And now we are fairly into the Season for sports. Races, boating, cricket, hase- ball, lacrosse, lawn-tennis. and a half-doz. on other games, all have their devotees, We hope the young fellows may all en- joy themselves this summer, hut warns them against making any form of amuse. ment a regular profession, or allowin it to takoup the time that should he devoted to other matters. Already we have had cases of small-pox and other contagious diseases brought into the Province by immigrants. Can nothing he done by arrangement between tho l)o- minion and Provincial Governments where- ‘0‘ proper and ellicientimmigrant inspection in be carried out? What is our newly- cï¬mted Provincial Board of Health doing to bring united action about 2’ ected to arrive at home. He was to have eit Jersey City at about 7 o‘clock and was looked for at home by 9. “'hen this hour arrived and he did not come the wife grew more uneasy, but thought; he would be back on the midnight train. and she sat up wait~ inc. As he did not come she sat up till 3 in the morning. and lay down on a lounge, but slept very little. In theJnorninga tele- gram came from his sister in New York, asking if he had arrived at home. In great- er suspense than ever she sent. back a tele- gram that ho had not. and at once started for New York. When she arrived at his parents’ house, the sister of the missing man without knowing anythin about Mrs. Hart's dream, related her own ( ream. When she had ï¬nished and Mrs. Hart told her dream both were astounded, the dreams were al- most identical. even to the railing on the bridge. The New York police are endeavor- ing to ï¬nd some trace of him. His wife thinks he has been murdered for his money. “6.40.0599â€â€" The most singular thing about the whole afl‘air is the part two dreams play in the matter. Both the wife in Trenton and the sister in Greenwich street, in New York, dreamed on Thursday ni ht that they saw the missing man on a bri ge, with a “fling on one side of it, struggling with another man, and saw him fall oll‘, while the other man ran away. Mrs. Hart described her dream in a vivid manner. She said she had no uneasiness about her husband’s going away when he left, as he had been in the habit for the past three or four years of go- ing to New York every month. But on Thursday night about midnight she says she had the dream. She saw him on the bridge plainly, saw his face. and saw the man he was struggling with. The dream distressed her so that she woke up and ale t very little Kthe rest of the night. Next ( ay she felt l depressed all ‘day and looked forward anxiously for‘the hour when he was ex- -.--â€" -v 3v -uu pay his bill, and he asked his sister to acâ€" corrpany him. She was feeling unwell and did not go, and he then left. This was the last seen of him. He had a sister living in Seventy-seventh street, whom he intended to visit, and as he did not come back to his parents’ house on Thursday night, they con- ,cluded that he had staid at her house. Next day a member of the family visited the sister and found that he had not been there. “You have all heard of the warning of dreams. All I can say is this is the ï¬rst well-authenticated case I have ever known. and if it does not border on the supernatural I do not know what does. It was a good way to restore one’s peace of mind, but a most remarkable sequel.†Philip Hart, a notion dealer in Trenton, N. J ., has been missing since last Thursday. He left for New York on that morning. and has not returned. His wife tells a singular story. writes a correspondent of the New York Times. She says her husband was in ,the habit of going to New York every month to pay bills for goods and to order ‘ new lots. He always stopped at the house of his parents, in Greenwich street, near the Cortlandt street ferry. When he left home Thursday morning, at 7.30 o’clock, he had in his possession 8140. He reached his parents home in how York at 9.30 and re- mained there until two o’clock in the after. noon. It was his‘intention then to' go and L3- I...'II - _â€"_- . w-lv was still more startled on looking around and beholding the exact picture of the man of the dream, oven to the mis-shapen nose. It made such an impression upon her