t^r^^kfj^ /best0"iiiig:"idr; the K'^f;^':f;Cir' under thought all circumstances. ',taking. S|^ inch' to pS:^J^(.fhfs* stature,, so no preparation hair. The utmost pi(^-$:*t,,:AHit."'Can-"be done-Is to pro- ^^^^ ^i->npts' conditions favorable to |lS?f;^.v';;%'rowth.: This .is done by wJv^-^'.'niove^-dandruff, cleanses tl:e Ifcj^- '//'M&'-alp,- nourishes the. soil in .vjn. tlc^cm ^t:'^' rc-*v ^<";7-('.,:,tc.:r,:'v'licn tho roots ere liour- i.L^J. Cut II:a roots must- be you wish your hair ts nortnnl color, or W?t fe^vv" io retain i i#f;.' * ',* if you Y/ish to restore t!:c lost tint of gray or faded hair use ; .'Ayer's Iiir Vigor. Ktt General. ..v - At Xilaonburg. last week while Mrs. Boberta was endeavoring to extinguish .. a fire which had oangbt in the npstairs -of the bouse, her dress became ignited and be was horned to death in the bnildin g , tofore she oould be rescued. ,The State Department at Washington ban leaned a, warrant for the surrender of ^^;;Vp;.i. .the Canadian government of Mrs. Olive jfe'^ Who is. held' ab Buffalo on a pjAV'iX.' charge of murdering her husband and Vi';'v who will be tried at Cayuga'.. AtTthe School of Arts, Sydney, P. afastcett lectured on the "Alimentary Pro perties of Vegetables" and , said that an Australian would annually eat as ma ah meat as two Englishmen, three Oanadi ans four Germans, and'ten Italians. That %':' . their health consequently suffered. He 3&? little pectoae that an experienced Jelly- tta^ivme^ from thebush will congeal before;: you can; transfer it from the; kettle to' the tumbler. tad^es* Home Journal.' v the Sweet tie,. Between Mother and Daughter. '/,' .-: "The careful sbeitet of the girfs of stately Oolonial dayB in American his tory is as possibleiwlth us to-day. j as it was in;the>lden"^6)B,"'Vxvitel? W' Bok, deprecating, in ihe Ladies' Home journal, the too 'great liberty given young girls by their parents. "Not in the letter, perhaps, but in the spirit. ideal influences it is necessary that we should return to one or two of the con ditions which existed and made those in fluences possible. Our mothers should be more familiar with, Jl^eir daughters than they are. The- multifarious out side duties into which women of- this latter day. have gone have not served to strengthen the tie between mother and daughter. If anything they have loosened the relation. The Colonial mother lived in her home: the mother of to-day lives too much outside of it. The daughter in the. Knickerbocker home was the first thought of the, mo ther ; the daughter of to-day is all too often the last thought of her mother. Such changes in home affairs are not marks of progress. In fact, it requires a reading, of old books sometimes to see how little actual progress we have really made. More often, the wisest progress would be for us to go'.back a bit, and see whence we started. , .There are potent lessons for us in the past. Our grandmothers knew a thing or two. Some things they knew better than do their grandchildren.1' Canada's Oreatest Celebration of the Jubilee Year. Mbple nasally oarrrthsir tnlni ;tw^ht?4f .-fMi^i'm^f^^t^if. :and iwelling.maa^tew, mdicatea fight- ; itoiit;.bll^^y:c^v;i 'v..'-/- #>' A retreating chin showi lack of force, mentally, morally and physically; usu. ally of the yielding"sort; soon diaoour- aged; desires protection; smaU ;ixeo> utive foroe. The development of ^otbei :; faculties often makes up for this defect A small, woll rounded chin/, witk mobile and red cushionof flesh upon it; Indicates a pleasure loving owner; U dimpled/ all 'the more so, for dimpled chins belong to coquettes. People w^th dimples love to be petted and loyed; like admiration and praise; generally fickle. Usually this chin is healthy, re cuperative and long lived. . Broad chins signify nobleness and But before we can bring back (those largo dignity,:. unless vertically thin, to > "! M: \&'&. J^i Ifift/. advooated a mnoh more extensive use of / 'Vegetables.