll m.ideni hare tb. croquet crue. “ ** **id “ WlU em0Unt l<> Seoiel IKcooomi.t ol New York to pr«.«nt

«“° •• " r..I,-. :

Orillia • new market it approaching com- one in the family learnt to play it. One U hM b#fn 10 loD8 • cardinal doctrine of Oatmealï>leî!on* hour's practice & day with a competent | fche Englishman that Britannia rules the ' h<*af •

Railway laboring men arw in demand at oitructor is permitted. waves, and so generally acknowledged by ‘. Boston’s floating hospital has already other nations, that a mere re-statement of Beans

I elec Is and has now thres Customs ofti- ] given several hundred eicî babies and their lhe facl woul(1 âllrâct but Iillle attention. Hay..

Owen Sound will prob.bl, have . bicycle I «•«■. m.king weekly tr.p. The hc0D0Tl't.howewr- Jult ”h“ .factory. with full passengers fiats. percentage of American traffic Britannia | potatoea

Thompson's new mill at Teeswater is in if possible that Lord and Lady Terence controls and how much per cent, there is Fish, smoked operation. Blackwood may be settled in Washington in the operation. The figures are such as Plums

Flo. Centre i. ..id to have two boy. for I “.y ,e°n t u7tUe'tTto the’ BHtiïh Lui- t0 g‘v« »°rae idea ol the enormous reaource.

***ry ®ir ' baaiy.la,t week" ^ *“ """ Gen. Lord Wolaeley i. greatly inter.,t.rl

* * in the temperance movement in the BritishW aikerton now has a telephone line to army. He says that there has never been

TUtkili ■——■—mm

vc I les. A Slight Enlargement In the Volumeof Business.

i he notes of the Bank of England coat exactly one cent each.

McKinley Senate One London gam company alone uses 2,- 1)00,000 tone of coal each year.Law. Bill

$20 or 30 p. c. 20 p.c20 p.c. I BolaU, the product of a tree in Sumatra,

"!!*??. P,c* threatens to become a rival of India rubber%c.L » £ *»d

.3^) per cent. 40 p.c. The traffic receipts of the Canadian•' 15 cents P*°’ Râilw*y for the last week in July

lc per lb. 15 p. c. s8*reg»ted $469,000, contrasted with $665,­..25 cents 20 p.c. ^00 *D the corresponding week of last year,..25 per cent 20 p.c. losing a decrease of $96,000 or about 15 per••ft cents lb. 20 p.c. Lent. 40 cents bushel 5c 11».

$4 ton 20 p.c.,.2uc gallon 20 p.c. I iron and steel as produced by a new Ger-.. JOcente bushel 20 p.c,.. lc per lb...jfc per lb..2c per lb.,25c bushel

..2c lb.

..23 lb..3c lb.

..110e #

e e

Electric cast notably melting of metals,cere.

man procès*, is said to have some very great advantages. In crucible steel the new

20 p.c.15 p.c.30 p.c. 1 process shows an economy of fuel of more 20 p.c. than half, which for metal so difficult of 25 p'g" | fusion is a favorable result,as it will reduce

20 p.c. con °f production without any correspond* 20 p.c. I ing drawback.10 p.c.40 p.c.Free Free Free Free Free Free

Apples, greenof the United Kingdom. The writer in Meatef/resli ^

The Economist is distinctly hostile to Brit- Poultry, live, ilh commerce, but he states the facts as Poultry, dressed. ,.5c lb.they are. Of the 1,238 millions of com- ^^bltuminoni

9 Lumber..............Wool..................Ktfg*...................Fish, fresh........Bacon and hams Salt.....................

$2. 50 ton .75c ton $1 per ton

, 1 lc and 12c . 5c dozen .80 lb.5c lb.

.12c 100 lbs.

The area of the current year's wheat crop (1993-94), in India, according to the most recent reporte, is estimated at 27,382,000 acres, as compared with 26,429,000 acres, which is the levised estimate of last year's

--- - - -*• :eb5ee:::Small-pox is said to have broken out st States, 11,000,000 or 85 per cent., live in "hH,e on< ani* â half P*r ceDl* Ha.t a

Spanish Hiver. | separate bouses, the other 1,700,000 million dollars daily, peyable in gold, if de­f smiles living in 500,000 dwellings, an manded, is the debt incurred by the Unitedîtitoi304 ,4ëille,> °r 0 P»'00' t01 State, through the employment of foreign

The song recently composed by the Em- e^*P8 t0 ^beir business. Up till 1861 peror of Germany—" Sang an Aegir,” as it the United States carried more than theiris called in German-is to be published by ,hare of the total commerce between Europe permission of his Majesty, The proceeds are to go toward building the church in memory of Emperor William. ___

Lord Randolf Churchill's friends are much concerned about hu condition. While at Bar Harbour he appeared one night in the office of the Malvern hotel, clad only in hi# pajamas, to remonetrate ag for the regular dance of tn hotel.

Seventh Day Adventist meetings are be­ing held at Darrell.

James Angus, pioneer of West Missouri, is dead, aged 82.

The Lucknow Sentinel advocates the de­horning of all bulls.

Barrie has raised the circus license from $100 to $30U per day.

The London pottery has resumed work after six weeks' idleness.

Wm. Abernethy, a pioneer of Lambton County, is dead, aged 73.

Mr. Whidden was this week ordsined as a Baptist minister at Morden.

KentCounty and Chatham have a lawsuit about the payment of $800 in fees.

The Galt councillors and the school trus­tees are to play a game of football.

The Bradford fire engineer gets $25 a " year and his assistant $2 for each fire.

The Woodstock Electric Light Company's assessment has been reduced to $3,500.

Geo. 8. Armstrong, the first white male child born in Eramosa, is dead, aged 71.

The losses by fire in Chatham during the ast twelve years amounted to $167,169.

Mr. and Mrs. Melville Millar, of Orillia, celebrated their silver wedding last week.

Mrs. Orange Clark, an old settler of Middlesex county, died at Missouri, aged

acreage, or an increase of 3& per cent. The total product for 1593-94 is placed at

INTENDED TO HOLD UP THE TRAIN. 17,923,000 tons or 258,458,667 bushel, of 60___ pounds. The average product is given as

Toronto Thieves Plot to Bob the Passe» 260,437,333 bushels, showing this year’sgees on a Canadian Paelfle Express— (crop to be about 2,000,000 below normal.One of llie Bandits Caught.

and America, but since the beginning of the civil war there has been a steady de­cline. The proportion of American tonnage entered and cleared in the United Kingdom in the American trade was 62. G8 per cent, in 1853, 66.59 in 1860, 22.10 in 1870, 6.82

and 10,000,000 below that of the previousThe C. P. R. authorities have been noli- year‘

fied of a daring plot to rob passengers on During the last week there has been a No. 1 express for the weston Tuesday night slight enlargement of the volume of busi- last this side of Port Arthur. The scheme ness in a few departments, but no general

in 1880, and 2.50 in 1888. During the same ] was arranged at Toronto, and the gang, quickening of trade. The falling off in the period the British tonnage engaged in the I which was composed of five crooks, all be- earnings of railways seems unabated. The

Mlle, de Lamartine, the niece of the trade increase.! from 33.7.3 in 185.'lto 90.50 I long to Toronto. Meagre details are to Reneral financial depression and the pro-

BBBBMThe number of millionaires in England is polized the foreign trade and transportation noun of the Dominion police gave chase to pnvpP. hav* tn-m rallv

not so great a. one might believe. Accord- of the United States. It is an interesting one of the men, but it Was not until a shoting to the report of the income-tax officials, question to what extentare we, financially, had been tired from a Winchester rifle that ?,rj,.ee ‘t un ; P(i w. ,y,H )n / * ^

The next British Methodist Episcopal there are in England seventv-one persons in the toils of this domineering «creditor the man surrendered. He was handcuffed generallv on a naritv with *L

StSt* '■ S1 d,:™ w” lb™» s! Æïïïiss sM.2. “tisss s;-s' ‘,“t rz ‘r:ms, Hüü .mmmiss™--®3 ÏSi=i3Stsasriy. mudrftwo feet long and weighing forty pounds place the latter part of August, and will be ed oor usual interest and investment ao eome ot lhe 8aim'8 recently piayed would , jobbers and retailers on which any increased out of a mill pond the other day. celebrated in the strictest privacy at Grasse, ! count at $110,000,000. To this he adds do credit to the "nines” of American uni- activity can be based this month, and the

The man Partridge, who stole ahorse, where the bride ■ father resides. fifty to sixty millions expended in travel- vereities. At Tatteraall’s there is a very , low prices for produce may largely neutra-rig and harness at Bailantrae, has been All the children of the King of Denmark hng and living abroad. Travelling goes in t jnqulry for trotting and pacing horses 'lize what would have been at any time insent to Kingston for four years. are enthusiastic bicyclists. The Czarewitch with transportation. Allow for living only, 1 I the past regarded as potent factors in the

Mr. A. W. Marten, formerly conductor »«" ‘be great improvement which h.. -d w. h.v. mail, for Baron,. 1115.000.- lw. week at^elford there were .ever- j selection of wereawd vitality ,n domw-on the M. C. R.. has been appointed con- recently taken place in his health to 'cycl- 0U0. * rom the figures of a British statis- al trotting contests on a mile track which | tic trade. Our foreign trade is still com-doctor on the St. Catharines and Niagara in8e Some years ago he was very delicate, tician it may be deduced that sixty or was laid out just after the opening of the paratively satisfactory. Rather depressingCentral. and wss thought to have a weak heart and eixiv-five millions represents British inter- Manchester canal by the Queen. The track reports come from the North-West, and

a nervous system outof gear, but the symp- j eet due from the United Slates. Add to j8 really excellent and the best time made, wherever the crop will be a failure coaaid' toms which gave uneasiness have di*ap-1 this for residence abroad, and we have not 2,12$, was not one to be ashamed of. erable distress willpeered. exceeded seventy mi liions. It is,therefore, From Canada lacrosse has been imported, is unsatisfactory. There is an increased

