The Sentinel, 1883-08-10, Page 311711
ee-
e•
. CAPT. WEBB'S FATE.
eLittIe Doubt He le Dead, but
treatae laulpaOltes' A Oat.
•
THE GREAT SWIMMER'S. CAUEER.
• .
A !Aire ,o1 Draiv,„erv and Seaseela on 18ea
and, ishore..,
• e
A telegrant from Niagara dated last
1Wednesday) night` Rays: The tragedy.of;
yesterday for there io only the .imiallest
possible foundatioe for the hop, that Cap-
tein Webb ie edit volive—ie the all.absokb,
ing topic of conversation here and on the
Atnerican side. to -day. All earls of ways.
by whieh it is thought poeisible the captain
• contd have reached land are suggested, but
all appear to be prorepted by the :strong
hope that the dating sWinimer had lumped
death. Everywhere the queabion is asked
"Has Webb beenfound yet? but nothing
has • yet been neard: Search „ has been
made around thewhlrlpool and. Owe the
river for several milee, but as yet, without
'enemas. Me. Fredertelt Kyle, • the IMO
• captain's agent, returned to the Clifton
House to•day and obtained Webb'S _watch,
. wbioh had been deposited with the Clerk by
• Webb juet befeire going' but to his death.
Kyle went down' to Lewiston last ' night
immediately after Webb's loss. He
hired a steam ferry boat and with
:several parties went up the river several
miles searehiug for the body, but. without
success.. About. 9 o'clockhe returned to
the Qlitton House here and shortly after,
, wards weut to Buffalo. He letdrned here
.to -day, and during 'several hours Made a
aesoroh along the bankssurround-
ing the whirlpool. He appears mnoh :opt
down at the death ot the captain. A
rumor. was idiom that Webb had Oben seen
by -Sonde :students _Passing the Roman
Catholic ,College of Our Litcly2of Angelis,
,severiel Milea down the river, but this is
not the oaae. Another ruixior was that he
, had been seen at the Frontier House,
• Lewiston, but this is also untrue, Some
• • people yet hold to the belief • that he is in
hiding soMewhere until the new Of his
death gets abread, when he Will show.hime
eelf. They *Mail offer to bet • money that
he will yet turn up, but no .wagers have yet
been reported. ' A theory is that he -left
• the water at. Foster's Fiats, A few Miles`
down the riveri but inquirY showed that he
did not -leave the .water there. • .
The etatemit
eet of a boy, Who ses•he site
e:±the captain juet at the bend turning from
•• the whirlpool into tbe riv# where it curvet'
• to the •eastward, appears to be the only
faot which keeps alive the belief that he
-safely passed . the Moat .dangerous point.
But other's who viete (dem by did not.. see
ithe Man .at this point. ., There is no. doubt.,
he was seen near the shore where the water
• 'begins to sweep around: One man thought
. the captain was going to make the land, at
'
this pointeanel he started through the trees
- to reach hioe'for the purpose Of having a
conversation with the captain 'on comnig
out of the Water. .When --he reached • thia.
spot,' however, the captain was nowhere to
.e.he seen, nor did he appear afterwards:
When in the 'small boat with MoOloy,
who rowed hum to the point at which he
. 'went into thewater; the Captain talked
*freely, ••• He said in answer .to :the boat-
man's.queations that he Made . $25,000 out
of his swim' MOAB the English Channel,
and that $15.,000 of it was gone.i "Well,"
•said.MoCloy; • "" if I was you I would g�
ashoreandkeep the rest." • But the cap.
teen would not be pursuaded to :go, back,
and when the boatman had gone as•far. as
..he dared i Webb !stood tip in the boat and
.went into the 'Water.
The Asia Or the itlist.
. •
The Maid of the Mist was theappre-
... peiatenanie of a email esteamer Which in
-
1854 used to ply.bettieeri a point filet alicoie
the Railway Suspension Bridge and the loot
of the ;Falis. She turned out an unprofit,
eoulatieureeatowisitelOw4asilak.
Ir''71str`oilttlx-r-r1=4-4-7---,I410,74t=i11441VaraliiWTAiiciffitiroVitaCk
• • ebe delivered- at theemouthelif " therNiftgarit
• River, necessitating navigatien through the
tumultuous rapids and past -the -Whirlpool.
