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The Sentinel, 1882-04-21, Page 3) ittalattiz.6 -tom& riknueaalatalannt ow FRilares 1i Connie- bJI Bleesedness and Molar Caine* • "-You will only regret it once, and that willbeali your life," is the congratulation • boon corripaulons often -tender to a_ young :noon on the approaclaof hit maariage; and though his companions may b� - ready • :enouglatolialloWhis maniple, eaoh tatter- inghimself that he t3be- the happy -exceptton ta • the above - prediction, yet matrimonial bliss, apart, from each. one's own case, seems hard to reach. • That: marriage, so fitted. by nature to eon! fer happinese on Mankind, often turna out .: ta lamentable -failure—a: huge mistake— needs aware* be stated; but marriage in Baca contanas all the elenaenta to. the - "securing of that quota, of happiness_ allotted to mortals here below. Hasty marriages are generally predicted: _ failures, and_ though they need: net rates-- eerily turn oat so, yet, if unhappiness fol - L loar such acts, Where po *oh is -left to ='-diti3,120e,it need hardly 'surprise any one: But many Marriages which are not hasty— where courtsbip, has extended over even years—do not confer on those so united. that happiness which was fondly hoped for; ,liayaoften, fail to briag even coateutment, but are rather a heavy yoke, which is at all • times irksocnea and often almost.unbear- able. Failing to htkve dig-swarmedthe true disposition Of eaeh other ie ono cause ,wlia a there are so many unhappy unions. • The first cities of marriages_may,a)e dis- missed with What has been said, bat surely in the second there must be errors of con- -duct the removal or toning down .of which ,would lead to greater happiness than in many cases prevails, In a Well -asserted tinion-,11the first year of married Mei- is .generally the most trying. Hither party May start' by expecting too mil& of the other, forgetting that life ie a real and earnest- basiness, and that time -ought- to be more profitably employed._ than in always Making tender speeches: or indulging in. a gashing fondness. These 'expectations or tendencies are mire to reedit in:disappoint- naent -and vexation, but they are errorsithat will be quickly got over. The kindly tone wad tender look in all intercourse; the con.' stant endeavor to please and - gratify, and the ever ready sympathy, Will - early be recogaized as the fruits of a true affeotioti, and be received in loving !sympathy by a- 4/Jared sentiment. • . -The change._ of manners which it of • noticeable atter Wediock seems to be on the °mime of Mthippy Marriages. Th is, and unqueetioneblyought to be, mix greater areedomaat Manners between. h band and. Wife fhan. betwetan lovers; but uuquestainably there. (Matt- nOt to be absence of kespeot for each other's teeth] opinions. ot even crotchets, where, snag; . exist.. .. The Inisbansla should show. respect for his: v•rife's audamana: and sy • patty, by expleiniag- to her, at least in o line, -his Wei/leis= tiffairs or profession prospects. Nothing will 'wound: & Wlf More -than a carelessness, though it be on apparent, of her -sympathy ; and many wellnaeaninglausband, anxious. to spare h -wife- annoyance; er . it may be pain, w a relict sleeting. ofdistrustin her breed • hiding from hertbe cause of hisitritabili • • or preoccupation. The- wife, on her par should lend interest arid sympathy to t dismission, andnever effector' show. indi terence. Life vannot be eapected to free• from dare's, or everi-clay affairs : flowalways snrioothly. '.atanlan in busines ,- or cog -aged in professional duties, will fin maaa to: try; niujili to worry -and. aim! • him. In most Oases the irritability, or least il feeling oflanguoi, will - Cling tali .