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The Sentinel, 1882-11-10, Page 3(By Gustavus , Etter. Translated by (Media Webb.)' • , c-Outa'weirteei as onne we parted, ' .0ould we weave that. charter again - Which by somethingivinfimpated, . Sweet as saushine after rain I • 131ISS. or bu-4 a vision t 0 the- woe of but e. doubt • • Skirety fate is not a, 'mission blisS is thns &tamped. out. • - • • Love, came peeping in thy glances I_ . Smiling, too; iti everysmile-; And_ tlo tales of Love`s:rOmances Woo'ci my heart with pleasing guile• . 10 the death ca that great moment Makes rue dread another% birth ety the-will'come atonement - Ere thy smile has left- the kiexth. • 0 could -we meet as-lonce we parted, Gould these. sighs be fused again, Then the -shaft which Cupid darted Would ere longhear golden. grain. , Then that restless incompleteness -tenth displays, with foolish care, ••• Would possess thy radiant sweetness: And the stamp of manhood wear. . • eitittrtDitileu tame -AS-L CoatatEeetc: Ititete- Wilmathe caws eitentita Ponder • t• • . Over. ;: • - Papeete*: - recoremendef. mead.ovealew, •:gatliered-inthe- morning while the May it, moon ism the inorbase• ; and Montaigne: -inquires_ into. the habits of the Most well. favored trzbes of every country, but. -con- fesses. that the- problem it( rather an eve:- . sive one-, the- ceastalwelyra et Sweden being as distiuginehedfor their comeliness- as the • highlanders of Aragon, and the Normandy -cider-driukers not Ise -theft- the Tuscan • wine -drinker* Hia onlygeneral rule; how- ever, still holds_ 'good ;, • that outdoor • dwellers_ are never wholly ill-favored. nor • in-doorw-etkere altogether lovely, and we might- say the same of _alcohol-drinkers•and ••••••• totalabstainers; the scimappstworehipping, natives of- the. Tyrolese . highlands . make amends by -their. active out -door life, . • as Loweit factory girls by their teetotaliste. • Thercie a- good deal in race thcitigh, and a trage of augelic features may still, he recog. - nised amoug the little:ragamuffins of many •a S,chles_wig‘liolstein coast village, where men subsist oa brandy, cheese and -sour • rye bread.- Their neighbors;- the Pomera- nians, are a manful, if not a celestial, gene. 'ration. and; iu spite of their dreary- moor- .' landsvery fond:of.. out -door sports.. But • farther east uature. succumbs Wart, and the northern_ Russians -are- about • as out • rageously-unprepossessirigasiteclootlife and. a combination o•f all vices could,. make the image of the Creator. Extremes _meet. . though; aed their -Emperor has the honer com.meaulieg -.twelve regimente, cf the •taost Godlike: men of the , present world --the lance.euirassiers_ of . the- --body- guard, reottlited the highlands of Les- glaia and Daghestan. Nearly: all -the natives: • ottneCaueituahavethat fatel gift of beauty whiott made- their land the lakorite hunting • ground. Of the harem agents, and this gave . the Czar a pretext for treating, it. as ft Turkish dependency.. •.But no social de- gradation coold counteract the combined influence of the Caucasian oliniate,hatdy : habits, temperance and frugelityafor the Circassian mountaineers are teetbtalere by • religion and. vegetarians thy - preference— : . fige„ honey, barley mikes- and milk being • the staples: of • their diet. They are physt•- •cally self-rciacle men,. tor their language - • proves thatther ancestors were Turatuans .—first coasiva of the owl•faced norneda of the Mongolian steppe.