A daring river oraftsman;Joel R. Robinson,
undertook tbe hazardous: task of piloting
. , the boat down the river, and two men
named. McIntyre and Jones assisted him.
An immense concourse of .4w:eaters
• -Assembled t� Witness the commenceerientOf
• the voyage, Which was deecribed by an eye-
witness thus: With .a shriek ,trout her
whistle and a. white puff from hefescape.
•. pipe, the boat ran up the eddy a Elbert dis-
tance,. then swung Found to the snight,
• Cleared the smoothwater, and shot like an
wrote into the rapid under the bridge.
'Shetook the outside curved the rapid, and
when a third of the .way down it a jet of
'water struck against her rudder; a column
?dashed up under herstarboard tilde, keeled
her over, parried' seiety her, smoke stack,
,. Started her over, on that side, threW
Bobin-
son flatean,his back, ikoa thtwit-Mobityre
• spinet her starboard wheel -house with
eueli force as to break it through. Every
,eye was fixed, every ' tongue was Wait
• and everylookerem breathed freer as she
emerged from the • feartul baptionxi, shook
• her wounded sides'slid into thevehirlpooli
and for moment rode .again on an even
keel. Robinson 'rose at Once, Seized the
. helm, set her,to theright of the large spot
• , ie the pool,and. then turned her directly
througti the neok of it. Thenee, after• .
receiving another drenching from its acimb-
•. ing WaveS; she dashed on without further
. aecidiet to the quiet botiore of the river
;7-helow Igewistoni"--2--Thus-warraccomplistied'
,
the most remarkable 'andperiloes voyage
. ever made:
• , Captain Webles Career.
• ' .
Captain • Webb belonged to an old, and
, highiy respeetedi Selopiaai family. He was
one of twelvo. children and Was born in
Dawley, in, Shropshire, in the. year 1838.
g° t4politi his childhood days on the banks
of tile Severn, Where be learned to slim,
and there, near the great-ironbridge, he
saved a younger member of hia fathil3r,
•
from deoweing. Thin was his first icinatai
feet; He was " bore with eo love for the
'Water, and prevailed upon his friends to
let • him go to sea. At a very early age he
donned the blue -frock afid blanket trouser')
of a iavat approntice on.boatd the teitine
ing ship ebtiWa Here he learned to hand,
reef. and steer, rid wellitrained in all
that goes to make a thorthigh nett -
'0,n • board this Vafitiel lib be
name
famot.vt by ettvihe the life of a ,alidprasoto
who fell overboard' in the, Wow.. • After
leaving the .0on.Way0aptain, Webh ".[esrve.4
hie tinier IA the ecogogoyof the, Rathboue-
Brothers; of 1,dverpoolo„ .ae, went in.Uter
:ally' at the hawse- holes and owns out at
:theoabin windOws, He we40. ,ehjet ,ntacer,
. of the, Hengist and other .0eagoing ships.
Oss April 23rd, 1872; while returning, in t
Itemsia, of the, Cunard Lice, from NOW
icnr4 to .tiverpooi, whither he was .cone
piled to workhieemsagecowingtotlisaster
and itnaonotal difficultiee, a seaman on one
:of the lower yardarms fejl into the Sea,
which was running mountains high. The
vessel was going at a great rate'
of epeed, and there was a gale
of wind. • blowing. Notwithstanding
these disadvantages Captain Webb
jumped On the rail and lee -ped into the sea
teethe drowning man's rescue. He did•not
find the sailor;but was not taken from the'
water for more that half an hour, owing to
the state of the weether: ]or this brave
attempt the passengers presented him with
£100, and the Liverpool Humane 'Society
the silver Medal of the BoYal IELOolone
Soeiety. In •1875, Captain Webb • swam
heroes the English Channel from Dover to
Caleis, in twenty-one hours and shalt, after
aterritio battle With the Wind and tide.
For this he received a greatovation'
from the citizens of hie • batty° town.
Later on he tried to swim thirty-six con-
eeoutive hoursem. the Thames, butowing to
the filthy condition of the water was unable
teremain in longer than ten. Even then
he wail nearly poisoned.. He sWitro for sx
consecutive days with several famous
swimmers' shortly afterward, no one to stay
in the water longer than fourteen hiiiirs
each day, And beat the second man easily
by twelve miles. .-Captain Webb said that
he•swarn fourteen hours each of: the first
two days, but did not find it neoeesary to do,
so afterward, • • .