mind that she requested to be let out of the ele- vator at the ï¬rst landing. She stepped out and the other occupants went out at the next landing, and the man remained. The elevator machinery gave out ; suddenly the car went up, and then down. and the man was‘i'natantly' killed. friend. She‘luepped info Vihéï¬elevatorr with others, and was startled to hear ‘ Are you all ready? from the__m:_m i1} c_h_arpe. She c“-.. .L::- , “And now comes the gtrangest part of the story. Some little time afterward the young lady was visiting in Cincinnati, and wenttoan apartment hotel to call upon a friend. She stormed into the elevator with “ The dnnm nee'med a peculiar one, but did not attract very much attention in the household until a new days or a. week later it was repeated, with exactly the same characteristics, down to the ‘Aro you all ready 2’ and the awakening. I'AI‘I‘ n ......... 4L- ~L.._, , , “ \\'ell,'replicd the ï¬rst speaker. “ I was told to day by a leading eity hall otlicial, whose trustwm‘thiness is undoubted, that a daughter of the late Harvey Jeu ell (who was so well and favorably known in Boston in legal and business circles. and “as a brother to the late Marshall Jewell) had re- cently a very queer and unusual experience and one calculated to make a deep impression. upon the strongest mind. Some weeks ago she had a dream in which she distinctly saw an undertaker drive up to her residence with a hearse. He wasa peculiar loaking man. His queerly-shaped nose, which looked as if it had been broken and was twisted on one side, gave his countenance an expression which would have made iden- tiï¬cation easy and certain. He came direct. ly toward her, and, as he raid ‘Aro you all ready .7' she suddenly awoke. llml ‘ Incidents rented liâ€"Beal Lite that may be claimed to dtseount notion. “One of the n 0.1: remarkable occurenoou ! ever heard of was related to me this "had-- lug,†remarked a broker in 1398.0", the other day. “ l have heard of a good many wou- derful dreams, but this has some lcutures about it which border on the marvellous." “\\ hat is the story .’" queried another broker. whose business was apparently dull enough to allow him plenty 01 time to stu- y the miraculous. since he had almost forgotten how to buy and sell. H “-nl| _..-.I:...) u“ c_,,. ,u .. v PRIMONXTORY DREAMS. '7'. -u vllv A‘\'l I'll l Pole by means of balloons. The Lieutenant- Governordid well to get him to say a few words on the Hudson Bay route, if for no- thing but to keep that question before the public. There can be little doubt that the summer route by Hudson Bay to Liverpool, will, within the next ten veirs, be the one by which the greater part of the overland freight from Japan andChina will be carried, auwell as the overplus products of the creator Cmada in our own North-West. It is of importance that the capabilities and possibilities of that route should be tested. For that purpose Hudson lhy should be thorou hly explored, and its dii~ ticulties and m vantages for navigation made known. Fort Churchill or some other port near the mouth of the Nelson will be one of our greatest sea ports “ithin half a century. In this connection lies the value of this disputed territory about which we have had so much talk lately in ourparty pa- pers. Could not our (lntario Government send out an exploring party to giveus a cor- rect account of all about and beyond the â€eight oi Land? Another fool nearly sent to his account ‘ by trying to walk along the wires of the Suspension â€ridge. \Vhois worst? the man that tries smh a thing, or the unrecon- strncted moon-calves that goes to see the performance? “'0 think tlwlntter. But the state of Ireland is gradually be coming better. Very few agrarian murders are now reported. Here and there the re- pression of Crimes Act is being pretty se- verely enforced, and newspapers and travel- lers are brought within its strict provisions pretty sharply, and sometimes unjustly, but upon the whole its eli‘eet is pretty good. “agitation is to be carried on, by all means let it be constitutional. The hopes of Ireland's best friends lie in that di~ reetion. One can only hope, for the exer~ ‘ tions of her so-called friends are very eccen- tric. In the British Parliament the Irish plrty are voting with the Toriesâ€"their sworn enemiesâ€"and against the \Vhias who have proved themselves their sincere friends. In the United States the Irish Party are being courted by both political parties. and is metaphorically “ breathing our. slaughter’ against Britain, whilst in our own Domin- ‘ ion we see the mouths of our great political parties shut, and those of our leading organs as well, by the existence here of an Irish Party. Could greater proof he needed of the sins of the fathers being visited upon the children, even to the fosrth generation? â€"â€"â€"â€"â€".