•—popuier' • Science - • Monthly., The Deacon's. Morse' Trade. A Hudnon River farmer who wanted a. better horse- than 11.1O. possessed drove jto Yonkers. olio: day with. hia nag,. and-huiing hp &certain citizen _who_ had_ the_ sort of horse: he 'wanted; the farmer stated his desire to exchange, and added : • , "1...n0E4kt-end-that yott are a, Christien . • teen.?'t :•• •• , " Ye*. sift?' - Belong to the. Church? •" "Yes." . • ° . - . One of thiadeacinis„ I berieVe ann." - A trade Was made, and the frmerdove . home with the new eqdine. • But in the courseof three days he returned and began "See here, deation, what kind of a man are you? Yon never told me' that that lictree 1 got of you hadspaying_ and ring- heines &nil heaves 1" . • • "No,- I believetrdidn't.'r "Well, You are- a -pretty Christian, you are!' • "Aly friend," placidly replied the. rat' than,." if you can find- it anywhere in the geed bopk " the • a deacon 24 the Church. -must point out he defects in. his ownhorse. • whore a Slane is toct ignorant to see. for • himself, Pll a sin and trade back. •-Come in.end vt t for the pagsage." - Th. eafotth ighlandets on their retiirn from Egy out the end of- this Month,. will be stationed at MatyhillEctracks near. _ tHaegow. . • :At a- ohurchr it:letting Of the- Parliament Street Baptist Church- Toronto, held last evening-, Rev. W. T. Tapseott tend:eta-his resignatioa as pestorof the church; for the purpOse of accepting it call from Aylmer. .The resigeaticin wasaceepted. . ; '•••• jedge William Viers-Bouic, of Rockville, • Md.., Was told by his physielan thathe had oniy a. few hours to live. His daughte —waddieg hadbeen appointed fat the follow- ing week, hut, on- his urgent.. desire, the •imartiage catemorty wait performed at his bedetcle. ,Ite•wai too weak to pronounce a •bleishig upon the bride, aiturs, feeble kiss- - .was his lasta. cta. • • • • A peculiarly; heartless elopement was that of Charles Signer, of Amboy, "IL He • had been married only a year, and histwife ,t4hrought him a sinall fortune. , She became, and -they, started. fcir Colorado, on the . •advice ofta• physician.-- Signer erix-ried• the Money realized: from •the sale of her teal • estate. •".the • train he &II in. with a • baticasome• young woman—a stranger; .hut acqualtitatice: advanced so rapidlythat on Arriving at Chicago he left Mrs. Signer - lathe station. and continued his journey * with tee ether woman. The abandoned - :woman, without a- Cent; robbed even of her bagg,age,wite taken to a hospital. - . T be Buis -bat Royal Commission to abate drunkenness reeonameud-s 'Liberty to commutieeto close all •dainkiug shops. 2.: Permission to ceminunee -to establish cemenneil monepolies for the sale of dr:ink. • houses to be established ahoye 25 per cent: ineXcess of .One per 1,000- of • the population. .4. Te -et and food to be sold •'wherever - :drink . consumed • on the premise Rigorous eupetvigion .of - public houses. a, • a n$ AND PREACHERS. • — 1Feekly Budget of News iu geld:ince Thereto. , . The American Tract Society aids in circulating religioue literature in 146 languages. • . In India and Ceylon,. out of seventyltwo missionaries tWenty.four are c,hildriati of atussionaries - • The: Rev: Granville Moody,:kapten during the Rebellion as" the fighting parson," wattreceittly superatinuated. • • • A oorreitiondent-of the Pall Matt dozette advocatea the abolition of, -.celibacy among the Boinan Catholic, eletgy. • Gene:Yee-Weeny Of Calvin; is deseribed by a traveller as fuli of ungodliness intoxicated With the pleasures pfthe • NO fewer tiled eighttt-alkappliCations for the vacant charge .of Craigie Parish, in Ayrshire, have been -remitted by the 'Kirk session. •' - In_ the, Sabbath Schciols of New York the Baptists' lead all other denominations in the percentage of' growth during the past ten years. . - . The 'Christian. .Intellizeret thinks that, .21fr.