- In spite of hittoseif: and 'where there is .7aut of proper sympathy between husban . aha wife, arriving home, -inetead of th affairs Of -the day being talked over in way calculated tcasmooth- the ruffled tem per, it not restore- cheerfulness,- the wife' indifference or his own carelessnese of he • anxiety' they- seal his .lips, and leave hi irritability ready to break oat in teproache on the most trivia" 'oeoesion, His Wife' temper is, sure to sailer,. and, pride is eve :ready to step in and widen the gulf which :. this habit may soon, enough --render all ba impassable. _ . -.. ' • . . - Of stubbornness; standing on one's rights and suchlike,. mailing need be said. -Their effect in everydley life. wilt prove the evil consequences of their -presence- in iliouse- • hold. . lio*- niany-aan unseemly altercation would be avoided by one party being able t� _ refrain limn- indulging in . reproach and •a OalmlY placing the affair in dispute: in its . true or best light) l'efore. the . other" Es- - tran 4 -mite. and- distrusts Might never gv5 arise uld husband arid wife fcirm. the habit . yielcling cherished pleasures to: the unexpressed wish of the- other. The . want of thisaseltaleolpling.; is the bitter • came of, many &matrix:not:dal separation.-- . • sympathy once broken, unlovable quaii- tie& are not. slow in. developing themselves. Cyraclera is too-oftenaffected, and sneering . • . indulged in, to 'belie the Aching of the ' heart; and thus beopme. apparently such -prominent traits= . of' character. that belief, in: better: qualities IS- V74311-rligh, impossible ; . for aeit , is much easier to believe in ap- pearances. then to arrive at - a, knowledge • Ot thetrue matins Of the acti•ons_otothera. it we. a,re judged et our own 'showing we •• have little reason to complain. .. - it is well for a.: Youog Man, to remember ther-after - marriage be: cannot - retain_ tae freedom:a:1U a beelieforwith thebeneatiaof a. settl owe.. He has serious and respon- 7 eibled • ies- to portent; has to • secure, the comfo :and -welt -belt* of thetaomita who. has colifided her happihesiato hig care,: to- -seek her_ synapathyaralconfidence, to avoid . _ • . neglect- or the iseemii* -to prefer', mach in.ore- the- preferring, the company' of others • to hart; to contribute to her latellecaual culture * to ease her -burdens _saint in all. - things to lbe. her guideaandamiaport. He • must bear lamina that-the:B*464,ot those who Were his coinpanions in .youth and early maohooa must now be, enjoyed at his- . own honiet and that the- limiting for . pleasure in his former haunts. Will. lean a, • dearth of' it at his own: fireside. Duties, profesairatal. of busineet gatherings, will call hita simaty often. enoughabut et. then absence s no . real • wife- Will aaaaNallia Pleasure parties! whioh- are unsuitable for • his wife are equally unsuited:to him: In. all thiagia thoughaetia all -places, 'she ia• - his c.onapaniona-the Companion of bis -joys, '' . of hissorrowaof his impe.eand of his feara. -L-A.'dorden... • —A,young lady tkirefr down her book in disgust when she reaalaCarlyle, "Never; or hardly ever." . will she Walk Will -moat of -the fashionable New York girls,• now that springliaa come, takep. three mile walk every atm( morning from end to mid of Central Park? • • N -o. They will not. Why not ? • Because most _fashionable -New- York -girl's are -pot now made to go on foot. ' Why iso ? Because their artificial heels are too high and their real heels, toes -and ankles too weak to carry them so far. . How, will they get thraugh the park? • They will -be hauled through the park by pretneangeteedsin covered carriageawhich shall keep the- sun's impertinent rays from damaging their complexions. What else weak" the sun do if they bl- amed it to shine upcin them a ? • It would get into them and go through their skins into their blood and fiord thence into their delicate and lovely bones. it Would enrich their blood, tone up their nerves, strengthen their Muscles, stiffen -their hones and make more elastic their beautiful. jeintia • Hew will these poor- helpless githitryato. et this needed tomo- into theni. which the orb -of day barest"- to gin without money 'and without price? By taking piths and powders at 85 per doctor's visit. - -- How many out of the thousands of young ladies of 'dente in New- York could have • been found