Inventor Edison, at a recent scientific P'^io that oar foreign tax is twice as great and has to a certain extent succeeded polo, demand for money at interior points to seance, had a large globe of goldfish whose jfor shipping service as for interest ac- As the result of the visit of various Wild move the crops, but rates continue the anatomy was distinctly outlined, and every count,whether we have regard to Europe West shows, several wealthy young men, same—from 4 to 5 on call loans and 6 to 7 action of each organ was plainly seen. This i or (,reat Britain, and that our total foreign among them the titled son-in-law of Mr. percent, for commercial paper, Montreal the "Wizard " accomplished by making the tax ** *bout $863,000 daily, and over six Bradley-Martin, have imported mustangs &nd the east having the benefit of the lower fish swallow minute incandescent lamps, j millions s week.” and broncos, chiefly noted for their bucking rates,and by invisible wire conducted the elect- The end of it all is that the people of the propensities. It is the delight of these — —ric current. The fish apparently were not United Staten are implored to own their young men to wager large sums on the incommoded by their diet of electricity. j marine, do the carrying of their foreign ability of themselves or their comrades to

Prince Besoiow, m native African who for tra le* and 6at fr°m UDder thumb of an ride the vicious animals in which they have the past few months has had quarters at the °PPreeeor w.ho refule*lo take depreciated invested. The " Golden Gould” as the

kssls a S.fss i ■--- -*take the throne made vaesnt by the death , j 11 1Sld \° ^ t0 yachting, and because of Zimmerman’s l“t few years, was comparatively small. Inof his father. The Prince wifi be accom- lar8e,7 duei to this domineering creditor exploits, the bicycle has become more than ! round numbers, about 50,000 pilgrims have

ElisesIn » letter written from Florence in m over tee world. or Tnrki.h trouser, in the mtere.te of com- ltiu better u toon* the projected ..ni-

1860, and recently sold in London, Robert Tpe Economist writer wants an Ameri- I fort. A stand in favor of the latter choice Ury establishments are completed. Both Browning speaks enthusiastically of the can marine, and, apparently, is willing to of garments has been taken by the grand- hD Jeddah and in the quarantine stations liberal treatment hie wife received from P*y for it, because he quotes approvingly daughter of Archbishop Benson, the chief p.l Tor and Clazamone, a decided improve! American publishers. They paid her $100 the fact that thirty years ago Great dignitary of the English Church. | ment upon former years is evident. In theapiece for her poems, and offered $2,600 a Britain was losing £1,000 daily on mail _ conveyance of the pilgrims by sea there is.year for sn amount of labour which would lubsidiee. He would, doubtless advise a ARBITRATION npn INFO however, much that is sadly deficient*cost his wife and himself but a single headlong plunge into the subsidy business, AKBI1 KA ION DECLINED The loading of vessels in proportion to their

35kss KW SiSSp HSSSSVineland, X. J., has suddenly recovered h*a reasoning lead to? This: that Great A despatch from \\ ashington, says:—A | ln the jist 0j travellers. The ships in- her speech through seeing the blood flowing Britain carries the world’s goods cheaper feature of Thursday’s session of the in fact, often so crowded that pi lgrims

Miss Clara Lundy, of Newmarket, won I from a out on her finger. While eating and better thfcn any other nation. That House Committee of Foreign Affairs , have to put in the small boats hangingZAltlWAC'l'Æ !S, 177.7^7.ziïiz22,“ -......... ...............................«

chosen by the teachers. I he subject was rendered her speechless. Physicians were than their own ships could do the work, present on the joint resolution to arbitrate snj lbe provisioning of the pilgrims ia "The Province of Ontario.” unable to cure her strange malady, and the That it would be advisable to pay Americans all differences between Great Britain and 1 wretchedly done. In consequence of the

case excited considerable wonder. Recent- more for doing this work than is now paid the United States for the next 20 years. It1 neglect of sanitary matters, the mortality ly, however, after cutting her finger, her to Englishmen. All this because the was argued that in view of the fact that I on board these ships, although no epi- powe;1 of speech seems to have returned, Americans could be paid in silver, and the the Nicaragua canal may he built under j demie has broken out this year, has been

. , and she now talks as fluently as any child Englishmen have the power to demand the auspice# of the United States, and I very great. Every vessel going from Jeddahknttirs Hum Fiomr*trn#i* »»<! < ompel 0f her age. gold. The absurdity of the whole thing complications may arise between the i to El Tor has lost from one to three per

aettiers le Flee. I There is great rejoicing in the pretty is clearly shown by the fact that all the United States and England growing out ] cent, of her passengers.A despatch from Pretoria, Transvaal little highland village of llraemar, where gold in use in the United States amounts of the different interpretation# given to

Reoublic save : " The Kaffirs in the north il hae been announced that the Duke of to about $646,000,000, and that, if gold the Clayton-Bulwer treaty, it would be ■, — . , Fife has lent his honee, Old Mar Lodge, were exported to pay interest and ocean better not to put this Government in a - ° penetrating is water at high pressure

of the I ranevaal have revolted. J hey have t0 lhe Duke and Duohese of York, and carriage due Britain, there would not be position where an adverse decision might thatonly special qualities of cast iron will burned a number of homesteads and captur- that as soon as possible her Royal Highness an ounce of gold in the United States in make it impossible to build the canal be tight against it. In the early days ofed many cattle and are besieging the inhah. ^ there to recruit. Mme. Albani hae three years. Notwithstanding the denun- ____ the hydraulic jack it was no uncommon

Fv™*." ï.4: 1ha\e been sent to the aeeaii jor tqBlme| Bhe is this year to have the ocean freights, and will continue to take • ^ would penetrate the unwary finger just aspretty house on the outskirts of Braemar, pay in wheat and other food products. Prof. Asa Gray says that the Washing, readily as a steel one.

The bicycling fashion has reached Home, wbich was last year occupied by Mrs Bread is more needed in England than ton elm, at Cambridge, has been estimated and many of the Dalian ladies may be seen Henry White, wife of the Secretary of the geld* Not till the people of thp United flying about on their wheels. American Embassy. Slates can make more money by owning

If a piece of cork Is sunk 200 fset below ----------- * ----------- and sailing ships than by cultivating wheatthe surfaee of the ocean, the pressure of We never lire ; we are always in the er raising cattle will the tea power ofthe water will prevent it from rising. peoiation of living.—[Voltaire. Great Britain be seriously menaced.

ainst the music c week at that

92.

Mr. Frank Reetorick, of Watford, ship­ped 20 horses by the steamer Indiana for Glasgow last week. Average price at $75 per head.

1 follow Business there

The first load of new wheat this season has been delivered at South Yarmouth, testing 70 pounds, 28 bushels to the acre, 50 cent# a bushel

Ida Jane, the 17-year-old daughter of Mr. John Railing, who lives near St. Thomas, has left her home, and her par­ents are anxious to get eome trace of her.

Thirty-five men formed themselves into a Montreal Union of the American Railway Union Thursday night. The union is sa,d to be working quietly and secretly for the time being.

Aid. Derby of Hamilton proposes to in­troduce a by law authorizing the pay of salaries to aldermen at the rate of

The Mecca Pilgrimage.A report from Constantinople upon this

year’s pilgrimage to Mecca, states that the

ment $150

per year for ordinary members and $300 for chairmen of committees.

One of the soldiers who was blown to pieces in Chicago in the recent explosion was an old Port Hops man. Hie ns me was John Knox, although he enlisted under the name of Jeremiah Dunmvan.

Among the patents recently granted in the United States to Canadian inventors is one on a clutch pully to Herman Banker, Barrie, and on a buckle design, patented for 14 years, Geo. M. Aylesworth, Colling wood.

on

REVOLT IN THE TRANSVAAL

▲ fad with society girls in New York to produce 7,000,000 leaves, which would j who are rich enough, is collecting unset make a surface radiation of about five I jewels. They are intended not to be worn acres in extent, and give out every fair day but eimplv to be admired in their < **««* in the growing season seven end three Needles#' u> say, there is little danger of quarter tone of moisture. | that fad becoming ever too common.

T-L" *

like blocks or slicks, rough hewu orOBlj.

Lethe.

Is!:::used for sperm and in building wharves, Reeve of etahbrd township.

-Ssss. rjsor»i*Syt3i‘stf'# p «iiRiti«gss$rsSJE

warn^s&isa, "Baggsass

Canada* hu always sold largely of her ___________________

SSSPP&t 11 equal to the best or themthe value of $1,608,000, lumber $»}•.• ■■■■■■000, shingles $736,900, railway ties WM,- 600, stave bolts $103,000, laths, padings sod pickets $464,000. The remove^ of the duties is certain to prove helpful to the industry. If it does not increase the price obtained by the Canadian lumber-

at least it will place them in a bet- position to compete in the American

market, and this important industry promises to be still more active and

CT,:,'|apambf sut to -»»<*, imMontreal Gazette

_______mow ______ _IS"' “

The Gquity.onmanu-vvv^yy\A

SHAWV1LLE, AUG. 23, 1894 COLUMBIA\AA\

The Times gives a very startling account of Brook villas finanças. No auditors re port for 1893, has yet been seea. Special auditors from Toronto are now examining the corporation books The deficit for s few years past have accumulated to $63,­000 and arrearages of taxes, about $30,900 owed, it is claimed by a ring.

The McKinley duty on wire rods is $13, 44 a ton, and the duty fixed by the Senate bill about to become law in the United State# is $8 96 a ton. Practically no wire rods are imported into the United States, nor will any be brought in under the new rate of duty which serves exclusively for protective purposes. Now, according to free trade theory, the price of Amenv.,, wire rods should be the foreign price f>lu$ the duty of #13.44 a ton, and yet Ameri­can rode are selling at $24 a ton or just about the English quotation for the same article. Somehow or other when free trade theories come into contact with hard facts, the theories always get the worst of it.

CHAMBERSETTS,oth t

10 PIECESbell

I have just received a lot of new Teas.

First garden pickings of the

season’s crop.

Bought before the war com­

menced.

Get a sample.

