The Sentinel, 1883-08-31, Page 5•
v
1101110114141g EU�TLIGIIJ triLaipts
\ The Ilfainttra Of it les Ellen Terry—A: recut
• liar but .PcondneittlrigiorC, ,
• Hardly SQ00114 to the interciit exeited by
Mr. Irving himself will be that Attending
the debtiCef Mide Elhgi Terry ii .141P4 °GUI*
try. She will be Mr. Irving's principal
flUpPert in all the plays he .appears iu and
will Aber° pilblio Attention in great Measure
with him. The reports that baYe been
wafted arose the ocean accord a high place
to Miss Terry, and if We Were to believe all
. that iksaid of her, iihein indeed a great
• stotress. • .
p Mien Terry is a peouliar creature. She
has been, a prominent figure on the Englieh
. stage for the paot seventeen yearsto etty,
• the VeO least, and made a reputation
before ' she ever , linked herself to,
' Mr. Irving's dramatic) fortunes. Physically
.she is a tall, elOugated, elim peratin,.
a feminine :counterpart of Mr. 'Irving
1111210elf. She know; her art, and , that
is all she does know. Off the stage ,ebe is
an apparently insignifioant woman, whota
. nobody would turn round -to look at in the
street. She is not pretty,she is not cora-
mantling, land. si
he dresses n a More than
conemonplaize fashion.. Shortly ' after she• .
joinect•Ilie .Lyceum company Mr. Irving
put this to her as delicately us.he could,
and advised be that being a member of the
Lybeuna Company eatdreoeiVing avery large,
• , salary he Would beobliged toher if she
*mild uphold the dignity of the theatre
• • .by dressingin fashion, or if not that, at
Any rate with care. She answered that,tut;
• far as her dressing on the stage was coo-
.cerned, she conceded Mt. Irvieg's right to
'criticism, 'but that his right Olosed after
' she 'paella the. .stage door and that she
would tibia &esti in what style;uutted her
best: For •a time, however, she
• ,adopted the •hiat 'but did not :stick
to it. • :Her friends call. her eccentric.:
'Scime years ago Miss Terry, niarried an
• • actor awned •wasta man who
• • had made. mine •reputation in melodrama,.
• and:ts still sought for wheneverany play
• of this sort is to be put oh the stage. -* But
-there Were pdculiat ciraumstances 11141Ouit
their marriage ,and they lived- together 'but
a. Very short time. He went •his way and
she went hers. 'But they are still inarried
• andiincTiWilTlitra. Kelly. That She has
• . been of good service to .Mr. Irving in his
-.work there is no doubt. • She Was the one
• Wornanin•Rngland .who &mid , realize the
• idea of the heroines of e.plays he brou
• Out; • Sheis-paida very a I: salary
t -is
said 280 a week, Which 18 e , .1n3, for
England. _BAIL:Mr. ,Irving?crappreciation-
of. , her does, not stop • there. About a.
a'
-#fl%
•-.and- retired in a villa. in St.:Jnlitt . Wood,
• and • all :aloue, and' courts. rio sort ,Of
publicity. •She. lute 'few personal friends,
and is cold'and distant to people general4 ;
''• in fat.* is a, singular woman. But when
• on the stage she is said. to 'have the most
• remarkable inagnetism, and to enthral her
• audtencea.. The London critics, even when
•,...they„aromost severe on Mr. Irving, always
• speak in the highest' pea* of her. She
:belongs to a 'famous. theatrical
Three Of her sisters undone of .herbrotheri
. have been on the stage. The best known
. of them outside of, Was 'Kate
• Terry; ' an actress whom the .London siege
•;severely. . missed •when •she Married; a
fashionable Regent street. taller or Home;
• , thing of that. sort. In fact, what Ellen
Terry is now .; her eldest • stater- E.ate.
was to ' the London ' stage when
• Fletcher • was the brightpartioular
star at the 'Hanle.' Lyceum Theatre in the,
sixties.. It is tuitions to see' one sister into-,
coed to the place 'of Anoint at the :leading
• theatre in the greatest city .in the world
after alapse Of a decade' and a half. The
• likeness between the sisters is very great• .
