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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1902-10-31, Page 3HOW Relief Caine TEE CLINTON' NEW ERA I OntIPOPOIReeitentenanteleveranteseeletleteetse REACHING OUT an Interesting Story Pro Tin U01140414 Settiernent • Freon the Legberg, Winnipeg, Man. The reaaers of Logberg have long been femiliar with the virtue' a Dr Williams' Pink ?ilia through the well autheatfosted (eine published in time oolerans emelt week. Many et our r" %lora ere 'deo Ole to youth for otwee wbieh beve ootneunder their owe observittion. Thies week "Log; Pere WM tee wed it letter from one ot 11. zeiders„ Mr B. Walterson, a proaperoes -fanner living at ,Eitu, in which lee givea hie own experience in the hope that it may benefit pine other fruiterer. Mr Walter= trays: "Bome year ego I wits elefferinft so greatly from rheumatiam in my limbo that I wag for a longtime unable to do Any work, 1 tried, in many ways to obtain a mire, both by patent medieipee and inedicine prescribed by dootore, but without obtaining any benefit. I eaw. Dr Williams' Fink Pilla advertised in the Logberg es being a care for ibis trouble end determin- ed to give it a trial. E bought a dozen -Uses and before half of them were used I felt a great change for the better. This improvement continued from deer to doe, 'andbeforel: had -used -ell the pills I was .00timietely oured. Since that time I have Dever had an attaok of , this trouble. After lisle I need the pills in OeVerel other case -end no Other medicine has been rei benell dal to ma e feel, it my duty to publiol ties testimony to the matte of wonderful medicine se others aimilarly afflicted may be led to try it" you are week or ailing; if your nerves are Wed andieded, or hourblood ie out of ooneition, you will he wise 10 Use Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pine, whith are an unfeel- ing cure for all blood and nerve troublee. But be ether -you get the -genuine, with the lull name "De Williams' Pink .Pille for Tale People" on the wrapper around every box. Sold by all raediolise dealers or sent • postpaid at 50 cents a box or six boner „ter $2 50 by writing direct to the Dr Williams' :Medicine Co., Brookville, Ont. ` GROWTH OF OM/FELLOWS.— 'The report of the Grand Sire at the ses- sion. of the Sovereign Greed Lodoe of :the I. 0.0. Felately held at Des Haines, 'Wis., shows the order, throughout the world to be prospering. Of the statist irs ,given the following are of the. most. interest t-127 Grand Lodges are estab- lished Of Which 6 were in foreign conn - trees, the total number of subordinate • lodges is ,12.7.02, and of subordinate encaamnients 2,780. The entirename• berehip of the order reaches 1,e32,272. During the year there, were 0,693 in- itiations in the Baba& inate lodges, in- cluding, those • initiated in other branches, the total *embed 1E5,815,:' The amount of relief disbursed was 46,930,785 an increase of $230,003, BUTTER EATERS Au Peculiar and Critical. , • • In the largernejority of lionsei, consume ere of butter—old and yoting— are particle, ler about the cider of butter ,placed before them. "Whitish or imperfectly colored but. tereeoea not attrapt the eye or tempt the -SSW It is the well made' butter colored • mut Wells. R ar en es p i d ' Im revere Butter:Crew, that is Tasked for and appree dated. Thelovely delicate. June .shad.: produced by wen% Rithardsomdi Oos Im- prved Butter Color kr well knowp. It 1. easy to cleteot the batter Morel with ern& and demi:Mei colors.. Such butter is usually briolty in oolor, sometimes mottled, and p1 ten strong anceranoid, It pays buttermak; ere -to use Wells, Rithaedson & Oe's'Im- proved Butter Color. When steed by butter- mkers it gives en extra value of from.2 to 4 eentliver p.eubd.., Don't be decoivcd by any dealerensiiit Mien havingthe Med thee makes ,prize butter, .4 droplets ana dealers. , • , • DEL4NESS CANNOTBE CURED • • By focal applications :as they ()Minot • reach the