THE

Central Canada

E ZHIBITIO N,AT OTTAWA,

It seemi that the feeling held by Brit­ish farmers that they are being ruined by foreign competition, is held by other clas­ses in England as well. An English jour­nal published in the interest of the paper industry, has recently been publishing a series of articles kicking against the sale of American ground-wood to British pa per makera. It declares that it is being bought by these paper makers for less than what it is worth. How does this statement agree with the contention of our Canadian Grit friends that nothing <mn be produced so cheaply in a protective country, as a free trade country. \our talkative free trader tells you that by reason of the tariff every product of Am­erican factories is increased in price, but here is a wail from an English paper that one article at least is produced so cheap ly in protection-ridden United States that it is being sold a great deal less than it is produced for in Great Britain under free

men,ter

a ÜS* seesÜEE as=

J.H.SHAWSterling Binder Twine 7c. per lbIn lots of 50 lbs. or over, 3 per

cent eff,Entries In all departments close September

The latest developments In Elect ricity ex­hibited In Main Building

ley 30, peas 26.South central—Wheat 16, oats 28, bar- isth.

ley 23, peas 16, flai 10, rye 10.East district—Wheat 14, oats 27, bar­

ley 24, peas 15, flax 16, rye 18.The wheat is estimated at

I The two ends of ths Grit party work 16,000,000 bushels which is in avsrmge of

2WL Î2S. gKi;sStates snd they metaphorically weep over western dutncti. Wsnt of rsio wee the *reste.t sndorlimsl Aerisl Woycle^Rlder.,sxirj.:r.shs“SL,ïï -îtjïïutheir report of the Department of Agri- 000 bushels ; barley, 2,200,000, peas 220, host of other Specialties too numerous <> culture, in which they devote a good 000, flax 300,000, rye 64 000. late.many pages to showing the Ontario farm The groas total of all crops is nearly 31, For Prlze Lists, Entry Forms. RseePro- er that the very worst thing he can do is 000,000 bushels. grammes, and all required Information, ap-to sell his hay off the farm at all. Gentle- The hay crop is reported light, averag- mcMAHON, Secretary,men get together and agree on some line ing 1.62 tone an acre for the province. ‘ sparks atof policy. The potato and root crop is reported A. McLEAN, President.

--------—“ ------ good

See them at once, they

USI °F r»™" I «• "“‘“fully Cheap.

tradeTWO IDEAS

G. Fred Hodgins.

Cash, or Trade REMOVED.1894. | But HO Credit. I I beg to inform my patrons

and the general public that I have remov­ed my stock from corner of Main a##

In consequence of the aboveI have reduced prices to suit freih and choice iuppiy 0f &u the .upi.

lines of

Ottawa.

WANTED PROTECTION, To the bulletin the Government append ■^■1 ----- this remark : Correspondents have, in | 1894.

An exchange says -The Populist cry general, estimated the grain yield at what in the United States, like the platform of mjght be expected if dry, hot weather the Patrons of Industry in Canada, was continued, remembering how crops suffer* that they wanted a tariff for revenue only, od last season just before cutting. Con- How little they understood this tariff for j^ions at present are favorable, and the revenue only may be inferred from the «^id will in all probabilities exceed the fact that Senator Peffer, from Kansas, who is one of the champions of the Popu list party, moved in the United States Senate recently that the protection be notremoved from wool, which is one of the | they decide to maintain their skpar productions coufrom which he comes. Senator Peffer's demand was for protection to the ftrmers of his district. If to morrow Patron rep

PONTIAC- -WOOLLEN- . (he people«hohnvcC^b.

READY-MADE CLOTHINGGROCERIES,estimates

Winnipeg Catholics* — SUCH AS —

TEAS, 8U0AR, RICE, RAISINS, CURRANTS, TOBACCOS, ét.,

-ALSO-'CANNED GOODS, CONFECTION•

ERY, CANDIES of all kind», ami FRUITS in Season.

MILLS BE : SOLD : VERY : OHSAP : INDEEDWILLATE SCHOOLS AND TO INTERVIEW MR

LAURIER. Men’s and Beys’Have commenced opera- | Straw H&tfl,tions for the season after having been thoroughly overhauled and re-fitted.

Winnipeg, August 16.—A meeting of reeentativee were placed in the House of I the Roman Catholics of Winnipeg was Commons, we are convinced that none of held last night to consider matters relat- them would dare to vote for free agricul- iDg to Catholic Schools. The meeting tural produce, and yet their platform dis- & representative one and the discus- tinctly states that they are in favor of | tiona were characterized by enthusiasm tariff for revenue only

AT COST

AGENT FORThe Maxwell Farm Implements,

School Bools at City Retail Prices. I The Workman & Ward Hay fork,The Daisy Churn And McLaehlin Carriages.

I can supply any school in the County withand unanimity. The attitude of the Gov­

ernment with respect to school legisla lion was condemned, and it warn decided to make a formal protest to the ministers

From a Canadian standpoint, perhaps against the position in which the Catho- the most satisfactory feature of the new lies have been placed in by the provincial American tariff is the removal of the duty public school act. on lumber. Free lumber should not only It was decided to continue the mainten result in inc dian article in

TUB LUMBER DUTIES

Parties requiring My books will be closed Oc-

CARDING &$PINNINC|i"uJ. R. HORNER,

A CALL SOLICITE*.teasing the sale of the Cana- ence of separate Catholic schools as at in the United States, but also present.

in lessening the Quantity of logs towed A deputation was appointed to wait on from the North shore of Lake Superior the Government and give expression on and the Georgian bay to Michigan mills, behalf of the Catholic population, to the The late tariff on lumber was disastrous to disapproval of the treatment they havethe industry on Georgian bay, Michigan received in educational matters. _lumbermen obtaining their supply of logs A committee was also appointed to J REASONABLE PRICES, from Canadian limits under the protec- wait on Mr. Laurier on hit arrival here tien of an import duty of 91 per 1,000 in regard to the position of separate feet on pine, and $2 per 1,000 feet on Schools in Manitoba, spruce. Lut year no leu than 400,000,- ^000 feet of lumber in the log was towed across I

may rely on having it

Skillfully Executed | Main Street, Shawville, Queand at

D. WILSON.ShswviUe, Msy 21st, 1894

OLAN, PEOPLE BDIIN STOCK. FROM

dot Clothes la Canada. A Choice amd ExtensiveLine of

to Michigan from Canada, and about the only gain to this country offset­ting this rapid denuding of our forest wealth was the toOntario Government. The advantages of Detroit, Mich., August 16.—An even- carriage, sawing, and manufacture all ac jng paper says the representative of a crued to the United States. Hereafter, Toronto tailoring house succeeded in get- however, lumber will obtain free admis- ordere for clothing to the amount of •ion to the American market, and there nearly one thousand dollars from the offl- is some prospect that the Canadian mills Gf the United States Gunboat Michi- will be able to resume operations on the gaDf which hu been lying near Amherst- Georgian bay, sending the finished article burg for several weeks, taking soundings, in place of the logs to the neighboring The cheapneu of Canadian clothing corn- country. The new tariff is broad and p*r*d with that in the United States comprehensive, reading as follows was an inducement to them. Someone

Logs and round unmanufactured timber %&ve the thing away, and it reached the U.enumerated or provkWd for In § Treasury department. It iaeaid the men

Firewood, handlebolte, heading bolts, stave believed they had a right to purchase an-

tr.; rpr rsSp-ilSiSïüü Bssçwsi.**" pv" “ÎTimber.squared or ei(T«*i been delivered, and the customs umcer*

'W8SB&B&S& ttSSKÿSas1» nee wood, ebony, box, ^ ansdlMa, mahog- liver it. any, ro^wood, satin wood and all other cab­inet WtKHiH

G. Hodrins, JrSHOCKING OFXKNCI OF THS CREW OF THF U. 8. GUNBOAT MICHIGAN. I ■1

i THE LOW-PRICEf \ i in tort i Prorisioi Dialer,which will well repay

inspection. ÇUVON, QUE.because in the first place, theyKNOW that they SAVEMONEY, and secondly, that they can rely on their pur­chases being good. He keeps only the best quality of goods, and has nearly everything you need in the line ot

Groceries, Provisions, Confectionery,

or Canned Goods.

I make any kind of

Boot or ShoeFlannels, Blankets, Shawls, &o.

you require

Best Stock.Perfect Fit,Prices Eight.e

Wool taken in Exchange forDRIVING BOOTS A SPECIALITY.Particular attention paid to

Custom Work.

Ml.for

A.H0DGIN8,de

Pine elepbospds. I H. Hobbs, auctioneer and real estate A Call Solicited. Muieh 17, ISM.

M»y 1,1894,

r

LOTISw I O. T„ DBATB or -M. T.O., <™~, I | ^ A0ti0a

if I OF bbmtol, who dud mat Wre, ISM, I SliU# %ow#fT*^^h!y%"gN%# I Qgftfllfttfflff

sutitttutton In ôrSre^xoïïeVrfVrrtlory |

snd liberal terme to whole or port time agente, Write us. _ 1

«TOim A WlLLÎKOTOII

Rot. Father Chiniony will lecture in BhewfUle on Aug. V)th in the ehow ground» et 7 pm. weather permitting,

inf expense». Butin Heav«n I know I’ll meet thwi,

*15; tïïtçu:ïl'ik:r' ^nsSSS^'»iïc01 H sfefef*1”"

It ia expected that by Christmas His Rot*-.! in garments pure and white,KttSmï'SftAâ1 ■**«««*.diocese of Ottawa, for the choice of Bish

▲obdTS tiau

WASHING MACHINEMontreal, que,J. W. Beal, Manager

Eclipses all others in the market to-day....Farm for Sale.

A rood Farm for sale being Front Half of Lot No. One In the Tenth Range of the Town­ship of Bristol, containing 100 acres more or leas, 75 acres of which are cleared and In a ■tale of cultivation. On the premleee there Is a log house, a cedar log barn, one stable, and completely, doing away with thewaM watered. *Tbe po&Ion*oMh! washboard and hand rubbing altogether,

be.idW being » mMj opened thet .*i oonoeMlon, or by letter to C.ldwell ohj,d ^n oee it without fatigue.

nathan jon kh ■■

w livre the oily Is of Jasper,And the streets are pure as gold

In the bosom of thy father,And thy tolls forever o'er.

Sudbury, Ont., Aug. 16.—A by-law for Home at last, thy labor done,sœtiSatiRSS -BSSSSSKed on here to day by the ratejpayers and one by one we cross the river, carried by a majority of 49. The eetima- One by one we’re passing o er

asraasisesr sssssssF

Nebraska is so great that the St. Joseph And what beyond ?4 Grand Island railroad has Iseusd orders Ahg moKafhearU can not conceive

SMtiTIS ® ïK a » Atottïts tsasst'KSa»wrflle Produce Quotation,. SBSSSE3HL-Oats........................................ 30 to 32 ness stands In the village and are well ad-p^. jo Ko spied for a general store or other business ofw........................................*-------** w that nature.

