A Wonderful Medicine. | dal Beecham's = Pills 7 FOR ALL Bilious and Nervous Disorders, Sick Headache, Constipation, Wind and Pains in Stomach, Impaired Digestion, "Disordered Liver and Female Ailments. PREPARED ONLY BY THE PROPRIETOR, Thomas Beecham, St.Helens, Eng., Sold by all Druggists in Canada and U. S. America. In boxes, 25 cents. We can only by illustra- tion and a word or two of description in our catalogue, let out-of-town buyers know about our magnificent selec- tion of rings. : All the gems arerepresented. All the good styles shown. '"" Ryrie" Rings appeal to those who admire ring beauty, and the large num- ber we sell 'enables us to carry a stock that allows a splendid choice. CATALOGUE SENT UPON APPLICATION. + DIAMOND HALL." Ryrie Bros., Yonge and Adelaide Sts., TORONTO. Every Bottle of CARLINGS ALE is ** Brewery bottling." &# o* Nowhere in Canada is CARLING'S ALE bottled except by employees of the CARLING B. & M. CO,, Limited. That's why we can -- and do -- guarantee every bottle. Sole agent of Kingston, Henderson. SHOE DRESSINGS RE. A . TAt T THINGS [ HAVE = EVER pis NOW READY FOR IMMEDIATE ISSUANCE Sent Free Upon Request. A verv special letter, in which vou must naturally be interested--owing to the tonic which it discusses which is in direct accord ance with its title, which is as follows: 'The Probable Time, the Bull Cliques will Select, tor Disposing of . Their Stocks." - A concise and _matters are so logically and reasonably cused, as make it possible to form pertinent option as to comparatively a definite time which the present manipulators will probably selact, in which to transfer their enormous hoklings of atocks, held speculatively, bv them TO THE PUBLIC Our 'Guide to "'Datly Market Investors.' and Tortora Tasued free--upon request Orders Solicited--All Amounts. HAIGHT & FREESE hed co 53 B'way, N. A « i -Maln Office STOCKS, BONDS, GRAIN, COTTON. Kingste - Ontarle, "Determining t character and financial responsibility of vour broker, is as impor tant as the selection of right stocks." TO COIN COLLECTORS. CABINET OF US. SILVER COINS FOR enla Address at Whig O > thouglrtful letter, in which § Sermon On ¢ Good Manners. "Manners," says Emerson, "are the happy way of doing things." They are the adornment of life and impart beauty and charm to even the com- monest actions. Two men, doing the same thing, may produce upon us the most opposite effects. Lhe one, by reason of his courtesy, may create a sense of pleasure and happiness, while the other, from want of courtesy, may us vexation and pain. Actions, very agreeable, ave wield. hive man, 15 le (se; be cause not in themselves, made by good manners to annoyance. 'The refusal of graciously and pleasantly $ more agreeable than the acceptance of who is not genial and cheer bestowment of his favors. sets of people with whom 1 want a word or two at the outset of my remarks. One regards | manners as nothing, the other regards' them as everything. 'Those who un- dervalue manwers i: Young men often despise manners and sneer at their exhibition. These marks of the true gentleman are to them the sign of an clicminate and cringing disposi tion. And they pride themselves on Lheir--boorishness. . You know these young men. In some vases the boor- ichness is in the nature of the animal: When the Ethiopian changes his skin and the icopard his spots these fel lows will give up their bad manners. They. are incapable of refinement. Do it vou like with them and lecture in floods of remonstrance and indignation it will do no good-- they are inherently worse and you will la- bor in vain to teach them politeness and good manners. But sometimes teas vulgarity is to be accounted for by false ideas. As 1 have hinted good maoners. are regarded by some as sigtis of weakness or effeminacy. What a mistake, young men! Good man nut sacrice manliness. | hey grace and dignity to the charac Peter and Paul were not weak or effeminate > men. | hey declared "the whole counsel "of God" and preached the most unwelcome docs trines in the face of persecution. I'hey took their live® in then haihds as cer- tainly as the bravest soldiers-"of | the king. But they were gentlemen. Their epistles coutain many evidences ot a gracious and courteous spirit. "1 despise senility- 1 would not have you budge one 10ta, young men, in seli-respect as in personal dignity. But this is not involved in the exer ¢ise of a genuine and uniform' polite ness; with respect for ourselves there may be combihed | a considerate and kindly respect lor others--a careful regard for their rights and feelings, manners are not idle, but the fruit of loval nature and of noble mind; (Ten- ; the King'). Be 1 he word and in one given, another, ful in the There are two good what them in ners do add Ler. isons "ldylls of courteous, says the apostle. here in the bible the revised version it has been taken away. But the thing remains--the rule remains and is illustrated