...When Kate was the reigning queen of the
• footlights Ellen'had even then retired faint
the stage to he the Wife of the celebrated
PortiAit painter, Watts. She was -even then,'
••however, kept before the,publio eye through
• the brush Of the accomplished Watts; who
never Wearied of painting her portrait and.
” exhibiting it on the • walls of the Royal-
• Acadeirty. After a few years of this .retire-
• ment Mrs. Wotts'separated from her
• band and :reappeared on the Stage once
-more is Mies Ellen . Terry, a name whioh.
ever sines) had been one to charm with on
the "Wile of the play.—Sunday's, New York
Journal. '
• •
Was It An "N" 01 ti • ' •
"Do you see that' 'name ?." asked a
nervous little map of hie neighbor in a
• • .Philadelphia car. 'The name designated
•Was inscribed .in script letters on a plate.
. glass show window. Is was not a very un-
• asual name, and the little meal Was asked for
A ArliAlpile won A CO,Itrtliff,..„.
A, Heed iflatiNt Wiree allitri Pitsitled
itesurance Agent., •
Deptity Cotoner Dr. Donlin received in-
forniation yesterday afternoOn that his
°Molar services viere required sit Roosevelt
risepital.On hill arrival „there he -learned
of the death of Isaao Howell, aged 28 yeare,
one of the throe men who on Tuesday night
were injured by the fall of an Olsvittor in
the St. Albans ilate, at No. 251 West FLAY'
eight street. Howell, who,Waff 0 furniture,
mover,'„ lived with his wife and 2 -year-old
child at No. 07 Nacdougal street. His
ekUll was fraetured, When Dr. " Dentin
arrived at the hospital the Siiperintendent,
who seemed to be in a pusaled frame of mind,
said, "Doctor, bere'sa class that•oalls for the
wisdem of Solomon to settle." Dr. DeWitt
began,to look anxions. Yes," centinued
the Superintendent, "the cad° ',refer tois
even More complicated than -the One, whiCh
taxed the ingenuity of Sol -omen. Here are
two women, each` claiming to he the only '
.original, widow of a man who.diedhere this
Morning. I wish you: WOuld' look into it.
Both women have an undertaker engaged'
and are olaMoring to gain possession cpflthe
body." Dr. Donlin looked haggard. ° •
neat.lociking .matron, with two haOd;
some children; stepped forward. Shesaid
that she was the lawful wife of the .cle-
ceased Isaac Howell; that she Was married
to him tenyears ago, when he was only 18
'years 91d.. She had borne him two children,
the two present. She ariaher husband
.hltd lived together in VeWark Up toone
year ago, when he left her to Conie to, this
city to proOure eniPloymeat. They had
lived-hppilytogether, and he had , sent
het--temkttauces 'every week, enough to
-support. liertielt and -ThesOre!.
mittances Were continued up. to , the "week
befOre, hie death. Sh� never suspected
that • he was,false to her, as he had always
been: a geed husband 'and a good father.
She did not knew that he Was living With.
another woman in thil3 city „until a short,
time before, when she . arrived, at , the
hospisal, and then met. a 'Woman , WhO
Wanted to be •hiti Wife. . - •
Donlin is s . bachelor, „'andhe, wa
about starting Out to consult soMeex-
perienced family man, when hiwas
inter-
oepted-bywif • or2.--SheAntd.her7child-,-
with' he She he Wanted &death
carti -ate so „' that • her .undertaker, „could
otte the body to her hoMein•Maedeital
refit..., The dilemnia was • one that .em-
barrassed Pr. DeWitt.. , • . •
r mit then -an excatedlife iniiiiranoe agent
asked permission to i3peak a few Words: to
Dr.--Doalizi:7 ' The -dead Min- had: been
insured in biii.compay,
40-m-rt,p4.co;•:,
rliver-olairre to. the: itioneY,,' Dr. Donlin,waki
.speephless in .-the -.presence- of : such • • an.
