I! you will an. dOWu and wait. yung man, 3t lust one-hail ov the good things 0v lite W!“ at sum time eddy around near yu, while the more yu chase them the more they will Junk into a run. A -â€"Kato Kellogg. -.v-u .u-v â€" -_â€". All ov netur'e works are a. part of a. per- fekshnn ov a plan. She makes no mis- tekes, creates no vacancy. and guesses at nothing. Ideu us what wins ; but if a. man hen't got but one he is very apt to run that one into the ground. and take himself along with it. Leflter proves nothing. Wise men luff, ud ideats grin all the time. Cunning is swesk imitsehun of wisdom, end iz liable at enny time to merge into fraud. . Happiness has no abiding place, but often is very near at hand, like the old woman’s spectacles. After hunting for them hi nnd lo, she found them at last safe on her nose. I I _L -II u'l um. Gravity iz bekuming to a phool at all times. but only to a. wize men on state ooksshions. Verry menny seek knowledge. not so muteh for the truth sz for the speeulsshun thsr iz in it. Heroizm iz simple. and yet it iz rare. Every one who duz the best they ken iz a hero. Bnty is a dangerous gift. The vanity it inspires. and the base flattery it gets for its possessors are not to be envied. Charity makes no mistakes that she ken be charged with. Good breeding iz the only thing that ken make a_ ph_ool endursble. I LL‘L a.“ Lannnï¬ â€œluv (- ruv ____________ Servitude iz so unnatural that an honest ‘ servant iz the rarest ov all things. If a man haz got the right kind of reli- gion he ken pick up 8. Breed enny-where that will ï¬t it. Indolence iz a quiet malady, but it haz eat up more foundaehune and tipt over more superstructure than wild ambiehun ever haz. __ - .. ,,,r_|___ A“: 0V6: uw. Abstinence should be the exoepshun, and temperance the rule. There iz a. great art in knowing how to give without creating an obligation. As selï¬sh and ill-bred as the mess of men-kind are. I prefer to live with them rather thango into solitude and try to live Qith myself: Gratitude is a word that you will ï¬nd in dietionarye. but you will not ï¬nd much of it anywhere else. The flower most recently taken into decorative favor in the pumpkin blossom. whose bold yellow proves even more effec- tive than the sunflower, as it can be used in larger single masses. and it also has the aid of the wayward vine. adapting it to uses {or which the sunflower is impossible. I,3L~ __......‘..I An 1m tbogin.“'l‘heroullud" ('1‘ o b that is uotwvory now). Or um o buyn nil think u good : " 11 you love me u 1 love you." ï¬atâ€"mm- to me a valonuno II ulcer whuu ,uu do not a! The ma old Hnugl um ova one Keep. nymg. m the we 0! wuy. A9511 ukod June, the 991.: night A __.x.- .Iu‘nl IUK "ulvu qu nun..- n -- _ Swallows in black and wilte enamel on silver are the latest fancy for securing bonnet strings i_n_ Parls. WIN-luv nus-nan u.- 4...-.." A new way of framing smaller mirrors is ina square frame of gilded wood. The glass. an oblong placed horizontally, ï¬lls up only a little more than half of the interior, a smaller band of gilded oak with abeading inclosing this. The rest of the space is ï¬lled with a band of red plush on which are painted yellow daffodils. The ugly fashion of doing up the throat as it it were sore. with bands of jewels and velvet- above. is set bypthe Princess of Wales, whose neck is swanlike. Afanoiful gift conferred recently upon the young American prima donna, Mlle.Van Zandt. by Baroness Willy de Rothschild. in acknowledgment of her beautiful rendering of the baroness‘ song “ Legéres Hirondellss." was a half dozen diamond swallows intended to be worn as ornaments for the bodice, 1â€. _n-.... a Aull A lulu; c-uv, ‘uv a..." _,'_,, Whn wu-up poupie wriw shout. She mm d not uulwel‘ mo 5! But hushed nil i but“ to pout. Thu flopped her, [or she aw I want The question Juui she will noi mm). W!) â€"iove." aw mid, “and Ihinin eyes, A duh-:1: hairâ€"jun: whsi they 1) one." It ccn’t hard. it tint in .11. So I'll begin by saying thin: “To my dequy beautiful . Lg-â€" ‘Vu‘l u...â€" ._‘. ,,,,, 1 send a vnleudue .ud kiss. The vnlenune. because she has The ‘0V01i85t hair and gentlest eye: Th_o_ kiu. beau»? I love her mo A n. A‘n- nI-‘n- . Luv-lac. HM UllIvIvâ€"v' 7, Thnn nny Oue beneath the skies . Because she is (he kindest Tho sweeten lady met known ; And every year 1' 11 say the nine. The very name. to her alone!" l‘here! Nov! if a ï¬nished. Who will do? I AI. _n Clan.