Lucknow Sentinel, 1887-11-11, Page 3. • '
• ^O
a reputation- throughout the world has
fallen into decay. Fine goldsmith's .work
is no longer asked for, and all that Europe
seeing to, require; are. cheap specimens of
filagree, work, finch its. 'bracelets, brooches
a:11Clegartihet:Ilecently Melbourne,with
. A conursroimmir of Otamben' ersisfnaz
his wife ainl two children, aged.2 an -21;12e
went to see the animals in the.Royal Park;
and that ;four wolves sleeping in a cage paid
noattention to himself and. his wife and
the eldest but the element the
younger one toddled up they sprang to their
feet and -Made for the center of the cage
nearest to her, where they stood against
the bars, pushed their paws through,barked
constantly and seemed wild to get at her,
not VieickslY, however, but as a deg might
have run to Play With her. child
spoke their efforts were, redoubled. On a
subsequentvisit tho same thing occurred.
.From which the correspondent concludes
that wolves haves strong maternal instinct
-and love children. •'
AT the forestryE0rIgESId in, Springfield
lad rnenth a Chicago montifacterer. of
farm Waggons said that a waggon had been
made of twenty different kindsof grebe;
all of which was grown from seed planted
within forty Years. It was by no means
Ageessitry to US8 samany_.:clifferent kinds of
wood, as the entire running_gest_pould.
have :come from one log of honey locust
eighteen inches in diameter. The waggons
which the speaker himself ordinarily made'
required five kinds. of wood,,oali,tickory,
ash, tulip (which tie called whitewood) and
pine.The pine, however, was used only
because it was cheap, as ash -was just, as
light and more enduring for the seine pur-
pose. He maintained that, although forty
years was a good while to wait for there -
turn on an investment; the money pet into
forest planting was prudently used, as a
growing forest, which was increasing in
value every year, WIliEr as Marketable as, any
other -property.- Moreover, -many- Of --the-
• hrancliee trimmed...Off as the trees grew
could be used; as well ite,the saplings re-
moved in the thiriiiihroTirffeieess;
, •
I)n. W. A.. Ilatmosn, the •clistinguishe
New York medical' expert, lecturing on
1.‘ the use and the abuse • cif the brain," the
other evening said: "Anxiety causes more
brain disorders than any: other agency I
know of unless it be love. 'It is Wellfor us
.11.1434300mtato know thianLathe..morkruamo,(Itonsamans.s.,',ain. mr,n2.410itimpe.tlys/t.to
eILL rcuceTboc&cndq
gioemxtrarbyttithkeerrdtz,..atio.3„trunamrotit,trtalzAt—vivoNril
that they should, he, though 't .ic.laatnesd ,%altned: have terraltd it inam11-4the 441agirne,-
is the mo- obstina eases whieh bad bawd. '
tions that Wear away the. brain, And not their* skil, 1, prove it to be the moat wonderful
haziest intellectual' work. •Very fe* people erejn_ ed3 ever devised for the relief and cure of
ufferin Nxotnen. It is not recommende_d ass
suffer !rein intelleetutil work, and if• my "c as a most perfect Specific for
memory serves me:I do net _recolleet ever v0.11418 .ne,giar ailments. .
!lavifear, sorrow and love. T consider that eight it-armpaPrt's stginal, invigorating eintio.,
ng to,,mathemeitician for, a patient. It
si net nitellecte 1 work that caitses nervous tit to the ' whcite system;
;and' to the wom and its appendages' 'in
dyspepsia, but t eemotions, such as anxiety, . particular. For overworked ' worn,.•out,".-
hoUrth are gaifficient fOrra Man tie use his
brain, because if he exceeds that tithe he
becomes . nervous and fretful, . and an
exhausted brain ban irritable brain. YOU
may notleel the evil effects! of the .Stress of
brainwork at the time but, you will sooner
or rater, When it will be too late.. The men'
that work at night with their brain are the
ones that expose theniselVea to danger, anci
death Which will surely come unless the
-great strain on the Mind is lightened., •
• c
.1
Wli.400 THE TIME O'DAY ?
