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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1883-07-27, Page 3• ' ot, c0WAROXer wimrS. An Xnellan. Aceeotent of th.' e, Chester Nreiesaoice. ' • sy fi • ' tF AN MOM. i'UlISVED RI if .1telat A S. Peal Pioneer Riess correspondent • ettempted to interview Sitting Bell eon- - corning he °ester fight the day after the Chief artived at Stending eteok, but he was reticent, Gall Rays, Sitting Bullwas running awayat the timeeeed the follow: ing incident' gives color to the:, supposition: ' When Sitting Bull was sent. from Yates to .• Randall„ COL. Gilbert, onlromandaht at the former post,. • detailed Tout. Ogle, of the letie Infantry, to make an ebeoluteli eeee accurete rewire by name of .every member • of the band Of Prism:tens, When Sitting • Bull's twins Oaree to • be counted their •neenee were given. as The One That Wail Taken and "The One • That Was Left;!' and his oldest Wife, eating as spolleSWOMall, paid thatat the time of the ()Miter fight Sitting Bull's tepee was hurriedly torn down „:ahd. a rapid flight made. . Several • • Miles of distends, had been put between , the camp and the fugitives Wheti, it was discovered that one of • the twins had. been forgotten irethe 'Jamey.: Upon the return* which soon 'followed, the youngster was found Uninjured near the debris of the. . lodge fire. . • • , • , Through the kindness of PdajorMeLaugh- • liii, agent at Steedieg Rook agenoy, and, his wife, Who acted as: interpreter* the lint cousin of • Sitting Bell and her husband; Spotted.eforn Bull, two of the beet known -Uncapapas gave the following •aceoune • which Sitting Belle and other chiefs.voubli ° for au absolutely accurate: •Bleven deem before the Custer fight the Simi were encamped: some distance from tbe Lettle: Big Hero, known settle Greasy GraseNind '4, *ileum sun dance evia,s held,: traces of , which Were, afterward seen by -*meet Though hieg ago absolved from partaking ' of its pities and penalties, Sitting Bull; the • Medicine mon and councillor, more then. warrior, Was one Of thoso.. tied..to the pole , of suffering* and tlie..piercee.meacles Of his Areast will. oho** the ..aceis .of that dire . le'. • obsereenee. ,One by one the othera. broke their bonds Or succumbed to pain and fait- . inge• but he, not trying especially to tear away,, seemed 'wrapped in study: . Two :days and two nighta .went by without • -.morsel of.:food or • . a drop of water passing . his lips, and .. on the Morning of the: third day he feinted; Faithful squaws* and friendie among tlie.m the narrator, foteed ' food and drink•between, lips*, and when, he revived hatold ofe A..DBEAN •-in which it Wee foreshadmied that his people. were Boon to meet Ouster and • his. ..followers, and: would annihilate them. Two • mornings after this revelation. mid seven •• , before the Gaiter fight, and just as dawn •.,: was •breaking, a large . fordo of .QroWli • at.. '• laiikOd the Sioux, and orday: long the - battle, lasted, Only- seven, Of the, Sioux , ewerie elain, and the ,Crowe .sueeeeded:lp eargying away all but One. of their .dead, when beeten*.as they Vere.• :Toivard oven!. ..ing they .retreated into the. heighee of the :Wolf' Mountains. The nextTniOrning. the Sionx.seileSsnlinient was heeken and Moved teethe fertile valley of the. Little Big Horn, to, the tipet now hietorio about 'fourteen, • Miles eouth of the present Fort Otisteremd, • as nearly as the speaker 'Could recollect, about -thirty ,miles .frain the 'Nene .of the Crow fight. The Sioux womanat this point ' of the parration, drew an aceurate • grain...Of the: .geouied,••showing (hieterei and. : .Reno's sositOne: • and :the • posi- tion Of the. Lidiane. There were;seven etribes represented, numbering five theme ;and warriors, and, running from south to • north in the folkiwirig • order te Blackfoot; •. UncapaPaii, etgallalaseSaiis Arcs,. Sinless • ,; ,Cheyennes and Mitineeenjouiee Very eaely. , :in ehe • morning . of the