• Beecher "keeps 124tatillealogy on, tap. and draws -a new one at every •impulie of hisharning souk" - - - • • Messrs. Moody and Sankey. are holding daily religious sereices. inthe fashion -able church of the popular preacher, M. Berater, near the Are de Triomphe, Paris. . . • • In Madagascar, out of a population_ of 00,000 there are 70,000 Christians. The first missionary visited the island less than - sitty- years ago. - • • . The old slay:wile arket ef Zanzibar, where • 30;000 slaves wUe formerly sold annually, has been, traneforrned into mission premises, Iwith- a Whit& and- golipol. - Another noted Ropi.a,n Catholioin. Rome' has•heconae a ProtestantSignorCatalona, 'Professor of PhyeicaI Science in -.the - University. at Borne. • He : has ,connected himseltwIth.the Free Italian -Church: .• • That letter of Darwin lately published is•a terrible. wail of despair. A man cat - net bet very- hattpy who believes that -this soul is no more, as some one says, 'I thn a teasPoonfilI of glue," and that immortality is only,. as Victor "Lego has it, "the great *perihelia.", : In the U. S. EtliecoPal • Church the fol- lowing clergymen have been rectors of, lane ,parish over half a century: ;Bet. Drs: • Shelton, Norton, Brown, Rodney, el- ' Germantown (fifty-seven years), and Edson; of Lowell (fifty-eight years). - Professor G. E. Day, of Yale Divinity .SclastoI, in a Iate address, gave the admon- ition to his -brethren to study;" tho Bible ore for themselves, and lesa the criticisms Robertson:Smith and. others .about -the Azt -evangelical journal in Geemany has recently published the etatistios of.. bap. - titans between 1826 and .1880 in l'ru-sela, shoviiiig that- in mixed marriages lie -tail more than a- quarter . of the oltildtein are baptized into. the evangelical church. Dr. W... H.. Ferris, a "-wheel horse Of Methodisni,."thinkstheillittrchesare,getting "too respectable,'" and that "people get'a notion under readern preaching that things are --about right anyway,andthere is, plenty -of time in the nettwerld to Settle the affairs. of salvation." - ••: • " A. ,Selnirch in Chicago has an invalid's zoom, in a recess near the pulpit -and look. ing down upon- it,- though unseen. by the • audience. • It is entered he a private dcior„ and hi:arranged:with tables, chairs, lounges arid_ other cenverdezioies. The ihmatesmay. Sit- or etand, -lie Or walk, cough Or leave - when disposed. disturbance. ' -Dr. Goadeell eteigratulated an elderly. • bhristien -men, a '*sident of -New -Haven, '-that his race. was &Theist over and his battle nearly fought.. "Yes, doetcir;"- was the •slok visa's. replyt" I suppose thatis so; and anaglad—yes,Ithiak 1 am glad—in. pros-, :pecit of heaven'. But, Still, doctor,I feat. I • shall nein. New Haven privileges." • - • Our-American'iniesionaries;" • *rhea's,- : -United States Consul, " in carrying the laibleitittefoteigit lands have opened .new avenues. for tra.de, established- Our flag in- • distant pens; formed treaties of friendship and commerce where none existed before,, gtienemployment to our nierehait inarhie, taught the English language eo as to &can: •tate aompeetcial transaeticins, and intro- &Med American :book; and --newspapers. Itt iety opinion they have .actiomplished more for our Government in extenciipg our in.. fluence in the East than all. the consuls in • the service, and the ceuntry dont& affordto pay them ahandileme boinity far their die - interested labors." - One of the lseerete of the success of the English Salvation Army is their singing; Which is designedly made t� eater tothe tastes of the- illiterate -and- uncultivated rciasses.• La London one' of their " byeans " has, for this reaeon,beconie as popular as itly of the song! -which are sung at the • "free-andoiatiies," the air beingirresistibIy. One stitaza is as follovisa , , Elijah -was a jolly old men, - And Was carried up to Heaven in a fiery • • yaw. ChOrus.