diseased nbrtitn of theettr. There is only one Way to Gate deafnese, and diet is by constitutional remedies, Dulness, is caused by an inner* condition of the redeem lining of the Eustachian tube. When :thietribe: gets ieflamed. you have I mumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and . when it hi entirely closed deafness is. the never., wet -mega lie hehoeueendielicannot ' be Aiken out and the tube restored to its normal eondition;hearin Will be destroyed _„,..e...henerer; nine cased out of ten are 'caused by . otitaiiiewhich is nothing but inflamedcon- dition af the mucous sedum • • WA will give- One Hundred Dollars ter any ease of dettfnesii teamed from mann) that can not be (Aired , by Hall's Catarrh Care, Bend for circular free. . F. J, Cniseeset Co.; To1ede, 0. Sold by Druggists; 75o. . • Hell's Family Pills are the best. • Mrs Wilson %daughter ottani Livingetcn, is going out to Sierra Leone as a mission - • ery. THE POLICEMALI'S !VIDEN(ip, Policeman 1Peter Horrid, Toronto say° thee for years he watt troubled with 'hebit. oonstiplition, and though he 'vent enrich money for medioine wits only denies pointed with the results. •HehatoW rentfra-- mends Dr. ChaseeslEidney•Liyer Pills to big friends because it cured him of his troublesonse ailment. You tan be cured •of conetipation by this treatment: Ocie a dose, 250 a bog, An attempt is te biglea le to combine 'whole of the bill -poising busineimee Lam. oftehire. THE TRUE TRAGEDY' OF LIVE • Its lasalth,diaappointed ambitioneuse. ° fulness destroyed, Pethicinay tragic, Poor blood, week tervee, a .tired brain. Is thete heel Beeline° there kr a cure. Feeiheehe Triblete make blood, not-hlue blood, but the fluid that strengtheno the whole body. Ferrozone dorm this quickly by itoproving digestien. etimulating amens" ,tdation, and by imparting health and tene - to the whole eystem. Mr Corabe. diriggiet, - Will tell you e greatdeal more about Ferro - •zone Mk him to tell you of the wonder. ful cierative properties of Ferrozone Tab- lets, Pelee 50o. The Duke of Sutherland lam joined the Liberal League.. • Five hundred lady doctoral, ere now in 'practice in _England. • Stops till eleask 014 Works et( tho gold Imiative Broil -Quinine Tibiae cure a eold in one clay, 110 Cure, No .Pay, Prioe .25 dents, GODWARD, " II. PEREIRA. MENDES, Minister of the Spanish and For. teguese Jewish Congregation President of the New York Reeve of Jewish Ministers, eto, Create in me a clean heart, 0 hod; and renew a right spirit wither. me.—Psairos, 11. • There is a pathos in these words Whieh touches every heart. For they are eloquent ef sorrow and sin, and tell of the penitence of a stainerl soul reaching out Godward. Senn, and eine They spell the same human story of yesterday, of to. day and to -morrow. Penitence, reaching out Godwardl They are attributes of our divine soPship; they are powers of the soul which give us strength to en - dere, courage to attempt and hope for a future. " All sorrow ean help to create in us . clean heart and to renew a right spirit Within ns. Sorrow born of adversity may cleanse the heart of mph that mars character, and through it a right spireteof sympathreive and charity may be reborn within' we The sorrow that tease the heart when loved ones depart oft cleanses the heart from wordliness. • Our thoughts follow teem Godward, and thue within us is }Timm a right spirit a faith in Him who is with us when we pa,asShrough the valley of the shadow of death. But sorrow for sin committed, epees to us yet wider thoughts. We are responsible beings, endowed with free .will. "See, I set before thee this day the life and the good, the death and • the evil. . . Lite, and Oath, blessing and blighting, but choose thou, the life, that thou mayest live." There- fore doh "gives to every man accord., ipg to his ways and aocordine to the fruit of his deeds." Farther, we are taught of God that "His work is perfect, all His ways are judgment, a God of faithfulness