der ,of the .fight, _elLeelilleaneeefeeeeteeRheeeevieeeeteietee reeeee'''ee-e-- rOtterateleketeletteeg:teineeet h all right,_but-eatlY7in- orning wo rode .to the brow Of the. • ewhite treepneeineelarge. -nueeliereeevere rapidly.' • The Weeps seen by e• : • • - the smuts were Custeese for, iminedietely . aftereignalling, and While the eaMp was in • Commotion, . Reno's command elenle • up, , unseen • hleincist of the Indians, from ..the etnithearld on the western side of the deer, • and 'opened five. .. The,. white Men were dite Montited* and thiehereetor ...eolitehove-onee moo was left behind to takecare of the • horses, as is theoase in dithileMIted ea*alry •on the frontier.' The weep,: as said, was in, the wiidest.eotainetione and Women "and ohildree • . ••• ' • • SMOKED teak NEW*. • , . More than half the men Were • absent &het the lidny- here, • The story -teller .waxed: xeited as she Beide The : man Who led ' ihoeci Weeps must • have _been drunk or mazy, had. the ektrkp at his Mercy, and ,• eould.have killed us all ordliven Us ,:away naked, on ehe prairie. 1 eceil believe • there Was a shot fired When his men commenced .. • to retreat:" Her.husbandeputlified this by . eayieg "Not mueh firing by the Indians; eaut :when ihey begin to run away they ran veey'faet and dropped their gone and anie mutation; Our heaves were not surprised by this time, ate' killed & geod Many when qabeymobbed the 'plain to the river. . :While •ehey were fOrdieg and On the hill beyond, I •, -ow boys pull mon from their homes and ,kill them on the :ground."' Several times over she repeated her disgust at the ection • - :of the Whit**, and the only explanationehe • ',could,glee for • the ietreat. was that Reno sevewhen- he got into it how large the -- Indian village was, and was, seized with 'panic greater then that aremig ehe Iudiatis , theitselvele That the htttOr was very:die ceded, however, was ereven by tbe fact that the Werriore,hurriedly ieturnbig with the 46314 eounded, herd's, teeemany fugitive •, from the , &Pip* and feared the worst on • their ;owe. return!,‘.,Ikebeeltetitetreat WWI seareely ended :betce 'the b • 0 of Citeitetei • • trumpets told the Sioux , of his abrotioh. • , But they were prepared for hint.. The Mon, •• .quichly erotieed the riverand by hinidtede galloped to his rear,: out of range at first, but soon heitimed him in constatitly-tiatrow- frig eirchei, Mrs. Tatouka mounted her pony and made to the fiest bend behind her Motile Where eho could get • A neer, view •• of the Lillie beyond.: :She eaw the trecipe &Mid up, demount each fourth Man 8010 the ‘hridled,Of tilted horges.his 001b, od the • rest deploy and advatee on tho mazi teezerdle. or=a7xe -P;z.Te'e;,•vra-lii$10talleg treeeelezere--04cremwr terrible offeeti the withering . tire will& greeted the 4" tae s`PPliamell 0' Warfare 'Used to approach froat the willowe on the Liaise Crush Chief VI/sew. side of the stream, and laughed as ehe raid: (London Echo, June 213th.) 4 "Our people, boys and all, had plenty of e. guns arid aromunitiou to kill the row ' of ay, the don of the merry month soldiers. Those what ren away left them at =ay, ruahnoWn by the English people, behind." Slowly trotting north along the an expedition °mudding ot 160 officers and outskirts of the encampment* she noted men of the Sewn(' West /nab' Regiment the Indians who had crossed getting closer to the troops, • She watched the latter, thefie who were left of them, retreat to their horses f and mount. She heard . the yells of her kindred and the shouts of the whites, but as soon aathe former grew pleat* and the latter fewer .she could dia. tinguish little save here and there an .animated cluster, of men and horses. Slowly her poney jogged down ate, stream and when she reached •the Minneconjoux camp on the extreme left, net , an hour's rids, showed not one white soldier was visible on the :field. Of horses there were plenty. These the. Indians Feared, of course, • Tetouka himself, describing