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The Sentinel, 1882-02-17, Page 7• oiending a Valentine: . . might begin, "..Therose-Is- rod" . (Though that is not act very new), Or this the, boys -all think is good• : 4.‘ you-loVe-ine as I hive you." '1114-• Seems to me---avillentine Is _nicer when you defnot say -- Thesame.old thins that every one • . Keeps saying, in the same old way.. •• AndI asked .iane, the other night, •grown-up people write about.: She-Would:not answer roe at first, - But laughed rbegan to pont. That sthpped ler, for she Saw I meant -1. The, queetion (and she will not Wise). • . Why •.--.40.ve," she said, "and shining eyes, ..-4.kiss, soft bair—j ust what they please"It . can't be liard„ if that:is all, , - • • • -So I'll begin by flaying this: To my deitriady beautiful I send a vaielinue and -kiss. • Tho valentine, because she has The loveliest hair eta gentlest eyes . The hiss, because I love her room:. • Then any one beneath the skies; - • .BeCausesho is tho'kiridest,...beat„ The sweetestlady ever known; . And everyyearrii say these:roe, The very same-, to -her alone!" ,gliore Now lt a finished. Who will do? riethought of one sh.d. then another. • . Who is there like it? Whyiof course, I'll Send it right away to Mother! —.Kate 2KSZtoug,,in; St. isriehola,t for..February.,. 2882 ,„;„. goitre. litimege philosophy. •Ityou will sit down and wait; yung man, .at bast- one-half ov the good things ov life Will at surretiine eddy around near yn,while the more vu chase the rci the mere they Will break into a ran.' . • ' . • All ov natur'ieworke- are a part of a per- fekshun oy a plan. She makes no raja-. -• takes, creates no vaettecy„ and guesses at • nothing:- . ". • • ' Ideas are what wink ; but if a natiallan:'t got but One he is Very apt to rim -that one into the ground, and take himself along with it. Laffter proves nothing. Wise Men And ideate grin -all the time. - • Cunning is a, weak imitashun of wisdom, and iz liable at enny time to linernee into fraud.. .Happiness has no abiding place, but often is very -near at -hand,qike the old . wt•oniaree-fapectacles,After -hunting ferthem hi and lorehEilound them it last safe on her nose.I ` • • • Gravity- iz: bekuming to a phool at all tinieti„ but only to a wise man on state ockas.hions. s • Yerry menny , seek isnoWledge„ not so mutch for the truth az for thaspeculeshun tharis in it.. „ :Heroism ix simple, and yet it iz rare. Every one who duZ the best they ken iz it hero. _ • , , . Butyie a dangerous gift. • The vanity* inspires, and the. base flattery it gets Air its posseseors are not to be envied. Charity makes no. 'Mistakes that she ken be charged with. - :Good breeding iz the- only thing that kan Make a ribeol endurable. • Servitude iz so -unnatural that an: onest servant the. rarest o -V all things. If a tha)alitte got the right, kind ofzell-, • OM he kart pick up's, kreed- enny-where that will it. • . Indolence iz -quiet malady,. but it him eat up .122Ore foundashung and tipt over more superstructure than wild anabishun • ever has. - „ • • -Abstinence should be the excepshun; and m :temperance the rule. There - a great art in knowing hoW to • give witliciut creating an obligation. • • As selfish '-and ill-bred as the mass of man -kind are, are, I ,prefer to live with them raper than go into solitude and try to live • with mys lf. Gratitude is a word that itt you will find in Ye dictionazysi but you will not find much of 0 it anywhere else.• .st THE SALVATION Apnr IN ENGLAND. An Alarming Riot Caused.b9r. its Proceed -1 ings.in. -1314/TAL ATTACKS BY THE MOB.' On .Sunday, January 8th, an.extraordi- naty'end alarming scene was witnessed in Sheffield.