“ All JUUWI A‘uw u I: unuouw. I've thought of one and th'éEâ€"ah'éther. Who is there like it. ‘2 Why. of course. I'll send it right away to Mother! [VI vuu u-w-â€"_. Says a writer in the Art Amateur: “ There is me excuse for a woman not making agicture of herself in our artistic days. if s 0 can afford it." The effort, however. may get her husband into difli- culties and herself on the stage, as it did Mrs. Laugtry. A Titian or a Veronese gown is not only expensive because of its rich materials and the accessories required of real laces and ï¬ne jewels, but because, too, of the room furnishings absolutely necessary for a. suitable background for the picturesque costume. Everybody that goes to Winnipeg does not. it appears, make e rs id fortune. We know of one young man w 10 recently went into an extensive business there after hav- ing borrowed 820 from a friend in this city to help to [my his way out. According to agreement. he was drown upon for the amount. but last week the draft came back dishonored. The same gentlemen wrote a few weeks ago to a. sporting man here to get him it horse that could beat 2.30. Some bright youths have emigrated to Manitoba. -â€"()umm Free Press. Early in March Queen Victoria will pay an unofï¬cial visit to the Continent. She will journey to Chorbonrg in her steam 'ocht Victoria. and Albert; but whether ier destination will be Italy or the south of France is nnoertgin, though. the expectation in that she will proceed to the name beautiful district she made her head- quarters on the occasion of her last conti- nental trip. __8lm will 985““ travel incog- ----- 13.__ Ann “B In: El lll ll Iluu u.- . “a .... -_._, mm. to avoid ceremonial receptions and ensure comparative privacy. Jul- nllungv Philosophy. â€up; I Vale-duo Latest Feminine Fanclel. .-_u__ _ in Se. Ntcrlotaa for February. 1332 THE SALVATION ARMY IN ENGLAND. Ant Alarming Rm Caused by It: Proceed- lngs In Sheffield. BRUTAL ATTACKS BY THE MOB. On Sunday. January 8th. an extraordiâ€" nary and alarming scene was witnessed in Bheflield. The Salvation Army, which muetere very strong in that town. having no less than [our barracks. decided to hold ~ - 1'- se la .‘_ at... LIV IUD!) Uuuu avu. vâ€"upâ€"vâ€"I _--,,, , on that day a -' Grand Council " in the Albert Hall. “General†Booth. the com- mander oi the Balvationists. and his wife addressed crowded audiences in the morn- ing. In the afternoon the Army had a grand inspection and march through the town. which they accomplished in safety, but amid great booting and jeering. 0n the following Wednesday, however. their march was most disastrous. They left headquarters at half-put 10 o'clock in the morning. In the procession were three carriages. containing the ofï¬cers of the Army and abrase band. “Lieutenant" Em: erson Davison, a converted Northumbrian wrestler. who carried the banner at the Stephenson Centenary at Newcastle, marched with them. On that occasion he was presented with a scarlet uniform, and this he now wore. He was mounted on a grey horse, and rode just before General Booth’s carriage. As he appeared a crowd, which had gathered in the hope of seein the procession. began to hoot him. an when the other oflicers of the Army took their place in the carriages the uproar was ,L“_ -1. -1“-.. hint-hat] uuuu' yawn an my um--â€"a-_ ___ -1 var great, and the street almost blocked wit people. Two police ofï¬cers on duty near did what they could to reserve order. but the uproar increased. ans as the Salm- tioniats started on their “ triumphant march." as they called it in their pro. gramme. they were pelted with mud and ‘ ‘ “ ‘ “ ALA LAâ€" -1 Dunnbhill tho Lummv. uuv, u--- ...v_ briokbats. At the top of Brookhill the roughsbeoamesodaring,throwingstonesand mud at the women. as well as at the male ofï¬cers of the Army. that “Major" Cad- man, who had control of the procession, called a halt, hoping that the crowd, which numbered nearly two thousand per- sons. would sweep by. Finding they did not, he divided the procession; one party. headed by the Northumbrien wrestler, going down St. Phillips and West Bar towards the centre of the town, and the other making its way to the Albert Hall by anearer route. That portion of the pro- cession headed by the wrestler had a. tear- ful time of it. On arriving in West Bar the crowd of roughs increased greatly, numbering at least 4,000. They ridiculed and jeered at the procession, spat upon the , :L n...