Captain' Webb first visited Ole continent
jilly„ 1870„ and on August 13th, he swam
from Sandy Hook to Manhattan Beech, and
on August 23rd he wasdefeated.by Oeeptain:
Hoyt= at Newport, Boyton swimming in
his drat's •and using paddles - and giving
Webb five miles start in tveenty-five; 4
second trial was arraeged for September
5th for $4,000, but the declined to
give a decision and the match was
subsequently declared off. He , shortly
afterward left for England, but re-
turned in June, 1882, when hewon several
matches, defeating ainongat others Ge U.
Wade and Thonias Riley. On October 14th
of that year he performed the wonderful
feat of remaining in the Water 128* hours
in a week in Bostonethe taiikbeing aoconte
plised in a tank in Agrioultural Ilan. Webb
went baok,to England immediately after-
ward, but once more returned .about two
menthe age. He announced hie determine -
Win to attempt the swimming of tbe.
Niagara, raPids,and prepared himself for
it, by a 'iodise of training at Nantasket
Beaesh, where he could obtain plenty of
practice. amid the breakers.
•
• .
.TIac Pinee oi loofah.. •
; • The Whirlpool is a Scene- of extraordi-
nary beauty and attraction. . As the river
appreachesthis plicsee ite ranid•deecent,
and the ' narrowness of its curved and
rooky bed, force the - steam, which:. here
'rune at the rite Of 27 miles an hour, into
the piledeip ridge . 'of water, from Whieh
liquid jets and 'acmes, ,often rising. to. the
height of twenty feet,'are thrown into the
• At the pool the . river makes an
abrupt • turnto, the right, 'While. the
Strength and • 'delete:is of .' its.ourrent, as it
sweeps round. the cliff on the „American
Ode, produces to strong e.: reation
as • to. Press part . of the stream
into a 'recipes or .basin on the Canadian
shore, the struggling andcounter-working
ouirente, thins forming the great vOrtek, of
he whirlpool. But it is a. hidden vortex;
and the oontrait between this lonely little
lekelet, calm and'smooth as a niirror, ex-
cept for a few- swirls of , foam at its outer
edge* an it lies in the embrace of its' encir-
cling and 'rich -Wooded Cliff's; and the 'indents
whiteetosidrig rapids from which it seems
so mireculonely to have (Mowed, adds .the
=charm 4.,,,,itturprist-antl,,myater
gyrating oircles'etile, and 'epread and .van-
ish, and reappear again, signs, of the
Lmynterioutecureentsebeneathee-Everything
whielt cotheit within the reaeh of these
resistless (*fret:its is °alight and dragged
into the vortex below. • 'Here' bedewed
animals that have ,gone over the Fella re -
44414 and'oirole around for deo or weeks
before they are rectoiered from the poo1,.
after their weird fiance of death. From the
whirlpool to . Queenston is .seVen. miles Of
rolling turbulent water: •
London eabiegrein.says Capt.Weblis
deatill'in the unfortunate attempt, to swim
the Niagara Whirlpool has created much
regret in this city; where . he was well
known. It has also caused 'much eirete-
ment at Trowbridge, in Shropshitil, where
his family reside, and Where he .has two,.
brothers,' one a physician and the other a
fanner. To the farmer Capt. Webb said
before his .departure that he intended, to do
a" big thing" in America, 'where.he found
MODS enthusiasm about e.,thletio matters
than .at home. Hit English relations*,
•knowing nisrecklees daring; attempted to,
dissuade him, fearing some digester,
althotighhe did not inform' them whet tea
he intendedto • attempt.. His ' earliest
swimming feat to' attratit attention was the
.eaving,of the life of One ot his brotliere.
The Vim says, Concerning the death ,of
Copt: Webb: "It •iseimpossible not to
admire. Webb'e daring, .but the wasting of a.
valuable life is to be regretted,"
The :News blames the death upon the
mon who temptedhitn to the feet._and
tiPen the IAithoritiee. Who permitted the
attempt, saying that he saerificed his life
for an American holiday,
Freaph gray is again epopular color in
Paris. • ,,
1, .