an . d without just add ppright as He. e. : Is He not thy Father, who bath • acquired ehee?: He lath made thee, He bath established thee" • If we are the work of Hi.s hands and His work is perfeet„ must :We not be- lieve that we will become perfect? If all leis ways are jucleinent, and He is a God of feethfulness, without iniquity, just and upright, will 1 -le not in faith- fulness, justiee and ilghteousuess ineke urs somewhen, somewhere and soihehow Woithei .'eliildren .. of Him; our loving .Father, worthy :possessions of Elba to whom we belong, worthy creations ot Him in whose spiritual likenees we are made, worthy.' of being establithed by • Him who is etlie -Goa of the spirits o , all flesh,"e .end "id Whose hand,'the .,soul' of every living. creature?"'• • • When Moses asked of God, "Oh; show Me, 1prey:thee, thy ways, that I may Mid grace in thy. sight! Show me, 1, pray thee, thy ,glory," the answer came, ."I Neill maketill my goodness pees hes , fore thee; I Will proclehe the native of the- Lord before thee. . . No month een see inc and live. • . . But thou haltsee my aftermath!! Prostrate in eevei enee, the_ Pr')l)het thn heitid .nattire of the Lord proeliiiineil as the Eternal, ,Alniighty, power,. eompaseiore • ate' and 'graCious,- long.. forbearing, • abundant in loving kindnessand truth, 'keepinginerey for teousands, - forgiving iniquitv and transgression and in, but by no means clearing the 'guilty. This Muth was Mises allowed to see of the ways of Ged with mite; Of the. glory and goodriees Of God. Thue was he made to learn :that the : poisep growths.. of Sin :erefollowed by tile aftermath ef Clod, the manifestationoh divine mercy end. pardon, .erowised with loeeebet teerinieel, ius irei, . • : • Li is God% waY 'tb.tt pler0fUl; it is ilis glory. to forgive; nee-- shiettnese. netkele kthn love us, hat it is ture . to, be 'pet. Teue we lenoiv not . where flis mercy' ends •ant: His justice begips. We cannot know everything. Ne -cult, mieseeteerui_say if knows Gedhi mysteries._ "The hidden things belong . unto 'the Lora our , God."' We know nee how this spiritual'evolutieeeseall be, any more than we know' how Oat Of. the foal muh springs the pure lily, hew . out .of the rotting Seed grows • tho °fragrant blossem glowing with gorgeous beauty. Nor know we hew, long this spiritualchangeshall take. The dark- ness of pin may change to spiritual light as swiftly as :dawn • Melts the • blackest night Into rahiant day, or it may take an age:. But it will •irettake eternity. . God's nierey and forgiveness, His power and His glory, will brink to pass ethie renewing, this rebirth of a right spirit within 'us, seineihieny snine- where and flomehow; "Ivor I will nee ecintene forever, neither will X be always wroth; for the spirit, would fail before Me and the addle which I have made," declares God. lea, "He reteineth hot his Anger forever, because he delighteth in mercy.' . Our own experience teaches .11s that if child is faulty, a good father; ipi. peltedby his very love and in justice to himself and his ofrspring, fashions out. of the faulty clad. a strong and motel man, builds up • hie cheriteter by otrapithening it,: where, it is, .wealt,- straightening it Where it • le crooked, mitking it sound where it is rotten. Shall not, out Heavenly Felber do as much? "As one cortecteth hi eon, so the Lord thy God correeteth thee.' Thus God's justice eoinpletes Hie love. Therefore all men. • and women—the ionsand daughters of God--dnay each exclaim:—"I will . bear the indignation , of the Lord, because 1 have sinned against Mtn, until He nterideny cause and execute judgment for inee He will bring me forth' to the light and I Shall beheld Me righteousness." From Buell thoughts will be bern • mighty desire to become worthy of be- holding this aftermath ' oe God, which obeli eonhiter the tangled growths of sin, and mit daily life will be n strong and ceaseless effort to_ make and keep our hearts clean. Thus will there be a re -birth of the 'right spirit within us. This mighty desire this strong and Week's effort, is reaching Out God- •WItrati Atithie le teligiou, The bye -election at Devonport, tng., re. milted in a GoVarninani victory, Etie Majesty'S thirdeclasa Grottier Madre, weB etirataislikeeedYeeterday M Jarrow-ma•i. 