* BxoeBsive tea-drinking also ' Australians. Aooordlng to the flgaring of SooreUr y .Oase,of tbe water department, the pop ulation of Detroit is 284,319, based npo n tnrnumber of famiHeBfound by the water .board'asaesBor. There are 55.816 fami lies within the corporate limita, and mul tiplied by 5.14, the average uambor of per - BOOB per family, according to the heat of _ statistical information, the population as given above results. M. BorfcUolot, the eminent French . ohomiefc, has made some analyses which prove how intimately ail Boleuooa.. are allied,by showing arobeoIogiBtBthafc the . metal of some early implemeais rooontly1 uaeavthed in Gbalden are pare copper, ana not bronze, as has booa aapposod. He has established the faofc tbab para oopp er was in oommon U'o for mannfaofcarla g '.:', i(HM) B. 0, ' It p'receSea the age of bronze r-:'"^.OlilJdea as in Egypt. The form, pro- *:-*^>sbb:i'of mannfaoture, and, ftsss'ot doweled, axes were tbe same for the pare copper axes of-. Qhaldea as for the prehiatprlp -nrpthe axes of: Europe and Siberia. M.,. ".'. Bertheiot says : "-The dleooveries made in Egypt and, Ohaldea east new light on problems that relate to tho origin of the metal inclastry in the history of the human raoe."" Farmers are coming for miles a^ouud to See at work the biggest graifl harvester in the world on Roberta Island in the San Joaquin River, California. The maohinft turns out three sixty-pound aao^s of wheat every minute, .The machine has a outtliiR Hue of 42 feet, and it alsp threahes and sacks the grain, la one run around a ! 4,000 apre field it will turn out hundreds of sacks of wheat roady for market. The . eoat of harvesting baa been roduoed to a minimum by thismaohiuC, and the num ber of days oouBuraod in jotting a larce /field ready for market will be about half -..^thafc of the regular harveator." Eight or " i '^handle it .easily while it id turn. P^ -: inRounromi,^ * ^00 eaoks a dayof 'Mi&r- ; tenhoursWHrweeping 100 ^"a r r"D BS^^--; "1 *Pe_ Wi1' heaviest wheat ever grown in that 0Qunfcr>"' h>i.'-0."/> /"' '... ife/V:.;. -; ) \l w 'fox.-- ^:vfv-.., ^rjklh on the island hats always been tall ;- Rhd of :;ranK growth, but this year it was ^^ir^'/^ii^v'-^'ytn^K.be^vior:lhftB"Ixx.;pa.bt ;Seaflons.;; ^lo f|||>i'C /'aiffiauityhaB been experienced in harvest. m^J^^^'^/i^^ttio^. engine,'wbioh,,;r^B te^^v/vtbrough ^hevih^k' .grainy:wUj,'ftbotlfc tDe .Would; IJully alive to the times the manage ment of the Toronto Exhibition, or aa the title runs this year, "Canada's Oreat Victorian-Era Exposition and Industrial Fair," is to be oondncted on a scale, from August 80*h to September 11th, that will eyen transcend any former effort made to promote this, the most popular, most comprehensive and most attractive annual .show held on this continent. Already a sufficient number of applications for space and of notifications of entries have been re ceived to warrant tho highest expecta tions. The management have increased the number of medals to be , awarded and have made many improvements to the buildings antl fpronnrffl, showing that they are resolved to leave nothing undone that will enhance the pleasure and comfort of both patrons' and ex-,' hibitorn. Tlieylmve also deterSnined on a special feature that -promises to^ i)rovo tbe greatest'outdoor spectacle in the way of entertainment that Toronto or any other oity has over known, out- Bide the world's metropolis itself. This spectacle will take theform of a repro duction of the wondrous Diinnon- JubileQ precession in London. .J^^atB. are now' across the Valor hiring and buying the iific^a^arjf properties and costumes, which 'will be an' exact replica of tho uniforms and bpstumes worn bythe soldiery, the sailors, the nobility and the yeomen,-of), the guard in the magnificent procession. Scenes will also be reproduced of the , oere- monios , at Buckingham;'Palace, St. Paul's ,Oathedral. and' other places, along'the.lino of route. Many interest ing specialties will also be introducod, ,while'at night the etfopfc will bo height ened andmagillfledby brilliant illum inations and flrework^. Not only will Bpectatorfl bave brought homo to themt tho grandeur and unity of the empire but-they will be-practically taken homo to, Old; London.' "While dwelling on this'grand feature the material aspect of the exhibition must not be lost sight of, therefore it is well to : mention thaV entries of live stock; and, the majority of