- The: Salvation, Army, which Musters very strong in- that town, having no less than four barraeks, decided to hold - that day Ef,:•' Grand Council" in the Albert Hall. "-General," BOW, the coin- niander of the Sakatiortiste and his Wife 'addrestied' crowded audiences in the Morn- ing:, In the afternoon the Army had a grand inspection and March through the town, which they acoomplislied in safety, but great hooting and leering. On the following Wednesday, heftier, their march was_ most disastrous. They left headquarters at halt -past 10 d'olookin the morning; In the procession 1Were three carriages,: containing the officers of- the Army and it brass band. " Lieuteirant"-En4 erson Davison,. a converted Northumbrian wrestler, who carried' the banner at the Stephenson - Centenary at - NeWeastie, marched with -them • Onthat occasion he Was presentedwitha scarlet uniform, and thielie now were; *anted on a grey horse, and rode just before 'General Booth's Carriage. As he appeared crowd, which had gathered in the hope of seeing the procession, began, to heat' him,. and when the other Officers of the Army OA their place the parriages the uproar was very great, and the street almost blocked with people: Two police officers On duty . near did .what they -could to preserve or but uproar increased, and as the Si tionists- started on their. tritinipb march,"-- as. they called it in their gramme, they were pelted with mud brickbats. At the top of Breokhill roughisbecamegadaring,throwing stones mud at the women, ' as Well as at the. in -4fficetteef the Army, -that "Major"C inari, who had control of the proCese. called 'a . halt; • hoping that the cro which numbered nearly nearly two thousand p sone: would sweep by: Finding. they - not, he divided the proCeosion; one pa headed by • the * Northumbrian wrest -going down • St: Phillips' and • West towards ale centreof the town, and other making its way to the Albert nsu &nearer route. That portion .of the p cession headed by the wrestler had a fe .ful time Of it: On striking in_ West B _the crowd: Of roughs increased. great numbering, at least 4,000. They ridioul and jeered atthe procession, spat upon officers, shouted '‘'‘ Give it them," " Th Want their beads. splitting," and. threw m and stones, Which, • seriously _injured t wrestler and many members ofthe ba Sonic -of the members Of the Army w blinded and almost - choked with rand, a, their fa,cerf:crnellyl. Out and .bruised - wi !Ones. • • Before the Army "gotstimit- of West Bar t -four etandardhearers were attacked by t mob and dragged about by the hair, Whil an attempt was Made to wrest. the, banne froth them. The fight was fierce for so inutee, but • ultimately the office managed to drag the banners -safely in .one of the vehicles. : At the bottom _ Sing -hill; a comparatively narrow a .steep 'thoroughfare, there was it den crowd, and the temper of the mob bectim more than over threatening. .No steno mud were thrown, however, but instead, ung man threw a short stick with gre rce Lienteriant, Davison. 'The sti ruck him with much violence on the bac of the head, andrenclekedhirn almest u melons,. He wciuld: have fallen, off h rse had not two . men -held him rip. I is way, and every note and then -puttin s hand In a half -dazed . mariner to ad-, he performed the rest �f the journe the Albert Hall. • . Outside this building there. was a roefise crowd, who teemed the Salvatio my.with groans, yolk. and several vol s of ,stones. Davison,1 still air)* conscious; was lifted-fr= his horse an ried or dragged into the Hall. The ban d the carriages containingjG.eneral an .FEATURES OF TOE.. The implisotied -igusPeetem-N1641r-Lite-iii . ihe_patthejkan.!_i_.11i - ,One telanixish paper A descriptionififlife-in7-Kihnainliain The-Oelbs are 8 by In feet, gird ,each contains a small iron bedsteak_alable and a Chair, whit:sharp _drained taitheTwalf.---The political prisoners arerousedW7:80; and are .alloWed to walk_ about in a small gravelledyarduntil hreakfaet=tinWietween 8 -and 9: During the meal they itTfe-bon-- fined in their cells. At 9.30 they are again permitted to walk-intheyardlintil1.