walking in Central ?ark yester- day • Perhaps fifty. • How,many on horseback? Perhaps 100. Where were the rest? They were at hothe, breathing maybe sewer gee, or carpet and bricaabrao dust, .or they; Were on Ilroadwayaor on Four- teenth street breathing "St. Patrick's Day in the Morning" dust, or they were shop- ping in close, stuffy stores, breathing dry goods dust, or they were packed in air - tainted street cars, breathing all sorts of dust. - ' What Mai be seen on any fine day in the pUblio gardens of Vienna and Berlin? • There may be seen many elegantly dressed ladies_ sitting -for hears under the trees_or in the aunshiae, sewing,knitting or reading. • And then? • And then, at 4 or 5 o'clock, they dineat another gardenin the open air, while a large orohestrapours_through trumpets and bugleandfiddles and flutes music into - their ears, and all :about visional)f flowers, ehrubbery, trees, statues and fountains are • poured into their eyes, while they leisurely place the foaming_ Colanabacherair with the nourishing kelbileisch or wiener schnitzel, Within reach of their digestive apparatus. And laro=w do they look ? . They eienarobust and healthy, and 'the bloom on theta cheeks looks as it it had srtuck in ancl had cometo stay. - 'And why are they thus robust and healthy? •'Because they live- so much out of doors, and breathe pure air, and pure air is pare life and pure food. • . • - . • Well, what is the Matter with us that makes -800 people die in one week in New York? - •• .-Maybe it is because, as Dr..alamilton said in hie lecture the other night, that "science does not keep pacewith civihaa- tion," and. maybe because our closely built, °renamed together civilization, knocks down more pins than it sets up, and sends so .11:jetty of us to Greenwood Cemetery, vithich, during the past year, according to the aunts' report, has shown such cheering and .gratifyitig evidences of prosperity through the sale of -the narrow houses prepared for all the living.—Nev, York Graphic.. - • , • _ • Row- an Ehapty Stonsaph Saved a Lite. No regirheiti•\from New Hampshire suf- fered more -in action- than the 12th, and a narrower squeak -for life than that of Capt. —but better known Ss' EldetaaDurgin' is not often recorded. In one of the puny engsgements.that the- 12th participated in he was Struck by a bullet, which literally bored aole through him just above the stomac , : He fell amid a heap. of lcillecland wound, and was -left for dead on the field. A °drain of the enemy advancing with a quick step moved directly overathe ground, and, se , - they • -were • marching - by, he • was barely able to make a motionsufficient to -attract the attention:of a Confederate •captain, who stopped, looked at hita pityingly, and said: -"Poor fellow, you are booked through. I can't help you, but I'll at leastput you out of the way of further harm," so, suiting the action to the -words, -he. took him te-nderly in his arms, carried him some distance one side, • and. placed him in a sitting posture, with his tack against a tree. This saved his life, as he was shortly afterward found, treated.. for his -wound, and ultimately re- covered. Theaurgeon said thathad he -had his brealtiest 'that morning --he would- as- suredIyhan hemikilled. Thirty-six hours' abstinence, being -.short of rations, had contracted the.stomach 'and saved his life. So the elOer lives, midis the life of theta- nual reunions.—Manchester,alsa H.) Mirror. PiuK6E-GoRTSCHAKOIT has finallyresign as Russian-Miniater Of Foreign Affair. Old age and. poor 'health -havei had_ stubliorn • man to conquer, but have triumphed. He. 18 84 years -old, -and has been in ' active ofacial: service. 58- years,' beginning as Secretary of the Easel= :Embassy at Lon; don, in_ 1824. He served as Minister at nearly every European°mart and represented Bassi& la. the -famous Vienna conferences- of 1856.