â€"oo<c-->Mâ€"â€"â€"â€"- Enthusiastic ComnnnderCheyne lectured the other night in the Toronto Grand Opera house on his scheme for getting to the North 1),! I 1' It was amost laughable suggestion sent by the correspondent of one of the New York papers all the way from St. l’etersburgâ€" situated this time in a saloon in the base- ment of a printing ofï¬ce on Broadwayâ€" ‘ that the Russian Government were about to offer to senj a large portion of the disaffect- ed Irish population to the Afghanistan fron~ ier. Doubtless the joke Was an American way of contrasting the Russian and Irish questions. Both are vexed ones. But the tormer admits of solution along the lines laid down by history in the case of other constitutionally governed communities. The latter requires for its solution new endeavors for which there are no precedents. If the state of Ireland is not known in the world it will not be the fault of her sons. It is a pity ‘ that they could not point out some com. men-sense way by which they can be rem-:- died. It will never come by the way of agrarian murder and cowardly assassination. Another of the Phoenix Park murderers has gone the way of all the earth during this week, and soon that cowardly deed will have been fully ayenged. , I thank you once more for your words, which shall be dear to me forever, and may the end of the term of each public servant who fills with you the ofï¬ce which consti- tutes him at once your chief magistrate and the representative of a united empire be a. day for pronouncing in favor of a free national Government defended by such Im- perial alliance. ' He is able to say regarding himself and the Princess : In asking you to accept my cratitude, 1 thank s on also for your words regardin the Princess, whcse affection for Canada ully equals mine. It will be my pride and duty to aid you in the future to the utmost of my power. Now that the prearranged term of our residence among you draws to its end, and the happiest ï¬ve years I have ever knoWn are nearly spent, it is my fortune to look back on a. time during which all domestic discord has been avoided, our friendship with the great neighboring Republic has been sustained. and an uninterrupted pros- perity has marked the advance of the Dom- inion. ‘ His closing aspiration will ï¬nd an echo in the heart of all our readers : A judicuture above suspicion, self-govern- ing communities entrusting to a strong m ntral Government all national interests. the toleration of all faiths with favor to none, a franchise recognizing the rights of labor by the exclusion only of the idler, the mainten~ once of a Government not privileged to exist for any ï¬xed term, but ever susceptible to the change of public opinion and ever open, through a responsible Ministry, to the scru- tiny of the peopleâ€"these are the features of your rising power. and extension of ’Cinaila, and the care, assuluity, and diligence which our present Governor-General has exhibited in attending to the du ics of his high positibn. Gracdul allusion was also made to the patronage which both the Maiquis and Princess have shown to Literature and Art in our young and growing country. The address had been accompanied in the Commons by able and appreciative speeches from the leaders of both the Government and Opposition sides of the House, and is well-known to ex rest the heartfelt sentiment of the whole om- jnion. Tho GovernnI-General's reply was exceptionally good, and he sums up our con- stitutional advantages in the following pithy manner: The seSsi n of the Dominion Parliament has been closed. and that Parliament pro- rogued quite a