-7-erclack- ,when-they Are again looked Up to eat their dinners. Then they are -let Ont-eigain -.until. 5'4'0104 when they arelooked:in,-for--the_ night.-- By day -a : Small , Window feebly Moderates the gloom of a cell, and lights are allowed froth 5 -to 9 o'clook in the even - frig. The:Government aupplien-pristin.fare, Only, but the eta -petits- are not forgotten by their friends. The:farmers, altlionglihey- refuse---any longer to allow: • the fox- hunting gentry . ride At, Will over their fields, 4o some hunting 'themselves. The coverts of Col: Lord - Lieutenant King'sCounty and Itather ogafi.plains, were recently boththoroughly hunted by such large gatlieringe of people that the gainekeeperirwereardid:167ititer-- fere. TheLordof NantiiaLlintherin the latter region -left his gates open to the crowd, and this.generoeity_catieed there to refrain from going:kid 7 -hi§ coverts at all. The gametaken was sent to the suspects and tile:it families. • TheChristmasdinner of- Miss Reynolds in Cork jaills-teportetto have been a piece Of beef and four potatoes on:a•tin platter, but. the tedium of her im- prisonlnent has been beguiled by serenades frau the city bands. The neighbors of In9-- prisoned, sin -Teets- are -active in . seeingthat theIrletin work is kept up. -Hundreds Of men with carte and horses tecentlypdritighed the fields; ;garnered.- the potatoes, and threshed outthe'corn -efIlessrs.---011teilly,_ Power, Gleinane„. Toole, 'Cozniangliton,- and Nohilly, some of whom_arifin jail itt Naas and others at Galway. •• alie Trish -Papers epOrt that, notwithetanding-therpatreeage f so many noble the Mord Mayor's und in aid of the Proptirty *.Defence. Aeaci- iation amounted, after five Weeks' effort, nly to about £1O,000. Meanwhile,,Ireland, ut of her poverty, ha raieedMore -than- - hat • as a iiiistentation-fund-for 7the-tus-- the P6ets; - • . by parlous Paefrielind Fignrc - r°- When the boc_I-Y_Of--La720-tariiiii-t-iiitiffor_ der; • Iva; ant pro-. and - the and ale ad- - ienr ro did ° rty, ler;' r Bar" air' Animal loses two -fifth of elibii-tancia-:it .iar loses life; " • ' Egypt Weed are hospitals for suPer-; ed. - P • . the -annuated • pats,. e suffering - ecarcely notice. • - ey - China imports 100,000 chests . of foreign he opium Average -*oilers ipend nd, 25 cents per day for opium. ere • New Zealand are frequently found rid the "betel Of _those -Urge,. winglees th Called by the aborigines !, • - The. largest representative • .1m9_w_nWas ten and he one-half feet high - • • - , 11? During the pest year 1;532 persone died- . . "' in --London of the 'small,p9x..--, 01-these,-325rs _ had been •vaceinatedAnd 6,37megliacted that mtr fPlir17.1110tfi9tilh'ephee1P;eliellf"ion7i! L5riidtenin.. 3g,661126,01300-1: of are vaccinated, anc1190;00_fiareLnot, • nd, . few Years ago - British India only or se Her -crop Of Wheat this year amounts- to 360,000,000- bindle's,- at _Whieh--1-70,000,000- raised about 20,000,000 bushels of-4vheat. . _ have •already - been exported--7different at POO of Europe,- ck. .:Tt' is asserted- by M-:Henient that deaf mutes who have been tanglietn-iipeak---arti II, with th accent - of their_ :country, is thus indicating organic conformationeolthe n mechanism of speech similar to -*nee of their parents,11 18 itcl: Lateat Fensinine Fancies-. ' The flower most • recently taken into decorative favor is. the Pumpkin blossom, whose bold yellow proves even more 'effect- - tiya than the ininflower, as it can be used in larger single masses, audit also has the aid of the wayward , vine, adapting it tonses , for which the minflovver 'is impossible.' Swalloves in black and white enamel _on • silver are the lateet fancy for Securing ' bonnet stringsin Paris._ . • • . A new way of framing smaller mirrors is CO ijo th hi he ta im Ar ley un car • in a square . frarae of gilded - wood. The ran ... glass, an oblong placed. horizontally, fdls. tui, r • • -up: only it - little more than half -et the °°F ' . interior, a ,i, smaller band of gilded oak with Pin a beading ..tinelosing this: The, ret of the' wa space* filled with it band of red plush. on whielr are painted yellow daffodils: The ugly fashion of doing up the throat sr : as i t were sore, with bands of jewels and. vel ,t; above- .is -est iv the Princess ef . . I, Wa esIwtiOse neck is sevanlike- ' A fanciful gift eaderred recently upon the*young American' prima donna, Mlle.Van Zandt, by Baroness Willy. de Rothschild, ,Was . in - - acknowledgment of . her beautiful viala .rendering Of the baroness', .amig " Legeres ,aira Hirondelles,". was tt: .half..; dozen diamond 4-__9,r swallows intended to be worn as ornaments- Bei° for the bodide. , • .•ask Says it -writer ,-in the 41r. t Alitateur : the "-There is ' 320. ' eXQQffe. for a woman not coy making a picture'. of 'herself in our artistic Pell . days, 11. abe can afford- it." The effort, ;the however, may get her husband into diffi.,: C°Ve s. Booth arid .Other prominent 'mem- s of the Saliation, Army, were ven. to a side door, which unfortunately s net open. To wait till the hall-kee er could open it was. ibilitones „ and mud were flying ha all direction. The carriage contrEiquently had .to be dri4en, _round the *hiding -reach the door through which. Davison had passed, , and, '.amidift keno of considerable.- excitement, a hastyscramblehad to he made to reach the friendly shelter of .the interior. Blood flowing from the heads of several of the clemen; and the faces and the dresses of oat all of them were. goverodwith'mud Davison,• who Was now lying nneon- us in one -of the ante -rooms, m.edical stance • was : summoned, and -on arrival ' medical min- he - &ti- ered that the man was suffering from eitesion.of the brain; and -from -shock to eystem, - his head, and face ''ere red with mud„ it was impossible to fell ether he had_received-4swether7injuritia except -that at the 'back of his head. ;His upper WBS CIA open whilst in a proces- sion the previdue day. Undeterred -)aY-, what had : happened, in the Streets, the Salvation, Army commenced the proceed- ings of,the "Holiness Convention,' A. large crowd. of _roughs welted outside Albert asir in, expeatation that General- -Booth and his staff would leave for the barracks at the close of the meeting; ,blit theY.wigelY decided to remain within th� hall to tea:and in readiness for the evening • - = - - , meeting. Lieutenant Davison, after having been seen by tadoctor, 'was re/noted to the Publiollespital; where he remained. While -the stone -throwing was a.t its worst the 'police. :Marked two men, and have .since aireatedthem. as ringleaders in the dis- turbance. 'The evening: meeting was it t suedes's, . The - members of the "Ar. generally- 'seemed •to,_ rejoice itt tribulation, and it as a sign that bIrd been "stirring up the, devil.'' rdi offers to compose new s;" on the ground, that -he has finally ed. -from the stage, -lie receives au on wherever. he 'appears in public in . . Prof- Owen, in an • article lately lished, questions Whethernas,never receives - a third set of _ teeth. - -He ascribes alleged . cases to thereappearance.6f Old and worn stumps in consequence of the ihrinkage and absorption of the jaws. • - The experithents made- by M. Bouchut with pepsine, :ea an agent -for -destroying . _ , _ worms in:the stomach -and bow -els, - have repeated,with-very favorable results. --Even the tapeworm succumbstothe diges- tive • action of pepsine :in large doses, while tnainote highly organized tissues_ of the stomach remain nnaffeeted; ▪ - , .A Germatt-tciannfactiiret has sueceeded. in.prachieing,serviCeable-face-maslie efitilea- for the- protection, of metal and -glass meltere,- stonemasons. and other workmen expand to Iwo, dust and , noxious vapors. These niashe allow the eyes to be turned in any direction, and there is space enotighfor . :Opeetacles in caisetbeeyegight is7-defective,_ -*means of a -seriest-of very interesting • -experiresntstegargingthe Muscillar-p_Ower_ of insects; .M. :g: Plat -Safi has. discovered- • that while a horse cannot .canixot :exert-a_streas beyond the sixty-seVenth -of. its weight,-"--i- eockehafer can easily draw it load. equi17-to. fourteen- times its weight, and a bee • can draw a- little *egg= ttrenty-AinieheitYler than_itself.' • * :: . , -• • . . , -7 - • - — . Pire-'1WP.:Git.is*-;ii.