tho departments, plose on Saturday^ August, 7th. Programmes containing all details of the attrnotions will ;be issued about the 10th of Arttgust.' " ffXo tiwioyt worms of all kinds frof/t chil dren or adults Dr* Low's Worm' Syrup is a safe, and :cur6 remedy, " ^------------ ,",', Wbat ouuuco bud drcamB is ," -: .ijo'fclion" tm^ never befn ^^iy\n%wi^ edj-buti in u'^;oat!eH o^f tun,; in^t. :U-r T'w'a'ms are the.reBulkiof imperfedt du gestiop/which' a few dose1* of AyerlB. Sar, aaparil^i wdl effeovually; reniedy r%J~u deVay try It tp rfay., when, if with it there be thin lips oi bloodless kind, ypu flud cruelty. Square ohins with little flesh denott flrmuesfl and exeontive. ability. Thost make good haters. Drunkards usually have a oirpulai. line about their china Slovene have wrinkles about; theii "ohins. ( Long,'thin chins are poetical, unsta ble and delicate in constitution. ' Such people are subject to bowel derange ments. If thin-through the angles d the mouth, too, they are prone to tube* ouloals; generally short lived. . . Medium chins with a suggestive bi furcation in the center, with small mounds of flesh on either sid4 oharao terizo generosity, impulsiveness, oheerj natures, The same sized obina, with i dab of flesh just under the center oi the lower lip, indicate meanness, sal* flabuesfl, brutality. . N. B, No one feature can betaken in judging character. Often develop ment of other faculties of mind or fea tare entirely governs. In each ease talu the "totality of, indications' befow 'judging. St. Louis OHnique. SHIP CUSHIONS, Don't HeMnrlnf Tsm1 For Their Ontflt WlimJ fihip Cushion* Are Made Of. ' When a new vessel is ready to be fitted out with her cushions, she is measured for them, not as a church would bo, for a certain number of cushions of a spec ified size to supply a certain number o) pews, but every space in which a cush ion is to be placed separately. On i large vessel there might be n nnmbor ol cushions of the same dimensions, but marine architecture is such that cush ions may be required on the same vessel in a great variety of forms, and of vary ing dimensions even within given lines, , narrower at one endt for instance, than at the other.. And cushions are mado to fit around masts, and around the round-, ed ends of cabins, and. in other spacci where they must be made in the form of an aro of a olrclo, and ship onahiom are made V shaped and in other shapei to fit into various nooks and jogs. All cushions are mado with a vertical front edge, and most of them are mad< with o vertical rear edge, but ship cushions aro often made with a rounded or beveled rear edge to fit handsomely against tho aide of tho vessel, which serves as a book to tho seat, but may slope away at a sharper angle than seat backs coiumouly do, JPraotioally every boat that is sei afloat, whatever she may bo, Big 6r Jit- tW, Js IndiTidi!?^ mfia?ured throagn- out for her cushions. The. same materi als for stuffing oushions that are usee! on land are used. on"the water~-bair, Sort, cofctda ancTlo on and ship ouah- ionfl axe sometimes BtuffeJ yvitb cort clippings for their buoyant,properties. The materials moat commonly used in covering churoh cushions are damaski and reps, the damasks more generally. The material most commonly used ia covering ship cushions is mohair plush, which ia made in various colors and qualities. Leather is also used in cover-, ing ship cushions, especially in amok' ing rooms and ohartrooms and aboard yaahts, and it costs lHtle, if any, mow than a.fine quality of mohair plush.-- New York gun. ' Modern AWnlnri. "Soarceiy any object is more eohBpto- - nous in the summer season than th< awning,." said Mr.. Biffleton. "In nom is our progress in civilization more ap- 'parent Awning stripOB are made now adays in a great variety of Styles and in ' varibns colors and shades of color. It ii; quite possible to get an awning to matpb a building, or one that shall contrast' With it agroeably. I'have seen lately a large brownetoue building equipped with.awnings, having, alternate stripes In two shades of brown, shading adml-. rably with the stone, the Whole produo1- ing a masjiyG, harmonious and pleasing eflfebt. I have seeB