again and again in the example of the saints both of the Old and New 'Testaments. Most notably is courtesy ilustrated in Him who bas been called *1he"first true gentlemen that ever lived.' The boor is not an imitator Jesus. There is not in the story of the evangelists the record of one rude or~ui one cold or wounding We cannot conceive our Saviour Indignant only occurs of action word. guilty of even-such faults. tie was with hypocrisy, and keen and searching were his denunciations of sin, but it was with the dignity of of- not the petulance of He was meck and He did not strive nor cry was His heard in the streets. A bruised reed did He not break, nor quench the smoking flax. Holy, hatmless; undefifed, He not-on ly did no sin but acted always with gentleness and grace. Those who overvalue But; while some good manners account them others make too much of them--account them ev: erything. Good manners are exacted above morality. "Sinful ? said the Pumli"s" story, = My son, than "sinful it is vulgar.' Etiquette occupies the highest seat in palaces, while morality has often been relegated to, the lowest room. A breach -of 'the. seventh commandment can be overlooked and, is overlooked, but a breach of good manners has no forgiveness--it -is® the "unpardonable sin in hich lite." Manners are good, but not the chief good. We commend them-- they are beautinil and aseful] but they are not the weigntiest makers of the law. To place them above 'the to place that which is above that Which is pri things ought ye to have done but not to have left the "other undone." I+ desire to treat this sub ject, especially in connection with suc cess incite. No young man who wish os to get on in life should fail to cul tivate good Many, ne doubt. have well with out them, but they have done so with unnecessary labor. They have made difhiculties for themselves and the same qualitications, accompanied by a would fended justice, irritated temper. gentle of heart. nor voice manners. despise nothing; mothér © in it is worse decalogue is secondary mary. "These manners succeded very pleasing manner, far higher refined and have achieved a SUCCeSs. civil behavior success which has While by their met hirst Good manners as a explain many a astonished the world orufiness and rudeness rate abilities have made diticaltics fin themselves and renderad success an im possibility or less than it might have been: others of morg moderate powers haxe pushed on and by the 'grace and sincerity of their manners made an casy triumph. Lord Chestertickl. to whom appeal as a matter: of course in a lecture on this says that the' "art of pleasing" of rising." "What a rare gift of manners," says Bulwer Lyt ton. "'Bette® for a man pursue them than wealth, beanty talent if it fall short of genius- will soon more than supply them all Give a boy address and accomplish ol we subject. is the art ie 1s that 16 Or oven > they - 3 1S passing ments, Eniersor, and vou givé him the mastery of palaces and fo he "goes He has not the trouble of entering owning them ; they solicit him to enter and possess Civility. hugs everything says Lady Mary Wartley Montague and costs nothing Believe young men, ! your refined, ' gentle or coarse, Whe ther vou mn a mn a trade your. prospects will be affected avs tunes where or me, vulgar are not profession or tritles. manners, are by your address and deportment-- they will help. you if agpeeable, they will hinder you if disagreeable. Itas not enbugh to know your busines$ you may know it thordughly - ahd work with the greatest industry. I'he man who gets on" is not always the clever- est or most laborious, but more fre- quently the man who shows a disposi- tion to please. and be pleased--he gets ahead of the man who sulks and frowns and snubs. An old woman who kept a shop used to say that the most profitable article she had, that Which paid her best, was politeness ..1t drew the very children to her better than sweet- ies. It is not surprising - since good manners are so Vital to success in life, that so little is done either'in the home or in school for their culti- vation ? We give our children the best education possible--a complete curritulum at school and perhaps at college and them out in the world -- "certified barbarians." 