- In 1856 he _became Foreign Minister. His greatest singleact was his •bold ciroillar -of 1870 setting at defiance the tieety Of 1856; Which closed •the Crimean war. He thus. opened the way for. the Busso-Turkish conflict of 1876-'77=7a, ending with: the 9elebratea. Berlin Conference, where- were gathered the greatest diplomats of Europe. Gortscha- koff must be isaked with Bismarck, Dis- raeli, Andrassar and Gearthetta, • . - —A scientist says that feta people' know that in bad season."' honey is apt to be poi's- oncrat; that is when flowers are ecarce, the bees are obligedto gather it trona poisonous floater& • Von. Moltke has gone to Switzerlind, and rumor says he is examining the passes in the Alps through which the French will have to go in case of certain military poissi- bilities. •OltnaltWetraims =CAB: a. -- he Prioteetwas Cranium as It tw- Pre. . Bernd gre-clitya : It is not generally- known. that the vabalmed head- of - Oliver Cromwell is eiteinta Sonae few years since,' it any rate;_ at was said to be in the &Anshan of Mr. fforace- Wilkinson. Of Sevenoeks, Kent. It Was then in good preservation, and its Ohrenological aispeot presented - 'ninth" Until*. peouliarities. Thug the length, from the forehead.• to the back of the ead, is quite extraordinary — far; rester . than in . ordinary -men. The fbreheed Or frontal portion, is low, hut - vary broad ; the orbit"; of the eyes are 'very large, the oheek-bones . and the Waidge of the nose are high and the lower jawbone, which- is ordinarily . carved, is short, straight and forming a right angle kith itii..point of insertion. - The htitO is o le indicating a .brain (which is but in instrument of the mind) of great = activity d great oapaoityacoaresporiding With the re ark of Cromwell's- Secretary; wild said that "it was at once a shop and a stoat hciuse." From its being embalmed, such fleah as remaine an it is of the 'consisteiicy of[ hard brown leather. The • eyebrows meet in the middle, and .between them wds • a small , wart, now worn away, cads of those -which Cromwell; When siting - for his portrait, Ordered the painter on no account to omit rem, - senting, as hit duty was not to fatter in &air way, but pint what' he 'saw exactly. In gife his oomplexion was fresh, and of .thq one known as 'salmon- colored. The har, which *as of aa fairish or reddish tine, has mostly been out off, - and the beard is now stained' brown by the ebabalm- •ingifluid, auddrawn ander-the Wain, where, win it was exposed on the _top of West. iiii _ stir Hall, it was tied close to the spedr-head which had been run throughan mounted on it. 'Several teeth _remain and the eyelidsabut the brain was removed duirning : the embaliaing process.—Dub/in Ti s. ' .. , Peculiar Steerage Passengers.- • . T me, 2 p. m. Scene—Caitle- Garden." Ea r E. C. Antoine Pommeret _leading a . hug - beer, followed by seien Onarades eicla Itiaaling a bear. Both bears and men were. steerage _passengers on the steamship Chataau Leoville, from Bordeaux. Cuktom-house officer appeathig tkom -L. acco4te first ruffianaaHold on, you'll have to pato duty onalunie bears. - • • An ine—Ale no got ze naonaie, so you take ze-hears.•• --` - Officer—N9, rail • Don't leave the ores. ittireethere ; they will eat Us up.• Mato/no—Al, oui ; any will not eat lik ze cannibal. Niaanecessatre for frighten; ze animals are perfeotamente ism's. See I put MY hand, in ze *nth.. , • Officer—No; no. Yotacainuatleeve them here ; lwe have .no place fpr -them. Take them 4way from here: ' Tb a eight Frenchmen with their eight beats then' Marched in single file,- into the rotun4a, and after the nante, age, birth- place, destination and occupation had been taken, h y led out of Castle Garden op Broad -ay, towercl - Baxter street. Pedes- too=thus to givethem right of way, and . either. crossed the trowded. thciyoughfare or took refuge -in the deorchLys. Pomment said it was absurd that atiybody should be frightened at the animate, as they were perfectly tame: They` 'ere not to- be used for exhibition, but w4ild be employed: in the West .for ' &Amin email carts, as- they had been trained Maio that work—H. Y. Tribune. • ow Queen Victoria TraVeill Of Queen Victoria's Journey - to• fall; . the