A little boy, when asked if bisfatherhad
a good mule, mournfully replied, "One end
• him is good." ee.„,,
",Chalmerswes 001181dittea the Most power-
ful preacher of hie time. His equal had
not been seen in Great Britain for a hun-
dred years. Yet, it is said, he Was any-
thing but •dignified, was awkward, had a
bad voiee and his secant was of the worst
desoription. Ile, said ()myth y when he
meant ,•4 opening," and he read out the tett
of eta of his grandest eermoos, " He that is
fulthy, tot him be futthy • How
strange, if true, that he should have coln-
mended the reverence, 'arid applause of the
World • •
I •
WIBIt'S 11113VOVION.
_
Stow PhliPlios 'Raised iflehbv i.'Save
the
The following, illustrating the energy
and devotion of Mrs. Phipps„ wife of Major
PiliPPe, is from the Philadelphia Record of
Tuesday: Attorney-at.law Alfred. Moore,
one of the present gas truStees•paugurated
legal 'proceedings yesterday to foreolose
mortgagee for $4!200,held by him against
property of the imprisoned ex-A.1=1812one°
Superintendent, Ellis P. Phipps; And the
latter's wife, Clara WePhipps. The lien hi
dated ;am 5th, 1802, and covers three
houses which are owned by Mie. Phipps
herself. A writ of fieri 'facial; was issued
but of Commbn Plette Court No. 1, and is
lathe nature of a notice that if interest
now overdue is not promptly paid.the real
estate will be meld out. From the,fiist; since ,
her husband's troubles began, Mrs. Filippa
has beeusaoridoing everything of, her own,
including even her Jewels, .to shield
him from ruin. She is now penniless, And
it almost certain that no effort will be
made to save • the mortgaged property:
When'the exposure Of Major Phipps was.
imminent his wife wasstriving with •alr
her power /to MOO the ottleenite. She
called on Mr. Metre, who had known her
for Years, and *Ad him she MUM 'haie,
34,000 at onoe. He was willing to lean the
money if good security were given. he
said she could not spend a recipient upon
any discussion about the conditions, „and
offered the three propertieS in question.
They were accepted,. the mortgage was
executed, and thedevotedwife received
the coveted Cash. Had Phipps' expoeure
not taken place there would have been no
necessity for the foreclosure, for the pro-
perties are in good condition and eould
have been easily disposed of at private sale.
As it is, few persona would care to take
them now with the judgmente standing
against the convieted ex -superintendent,
and it would be difficult to get any one to
take title from' the wife alone.
•
*centric oniciaes.
Minnie Mitohell of Shreveport La com-
mitted suicide) on the day in which ,her
lover was, killed on the railroad. '
, • "1 ". have Already ,outlived 'my allotted
tirne said Mrs. Mary Bach, bf 'Wheeling,
W. Vae and then she killed herself. She
was 87 years bld.
After losing a suit, and; being, roundly
abused for it by his client, Col. J. 3: Pickett,
of Gatesville;•aex., took twenty-two grains
of • morphine. :
' Grief for his first Wife.cansed Samuel T.
Magruder, of ---,.Dainestown;Md., tocubhis
throat, .although.7 he had been married
about one year to an 'estimable' lady. .
Mrse H. 'V. Jones, a Philadelebia bride of
but two month's, , took laudanum .because
her husbandforbade her taking . money
from the mob drawer ,of his store.
e-iirs. 'Kincaid, of Rutland, O.,' was enter-
taining a merry- company of Mende in
her parlors'. Suddenly be excused her,
self, went out, and drowned herself in the
cistern.,• • • , • ' • .
_• .o • -
Jennie Roberts, of Meadville, Pa., could
not get_ permission from her pareinte to
attend a dance upon which she had get her
heart. She reeented, their refile4 by
drowning herself hi the mill pond.t
After living 73 years, Mrs. Eliza Conk,
of West Mexico, Mo., widow, thought she
was too old to be useful in the world. She
drove a large pair of blunt soiseors into the
top of her bead with a heavy iron bolt,
When ,Mrs." Witty, a couein of Frank
and Jesse' James, found she had married
her husband under a'false name she com-
pelled him at the point of a pistol to marry
her again under his real mune of Singleton:
When Singleton was shot by "Canada
Bill" she was surprised to have another
womancome to hie bedside and •claini him
as his wife. She drove her out at the'
pistol's point. Singleton died, and •his
devoted wife took morphine: • 17'
Forgery of DOmattilonpfoses.