the animals, said, they wet& fat eind good- looking. • One officer WaEl the last to live. He was mounted on a splendid horse (the color is forgotten) and seeing all his comrades dead, started up the ravine marked j in the diagram. Two Ogallalas; two Uncut - papas and a, Brule Well mounted,' started after him. lie gained on them all, and one by•one they dropped off until one Uneapapa,. who was unarmed as it turned out, alone pursued. The latter was &bent to, give up the obese when the soldier turned, Haw hie pursuer, , noted thathis own horse was flogging, drew . a revolver from the holster at his hip, and. blew hie own brains out. The Sioux thought the distance ridden by the 'pursuer and pur- sued Was about seven miles from the baittle-field, but it might have been more. Lieut; Hareington's body was ,never, found, or at least never reptrgnized, and this • suicide might Jamie beau him. Custer- . his command killed, the Sioux 'again turned their' atten- tion to the troops on the hill, and the woman resuming the story laughed as she, told what fun the bucks had shooting at . the soldiers as they tan dowia the hill to the ,the for water. 'Custer's men were soon stripped, and the only way. 'the Indians knew they had killed the long -pared chief - was by. his 'buck'skin coat, trimmed with beaver, whioh they • found on his person. The Skin; lost thirty killed and more than twice is many wounded. Among the killed were some, boys of 12 or 14, who rushed across the river on their ponies and into the thickest of the fight. She men- tioned two boys who were woUnded, one, a, and 200 of the constabulary*, with a rocket • and battery and twohowitzers, commanded by Major Talbot, left Sherbrce on the west waster Africa, in seventy beets, to capture the strongholds of the Chief Elbow and his weeders on the banks of .the Small Boom Gbow is said to have made.severa raids upon territories •under British pro- tection, plundering and burning towne and villages, murdering the men . and eerrying off women and children. 'A reward of 250 had been offered for his apprehension. The Administrator -in -Chief, Mr- Pinkett, went with the expedition, accompanied by peva- ral friendly obiefs and over five hundred of their wax boys. . ' When Bwataniahoo' was reached some hurelreds of •the enmity appeared. The' .411) cleat TO CONNUteliVelltVileh On the appearance, of tho first symPtome-.as general debty, loss of appetite, polio; Chilly sentations, followedby nieet-sweats and eough- prompt measures for relief Should be takim. consumptions scrofulous disease et the lungs-. therefore toe the great anti-serofula, Or blood - Purifier and strength -restore ,r Dr. piercee. "ifolderi Medical, Discovery:1, Superior to Cod liver oil as a nutritive, and .unsurpassed aa rooters!. For Weak lungs, opitting of blood, and kindred affections .it has no meal. Sold by. drUggiatel the world '• over. For Pr. Fierce e .paworopamphi3Oet onmsrmeangtatmrptlemEn. seratiLtw4.80 sontamcuaolmtnzi, puffalo, - —the funds :available -no* for the Brant Memorial real". h 416,000. • '41 RHE litsporttentg , When you visit or leave New York city, save baggageexpressage and carriage hire, and stop at the GRAND UNION HOTX4 opposite Grand. Central- Depot. Elegant roonts, fitted. up at a cost of one million dollars, reduced to $1 and upwards Per day. European plan. Elevator Restaurant supplied with the best. Norse oar8. stages and elevated railroads to all depots. Families ORR 'live better for lesa money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other find -class hotel in the city. 'Andall`compiaints Of a Rheumatic nature,' orsimATINIE .is _tict a !event rrgar- RA" 81111114AislisatAlf&is ttehrEt0734.'t1S24.,, an oomPlaints of Rheumatic nature- iTlis A SURECURE wor expedition therefore landed arid attacked baI we—tht Arteianlibplacaleie Yveeillvdewt.is tri•n4ined 111"rinims ear.