leetwe by RON:. Pr. Palicer on
77,0tile8
Hey. Dr. Paritert 'et the City Temple,
London, Ene,144d.leetered in Copx Church,
• Ho,nailten.,. to i wooaudience, represent-
ing olmost every denomination and class of
•''''• petipleef 06 City. Hie lecture was unique„
solid and practical, and his style wholly hie
own,: yet. not so two:ninon oete,,b,e,„.in
marked contrast with.that of ether lectur-
ers. Dr. l'erker is % short, •chunky man,
With 'a. very intelligent-leoltnig, face and O
largehood, which leeks larger tinder n crop
of thielt; wavy., hair. He hasjust eneugh
ofthe English accent to betrayjliejaation.,,
• .-Aliti,TeVeri, if hie general appestiOnce did not
•• give it away.: . • He has a fine ,Onemand of
•' lengintge; his sentences .being 'beautifully
rounded and neishect. He says 0...good deal
and impliesi more, his. seeticulationsbeing
full of ,driutid.tie force 'and carrying mote
siiggestidus with them than his lipsgive
'utterance to,. Pie was introduced Witheatt.
(*tawny by Hey. Tann/go. Fraser last night
. and -Said : •
• Once, in speaking to John B.. Gough?, I
a:eked-him-What sort of lecithre'l should
4 li Me_x.2.1n_.e.oming.foLthis country, and -he '
said; "419_ matter, how fascinating, a lee-
-firer will hove. no lasting reputation unless
• there ohigh moral tone and purpose the,
.leetke," I thought o fairer 'tribute Could.
not be paid to trausatlantie intelligence. I
have net :come to this country to . speak
einiplY to its frivolity.: My purposeis a
moral purpose, therefore I,do not feek• out
• of plaee in thepulpitto diethies upon the
. subject of "-Clooke and ,Watches." I knew
nomore. than the /mast ignorant . person
.present about clockand watehes.' • I know
• . • • • . .
.• nothing of their mechanismast ho v- full of
• ,
•
suggeetione they are. . They de more than , •- LYES • •
LetsT
• ••:.-,‘tick--they overflow with all Borth of . wise
• teachings.. ..Can anianinakc anything with -
Out, patting something of hiniself tutO it?
Ho* namih Of the man is therein:. the
horse'whieh he grooms and drives! ? now
Much of the Man is. there in the eagle-
. none. ,'-`Se.it is with watches' and elcoks
there is somuch of the man in them. I
look at the watch and eee three • Workers..
' The secondhand working hard for its
• broad; surely it. deserved -whoteyer it may.
• .need. Theo here is this ,long,'; shin thin
galt`fitifkaftMlit 66salog1344jgdo*
n.aviegroht-talituitwilwt§WWWW41010,:-
7Ziwiardiditthe'", alrofir ittlaltPx
first . always " gang, the • Secend • Moves
With • 'a . languid .• motion,. but . the
third' is absolutely no.. , neo. at
all; • :So.. 'os : man •might Soy,:to
look at the •watch, but you couldtake off
the second.hand and not miss it, and the
•
languid moVing. one; but if. you touch the
apparently • motionless one you cannot tell• .
the tirno. So it is with. Society. . Here is
• amen always on the.. 'alert. " 'You can't'
'find him napping, • He is a man Of detail..
•, He stayebe.can't have, anything to do with
•• SleePy.:. people.. Then. • you . have . the.
clnss who -like to. do things onietly,', Who
„ don't like konnichltissr.arid then you have
-theeltier. going twee -slow. goingas a Scotch -
man;. but if. you 'disturb .the 'slow 'going'
ones; :Where ore yen We 'hails. people
whom we we deliariheas Old fogies. Theywant
. to take time to consider and Will give you
.. an °nastier . day after % to -morrow., They
• ' 'Maybeold-fogiesbut-theYare thenien who
%keep society healthy.. You see them in the
When you want to call a_ ininie,
, . ter the Young people will say One will do if
he isyoung enough, and can speak • 150
paileean hour Without saying :anything.
• Probably the youngfol100•fire will•becaught
. by, thwalder ones, but the old .fogies • will• ,
' oonSider„ and take -timebut :when they
• have .decided upon a person they will stick.
•• to,hina.- So hill& we need all sorts. , We
muet witit,foe-aeine,,..-andsalWayS Tenietribet-
that. the Blew may be the sure; that that
-appeaireto be nothing . may
'be. ' the • most lava -tin*. while, that
which. Melee a 'great show may be of
least utility. Come to ; a ,Ichronometer
:ate* Whet 'a.citn;;100 different etyleeand
; • sizes of •watahes all striking twelve: So it
isin politics, in the: Ministry ;and in ' all
• classes_of life;--there-.•ate different etyles;-
t, and tee need thein all, tie long as • they telt
the tighttele. •.If the clocks are all telling
• • -the-'saine-tale at 12 o'clock 1 Will be. seas"
• fled. )1- wish people 'would pay More atten-
tion to endless to Style: • in.