'Att:Ottositobatico...,:mnoT4E11
. .
Noi,''',A111.1W4till;=;;Zikii4,767,04,Potcattcrib,
is investigating an -extensive forgery of
minion notes of large denothination., Two
detectivee,onafrom_Chioagb-and-another-
Irom'Toronto, have been in the oityseveral
days, but they are silent about the matter.
It . is said that . Chicago and Montreal
eiharpers 'executed the 'week in •Montreal,,
Where the Plates were made; And „that An
Ottawa woman had something to do with
the ease.; ' • • ' ' • ,
. • •
mamma's Disease, Diabetes, Kidney; Liver
or Orintsry iiiseasele
Have no fear of any of these. 016e/twit you use
Hop Bitters, as they will, prevent and Cure the
worst' cases, even when- you havebeen made
worse by some great iniffecl UP pretended cum.
r
Hale county, Alabama, has a colored
dwarf, agirl about 20 years old,,who iadnly
8/feet 8 inolies.high. • t'
•
•
-Flies and Baas.
roaches, ants, bed -bags; rats, Mick
gophers, chipmunks, cleared out by "Rough ;on
Rats." Mo. ..
, ,
lack lace fichus, 'Urea sip, are nitioh
. . . •
I Area (lure is super -excellent. is fast
curing 5y daughter's ring -worm, which , had
spread all over her body." Airs. E. L. D. Atterriani,
blue Kill, Mass. Druggists keep it. $1 per
package. .
• . Water-repellent Bilk ilia novelty .among
ilk fabrics.
• ot Man. •
NeKtrAnt.-Weisitness,.,--Dysp(spisier-;-Inspoten.
--Sexual Debility,. cured by "Wells" Flealtit.
newer."' $I. ;
India silks of prismatic colors, a sort Of
rainbow, effect, ace employed by Kentucky
bridesmaide for dresseeel
• • •
Feathers, s.ibbons, Velvet clin till be colored
to match that new hat by using „the Diamond
DYets. 10.tents tot any color. •
A•
n effort is being 'Made . to bring fete')
fashion'aglioin thehordercid lace Veils worn
tenyear's or more ago.
Wctl 4Ont Ejerile."
Ask for Wells' "Rough on °grime' Pee. Quick'.'
coinplett, pormanent Cure, -Corot warts
bunions, • • '
,
Mlle& and Hvetweti in Selma ailhkutel.
A Cievellodo 0' telegram says: Charles
Smlith, of Chficap, atald /WanEt. 4iNtheil2o
of °Edon, two champion biltcliere, are
advertised to kill and dress two large
bullboke here to -da -
Or 61,000 a side and
the championship of the United' States.
Over four thousand people .went to Rooky
River this afternoon to wituesa the match.
Mitchell failed to show up, having out off
ewo of his fingers, and big Money was
fbrfeitert Smith; the Chicago -
champion
killed and dressed a Mille& weighing 1,00
pounds in severiminutes and four seconds.
It was pronounced Oneof the best pieces of
work on record. -
47' A. First -Class
This Is, and must ()Continue to be, the exclama-
tion of every one who has used PUTNAM'S PAIN-
LESS* EXTRACTOR, for it is, without excep-
tion, the only remedy in the market that will
remove corns without rain. All we ask for
the Corn Extractor is a,fair , trial, for it will give
to you What it has already given to thousands of
others suffering from porno, unbounded **thirsts-.
tion. Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor its gold
everywhere. Beware of cheap counterfeit.. Pol-
son ,,St Ob., Kingston, proprietors.
• Rev..Dr. Angus, of London, thinks ihe
Protestant Church, with proper efforts,
'might have the- gospel preaobed to "every
creature within ten years. He says:
"'Under the least , favorable condition') we
might need 50,000 preachers." • ,
. .
A state of siege has been impaled on
Niihne.Novgerod during the great fair.
General Debility and 'Ildrer Complaint.