% wit. jeaeltieetha leicelrer elreslukawne the stockade into whieh the enemy had retired. . The Standard's correspondent, who sends NI details, states that Captain Jaiiinion, B.A.., brought the• rocket batteey into:play, and in the second round set the town on file. The flames, spread with great repidity, the thatched roofs of the :Mosley paoked homes and the bamboo' -etookade intermingling in one continuous .blaze. • It is believed • that moat, if notall, of theinhabitants muet have perished in the conflagration. 'A forced march was Made to. Hahoon, about an hour's distance: ghe enemy cameout in the open, but could not withstand the lIre of our men, and soon fled into the bush, pursued byethe friendly natives.' • • On the, ,25the the boots having 'been brought tie the whole force oroised the jalliali Creek and 'the march inlatidthrough the•enemy's country to jalliahbegan. Alter two hours' fatiguing march through high grass and brushwood Jalliah was sighted. Gbow had cleieed.the bush for about eight hundred yerdis round the outer stockade, wile* wite.0 very. formidable One, and well deeerved, its reputation for .strepgth. the fences of the outer Waked° were twelve feet high and planted, at intervals of a few: niches, the piles being of great thickness and oloselyinterieeedlop and bottom with pliant lig= • shrubs, .making for native warfare an aim* irresistible cheilousi, frise. Thole were two inner stoelcadee, and Gbow had Under hie command:about 2,000 _ warriors:: . ' •' • . e • The :cirdee to advance, wasgiven and by a young Achilles, in the heel, and another iin muiceseion of rushes our nue were taken to• the••right arm, which was Shcit bff. Both. Within .sixty, .yards • of' the etriekade end :recovered and' neither Of .them is Poured in a meat telling fire. • The &llies on yet: ee, tie:nigh seven , years have the flanks behaved with the utmost try,- ceambeking up the stockades only to be: repulsed by thefire and spear thrusts' of the enemy. ' Three times they 'obtained a footing inside, to be ruthlessly drieene_baek. MaiinedehdwoUndedelkit-no-eniemy with inferior weapomtand erowdod intna tonal: space molt :as .Were Gliow'S people, oeuld stend against the. shells' that,. with Such' .preoision, were falling in their midst, and at length a fruiting Inside is gaMed, the. fence is fOiSed outwards : in many &wee and our allies pour in. • • •• . .There is nO ocentsione now .for any. More firing; the, enemy are routed, flying for . their lives, but the work of death • still goal, ono The florae' Noteus, infieneed With the Passions. of revenge, • proem the enemy from Stockade 16 house, from house to 'open country. No *quarter is, given or expected; the a/Mindedaremurderedas they fall, and the horrible clattineof inueie lation followa.e • ' " . Gbow • narrowly eaiiaPet daliture ,and was -hotty.puteued*: throwing . away in his :flight his sllversnuff-box,: his mord and whip, and seen his embroidered Owe.* Our allies took many prisoners, the males bet iii_g,x,rhlree4e7ly„erelleetkutacirlied,laneoltil Aabotiniattkoae; :and elien_ohgageneetelasted- -overthrae hours. Inaide theetowne the sight .weieyeeene, tieteextreinee.e-dtiea rimalrapecoone officer eounted:eighty4Wo. dead-rin-another-patt twenty-three bodies were lying huddled together, evidently the: .work of a single shell; and . here and there Were eeattered groups of threes' and 'Ones, while a single corpse, supported by a fence, stood up, grim, in death'grasping the rusty • Minket Which, :in lifeelle was ife the tent of loediegeeeeeeeeeeereee t e -The total heieee of the enemy- aree:osti- meted at between three and four hundred and 'probably exceed thee number, :and out of that the peteentag,e .of wounded who weaved our relentlelia allies ewould. be small'indeed. • Our losses were noMpara- tively and . fell • 'Chiefly among the tine:Mari* who maintained e hand- to -hand fight with the enemy : with the.. greatest bravery.. The alike. lost about. mite bun- ' dred.killed and wounded, the .poldieee and polioe having Only seven. Wounded. ( : was fodnd to