Ijnildiugs.of light, oolored'bricks with light^sione or; terra co^trinimings equipped With awnings in^sTrlpe^or^rkoroolorsaud of sopoo-. tfhat'fanoifnT4eaign!,'a'a,l;\the'Widtti andgrouping of the stripes, giving an Oflfect SQjnejyhat striking "pevhaps;;bui;; funongprofeMio^fJs,:**^ JMa^%firqUvBV|^ ^jreckon^yott'ye gqt to ^ive the first, place to baseban.' But>ay back 4n the days- before ths league syntem was perfeote^ I used to see some curious things. Ire- member oiie club in central Ohio that waa, as; good a looal orgahUation as I ever saw/ All1 the men In the team were used hickory bats and knocked a live ball so far that all the farmer boys in' the vicinity had a npply. FmaUy a sporty manager got bold of them; went wherever there was a game to be had, took a professional battery with him and bet all the money ha could place.' Having nothing special on hand that jwason, I ooncladed todd e little buiinoss on my own hook. ^By A little quiet sWrmishtagin Tor ledo, Olovoland, Oinqinpati and Colum bus I got together si nine that were fast enough for any company, I took them to A little ooontry town about 30 miles from tho club I've been telling you about, named them after the place, did some saucy blowing through tho county newspaper and got a challenge from the very fellows We-were after. We went over there in old farm wagons, looking like the rustiest lot of grangers that ever ventured' away from-home. In practice my boys got tangled up in their own feet, fell over each other and made the opposing manager feel so good that he was betting at every turn.. I was ' right with hhn . as long as I hod a dol lar, and thsre was a big roll for one of us when the game was over. Now there was a change. My boys came out of the dressing room inlcnickerbockers, sweat- era and canvas shoes, as sliok a looking lot of ringers as your ever saw. It was * cinch, and! was only hot because I had no more money to put up." "You made a good thing of itf" , "Good thing? I got the double cross. My battery sold out to the other mana ger. They beat us so bad that the scorers demanded extra pay. My pitcher and eateher got aWay before I could borrow a gun. I walked ten miles to the nearest station and then took a box oar. That wasn't a square game." Dotroit Free Press.' .'- ", .. FRIENDS OF HIS. Bomb Close Ao^iutiiitiuu*! of Whom H Bpok In UUJDruiii. "John," said MrZ Baatlake to her husband as she: poured'out his coffee at the breakfast table, "I think yon hav never introduced your friend, Mr. High, to me, have you?" "I have no friend named High/' re plied Mr. Eaatlake as he devoured but tered toast "Oh, but you must have, dear," in sisted Mrs. Eaatlake. "You are familiar enough'with him to cull him Jack." . MJaok High! Don't know anybody of that name. You never beard me men tion his name, did you?" "Certainly. That is the reason I ask- ed-you about him.'I "When did I speak of himrV * "I think you must have met him last night/' Mrs. Eaatlake went on, "though of course if you had met him then, you would have remembered it without^any trouble. I only know that after you went to bed you got home about 9 o'clock, John you fell into a troubled sleep. You muttered ra good deal, but I could not distinguish any thing very clearly except the' name, of, Mr. High Jack High, you called him. Qnca I thought I heard you_men.tion.jj w~5uVl. Bftme Kittys but^I'm' not .sure."' ' Mrs. Eaatlake looked narrowly at her husband o h5 ^aloMnis, and he looked atler BUspiaionHly and then said; "Ob, yes, I believe a man named Jack High did drop in to see the sick friend I was sitting up, with, but you could scarcely call him a friend! of. mine on such short -acquaintance/' ' ' 'Of course not. But who was Kitty?" "There was no ono homed Hitfcy. You must have been mistaken. I don't know anybody of that name absolutely no body," Then Mr. Eaatlake put his eoat on and left the house, after kissing Mb thoughtful little wife gopdby. JJonith ville OourW-iTournal. deoTote3ly pToSureBque.,1 ,< ':." ;y-\-^<:' VThe fact is that ill the ha^iia;;,^ ;0 competent person, -the awnWg^ may in<?W easily be made a great emr^ilishmpnt of the building; aud prp^erly put>p, ,m indeed most of the^j' ftro nowadays, it beoomei a thing'^ besnty mo4: a yffyii .'tioi:;;forever,' $"leiastV,'^ mi ^e.fwnnn'ei' /a^thi;'Vf^3i^^idi!