untoward difficulty. The insurance agent
brought • his superior experienize to hear
upon the subject.. At his suggestion,.
greatly to the relief'of. the phygiaian,'it with
agreed that .Dr:-.Donlin should 4010 the
board Of health.bertifloate of death to Wife
No, 2; With . the understanding that'the,
policy should net .be, paid until it was
legally searedwhioh•wife was entitled to it
• This arrangement :looked as it: it . would:
be satiefaittory to'all•parties, and Dr. Dow,
lin was /deicing sup . renewed Courage, when
the two rival undertakets, representing
• respeetively •• Wife NO. 1 and wife No. 2,
Oamo forward each to press his particular
'claim to take • charge Of the *body. Dr.
Donlin and the 'insurance agent tried to
explain mattors, but this was the hardest
• task Of :all; Fearing that other' olaimants:
for the body, might , flirt' up, DA „Poulin
and the: insurance .agent hurried awry.
The.body Was taken in Charge or in •trust
'by One of the undertakers until it is decided
Which Of the women shall .bury
York -Herald.
• . . • -. ..._• •
re
The' Evolution of of,the alteitinshin& -•
r • One's -historic sense eiperiences. e thrill
of pure human elation as one Mande on the
deck of agreat steamship bounding out on
the-oeein, How many thousand years
, have, gone to build thie-Ship 7 ", Beheld ...it
, disappearing little by . tittle,: the.. slowtri;
:umphe_Of—centuriets,,:reversed,,,,antil, our
, Arizona sinks.to a scooped '10g paddled by
'painted savage!:.• - The .swollen .Wayee . out
by the edge of our bow-740am: wider thita
one's hand-hisst is: they. Vaiffillsy "White
as the bitten lip of hate." Te.frothy.hounde,
keep,..yout:..places;.•your master: is here .1
The wind ditinea .- yelping; :it only •.4.11s
the -
merry boatswain's • pipes; 43unit:running up„
:the sa.ils.„ We patut a bark with full sailS,
On itsway to England, 'While We with sails
fairly fuul, are on our way to Ametioar.
•What, • Old- ZEolus, (diciest Windbag, have
you sunk in . suOh- dotage • that .man .outs
your ,gale 111, two, makes hall blow one way,
and half the other! The .hurricane.makes
•Ii.t..,%%stnfr.g,77f—P,•
,)
'11/mr"'"•••"g'-'4.4'2.7.:!7"1ViE71;5;7
glance tihowed thaT,thelettai Was
peculiarly .formed. "Well, new you may
think Me a °raid when 1 aesure. you that
that infernal little letter 'has almost driven
me into a Mad -house, ' but it's a fact,,and
I'M not a ciank;',3ither. I've ridden:down
this street every morning for years, and I.
never developed any trace of insitaittenatil
about two months ago, vaunt that sign was
etilok up on that window. At first I was only
• curious to know if it read Haustetter '
or Hanstetter.' I couldirt settle the
question and it began to prey upon' my
• Mind. I tried to avoid looking at it, but
• whenever I got within a block of that
.1. corner I beoame nervous, Llitt I never hue.
ceeded in passing it without glaring at the
name. It became a nightmare. Ono took
absolute Lipossession of my mind. 1 am
a bookkeeper, and all day long it would”
• .glare at Me front 'the ledger and journal
I lost my potation. 1 Aped the with:
try, but found no relief; Now they are
sending me somewhere, t don't•know or
care where." •
"But why didn't you go 4in the store
and ask What the name was?" asked the
neighbor.
•." I never thought of that."