--eiiance. . . , . . - .-Just„noW there-higreat_alifficulby-f-n----getz ting goocl domestic help, and it . is largely the milt a -those who have the training -Of 'girls. .- If a daughter. tiyined-taste and ---apt- ' ness: for any -sp-einal . branch_ :of work:, encouragelet in it,-;a0----"paiv_b_urttor_what she does and let her-buy--koe•CW-n--elethea, It. comes out - lit her--Parenta' pockets any- way, and this will serve -le,. meke_her_feeL 'zidependent and take: an -interest in her work. If parents-- would • _take-thie-course: Itthey would not need to employ -ea -much - clemeirtio help, imei should_ Misfertiliif.)._-Aver- Ake- them, their daughter would not be. left helpless. - . • - - : - - _ , • _ culties and hereelf On,_ the- stage, eait-di-4 Langly. • ' •: ' A Titian or Veronese gown is not only :expensive becauseofrich materials- and - the a,ceessCifes .required of real laces and :fine le;Wels,Jont because, too, of the _room furnishings- absolutely neees,aarY for suitable; baekground for the - picturesque costume" . , - ' Everybody that "goes to Winnipeg 'does - not, it appears, make it ;rapid fortune. We - -know of one young man who recently- went - inte- an eitensise. business there after haV- ing_borrOwed $2o. from a friend -in this city " to help to pay hia Way Out. According to • agreement,- he was drawn upon. for, the . amount, but last -week the draft came back dishonored.' The sande gentleman - wrote . . a few weeks -ago to. it sporting man hero to ge • him a horse( that could beat Z30. Some. grea bright youthehaye erpigratedla Manitoba. "-A - -- —Ott-dwa Free Pres. - - — _ . - -their .. . . • Early in ISIttich Queen Victoria will pay they an unofficial, visit to the Continent. She : .,„ : • will ' journey , le •Clierbourg in her steam Ye . 'yacht Viet a.'.and Albert;:but whether opera her destur ri will be Italy or the south of retir Trance ' ertain, though bite expectation oyati - is that will , prOceed. lo, the same I44Y beautif6 'strict rale made her „head- quarters the occasion 'of her last eoliti- . nental tr.,' She will again travel intoy- .• A. Lockport (i 'NT: despatch eays-- • that Mr. Stillivan daverno, ' the 1- prominent lawyer, is. dead. He -was one of the 'three Issmners who revised the -new ed.de. • nito, ta, old ceremonial receptions and. comm vilproeeduro forNeW York State. ensure comparative privacy. ' • . of ci FirokessionOi - The Baptist paetors leclare,d themselves: against prdessional, .evivaliste of the mufti kind, an -d -for - the reasons:ollowing "They cultivate a die.tacted, one-sided religious life. _They give adhe'prominence to noisy and .-publW )fforts for saving souls. They produce the napressiOn that religion is largely h matter' f feeling. They savor too muchofthei-bnic-- eoque and of buffoonery. 1 They lower the: lignity of the most solenin subject =Which 4an engage men's attention. . They put it premium upon ignorant and crude presen- tations of 'gospel- truth, They insult the - 'Intelligence -cif the age by- making liltreoin-DOlver'S icenint-M#Iegteoi.ery. §1-t 'The 'occupation of siteaWdriving, as. is well known, entails great eiPbsure..andis a dangerous One to life and -11hili :withal. For lhaevit-effecte exposurek4 luMbermen of the St.,. John River, ri'60 BrOnswiek, have -one grand panacea, as i- shown by the _folloviing-from letter:by NA R. B. Gillis, Milltown, Fron2,-.fitsiire while- -streatn-driving I took a hp -4 • cold; which In a short time broughton,sweats, eriiiken_chest and, every sylAptom of -deep. Seated consumption. - I medicines without relief,lintil I _itri Wilson' Pulmonary Cherry Cherry Balsa' when I Was oured." Such evidence as • lei incontro- vertible, --andit is lie wondkithat in NOW Brun -awl,* and Nova Scodig v.vhere- this remedy -first was introduced ilt has gained firni_hold on the confidencalt the.people.. iiiii”v the cid-nese arerried.