'Tr*. • • 'For a Stylish 'lair • Ati 4 SelENTIPICSIIMTE lotro Yon get °leen kneel used on Om 60eend everything. free , 1 septic conditicm, go 10 • E. ThnroToHsonhii Parlor SIOMIS 1110ettj Twitching of The Nerves Mrs. Drinitwater, 5 Water Street, Gale Ones 'eater t--" My great trouble has been with my nerves. was very nervous, bad twitching of the nerves and could not get to bleep at night, seemed quite worn out and believing that I needed some 'medicine began to use Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. 1 can truthfully say that this preparation has proven surprisingly bene- ficial to me, It has strengthened and eteadied my nerves, made me rest and sleep well, and he fact built op the system generally." In Dr. Chase's Nerve Food Is found the ideal tonic for blood, and nerves, and through these two mediums every organ in the human system is benefited. The • languid, depressing feelings disappear when this great restorative is used, and' with renewed energy ane vigor disease is overcome, the (ogees of thetedy perform their various duties and new flesh and tie, • flue aro added 50 cenie a box, at all dealers, or Edens:mop, Bates se Co., Tercet°. : • br. Chase's • Nerve Food A Little Study In Expression. • ffLite,"•• Brother Smoothly—Ah, yes, brethren and sisters, I feel to -night that I ought In the Church of eit..Deana, in Parte, they bury their kluge and Time. Thirty generetione of royalty are bur- led there. They are buried in sitellar MaallieV to Englandhs royalty.in Wept- miuster Abbey, Marble effigies at full length are placed, atop of their tombs, the redoes placed. together as though,. ho mute supplication. The costumes appear barbaric, they are so obsolete. remained a week or two in Paris, and saw the great churches, the Tuil- eries, the Louvre with Re gaiter lee of Paintings by' the old masters, the Bale de Boulonge, that gayest of eel gee parks, and the Chureh of Notre Dame. History records that on its site stood Pagan, tensple about twenty cerituries ago; afterwards Christian church stood there for two or thr ee hundred years, and the present Cathedrel was built about the year 1100 A. D. They showed me there the splendid robe the Pope were when he crowned Napoleon I, They have a . fragment of the al- leged true cross, also a portion of the Crow's of Thorne. The statuary on. the outside of the buildieg is badly btoiten and hammed, and no wonder. for that old building has seen troubled and very stirring- times. Italy is lovely beyond description; and .must be seen to be appreciated. I epent one week at a little Placa called Bellaggio. on the Lake of Como. 1 think, if it be possible I shall, when I RarteowehoaresoaoHnd f Akini,orpelhaamt yrui aye mt years in that lovely place. It would be nice to pass front one Paradise to another. "A deep vale Shut out by, Alpine hills from a rude world, blearAandolweahrirpkereimpammgyinre41;,,, fruits of gold A palace iifting to heaven ite marble walla, P From out a glossy bower of coolest foliage, Musical with birds." —Byron . The Italians themselves appear indif- ferent to the beauty with which they are surrounded. But they are very poor -7 -poor enough to enlist the sperm - thy of the civilized world, The wealthy class in Italy simply ignore the peas- . mitt y and their neede The .question asked by Marie A.ntoinette, of the starving poor et Ponce, "If they can not get bread, tvh do they not eat cake P" is echoechto•d 'yen Italy by the rich. The peasautry are held down to to confess, in the words of the -apostle . that I am "the chief of sinners," and--•: Who sale "Amen?" Through France and Italy, • : . .- ....._ , ' Written for the NEw ERA, • DEAR ErnTon.