week ago. The usual cere- Ilmnies mere varied by the presentation of a bleulal address to the Governor-Genera, “h; is about to leave us. In it there was expressed our sense of the interest which the Mmquis of Lorne and the Princess Ltn'se have always shown in the wellare The Alumni: and the Dominion. The Irish Question. Germany and the Vatican are still retain. ing their respective positions of armed neu- trality. Neither is giving way, and solong as Bismarck lives Germany will remain ï¬rm. Were he out of the way, we are inclined to think that the Vatican would speedily triumph. The strife of parties in the tier man lteichstag is yearly becoming kcener, and the Vatican party are taking sharp ad- vantage of the dissensions. So great and so constant indeed have the latter grown that there is talk ofdissohing l’arliment alto- gether. But there is likely little foundation for such a rumour for autocratic though Bis- marck is he is not a fool. whilst the Crown Prince is gradually becoming powerful in his father‘s counsels at any rate. Surely there must he incendiarie; going round tnroughout our villiages towns and cities, for the number of ï¬res all over the Province have increased during the last few weeks to almost an alarming degree. A detective or two might advantageously be detailed to keep an eye on the nutter. The Republic of France, it would seem, is “akin up to the advantage oiiuauguratiug an aggressive and vigorous colonial policy. It was not without reasonable apprehension that our Australian cousins sent oil that sol- itary policeman to take possession of New Guinea. I The East River bridge uniting New York and Brooklyn was opened after all on the 24th ult., and there is no ï¬re from Heaven forthcoming to consume the audacious villains who dared thus to crouch before "Victoria Guelph †and insult the palhriolé of the Green sod. Of course there was not. On the contrary, there was not a single hitch from beginning to end. The morn was fair, the sky was clear, etc.. etc. Even the president of the United States was there. and was struck neither with paralysis nor with leprosy. Our own private opinion is that O'Donovau Rossa himself was present and pattered a prayer for Enqland's Queen. That he is a traitor to Ireland and is chiefly intent on the coppers is too manifest. When the secret history of the times is written it will be found that the largesbtongued yelpers of the whole pack were all the re- cipients of English gold. It has always ‘ been so. They are by much too noisy to be genuine. Those of courage don't hluster, and men of business don’t threaten but act. Go, go, you fuols ! «Niobwhâ€" 'Ihat Coronation. And so the Czar of all the Russias is crowned at last. Everything has gone off smoothly and not a single Nihilist has put in an appearance. The preparations for the event were of the usual elaborate order, and never has the paraphernalia of royalty appeared to greater advantage. The pre- cautions against N ihilistic plots were thorough and extensive. For miles soldiers lined the streets four deepâ€"t no in costume and two in plain clothes. Police swarmed everywhere. The Imperial pardon had pre- ‘ vionsly been granted to maay prominent Nihilists, and a general feeling of expecta- - tion regarding a constitution pervaded all classes. The Czar’s entrance into Moscow, ‘ amidst the huzzas of the crowd, his visit to the palace and the cathedral, his three days retirement and fasting, and the full account of his actual ceronation. have all been fully given in our daily papers. The New York llerald has done a great deal of pardonable boasting over the fact of its representative being one of the six allowed in the cathedral at the ceremony, but has given us a good account nevertheless. The Czar and Czarina have the good wishes of TRUTH for long life and happiness. The certainty of both will be greatly increased if he turns out a good constitutional ruler. The Duke ofArgyll isa very hard man with his tenants. It is said that, strictly speaking, his land never did belong to him literally, but was the property 0! a clan over which his ancestors held political but notpioprietary rights. and which clan little by little was converted into tenants at will, numbers