“ n “min“: uuu. Jwvsvu w- 'u- 8' .......... . - oflioere. shouted " Give it them,†" They went their heads splitting," and threw mud and stones, which seriously injured the wrestler and many members of the band. Some of the members of the Army were blinded and almost choked with mud, and their faces cruelly out and bruised with intones. Am ,1 h-_LL- DWI-Iva- Before the Army got out of West Bar the on four standard-bearers were attacked by the - mob and dragged about by the hair, whilst in an attempt was made to wrest the banners be from them. The fight was ï¬erce for some r minutes. but ultimately the ofï¬cers E’ managedto drag the banners safely into ar one of the vehicles. At the bottom of Sing-hill, a comparatively narrow and steep thoroughfare, there was a dense â€Ba crowd, and the temper of the mob became 36 more than ever threatening. No stones or h mud were thrown, however, but, instead, a ' young man threw a short stick with great force at Lieutenant Davison. The stick struck him with much violence on the back in of the head, and rendered him almost un- 01 conscious. He would have fallen off his 3‘ horse had not two men held him up. In II this way, and every now and then putting his hand in a half-dazed manner to his head, he performed the rest of the journey to the Albert Hall. ‘ Outside this building there was an immense crowd, who received the Salvation Army with groans, yells and several vol- leys of stones. Davison. still almost unconscious, was lifted from his horse and carried or dragged into the Hall. The band and the carriages containing General and Mrs. Booth and other prominent mem- bers of the Salvation Army, were driven to a side door, which unfortunately was not open. To wait till the hall-keeper could open it was impossible, for stones and mud were flying in all directions. The carriage consequently had to be driven round the building to reach the door through which Davison had passed, and, amidst a scene of considerable excitement, a hasty scramble had to be made to reach the friendly shelter of the interior. Blood was flowing from the heads of several of the bandsmen, and the faces and the dresses of almost all of them were covered with mud. For Davison. who was new lying uncon- scious in one of the ante-rooms, medical assistance was summoned, and on ‘ the arrival of a medical man he dis- covered that the man was suffering from concussion of the brain. and from shock to the system. As his head and face were covered with mud, it was impossible to tell whether he had received any other injuries except that at the back of his head. His upper lip was cut open whilst in a proces- sion the previous day. Undeterred by what had happened in the streets, the Salvation Army commenced the proceed- ings of the “ Holiness Convention.†A large crowd of roughs waited outside Albert Hall in expectation that General Booth and his staff would leave for the barracks at the close of the meeting; but they wisely decided to remain within the hall to tea and in readiness for the evening meeting. Lieutenant Davison, after having been seen by a doctor, was removed to the Public llospital,where he remained. While the stone-throwing was at its worst the police marked two men, and have since arrested them as ringleaders in the dis- turbance. The evening meeting was a great success. The members of the "Army" generally seemed to rejoice in their tribulation, and take it as a sign that they had been †stirring up the devil." Verdi declines all offers to compose now Operas. on the ground that he has ï¬nally retired from the stage. He receives an ova‘tion wherever he appears in public in In y. L" - - - n“ ALockport(N.Y.) dospatch says that Mr. Sullivan Caverno. the prominent lawyerdadend. He was one of the three commissioners who revised the new code of civil procedure for New York State. says _tha§ The l-prlulod Inspectsâ€"Their Life In Jailâ€"Livia. en the For eflhe Land. One 0! the “ suspects " has sent to an Irish pa r a description of life in Kilmainham )ai . The cells are 