—Haying 'just return- ed from a Kiwi:ter ramble through pleasant Fiance and classic Italy, I thought I would write you a short sketch, befote the impressions : left on , me by those places write away. The Hist city . I visited was Paris, gay, captivating and beautiful Pads.. Versailles, that .veonderfully beautiful park built by Louis XLV, at a cost of twohundrecte million . dellaree with a, road made out to it from Paris, I used ti s think the picture ir I had seen of Versailles exaggerated ire beauty But now, having seen it, I know that no picture's Could do it justice. It come prises a tract of lend sixtyseniles in. oireuniference, with a splendid peLece, containing treasures of art, halls cf sculpture, and galleries of paintings, - many of them by the old 'masters. There is a very large promenade before the police, with flights of stone "hens leading down into.the grounds, There are miniature lakes, with email fleets' of tiny: strips; , immense fOnntainswiith bronze etee ues, and innumer.ible curVid jets Of water; avenues of stately forest trees, each branch, and twig, and leaf almost, trimmed to mathematieal . Pre, ;ieeeerreryor group is p,acedad;ieii;amannerto orm:cesia' er such perfect -order; -that" -Vething IS . ine fect is faultlessly, beautiful. I eau d'r aeethee. pot compete Versailles with any other creation of man's work •I. have ,ever seen. And everywhere in ebhance ' everything is in such perfect order, and shows such evidence of good taste. • It speaks volumes for the industry of the people. And they are so winningly. petite and considerate; I am sure a.. Frenchman- coming to our country' Would scarcely •find a favorablerorn- prison, generally. speaking, with his own countrymen, In regard to manners• . I visited Pere La Chaise, the national burying ground of France. It is very large, andeveryhigh oneupation, every ' noble trait of chant -eta,- wheel fadultee, of % mind, is represented here. To be given a resting place in Pere Le, Chaise is the highest honor France can bestow on her illustrious • dead, and costly arid' exquisite statuary marks each grave. Mosicians, astronomers, erirgeens, chenaiste actors, soldiers, teachers of the blind, of the deaf an dumb, Abbe Licari, the firet teacher of . the deaf and dumb, all lie here I tried to fend Pasteur's grave, but *could not make my guide understand nee. Handled Nay 'Beeler here sO (wilfully, that the soldiers' beet loved music, _the bugle call ' tOarMs, has no novver to reuse hire .. ,. CONSTIPATION • is probably the inost common of all , ailments. When neglected it becomes chronic,: and frequently • leads to heniorrhoids and other set- , Jetta consequerices, • . ' 4 . zscv.REDBY ,IRON -OX This Remedy, is not a purgative, but by milcl action upon the organs restores their manual functions, ' thus entirely avoiding the debility follOiving the use -of cathartics, Which, if taken frequently, are almost always harmful. • •• • Fifty Tablets f.�r25 Cents: • I ‘1 i, VOWS WO Opoi, s them Ohrledaue died. I vieited some of the old Monetiteriess where phalli/ Monk*, abjuring eat tidy vanities, lived their peaceful, holy lives. euvy them those omaks of old, The bsolte they reed, the teado they tole ; To hueseu weakness dead AO oold, And all ouch's vanity.' se/lei:lane I had intended, when leaYing home, to spend at least one month in It me, a ul to see the treasures ot art in the Va.ican. The Popes have alwaYa pat - ionized tine net, and pyrchase every- thing Ane and place it in the Vatican, I admire that trait at least in 1 he °here weer of a Papal government, but then everything has a redeeming feature. I had already seen miles of sculpture and acres of paintings by the old new ters, before reaching the Vatican, and • I was • growing weary of such things. But there were twine things there too I beautiful to be ever forgotten; a paint - by RaPhael,"The Transegurationyl as prcnouneed by an critics to be the finest oil painting in the world. And