being driven away and their hold- ings converted into sheep farms. A Mrs. Macphail is now to be evicted from her holding, although not in arrears, because one of the arbitrary rules of the estate is that no wilow shall retain her husband's lease. _ v-......uvvuvvu, UIICJ will do Well to put themselves and their property out of the reach of the Russian Government. Prince Dolgorouky is believ- ed to have received a large sum (half a mil- lion roubles, it: is said) during her recent visit to St. Petersburg as a consideration for the surrender of the letters and papers of the late Czar. Prince Gortschakofl‘hns left copious me- moirs behind him, dealing with both politi~ cal and private afl‘aiis. If his sons propose to publish their father's remi‘niscencey, they will An "In" 6.. _._‘. AL,, A icture of Miss Ellen D. Hale, daugh- ter of Rev. Edward Everett Hale, of Bose ton, called "An Italian Boy._" has been ac- cepted for the Paris Salon. It’s painter has since been lying at death's door, and her father and mother, on the way to her, are still at sea, ignorant of her recovery. The wife of Sir John Rose, who twenty ï¬ve years ago was a Canadian lawyer, and is to-day a baronet, a kni ht of the Grand Cross 01 St. Michael and t. George, and a millionaire, was an American lady named Temple. v v H. .. --"-. uv n «v quus. MI“, “I prefer in mak-ng the passage into para- dise to go with my eyes open," and display~ ed a playful huuwr and cheerfuluess to the end. l’rofoxsor Johnson. of Trinity College, re fusing an anodyne wlmn he was dyiqg, said1 I‘ ' nIâ€"n‘nr in .....I....._ AL , W The only known survivors in this country of the six hund-e-l who made the ch irge at llaluklava are Mr R. V. Gurney, of New York city, and Mr. Charles H. McKenzie. “I know you," said King Theodore of Abyssinian to the English. “First you send a missionary; then you send a consul to look after the missionary; then you send an army to look after the consul.†The house of William Penn in Philadel- phia is to be takru down and erected again at “’est Fairmouut Park. Ruby Porgy-aph- nbout Prominent People. Prince Hanan, son of the Grand Duke of â€case. has been declared bankrupt in Prague. The wife of Sir John Rose, T110 1318 Bridge. PERSONALITIIS. “CHOW†The proposal made by Mr. \\'. H. How- end for the establishment of Industrial schools is one which ought to commend it- self to the cordial support of every true C1- nudinn patriot. It is simply heart-breaking to think how many boys are being reared among: the people of this new country in ab- solute ignorance and vice. homething needs to he done, and though it may he said that such an enterprise as that proposed will only encourage careless and unprineipled parents to neglect their children still mere, yet this does not olwinte the necessity for such schools one hit. The parents could not well he more careless than they are. and in the meantime the boys are going to perdition. 0â€"<.>â€"o.â€"____ In: Estimate. “Have you estimated the rainfall of the last twenty-four hours ?"asked one citizen of another, as they met in front of the City Hall. “ Yes, sir, I have.†“ What’s the ï¬gures 2" “Why, air, if 1 get eyes on him I’ll knock him ten feet ! A man who'll deliberately appropriate 3 Si umbrella and leave its owner to walk a mile in a pouring storm ought to receive no mercy. Ten feet is the figure, sirâ€"exactly ten feet, not including a chill and a sore throat.†5 re. and rejoicing with a joy unspeakable and full of glory. In the world men were hate- ful and hating one another; in the Church the beautiful ideal of human brotherhood was carried into practice. The Church had learned her Saviour's lessons. A redeemed humanity was felt to be the loftiest dignity man was honored for being simply man; every soul was regarded as precious, be cause for every soul Christ died ; the sick were tended. the poor relieved; labor was represented as noble, not as a thing to be despised ; purity and resignation, peaceful- ness and pity, humility and self-denial, courtesy and self-respect were looked upon as essential qualiï¬cations for all who were called by the name of Christ. The Church felt that the innocence of her baptized mem- bers was her most irresistible form of apo- ' logy, and all her best members devoted themselves to that which they regarded as a sacred taskâ€"the breaking down of all the middle walls of partition in God’s immortal temple, the obliteration of all minor and ar- tificial distinctions. and the full develop- ment of man‘s spiritual nature.