8 by 12} feet. and each contains a small iron bedstead. a table and a chair. which are chained to the wall. The political prisoners are roused at 7.30. and are allowed to walk about in a small gravelled yard until breakfast time.between 8 and 9. During the meal they are con- ï¬ned in their cells. At 9.30 they are again permitted to walk in the yard until 1 o'clock, when they are again locked up to eat their dinners. Then they are let out again until 5 o’clock. when they are locked in for the night. By day a small window feebly moderates the gloom of a cell. and lights are allowed (ram 5 to 9 o'clock in the even- ing. The Government supplies prison fare on y. but the suspects are not forgotten by their friends. The farmers, although they refuse any longer to allow the fox- hunting gentry to ride at will over their ï¬elds, do some hunting themselves. The coverts of Col. Bernard, Lord- Lieutenant of King's County and Rather- ogan plains. were recently both thoroughly hunted by such large gatherings of people that the gamekeepers were afraid to inter. tors. The Lord of Mantua manor in the latter region left his gates open to the crowd. and this generosity caused them to refrain from going into his coverta at all. The game taken was sent to the suspects and their families. The Christmas dinner of Miss Reynolds in Cork jail is reported to have been a piece of beef and four potatoes on a tin platter, but the tedium of her im- prisonment has been beguiled by serenades from the city bands. The neighbors of im- prisoned suspects are active in seeing that their farm work is kept up. Hundreds of men with carts and horses recently ploughed the ï¬elds. garnered the potatoes, and threshed out the corn of Messrs. O'Beilly. Power, Gleinane, Toole, Connaughton, and Nohill . some of whom are in jail at Naas and at are at Galway. The Irish papers report that, notwithstanding the patronage of so many noble lords. the Lord Mayor's fund in aid of the Property Defence Asso- ciation amounted, after ï¬ve weeks’ effort, only to about £10,000. Meanwhile, Ireland, out of her poverty, has raised more than ,, 1 1... LL- na‘n n '1 51¢ a 015‘ Q E Z'EZS‘E'gï¬g‘g -‘wanâ€"w- .â€"'.__- .6909791 "5 9.7:“! - that When the body of a starving man or animal loses two-ï¬fths of its substance it loses life. In Egypt there are hospitals for super- annuated cats, while human suflering scarcely elicits notice. China imports 100.000 chests of toreign 1opium annually. Average smokers spend 25 cents per day for opium. In New Zealand are frequently found. the bones of those large, wingless birds, called by the aborigines “ moa." The largest representative known was ten and one-half feet high. During the past year 1.532 persons died in London of the small-pox. Of these. 325 had been vaccinated and 637 neglected that recaution, the remaining 570 being doubt- ul. Of the population of London 3,620,000 are vaccinated. and 190,000 are not. mum OF M lllll ITIUMLI. A few years ago British India only raised about 20,000,000 bushels of wheat. Her crop of wheat this year amounts to 360,000,000 bushels, of which 170.000,009_ have already been exported to difl'erent parts of Europe. It is asserted by M. Hement that deaf mutes who have been taught to speak, arti- culate with the accent of their country, thus indicating organic conformations of the ,meohanism of speech similar to those of 1 their parents. _._--_ ‘77 , Prof. Owen, in an article lately pub- lished: que‘atiqng whether man ever receives 77‘ 4---:L-.. n‘Innnl‘ uuuuu, uuvnuvun "av-"v- _.._ - . -n a third set of teeth. He ascribes alleged cases to the reappearance of old and worn stumps in consequence of the shrinkage and absorption of the jaws. The experiments made by M.Bouchut with pepsine. as an agent for destroying worms in the stomach and bowels. have been repeated with very favorable results. Even the tapeworm succumbs to the diges- tive action of pepsine in large doses. while tne more highly organized tissues of the stomach remain unaffected. A German manufacturer has succeeded in producing serviceable face-masks of mica for the protection of metal and glass melters, stonemasons and other workmen exposed to heat. (lust and noxious vapors. These masks allow the eyes to be turned in any direction, and there is space enough for spectacles in case the eyesight is defective. ,,L!