1 think more attention should be given in school to good manners : they should at least, be rigorously enfore-- ed; in this respect we are far behind England. But parents should begin their = cultivatibn. Good breeding ought to begin at the cradle. The voungest children should be trained in the PY way of doing things' to make themselves pleasing. "This requires the cultivation of affections. Good manners have also been defined as "benevolence in weifles."" Hf a spirit of benevolence is encouragl there can never be much amiss with the manners. Bad man ners have their root in selfishness. A sympathetic and kindly person never infringes, at least seriously, the rules of good behaviour, and the way to cultivate benevolence to practice benevolence --our actions make 'our character. In a recent drama the hero tried to conceal ravages, which vice had made. It was taken for his fall. But he tried to live in harmony with his changed aspect. He was ro longer vicious. An enemy one day to expose him, as he thought, tore off his mask when lo! the face itself had grown beautiful--his character was conformed to his life. As to the particular actions show good breeding it ix not necessary that I should go into details. Let it suffice that I make one brief quota tion : "A well-hbred boy should know not to walk in front of a lady unless where it chances he has to show her the way; to open any door he is near when people have to leave the room; to rise from his seat if any lady who to stand as longs as she stands; to pick up any- thing a girl accidentally gets fall and return it to her; to see what his neighbors need at the table and to pass it if near him. Little things, do vou say ? Are you they should find a place in a sermon ? "They ave little things but these and the other small coin of civility which you may easily learn if you have not al- ready discovered may prove in the commerce of "life far more valuable than minted gold. are the appropriate virtuous character. Sydney Smith said manners are the <hadows of virtues. Well, they ought {0 be--they ought to be the expres- sion of a soul in, harmony with beauty and goodness. The regard men feel for one another--the love they feel should declare itself in "those delicate attentions, those nameless an exqui- cite tendernesses of thought and man- we commonly associate with *the old name of gentleman." And their founda- not merely sen the : which addresses him, surprised orna Manners { Kev. ment of a ner grand when good manners have tion in 'a good heart--are shin-deej but arise out of a cordial good will and manly deference; they w ill not be variable in their manifestation, put constant and uniform--not reserv- ed. 1 mean for particular occasions and persons, but the same always and to everybody. It was said of a great statesmen (Canning) : "He can never be a gentleman for more than three hours at a time." : There is no man lL suppose but will fail occasionally in good manners. 1 have never seen the perfect gentleman. But to bear chagrin silently and to sufier provocation and harm' without losing our -amiability are easiest 10, him whose character is rooted in the faith of = Jesus Christ. Christians would enhance the value -of their ex: anple--the influence they have over the world, if they studied to add to their virtue--grace. And they ought. Is not the Christian the highest style of man? We should not make it appear as if Christianity made less. perfect men, in any respect, than the maxims of the world. The inanners of the Christians should be pleasing al ways and to everybody. The churl- ish. Christian not only makes his goo to be evil spoken of but his Master to be evil spoken of. He hin: ders the gospel. He gives a had 1m pression of religion. In admonishing Christians one says There is far too prevalent among us a rough unfinished conscientiousness: a rugged truthfulness. a bluff and al most rude honesty. Conscientiousness is good; but it need not be rough; truthfulness also. but it need not he rugged; and honesty but it need not he rude. Conscientionsness, Avuthiul honesty are gall essential in a sound mind, but us to be more than winded: He wants us to be minded. "Let tendér all your works," that of courtesy as used inethe scriptures. One of the greatest drawbacks to good manners is that shyness which is more less charac terpstic of "ally the northern or Teutonic natipns. A Scotchman is thought to he stifit ve when he is only shy of these ill qualities, cle God sound loving be Ness, ments wants mercies over i the meaning served or proud he has none but cannot do justice to the goodness of his heart. Beneath' the ungraceful and chilling exterior are concealed those very qualities, perhaps which are wed by the masters of court Iv farms. It is positively "amusing sometimes to watch the exhibition of this na tiohal characteristic. © Two shy men came into a room and immediately they turn their headseaway and - pre tend to be absorbed with pictures on opposite walls: as they enger a rail way carriage and dive the two remotest peeping at each other, now and then over the rims of their 2 ing for into Corners, Scotchman, invariably looks empty carriage, and having made himself comfortable there in wardly hates the man who ventures into his solitude. In dining and rooms. vou have how new comer looks out for a seat most remote from his fellow-men newspapers A LO- on a journey, an teas noticed every THE DAILY 1 \ WHIG, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. It is hot so with Frenchmen. They | sit down where. there is conipany. They are "intensely wocial, "more con versational and demonstrative and freer in their intercourse with = each other in every respect. . Dr. Guthrie said : Ask a person at Rome to show you the road and he will always give you a civil and po- lite answer, but make the same in- quiry at a person in this country and he will say very likely, "Follow your nose and you will come to it." 