†There can be no doubt but that a good deal of the li- terature, art, and science of the present day is not only un-Christian, but anti-Christian. Some few even boxst of what they call their revived paganism. We would not say that in every instance the preachers of this new aratar are sketched in the above por- traiture of ï¬rst century Secularism. But in very many cases they notoriously are. They themselves often don't deny it, nay, they glory in the fact. “ Living according to nature†is in their estimate living the life of a dog, or a cow, and a virtuous woman is by their standard as great an absurdity as a virtuous monkey, or a self- denying hog. They preach a crusade against , marriage as a †pretty superstition," and they practice as they preach. The most thoughtful of them are the most despairing, and the most reckless and the most hopeful have no better refuge and no higher motive than “let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die.“ Divorce is with such a virtue, and children are a curse and a cumbrance. Their great Gospel is â€Let us not be bothered,†and their only hope now, as eighteen cen- turies ago, is that death will take them back to the nothingncss from which they sprang. No wonder that their aestheticism is still practically pitiless as death, and feelinglcss as the grave; that their amuse- ments are now tasteless in their vapid real- ism as they were long ago, and if their morals can't be put side by side with those of Pompeii and other such places, their own theories and teachings are certainly not to blame. s __.- -â€"vv V- was . uvuvl in Hezwen. In the world, slavery was rendered yet more intolerable by the cruelty and impurity of masters ; in the Church the Christian slave, welcomed as a friend and a brother, often holding a portion of ministerial dignity, was emancipated in all but name. In the world, marriage was detested asadisagree- able necessity and its very meaning was des- troyed hy the frequency and facility of di- vorce. In the Church itwas consecrated and honorableâ€"the institution which had alone survived the loss of Paradiseâ€"and was all but sacramental in its Heaven appointed blessedness. The world was settling into the sadness of unalleviated despair ; the Church was irradiated by an eternal hope! and .A:..:.:.... -1â€, , - V"- "o... v. "n. uuuu. LIIU surua Ul earth were such men as Tiberius and Caligula. and Nero and Domitian; the rulers of the Church were a James, a Peter, 8. Paul, a \ John. The literary men of the world were a Martial and a l’etronius ; the Church was producing the Apocaly se, the Epistle to the Hebrews. the G09 8] 0 St. John. The art of the world was egraded by such infamous pictures as those on the we ls of Pompeii; that of the Church consisted in the rude but pure and joyous emblems scrawled on the soft lu/a of the catacombs. The amuse- ments of the world were pitilessly sanguin~ ary or shamefully corrupt, those of the Christians were found in gatherings at once social and religious, as bright as they could be made by the gaiety of innocent and um troubled hearts. In the world, infanticide was infamously universal ; in the Church the baptized little ones were treated as those ‘ in whom angels'beheld the face of our Father - _â€"...V. , with vvvav su' consistent as we are inconsistent, fell as we fall, and repented as we repent. Hatred and party spirit, rancour and misrepresenta- tion, treachery and superstition, innovating audacity and unspiritual retrogression, were known among them as among us. And yet, with all their faults and failings they were as salt amid the earth’s corruption, the true light had shined in their hearts, and they were the light_ of the world. The lords of cw uuu mm ourselves. They sinned as we sin, and suffered as we sutfer; they were iu~ nni|nunt....a. A- __.4 ,, Our readers will doubtless he rather thank- ful for the following rlther lengthy con- trast