- ._ InoverYdireation, AS At the eye c rea--7-ek--littlehillecke of -earth ' s:ireithree- --six feet high,-. are scattered - 'on-iiecuOus over the country. - These , -Ali* ecnier -With grass, now dried by -thd 6,1.4434 a, scattered as they; are over hile- - eilltivat -fieldie,rnakea one think of *decks , aft a harviiiit: pf timothy or red4pt in-.Atnerie Theyarethetoinhior raves Pi past goner tions Of C,hineee.-1, And, Ai k'the- leadin religion or superstition of " thp, country ancestralWorship, these maiiifis are net' diet -tithed or ploughaiiVerOitit -stand -f -iiidefinite.ages. .,Itwouldelienkto.astrang that sentiment Over-, thdlesting ,pliic of-. the. dead 'innet; - tii.. it. maeiiil exten reduce the ,prOdilett*onesiinfithflarid. V thereseeins to be no _ sySteM,-0,,i cerneteri as in Other countries, but the, - ner pf th field at, death is buried, RS i VS' been h ancestors - before hira„ -in -In Otvi, soil some spet at-itrespeetfultU- es from th . ... . graves0 his Prodetiesstire:, - • nd thus the tumuli go on .inereariniCirli--i umber an closeness of proriniity tillit-4n1d sewn t be only aT.1086:01_4 time. *lien the clea Will:possess allthe eoll;' and •Ittgrtre Otit th entire natiOn.--Viiiiicie liettetl:0 -114_ - • -A„ bey died iri Philadelphia 0 hydrop'h ict..L.,,ilii one of his struggles gy- bit of ftst rom hie -lips flevi- intc.iiiie: 'Mbar's, ey me Man had s nevoue ten:irk:monk- an, aVe-the-peCuliarcorigbe, resembling barks it3 einiagined-thathe had heed' • imiculate -with:the.disease. He felt all" t . symptoms nd Writhed iti agony. . A physician assure ina :that hydrophobia could ,n:ot :possibl hakeIeveloped' in,- a few hours l- nor.: frem uoli 'a &nog, hid that :Made- ii8 .cliffetence dieeettil doges -Of chloral - Werk 'required t ;net hlinandhe- Was left 11,1 - st, ..lifeles the violence -9f thii-.4ta0.14, - • --,•-:,--...-----. .. 4 pily-, • FITS; FIT . , - .Suceesshilly treated-hyWorldePispensarY Medidal-Askociation. A.ddresS Kvith stamp for parePhlet...,:13iiffale, N. Y. "-----__ . .. __.: _ The London. Truth says:" Ault. ost spirit- ed -repreeentatiOn:Of 'Patience .Ottategiveri a few - daYksince. at Greystoke d tile,. allthecharacters being taken -by „Members' Of the family „and their guests. .,1-Aidy.tita-bel -now: ard appearedasPeiti.0-ci4, and,Ilatly Raehel as Lady itrieeta, While Nt. staffdtilliovvord, K. P.; was '-Regietaid: , The pip. was • -pit On-4heAtage in ai.satirtfactoryw 1, and was really admirably.:played':thtotllont.' 'A company of nearly .100 Witnesse the 'per-. 16-iiiianco•„in addition- to • the faiti, ants -..and- Villagerni49-vi.ere also invited.' ' nioii-iiiOus .1!0,8f4 tO 4110 WalliliT.- 1 an to' ly ed nd ed er a. is er or er Lt, or as is at se 6 P- 0. d. 0 'An-inimigrantie not as valliftbie to the county as,sa.,_'native, Yet -110 - reds - of thousands of dollars are spent bringing Tztonigpauts to 'Canada:- while Alt grave - :yards are being filled • -vqthth4-6 whoa() livesnright haVe-been,sa,vectto th60 friends and country for many yeare._.41W many also, are like fading Solvers, anare to their relatives and no -:Assistance. Miiy now • dead. eifitit- not have haVe died had.1 -)sek but used Dr. Wilson's •-Pulnionarlt Cherry Baleam,-a_ -truly wonderful reinh,,,-1it eab-arefully compounded N dished by these Whoinivally detest : medicine; but - -go . pcwerful itt it action, -that it .Strikes itt-s- the riot 104411 lung: diseases and eradicates thetig Let the . . . weak- and • spiritless . :t take - courage --_and Wilsen'S Pti±onary Cherry -.Baleitna ank:oh,ealt- the - ,vciyard for many years to come::: „ Mr; of Mit being-.