be well Mocked . With goods of the telephone and telegraph, and extri,:f and provisions and was looted. of every., tutted: himself :gracefully by teferrieg to thing. Oar : lore° returned to Heihoon, anibermineii, but his • coup de grace was *hi& witeeiviiortated and burned on the delivered to his audience When he tiled that erreing of- • the 26th, • and Sheibro was hieaseiduous puisiiance of the subjectbad :ieaohed !Ate on the following eveping; revealed to him the terriblefact that inside. , Of fifty yeare :the electricity ofethis.. eneth '• ; passed•since they counted their •first coups. News of Tertyle • approach compelled 'a hasty breaking up Of the camp. the eecoild day after the ,battle. She Kays they marched day end, night' for several days, , encl.:, soon tho whole bleed was Sate in the fastnesses of the :Big Horn mountains, where they remained. some tinuebefore a separation .telok.place, • and the Ileimpapas and ear - lions of other tribes went• north.. The squaw's' story. was. tOld straightforwardly, and beyond question elle believes it is true. Neither . she, nor her hindiaed had the slightest idea the acceent was to. be pub- lished, and the appearance, of a PenciLand note -book would have been a signet for a sudden oessation';of talk. The:correspon- dent was introduced as a friend by ,Maj. MaLaughlin, and the • realtal was given as one. which 'would interest, but Was Of he speoiel moment to the ,hearere. • THE ABROALID• Sir. !tobacco' Expatiates on .fiCieetridti • • Dither Silas' Crowd. • It ie.noit,often that educated Toronto has been offered threoppeiremitiyeefieeteveugteee 13""0-1).13.thaighEa.113-art10-17-007.N lalitaist might Abelesidents_ol the-Qilee City-weretreatedtteadiegaitation, on the •" shrieking " subjeet of .:elerstruety, which ffithilitry-brillient to throw eyeinethe Iiimineue-subeeirliethide. The naNIO of the talented leoturer. is Mr. A. Johnson, the Welf-known colored pre, frissional Aitronoinioal Lecturer, Literary and Educa,tionel Water, Baiter and 'Pub- lisher of the British Lion and American 4ctglo, who has lectured in the principtil cities of gogioxia, Irelepe,efeecitiand, the UnhapPily for Mr. Johnson's researches liehis mysterious, Raoul, • he was unable. to edify but a few, ea fifteen, including himself,' were the aole:ocoupants of the Albert hall. He was not discouraged, however, but drifang.his. shin- ieg beater* and wiping his •moustache with an imineoulate handkerehief, he .prooeeded. The drat principles • of.: :eleetrioity were deftly dealt with--siieh as the stroking it cat's back and rubbing a guttaepeieba but- ton. He plunged deeply into the 'secrets this earth whioh is the greed reservoir ef eleetricity, would come in fronted with the fire whit% existed in the innermoetbewels of the glebe, and our sphere weuid be annihil- ated. The audience, ell** iiemptems of attain, the lecturer refrained from allud- ing any further to the 4, poieer of Glee'. Welty. ' He thanked hi's audience,at least' mob as were awake, for their diligent attention, and ended by Raying that he was going to repeat theleoture very shortly in Neer "York, atia thew who moiled to hear it again eould 'avail therneelves of the opportunity offered there. Bowing grace- fully to • the audience, which had ISOW diminished to seven, he pulled a bundle of papersernin hie pocket end Amid, that be would present eaoh Ono preeent with a COPY of the "Iiritieh Lion." In order to show them that . extraordinary talent existed in its 'column's, he ',would read " a few') to convince therci that it Was realty a paper of unusual brilliancy. This was the finishing , "hook," there was a stampede to the loor, nod the leather adjoureed-4111 he mot at New York.—Toronto Meta. --Beer yOur:ownireisforttities with half the resignation you hear other peopleee, and you will be happy all thu_tittie, It is ,easy to.tell other people hew' to 15e hotoio. and ,so dittioait • to • be 0011V:11400UB otettielves e • tatiThe Diamond DyeirfOr tainuy tied hovonO equals. All popUlareolers "easily died, Itult and beautiful. 