—Lette everyone be a scaly outman, Abd be carried,np t Eteaven in a ,fiery, van. . Mr. Holloway. an Englishmen, haegiven ,e,ii000;000 to endow an institution tor the -higher educatien.af *omen. • • • Wait Whitman, :the poet, is • lying •seriously ill at his residence .M Camden, - _N. 4., that fear,. if any," hePes are entet. tabled of his recovery. His illnesi is the .result of Bright dittoes° of the kidney*- . . ._ Sir John Macdonald. hae. purchased for. 4-19,00.0- Einsoliffi .`OttaWar, formetly-the. .residence re: the late Thomas Reynolds. Sir,a•ohn ,has- occupied:. this tesideete some tame. pending- .-au- Stadacoilell t Ha. . • • ' .' • .• • Stevan -Oa. 4l51117 14RBIAGE.-41x. Brain, well Booth, son of general Booth, and chief' of the Salvation Army staff at home, was. married the other 'day 411 GIS2t011.:COngfeSS-. HSU, London, to MISS Florence Soper, ohief, of the Parisian contingent. • The hall was densely otowded, about 5,000 persons being present, and the proceedings -Were enlivened • by the singing of hymns to the accompaan- ,ment of a brass hand. At the tioncliesion of the - ceremony a collection - was made to ferui a wedding Present to the bridegroom, though General Booth: anralunced that the . proceeds weuld be haaded--ovet towards the payment �f the balance due on the Grecian . , Theatre. _ -AN ENGLISH . talttihoia.E. The 'Death. of a .ioor :Man Attributable ta the Course ot. His CreditO, E. • The story told atan inquest held in Lan- don recently on the hody of Joseph jellies; Grafton shears; gaysTeata, that some change itt the law of &krone is needed, for never was there - a clearer imitate:2e of, -gunmen jaa gonna injuria—in feat; there is. no dolibt.that tae persons employed tY Qua Garrard; a naohey-lendet, in the exercise d' his strict legal tights, accelerated, if they did not actually cause, the death Of Grafton; The, poor • man hala email tshop. ;ile borrovied 4.201of Garrard on the' security, apparently, of his goods; for- he 'signed a "paper" •agreeing to repay • 2.26. He .bad already:- repaid* •*215, •when he 'fell Garrard, on thig; seized his goods: -In vain the unfortunate borrower asked thathisbed should be left for him to die on and his wife's sewing machine tot her to evil a cruet ot bread With. Garrard% representatives were 'inexorable: They -consoled the *retailed couple With the observatien', that "he would not last long." When they had gene this -vietine Of:justice lintenipered with "mercy lay down On a few rage; without a pillow under hishead,.- and with Only -piece of old Mirtain for' a 'covering, whilst •bisneighbors,- poor- almost as he was, •clubbedtogether to provide him andhis un- happy Wife with alittie nourishment- Thus he remained- tot nine -days and nights, and ;then -he died,. Mr. Garrard, the 'ialooey- lenderi-upoti beirg called as & witness; " regretted thatthe• b4 wait not left," and stated that he•had•been in bpainesSfor twenty-five years and neverhad any *corn.. plaint made against hire." - The: jury wished to add as -a rider to their verdict an expression of their disgust at the: inhu- man conduct of the philanthropist:Garrard, but this the coroner told them -thete Could not do. • aettcatetteatt4t't.,t' I, ._ Modern A.dvertisingo‘ ' Tbe Freaks of irortune. - A familiar figure in Wall treek New _York, is that of John Tobin, no* an old- man..