_‘ By means of a series of very interesting experiments regarding the muscular power of insects. M. F. Plateau has discovered that whilea horse cannot exert a stress beyond the sixty-seventh of its weight. a oookchafer can easily draw aloadeqnal to fourteen times its “eight, and a bee can draw a. little \vaggou twenty times heavier than itself. Just now there is great difï¬culty in get- ting good domestie help. and it is largely the fault of those who have the training of girls. If a. daughter evince taste and uptw ness for any special branch of work. encourage her in it, and pay her for what she does and let her buy her own clothes. It comes out of her parents‘ pockets any- way, and this will serve to make her feel independent and take an hnerestin her work. If parents would take this course they would not need to employ so much domestic help. rind should misfortune over- take them. their daughter would not be left helpless. The Baptist pastors of Chicago have declared themselves against professional rcvimlinta of the usual kind. and for the following reasons: “They cultivate a dis- tmoted. one1aidcd religious life. They give undue prominence to noisy and public efforts for saving souls. They roduco the - 77777777 1.... u"... "main" in lav-an, v n. matter impression that religion is largely a. matter of feeling. They envor too much of the bur- lenquo and of bnii‘oonery. The lower the‘ dignity of the most aolemu an ject which can engage men‘s attention. They put a premium upon ignorant and crude presen- tations oiGospol truth. They insult the intelligence of the age by makin the nnlenrned and the unwise its rel gious teachers." has“; gï¬Ã©t'eaâ€"tiï¬ï¬Ã©h fund for the sun. Curious Fact. and Figure like the Girls n Clmnna Professional lh-vlvnuntu. A I‘m-Driver‘- mublo Recovery. The cccupstion c! strum-driving, es in well known. entsils greet exposure end is c dsngerous one to life end limb withsl. For the evil effects of exposure the lumhermen o! the St. John River. New Brunswick. hsve one rend psnsces. es is shown h the following mm 3 letter by Mr. E. B. illis. Milltown. N. B. : “ From exposure while stresm-drivinu I took s hesvy cold. which in e short time brought on night sweets. sunken chest and every symptom of deep. seated consumption. I took medicines without relic! until I tried Dr. Wilson's Pulmonary Cherr leeem. when I was cured." Such evi ence us this is incontw vertible. and it is no wonder that in New Brunswick and Nova Bootis, where this remedy ï¬rst was introduced. it he gsined e. ï¬rm hold on the conï¬dence of the people. In every direction, as far as the eye can reach. little hillocks of earth, irom three to six feet high, are scattered rcmiscuously over the country. These ing covered with grass. new dried by the autumn and scattered as they are over the cultivated ‘ ï¬elds. makes one think of haycccks after ‘ a harvest of timothy or red-top in America. They are the tombs or graves otgst genera~ tions of Chinese. And as 0 leading religion or an rstition of the country is ancestral wors ip, these moulds are never disturbed or ploughed over. but stand for indeï¬nite ages. It would seem to a stranger that this sentiment over the resting place of the dead must, to a material extent. reduce the productiveness of the land. For there seems to be no system of cemeteries as in other countries, but the owner of the ï¬eld at death is buried. as have been his ancestors before him, in his own soil at . some spot at a respectful distance from the‘ E graves of his predecessors. And thus those 1 tumuli go on increasing in number and l closeness of proximity till it would seem to , be only a question of time when the dead 1 will possess all the soil, and starve out the .AAâ€"‘_ éntirB nation.