10 dents it Package. ' • • .. • ' Prince Albert Victor' will ocouiii. the " Baohelor's' COttage ". at Sandriughven 'during the greater pat ecif the nut -Amer for the purpose of study, , • . . D. Pieree'S et Favorite Prescription i t ' Et evert where acknowledged to'be the standard mine y for feMale complaints and weakposea It is sold by druggists. • v 0 • • One min, 'to an 'elietost latighable degree, infer what a; Mane wile is like freixi his Opinion about women in general. -el, Stele, art Mins.• • Wells' gefitough an Corns," • Akk for Wells' "Rough on Corm!? 15e. Quick; complete, perManent cures Corn% wart.% bunions. . • -..voltaire's house is used by the Geneva Bible feociety as a repository for bibles. Bright% JDIsertee; Illabetee, Kidney, Liver ' or 'Urinary :Diseases? Have-no/ear of any of these &biasses': You use • worst cases, even wben you hate made Hop Bitten, as they will prevent (mire the worse by some great puffed up preten d core. If you would succeed in lifterise,eerlyetrid he en mimeo:list of time. . "A dream of Air 'women "--Bieh men. e • 0 Don't Die In the iltense. • "Rough ou Ite;tff" clears Out rats; mice oaches, bed -bugs, files, ants, moles, ohipmonke gophers 15o. • • First editionof Shelley are in de- mand in London at high prices. Skinny Men. , . Wells' Health Renewer" restores health and vigor, cures Dyspepsia Impotence, Sexual De- bility. $1. u ' ' 111 treatment---Medi'cial attendance: , Don't Da It, - Don't Wait an hour before buying a bottle of. Putneares Painless Corn Extractor. It is. safe,' painless), prompt in action; never leaves sore spots behind, and thereforelibrfection Substitutes are. being • offered for the genuine' 'Putnam's Extractor. Sep that the name.. :Of Poison it Co. is on each wrapper; 1:1014 by drug-' .gists and country dealers ; .snly 25:cents. ' • , Always out of countenance—The twee. DM -CLINE Or, ISLAM ImPoteney . of Mina, lirab or vital ftnieiltm!.•: nerypus weakness; ?gruel debility, etc.,. ouredby Wonntes Distlinsattr• Minnoen Assootano,N, Buffalo, N.• Y, Address,. With twe 'stamps; for pamPhlet. • • . ' An old lady in Georgia, , hOlag ,108t all .her petdenee,•bas suede'', neighbor her 118 for 'wife° borrowed a cupful ateieletifie ' f T4E LOSS or POWER To' digest and assimilate•food in any one Who has it weak spot, whose weakness renders_per- feet nutrition a necessity. requires. linntediate attention; the lungs impaired by inflammation, the heart by rheumatism, and the liver or kid- ney by over -stimulation; will soon ory out from - starvation 'when thebloodis insufficiently fed and thetissries ill -nourished., Failure Of nerve , power and it weak stomach are the thief factors in these to:labial, and the elements Of nerve nutrition and essential agents of.thegastric juice in WHEELER'S PHOSPHATES AND :,0ALL • (i8eerschate litiVeredin aline, Ark. , ,.;=.4"Iii::-Bensink's Celery •artel..;Chanoonlile-Pillsr- -are-worth-theirweIght in goldln nervous and. sick headuche.";-.Dr.a E..H Schlichter, of Balti- rnore . . The Dickinson family, to the number of 1,000 or more, *ill hold it rewlion at Am- herst, Mass., on August 8t1I and 9th. - .. *If MreeLydia E. PinkliaM: has not really dis- covered the Rtiiir Pito, Which the ancient alcheraists sought by po much *patient research and persistent ex,pernitent, her medicine seems, at least, likely to command an immense sale and universal popularity in the future. If rapid progress and eminent sueoese furnish any basis, for a correet judgment, Mrs. Pinkham is a moat premising competitor for such honorable dis- tinction as the alehemists failed' to achieve. Lord Walter Gordon Lupien, Boll di Ufa. Puke di ileolimend, and state are at the Clifton House, Niagara Falls. ` • • **"*.wiroubIes often come frora whence we least expect them." Yet we 'may often prevent or ' .counteraet there by prOnapt and intelligent ac- tion. Thousands of persons are Constantly troubled with it combination of diseases. 