•.• the church We havo ifinumeroble, pedantic
.. entres'. all talking: .of style and forgetting!
the message.. A rich Man. thee . and the
.time.. has .coine for reading the will: The
• Old fogy lawyer adjuiits his spectacles .and
•. slowly roads John Henry ThoinpsOn.:010,:
•f; 000; Satoh, :§15,090; .Henty.' Wilkineon,
c000; and the people interested Spy, " I
• 't like' that lawyer' style." DO .they?
Well, ne I' they don't care obont. his grunty
rhetoric, they want to hear sheet :the .461-
, Isits-:-they Went the message. '. SO ought
, We to he in all greet Matters. Never • mind
.'"the.style, but gotatpurpose. But that
'7 &find clock there, r didn't hear you 'Strike
at, aU. " Oh, no,, 1 don't strike. :LAM not
One of your vulgar clocks:. -if -people want
to know the time .they must .19Ok atnie. I
am not Wit one Of those professing clocks." A
.. Man .buye.that 'clock and sets him up. The
long *inter nights dein° . and Alm •man
Aka awake. Ile Wonder's What. time it is
7 and: wishes his &Olt etrnek. He gets hp,
knocks Over 'a 'oheit and finds • only one
Match iele the reins and the sulphur end is
off that one. 'Then be. Ininekii: over it vase
and resolves te' buy' a striking clock.
with Mew There are those 'wile Make
-profesdions. They hair° no religion, no
politics, no: 'ideas: They never say. any-
thing"- You mitst:lOok at them' to siee What
" o'elpelt it is ; but .ininietitnes it is dark,
• and then you Can't see thejace, Oh, fer,e:
strong,.'"resoimet 'Voice in *". the tibiae Of
national' darkness ! Ueritiany had her
'Striking clock in Luther, aria England has
• in, CUadstone. -(This 'aeittinlent ;woe' ap-
plauded totlie eche.) .We. Want reen.Who
can strike at the .rigbt. tinlo. There are
eontahnes torruPtione and .evile, and we'
two men Who can ..speak otit.• and say, No!
in God's mime that'S wrong. There is no
• meminieetreqin4 to the ',Ineatinesa thatyill
• accept all • the privileges 'of Chriatianity,
andWill not venture out to church on •a
foggy .$fitid4-filgfiti but will alloW' Wrong
- and •oppression te.go,hidefault
- to jndg-
morib. - -Every- ,-Wittch-*•atiff- Plonk's -hat it
and if Men cetild learn that we • The Moscow Gittitte denianda a npntritt.
Would have .inetn Oritentreent in society lity agreement touching -Gibreltdr BMWs&
"then we have :' and Men would he praising to the BOA Candi ogreeinent,. , The paper
'. the Lord'instead of envying one •another. saysh.believes it all the powers interested.:
Every man cannot te a CMEntr. Canal' was shOuld insist on such an agreement End-
, ,
•
More than all Cibser'e legends. We DMA land 19.01410a ,
4
•
have eloquent and learned men to fill pt.
Paul's, bat we mustalso have the shepherd
to reveal the kingdom of God to the
tear-filled. eye. We meet have ,the
mother who is Jew's in the family and the
father and tholittle ehild. They. all 'con-
stitute theministry of manhood. W,b9
should we envy what our neighbor has-?
He is eur brother. I would like to write a
4.‘ Hamlet "- and Othello," ond even
work is insignificant as "Paradise Lest."
I will tell you why -I don't. 1 am not too
proud. I could lay aside my pride; the
only reason why I don'tis that I can't. It
is not my place: Then there is one great
big clock by whieh the dealer sets all the
others. It is the regulator. The Bun
regulates the regulator and prod regulates
the sun. Are there no regubitorsin society
in Hamilton-inen who are looked tip to as
trattaiiiir IsTo clock -cart be put right by the
hands and no ixian can be niade,' clean by
washing his hands, ,• You must make
the ' elobk right within. It takes 3,200
-operations to make a commen watch:
Which one of the operationsmade the
watch? No one. Who can tell how ninny
operations it takes to make.* man? Was
It the enyirenmente; or the father se, Wise,
or the Mt:44r SQ good,' or the companions
so well chosen? Which one? ,No one
It was. the father, -the mother, tic jatitnal---
ist, the pastor, the school teacher -all.
