The Advanmue- ol the nonunionâ€"An Anny Veteran's Experience. (Toronto Mail.) The Earl of Duï¬erin .our late Governor- General, is evxdeutly a man of destiny. His appointment to the Vioeroyalty of India is a deserved honor, and he will have the best wishes of every loyal Canadian. But he has no sineoure. English rule in India isadiflioult thing to maintain-as the late Postmaâ€"ter»Genei-al Fawcett often pointedly told Parl'ameutâ€"for it is one civilization attempziug to rule another on its own domain. Moreover. the ruling class will always be in a minority because the climate is so 81-596ng that Englishmen cannot colonize the country in any considerable numbers. Adults cannot long abide there without a change of climate. and children born there of Caucasian par- ents. invariably die it they are kept in the country _over six years. India has many natural advantages over other English dependencies. but Oaneda hes a more healthful climate. and she in nee vexed with the problems of the government of eliena. The host of the lowlands of Indin is something dreadful. me oven-ego being over 80° . In the dry season the gloss often regissere 120° . Most of the weslmy class can flee to the mountains in summer. bus the nrmy oflioers and men have to endure it. As a consequence she monoliey -is very 3'1“: . " Not long 330 is was our privilege to con-' vane as some length with mar. B. Demon. of Godeiioh. who has served in Her Majesty’s Indian army over 17 years. To anr inquiry on how the climate aï¬eom the hell“; 0! foreigners. he slid: _ “ Well, one does not notice the change st ï¬rst unless the dry and hot eeeeonje on. Indeed I endured the damp hot of winter end the dry hggt of eugnmer very well 2c: msny yesrs. Not until 1877 did I begin to feel knocked up entirely. Then I lost flesh rspidly, my appetite was thst capricious tint I could ï¬nd nothing agreesble, my bowels were stupidly torpid. my spirit was s directly I wanted any vim. I got that yel- w thst I looked very like a lemon. end my legs swelled like in size to on slephsnt’s. And sure enough. I was week! No. I hsd no psin st sll. I was simply quietly west- ing nws , my system being completely saturate with melon-is. None of the army physicisns could help me. sad I ï¬nslly went home for treatment. but the London medics! men gave it up when they sow me and learned thst I had been sol- dering in_lndis. _Quite given out. I came to Omndn, but got no help here. owner. I hnd than! mndo up my mind thnt 1: WM nll up with me. but by n vary lortunntn turn of circumstances I begun to use me hmous Wunor's auto cure. md when I had taken nine boulea I got to be I strong and bunny mun. hnving run from 92 to 142 lbs.. the most I ever weighed. I hnvo not hnd to take 3 {top 9! megioino in over s twelvsmonth. No. I shsll no. go back to Indis sad I don't advise nny of my blonds either here or at home to go there. The gsnossisn hss no business than wins. over. oounky. Some of us any It times lael llke ï¬nding 6 mm lunll will: out cold Dominion. but “to it All in NI we h“. u alumna much probable to I n of " Indiu‘a con! “and," sad w will stick to our own do Voro’wol work she slut in. The key to um will be '0 d for u A youth and a maiden low-talking. ue eager; she. shrinking and shy A blush on her face as she listens. And yet a soft tear in her eye. Oh! sweet bloomed the red damask roses. And sweet sang the thrush on the spray. And brigut was me glamor of sunshine That made the world fair on that day. But. oh! not so sweet the red roses, So sweet the bird's song from above, 80 bright the gold shame: of sunshine, As was the sweet nlemor of love That tell on that pair in the garden. As 'mid the fair flowers they strolled 5 And there, an 'mas ï¬rst. told in Eden. Again was Love's tender tale told. (A MAL IXHIBITION 0? HIAL‘I'IIJ Bull. beauty. ml 0nd wulthl A: the goddeu o! ood hum: I would 3 lm.‘ a nu ancientmuuuon. For In more“ bl n nu on u u (â€roe Knowâ€"l never an a chill. 0x A lover or a pull 0: I po‘tlon . $333..“ om comp: re nlr And simple luc- '1‘hn'o my notion. I load I plwld Illa. Undlnurbed by_ my tulle 0r oonwï¬llon' In um 0mm out of mm Whlcbjtiu reokoqu more pomo Ndi 'u} xifentlon. In my cuisine I eschew Ev'ry onuomont. “gout. n,,n-A___ . And :5 I" tibia foreign antral MuruLur, f‘ gggtlgunm. ah. n'onmz â€1536 101 1" Mon ofler me In uln Bituzjbopr pnq sweet champagne ""1113 immune; As my lsther's duhoua (laughter, l'en onlï¬gulu "to: _ fromâ€. I should feel a. levoua sinner, 'Twixt. m lune eon end my dinner To nk m: Would I ruin my dl eetlon Wm: that beverage n queeuon? Noe for me. My welet I've let alone; Never at to buck or bone id I force it. Could I reconcile my rlba To ngnntive flba In a oorset ? To an I shou'dn't dare Upon: Mammy min - ' ‘ ï¬Deéolle'tef Though an eligible Peer Woroï¬gwï¬lsperjn Igy w, ' "' wine's; stay I" Those talks are leekleu tools Who. neglecting nature's rules, Violate. In their w-ld career of pleasure Flv'ry h gienlc measure 1‘1 1 we lute. 80 the rich had better raise A tom 10 to my praise, nd dispense My laws throughouk this land. Anyd make it. understand Common sense. When _I yompn uplo- np her mint! to A Story (In! Neva- Grow- Old. Fflgugo ; INDIA AND CANADI. 