there are two pieces of sculpture, "The Dying Gladiator," in the Capitol, and "The Leoccion," I remember, when I was a child, of my dear father telling Me of the beauty of these sculptures, and promising that we would visit' thenrtogether sante clay, but it has October Blet, 1902 Z guarantee Ar Latest Method rreatreeet to be .permanent and emitters Og VaticOtsele and aurieture, witnout !stature, etretahine or rote ot time. in Pearleoce *booths the 'bagging, or wormy condition, equalizes circulation, stops Tame in the groins, aiso all (trains, thereby giving the organs Utalr proper nutrition, vitalizes the parts and re, gores lost rimers; in Stricture it absorbs the Stricture tissue, stops smerting sensation, nervousness, weakness, backtiehe, eto„ while in ell promoter) trouble. it ha the tree* ment oar excellence. So positive am 1 that my treatment will our* you, Jah sea PAY WHEN CURED You need pay nothing until von ere cenvinced that a thorough and complete our. has been established. This should convince you that 1 bay° confidence in my Latest teethed Treatment, otherwise X could not more you ties; proposition. it makes no deference wee. has railed to cure you, cal) or write me. . Each Time You Call You See Me Personally, Or eeeh time you write it receives my personal attention. The number of years XII* egablishedin hoced inc as the lm% and the cures I acoomplished after given up by other dootore hes wrlto for blnk for otrntst<nzsttrgittigzuwiTieorzingrArtmirFaettmgifir" nt Or th080 who cannot call. BOOK FREE, A11 medicinee tor Canadian patients saiposti trom Windsor, Can. All duty and express charges prepaid. Nothing sent C. O. D.tt 1)R. GOLDBERG, 208 WOODWARTgri: 431:14. Wh.COX Quality the Best a Prices the Lowest.. been my fate to see them alone. They are without history, being dug up from the Cainriagna, but they stand unriv- alled for beauty, and mock all efforts of genine to produce their equal X had only been a abort time In the Eternal City before I began to be homesick, and desired to return home. Some other time I shall return to the Titiane, Raphaels, Antona CallOVEtOt mummies, catacombs, ruins and relics. My trip has been simply delightful. .1 resolved, when I stertee, that I weuld see nothing unpleasant, and to make the best of the drawbackt. In each city I employed a guide, but they seokeeuch inopertect English that their services were not satisfactory. I 'often found that I could rely on mV , own knowledge of the places 1 wisbed ' to visit, and so dispense with a guide,' ! And gnite frequently I wa,s well aware .that 1 WAS inettosedan,. in the prices of • things; still, I submitted with er: Food humored grace, rather tban to have any unpleasant tangle. I had learned • that lesson befere going to Europe. I haym not Written of 'Venice, 'The 'Bride of the • Adriatic." I think it is because I was disappointed in rriv idee, "oeVenice.- I hadexpected to Snd ' it • lovely and romantic and grand. It presents an appearance of poverty and decay. And it; seemed so strange -lo step into a gondola, from the threshold, instead of walking or driving whither.- soever one wished to go. "There is a glorious city in the se; ,The sea is in ear broad, her narrow *tweets: Ebbing and flowing ; and the salt sen weed Clings to the marble of her palaces. No track of man, nolootetees to and fro, Lead to her gates! The path lies o'er the sea, Atd trete the land we went As to a floating city, eite7„ring in, And gliding up her streets So Smoothly, silently; by many a pile, In more than Eastern eplendour— • Ot old the residence of tnerehant kings:" So wrote the poets of Venice. But , that spoke of the time when; Vebice was the Autocrat of Commerce. To- ddy she has nothing to sell. She has ' But ee. began to realize the truth in no place in the marts Of the Orient,: • John Howard Payne's words, "Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam; be it ever so humble, there's no At J. We iRW IN'S • • Redpath and St. Lawrence