â€"Chimse Letter. A boy died in Philadelphia of hydropho- bia. In one of his struggles a bit of froth from his lips flew into his father‘s eye. The man had a nervous temperament, and he imagined that he had become inoculated with the disease. He felt all the symmms, gave the peculiar coughs resembling ks,‘ and writhed in agony. A ph sioian assured him that hydrophobia can! not possibly have developed in a few hours, nor from such a cause, but that made no diï¬erenoe. Powerful doses of chloral were required to quiet him: and he was left almost lifeless - as, _ -LL-_l- g;-;6;;iâ€"(Jiéil})é of the attack. for pamphlet, Buffalo, Successfully treated by World’s Dispensary Medical Associgtign: Address, with stamp The London Truth says: “ A most spirit- ed representation of ‘ Patience ’ was given a few days since at Greystoke Castle, all the characters being taken by members of the family and their guests. Lady Mabel How- ard appeared as Patience. and Lady Rachel as Lady Angela, while Mr. Stafford Howard. M. P., was Reginald. The piece was put on the stage in a satisfactory way. and was really admirably played throughout. A company of nearly 100 witnessed the per- formance. in addition to the tenants and villagers who were alsoinvited." .â€"â€" â€".‘â€"____-,, An ini'migrant is not as valuable to the} country as a native. Yet hundreds of thousands 0! dollars are s nt in bringing immigrants to Canada w ile our grave-‘ yards are ‘being ï¬lled with those whose lives might have been saved to their friends and country for many years. How many also, are like fading flowers. a care to their ‘relatives and no assistance. Many now dead might not have died had they but used Dr. Wilson's Pulmonary Cherry Balsam, a truly wonderful remedy. It is so carefully compounded that it is relished by those who usually detest the name of "Hung.-. 1...; a... “mum-3n] in its: action u, uuvuv n ___..V‘ medicine; but so powerful in its action that it strikes at the root of all lung diseases and eradicates them. Let the weak and spiritlese invalid then take courage and Dr. Wilson's Pulmonary Cherry Balsam and cheat the graveyard for many yearsto come. Rev. Mr. Villards. M.E., of Mattoon. 111.. being unwell a few Sundays ago, asked his congregation to allow his wife to read a sermon to them in his place. This they refused that Sunday to do; but on the next Sunday Mr. Villards went into his pulpit with the ohastening rod in his hands. He told his people that some of them who could go to a theatrical performance and listen to vulgar language from half-dressed women, were the most horriï¬ed at the idea of listening to the chaste words of a woman preacher. It is announced that New York will have next season Patti, Nilsson, Valleria Gerster, Pauline Lucca and Albani. Con- tracts have been already signed With all of these artists. except one. No city in the worldâ€"London, Paris. Vienna or St. Petersburg. has ever been able to gather such a constellation of prime donnc as will then be concentrated in New York. ‘ We verily believe that dyspepsia is largely the cause of much of the morcse- ness andill-nature which marsthe harmony of the social relations of all of us. Dr. Wilson's Antibihous and Preserving Pills cure dyspepsia and sets the liver, stomach and kidneys right, and thus makes us better natured. [low the Chinese are But-led. Amman KIND or vammâ€"On account of ill health and pressure of outside busi- ness, I shall alter this notice quit barber- ing and devote my time to the land business. at my old stand. Portage avenue. â€"â€"Adrcrtismncnt. in a Winnipeg paper. 8.1 An Emu-mou- nu m"“"‘0 --â€" v- -- .i,, We beg to intiomto that every well regulated household should have abottle of Star Cement. as it mends everything as good as new. - n ._-._. "Ann uvu “A. _ IS The Bri-t'igh princes sailed from Hong Kong on the 319:. of December in the Bac- chmï¬c. FITS, FITS, FITS Lou to the Conan-v. Dr. R. V. Panel. Buffslo. N. Y.: Dau- Sirâ€"I hsvo to thunk you for the ms relief roooivod from your “F‘svonb ro- soripuon." M sickness hsd lssssd ssvsn yam. one otw ioh I In in bed. um @15ng one bottle} was an. to be shout , AA‘_-II__ the House. Rupoouulg. Axum K. Exam. 0100!). Mich. Henry Mars. 0! St. Louis. piticd Mr. Dinkelmw on account of her muitd “Micky. Ind poid .11 the coat 0! I. divorce. Then he muriod her. But within u your be war cured of his love for her. wd cm- floyod the some lawyer who bud procured ‘ he divorce m annul his own mcrrugc. The loss of life in Indie. due to the rsvsges o! venomous snakes is slmost incredible. Yet Consumption. which is In! wily and fete] es the desdliest Indisn reptile. is winding its coils uound thcumds of people while the victims sre unconscious of its presence. Dr. B.V.