• Come on. Here's ,Riglith..street •and
.,we've got to hustle to make that train,"
and a big burly fellow tapped the little man
on the shoulder, who followed him meekly
-.Out df the oak.
-!t" 9
Yee " said the big man, " that's a
straight young feller—. That Fagg druv the
poor little feller crazy,. and I'm taking hint
to the Norristown Asylanot."--Philadelpitia
Mimes. '
• •
The bird craze hail amine again. All
varieties of the feathered tribe are in de-
mand,from pigeons, seagulls and paroquetai
to birds of paradises,
IATEUVictfrriliOndPa;lhirigerthraarea 'song F
The gale that Wrecked You on the sand
• Ll
It taught my rowers to rem';
The storm is my beat galleythand •
And guides me where Igo.
. Conway. in' Philadelphia
• •
•
F !Steel Pen Waste. .
Germantechnolo.giell journal:points out
the tacit that a vast amount of valuable steel
is last every year in the shape of pens that
beeome unfit for writing and are thrown
'away. Pens are Made of the very finest
steel, and can be remelted' and used again
for many purposes. They can be turned
into watch epringe and knife blades, and
can be dissolved and made available in the
manufacture of ink.' The suggestion is
made that the children of the poor should'
be taught to collect' castaway pone, and
thereby save, valuable Material and earn
money.
. fintarria;o1 she *builder
Stinging irritation', infianimation, an Kidney
and Urinary Complaints, mired by e, Buchu.-
.
. As the dog of betitizel King, a flagman at
Elizabeth, was trotting along the reed
a swallow flew fie low that it went into the
dog's open mouth with such &tee that the
dog naarowly eseaped choking to death.
The bird was Anally taken out •
„
*Lydia E. Pilakham'il Vegetable Compound
strehgtben'S the stoTach and kidneys, And aids
digestion.
"There is connected *with the Reformed
Episcopal. Church, Plaillidelphia, • a Sunday
dohool of about 800 scholars, a Kindergar-
ten, a Boys' Association, • a night school
taught by young lady volunteers,: and a
Temperance League. Beside blidee organi-
zations there are the Usual witoktp lectures
S2d plediyer.bieeti,gd. -
y ' STICti1111:14•Na
lu future every profeasiOnai and tnainestmari
Will need to knOW Ohorthaud, and perhaps tele.
graphy it he Wishea to succeed iniite. Many
business men Cariploy ehorthand Writers, paying
thorn as high as $1.0Q A month. Tile Collegiate
Institute at „Kingston,. of which A. k- Knight,
44 Principal, inchitlea thekle siibjects in ita
Ocnnnieroial eotirse of study, and every :young'
man and woman shOuld inake a trete of this and
write for its prOcipeCtus before.selectitig a College
in Which to get a business training. This sante
Sehoelbas long had an excellent reeord" as the
preparatory department Of Queen's University.
The teaching iltaff llas been thoroughly re-
organized. „
-The whale thinks' itself a big telt, and
one oannot make a good dive without com
ing up to blow about it. • •
•
rTIHE SKILL IN cONLEINING
1. eeMplicated Medicinal preparation with
the various ingredients so adjusted and barmen -
40(.1 as to s, cure toleration and assimilation by
irr table stoinachs, and the special action or
form of energy, of each 'separate agent; And at
the s ime time an effect peeuliar to the theM iced
Manipulation of „the conipppund, is acquired only
by long ani patient study Of the pi operties and
liseirof medicine, and cannot be imparted vont
brain to brain any more than a •juggler earl
endow an onlooker with the capacity of keeping
a number of balls in Motion in the air by show-
ing him how it- is IS done: This explains why
'VVHEEL1)R1f3 PHOSPHATES AND CALICiANA,
an outoon2e of experience, ' accomplisees the
object contemplated, while he fraudulent imi-
tations aubstituted by coMo druggists disappoint
the invalid. . • •
• —Mike --"An' ;What, are ye ' diggieout,
that 'hole for; Pat?"'Arrah,
not the hole.I'm after diggin' out 1: I'M
diggin' the'dirt out and leArin the hole."
k -r_„. The Scarlet; Cardinal Red, Old Gold,' Ravi
blue, Seal Brown Diamond Wei giveYperfeet.
results. Any fashionable cetera° cents. •
, Press men Very seldom"drinkchltatipagnel
which is another proof that good prinoiplee
have been instilled into 'them' early in life.