The building will be rented In whole or In If desired

It does its work perfectlyop

Bristol. July 3,1834. ProprietorIntend purchasers should not fail to

see this excellent machine beforebuying.

For Saleoi;to Rent.|Wm. S. ClarkeAGENT,

Korehead P.O., Que,

5

TOUALWAYS

de

Rye 40 4210 10118 20

The Oew Tlr Semedy. lackiMi reestantly oh hud.For further informationSB apply on the premise# toJ. McMaster, V. 8., Stratford, gives the following as the beet remedy for the

fly which has done such damage dur- Butter...........................jDg the past few days : It consists of Wheat, (standard) at milltanner's oil, 1 gallon ; sulphur, 1 pound ; Buckwheat......................Carbolic acid, 2 ounces. Mix oil and Pork per cwt...................sulphur by shaking, add acid and it is Hay lwr ton...................ready for use. Apply with brush on parts Calfskins.........................attacked by the flies. It has to be repeat ed about every ten days or so. The above is sufficient for eight or ten head of cattle all summer.

MRA L. BOUCHER

ALWAYSLard 00 10 quyon, Julyl, 1804.. 14 00 .. 65 00 ..40 42$0.00 0.00 7.50 8 00

25 to 30

oow

SATISFACTORY. PAYthe universal verdict of those who trade atSILAS YOUNG - PROF,OTTAWA MARKETS,

The following were last Saturday’s quotations !Butter in pails.Eggs per dozenLamb “ lb.......Mutton •• ....

Hair-oattlng .Shaving, Shampooingdonelnflrst-classstyle. W. WILSON’S, Ir or what you et, tut

do you always get what you pay for ?

▲OallSolicitsd 8HAWVILLE.to 17Oni Of Our Industriel, Shop nextdoorte Turner’sSheareand Scissorssharpened at res

stent ma-15

600D GOODS, WELL SELECTED,

8 10Canada has recently been compliment ed highly by the Journal of the American paper trade upon the success of her paper Tomatoes per gal industrie.. _ . I Cabbegw “ doz.

The capital invested in these industries Carrots more than doubled during the decennial Potatoes “ bag.. period of 1881-1891, and shows that such Oats_ bush... resulted from the moderate protection a-| l,ay

pted in 1878 It should be

■enable prices by means ofa new pa chine which doesthe workperfectly

301 Dee!6,l892.6 8

i2020bunches You don’t get what you pay

for if you get inferior goods at regular prices.

You don’t get what you pay for if you pay for a quality you don’t receive.

40 IN GREAT VARIETY,40 42 k6.50tonPRICES REASONABLE.The Steamer . WttcoRSr&

JANET CRAIG BtHiâSWill leave Aroprior every

MORNING TRIP : BM 1:%^ GOOllS.w<BuHdin| Kd 1 5oo. monthÎy^16 Pi**®»» Organa, and Farming Impie- ^

dopointed out, too, that

while the paper business has been expand­ing, employing many more people and paying out great sums of money for Cana­dian raw material, the prices of paper has been rapidly falling. Ten or fifteen y ago paper in the daily press used to cost from 6 to 8 cent# per lb. Now a paper of better quality sells from 3 to 4 cents perlb.

This industry therefore affords a splen­did example of protection stimulating p 4wtioo. keeping »p k*n compel,Lon, | and reducing pnoee.ggggggggggggg

Th. DtilawtorterSiptmbir. ^ Ar-prto, m ^ %%%.,% £»<.

ÈæFplKE SaffiSF»»»8

—35ÊeSS.S««! BSRE

00 toLtd., SS Richmond St.West, Toronto

Now is the TimeTO BUY YOUR

Spring Supplies.ear

Leave Aroprior at 7 a.m.,calling at Band Point 7.80 a.m , arriving at Bristol wharf 8.40,

issued

ro-

Whose fault is it if you don’t get what you pay

AFTERNOON TRIP

ORDER YOUR OEAS0NABLE.

CLOTHES "for?

Us In Di Fat•r WITH approaching Spring people’sthoughts naturally turn to considerhow they can the most profitably make those purchases which the sea­

son invariably necessitates. Because you can always getAMONG the aererai requirement. many | yOUF money back to the last people know that they must invest in a Cent by trading With me.$3.50 per 1000. )

1001.25. new Baggy, Wagon or Bond Cart

as the case may be.TO get a good article and at the most reasonable figure, are points which every judicious buyer keeps in view.

IT is in respect of these particular advan-1 Because I guanantec the tagee that we take a front seat, and there- . »

He makes a good substan-1 fore solicit in good faith the custom of all Imost Ior money.° I who look fc

tinl Job, and guarantees a fit

I every time.

Shop.—Opposite James Hod-

gins’ residence,

February 8th, 1894.

Because I guarantee the best for the money.

$1.86 per 10001.40

00 SHAWVILLE, QUE.Freight on Laths or Shingles 20 cents per 1000 All orders addressed to

JOHN T. WAIT,for a square deallea Season of 1894.ding Every one of these facts go

to show that you ought toGIVE home manufacfure a share in

the race—live and let live.

Respectfully soliciting your spring orders

Yours, TRADE WITSThe Shortest and Cheapest Bonte to Aroprior.Silvia Awsr W Brought.

at any hour of the day from______________ , . -----------------P- m Market days ( Taw-preoedented drought of th. prwent | ^ end Saturdays ) from 6 a. m. till 6 | ”

**MaDy hare no particular destination in Their sole object is to rwoh eome wat of th. Mississippi where they

make out an existence until another and escape the hardships of a

ter on the prairie. .__Since the exodus began it has been

timated that ten thousand people hare dneer each way. _left the state. At Plattamouth one day «enta, for ditto returning same day, 75cta.last week three hundred waggons ware

H. S. DOWD.n between Roe» oebec, i Con-

Shawville Ms roh, 1894

DOCTOR A. J. JACKSON,OOTS

sa:?*--,been foroed from their homee In >V eatern i Çrœeing % Nebraeks and Eastern Colorado by the g â# m. tifl 6 Remember that you can get

SHAWVILLE Q. |a8(iu&re<^ea^ f°raroun<ldol­lar.>nn

$ ~Eop.mHouse and Sion Painter,

Gilder, Glazier, Decor­

, ator, &c.

endother ttmn products, etc.,locality eait of the

mRemember that you can

get a high grade for a low figure

OSD win EQUATORS,THE TARIFF:DlFor a 2 horea cart or conveyance and iver each way, including normes 50 OR

QUI!/ nri I rrc All orders promptly attend- Remember that you pay for rlNK I ILLLILIw I e<j to and estimates furnished. | Uf0^^ W^at______ __ were) For * one horse cart or conrdyancesnd

the bridge. One man driver each way, including hone, 40ct».

WÊÊË Stiff fcsrl E=EE£*3?rSM3 wrk iD aoy of 116 abovehande to change in the above arragemeou. beued’i* »ii ewe.m O ntnf fl should tsks »o other pille. They remove

Seed arrangement, to Lead and GIRLS " otharwlH'Unload. ^ AUy be had »f mediclB# dealers or will be sent

Jas. X. Greenehielda, g&fê æ&°“to ~ *-or "

JO» T.WAJl.ireprUtoi.Arnprloi

’nt?.SSG The subscriber having start- H. S. DOWD’S, Quyon, Que.

ines, in first class style

PUBLIC NOTICE. Orders from all parts of the 1 county promptly attended to.

TTT7 v.--

At breakfast he told hie brother and had died three dayi before; ehe told this Dorothy thei Ue a a# due uext day iilumply, but wi'h a sadness that brought Norfolk. tear# to her husband ■ eye#. She said the

••If the home ii ready/1 he mad to rector had been very kind to her, and had David, 11 you will spare Dorothy to me at helped her in making arrangements for

To Rath’isurprise he did not repeit hi.

of her marriage. She fancied that hi. mem- illte the lhr htf„, mothero( lflmlly th.n lo 1'urley; .he ,i.>rm.u.d if he did not hae made her penitent and emotional. She ory had been affected by this last illness, ^e petted invalid ehe had been at Purley. i forbid it that ehe would go over to Dob perhaps feel# that ehe has unsettled andfor he had often spoke to her of Michael I " You are etronger, are you «Ht” he = mouth and make Acquaintance with Hath, spoiled my life. If she were really sorry

, i » , .h* said to her , It would humanize tlie relations between ehe would be glad to give some proof of it,•" e were »*”°raot that « “ I hone so ” ehe answered " but do them; for Ruth's answer to Dorothy e letter ehe would have asked me to come to her«red for .ome one else His manner k ^ I bénin to think I might here on her marriage h.d been so formal th.t it and she would have written at ouce.' to Mr. Bevmgton to-day had shown her that # , d(*j œor, than , ll|d a! pllr|ev I was esident .he did no wi.h for a correa- He grieved for the lo„ of hi. old friendhe did not in any way suspect the relation. „ hed „ot m,_ You „„ , hwj pood.no.. And also ih. astute Dorothy and for Ruth', trial ; but the .or. i l u.odbetwwn them. It was. she considered, „r„wll to ,l)ink Vouf nvuon that 1 was not promised herself to discover whether Ruth feeling had come back. He could notessential for her fathers sake that he should * couch to beuseful was correct, could not be persuade! to give up her bring himself to forgive hie wife's perils- never learn the truth. Instead of trying to hod out for myself watch over her father for a few weeks tent avoidance of him or to feel ae kindly

"I did not know you cared for change. how much oould rf , and devote herself to her husband. towards her a. he had been feeling whendear, ehe said lovingly. I am only think- , mvself at vour expense " " I am much better titled to take care of her letter reached him.ing of Michael. It i. not my fancy : indeed ,t l0 xikhael after hie Mr. Rryant now than I was when he came (to «* COWTlieriD.)It is not. The last tim.he csme to App!.- , lolitud, from all flmily tle, t0 fi3,l to Purley," ehe said rejoicing in her new dore he spoke very hareh y of Mr. Beving- onc„ more „,th th(^, who ,oved stock of heal,!,.ton, and I promised him 1 would not will- h(|J) ,, WM „ l(j, delightiul to be The golting party did not reach homeingly eee ,hl. gen kman .gam Do you HorolET: but for % d.v or two long before David did. The girl., fullnot.think that my husband woull haves avoided anv opportunity of finding ! of excitement and delight, gathered round Hunger I he *#•.! Derided Foe They «ave right to be angry if we were to accept Mr. himwlf slone ^ ^ eieter/ h | their father, buxzing out all they had to „ ( entend iflih.IE s&Sœrs 1IHEEEEEEEE zstjz