best granulated and coffee stager a'.) less than wholesale prices. Capnonuenddle, oods cheap—'Delarend Kent Can Corn 80' a van, Catitled ehicion 10c, Roast Beef 1. Ib tins 5c each. „ Teas—Black Japan and Young Hereon from 10., up, our leader is 2.50 per Raisins, t/Urrante, Prunes, Dried PeacheseApricots and Cooking Figs OrcohoekaePrY—I have just p pled out 3 crates of Dinner,Tea and Toilet Bete and fancy china, new patterns direct from the factories In Buglancl, selling from 10 to 20% less than regular price. Call and examine quality and prices. Wanted good butter and eggs. Phone 45. J. W. 111,- WIN Clinton nother Drop in Prices The undersi a ea is offering his $80 Buggies for $65. mei are his own ata • ud are mad,e from choice material and br first dais mechanics. All the latest improvements used alit are up-to-date in .every respect. They cannot be surpasset.' and we guarantee them, JOHN LESLIE. liuron Street. Olintcn,- , A. very fine line of DRESS. GOODS is what' our ciustOmers say. Snell beautiful WRAPPERETTES at 10 and in cents. Chattier WOOL SHAWLS de SQUARES PRINTS that please • T.henrm ee;n.onrA$3 WATERPROOF .COATS •io• Great .valite it, READY MADE SUITS, • also Cottonane PANTS and SMOCKS • Londesboro Emporium, sept. Ssrd, •NEW IND UP TO DATA ' Oar GRAIN BAGS at 412.50. &elle are trellere - . . Sae ' our leriadsome BUGGY Rtios. alga • RORSE BLANKETS and ROBES Our 'MILLINERY and FA.NOY .0pODS. always take theeyesor visitors to the ' Eroperium. • , . • . eeee A trial will prove that you pan do well here- ;• as we,carry a large variety of geode, and . are prepared to sell at aloes prices for I cash or produce, sunh as batter; egge A • large, tellow, &O••• R. ADAMS place like Home." So I was glad t� leave the land of poetry, chivalry and •nsMen.d ttrl roeareurnoheaeotthe Maple Leat • . ' • Ogle:4;1E16i My own land:. 1 love thee best. • . • IL H.': •• • • • earth, by taxes that are tiniest and op- pressive. Labar is poorly. paid. and during late years Italy has been visited by pestilence and famine .and earth- quake, and &millets between Church and State. The Government encour- ages emil?re,tida, • They would be a poor acquieition to any country; Lazy, poor, degraded, superstitious, reiterant and worthleae. For tbe past flftesn .hundred years Italy has spent all her energies and industries in building beautiful churches and Cathedrals MI tbe church property of Toronto put to- gether, would not purchesethe teeete. ures in one of the cathedrals. In the • Cathedral of •Milart, which I visited, a priest showed me statues of hishops and virgins, life size, of solid, silver, with jewelled crowns; and hold- ing in their hands books of solid gold, etudded with gems worth twenty ,theeireed &Were more.. The were -afehdle'elfeler`eer Nam,' -tat% high. The silver statues were worth from etre hundred theueand to two hundred and fifty thousand hollers, according to site. There were bas- reliefs carved" in.' solid silver, that weighed six hmadrecl pounds, . The treasures in that Cathedral are estim- ated to be worth • at least twelve mil- lion And this in .& itind 'that fairly swarms with beggars The Cathedral itself cost, for the woreinan- Ohio alone, considerably over &hundred minion dopers. It is built of the pur- est ' and whitest marble, which all came from the same quarters and was gift to the Bishopric. The architect waked on the plan for forty fine years before the design tvas accepted; the work was begun more than five hund. red years .ago, and will not be nabbed forprobably a bemired years yet. They are always adding to or changing some part alt. It IS the mast beauti- ful piece of arehitetture I have ever „seenhand even now I sometimes think I muiff have dreamed the vision—so airy. so tztaceful, so Mehudicerste A. s , long aa memory lasts, it shall remain b me a type of the beayenly mansions, *Web "(Eye both not geedr.neithe bath it entered into the heart of man." It la claimed that St. Peters at Rome