Montreal'Herald.' '
• **Ji, Unbidden guests, are .often welcomest
When they are gone.", .Disease is an unbidden ,
guest,. which Kidney -Wort almost invariably
shows the door.". Hera is a ce,Se in Point
" Mother has recovered," wrote an Illinoie,gi*
to her Eastern relatives: "She took bittere /for
a lohg Cone, but Without any good. So when
`fshe heard of the virtues of Kidney -Wort she' gat_
orlicnratittit-eomplistifily cured her, so that she
can do as much work now as she could before we
moved Weet. Bluets she got welt every one about
here is takingit." '
. ,
Don't forget to piirehase a. return tieltet
whiza_youato_Lon Tour_veciation._,It may
mune hand Y teget beak with.
Irgitstimpsi tilltrESSENP •:••
•,; 7 ""
.--crtztestar..
a friend who suffered terribly. 1 purchased
a bottle of .your "Favorite Ptiesoription,".
and, as a result of its use, shels perfectly;
well; , •4. BAILEY; Burdett, N. Y.
,Dr. Pierce's "Golden MedioalDizieoverY"
and "Pleasant' Purgative Pellets".. purify
the blood and cure constipation.
.—The larkest object glass • in use, is the
26. -inch lens at Washington, with a fooal
length 01 33 feet. Its light gathering power
is 16,008 times that of the unaided eye.
e,
' . •
That liessband of aloe :
Is three times the matt he Was before he began -
using " Wells' Health Renewer!' $1. Druggists '
• .
• • ,
Could new born .beatieti be.oalled pauper
immigranta ? asks an exchange. They arrive
in this. .cOuntry 'without a dollar in their
pockets or a suit, of clothes to. their backs.
Dr. R. tV. Puma,
Sir—For many. months I was a great suf-
ferer. Physiinans could afford me no
relief. In "my. despair I commenced, the
use of your ",raverite Pretzeription." It
speedily effeoted my entire and permanent
cure. • - Yours, thankfttlly,
MRS. PAUL R. BAXTER; 'Iowa City,,Ia.
• A..niedical•journal says there is a Man in
Vermont whose brains have dried up, so
that they rattle around • like beans in a
bladder every time he shakes his head. . '•
If you are bilious, take Dr. Pierce's
" PleasantPurgative Pellets," the original
"Little Liver Pills." Of all druggists.
The inceining ocean 'steamers . report
roaming many large icebergs in the Atlan-
tic. '
•
•
Flies and 'Bugs,
Flied, roa.ehea, auto, bed -bugs, rata, mice,
gophers, chipmunks, cleared out by ‘" Bough on
Bats.' 15e. „ 4 ,
—A13 -year old girl gave birth to a child
on Sunday,evening-ian-Ahe "n !""s'
•
A Young „kat* Writes "I have .used,Bitag-
natio Medicine and am Much pleased with the
result. It has cured nurafter Doctors and other
medicines had failed."
Amiability is the sunehine of the, soul,
which, amuses smiles to bloom on the lips,
and •expande the heart as the rays of the,
sun open the:buds of the rose.
Palnlesi and Prompt.