' Hitherto ehe had only spoken of hie wife ! m for him by his brother. eepatches from Seoul which reveal a most

He was looking at Tier inquisitively, and „|d frjmd Jf thejr mother'., and the reeerved letter wa. from Ins wife, and A long letter from hi, eon, written .omethe girl e hive red at the danger Iwfore her. , jgienael eiid he should stay at home with 1 when he had left the room .he felt sure that time before the Chinese and Japan troops hhe waited to collect her thought, before ; ^,thy and take a walk with her on the he had gone to enjoy the letter in private. jnvajed the wimtty confirm, beyond all’Ei1sesssisus s:l-i;rr£rJ?Js:jis1 »• -»... ...promised .1 let him know that my husband j rjver ^ac^Pt) by but behind was ft ! u ^ entered his fare was full of suffering ; the people of the little kingdom have todoes not like him. wide-spreading moor that stretched up, i he came up to her and in & low, dejected contend with is starvation. Hundreds are

to see us olf-but what I don’t understand ’ u, , lnd lhe bu,he' h,d me COm men are coming to meet me there p^ple ,ho.re strictly agricultursl is very^^^ ^

.aid; "forgive me! Try and forget -JJ1'!»., when the hou.e i. free of work etart in three day. ; I do not .ee how I can Lut year the Government etorehouse.

?t?,L:\z\L saur «S' z LEtL'^r1 - a e r • «. » «. «. % assme I ought uot to »ay a word igaiuet him, “ bmi ing, as it wai e. or er prise, houses were empty. Then followed riot-wiaissicsss.—" piEi ieitaüSi

would carry him off ; he says the pure a:r sister.^**^^^******1 ^ ^ ^and the quiet of a place like Dolmotuh •• I want you to do something for me, are more likely to prolong my old friend s Dorothy. I want you to go to Ruth,”

' Dorothy felt a mist ; she began

THE HOME.APPLEDORE FARM.Bread from Whole Wheat Flour.Someone ie always trying to convince the

public that whole-wheat flour Is the omy kind to use, but few give directions how to use it, writes a correspondent. So 1 would like to give the public the benefit of my experience in using whole wheat flour.

No sponge is required, so it must not be set to rise at night. Mix in the morning, and it will be ready to eat at supper.

Yeast Bread.— Four cuds of lukewarm

invitation. After a few more words with

Bryant looked gravely at his daughter.

water, three tablespoons of brown sugar,one teaspoon of salt, one cake compressedyeast, ten level cups of flourthe sugar and salt in a bowl with thewater. Dissolve the yeast in one half a cupof lukewarm water and pour into the bowlof water. Stir the flour in, mixing wellwith the hands till all the lumps are out. 9It will be a very soft, and sticky dough,and cannot be worked on a board. Whenit is well mixed, set in a warm place,(aboutseventy degrees) for about four hours, or till it has risen to double its bulk. Work for twenty minutes without adding flour.Do not try to work on a board as it is too sticky. When thoroughly worked, put into separate pans, let rise again, and bake in a slow oven for forty-five minutes, or an hour. This makes a splendid bread, and it is very much more nourishing and healthful than white bread.

Gems.—Three cups of flour, two heaping teaspoons of baking powder, one teaspoon of salt, one Urge tablespoon of lard. Sift the baking powder, and salt into the flour. Rub the lard thoroughly into the flour. Add enough water to make a very stiff batter. An egg, well beaten, and added to the hatter is a great improvement. Bake in gem pans or pie pans for thirty or fortyj five minutes.

If one does not want to give up the sponging of bread, a mixture can be made by setting a sponge ot white flour, and add­ing whole wheat flour in the morning in­stead of white. This does not make as nourishing bread as the entire use of whole­wheat flour mikes, but it i* much better than the white bread. It every housekeeper who reads those recipes will try them, she will surely see the superiority of whole­wheat over white flour.

It is much cheaper, as it contains much more nourishment, and is pronounced by doctors to be a great deal more healthful.It will cure constipation, and will agree a ith dyspeptics better than white bread.I can bear witness to that fact. It is not a good plan tobuy the flour inlarge quantities, as, being a whole grain it is likely to get bugs in it.

In these hard times, recipes for made- over dishes are generally acceptable. The scraps of meat left from roast, or steaks are often a burden on the houeekeeoer's mind. The following makes an extremely palatable dish : Chop fine the remains of roast or steak, season with salt, pepper, a little nutmeg, aud a very little onion. Make a pie crust, roll thin and spread thickly with the chopped meat, roll it up, and bake half an hour. Serve with brown sauce, tomato sauce, or white sauce.

Dissolve

COREANS STARVING.

pa.ket of letters broughtbrother.

inquired lor her ana lor Mr. I Dorothy eat watchmg Michael, and she At last the chance came. David that he kept one letter in his hand

Clifford took his daughters into Edinburgh I while he read the others. She guessed that

you must excuse me for saying you are in consistent. If Michael told you this, how

CanningMiss Bedford, principal of the New York

cooking echcol, uses the following propor­tions in canning fruit : For apples, peaches, pears, blackberries and sweet cherries one- fourth pound of sugar to every pound of fruit and one quart of water to every pound of sugar. In canning strawberries, sour cherries and raspberries (to which she adds a half cupful of current juice to everypound of fruit), she uses one-halt pound of

Tht Be, Wrap., or là, L.korln, < . t0 a pouDJ 0, (ruit< Md wlter & thesame proportion as before.

With the lingering echoes of the great Fo, inei |ee> bhie Ium, and „ and d natron, a trike m ,h. United State, ,he „„ lhri, fourth, o( a poan(1 of laglr•U folly and «futility beginning to dawn * ,n, 0f fruit, and water in the ..me pro- upon ,ta promoter, and chi., .offerer* th. othe„ t io the pine.One. more the unequal conte.t between app,„ Yh.y require no water to make » capi <il and labor Hah been decided in favor syrup, as they have sufficient juice without of the army which was best supplied with it. Pineapple should stand in sugar at the ainewe of war. The great railroad leMt twenty minute, before heating to

.. m.... ». ........ ................... ........ s.ï.'ïlîISSIin disarter to the poor and the triumph of They should be shredded with a silver fork, the rich. The reports of statisticians give as the large slices of pineapple that look the lose in the last strike alone at from so tempting in cans are awkward when $90,000,0(X) to $100,000,C00,without includ- served at the table, it being almost impos­ing indirect loss in curtailing the summer sible to cut them with the spoon without traffic and delaying the delivery of manu- soiling the tablecloth, fact u red seasonable goods. Of this nearly Damson plums require five pounds of $70,000,000 was lost by the workingmen, fruit to three of sugar. Quinces should What a fearful cost in misery and suffering erst be steamed before putting them in a this unequal struggle has entailed upon syrup. Fruit should be measured by the the helpless and innocent dependents of scales ; as sugar does not vary, it may be lsbor. The best and most effective weapon measured in a pint or half-pint measure, of organized labor is not that which strikes Fruit juice that remains after filling the down by starvation its helpless and de- cans may be panned and used to fia pendent wives and little ones. The best sauces and ices, weapon of the workingman, both for de­fence and offence is the ballot, and until

CHAPTER XXXII.Philip Bryant was right when he said

Michael Cllfiord must sometimes have gone back to Purley. He did not know that on these occasions Michael had contrived to make his stay as short as possible.

His anger against Ruth bad sudsided; he had not been able to sustain it, and he soardently longed for an excuse to present tun* it would be really selfish to ask my tainly quarrelled She had thought it himself at the cottage that he was afraid wife to bring hei father to live in Purley ?T’ strange that he had not spent Christmas at to remain in Parley, lest he might be tempt “1 al ways told you you were like Dolmonth ; yet if there had been a coolnera •ed against his better judgment to visit Sir ualahad, Michael,” ehe said impetuous- between them ehe fancied that Ruth's Dolmouth. He knew that hie beet hope ly. “You are too good in this case. I only niesent sorrow ought to heal any cause of of winning hie wife’s love lay in avoiding wonder how your wife can bear to stay &aiBher till she should make the first ad- away from you ; I suppose she is very good •*] will go if you wish it,” she saidv.DC« to reconciliation. He odd not non too." She felt that her l.p w.. curling, .lowly, "ani I will do all I can ; but I amBO back to hi. firat idea of trying little by , and ehe also felt that .he wa, on very ten- .f,.ij 1 cannot be of much uae in comfort- little to win Ruth • love; their last meet- der ground. She suddenly stooped to ing a person I have never seen ”

other man. He told himself angrily when sunshine. She did not see her brother L* comfort Ruth. \ ou knew herthis thought came that she ought never to suddenly redden under hie stern mask ^ , and you .iked him; and I am * irehave thought of Reginald Bevfngton as a of telf-control. 8£e loD<1 lor sympathy, though she say,lover. “My wife ,s extremely unaelfish, Doro- ^ a]°“6 ^ at ^ H

Clifford's own love, however, was Ruth's thy. i can't bear to think what-the ^ *ady.10 atrrt ln two day8 lltn® 1beat advocate on this point;he could judge loss of her father will be to her." Wl wri,e aI1,‘ - hvr t<> expect you. Sheher feelings by hjs own. He knew that he Dorothy felt irritable. It was natural, ^ alone, even if she wishes it. 'ought not to allow himself to care for her she thought, that Ruth should be fond of , , £ou,rfe not““ J^rothy hesitated;as be did, but when he tried to think this her father, and all these months the devot- , looked up at her brothers saddenedout and go back to the beginning he could ed sister bad been trying to accept Michael's „*, , T , A A A . A , „ . .not find a clew to guide him. He could very singular arrangements in the light he , 1 , ow on8^ not to interfere [she