Loraloti World sayi • " Thoughe striates - privacy characterized the embark- ation of Her Majesty in the royal yacht 'Viotoria and Athert, yet the Queen showed. that th repent atteinpt on -her life has not in any ay rendered her nervous. When cheered at a publio. railway arming at Portsnicuth Her Majesty rose from • her Seat in the saloon oaraiage and bowed her Acknowl dgments from , both • windows.Since t e 'teeth of tl* Prince Consort the Qu en has positively • refused to be • received With royal -salutes. . The run trona Portsmouth to Cherbourg was most enjblible, the water- being almost as • . , stiltes •ainaillaond. Her Majesty and the Princess. Beatrice promenaded the deck and spoke to both officers- and seamen, the Queen, When in her yacht, showing a die- loi i inclinatiln to •cerempoioas observanCes. II While r Majesty. was. in the pavilion i pretty lit le bird flew on to the qoarter- deck, and after eating a few crutabs, thvintit by the Princess Beatrice and one or two of the officers and members of - the koyal suite, went forward and made: friends* di' some of the orew, • -returning to the -pa lion; where it. was delight by commandlot the Queen, who sent it back io .the yaptto Windsor Castle, proposing to 'keep the bird as a. niethento of: her pleasant Veyage."• . .• • - Oiling the Waves. a The shi Airlie, Of the Dundee Clipper Line, arrayed in the Tay the other day from Calcatta with a load of jute: Captain Foremen reports that On the 28th -February • the ship encountered & terrifie gale; which lasted fouldays; - For an-hoor and. a half •the- veseel ey on her beam- oath'', and in order to sa e the ship the master decided a i on -trying o allay with oil the -violence of the sea, wh ch wag running mountains high: A number of bags. were with oil, and the begs having been perforated, so as•to allow the kiii to escape gradually, were towed for gorty-eight hours to windward. Captain F 'reman reports .the experiment to have, Men eminently successful, the water in he immediatevicinity of :the vessel taco hag "quite smooth." A _big mauntaitiou wave would have beenaeau bearing down on the, ship, and when about two ships' langths or so from- the vessel,. when it cube amongst the oil, at would suddenly fa1. Had it not been for the oil experiment, the captain ie of Opinion that if the-yesset had not altogether foundered, ithewonldheare had her decks cleared and sustained ocnsiderible -damage. . _ 1- - • , , as to :Winiiipeg Wagon . , ••-.- •Epolsed. PAPER. .CITIES, SPECULATION,- BLIZZARDS' .Five hundred persong belonging = to Mill - kook, Peterboroa 'recently leak for . the Northwest. - There .is -a great dearth of sohool teachers in Manitoba, and high .talaries are offered': t� qualified teachers: . . Meier& E. & C. Guandy, of 'Hitnilltoti, are- douhling1the -9apaoity of their ware-. .notilie in Winnipeg. They Are importing& number 9algickmaking naaohines: . Mr. Walter -Buchan, late of Durham, - . recently sold his au* there and started for Manitoba. • Before reachtng Ithere, aora; everahe last the . balance of his reason and had to,b,e detained in an titiyliam at St. Peal. A palliate. latter - from :Etnerion, Man., asp- at a funeral fle few 4:Ws:age, daring the snow blookade; the :corpse was pushed Or drawn oyer the slow fOr nearly two.nailei, to aeach the cemetery, as it Waelnp•oseible for horses to get thianigh the drifts. A Winnipeg report Bays ; Mr.- R. Brown _ sold east -half of seation :25, 'townshiP 11, range 22 west, and south balf of -section 35, township 13, range .23 west, and .northeast quarter of seotion 19, township 11, range 23 west:at65 per acre, cash, to Mr. William* WalkeasOf -Brantford' :Aliso -resold far bar.. Walker east half of section 22, township range 22 west,: for $6. per acre -to Mr. 3. Hutcheson, Woodstock. Also sold lote150 and 751 Pritehard street to Mr, J. 1164,, tot tistOwela tot 8400 each. • -. 'Thirty Men, witli. teanis, have arrived...it- Winnipeg from • the: Woods twenty:eight miles north -of-,Widteinoutli, where they had been cutting sati.logs for Stubbsaiiiill. The cause of their breaking up camiaWas want of previsions.