Punish% Paminass cledis EtTnAeTtni, the
great remedy' for corns, is absolutely safe and
painless, does ite work promptly, witbout in the
least interfering With the comfort of patients,
and is absolutely alone Dira, safe, painless remedy
for corns.. Do not be imposed upon by danger,
ous eonnterfeits. Use only Putnam's Corn Ex-
tractor. Beware -of base substitutes. 'Bold
everywhere by druggists and dealers in Medi -
eines. Take only Putnam's Painless Extrasitorl,
N. C. Poison & go., proprietors Kingston.
•
Neal bow figures that Ii1,306,000,000 is
sPeizt for drink each year. ,
•• Don't be Alarmed •
'Bright's Disease, Diabetes" Or any disease of
the kidney% liver or urinary organs, as HOP
litters Will certainly and astingly euro you and
it is the only thing that will
---The 'Spaniards tell tis that he who
stumble ia twtoe over the same stone deserves
to break his Shins.
"Fr four years 1 Erred agouti from a akin
disease. • Dr: Beuson's kin Cure cured me." C.
B.• McDonald, I'lantersville, Ala. el, at drug$Ista.
—It is that nothing, is Made in
vain, and yet it is well known that the
miner's work is 8,11 nuttle hi vein. '
—If you wish to ocoUpy a high platie itt
the estimation of the world begin by being
worthy of it, bet:Muse the higher the ape
climbs the more he shows his tail, •
• .
,
The faelli0O /Or hok1es, ha ornaments on
dresses• and bonneta, B ihereasing. Steel
appeartrU be tbe favorite material for
these, though beaded and chenille effects are
also shown. —
,,-,:,-„,„,:iisiortamiestsawesiosssimastetestaareasei
. vital ttnestirsum 1'• •
•
•
Mahe most eminent physician ,
•<opt auy school what, is the beet thing in the
worldforquieting and allaying all irritation of •
tho lierVeaalid caritig all forms of nervous com-
plaints, giving uathral, childlike refreshing sleep
always?
And they•Will tell you unhesitatingly
Some fortilf4t7toty.
• APTEll I.
dolt any or all of the most eminent physk
dant; , •
" What is the best alfd, only rePled3r that '0a4
De relied on to cure ail diseases of the kidneys
and. urinary 'organs; such as Bright's disease,
diabetes, retention or inability to retain urine,
and all the dilleaBOS and ailments peculiar to
Women"— -
• Arid they will tell yon ,explicitiy and eMPhati-
0.011Y. "Bnahu.".
• utlik the same elip•ielaus
" What is tbe most reliable .andeurest cure ter
all liver ditoo,Hes °et Ayspepsi ,a constipation,
• indigestion, biliousness,malarlal fever, ague,
00.," and they will tell you
" Mandrake! or Dithdelionl"
Hence, When these remedies are COiabilledWith
ethers equally *canaille
And compounded intnHop Bitters, Buell a• '
(Concluded next week.)
. •
402 kWilitilt. 312 a day at 4101328 Quay .113 ate
Coldly Quilt free. taus &Oe„ Atigttata; Iffe
• NOTI/11' BUT UNTITLED WOMAN,
,r/From the Boston Gleba]
: .
. . „
meter& Editors • „
.agotid likeness, ef-lirs."-Lydiall.-Finit*--
• ham, of !Ten, Ham, Who above all other human beings •
may be truthfully calledthe "Dear Friend °Monism;
isf some .cf her Correspondents love to call her. ..13126
. pates:3;13:y devoted to her work; which is the outcome
.at a 'nts.tudy,-and*0.obUgeetokeepslx1ady
irsiditi,ite, to heipber answer the large correspondenesi
whicIrdtilYpotirsin upon-herfeach bearing its special-,
harder_ et, smearing,* joy at releesefreM Jti_her
•VegeratteCoPeutidlia, medldliio -for 'good aria not
evil. pur„fosea• I havepersOneuy
-01traccount Offisprovezeineritaltelf4scoinniendeP-
and presoribed by thebest physicians in the country:.