is it more beautiful bedding. I have always had a taste for the beautiful in architecture, and I would not call St. Peter's beautiful. Ib is grand and Massive and impoSing. I would not think of compering it with the Cathed- ral at Milan. I would not compare it with Any building I have ere- seen— there is no Other building large enough. The cross On the dome is four hundred andlorfY feet from the ground, and directly under the dome on the inatae A FOSITIVE •ILES. F 0 opturons ofIeQdIng Physicians! • Prioe $1.60. FOr sale by druggists, of ty, mail on receipt of price. , • I have tonna the inippository made by W T Strong, of greet value' • in hemorrhoids.' They are the best I bave ever used. . T V Hutchison, M D., Iiledical Health Officer, London, Ont. • ' • •. . • w.i. n oth.4lIrillatsufacturing-C1,...• st, London,' patitrie, • •N • Rola ionisingt base le effect on harness treated. with Lesko liar. nem Oil. ,.11 re- sists the amp, keeps the lamb. • (freehand pie able. Sdtehea • do not keek,, No tenet ma. race to dart, ardent. The harness not only keeps ' looking Ilk* bet wattle !vele* as tengby the !tie ot Etitelui Harness 011. 11 told 14ve eka bir atrinintli. • is the -"Baldatchinci," (whatever that may mean,) and in the crypt beneath rest the ashes Of Peter, our btrviour's disciple. They showed me a piece of the 'Crow; and pare of the Crown of Thome; and there were other relies. I went up to the summit of the dome, and ot Opurso the View is very flee. I suppose thatnowhere in Europe is there another vie* that eoinprises eo much history. In the distance the blue Mediterranean, nearer the Alban mountains., the Appeeinee, the Sabine hills, the Appian way,: and, directly beneath. R4un&e stately ruin& , The Coliseum interested • me very much.. nistoty, Celle ua that tevetity thousand Christiane radioed martyr. dote in thie nista rather than deny their faith in Chalet, "Butchered to make a Roman holtday," at Syron puts it, The Coliseum was to me the most sacred place I 'visited in Europe, They reatilato atitiont or the • heart arid ittirigoriato the betrva. - Thar buildup the Itviln down orm, win as no Other remedy will do. , They cure papironeneise, aklielpiedallideiliti *go PailatteAllOtt of the Her, Atteitt Effect...Of GraippearainS or Dien, ' .pe1le, iittatiVilet.' Oelletled DebiUty and all trbenbleanoneed by` tbe aye* , tete tieing run dnern,, , They' have (tuned °theta,. They will you. Every Person interested In Reciproo city should subrcribe for a • magazine entitled f'Islational Reciprocity" as it contains Articles from the best writers, together with the latest government etatistics. It la the,oilicial organ of the National Reciprocity League and lathe only paper devoted exoluelyele to reciprocity. Price $1,00, 800. per to* or for el.211 All dealers Or Th6T11baruCoLth11tcd1toroato,Oot 13VRD 4 CK :BLOOD BITTERS MAKES • PERMANENT .0111FS " argains on Furniture A large assortment of fall goods,just arrived eon- sistipg of Bedroom Sets, Sideboards, , Extension Tables, Fancy Rockers and Couches, prices all marked down to the lowest Point. • If dissatisfied we return your money. Bring in your pictures and get them neatly framed. Is x • thi doctored for a year and a half for what ree doctors told me was gallstones, I had uad.so much about the 'relief Ripa,ns Tab- les g.ayeLother_papple tjhougitt_ watiki , get some. I have used eight of 8.cent boxps and have not had a spell since. • Ofsueh severe diseases as scrofula, running sores, salt rheum or ec- zema, shingles, erysipelas and can - ear, as well as boils, blotches, pim- ples, constipation' sick headache, dyspepsia and alldisorders of the stomach, 'liver,' kidneys, bowels and blood, • Burdock Blood Paters always does its work thoroughly and cow- ploely, so people lolow that when, BAB. cures them they're cured to stay cured. JA.A AT IgaIGGISTS ° Tho fivo.oent packet f .enough for on �dinary occasion. The &nifty° bottle" silty* cents, contains a slimly for a feat