R. V. Pierce, M.D., Buffalo,. N.Y.-Dear ' Sir -
My wife has been taking your "Golden Medical
Discovery "and "Pellets "tor her liver and gen-
eral debility, and has found them to be good
medicines, and would recommend them to all
sufferers from Liver Complaint, Sour Stomach
and General Debility. Yours fraternally,
N.E. Pastor M. N. Church, Bleat, 111.
• ,
, I try to make my enmitieseransient, and
my friendship immortal.—Oicero.
111131MINDDEN AND 'EnuiNDO.
W. E. Roost% of Emporia; Kansas, says that
his wife had been sick nearly seven years; and
forth() last four : Months bed -ridden, She has
been treated by a number of physicians and Only
grew Worse. Her attention . was called to Dr.
Pierced "Golden medical Discovery"' and
"Favorite Prescription," which she commenced
using. In one week she could sit up, and in three
wesks. Wald walk.abeirt. By &twists.
Those peoplein whom heart and under-
standing balauce each other develop late.
,
FTI
Hk-POTENTIAL,'ENENGY• OF
the nervous system exists in the,. brain and
other -nerve gangtia in the- forM of a Pont/Ilex
body, known as lecithin, derived from the ratty
matter, nitrogen . and phosphates in our food.
In all forms of nervous debility prostration Of
the vital forcetresults from a failure of supply,
of this reserve force of the nerve centres, owing
to indigestion and Mal -assimilation. WHEEL-
ER'S PROSPH4TES 'AND CALISAYA will
make up the deficiency, and no imitation nor
substitute should be used in its place.
To be content with little is diftlatilt ; to
be content with innoh,fmposiiihlei .
,
Young, middle-agedor old men, suffmingfiem
nervous debility or kindred affections, should
address, with.- two stan_lps, for 'large treatise,
WORLD'S DISPENSARY • MEDICAL AsSOCIATION,'
Buffalo, N. y. .
An earthquake was 'felt at Athens on
Wednesday. • ' '
• "Dr. Benson's COkny and Chamomile Pills, are
worth their weight in gold in, nervone and sick
headache."Dr, H. H. Schjichter, of Baltimore.'
;The aotint Of Perseitie;ex-Admiral of th
Italiatenavy, is dead, .
.The worst cases of weakness, exhaustion, im-
potency, and all diseases and weakness of the
generative' organs can be cured by ',Magnetic
Medicine. •
August moon fulls on the 181h, at
8.10 O'clook. • ' •
—Tho out -port of Port Credit, 'Ontario,
tinder the port of Oakville, is aboliChed. '
• *,,,* "it is agreat art to do •theiright thing at.
thscright time." Tho person subject to derange -
Went of the kidneys. or liver has a protective
& 06100,04
4"34117M -41111a*
Attlitalfead4itrtewligeor vittae.
,whole system of all bad humors.
---T-heecenstieref-Egyp;WOM. est' year by
Sir Auckland Colvin and Just opinpleted;
Eshowe the population Of :the country to be
6,798,230, of ' whom '3,393,918. Are males.
Cairo has A population of 368,108; Alexan-
dria,
.inoludieg its suburbi, 208,775;'* kart
Said,16,560; Suez, 10,913 ;.Ta,ntah, 33,725;
Mansurali,. 26,784 tZegaZig,719,046 ; Rosetta,
16;671: • '
, •
he'
Wall baskets are made in novel Sh'epes ;
the oblong ferm is especially fashionable.
• Lydia Pl. l'inIthani'd Vegetable Conipalin'd is
positiVe Cure for all those -weaknesses so com-
mon to our hest female poPulatioil, 1,
* 0 • 1,
W) St47AN
- LADIES' COLLEGE,
• ligninlitton,Ontarltr,
And all complaints Of a Rheumatic name.
diargiretralf fliessins tertiCasselynt
R.ALGIA, SCIATICA, 1WINATigr14.-Antit
complaints ofRheumatic =tun%
• ITAS A SURE CURE
•
/ors= WI.. PG. Venison, nannInelitrer and
• Wholesale Dealer in Sisenits. Costiee.
dowry and gmapieatt, cannon street west,
lianialltots. •
3.N. SUTHERLAND. 311,1211EXY 151, 18.
.88 e
Dada Bras -Having purchased four bottlee of •
Rheumatine, it gives me much pleasure to Inform
you that it has been of peat benefit to my wl1'
who has been a sufferer Scorn rhetunatlem faXthe
past eight years. As to myself, it has made
my general health much better.