Discipline e,nd•sprrOvv hive had their part.
Nine-o'brOPICI'uesde,y night -here "is -about
2 o'clock Wednesday morning' in London.
So right here may, be wrong somewhere
else. Thereforelet every one see that he
is right in his. place. The lecturer closed
atter referring to Gladstone as e." regulator
andstating that he had suggested as a
title for a. future lecture, "Gladstone" --the
man, his opponents and his allies." The
sentiment expressied and the suggeition
Snide were received -most heartily..
,
„
Altline41-140-11Inderground.,MarIcesHir thc-
Fading Away of Visual Organs. , •
„ There is amanifest tendency orall gayly.
colored ferns to lose, their hues, in the
caverns ' and to become of an even color.,
This may be explained by the eiinnlo ab-
sence.of sunshine, and On it no conclusions
0812 be based. The •changes of the struc-
tural parts are of moreimpertance.; 'these,
as might be expected, relate mainly to the
organs of. Sense. • The- eyes sliniv
airs aeuRen'aPliittil4Militf V1210fi qiiitoNtattA
avniPZIn....he.-1611*Intarl4a0.-V.ifillffehrs5
They VouvreagirgirVisaPpeliTed;VidoWhillif-
strticture which serves: for vision • being
no longer produced. • In the crayfishes we
may observe a Certain gradation. 501218
enema which abound in es•Yerils are 'Pro-
vided with eyes; others have them. pre.
sent, but so impertect that they, cannot
serve as .viqual organs;. yet others want
them altogether. One species of .pseud9=.
scorpion, as shown by Prof. Hagan, has in
the outer World four eyes, while, in the
caved it has been found With two eyes and
others in an 'entirely eyeless condition.
•Some cavern -beetles have the males with
eyes; While the females ,are quite without'
them. As whole, 'the cavern-forras ex-
hibit . singifier. tendeney., of the Visual
Organs, not only to lose their functions, but
also to disappear: as body -parts. At the
same time there is an equal, or even more
general, development of the antena3 and
other organs of touch; these parts bedtime
considerably andapparentlyof
greater sensitiveness, ; a che.nge Which is of
manifeet advantage to the individual.--
Scriliner's Magazine. • ,
Miss Phelps,
The announcement of Alias Phelps' new
"Gate",story,.entitied '" The :Gates Be-
tween," recalls the remark of a prominent
Kansas City lady • who was driving with
.ElOnietnehts elongtheilesperns•LBoadthis
slimmer, between MagnoliaAnd.Gloneester,
Mass. Ass, curve of the. heautiful drive-
way disclosed the narrow Neck "stretch-
ing Out to sea, the Western *man turned
to her 'companion saying:.,“'We dnini . • .
PIA on the Neck hat week when..we wept to .
. Timis has been, 0, royal corm*ttee ap-
.
Manchester.byLthe-Sea, and had a view of panted.. to ;investigate the Hessian fly
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps' surainer honae. ravages in the United Kingdom,. twenty
After_that=..visit2,-,,landerstand-why-sheli cotinties-inEnglanclond-ten-in Seotland.
always writing about gates. Why, there is having been visited by this insect. It is
nothing elect.: as • noticeable.' They thrust difficult :to estitnate the dainage, 'some
theraselvee across the road at every turn placing-it.at bushels per acre. In Fifo
without the shadetv Of an ex011se ;, but net there are complaints. af losses -Of three to
one of the slit, was ajar. ' And wernings ten bushels per acre. The treatment in
Were Fisted every One against leaving it BuSsia and in the United States has been
ajar under extreme penalty of the' ." inquired into; and corn nierchants are
-FroinPortfolio Of the American Magazin e for reqtiested to bp on the alert. The: general.
Notientkr. • •• •
. • , conclusion of •the .onunission favors the
'dissemination of all inforniatien possible,
What tite-ClergymanDoes. :trusting ,to the vigilance of ':the :British
, "What do they do When they iristall -a
minister ?" inquired , small boy. "Do
they put him in a stall, and feed him?"
,!,' Not a bit of it," Said his father " they
harness him ton, ehnighlarid expect him to
drawit alone"
. .