-unwella few -Sundays ago, k _congregation -to -Allow his wife__ Baird= to thein -in Iiis place: - refused. that -Sunday to do-- but on n, bd his read a s they e next Sunday Mr. Villards went' into iit pulpit with the chastening rod hi his hatia. - He told his-pool:Ile- that ;eon . of -81Kii who could ;gate a theatrical perfortgAbe and -Eaten to viilgar -language from haltdreoged- "Women, were the most horrified the idea ,ollisteningto the chaste words of woman preacher. preitCher.: - It is„anneunced that. New • .have-nelet "-Season -Patti; Nilsson; Gerater,.-PaUline 1.-,41cce And Alba tra,ets .haveheeir already signed I theso-artists;-mfeept one. No ei *Orkl•-Londen, • Paris, ' Vierm Piiteetr-burg,-,hati ever been . ablesudh a constellation of prime don then be concentrated iii NeVrYor . We. verily - -believe that dys largely the cause of innah -of th =n-ess andill-nature which mars the of _the social :relations --of :all of -1-Wiliali'S-Anti-bilions and Preser mire dyspepsiaandSete the liver, and kidneys right, and - thiig-n1 ,kettelut:tured. ' ----=-A/%76TI*1131,1111i=0F :SHATIE0.;•"., �f ill 11*-cl,pr kiimifixii of •outsi. =--notice quit ing and devote my time to t business, itt my eld:Mand.,Zirtag-4dvcrtj.e,ncnt in, ."1/1.-: Winglike g"..kt Colds,coughis, and suctichkease -to -cOnsumptiensx_t_iay-be.dhsecked-,,a: curcd, by the uso of one '25 cent Wistar's Pulnioriio Syrup. of Wil and .Horehourid:-r•-dt-ievibith:a.tri Brigglii-Botaii15:-...13Atero • are the and We believe the beet. tbnicin-iii -in-packageu-at-Icents, and Ma haltgallon=d7tho-t- fin-mixtUte, _ --1-• as rnaking tet the •-We Tbeg---to-intimice---•-tiitt CVe regUlated-houi3ehold..--should-1-061 of StatT_Gaiii-ent,:6----e_it_D.mends-eyety _ sailed fro ea eeilea,rned and the. unwise its religious- -1C-On b=01.2-Desecenilie- Chers." . • - _ ia is orose- molly Dr. Pills , mach' SS; -1.18 hut busi- ber- i °hued n . lead ,Often le _of lierry 'vest; -Sold i3to49- 2 - ple ,LWell tittle - as - - -,t20110t OUT --oir BE -- Dr. R. V. PrEses, Buffalo, • . ; Dear : -,S'ir=I have to thank You or. the great relief received from your "Favorite Pre- - neriptione"4- -Mrsickneste had lasted- seven • years, one -of which r- was .i :bed. -After -_- •tilling AiiiiiViitle I was able to he about" - the -house. 'Respectfully - ; . .: . -..,.. • ' Axon& K. Mom,: Fulton, Ni -011,- , . Henry Merz, of St., Lom , pitied We _ Dinkelnian - on account of her_ • marital •. infelicity, and paid all the cost eta divorce. Then he married her. But Within a...year - he was eared of his -love .for .her, and "em- ployed theflame lawyer who: had procured the divorce to annul his own marriage. ' . . _ . snakes its Idfe Des* y-Crs. , The lose of life in India due - to the ravages of venomous snakes is almost • . incredible._ Yet Consiimption which -ie as . .- . wily and "-fatal as the dea. hest Indian • reptile, is Winding its bells around thousanda of people while the victims are unconscious - of its presence. Dr. R. V.1Pie Ce's" Golden Medical Discovery" must be - used to . •bleanse • the blood of th. scrofulous ,.. • impurities, for tuberoular coI gumption -is . only a forin of ecroftdous disease. .. Gold6li -. •• -- Medical Discovery " is a sovereign remedy • for all forms of scrofulous I disease, ot--- king's-evil,-sirch as tumor, wh te swellings, fever sores; scrofulouti sore-ey s, as well as for Other blood and -akin iSeafiei. By druggists. . _ , • Every journal,popular or scientific, you ' takeup,has something to sayabout the . , value of ,Phosphates as fertilizers, or as brain and nerve food. Farine e know that - they 41c:re-See 'largely the - growth -sand - products . of vegetation; ' and physicianio , • long eines discovered:that tbey augment : -nerve power, Their mitten on: plant and animalis precisely the seine is excitants • of nutrition-incompleting the development ' of the cell that biiilde-Up the vegetable and . animal tissue. - The use of • Dr. Wheeler's Compound ..