'uchu. nappy llucll. s 1.“, hot-Md. ï¬l- lgr a quum GIUIIAN â€OIALIII‘IO METHODS. The Underground Runway Tran-lured u the older cutl-cItâ€"vtwuhuon o! â€vol-noun blur-unto Through Hwy Amoriotnl. write: 3 Zutioh oor- reopondont to the Now Yogi Sun. remem- ber the underground “dread of the aboliuouhu before the w". The abomion- ml htd moi: oyn‘gowsppperagnd held uhlie meetings. besides using other mews or propegsting their sentiments. Except en oooesionel riot. there was free speech (or them throughout the United States. Nihilism in Rome end Socialism in Germsny flourish under eterner condi- tions. Their modes oi defeating the iron will oi deepmiam ere diflerent. I know something of the mysteries of the German eooislistio propsgends. Its heedquuters en in this city. sud its omnisl orgsn'is 3 little weekly peper. call The Social Democrat. The Germsn against the noon-lists. promulgated October, Bist. 1881, end letely__extendtd.gi_ves into, the hmde umL_AAJ ..... ' Kiln. poligrï¬aweri'ét repression unheard of in the Genny: Iatheyland for abput of in the German Iatherland for about half a century. They are far stronger than those of the vieeregal authority in Ireland under the Coercion Act, and they even surpass those of the French police under Napoleon III. They are enforced with an iron band. and. arbitrary as they are. they are often exceeded. The will of Bismarck directs the machinery. and the zeal of his underlings is too apt to outrun that of the ‘ master. By this law the police are lempowered to dissolve every union or society. to prohibit every meeting, and to suppress every newspaper, pamphlet. book. or other printed matter wherein they choose to allege that socialistio ideas are dissem- nated. There is no appeal from the action of the police to any court. An appeal may, howevor. be taken to a sort of special com- mission of nine members. selected by the Government. the alleged culprit suï¬ering in the meantime and having no redress it it should turn out that there vvas no__real cause tor the set of repression. These commissioners are ï¬he Judges of both the law and the techwihhout the aid of siury. The police are almost invariably sustained. Within a few weeks after the promulga- tion 0! this law about ï¬fty newspapers were suppressed by the police. at a loss to the proprietors estimated at 8500.000. a large number of families being thereby throw: one of employment. All meetings sus- pected ot a socialistic tendency were sternly prohibited. All tangible organization was annihilated. and the mildest of printed socialistio ideas was sternly suppressed. The man of iron made sure that no new converts should be made. and that the rising generation of workingmen should grow up in the political faith as it is in Bismarck. a short time. Notwithstanding all ot the difï¬culties that the arbitrary powers of the police enabled them to place in the way of a political canvass. the socialists increased the number of their representatives in the German Parliament from nine to twelve in 1881, and another was added in 1883 at Hamburg because of the death of a progres- eist, who was succeeded by the well- known socialist Babel. The number of their vetere in the parliamentary elec- tion or 1881 was about hall a million. The main instrument of the success of the Socialists in sustaining and increasing their organization and power in the teeth of Bismarck ie this same little weekly sheet published in Zurich. and the tale of their ingenuity. expecients and success in battling against Bismarck is a sort of Arabian Nights entertainment of fact. The SocialDemoctat was established here less than a year after the passage of Bis- marck'e masterpiece of repressive law. In the intervening time and for about a year the gentleman to whose courtesy I am primarily indebted for the opportunities of investigation was in a German prison. The ï¬rst editor'ot the paper was Baron George von Volmar. who was crippled in both legs in the French war. He is of the old nobility of Bavaria. His novel-reading while convalescing from his wounds was in the line 0! political economy. and this thin pabulum made him a Socialist, notwith- standin the obvious interests of his class. As he of the propaganda he assumed the name of Walther. :1‘_he business manager was Herr Julius Motteller. formerly a member of the German Parliament. who assumed the name of Ju ius Brant- ner. and afterward that of Morretti. Herr Oarl Derossi was a worthy coadjntcr. who invented their wonderful secret~ciphercode. which has puzzled the brains of the German police and of the scientists at their disposal ever since. Baron Von Volmar is now a member of the German Parliament. ‘ The paper was started with 1.500 sub- scribers. It was at ï¬rst packed across the frontier in the clothes of pedestrians. The circulation is now fully 16,000 copies. These are nearly all made up into small packages for various places in Germany. ‘Each package is marked with a symbol of the secret code. The packages are then bunched. placed in cases. and sent over the frontier by the hands of professional smugglers. These