—prematurely old—with bent . :form. and grizzled beard, wrinkled face atul hard, steel -blue Oyes. Once One of the great men of the street, he is today a POOr man!. He was worth at the height •et his &Aline about $3,000,000. Too greatt-greed tnitted him. He was always waiting -to hit , the. bull's-eye, to sell out at the very top, and this the speculatot never attains except by akeident„ After Tobin broke, Commodore Vanderbilt bought 5000' shares of Central for him:, 1 They showed a profit of $150,000-; but, Tobin bung out for more, andlost ell. A banker once • told him, When he: :was dealing heavily it'Hatlena, that if . he • would drive a gertain person out of the ananagemeiat he would make him a pteeeht of a watch- Events timed out as he had desired, when Tobin,- remembering the promise, went to Tfffauy% and ordered :a $1,250 watch. The ;bill was sent -to the hanker and promptly paid; but hecould, not help • thinking John Tobinis memory both acute and costly. . •• What' IS Cruelt)i to a Cat t . . • . The trial of Hugh Devlin for -cruelty to It catcalled forth interesting Medical testi; minir at Providence on Tuesday.' Devlin had :confessed that, lia.Ving been- anneyed by a huge tom cad,' he had °hacked it -elite under the ground; not weatonly, hat bees e heitlietight that the etitegtend most rne way to take the aniiiiallstnineliv The :agent of -the Humane Society Con- tended that.Devlin.had done a cruel, wanton deed, but physiehtnii • testified for . the defence that death •hy° suffocation Under _ground was for any animal as easy and painless as death by drowning, • The pop- ular horror of being _buried' alive had its origin, not experience; but in the imagin- ation, -Whit& **tared such et fate ett terri- ble • Whatever Devlin's' hitent -he had caused the eat no more:death agony than it he hatillowed th-e orthodox Method:and drowned.la- Possibly, said one thettlet lived:longer by three respirations than it. would have : done :under *Met. DeVlintvattfound not guilty of cruelty to a cat—Springfield Beputtlean.- • ' A It is not to he doubted that men and 'Women who are and have been exclusively -devoted to one pursuit, or limited to single line of thought, are narrower in mind and more oircuittgatibed- in powers than those who have had a broader field •of :vision and a largeeculture. They: may -beable-to don. single thing perhaps better than it has ever been done before; but this -special excellence has been bought ata lutaty eapenee Offull, rich and rounded manhood or weinitahood. • The two brothers, the Batons Rothschild of the old ancestral house .in Frankfort -on. the -Main, heve Made the return of their income. for taxation. Theyontiger brother, Wilhelni,or Willy, as heis called, *appears to he the riciet man: of the two—at all events for the present taxable year: Hier return in ' 4,188,000 Marisa. The elder brothetaMeyer Earl, on the- other hand, only re.turns .4,560,000 marks. ACcotding • to the. figures tendered by Ihmself.to the • Government, Baron Willy • Rothschild enjoys a daityineozne of 13,120 Marks, or over $3,250. An antfSeniitic ptint• details the figures cbosely, and exclaims that this • Jew is receiving 564 marks,. or $140 evert': hour, $2.35 every minute, and &lir- cents cents a second does not • sound much, but there are 31,536,000 seconds- in. every year. . • The 'emigrant, tourist dr traveller bowed for the -preductive Mines and fettile prairies • of the Greet Southwest is unanimous in selecting theroute: via Chicago:- Implicit confidence is placed itt the -"tenses City itieneerliee,coinposed Of the C. B. and Old Reliable Hannibal * St. Joileph Railroads. Through fast trains are run by this -line end the equipment ishesuipassed. • -• CA o'w that Milks 'Bauer:• :Pdr..M. H. Boyer, of our city, has Jersey cow that gives butter aid milk both.. She gives such rich milk thatin Milking it into- the bucket it churns it. ..Mr. B. tells us that he: gives her no "extra feed, only putsher in a good pasture. • This is the kind of a cow to have. We •examined the milk and butter .after he bow. W118 milltea. and found large particles of butter in the (Ga.)