• One ewe: "It works -like a charm and eaves. raa* •
•
pain. • Blida cin*enthely 1115 worst of tal'ing
'‘of. the uterus, ,Lineorrhcei, 'irregular .ead
henstruation,011,Overkin Troubles, InSgrazation aid
131ceration,Floodixge,:allOiSplacements and the con?
frequent Spinal wealess, and:is. eslieciaily adapted ID
the,Change of ,• • . • •
• . .
It permeatee every Portion of the sys'.'e'.. end gives
newlife„and,vigor.• It removes faintness, Ilittaiency,:
destroys all cravingfor atinialents, and ;relieves week
neeri of the stoinach. It enree Bleatirg, headaehes,
,NervonsProatratier., General Bettity, aleepleseness,
Depreadoliandlndigestiois. 'That feelingot bearing *
down,confihig pin, 'weight and .hackiche, Is always
permanentlfetred. by its use. It *Matajl Untie, and .
macron oircurc.stances, act bitumen, with the laW
.• •
. that memo:he female system..
• It enfirsonly tit perbott1eorsifor$5,andaeo1db7:
druggist* Any advice reqiiiredas to, 'medal cases, and
the names ot many who MVO been restored to Perfect
health by the use of the Vegetable Conipound, caliber
obtained .by addressing:lira P, with stamp for reply,
ether home 1111ffnno Masa.. " • '
For Kidney Complaint Oeithersin'this,coMpoundlis
wisurpamedris abundant testimonials ohm:, -
• : "Mrs. Vinkhentli Liver Pills," says onewriter; "sin • •
Wheat
*s the world. for 00 core of „ Oonstiplition,:
Rillonsness and Tonddity. of .the liVer. Her Bleed
• Purifier works wonders in its special line and bida fair'
.. to egnal the Compound in its popnlaritY. ', •
• All mustrespect her *mai Angel of Bor.:7 r' Ciie
..osiibitiOn into dogood to others, • ,
7lWadelphla.i'a. t)
LAT'. a
egit a w in your own town. Terme and •
*awv out 'res. � RtTT& 0 Portiend.Me
•
KIDNEY -WORT;
HE ,CREAT.. ,CURE
A,: Win for all use painful diseases et•the
E KIDNEYS,LIVER AND BOWELS..
• It cleanses he syhtem of the acrid poison
ra that causes the dreadful suffering Which
• only the victims of Rheumatism can refdire.
THOUSANDS OF CASES '
Z • of the worst farina of thin terrible disease
is rave been quickly relieved, and in abort time
PERIFECTLY.cuRED. •
ruice,41. Liquin 011 DRY, SOLO IW DirroatsTS.
. • Dry can be sent by. mall.
mzeitosorrst on. ,Inirurarzeuvt;
A tins
RHELIMAT
.1111C GREAT CURIE F
-UMA
• And all complaints Of a Rheumatic
RIIIIUMATINII is riot a soiereigm
"all the ills that flesh is heir ' bu
RALGIA, SCIATICA, RHEUIVIA
' complaints cf Rheumatic naive: -
.11°,1s A sUIRE.CLI
From Jr. 11, Maxwell, who
Oshawa for the past testy y
well-hnown Insaranee A
• . Osnawl, Ontario, Fe
*rt; a. suntERLAND .
, St. Catharines. .
Damn Sir,—I have taken four bot
Rheurnatine, and it a,ff.rds mo mtle,
testify that r haVaxeceived great be
use. I have be n afflicted with Idle
about twelve years—for the past t
pain has been so great as10 be al
able., I have need many external -r
obtain no relief until I purchased y
tine ,froni Messrs Sigginbotham &S
here. Itheumatitle has bean the .0
present comfort And ease. Your p:
H.
;BOLD BY Au; Dittroa.