PU1174.T4NT TORTQ$-"..
.17irEggen PFAthifu, 0004 to ;Om $200,00
to build a Dicketur Memorial in London
brings, to mind the. ;fact that the great
novelist -4n his will eraphatiCallY7.ilisap..
proved of any each apt Olt the part of his
admirers. He believed, and, Tightly, that
his works were a sufficient monument to
his memory. •
TIXE 1g4ndert ..Echo notes the, introduc-
tion in English markets of a new fiber,
which ii.so fine and durable that a new
fabric made from it isexpected ehortly to
drive silk ahnost entirely out of the market.
The fiber is in. the shape of a pine -apple
leaf,„aied the new fabric; has received the
name of "pine cloth." • . „
Tng,late.,Mr.,..David...-Kennedy,the.-Scot
tish vocalist, was an ardent Liberal. When
he, was in•Egypt he, wrote:. -1# When this
comatry, is governed by liberty as new by
despotism, it will be 'the garden • of the
Lord. My curse on. all .,forms of tyranny,
tiosi .our Government on the Bide Of
tyranny'! 'But not forlong-not for long
ljeavenbe on the Glidettine
BEv. W. ELLIOT, Vicar of Aston, Bfrtning-
ha-m, is trying to collect. his tithes _trona
his parishioiers by k -gal iecto6letpf
ecthig_.8.tit6hilise
mar..ha_h.d.lived.f.or.:_tWenty five yeare-
on his property wichout h
IraTa...levy put on, and in anether case a'
distraint for £3 WEE put on the Smallheath
Liberal Club, • but the chairman defied the
bailiffs and the *arrant Was not enforced.
APROPOS Of the fact that it took eighty
soldiers and 150 policemen recently to evict
one Irish tenant, the PaliMall Gazette offers
the Government the following problena. in
sirnple proportion : If it takes 230- arnied
men to reduce one Irish patriot to the sub,.
raiseion that you mill union; how many
armed Men will it take to reduce the whole
Irish people and thus complete , Mr. Bal -
four's promised taskof uniting 49- ylait0,.
EnucAroits•in Anserica who have recently
'been engaged in 'dieCi5li7-ebriariinetste
-teoching of the dead languages will be in-
terested to know that an intleential coin,
mittee, representing all the colleges, has
decided -:to Adopt the 'continental pro.
nunoiation Of Latin- at Cambridge Uni-
versity. Whether Oxford will follow this
example reniains to be seen, but, if it does
•841-tir:%11*1144.
ith=selateseinco4uauda,py. onlv _
4-aktectitiO•74Clitclillyqifterdtsse4f11-tAropti-'
every. Other year. : This islecause the
hill.45'iop of one year So'inchatiate the 'fruit-'
producing qualities of 'the son that it is -not
ablest° produce a full crop the next year.
Give it a good supply of the proper kind of
manure and thus make up for the lots of
the fruit -producing qualities. of the Coil
and you niay expect good crepe every year,.
•Previded y,oti. treat Yoni trees properly -in
other :respects. • • •• • -
Foasus, the'wife of Mr: Forbes; the.
:well-known naturalist and. explorer, *ho. a
year or two ago published an account of
his scientificreSearChes in the Eastern-
ArchipelagO,' has written a.natratiire.pflier
adventures • while ' she acebinpinied her
husband in his travels. • MO. Forbes' ex-
periences in the East Were in some respects
unique. :She *lived for a few -weeks abaci,
lutely alone in the mountains of: Timor-,
and was the -.firei -European woman ,who.
visited Papua. The 'book, is dedicated to
the Countess 'ef Aberdeen.',' • •
• BM Cn4.1nms and Lady Dilke' have had . a
jolly tine -in Constantinople. The Sultan
was extremely cordial to them', and. they
were received by the Patriarch ofthe
,Greek °Mitch' and. by. the' 'seven' .Arch-
bishops in. Synod assembled: A Turkish
translation of Lady "The Shrine
Of ' Death '.', is being' made.11.The„:„tioted
couple went front .,,Turkey to Greece, and,
are now on their way to London. They
have won a good deal Or popularity wher-
ever they have stopped /for any length; of
, TirE Majotity report Of the -1002 Com-
mission gives a 'vett. intelligible idea of the
actiml strength of „Mormonism The pope -
laden of the territOry.. is about 20(1,000,,a
gain of nearly .60,000 since1880, and the
property is • assessed at a valuation of
$33,665,802. The Morinon population is
132,297, -with 3-1,431 church dignitaries; but
the Mormon Church in the various terri-
tories number, 162,383; with 46,639 Children
under 8 years of age. The strength of the
non -Mormon element in the' .territory is
about 55,000, with 62 churches of different
denorninationa, employing 230 teachers and
haying in their schools 6,6.68 Since
the passage of the Edmunds law in 1882,
541 personehave been indicted for unlaWful
cohabitation, and 289 he've been convicted,
while fourtear haVe-been convicted' for
polygamy, and many fled' to escape arrest.