- Mercizry.' Your Teeth withpearls surely vie, If " Teaberry " y-ou only try; • - . Once ueed; you ne'er will be without it, , Just try wee bottle,if you chtibtit. a t -It is often anansing but atimetiniesentitiy. .ingto. read an interesting paregraph - and find on oproing-.neartheclose that itsimply leads. up • to a notice of, smile- eitatile for Sale. This, some would consider, a 'mild kind of fraud, but .certainly a justifiable -one if the articles advertised are of value and useful-te the reader. Of this nature -is Be. Dow's:St-00mi Oil Liniment ofwhich -Mr. '4.- P. Moffat: of Wellington, N., B.; wtitea as follows: " About three . years sines I.becanie a cripple fteni rhenrnatisni. MY joints anti lirebe Were- drawn out of shape -by the pain. • TWO -bottles of 'Dint% Sturgeon Oil Liniment relied Mit -and my_ distorted limbs are even- :getting -straight." This remedy is enabling cripples haul this terriblel-disease,: spinel complaints, weak •jeitits,centraotion of museles; ete.,Aci. :cast away their cratchesand tejoice. . • "He that wititgtfor an -oppettiteity..tb intuili at once nay breathe out , his life hi idle wishes, and- regret; in the lest- hour, has useless intentions and barren zeal. . • , . What has been .Done can be Done. •- . . "I have. used -Dr. Wilson's PulmonarY. Balgain with ,great advantage for several years . -back Quito recently I' caught a cave* cough accoin,- Peeled by Ann& eOteriesit. of the hinge. Remembering the :great --benefit I had. derived from Haase, I at 'dime resorted to and Was mired as before.": This good Atistircenii to. the :virtues. of Dr. -Wilson's; Pulmonary Cherry Balsam • is :from. Kr. H. W. Daft,. Dumfries, was net anted -by it -once or twice only but Often,. :and:Wits soconvinced cif its virtues thathe kept it by him and to his great advantage: Thee When the day of gave.* trial imme he had rionfideece in it and -his confidence Was. net misplaced. 114 Dnfan'a. experience is that of thousands of others. - . - Hervey •County, - Range* many Juin. deed buxom 'Mennonite, gtrls- may new be. found in the extensive :hritom.ccirn fields; They.appoar to like the work, and present splendid itictiates of good- nature and robed' health. •. • _ - • . • . Thanksgiving Day. r it .now seemathet.genetal rule crowd into -One day the thankfulness of a whole year . The exception to this tele 18 in the. case OfthOge who. have used POTN.Ablr'S LESS COBbi EXTBACTOIti- with the: 'invariable, -results-attending ite . use, for a .peifect- Cate. They feel thankful always.: Try Ptitttain's Painless Corn Extratitet. -Safe; sure, and painlegia Sold . by - druggists . everywhere. ,Beware of snbstitUtes. • , . John Garfield, a cough' of the late. Presit • • died at his daughter's home in Biddeford, Me., last week, at the age of 82 years. • Onr Progress, • As stages are :quickly abandoned with the completion of isalroads,': so the -htige,- draitic, bathartia pills, 'competed of erode and hiilkY medicines.are quickly abandoned with the introdnetioti of Dr. Pieraste "Pleasant Purgative Pellets," Which are suget.coated; andlittle larger than mutt. ard seeds, but composed of highly conceh.