Yours truly,
, Z. JPATTISO*9
0.1111••••.,
• ,
Ni:OLD BYAIiL .DRUGGISTS4 '-
The: Menmatine Wanufaetarint. Co.
••,-;.• ST CA.THARINES, ONT. • '
(4W0 WAPIer a; Co.,. Wholesale Agouti,
• '• • ,ummotow4
, .
De 0 iwito, ii.3. Sa.
.BEIORE — AFT
'Electric ilteliancee are sent on 30 Nye' TrIale
TO .MEN ONLYglY.OUNO OR OLD;
-Tinto are Mattering from Nsrevous Istamur.
• yy Lost Vrmarr, LAci OJ Mom Pones An)
WAsrisoWEASEMESSES, gulden those diseases
of a rimer:An NATons restdting from Anuses end
Orunn Muses: Speedy relief paid complete redo.
ration of NEALra,trloon and MANHOOD GMERANTEM
The grandut discovery of the Nineteenth Century.
SndatonsefOrIliuStFatCdPamPbiOtfrO�. Address
VOLTA10.811.1* CO IWARSHALt;.611011.
will re -open on September, lst, .1883. The first
Ladies' College in the-Dominiort.- Has just closed'
most Propperous year and now offers greater
ad•vantagewthan ever. . Faculty, Sy° Professors
and eleven redy Teachers. Music Wild, Art
specialties. For catalogues address the Principal
A. BURNS' D.D., LL.D.
$5 to $20 ter dart bwhe Samples wortb
afree Wasson &Son Portland Mns
KIDN EY -WORT
• 18 A SURE: CURE
fOr all diseases of the ICidneyi and
• _Iirgi,"11 LIVER
..It nas specido action tkle most Important
organ, enablinjr itiditysen
faklatiin, itimulaing thehealtby secretion of
the :Bile, and by keeping the bowels nt free
conditio*. etemtbig.ita regular diaohatge.
•
M
a I ri If You are fainting 121.63n
' • was. malaria, litre the chills,
are bilious; dyspeptic, or constipated,V.idner,
Wert will surely relieve andqui011.9 cure.
Xn the ,Spring to deans° the SyStern, OVery•
one. Should take a thorough course,ef it,
4.1, SOLD BY DRUCtlISTS. Price $1.
ORT
oN'T aivt YOUR.. ..A.)31E8
• iujorioui triediCitiC When they stiffer frOM
the eitect of gettiog tooth. Why not ode dead
• '
. .
HUMAN'S • ELECTRIC TEETHING • .NECKLACES
• i•-.• .vollitth
QlLf.fil&V 0,10011111f Iran alum)
° without injUriqg it in the least., •
Ask ionk dittggiat forC
NorOS.man'a. rake nobtho
rtico 43
THE
COOKS
BEST
• • ,
SOLD BY ALL GRQ,C E.RS.
" • " WE E
0, 41
ooTat
MANDRAKE
/IT sik.
" THEONLY
VEOETABLE
CURE
FOR
" rrIZIESX.MPTSZAth.st
Lois of Appetite,
Indigestion, Sour Stomach,
Habitual Costiveness,
Sick Headache and Biliousnest.
,Prke, VIS,,peificitile.' Sold by all Druggists.
RUPTUR
CAN BB CUBED. IN SIX llIONTHS
• in USEOF
1101tilirS ELGOTROARATITR.: 'TRW', •
Warranted to bold (04 be einntertkb
0 3)01
4 qtrigN 'ST 'HOS Tonoilt0.
WOODSTOCK,COLL
WO 9111-1*0 t/BC, ONTAARTO.
•
• INEtEEN nOEBOSORS AND
tiiettcherS, 'Etidowineut thtal eXpencell.•
!
Om $15014 t20 per annutno In every respects',"
rat -class •school. (lateral and conitoont
vetsight.
•• Conree..
•• IC tetelieso Ceirege,
• Ole Conimerctest College.
kreparatory Here reciting.
• Per catalogue containing fell ,Information
&Areas
BEV. N. VeOtivgatott, 13. A. Prinoipeoi. ,
ekk week su,yout own'Wpmretorts
ortuu Ont,lt tree, U. notztotatt 00., Pottland,K0
M
„.