The tnajority of the COnainissioters regard
the,recent inoVernent to obtain Biatehood
for the territory, through the adoption of a
constitution in Which non•Mormons had no
part as a mere effort to • free the Church
from the control ' of Governnient and to
give the leaders a freer, hand. orr the'
other hand, the Minority of ;the Commis-
sion believe that the large Clited, of Mona,
.gainousi. Mormons havo. hecoMe convinced
thattheir interestereqtfirei the abolition Of
polygomy, and that with its .sitippteseiett
theirreligtotts faith Will :ilo longer•militit6
against , '•• - •
:
'Tns process Of welding invented by Mr.
De .Banardcii of Russia, is now . applied
inclustrially,birthe seiciety for the electrical
Working of metals. ' The plebes', to :he'
welded. are placed upon a ' cast iron plate'
supported by an insulated table . and cola-
neeted-With the negatiVo. pole on. sotirce of
electricity. The positive' pole cOormuni-/
cates with att. electric,: carbon inserted in
an insulating handle. On drawing. . the
point of the carbon. along the edge of the
metal to be welded the operator -closes the
;circuit. He has then merely to tarso the
point slightly to produce a vOltaio are
whose' high. temperature melts ' the two
piecenof metal and causes them. to unite.
-
• SUR who..sweepti a rooni.says Good
lionsclieepingi., "Makes, the action. no less'
. . ,
fine by the Wearing of e. ;pair °Vold: kid
gloves.dnring the process, and. the tons is
true of blacking stove, cleaning kerosene
lamps,:and Many other househeld •chitiesi,
that, :fall to.'"nidthers •and daughters in
homes where nO servant ie kept, 'Mothet,
thinks it oe silly,' said a Young, girl, blush-
ing, with shame on being found sWeepieg
in gloves. lint why not as well weak gloVeii
to protect the hand as a Sweeping cap td
protect, the hair? The occasienal wnshing
of the hands With boin meal and borax
soap, in tepid water helps to keep them soft
and • smotith,. .and glycerine, Mixed with
lemonjuice,,is excehent to apply at nights"
,
Turns is no longer," saye,, 0, Gerinan
paper, any Sivoid making industry ni
*fair Intelligent Women Decide.
When.the question haa to be. Met tO
what is the best course to adopt to. sedifre
a mire, safe and agreeable remedy for those
organic, diseases and weaknesses which., -
afflict the female, sex, there is but one. wise
decision, viz., a course• or self -treatment -
with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Preseription. It •
ia an unfailing specifiefer periodical pains;
misplacement, internal inflammation add.
all functional disorders that render the lives
of BQ tventell miserable 'and joyless.
Tbci3rWhi? try it praise it. Of Druggists.
,
•
The stil3scriptions in the TotentoDistrict
this year to the Methodist l!dissiogary
Society amount to • If 23,403.44, an increase
of §4,946.53 over last year. • '
F. W.,Hamilton„whose name _hae.,1,004..
beforeWe lately in connection with
that of 'Mrs. Middleton, of Ottawa, who has
left, her husband; arrived in Toronto yester-
day and left for the west on the 1.05 O'clock
C. P. train; Captain Sherwood, of the
Dominion Police, who also arrived in that '
city yesterday, made inquiries at the rail- .
way ticket offices regarding Hamilten'e
destination., but not finding particulars he
he. .
also took 'passage on the 1.05 „ train west'
with Hamilton.
The treatment of many, thou -Sands of ,cases
of those chronic, weaknesses and distressing .
ailmentii peculiar to females, at th6
Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.;
has afforded a vast experience in,nioely adapt- •
ing and thoroughly testing remedies for the'
cure of woman's ecullar •
Beauty Witfient.Paint.