- trate& vegetahleextracts: By draggiitis. - Prima) Henry,- sedorid son of the Crown Prince of Frugal*, has embarked in the imperial frigate Olga for a ling voyage, Miring whio heWi11calI at: New York and the other prineiPal perts.. • Teintyson's, .Rlay Queen." Who _blows that if the 120401,411 girl who died eit young had been blessed, With -Th. Pierce's 5"Voyorite Prescription!' • she might lithe reigned on many anotherbright May day. The " FavOtite Prescription" is a certaincure for all those disorders to which fernalea..,,itee By druggists. :Sla•yback, Who :was killed in 51 Louis the other diy, was officer in the Con. federate army during the war, and was accounted one�f ;the. biavest Men who ever drew a Bake:- • Pltbr. N. WATBYNS BOE±.;• 31. D.,- Nevi York, says of Wheeler's Elixir : " After having Used Your. - Compoi.ind, -Elixir of :Phosphates and CaliSaya for over .two years in my daily practice, I must give it my unqualified approbation: During- a •practiee of over twenty years .1 : hay% _ used many scientifically prepared compounds, made to fulfil- thesame therapeutical indiOationia as your Elixir, but noue:'tif them thawed With Me as valuable AS years. To:the niedicalitofessital Iwould especielly. recommend: it as the best -remedy with which Irani acquaVted for . the 'successful treatment of . that large and conatantly -increasing elites of oyer -worked aud- tetite- exhanated -women:" - . . The Thiene-be de la Panpuee, the husband of thii.well.knevin- actress Methane'. Heil. • who hist vast mune in .the Paris finahotal.panic at 1881, ia now at Kimberly, Ethics., working *halal m.a diamond mine _from sunrise tostalset: - • • • ' A dose ef Dr. Wilson's ,Anti-biliOus, and •Preserving Tina :contains more life. preserving properties . than . any other cathartiO pillanuide. They will act quickly 'on -all diseases of the eniniablit bowel* and kidneys -and - are especially .valuable to thosewho have to USIt inetliaine frequently. - The late Sem. Phillips nne . day met Douglas 4etrold'and.told hied he had seen, the day before, Rayne Collier; looking wonderfully gay and well—quitean ever- green. - "Ah," Fetid. Jerrold "he may be evergreen, but he's never read." • Carboline, a natural .bair restorer and dressing, as DOW improved and perfected; is pronounced by competent authority to he- the best article ever invented to restore the vitality Of youth to diseased and faded hair, Try it.- Sold by all druggists, • Chicago is much exercised over the mysteriousdisappearance cif" a respectable: young lady named*Mary Winchestet,i'and all Sorts tf.":r umore are *at.as to the probable %woe, inclodin.gisiiicide„abductiote and merder.- The police are on the alert, and the - take shore is to be thoroughly searched for any clue. _ • ka Travellers 'Special incl. cements are -offered you • by-- il the Butlingto . route. Itwill _pay yon t� . reed their- adve tisement to be :found else- where -hi this i 04e. ,. • . - ' If the bleed: he..inipoverished, as niani- •fested by 'pimples, eMptioes, . ulcers, or running sores,t-lerofuleue tumors' liviellinge or general debility, take Dr R. -1*Pierce's " GOlden • Mediae- Discovery.". -*Sold by , , . druggists: .. - . -,,. • - - ,--4-....--,-- The less Mei_ thialt; the more they, talk. -,-.1flontesquieu. ---- - - .-',.. - Itis vain to the -future and Considerable the Panama recent earthqu that has -visited e always looking:- toward eve; acting toward it. - — =age has ;been done to Railway works -by ,the 6, which was theh.eaviitsb Columbia for thirty years.. • General Web loY- -writes' from Cairo to - the brigade cam at -Richmond, Que.„th,at•he . received their -e rigtatuletione telegraphed en -the .10th -of Fptember,-and-weethaekful to then; for the lind remembratute • . ; . , An unhappy:- death. .occurred - on Wolfe: Island a litho ,er a week ago. A. young woman,: marri4 two :days; was . taken -• ill, - and. forty-eight iours later departed this • . life 4.1:m2404i A - of the .brain-,..reeultieg from a o�ldoaugit at the patty in celebra. tion of her linpt .• Hon. Oliver itqwat, Attoretty-General, lure instructe.d t e County Crown Attorney of Middlesex toinvestigate the system of otindhatingoouti y-!inagistetial: 'buginess in connection With etective bureaus, as COM- . plained of by. 4 e Grand Jnryip their pre. sentment- at the ate assizes:- ' • - .Tho Ticheber. e claimant and lite friends having .giveit_. out that theireanse hesa. - supporter in th :. Eail of • lioeebery; that' tiohlianiita. has I ittezi: a curt tote contra, .