- Fors weelapreviously to their starting forthe oity they had had only flouraroolasses and tea; And for five - days they had -had -neither hay nor Oats for their horses:: The hay which had -been used for the ;penal ledsawas ealdevoured ;' also the realise which had been lying aroundthe yard, when the party left the cetera . The men say that another camp, twelve --- miles north of the plade where . they were Work- ing, Will break up soon, - • Mr. James Gillies, stoimoutter, :late of °pinto, writing &one= Winnipeg, -seys afpenten in -Toaonto will be athinking ey will make - their fortune here if they come _up- and get ,•the wages that I see stated in the Toronto papers. I read_ in on yeaterday that carpenters were -going • ike for $7.. per day, but that' -is- all - et s they have givenup all idema of striking, as thereare too many of them here just now. The fates of wages going:mow are : good carpenters, ; hamtner end ea* -men, 2.5O;8'stonecutters, $3,5a to .04 ; brieklayersa from 63 to 8350. These will up .onae the buildings-_ get started.: Laborers got §2 to -02.50. Board rues froth - 85 to.§7. Sorae_ boarder s have to put- up With a goad deal Of inccinvenietica Two young -fellows I kii-ow have to :sleep Oa e' -stretcher, and they:are the only onesout of . fourteen that are above the floor. aThenat have to do the beet they can in e nom Of about 12 x 12; which has not beenavaept Oat Matte the hoose ' was -built;- The, boom in town lets has burst for the present. The auction rooms are -deserted,- and few -sales are' 'reported. -• . THE PLOT OF RASCALS, Interpreters who Swindled Italian ,Rall• way Laborers: A., FATAL lif0T. , - A despatch from Fort Plains, N.Y., seys : Four hundred Italians' Who have been working here Onthe • West Shore-Rialroad .poiagregeted the: Zeoler Same, where the:contractor is stopping, and conia hienced stoning and aringintothe haulm. • The Grand Army post dispersed the -rioters, but not before they did __ Considerable' deinage to the :Zeoler. House. . None of the inmates were. seriously Mimed. Some of the Italiane were shot and wounded by the inmates. - • • • • - To -day we havethie telegram from the scene : -One 0 -the Italians concerned-i the tiotam-Sataiday Was fatally Wounded. Ten others were hart. • Many officeis:and aarrciwlY egeepettand seaeril were injured. . The trouble is -attributed toR�se- -sod Chase; ioterpteterg, who Were given, money to buy food to; the hungry Italians until the.pey aollswere made out, but -who, it is alleged,- poeketed the . Money, told the. Italians that they would get no 'pay, and them to kill the contractors. Roe and Chase camped. . The.: italiatik threat._ en'ed vengeance onatheni. Arrangements heae been Made to feed the Italians until they are paid: No further troable- is. eared. • - Vennor's PrognOstications. The year 1882, with Its Monday Christ- mas, has already co-mu:mimed badly._ Is• list Of life and propertidestruction nearly .everywhere is anything but-cheera ing. The -outlook for a -healthy:Beson,- after such. a. Season -a -is but _a. forlorn one, whilst., as we regard it, the egticaltiikea" outlook is of. a 'still more fon:aid-Wale . - A :premature spring .ha done ti good thin yet, • but -many a • ba •• One, Rapidly growing vegetation; raider he in-. vigoratiag heat of the spring, sun a 'o y. ous Pietare when seasonable, but , hen thit . an progress ilia period- which -experience teathee us has to he followed by -frosty and - -generally unfavorable weather, the picture, on the e,ontrary, becomes agaO,one: • 1 CAN _BE CURED, , D. L D. MoBlionahr,,63Niagara St.;Buffalb,N Y., -has &positive and wonderaut cure -tor- Bev. De. B venial the BrickPresbyteaian gaatmocgermaweidithooineetst.li.eu tqChiirlioonhd, London, Isor just all' SCROFULOUS DASEASE successfully uLaCelfRthSetzuTUitMe ONcSau- Intl' wthreceisiavirduttt°plekeetsuarnilt treated. --fiend for Oireellir WW2 oarnoulatt farewell gift from his parishi tiers. It •. . . talies the.foirteof ' e• purse Of oJrS6,OOO,1 liiinira,--Mullalf ran We,gto•learn Telegraphy contnbuted bir haeuibers ' of hi a congreg- ia"unlit ' 'Una in g few menthe, end be °Weill tion, • _• of a sitrattion4addiast - Wi •vi -. Valentine'. Bros. Jamie lle, s.