• • run -clown," debilitated te-achers, milliners,
.dressinakers, seanistresses, "shop -girls," house....
keepers, nursing mothers; and 'feeble women '
.generally, .Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription; ; •
is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled ••
as an appetizing' Cordial. and :restorative tonic.
As a soothing .,.and strengthening •
inerVine, "Favorite Prescription" is une-
qualed glad is invaluable In allaying and sub-
duing nervous
baustion, prostration,, hysteria,. spasms and .•
Other distressing,. 'net vous symptoms.' E.081• • •
monly attendant upon functional and organic'.
.diseatie of the womb. It. induces' refreshing ..•••.
• 'sleep and relieves mental anxiety •and
Dr Piorce's Favorito Prescription
is a '• legitimate medieine,; carefully-•
• compounded by, an experienced and ,SkillfUl
.." What Makes iiiy.'skin so:- dark and:muddy ? • physician, ,end .adapted to woman's delicate .
..My cheeks were once ' 80:sniooth•nnd ruddy! organization. • It is :purely, svegetiible in'ita
I• use. the best etsinietica made.", •• • • composition and perfectly harmless in ,ita.
What a lovely maiden said. • '. , effects, in. any condition' of the system. .Ter
, , . • • morning Sickness, of *nausea, from Whatever.
".Thatis not the cure, mY•eharniing cause arising, weak ,Storatich, indigestion, dys.' •
The doctor said--!•"cereember: this pepshi and kindred synipterns,' its nseyin.small
..1t.'you.your skin Would keep front taint, :
•. Discard the powder and • ' 'doses, will prove very,beneficial.„! •• • . :.•
• 44 ravorlte Noremieription P)
• tilt° cure for the mOst,,compileated And
ob-
Tho PrOPer .thing•for all 'snob ills stinate cases of .leucorrhea,.eceseive timing; ,
:Is this,". remarked the.niensof pihe • 'pairifuLinenstruation, unnatural suppressions,.
.: • Li this'youll Slid the only eure.:",,: •
"Enrich' ttiii-hleed and 'make it pure-- .T.Ffeelmapsus, or.failing of the womb, weak back..
. , ale weakness,".anteversien, retroversion;
'Dr. Pierce e.Gol en Medical Discovery will
bearing -down Sensationswehronic conge.stion.
inflammatienand ulceration of the womb, in,
do this Without fail. It hae no equal. • All flannnation,. pain and . tenderneas ovaries„
druggists. ' • • . ticconnianied. with "baternal, heat.' •
As a .regulator and promoter Of funo.
tional action,. at that critical' period of 'Change .
•
Referring to 'the reaent statenierit-that, from •girlhood to wommiheod, "Favorite Pro*
at a .r,ePent • featival. held ,in the .Queen's scription" is a perfeetly 'safe retnedial-agerat, '
presence in the. Highlands, there. was ex. and can; produce only good results.. It •
. e ually efficacious .and'valuable in its efrectii.
ceseive Ariwkingi--Bir-L4enq'----PetiserthY;- -w en_takenforthoilo-disorders And ',Orange.;
Majeiity'S.Pritrate,S et t writes
p(riod, known ,as." The Changeef •
• 44 FAVOriE8 PP8SCielpE1011149vwheiT taken .
In eenneetion with. the .use of Dr.. Fiercies
, Golden Medical DisoOvery," and tiniall laxative •
.deses of Dr. Pierce's:• Purgative' PelletS (Little •
Liver Pills).-eurea Liver. 'Kidney•and Bladder .
diaeasee.. .Their •combined' -nee :else ,tenievess ,
blood. tainta, • and abOlitilieS. cancerous, and. '
'fierofulous.bumora from 'the. system.
4f.Fatorlte-Pkescription 0, is the only
.medieisefot women, sold bYdruggisite, tinder
a pOslttre guarantee,- from the mann4 •
• factureni, that it *ill give satisfaction in every . •
ease, or money will refunded: !kilns guaran.
Um. has been printed .the .bottle,wrapper,
and faithfully carried .ent for cnanY Year&
• lidargabottlee coo doses) $1.00,' or NIX. •
bottles fOr_$5.00. ' • .
- large. illustrated:Treatise on thieased of ,
Women (160. pages, paper -covered). tea'.
.cents. in stamps. .A.d'dtenS, ..• . . .:•
ispensaty_Medlcallssociatibn
• •,,eat.laistiiisi4. Altio
• , eer a y, tee to. merits incident tothat lat,er and most•critical
say he Was present on the occasion • men:
• tkined, and that he did not see ivnydrunken
persons. •
• Virorth wen t)oilars 136ttle.• '
• .