}Pieroe's" Golden ‘Medioel Disooveryf must_ be used to cleanse the blood of the aerofuloue impurities. {or tuberouler consumption is only ntorm o! serofuloue disease. “ Golden Medical Discovery " in a. sovereign remedy for all forms of eerotnlone disease. or king'tevil. such as tumors. white ewellings, fever sores, eerofnlous sore-eyes. as well as for other blood end skin diseases. By Every journal, popular or scientiï¬c. you take up, has something to say about the value of Phosphates as fertilisers. or as brain and nerve food. Farmers know that they increase largely the growth and roducts of vegetation; and physicians ong since discovered that they augment nerve power. Their action on plant and animal is precisely the same as excitants of nutrition in completing the develo ment of the cell that builds up the vegetab e and animal tissue. The use of Dr. Wheeler’s Compound Elixir of Phosphates and Calisaya will speedily convince the worn out invalid that it is Nature's truly physiological restorative. The Winnipeg Sun says : Today Robt. Hunter, of Hamilton. Ont., turned over some $10,000 worth of property and cleared 81.500 in the transaction. Mr. and Mrs. Spurgeon devoted the 830,000 presented to them at the recent anniversary of their wedding to the endow- ment of an orphanage for girls. They had already established one for boys. ' The recent death of Mr. James Wyllie. the tenant of the farm of Mossgiel, near Mauohline, Ayrshire. is noticeable from the fact that he occupied for forty years the land which Burns tilled. being the second tenant after the poet and his brother Gilbert. It was while at Mossgiel that the bard wrote some of his ï¬nest productions. wane "luuuuv any “n -__“ Lnliué r-'Modicinoa ULCERSS TUMORS and 0“ ROFU DISE successful] 5 Send 'Tor “11mm The State of Michiran, having 50 years of im- provements, still contains large rack of unoccu- pied land: suitable for terms, some of them subject to tree settlement under homestead laws‘ and all of them for sale at low prices. A pamph let, prepared under authority of the State. and. containing a map. descriptions of its climate soil. industries, crops and resources. and an account of its lands, will be sent free to any one writing for it to COMMISSIONER OF IMMIGRATION. DETROIT. MICE 611m mus um mums. FARMER’SS! Could I but see Carboline made, And view the process o’er, No bald head pate would make afraid, No grey hairs fright me more. As now improved and perfected, No oil was are so sure. All skin disease. of limb or head. Thorley’s Improved llorso and Cattle me feel necessitated egalnto call attention to the feet of the numerous lmposltiena pelmerl 01! upon the public as their food. not only by travel lore 0! other food com mules, but also by many of thelrlocnl agents. his disreputable ractlco must, if unchecked. tend to tarnish t no good name of Thorloy‘a Improved. Farmers and feeder», make sure our trade mark is on the bug where you purchase. For sale by dealers everywhere. i Mnnul‘hcmrul 48 John Street South, nnmllton, om. TLIIN OUT 0' III. i Sold by all drnnglau everywhere. 1 T r W x-r†.v _ ash" ‘ rams: MARK. (Mun-J Itisnsure, irompt and Eliectnel remedy for Nervonsnese n Allhits 3 es, Week Memory. Dogs of limin Power, Some Prostmtion, Night Bwoui9.S ennniorriime, Seminal Weakness and (ieneml es of Power. It re airs Nervous Waste Reinvenetesthe Jaded In loct,8tren th ens tie dnioebled Brain and Restores nr prising Tone mul Vi or to the Exhausted Generative orvns. T10 ex rieneo oi thou sends proves t on Involueb o Remedy. The medicine islgleeennt to the taste. and each box contains an cient {or two weeks' medication and is the cheapest sud best. Fnil particulars in our ngmphlet. which we {desire to mail free to any M ress. m-oh'n Illa-noun Medlcllo is 891d1_ snu Ill mu nun-Irv..- ........ Fnll particulars in our (leslm to mall tree to my a« dross. Mack's ï¬lms-Ila Medicine ls soldv dru lsts as 00 cos. per box. or I9) boxes for .1 or wll be mulled tree of postage on rooolptc tho money‘ by addressing Mack‘s Monocle Mullahs 00.. Windsor, Ont... Canada Snakes .- “to Dumyou. "'1' IS WITH FEELINGS 0F DEEP REGRET , that the manufacturers of It. never fails to cure. D. Mcuxcnmn, 63Niagam St. .BuflaloN B'YL, has a. positive andw ul cure for car: 3739982.“. F.“ 2.33“}? K3}. ï¬ï¬Ã©â€™Ã©u'fli "IAL‘K‘H MAGNETIC! MEIDIGINE CANCER CAN BE CURED.