^1,'^ -- ' Tho People Nearest the Fole. The Etahs, a. handful of Eskimos nuruborinig probably' 100 persona, are the most northern people of the world, They have their abiding* plaOe on the west coast, of. Greenland, between 76 and 79 degrees ^north latitude.^ E^r many years after pt. Kane canj home with his vivid'^and aba6rhlng story of^. these isolated natives .they were s^p^ posed. to have built their, stone huts., nearer the pole tii'an.any other '.human beings.; H is iknown: now,! ijowever/ thanks, to, Basatls, Nares r;ana Oreely, that ihere ore uumeror^^gg ^ hn. man ocoupahoy'>afl-;'^; UOrtb as the eighty-second pnj*,;rielf and rso long ago was it; that .^BybmH their huts and' 1Ief8ea/na:*innted tbe bea* and ,wal*e* IrJJ16;$*$noftkt oi ^rantXand that the Euuvnatives;Sf :tooay-have'only tte ^mm.est uud most uncertain traditions ;ife' i^ V ^i/% *9m (ma* turns1.) - ' Two Bl^iSaiu^fWc. bottle*. " Wanted ..' tfan and Women whootn work hard talking and writing six hours daily, for six days a Weak, and will ba eontent with ten dollars Weekly. Adtosssv.'1 :..-v . .' 'i . Brantford^Ont. Ill MUTCH X e&n par ten dollars weakly Iff Ml I CM* to a lady of mature age, re finement and taot to spend her time in,a good cause. T, H. IiIKflCOTT, , Toronto, Ont. UflUTtn TBAOHEWb andotbarbilght ftHH I tils .men tot racatlon or perman* ently to aoltolt for "0*nado.: an Enoyol .padla of the Country," In Ave royal qaaxto volumes. NodeUreriaa. Oommtaaton paid waakly. - THH UNBOOTT 00 *ANY, Toronto, Ont. Is what you can rely on getting when yon buy from us. Oar wagon goes to all parts of the town. Buns. Cakes and Pastries, You cant find nicer, fresher, or sweet, er in the country. All kinds of Fancy Cakes and Jelly Bolls. ' Fresh Taffy and Candies every day. We sell nothing stale or ' -dry- Leave J our Order and you can rely on prompt do- livery. FRirnrross. Opposite Book * Fruncle. Essex SING LEE. LAUNDRY. "WllBon Ave., next Aberdeen Hottl. The latest Improved machinery for Ironing Collars and Cuffs. Will not oraok or break the wink* Family work obeap. and delivered. Paroels called for ,,thistopjporttnity;.of':^b^"'* people of the rownaad Oountyofl he dm remodeled the Bswi'^ui oording to plana prepared by B.; Thomaa, and also aaouredtoeaarW* Straohan, an experlanead and thoi..., ,v'.. 'H'#p Thanking the people of tbe for the patro&MKe bitowe4 past,-will guarantee satisfee Cristino; and Chopping, . ' ,8p0'dlaWii..^l| Cernmeal Kept in Stock dtutji'"*'"' Prices* ', "'.".'j'Ji'^ . Cash PaMforWh&efaSl^ TD0 youTp^ ' MS.. If bo, ypu want to h , ./ ^ the beat therei'~i0$ everybody knows t The Nobbiest Turnout . r .'"^M A^ ^ urn -IS TO BX HiD \'.iM JOHN A. ROS: Livery., Good Xoodatera, JGktsy Hiding JBuggies. Comfortable Carriages*. A Call Solicited. > Satisfaction Guaranteed* " North of the *. ; A Railway Track. .i^'^yM ' '-feSSEXtW Builders And .^y& :: ^ Contraotc DBALEU5 IN- British. Coluiof Please call and try. II not sattsfaotoy I too charge will be made: Lour work suit von, recommend ns to your friends. BABY WAS CURED. DEAR SIRS, I' can highly recom mend Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild .Strawberry. It cured my baby of + dlarrfiaeaaftor all other means failed, + no 1 cive it threat prilBe. It Is excel- 4* lent for all bowel complaints. . MRS. CHAS. BOTT, Harlow, Ont + t THE HEAD MASTER GENTtEMEr*i~I have found great T satisfaction in theufleaf Dr.Fowlcr's T. Extraot of Wild Strawberry, and con-, T alder it involuablo In all caaos of T . diarrhoea and summer complui,r,ti T It Isa pleasure to me tfiiecomtflend 2*1 it to the public. "^ RiB.'RTASTERTON, Principal, , Wjt S High School, ^<ivcr Charlo, "N3.f , Pine Shkgles, $1.00^ ' :-Ws*,j ' " :-y ':A--s^ sash, pdqxs; , l-::'::-'^M '.. *^- \\':&% 09* smuractlon Oaaranteet Opp. Water Woria, M FOR TWENTY-'4EVEN 5WJ ' tAHOffSTiSA^ii^Ci J GOTJRLAY & JSQN; m ^^tiiii ' V -' *'* '{*'* paoDV^^ -SnsVar Hood'. Plto.. Thejr;o> ^1 srk Thet)iafles,oT.l?W^^ prominent in European history in. 788, boapa'eit"'"' rarer"- wrapped.iu lobN^irsi^^l wrapped in loose aov aufl piaosa :in. ......' m 7156