--,' . And all - Oints" in ]owe, . Nehreaka,Missourl,Ran- _ sas, New Mexico, Arizona, Mos- tana and Te4i13. The SHORTEST,, -QUICKEST . an 13.EST line to •St. Joseph; AtchiSon, Topeka, Dent-. son, Dallas, Gal- _ Iresten, --Universal- ly conceded to be the best. equipped the`World for all classes of travel: This Route has no superior for Albert Lea, MMneapolis and St. Paul. • Nationally tepated as -10014 the Great Toro ncar Line - . All COIIrkepti0128 made In Union • Depots. TiaroUgh . Tiekets via this Celebrated Line for sale at all Offlcesln the US. and Canada. All -information tabout Rates of Fare, Sleeping Cars, ete..leheerfu I I given bY T. 1 -POTTER. PERCEVAL LOWELL, 3d neePes' t &fe:1Krgert GePosdgg-.ee;0.E.thicaio,ut J. SIMPSON, Agent. 28 Front Street East, Toronto Ont. _ • Trilt• and !you will. Rad tr.aVelilig.-,tv '.1uxurSt„instead of a. dig- . Icoinfort. ALM. We ogee tot sale at a GREAT - BARGAI Ng - 1 WHARIDALE POSTER PRESS,.- _ • OKLA' IN USE A FEW YEARS;: And way adapted -16r painting newapaaers posters in a country office '. .The bectotaiess is 33 x 46 inches. There ara, -three rollers over form, and.fonr distributing rollers -with- Fresi. The Press east $I 200 when Fer particulars address TIIIIIES. PRINTING: CO.. ItA.MILTON. ONT. 1 - NO• RMAN £CTRIC BEL? INSTITUTION ;(giiiTABLISHED. 0371 4 QUERN STREET EAST, TORONTO , _NERVOUS DEBILITY, Rheumatism, Larne BacaaaeuralgicaParalyeis and all Liver and Chest COMplaints, immediately relieved and perm.nently cured - by using these BELTS, BANDS AND INSOLES. •eiretilars and Consultation FREE; A Skin of Beauty is a Joy Forever. DB. T. FELIX GOU1tABlY8 ORIENTAL CREAM OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER Parities as well as Beautifies the 8lin. , _ • Remove Tan, P pies, Frock- • les, o t h- Patclies_and every blem- ish;on beau- ty,and defies- - detection. It l . asetobd the test of thirty • years, and so hariniess we taste it to - ;IP• be sure -the tionpreliara• is pr operly • • made. • A o cept C01111 terfeit of similar name. The \ distinguished Dr. L. A. Sayre said -to a lady of the haut-to is- (a pa . _tient) : As you ladies -will use thent, 1 recom- mend Gourad's cream' as the least -harmful 01 al/ the Skin prmaiwtions." • One bottle will last six :months, using it every day. • Also ,Poudre subtaeremoves superfitious -hair without inj ury tothe skin. - • Huh. M. B. T. GOURAUD, Sole Prop: 48 Bond Se.,• . • For sale by all ,Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers throughbut the U. S.! Canada and En - rope. - 1:„I3eware Of base imitations. ,81,000 Reward for arrest and proof of any one selling the same - • DIACJIVIS:111AGNJETIC lkc114'........-i i fae ftril , fici le cv N Pa 8'41;4 , ' --;-w-f, ":' aaa ••,g‘',. ) TRADX. MARK.- (AF-rtF3. ) . ' • It is .ft ,sure, prOmpl:, and Effectual reined)! for - ,•• Nervousheas. in ATir its stages, Weak Memory Loss of Brain Power, Sexual Prostration, -Nth/ Sweate,,Spermatorrhcea, Seminal Weaknesaahd - _General Loss' of 4Power. - It repair a :Nervone - Waste, BeijuVerrataitbe Jaded Intellect, Stre ngtma ens_ the .Enfeebled -Brain and Restores Sur pristing.-TOne., - and ' Vigor to '-- tlie :Exhausted , Generative organa. % - Thir experience 7 of _thou sandtp- loves it, an Invialialileanetoeay, The Iliadic' -41 is pleasant -to.this: USW; and. .eaelibOX li.\1 containsindent for two,weeke.' medication , and is the c2 eapest and best. •' Full partienlars in . our - pamphlet, whit* desireidmitil Tree to anyaddiess. . -- " Billpiele, . Iniagnette :Medicine _is -sold druggists at 50 per box,- or .12hoxeci for st or will be mailed- ,free of - poatitga'ehi'reeeip t . thetioney,-blaildressibg_. . ..:'. . , : . : • Illitek's nalilleticIfIedicine Co., - . , - - Windaori-Ont., Canada Sold, ._._ _..• - , .p7, -au drinhits everywhere.