1)is- eased kidneyli and costive boweli are their ...tor- mentors. . They, should' know , that KidnepWort acts on these organs at the'ssine tient), cansing thereto throw Off the poisons that have cloggea them, and sO renewing the whole System. • , . • T• he heart'thitt is menet awake. to the flowers is always first to be touehed by thorns,' • 111 tempered folks who think the tele- . I :phone ia always toblanee, iney he deiieeitied as victims of a etello-cination. , •- . - . I • who was tor assay years Propirlater. int the SmilAstatilInfORSESblhattfleigit in *as city. ° J. N. 8vrropireenie DnAn Sin was ouffering With rheumatism in my shoulder -so bad st threes thst I could net get my dress off Without ItSfliStSi100. I took two bottles of your Rheumatine, and sTA haPPY to. say I am completely cored. Yours truly, • ' MRS.' JAMES MOCOUR,T, .;;SOLD BY ALA ratuoGisTi4.0, Tko likeunatine Nanditturing . e; ST CATHARINES, Olelt. eV. • Winer tee, Co,, iwaikeiato Aosta . litanditon. D.ip. N. L. 30. 613. ' Electric:40E0es are sent 00,3e Dart 'WA., TO MEN LY, YOUNO OR .0Lni vi71E0.. are ! .Ting trent .Nmtvese pmsfsty• V Poer irre4y1. LAO- 0" Nome Folios ifgo • lite4,Wasemow and/M*408e dleehijet s'F=8_01.1AL: NATO= MA front Ansizsiont terititiCAussa. Speedy relief Slid complete recto, IStios of lilstrait,Vmon and ltdmiebo GRIXANTRRD. Thegrandest discovery of the Nineteenth Century.; RlidatoncetorDluctratedramphistftvo.' Addtesi VOLTAIC PELT CL, atit a *reek in your owe town.. ',Terms sent S tPWw outfit free. H4Idriwere & Co.,.Postiandilliti • "' • . . • FOR THE PERMANENT CURE OF , CONSTIPATION: !' No other disease fp se prevalent this cotut4 try'asOonstlintion,;ana no . rowdy has ever equalledthe celebrated KidtW,Wort as cum 'Whatever the cause, however obstinate the cese,- this 26=0!wfll orecoonze it. . tioniplidatAidwwicondipatieit, 4idne7Avoti, strengthens the svesketutdVS4Mit 01010 corce all kinds of 1311ea even auk VoXychdans and medicines have 'before failed. . .42. Erlf yoshsve.either of these tronblea USE NEVER BEWITHOUT 0 I) NNIS FS!' 'I Your Shin dur4 is supOreicellent. It is fast curing my datvlitor's ring worm, which had spread all over her ngdp." Mrs. E. • Z. b. .111er riam, Slue ktilZ, Maas. Druggists keep it. $1 per eaeasee. The Erie, 114t., workhouse authorithei .decided to act on a Grand jury recenimen- dation; and allow, In future, " Married paupere in the house to five together, "on the score of humanity." It has lately come to light that, in VicW of this; all the un- married paupers, edirie450, varying itt ate froin'1.8 to 'BO, were Turranging to got mertiecl. The ailthorifies hare, cense- eVehtly, reconsidered. their decision. • RUPTI.TRE • • OAN BE Oilmen IN SIX MONTHS BY • , TE USE OF NOILIgiti'S IiiECTRO-CURATIVE . • Warranted tO held and be cemitortab • • • Circular free 444 i\T,0 Ri .A..i\T 4 tiis. Eii.ST, TORONTO - SOLD BYALLQROERS A CURE GUARANTEED. WIC EDWIN „Itotor. wine. oRs( BRAIN &NERVE FOOD.) For Old and.. Young, Mate 'sad itesSak• Positively euros Nervcmsnessin ALL its stAgeti Weak Memory, Loft of Brain Powerzflexital Pros.. , tratiOn Nigbt Sweats,Spekniaterrho3a, Torieme rhout, ,Barkenriess and ,Gelleral Lone of Power • It. restores -Surprisino Tone and victor. to the Exliansted • generative organs.PgirWith 66horder hir t*Eri'VE psoktigee accompanied `With $5 we wfll send our Written Eitiaranteetoleftin the money if tile treatrai3ntdoes not eff till. 01 • Pamphlet sent free by mall to eev ad . bydruggiSta at00C,* per beki- or 6 bOtiok $21 30, Mailed 'free of pilotage; t',Ok %Sett) money . • „ is Ittivalsette *wow** 4.u. AN ENGLISH VirrEleiNANY EttltoXoN AND ONEMIsTo 1.....W travelhot in t coon says that most of the Horse andeattle Powders Iseld here are wortlitou trmb. Its that Skerldsn's . Will nil* Ponditien Pow. Ulti dos are abisoA II* 'Moly intro and Vet ,* *1"6".° inimeneelyval- tillible; Toth - hie on eirth eve hero or be th