é possibly fixa time when he had not gave them ; but in Dorothy's opinion a , i V.T*1 xi°°[ nerx'0U8 l® 8et her wordsed the girl; it seemed to him that woman's love for her husband must exceed out^ but Michael dear, if you could only

he had always thought of her in one any mere family affection—especially when to her for a day it would be so muchway, and bad longed to have her for Michael was the husband in queeavion. better in every way. Dorothy could nothis wife. His love seemed to go back She gave him a cheering smile. understand her brother ■ conduct. Of courseto her very young days, when she “ Ruth will grieve a good deal, my dear h,B W1‘e 0USht to have summoned him atm*mm igEH HüëS f ~=—HtBS ïmm mpmas with his brother in Scotland, and he angry my little Dorothy would be !" \[U to morrow, and he now eat down beside -- act a 11,11,6 ou* °* ordinary, do not dowas now on his way. He hoped to per- He told himself she should never learn frothy and planned out her journey with A man » own good breeding is the best » Î be conventional.suade Dorothy to come and stay with him it No one should ever knowhow Ruth h,ie °8"a rapidity. He told her tl at he security against other people's ill-man nera. . ,,n,ot • 10 yonr P°JertJr; ----at Purley as soon as bis house w*s ready, had deceived him. He meant that part of ®hould probably be absent two months, and -[Chesterfield. should be aa r*ioent m regard to it as toAt present the brfck-layers were idle; their lives to be a buried memory between fhat when be returned to Purley, if the The sealing veseel Vivia is reported at : , ,there had been a sharp frost for a fortnight, himand his wife. Dorothy should never know 8!' unfinished, he should join Victoria, B. U, with 20,000 skins on board, Ho no fores into your conversation theand this seemed likely to continue. If the it. Hie vint to Dalgarno had done him her and a! Dolmouth. the catches of eighteen Victoria schooners. uamee nole,j personages you may haveweather ehou d change before the end of good; he. was becoming hopeful. The During the evening he and Dorothy were A very simple improvement in fire hoee C ^uce 0 mee *January the builder assured Mr. Clifford rest from incessant work, the freshness of unusually silent His strange abruptness has been made by which the hose man at Ho not dress inappropriately orconspic-the house could be ready for occupation by hie surroundings, and the delight of being had convinced the loving sister that there the nozzle and the engineer are put in U0llH*y* Ri* better to be underdressedMarch. Clifford longed to be at home with thole of whose affections he felt sure, was some mystery between Michael and mitant communication. Through the than overdre8sed- Women of refinementagain, and yet he was now asking himself had helped to heal the heart-wound he had hie wife which he did not care to explain. fabric of the hoee two insulated wires 8*™ attention to the shoes first, the gloveswhat excuse he should make, when the received on hie visit to Appledore. He Meanwhile Michael was in a strange are run. They are connected with the Dext* wh,lft lhe drees and bonnet are later house was ready to receive her. for his took walks with hie brother; he .kated state of alternate hope and depression. He metal couplings so that as soon aa the hoee ^^tions. , twife ■ continued absence. with hie nieces, who were extremely elated wondered what Dorothv would have thought is put together in the ordinary way, Do not be one minute late at a lunch or

It was a relief to reach the end of hie : by their uncle's companionship; but at of hie wife’s letter. At night when he signalling apparatus on the engine and ,nnir'journey. Late aa it waa he rejoiced to see the and of a week his restlessness bad went to bis room he read it through again. ! noszle, with a dry battery to furnish the Ho not forget that well-bred people arethat his brother lived on the farther side of 1 returned. | Roth began by telling him that her father current, complete# the apparatus. always thoughtful and polite.

ECHOES OF THE GREAT STRIKE.life than » market-town, which occasionally i _____ fhas some stir and hustle in it. Don’t you think that Mich eel and his wife had think it would be really selfish to ask wife to

oer-

reement.

notlov

vor

Sound Sense.

Do not ask even an intimate friend to dosome shopping for you, unless she should offer to do so.

notDo not delay when you are ready to leave

Une

I

L-__

9fHave You Got It?To cure crsmpe take Nsrviline. To

break up a cold nothing is as good am Xervlline. If lumbego, neuralgia, or rheumatiem troubles you resort to Nervi- line. It .sever fails to give relief. Nervi- line is a powerful, penetrating substance, which goes at once to the bottom and speedily dislodges sll pain. Nervtlme is bettor, stronger, and more certain in action than any other pain remedy in the marke\ Xerviline is sold by all dealers,only 2/i cents.

A POWERFUL REMEDY!!!PROSPECTIVE WHEAT PRICESA GLASGOW MIRACLE IThe Visible Happlj Is Ike largest fever

Before Beewe ml this Reaioi. 0L6, CHRONICFUNS

SUCCUMB TO

Schillers Sarsaparilla PillsA SCOTCH LASSIE RESCUED BY ACANADIAN.

If ont were to look for facts upon whichto beat a hope of materially higher pricesfor wheel in the near future, it would be

Her Mfe Was Despaired #f-»eb|rei le | very difficult to find them, says the Minne­apolis and Heart Tremble

The value of Sarsaparilla am a tonic and blood purifier has been known for centuries. It wa* In use among the anc enta. and to day more of It is sold than of any other drug. It Is used ex­tensively as a specific In diseases of the bio id such as scrofula, pimples, ealtrheum. etc., and It has usually been administered in liquid form.

The aim of the modern chemist Is Loi traie his drugs and by using only the active principles reduce the dose, for small doses are easier to take. Experience has also shown that small doses taken often are much more ef­fective in the cases of chronic diseases,or where the treatment Is for mild complaints, than heavy doses taken at long Intervals. A medi­cine to do good must be taken regularly. Hut to those who are feeling out of sorts and yet are able to attend to business the taking of medicine is usually a great nuisance, for there are very few who feel .Ike carrying a bottle around the country. To meet such objection-, these pills are prepared. They are put up so that the box can ue carried in the pocket and that a person in need of a blood purifier cun take them regularly without being in the least Inconvenienced.

THE SCIENCE OF PREVENTION

ST. JACOBS OILspolie Market Record. They do not exist in the stocks of wheat in store at the begin­ning of the new crop year, nor are they found in the probabilities of yields of wheat for this crop season. They are not found in a probable shortage of wheat for con tump-

concoDIT—A Wonderful Hlery

A.P. 724 HITSTHE SPOT AMD CURES.

From tho Ulasgow EchoThe com of •• Little Nell,” whose mirac­

ulous cure ww reported In tho newspaper#,with a subsequent letter from the Rev. BSsmnel Harding, is but one in a series of tion in any large section of the glole. Stockssimilar cmss in (llasgow. The latest is | of wheat for the whole world over were th»t of Mil* Lizzie Dunoan, •young woman i lelJom so large u they lre „0W| nor have

Zm in" te"." med a “Volin^-WMV ^oy been often .o large in any important log away by inches before the eyes of her wheat growing country. The visible sup parents, and her sad condition seems to ply was larger at this time a year ago than have been known to a number of people. ever ^fore at this season, and it is larger

ZzzSZiS i .-rns-Aisi. tremendous impetus waa given to the pre- 5 million bushels smaller than lut year, dlneaite as to prevention. Vaccination will not

entirely confirmed. wheat region now, and the dry weather in D view. While no better remedy can be foundArriving et 20* Stirling Road, the report- th, winter wlieat region when winter I thel* chief''m "k 1 ie^mtho

er waa conducted into the presence of wfoeBt needed rain, the total crop of this fact that they tone up the Hjatein *o that ihciuMrs. Duncan by a rosy-cheeked young A . A , . Is little danger from disease,woman who prove,! to b. Ml» Duncan, —try promi.ee to be of o^yÆ^:C%%Ærv^%^

who looked in no way like an invalid. LAlor.u YIELD than last YEAR, that while one person will catch a disease“ This is the lassie,” said the mother. , , ... . , ... . . _ another living in tho «arr-e place, eating the

“Heaven knows that a miracle has been sn‘* m spite of rust ami unsettled weather wuno footi, ami expotod to the same dang r.wrought upon her. Eighteen month, ago during June and the fo.e part of July in wJU«Sd'TholXluïlS2‘{hltThl" immun- Lizzie began to pine away. The color loll many Couu tries of Europe, the crop there ity from disunite wh#ro there in exposure is due

and before she had got out the words her pose that the grain supply coming into the this theory. Other ncientl*ti claim that the whiteness became like that of a corpse, and markets of the world this season will be name result ^ be whieved ^ treatment•he fell »w»y into a faint. I .ent for th. smaller than fait stason. It follow., there- through ^8?bî,î5?Uanioîi*"he latter and doctor who said she had heart disease, fore,that at the I beginning of the harvest of aflcr „ scries of experiment* extending over When he saw her again she had grown 1895, there will be a burden of wheat upon many yearn he discovered the formula u*ed in

"rryt mongh“"''w', ‘e^pecM IhlmCw^fhJ,^ with^uLtifW

that poor Lizzie would not live long. There condition of finances, seems not to promise that they serve thi* purpose ; and if the plus

f they would break the skin. Her arms eon of 1894 and 189.). It is as well to look . rheumatism, etc., the danger from dim-a-e i*

SSHFrEB EHEEilrHEE sPSEEEEEttSSS SSS jBSS^œSSSalike other medicine, but altogether of this, however, we are assuied, which is that give rise to ban blood. The three primary

sswtsws :=zhusband, *In the name of Hod let’s try Dr. ably show a larger yield when the fai „ OIRM THEORY OF DISEASE William.’ Pink fills.’ Well, before the ere finally e.Ubli.hed then lest year, and phynicl.n, tracealmwtevery ,Usenetfirst box was empty there was a marked although to *ome apeeirtc poinon <n tho blord due to theimprovement. She persevered and when THE CROI’ OF 9PBIN0 WHEAT existence of disease germ*. It has been

NeIWIÉ ÊplSSIi ^0##said Mrs. Duncan in conclusion, “or any wncai. Men> Bchiller's HaraaparUla Pills are the onlyperson in the street and they will confirm France has & larger crop than last year, ^entitle remedy yet discovered that will

vsl............« i ww i. m, S-asiSSSttli'e,'’added the daughter, “yeti can hardly states of Europe have a larger crop than 07alf kind8. If the blood 1* in an impoverishedti- tzSLz i r. rasstairs; I was afraid to walk on account of Russia but little u yet fully known. Some- tem u open tot he attaoka of the first dUea*c the fluttering sensation at iny heart. 1 times the reports are of a yield greatly that comes along. It is in this way nature

„„ *j£=bs ’srs-ss zrSss-MüOKsss EE3BHEÏELEmy hfe. ” rust, which would bring the total yield ne- 1Ua pm* are the best safeguard against dlnea*#.

a z ïz r. 5SSSSparents had their daughters photograph years, there seems to be no> evidence, quite nervoUflncw,e depression. "the blue* hinguour, taken, for they thought that she would conclusive, that the Russian yield will be rjnKjng |n the ears, yellow t-peck* doating

ESRSSE5&to carry her back to her house. “The sions against higher prices, it seems ai pains h heaviness in tho region of the stomach,

tsist a.œ S*5Ssii5lass, and Dr. Williams* Pink Pills have An advance to equal carrying charges ma> lumb„g0< u ,,ùeer feeling in the bowels overbeen an instrument in God’, own hand.." ^^^Wy^a^ted: A, much

^ fL th,%t.r^ nnr for

A year ago wheat leu ft htruggi0 going on between health andIt has been disease, and that the nooner the nystem ir­

ai i ended to the better. An ounce of prevention id better than a pound of cure. Schillers Sarsaparilla Pills under such circumstances are invaluable.