between the Church and the World of the ï¬rst century, the more especially as it tells what is true of the world of the nine- teenth century also. so far as that has parted company with Christianity and has ceased to be influenced either by its teaching or life. “To represent," says the writer spoken of “the Christian Church as ideally pure, as uniformly excellent and perfect. would be altogether a mistake. The Christians of the ï¬rst days were men and women of like pas- sions with ourselves. Th_ey sinned as we n:n -“J “Jr“ I A Conn-nu. ;, 'fell as we J 08. J. CAVE, PROPRIETOR. OFFICE -- xmo swam, woonvnm, ox Elm Wundvillc annotate. An unfailing euro for Seminal Weakness, Spvnxmtorrlm-n. hmmtency. and all diseases that milow us n cunsoqucnw of Sell-Abuse; as losslof nu-mory. universal lassitude. «in in tho back. tiilnncss of vision premature o d ago. and many mlu-r diseasm that loafl to insanit an" consum tian and n. walnumro grave. Fulf’ our pmnph 0t. wlmh e o dosiro to Send fro by mail to owry one. L-s‘ Tho 6912mm MEDICINE i.: sold by nll drnaglsta nt :3: per package. or six pur‘kflEOR for 35. m will he sent frro by mall on ;:ccipt of the mhuoy, by addressing Befofé‘TéIViihg THE Afiï¬ â€"-GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY 25.9.91: MARK. camps TREE MARK. ‘ \ SPECIFIC . momma ‘ 3’3; PREEMAN’S WORM POWDERS. Are pleasant to take. Contain their on Purgntive. In 9. Info, auto. and affect“! dostmrer a! "only in Children or Adam. .0. v. uuAu unauubu. Manufactured only he Professor HOLLOWAY'B Establishment, 78 New Oxford St. (latesaa Oxford St.)London. and sold at ls. 1M" 25. 9d.. 43. 6a., 123., 9.23.. and 835. each Box and Pot. and in Canada. t 36 cents. 900ente. and 81.50 cents. and the larger sizes in proportion. 33' CAUTIONâ€"111nm: no Agent in the United States. nor are my Medicines Bold there. Pur- chasers should therefore look to the Label on the Pots arnd Boxes. If the address is not 533 Oxford Street, London, they are spurious. ll disorders 8 also Gout. Rheumat- and every kind of Skin Disousc. I Colds. Sore Threats, Bronchitis, and n of tho Throat and Chest. 41 hm Scrolula. ‘1‘. l‘_ln ‘ will be found invaluable the euro of Open Boxes, E _, _._.‘“a.uua BAD LEGS, OED WOUNDSU,w DOUGHS rulu cury spccws or dlsease aris!r~g from disordered LIVER. KIDNEYS, STOMACH. BOWELS 0R BLOOD. WILL CURE OR RELIEVE BILIOUBHESS, DIZZI/VE 08, D YSPE PSI/1, DROPS Y, I'NDIGESTION, Fl. UTTERIfr’G’ J4 UNDIOE. OF THE HE ERYS/PELAS, ACID/TY G‘F SALT RHEUM, THE 8705!. HE ARTHUR/V, DR YIVESS HEADACHE, OF THE 8 “nuusauus or persons have testiï¬ed that by their uFo alone they have been restored to health and strength, after every other means had proved unsuccessful. And cvcryl species of disease arl_s_!7r§gffron.$ Ahaâ€",1“--. n lllr-l‘ ......... A increase the secretory powers of the Liver. lbrace (1w nervous system‘ and throw into the circula- Lon tho )urost Elements for sustaining and re- pairing t 0 frame. Thousands of persons have testiï¬ed that In» M. x ., , -- - ‘3'. MILBURII (50., . 'vvm‘ _ 7 w W THIS INCOMI‘ARABLE MEDICINE has so- oured for itscll an imperishablo fame throughout the world fox-the ahoviatiou and cure of most diseases to which humanity is heir. \I'l‘lfv. re. 1:! “00d. CL "‘3‘ \V'm'rnr.â€"Jau. 9, Fob. 1 Mar. 1, Afr. a. May 1. June. 1. July 3, Sept. 1, bet. 9. Nov. . Dec. 1. Buocazmnâ€" } May 9, July 4 Sept. 3. Durvm’s Cnazxâ€" Jan. 3. Mar. é, Nov. a l’mn‘ Pmunxâ€"Fob. 18. Mar. 10. May 7. Junola July 31. Bupt.3. Nov. 5. Docrlo. L‘xnumGEâ€"Fob. 13, Mar. m. May 8, J mm 19. Sept. 4. Nov. 6,1)oc. u. C.\xx:xu'x'nx.â€"â€"l~‘ob. 14. Mal-.21, May 0.Juuem bup:.5, Doc-.12.. Bz-uvnu'rox.â€"Fob. 15, Mal-.22. Juno RI. Sept.6. Doc. 1-1. Up'rununonzâ€"Mar. 98. J uue 22, Sept. 7. Dec. 14. By order. JNO. E. FAREWELL. Whitby, Jun. 1, 1883. Clerk of the Peace. Worth their Weigh? in Gold. coll/m 0F 0mm! Slttlngs of Division Courts for 1883. Published bmdér of the General Sessions. AND WOINTMENT. SIGNAGE and. BOWELS‘ THE GRAY maman‘q’n Col [auto and improve the quality of the 0" assist. the digestive organs, cleanse >19 in every household in 1, Hard Tumours. THE STOMA 0H, DR YIVESS OF THE SKIN, or THE HEART, ACID/TY G‘F Proprietors. TORONTO. Toronto. Ont. ‘. _Ibrace