„ Elixir Of - Phosphates - and (ialliaya will speedily cOniiiiim the Worn out invalid that it is Nat rre's truly . physiologic:4 restorative. ' • . Hunter; of Hamilton, Ont„ tUrned over . -- ---Tbe Winnipeg Sun - says -: , relay Robe: . _ . some $10 000 worth of property and cleared • ' ' O1,500 in the transaction: - _ ri/ , •• -3/r. and Mrs. '-Spurgeon devoted •'. the ., anniversary ottheir wedding to the • $30,00a presented to, thepi -a- the: recent -- •• - - . -- - _ • . • . . endow- mentsirea:iletiarlPisila4hodag-oenel-ofrergilfols; .. They 1.144: . . . , . The recent death of Mr, Japage Wyllie,: - the tenant of the. farm 0,NOSegiel, near ' Hauchliie, Ayrshire, isuaticeable•froM the, . -fact_that he occupied for fort • years the ' l• land which 13urns tilled, ' being , the Seeiind: ' tenant . after. the poet - and i brother Gilbert. It was While at Vossgiel that the- •batd wrote Seine of his finest -productions;; Conic:VI but see darboline And view the process o'er, - No bald head pate *mild ma e afraid, -. No 'gray hairs fright me in re. As now improved and perfectd, No oil Was ere 80 sure, I All skin disease of limb or h • . It neverfails to cure: CAN :CUJ1EM 1-11%. L.1). DfcBfacrunr., 6aNiagera t. Buffalo N - - - • • 1_5 . Y„has a:positive-and tooitoW loure for Caltnincgerm; weitte0in.uetsth.:.„ et:juLSCe oEtethse liTnui f_mborResa usatni ea- • : - , s - - ill 'SCROFULOUS DISEASES succeesfully treated. - Send for Circniargivingf]1 partipulara• CHEAP FARMS NEAR -M. RKETSi• ___. • • . , . . . .. . . . • The'Stitte of -)Wchigten, having , 50 years of ite-', provenlents,stili_bontains lovetracts of 101,beek. : .piect /end3 suitable for - farms edulo of them, -•-: subj ept to free:settlement ender Iiii lOstead laws! . • :... , •717. i ticAtmf 7.12 IONR' EtTi7 r....:.K.IDA:3-TRitiiiTc:N.m.:-I-.c... -...: .:,..- .-. i end allied tliemlor Sale,at lo* prices, . 'A pamph- let, grepore4-tincler qutherity. of t :state,. awl. -omit:gulag it map; descriptions of 'ts cliniate -. ' soil; '.induStries;:. crops. 'and reSoures, and an account of .its lands, Will he sent free to any one f- ' .__ .;_,,..,. .,. • i IT IS -WITia FEELINGS OF DEBI'', REGAET - that to of : . • . • _ .- , .- , - ThOrtty's- .1porovett . flops,. aid -Cattle. Food' .__ feel 'necesSitated aiiain to call atten. ion tor tile fact of the , niunerous impositiong paiieci ott, upon the,pnbliceatheir-fOod, not-onl -by-trilVer lett Of Other food.pentipanies, -but cliti by many . a their looal agents. T1ts disr'jtal,le.practice toust, ,-,if unchecked, tend to tarnis •the good -A name of rPhorley's Inwroved. Farmers and ' feeder., Male- Sure: our_trade pleat is ' n the 'bag.' *here you --purchase. For sale bY.dealert everywhere: Manufactured 48 Jelin, -iri•cg Sonflas - , • , Mariniton, Ont. . _ dIACIEE:90 MAGNETIC _ 40. *it •NG Ca" t4.tr - /11 4 ''Gr• • • •• . • . _._ It -18 sure, prompt and:Effectual r-in•edyLOr Nervotisness in- AT4T7 itS stages,. We Alemori, LOSS Of :Brain:PO*6x,- Sexpal ProStrit Night • Svireatt4i S"permatbfriicea, Seroinal WealtnesS and - -1 General Lose of -Power. - It; repairs Nervous Neste, RejilvenateathelededInteilect,$trengthi'• ; eris the . Enfeebled Brain and Eestdres . Sur prising Tone, .a.nd -Vigor to 1104 Ethatisted - Generative organs. The eperience of thou sands proves it -all: _Invaluable Itemedy: The inedicinels_Ipleasent to the taste,,end each box Contains stifle:lent for two: weeks' medication and is the cheapest and best. Eull particulars in our pamplil. et, Whiclx:We desire to mail free to any address.- - .31LaCk's Magnetic 111.edichte :is sold druggists at 50 ets,per box, or 12 boxes for ' Or will be:mailed free, of postage on 'receipt the money, by addressing 'Mach,* .11/1,ognetie Medicine Co • Windsor , Ott: &nada -TRAOgMARK. rscik 1 Sold I by all druggists everywhere: • . -