Physicians,the world over, endorse It ; babies and children like thetaste of It. respond readily to Its nour­ishing powers.

I â

4

Weak mothersMl V ASK YOUR SEWING MACHINE AGENT n,LI FOR IT, OR SEND A 3 CENT STAM P I FOR PARTICULARS. PRICE LIST, 1 V SAMPLES. COT TON YARN.ItCScott's

EmulsionCÏÏTe

e

FARM! F R8, "me something good.*

tho Cream of Cod-liver Oil, is the life of tho blood, the maker of sound flesh, solid bones and lung tissue, and tho very essence of nourishment.

Don't be deceived by Substitutes!

TAKE

SO

Othert

IT’S MADE SPECIALLY FOR YOUR USE,±ss Gold

Hardware and General Store* all tell it.SAMUEL ROGERS A CO. Toronto. Ont

FA*MSI 1 ho Old Dominion Land Agency, loronto

1 f ANyiOOD Wrecked and Kenrueil. By

gffiSI IMPERFECTculars containing terms sent on application. nn A III A HTWilliam Briex*. Publisher, Toronto. Ont 11 R AI N A U t

Do You Wait “The Earth”?We want a «mart hoy to sell this new and

handsomely illustrated weekly newspaper on the afreets of this to *rn.

Big Business for a Bright Boy.Write at once to THK LARI H, i3 to SI

Adelaide street West. Toronto. Ont.

wasawaas 1

Is YOURI mpu rifle* clan not acru mu* ate If JOU^wul

use ordinary precaution and

SCHILLER’SSARSAPARILLA

PILLSALBERT COLLEGE

BELLEVILLE. ONT,

SPLENDID RECORD of six candidates for Senior Matriculation. All were successful. Candidates prepared for Teachers' certificates. Diplomas awarded in Commercial Science. Music. Fine Arts. Elocution. W ill rtopen Thursday. September Ath/M.

FT DYER. M.A.. D.D.Don't procrastinate

Sold by all Druggist», for $2.Ah. Wholesale by

H. K. SCHILLER & CO.

ton30c per box. C boxes36

HAMILTON LADIES' COLLEGETORONTO

Re opens September 6,1394.All teacher* honor graduates of universities

or colleges. Regular course* for graduation in literature and science, music, art. elocution, etc. Excellent accommodation, innpit mg m structors. refining associations and p*ea*ant surrounding*. Address the Principal,

A. BURNS. ST.D., LL.D.

Àtook Dr

»

sss'sr.feiSM & ,,if vies. They have solid k , the side, consequently (L

MARLIN 1itop receiver» ana ej**rt at

««TREPEATINGlight Action.Weight ,Fewer parts than other ™ neat era, and simpler. Write for catalogues tolie Marin Fir a ArnuCo.

New Haven, Cornu, U.b mmmL\.Itlr.. Am*'.’-lor Wbile filers onn.it gvt work t»7 9v-:^xtiS5]

RIFLESn iveZ~VDROWNED HIS CHILD was not

the previous one.Harry F. Johnson Hanged for the Harder I jjjjjjj ^nct^uUhe end of the old season

«C Allentown. Pa | ^ the ginning of the new finds condi-A despatch from Allentown,Pa., says tlous similar to last year.

Lehigh'. tir.t legal hanging .ince the conn- — — ' There «rf^f”hron“ Nenae, that an

ty was incorporated in 1S12 took place on Jq Build Up due largely to the condition of the b.ood. rui

E«S^|£?

####sâSSS?? pipssl tàmmm.ïïr.cxÆ» s=s?assass x ^aay =ment for 10 week, and ,h1en1 '‘“PP®" Book of particular» free. VVerld. Uup* gold hy »n drug*!*!» at 60c nor box; Six Uaxe. Further demand, being unheeded, abe left I Medical Auociatiun, UB3 Mam nt., (or *150, by addictingthe child at the livery stable at which Buffll0| N- y, H. K. SCHILLER * CO., feront»

HEBdEBE naÆïSL«ron the morning of July 25,II,85'X Adams* Hoot Beer Extract............. h^f^lke M EH Hchild remained at the stable all day, me Fleist!hmann's Toast....................... .twopounds I After Scarlet Fever. Diphtheria, Pneumoniafather during the day making severa Sugar. ‘'.‘/.V...'. twogallons md oilier prostrating diseases. Wood's Sana-«ügsp fassisa mmnose, SB he said, of taking the child home, andtehmon*. ^ ^ obtained in all drug and tëtigy; A •• My boy had Scarlet be took Bertha in the buggy with him a * .er> *tpre# in 10and 25cent hot ties to m ike wHT w Fever when 4 years old,drove away. That was the last time . two and five gallon*. (fj^ leaving him vi*ry weakchild was seen alive. Johnson leturnta Nothin& Hunts Out COPDS 'Wj ami with blood ro«n-

SBHWnmHwant to take car. e .r. | ,^1 Jo V,—and da.gorou. HOOd'S SarSapaHlla

ESS3n‘i;rfila £ |your LT

I Always-'IS uow1

was mad», sal

r:JME be Ie\er n knowing wli*i l

ClOAFd

XV I!udo it anti m

Wo »wf

that the Acrm< » »r hn«v In make Wind ar.-l tank*

world knew!suit Co. alone knows

mill*, steel towersf< rtwem posr in up-

• an 1 corner of the earth, any one locality u not it -mr Said, la it, tfcarw

e are buiy and are output, even Eteryrne on the Aermo-

tersf every

Itf Really^- Equ&Vtfo any Imported

Takg /y Advice and 9^|

Irv^ijt: oi\ £ettm<> tnlS;L^

} d -1c5Atc°^MohvgtAu"

A butines» carve*":' felt by us. Ike « fore, any won l»r doubling our last yedays of dcpressi' tor premises, from i Ih#

resents tin» well fwl, II are

n these

- IIcountenance.

ones, inevitably w^n**®?* '' j iKkMuTuH CO., 12th. li***"*11 <•»'

A

IiUMAM<S v« of 13.Preserve

Eyesight Saved Our Steel Dome and Steel Low Radiator

Oiiil Furnaceh/

with three steel radiating flues.!

THE FAMOUS!i FLORIDAil the MOST powerfuland ECONOMICALa

Heater made in Canada.death was

If your local dealer doe* not handle our goods, write our nearest house.

The MeClary Mfg. Co.t

Mas*. * LONDON. TORONTO. MONTREAL. WINNIPEG, VANCOUVER.

GRANBY RUBBERSand income taxes.NÜ jr «tfçsas:pletely cured him of indigestion.

Diller, Neb., «wed down theSean°V.nt ‘off? and ZdW tiJïTp ot*“.

rent

mer permanently cured.rSï"‘]üS*™n :

Write for circulars. 65 Shuler SL, 1 oron to

They give perfect satisfaction in fit, style and finish, and it has become a by «word

“GRANBY RUBBERS wear like Iron."A man in

------------------------------------------------------ W :

I

R°yal mail QPRINGLINE OF STAGES u

School Municipality of Clarendon,Threshing commenced in the vicinity of Litchfield this week.DENTISTRY.

STATEMENT 8H0W1N0 8TAN»1HQ OF SCHOOLMICTIONS.If you want a first class set of harness,

leave your order with H. Hobbs.Miss Ada McRae has gone to Montreal

to get the latest styles in Millinery. No- School, tice will be given of her return. j-jo. 1..

The football game played at P. D. Fort . ' on Tuesday between the Crescents ot N ' ' ' Shaw ville, and the P. D. Fort club, re- ' * suited 1 goal to 0 in favor of the Fort boys. y* '

Mr. W. K. Rowan, the energetic agent ^0* 8] of Messrs. Evans Bros, manufacturers of ^o. 9 Pianos, Ingereoll, Ont., was in town on Tuesday and favored The Bqrmr with a

TXR. STACK H0V8B, Sr, Dentist, will visit MJ the undermentioned places on the datesnamed Amt. to credit Amount

of Mellon. IS HEBE IQuyon, Tuesday, August, Hist. ShawvdU, JPddnewJoy, tfnd.CampbcUs Bay, Thursday, f5rd.Fort (Wowye, Friday, t+th.

Parties will oblige by calling early as the afternoon Is always very busy

RUNNING BETWEEN$138 46

149 A LARGE AND WELL-ASSORTED STOCK OF

29269 33

64

DOS’ All-WOOl SQltSIE20 44 TOESDAT.TBOBSDAT l SATURDAY,163 04#

13 66 167 17#

63 ilGold has been discovered at Edmonton, Alberta.

Readymade clothing at nricea that sell every time at G. Fred Hoagins.

A firm in Sioui City convert 1,100 horses daily into “driedbeef."

Remember the concert at Bristol Mines School, on Friday evening, Aug 24.

A new weekly paper entitled La Se maine Commere is to be published at Que­bec. It will make its first appearance next week.

We regret to state that Mr. George Hodgina, sr , is in a very low state of health, having caught a very bad coldsome weeks ago.