- dieting the aseeii Via -. SifOliTEST,, QUICKEST : and BEST' line to 'St. -Joseph, PRs719cf31:13:11rNiEsilslwkililm:Ilej:lxswsi:.a071irik, 4104 P Ateht8otil, Topeka, Den!. "taua and Texas.- • or Th s Route has no superior for Albeit be .tchoenebee4setd eq°10P d iThiversal- 4;1/ Lea, Minneapolis and St:Paul. Ye - Nationally reputed as be-44gThtrhoeugGhrCeaati - Railroad fri the Vrid for all classes of tray _ to Une. 7.7 N SAS All cannections niacle .. , . 41.13-nion Depots. • Through, , Ti7ft„ ,TiCketik*ia this and- -yob Will ....Celebrated Line fo find traveling -a sale 01.511 Otticestn hi:Wry; inetesid .:. :the -If:S.- and' :of a disi._ ,coMf.or4 , ...Canada. All -Information bout Rates of. F re, Sleeping Cars, etc.. cheerfully given by T. 1. POTTER. $d Vice Prert & Chic S8 Fr PERCEVAL LOWEU., '1 Manager,- gen. Pass'. Age., ge, Chicago, Ind sit Street Bait Toronto Ohl- • 0013111y198 b'scoptionflooks----:. THEes't.e. . if; lit E SATc6- 1 LateTyHwEritrepleaLr1114!ptinidr.itldro-fiai ite . _paper, elegantly. ill Strated and beautifully-b.ound. - No . -other books their qual. All new an., no competition. . Territory cleat'. Th : y Satisfy the Agent -because they sell - fast, the people oii ecaint of :their value. . . - . ii - 9 tir'14r1 I1VWIIII2: ieia.tfi%;;::zIlokraphyfron.hemoun But4ertoj:..-. .1$102. ,,The_only: . okcoyeringtho subject: . • . 'The tivestf the James -Brothers._ - Tile only OomPlebf - 'nag irtreiKoniryoNtlaripil*OrityiestutEal:. . ``'ihe.Jeann tte , . . -cyciopedigeof all Arctic 'Explarations... i 'eluding: FRANKLIN,. :KANE,' in eluding ii I. land . ps 'LONG, - - -, : . - N. ‘`Plotoria T 'nilly'llible-'tThe °7113' emu- - - ii.-. pieta workts m - 'Mining both tferaittns of theliTtsty T 'eaittincist. 81°ore Featuresand Illustrutions than any Other_edition. " . - The most cinsuitlAz -TERMS granted by any 'PUB. LIsilING 110E9E. --PROMPT DIF.A.LiNGS. Me - IDIEVLYS:- ,1 . ' : -. : . _" Write qiiieklY'.-to..eircuiars and tame.. 'TerrItOry is tapidlyboing mit - - - .- " - • - - - - COT3IIIN -COW/ PITITISHITTG 00.,_ . Dii, 98, 9914.100 trepalitaiiiileek;-08.10A00,-Wis-L' - . . • VitliEA. $5 STOCK It0113[1 -CAP,ITAli.- IA 4 desiri4 to innhe inonci o4 sma,11 and mediuni investtnentS ' .in grain, .provisions and Stnelt eoulatidu s, can --(10 So by oper- : a; ngemotirfilati. I'ioni May l.ttt, • .1 81,, to ..the preacut date); : on in- -v. stments.-of $10..(X)to-SL000, dash • -fits haVo been -realized and. id- to investors amounting In sdserni pine§ tne original invest- btostill leaVing- the original in‘ • - ,.1.) lenge, 111:. roc -missions- rield.• - Address, . - A 16 on denikud. ElkplatiAtoky dir,- • ; F Ell2IIINI:- .A,-: M i.:1,1 1,11A11., C011te Iti ti.1011_ .4101.Cilalit 1.... Mai ue Block- y stillest -al -taking': naohly Or pay. -. C Ian and'. stktetzentsnf fund- W " s ' I free. - Wo- _want • 1 Ostensible- . a, d introduce:- tlio plit.n. Liberal . ents, Wiio will- 1...linit on crops - - II S MPTI .2 I have a positive r medy for the above disease; by its - t in its efficacy, Unit I Will Sand TWo BOTTLES FOSE, to - tee tnonsands of ca es of the worst hind and of long etand1ng have been c riks. :Indeed, so strong is -inyfaitU gether with a VALUABLB TREATISE on this diseasecto any sufferer. Give-Biliress and P. 0. address. . " . -, - . pli: T. A., .181.0011_af, 181 read St., Now Toes. . viiqc IEN ,f Y•931 waPt..1°_irarr) Telegraphlr' ". • ..". . . -1 sr s..) 1 k iu a iew montofi, and he certain • ,fa ontnallititijai Inis-Yalen t; tiplir.., j',...tes.ville . • -