' Any person who has used, .Polson's
.Nerviline, th,e great pain cure, would not be
without it if it post ten dollars a bottle. A
geed thing is worth its,Weight in gold; and
Nerviline is ;the best remedy in the world
for all kinds of Pain: It musk neuralgia in
Ave Minutes]; .thothache in , one minute;
lame beck at oneopplicatienheadaehe in
a few %moments; and all pains. just as
rapidly.' Small teat betties Only cost ;10
cents. Why not try it to -day? • Large
bottles, 25. cents, sold by all druggists and
country dealers. Use Poison's ,nerve 'pain
"cure-Ner viline. .
The Important Thing. ,
Eastern man, (who has been • inVited to
,“ take sehand” ni the gaine) kno* Very
little'about.poker. I SUPpOSOt the chief re.
quisitein playing the gome successfully is a
knowledge of human nature,
• Western man -A. knowledge Of human
nature helps; Stranger, helpft; . but .the
hieLrequisite is cash. • " •
13y its Mild, soothing and healing pro-
pertied, Dr?Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures
the worst cased of nasalcatstrrh;also cold
in the ' head," Pciryza,:_and'eatarrhalbead-
acheil.- Fifty bents, by druggists,
. 'See isles the part,tio,. • ,
An esteemed OonteniporsirY has a depart-
ment- headed " The` Woniap's World."
That's about the sixe of it. -Baitiniere!
American.
A.now line of paseenger iteanaere to ply
betwebt Kingston and Montreal is talked of
;i next season.: . • , •
ft is now tepdtted thaithe Cr bip the
Measles.
DEMEEC68. What mits•oilco Ithown as tlie King rturobert will ...visit the Crown
riciord.traffe now ,occupies ,itself with con 1 rinee...01 Germanyat Baono
veribigibeibTadesil-of old sawpfundpicece Of -.110 Marquiii Of Lothian has been sleeted
ordinary iron into doggere, 'cheep 'extras Rector of Edinburgh University. ,
and rifles. -of Solingenand Iiirniiiagliam,
Lord Salisbury has notified M. Vitadding-
utak.° 'ar.3° 0,166:boupt 11P' A.11114116'1 Ddild ton,French Anabtiesaderat lionden that t
dedefateu In Oriente dyle, ano tnnri ptit.
upon the. mittltet As Weapons Of Arabian find
Royal sanction hag been giveri to, the en-
,battasaoa,origin, The tanInna gad and foreement.of the Newfoundland Bait •Act
silver work which mice, gave' this district 'c'tt seas°1"
DONL.4587. • .
Ladies VVent. ea to 'use' our "
1'000 000 '
0 . , . 4,. Magnetic '• ,They• ,
Relieve Nervous, Headache and the discomfort
often caused by all other hairpins.. Dimple box
loc. Address G, E. M. go.,, Vineland, .liew •
Jer.ey.
1
When I shy cunt I do not moon morels, to Mop them for.
time And, than have 'thent rettru,rtgatii., I fifean a 'radical • •
curet I hive rand() the di Oise or PITS. EPILEPSY or PAILT,
INC SICKNESS a life -tong study, • I WILIT4fit Iny ieTikty
to nitre tho worst Cases, Becifula °that's hove railed ne,
reason for not now, reeePring a • cure, Send it Once f Vra, • • •
treatise and a Pree Sett o of my'lnrallible remedy:, f3tvet
itipress and Poet Office. lt coati you nothlifk fors trI4
,and I will eure. you. „Addfees55.. 11. Q.. ROOT,
Brandt Offloo 37 Yonio Bt. Toronto: •
114,F.C.:001(' PF.St 001,7K1
'N.SUMP
for th,o above dinoiso , 0I •
theniintIdo OreArnnf ef the Wont Kind AO of leng• ittnndIng,
bate' been rand. Ind664, An• *front -iv fidtbite '
efilhittyk that 1 4111 TWO 8011 i ••• .
with A VALITAIII,E Trttf,d'IlliV: Oft t.t..11 itto.
onffitot. t.tv o t.;•:•vo. • ,to: 8441141W ,
rtn:.
../Iratich gfr 37 I'otrylet,. Tol+ortI'. .
• ta.
•