Dr. George Duncan, a former resident of Ottawa, has received an appointment as surgeon in the Japanese army, and has left for the seat of war in Corea.

A grand picnic will be held at Camp­bell’s Bay on Tuesday Sept. 11. A good day's amusement will be provided for those who attend. Proceeds in aid of the school.

16 7No. 10 No. 11 No. 12 No. 13 No. 14

Leaves Shawville at - - 6, À. M.RETURNING.

122 76* I Leaves Otter Lake at - - 1, P. M.

JUST ARRIVED I

Made by L. Morris, Merchant Tailor, Notre Dame Street, Montreal.

All kinds and patterns ef Serge Suits, well trimmed, the heat line in tewn.

callRev. H. Plais ted, of P. D. Fort with

the knowledge and consent of tne Bishop, will be absent from hit pariah (for the pur­pose of taking a brief rest) Aug. 26th and Sept. 2nd. Next time of service will be Sept. 9th at P. D. Fort, 10.30 a.m.; Clarke's 3, and Bryson 7 p ro.

Total Assets.... «1074 82}Total Liabilities...........

Examined and found correct.Jab. Thou. Pattisow, Wm. A. Hodoins,

Shaw ville, July 27th, 1894

$426 42} IShawvilli to Otter Lake ..,Thorn ■ Centre North Branch . Chart erisYarn

$1 006050

*40seeThe social at St. (George s P D. Fort, as

advertised in Thi Equity, met with more than hoped for succès». The weather, which in the morning appeared threaten­ing, cleared up in good time for the after­noon of Wednesday 16th of August, and early m the afternoon young people be­gan to arrive. The Sunday school child­ren were to meet first and have their an­nual tea before the “social" proper com­menced. The youuc folks being satisfied made way for their elders, and the tables were kept for swhile in constsnt use. A skipping match took place between some of the maidens, Anna Amy taking first and Sarah Hogan second prise. For the

Seventy five men in charge of Mr. John I boy» one °r two liUle imprnmtu race.,Stewart, for Gillies Bros, passed hero by 8Uch as hopping race, backward race, rac train on Monday en route for Campbell'. >ng on all foura, were started and otherstage ty1 the firmes Ootdonge*Limit!” “ ^ "earn and lemonade were plentifully sold

g* ““fer1»“a*

26 HATS.Auditors ••sees

Parcels carried at low rates end carelully handled.

Special attention paid to the travelling public.

Special line of Mena and Youth’s Straw Hats ; also Ladies* and Children’s

Straw Hats of finest quality.Laths and ShinglesHodgins Bros' Mill, N. Clarendon.

R. HOBBS,Stage Proprietor

SHIRTS.Bhswvllle, April 28.1894.

P. 8,-Plrst class Livery Herses^OTKC^-Ail^ov#rdue^Mcoumt# sr#^ and Rig* obtainable at all times. Top Shirts (plain and fancy) also in Silkotherwise*before the 15th of September next, —----------------- ----- and Satin. The finest stock of Under­

sax- »•’ - %% z? THE VEBDIC XLNorth Clarendon, Aug. 6,

Rubber Goods.FOR SALE,PnreDreil AyrsUre Boll,

The universal verdict of the people is that

W. H. KoLACHLIN- MAKES A —

Neat, Nobby, fashionable & Well FittingSUIT.see

—All the latest styles in—Coats, Vests, Pants, Etc.

Ladies’ Circulars, Rubbers, &c., manu­factured by Charles McIntosh & Co.,

Montreal.n and Thacker, e sum total of

3 years oldregistered pedigree.Apply to

Ja8. Armstrong,Clarendon, Aug. 18, 1894. Green Lake

ing JEWELLERY.Rev. Father Chiniqny is to visit Bristol

Church on Wednesday evening the 29th inet., where he will deliver an address, to which the public are cordially invited.No admission fee will be charged, but a I Owen Behan of Cadillac, Michigan, Misscollection will be taken. | M. J. Keane, of Montreal, Misses M.

Dolan, A. Kane, A. Kearns, Mrs. J. . , . . . Kennedy and family, all of Ottawa, Misa

recently purchased a large stock of leather E,jls Bennett, of Arnprior, Mr. Nedfor the manufacture of harness of .»» Roche, of Sudbury, Mr. Thoe. Allen, of kinds. Parties requiring a good article q^jQ are the Iateet arrivals here,in this line will consult their beet inter- Miss Deliah Joyce spent four days of esta by calling on him. | t^|e weefc with her parents, accompanied

by Miss Steepleton of Ottawa.Mias K. Dolan left for Ottawa this

week.A. large crowd of people from here at­

tended the picnic at Quyon on the 14th also Mr. D. McLean's grand ball on Fri­day eve, 17th.

Berry picking is all the rage

Mr Mph H-d,™. .«d ton pureh«,d fa did lh„ dlm „ . „.d cut

%%% m - - -^*^teLnK8S.je--lir**

SV», s’ tsX moX fr * —-—* ■SXSft » «1 SSiL1; Jssr"■* «•“■»,i"-1that gentleman • farm. | about the young fellow going

_ , . . ... „ n ,. , home from the party on Thursday eve,In ready made clothing H Hobbs die- who misaed the turn or t< and had

count» all competitors Examine his .^imd the other way ? Just ask stock and satisfy yourself on this point 1 ®

A full line of Watches, Clocks, Rings, Silverware and Cutlery, Cruet Stands

Pickle Dishes, Butter Dishes,Tea and Tablespoons.

Children’s Sets, Accordéons]Albums,

And a variety of other articles in that line:

North Onslow Note*.

Bricks for Sale

D. Kennedy’s ClarendonMr. and Mrs. O’Connell, Mr. and Mr*

-

Harnkss ! Hahn ess !—H. Hobbe baa

Call aad leave your order for a SI MMER SI’IT. You may rely

oa the best satisfaction.MOREHEAD, P. 0

PROVINCIAL GOODS WILL BE SOLD AT LOW. EST LIVING FIGURES.

Property Changes Hands. Cleaning & Repairing a Speciality.

STAND:

ARMSTRONG’S BRICK BUILDING,MAIN ST : SHAWVILLE,

NEIn addition to the sales of property mentioned in our last issue, the following have been made purchased the farm of Mr. W. Wall on the 11th range of Clarendon; Messrs. Me Credie & Son have disposed of their 6 acre

XHIBITIOQUEBEC,

September 10 to 15,1894,AGRICULTURAL I NEAT, NOBBY, FASHIONABLE,

Intending buyers are invited to call and inspect stock before purchasing elsewhere.JMr. Robt. Dagg has

E. HOLSTEIN.now

April 2, 1894

DESCRIBES THE WAYAND

INDUSTRIAL TAILORINGLiberal Prizes.S. orM

J. B. Burroughs & Co, Shawville.Quyon Notts.Public Notice, Special Attractions.Aug. 20.—A young man who is camp­

ing in the vicinity of the village, met i PUBLIC NOTICE Is hereby given to all with a very serious accident at the station 1 rote payers and resident tenants of theon Saturday evening. It mm. he went %%%&%%%into the baggage car to look after a canoe, municipality has been deposited In my office

rt: tisriftftX 8K srrSISShis hand. He unfortunately stumbled, which shall be taken Into consideration at a .nd in do doing thru.t the knife into th.inside of his leg above the knee and in j Cn hall at 10o’clock In the forenoon

2rïT«£s; Iarresting the copious flow of blood, pend-1 Hec-Treas.ing surgical assistance.

Mr. James Bolger, a highly esteemed, ____ ______________ ______ _ _ ■ ■■■

fc' | MEXICAN FLY OINTMENT,

Leave your order with us, and you will be satisfied that this is the solid truth,

For prize lists and all in­formation apply to

R. CAMPBELL, Try Our Waterproofing Process.One of the latest and most useful inventions out. Par] ties who have tried it are well satisfied with results.

Secretary-TreasurerQuebec Exposition Company,

Parliament Buildings,QuebecJuly 23, 1894

Aerated Waters.We manufacture all kinds of Aerated Waters, such as Ginger Ale, Lemon Soda, Cream Soda, Plain Soda, Birch Beer, etc. Orders by mail promply attended toSaturday. His remains were interred at

the R. C. cemetery on Monday morningONLY REMEDY KNOWN FOR THE TEXAS HORN FLY.

Manufactured and sold only by J. E. BURROUGH S & CO., - - SHAWVILLE,A grand concert is to be given at Bris­tol Mines School House on the evening of Friday, Aug. 24., by the Young Ama­teurs of Quyon. Proceeds for church purposes. Admission 26 and 10 cents. See posters for particulars.

The central Canada Exhibition atOttawa.

The Dairy Department of the Central Canada Exhibition from the 21st. to 29th. of next month, alone promises to be worth going to see It is to be made a special feature of the exhibition. The amount of prise money in the depart­ment is $600,00. An entire build­ing will be devoted to exhibits and other features including buttermak­ing competitions open to farmers. Cana , da's famed Dairy Commissioner, Prof. Robertson, will be there to look after the competitions and to give instructive talks. Farmers from all over will no doubt avail tûemselves of this opportunity of getting valuable information free of charge. |

W. H. Lucas of Caldwell, has been ap­pointed agent by the Cossit Bros, of Brockville, for their famous Bindlockhine binder and other machinery, of which he has just received a large consignment, and is prepared to fill orders on shortest notice.

THE SAMUEL ROGERS’ OIL CO.,OTTAWA. Stove

' ware if Depot I

Pontiac Hard-

and Tin

X 9In 501b. Tubs, Half Barrells and Barrels. rPrices given the trade on application

*eiR. McCREDIE & SOIT, BUILDERS’ AND FARMERS’ HARDWARE,

Paints, Oils, Class, Putty,, Q

►■Builders and Contractors, wMANUFACTURERS OF Harvesting Tools, Ac.1

Cheap as any place in the county for cash.PlaningSashes, i

Doors, Mouldings, Blinds, etc.

and ALSO AN ASSORTMENT OF CROCKERYAND GLASSWARE.Turning]

Done.m Bring along your Dollar—the Bonus Tax is due and we must hsve money

0. T. MOHR, QUYON.March 15th, 1894.

Rough and Dressed lumber on Hand.

Orders by Mall Promptly Attended To.