'This rudeness of the lower classes is "ac- cording to Dr. Guthrie the fault . of the upper classes. The farmers are unmannerly because they are not treat ed by the latter with courtesy. In France ii a gentleman cally at a friend's house, he lifts his hat' and bows politely to the servant who opens the door and calls her ""made- moiselle." An employer will acknowl edge his workman or work-woman on the street with the same courtesy he would do his most intimate fuicnds. And it is in this way that the lower classes have been trained in polite ness. Sir Morell Mackenzie, who at- tended the late Emperor Frederick in his fatal illness, bore this testimony to his courtesy : His medical attend- ants and servants will always cherish the recollection of "his grateful ac- knowledgment of services, which or- dinary patients exact as a right. Dr. Chalmers delighted the poorest in his parish by his courteous salute. I'he love=and admiration which Sydney Smith evoked from all classes has been attributed to the fact that he treated all classes, rich and poor, his ser- vants and his friends, with the same consideration and courtesy. Good manners should not be the monopoly of a class. There is no 1ea- son in the world why the humblest-- artizans as well as artists--should not behave towards each other with court. ly "grace and kindness. There is scarcely a moment in your lives in the home, the workshop, or the: street in which your usefulness might not he materially increased by the reline- ments of courtesy. It is common, says one, to depreciate gentlemanly quali- ties as trifles, but trifles make up the agyrecate of human life. It is not so often the great acts of others, he con- inues, that we treasure up and re- member as the petty incivilities, slight neglects, miscroscopic rudenesses which men are guilty without thought, or from lack of insight or sympathy. There are some rules of courtesy to which | call your attentionyin clos- ing. | have reserved them until now not because 1 regard them of least importance, but of most, and because I wish you--whatever be the fate of what has gone beiore--to carry them away in your memories and hearts. 'Lhey are the rules of that etiquette without which you and 1 will be shut out from the highest society of all-- the society of Heaven---rules whose obedience in all their fulness and breadth, beauty and benelicence, re quire in us a new nature the guidance and help of the Holy Spirit. 'He that would be greacest among vou, let him be your servant." "Bear ye one another's burdens." "As | have wash- ed your feet so wash ye ope another's fert." "Let each esteem the othet better than himself, and in honor pre- fer ye 'one another." "Love thy neigh- bor as thyself." These are no idle formalities. The observance of these rules attests the second birth, and our kinship with the royal family of Heaven. It is some- times said that civility costs nothing; and it is true, if by it is meant a mere external varnish, a thin wash, made up of grimaces and bows. But the civility of the gospel is not a mere skin-deep politeness, a candied peel of courtesy, the indiscriminate fawning of a spaniel, the growl of an unctuous imposture, but a hearty wish to make others happy at our own cost; a manly deference without hypocrisy or obtrusion. True courtesy is sim ply the application of tie Golden Rule to all our social conduct 'or as one so happily defined it. "lt is real kindness, Kindly expressed." "Fs amine vourselves "whether ye be in the faith." Hold up the mirror of God's word. What Pmanner of be ve bear the family likeness H ve are the children of divine blood will flow in your veins, and a divine grace and nobility characterize all your actions. men are ve? God, Pointed Paragraphs. To err is human and to lie about it is more so. Intellectual improvement warp a woman's shape. Even the pessimist happy in his unhappiness. This would be a eloomy old for cats if women could pur. Some music hath charms to hold a man if he is chained to the spot. Speaking of home rule, what's the matter with that of the first baby ? 1 | "Fair and warmer' is the prediction the weather man lays ap for a rainy day. : Girls should never flirt in public un- til after they have a strangle hold on the art. The string tied around a man's fin ger is merely a forget me knot. I# matrimony one and one makes one, but in divorce" one leaves two. Some men don't beaten until long make the discovery. 