Tho Iliounatine loofa&
ST CATHARINES.0
41.. Winer ilk Co.,. liVissolenal
.0 or. A.. 30.• s:
0
51
HAS BEEN PROV
The SUREST CURE fo
KIDNEY' DISEA
Doeiiilanie.haok Or disordered
ciae-thatyou are-avietimii-TIELTr
ginelEBoirrtehAerdis;:snasrlit2n4neYeadaroCr7haetaclen
comma t willepe
,
.4.4%**414,40-warsioft-orottiob.
andwcakiicii 1Zidnqy-Worta viaa
salt wJfl aot promptly and safely. •
Either Sex. Incontinence retention
brick dust or ropy deposits', and dull
pains, all speedily yield to its curative
is- BOLD B ALT, TAVUGGISTS: ,
KI D WO1
if.SEEORE.,.. AND Nu!,AF
ElectrleApeliatiet 'Oe tent On 30 NYS
TO MEN ONtYi. YOUNG ,Olt
jiiO are suffering from 'Naivete
yy iLesi.vrratary; Lion ow lbws V
Yuma, Wasrma wristrasses,and an these
of a PERSONAL NATURE readung froM AB
omits ,olosic& speedy relief and cOmpl
rationoflizeraniVioonandllatruoonGo
The grandestdiscovery, of the Nineteen*:
Send alioncefor flhistrateclraMphlettfee,
VO.TAI0 011.1 00., MARSHAI1.,
'NEVER ijE. WITH(
N N'
WELLS, 'RICHARDSON & CO'S
I NIP ROVE D
BUTTER COLOR
A NEW.DISCOvERY.
tzerkor 'wend years WO lia+e furnished the.
DanTinen. of America with an excellent arti-
ficial color for butteri eo inerltorlOus that it met
withgreat success everywhere receiving the
highest •and oniy prizes at both International
• Dairy Fairs. „
Grant by patient and scientific chemical re-
search we have improved in seve,ral point* end
now offer thia nevreolor as thd best in the world.
It Will Not Color the Buttermilk. It
Will Not Turn Rancid. It le the
. .
Strongest, Brightest and
.4,4,heapett Co)orldade,
brAnd, while prepared loon, 18 eocoinpoubd.
at that It Is impossible tor ft to become ?Afield.
tarBEVVARE of all, imitations, and of ail
other •ou colors, 'for they are liable to:become,
•rancid and -spoil the butter.. "
rirIf you cannot getthe "iniprcived" write us
to know where and how to get it without exp.&
mimeo. ' * " (4S)
WELLS, „melt AUDSOY & co nuircnonn. vt.
RITPT
OAN BB 0011ED IN StI-110
' TEN 08 fits '
111411111 ELECTIO- TOM
Warrinted to hold and% ooW
,11.1. late
.1\T CD Xt."7/4
-4 QuIcN' ST smiT TottOrrO.
$ $20 t
"
„ 5 flim
ree. bos &Son Portland MS
home, .11einples *drib
5 to
CRYING BABIES.
• BabieS Cry becetise they Suffer. their little
gutuis are infianted, and their *bodieslite nuire or
lees feverish. ' If yOu Will tie aranna their Imola
oneof 7.
Norman'idleettic Teething:
Necklaces
, .
vautvin Bea a .wonderfol change for the better
their suffering Iv* „cease itud their :genera].
health improve. „ -
Ask fer Nevin/Woo ...and take' no:Othei Atli Yon
w 1 be,pleasea. • •
Wee racy coati.
Endorsed by the IMMO Aosionfr ifsb
FOR 111FLAMMATIONOFTHE URINARY
caused by inaitoretion or =posit% 11
Bospilal, P&r10 Trestennii. Pod**
One io Ulna 4.4*
required. 40 nauseous doga
Clopalbit.
firrArattstizi, airarsmo,thmortisillte
Price $1.60rinolUding Bulb gYrtage. �ot
Druggists, or lent free by nitil. liectirely
on riteelpt of price, Desariptird treftbb
Applittation AIMBICAN&MISTS 1:114.4
UPRIK 004, Wiodsort out. •1304 I* all 114