1i the beauty of the average man's mind isn't more lovely than his face itis entitled to svmpathy. There is no objection to = woman's having a creat command of lanvnage if she knows when not to use it. ¢ 1s to apt is momentarily world from one known they ape after other people Néw Use For Refined Wax. A new and important use for refin wd paralline wax seems to have heen discovered by a prominent resident of Ohio, living near Lancaster, who had two trees badly damaged hy storm, one bwing a maple and the other apple. In cach case a la hy was broken down from the trunk, but till attached to it. The limbs were prop ped up and with straps, very un ~ fastened securely much as- a broken and wax poured into The "surgical might be fastened with splints, then melted refined and over all the cracks. operation" was entirely essfull The paraffine prévenged the escape of the sap, kept out the rain and moisture which would _haxe rotted the trees, prevented the depredations of ins and the. limbs seem thus far, te perfectly re attached to the trees. ee -------- or sued ne All cases of weak lame back, backache, rheidmatism, will find relief Hv wearing one of Carter's Smart Weed and Belladonna Backache Plas ters. Price 25c. Try them. + al powder gave him relief | for vou < /ACINIED) FU REJAN DIT THE ¢"NATURAL WAIST." Narrow Waists Are Going Ont Of Fashion. The men who are interested in wo- man's apparel, may be divided into three classes--those who make money out of it, those who spend money for it, and those who have no financial interests involved but who regard the female raiment with an esthetic or artistic eye. Of course all men of rational mind and artistic sense belong te the latter class, whether they contribute to the wealth of®dressmakers. or not. It is very natural then, thats the proceed- ings of the National Dressmakers' As- sociation, which is now holding a con- vention 'in the Fine Arts building, is invested with wide popular interest, and that the present tendencies -- to- wards the graceful anil simple draping of the natural figure, as revealed by the models displayed, is hailed by masculine humanity with delight. This tendency is plainly disclosed in the evolution of the natural corset, which, of course, brings the natural waist. We are drifting gradually and delightfully toward the Greek models and ideas in woman's apparel. Even the costliest gowns are marvels of simplicity compared to the complex, profusely embellished creations of a few vears ago. The curves of feminine heauty are brought out in graceful relief instead "of being hidden under hideous mountains of tlounces and ruflles. : * The passing of the old-time coat of mail known as a corset was marked by one of the speakers who said: Cranks can't kick about tight lac- any more. Women don't want to tight now because a natural what would have heen called a large waist two years ago--is the pro- per thing. The corsets are cut lower and allow the lungs full play Instead gi instruments of torture like the old; high-iront affairs, they have hvgienic value. One style, for instance, has pronounced. by physicians the ny lace waist heen ideal corset. For the passing of this instrument of torture and the coming of the "'na- tural waist" all mankind 'is truly thankful. It is doubtful if anyone of rational mind ever truly admired tichtly laced, wasp waisted woman. Naturaltessin-manner and. dress has stood for the highest attain always : female comeliness--and it a in wavs will: ment PES Deafness of 12 Years' Standing. Protracted catarrh produces deafness in many cases. Capt. Ben. Connor, of Toronto, Canada, vears, from catarrh failed to relieve. Dr. All treatments Agnew = catarrh in one day, while the will do as For sale hy Kx short It and in a very left him entirely 50 cents. Taylor and BH. Wade H ---- > Smith's. White Liniment 158he most | and a penett ating liniment known, swellings, cure for sprains, inflammation. neuralgia, rheumatism, and lumbago. In bottles, 23c., Wada's drug store. ' Three | applications of Peck"s Corn Qalve will cure' hard or soft corns. 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Canadian 14c gallon American i7¢c * And please note that this American Oil 1s quite the equal of what is generally known by dealers in this district as the best, and there is nothing better outside our specially refined "SUNLIGHT" brand. McKELVEY & BIRCH, 69 and 71 Brock Street. THE 20h CENTURY TRETIIENT, The source of all POW, , cicorers in the Labo- The Fountain of Youth, sua eta: _ The result of 50 years of scientific research. Lost manhood brought back after years of weakness and despair. Nature's Secret restored by combining three of the rarest chemical reagents in the world. This is no experiment. tis proved by its use in the Hospitals of Furore. * Tens of thousands of weak "and hopeless cases cured by 30 days treatment. This is a fact! Prove it yourself by a test. A 5 days treatment with full particulars sent absolutely free: All packages are carefully sealed in a plain wrapper with no mark. 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