oï¬spnng of rohctive tariï¬s are exceedingly adroit. an they are very seldom caught. When everything is an! right a cipher despatch tells the fact. otherwise another cipher causes the print- ing of a new edition and its being for- wnded through other channels. The orgenizetion is so perfect and the ohennele of dietributlon eo numeroue that no one chennel doee duty more than six timee in e yeer. When one of these con- trebend ones arrives at its destination the eoneignee eddreeeee the various peokegee therein eeoording to their ï¬nal deetinetione, u denoted by the eypher symbols on each, end. e53 rule. torqurde them through the poet. No one of theee coneigneee can read the c her that in need by another, and than e provision against treachery is very complete. The postal authorities and the police are utterly powerless to track thielance. unleee it comee to the matter ae it paeeee through the maile. It by any accident they ehould discover a package it would be no evidence againet the addreeeee; if it were no. it ie evident that packegee intentionally cent to enemlee 6! the eoclallete for the pnrpoee of getting them into trouble would be very common. Tnle addreeeee dietributee, or came to be dietribnted. the pa re in the package. and another member 0 the club receivee and dietributee the package the week lollowing. and co the circulation goee on. The work of ï¬nal dietribntion ie the meet rieky. for a men who in detected in one act anilliary steam power. to no ueen 1n Dunne and among the Islands. Everything is good and substantial about the cabins. but there has been no unneceeeary extravg. preeente. eonvenire and bite of fancy work that adorn the captain'e eanetum.â€"Bouoe Globe. Philadelphia Cell: Ouetomerâ€"You have not left me any bread for two morninge. Baker'e Boyâ€"No. mum. You take Graham bread. “0! eonree; why don't you leave it i" “ We haven't none. mnm.‘ " You haven't any I That'e a queer excuee. Why don't you make it ?" “ You, eee. mum, the man what held the mortgage on lthe mill forecloeed it. and it don't run "Oh. you mean the flour mill?" the raw mill." now." " No. mum; will 390 Item two to six month:' imprinon mom tor it. and u m. judge. soundne- hold him rupowhlo for 3h. opntenh 0! we p r. u well u it: dietribntion. it [e poe- eib e to: him tobe punished with ï¬ve yeen' Imprisonment for bundling one copy at the Social Democrat to a neighbor. By the lune mane the propeaende enpply their enh- eribere with intetdieted boon end pumpk- There in . umu odiuou o! the Social Democrat very sway. so bear the ex use 0! letter use. Thin edition in to! ed tad prone inuo ï¬fteen difleun. forms to: u may size. of onvolow. und i3 is an $0 Iubeotibou to whom it would be too risky g9 deliver thg 11313011 by _h-nd. A_oon_uin Gel-mun d 'ddko his been 3 subscriho: from we onndatiou of the paper. and he receives it in letter toxin. Almost every copy of this little pupa: hu muny radon. The olahonh mews “hon for “I oiwulaï¬ion show am it inheld in very high enumuion by those who naive it. A The Germgn {uhhoritiea huvo‘upent. and are spending. large sums to destroy the interdicted sheet. Numerous spies have been sent to Zurich. and hosts of spice are on the frontier. The surveillance is so close that even here in Zurich it would he the height of imprudence to designate to any man not thoroughly in the conï¬dence of the propaganda any one of the special stations from which the underground post starts on its secret journey; yet it travels with fair average security. and the social- ‘ istio organization still remains the most‘ dreaded opponent of the imperial system. It deï¬es repression, and it derides the petty eudo secislistic laws by which Bismarcs as lately been trying to compete with it in winning the hearts 0! the worsin men. It will continue to increase. an it some means 0! meeting it better than the devices of despotism is not found. it may in the end sweep out of existence the imperial regime aseasil and as eï¬ectuauy as the French gavolution annihilated the old monarchy of rance. " What is this man doing here 7" “ Why. he’s the Paving Inspector." “ 0! what use is he ‘I " “ Wellâ€"um. He gets 83 per day." “ For what? " “ To inspect." “ What does he inspect?" “ Nobody knows. When the contractor on the excavation begins work the Paving Inspector appears. He looks over the street and node his head. He walks up and down and thinks of hie 83 a day. He site around on the curbstone and shakes his head in the most solemn manner." “ But it he failed to show up ? " “ Oh. that Would make no difference. What the contractor doesn’t know the inspector can‘t teach him. Sometimes they are not even personally acquainted. and nobody ever heard of an inspector givmg any orders on the job." " Doesn't he throw out suggestions ?" “ Very rarely. He sometimes suggests that it is a cold day, or that a glass of beer would just touch the spot. but further than that he never goes. Some folks think the excavator might dig right down to China it the inspector was not on hand, but that is a ‘ delusion.†‘ “ And when the excavating is ï¬nished ‘2" “ Then the excavator packs up and leaves,~but the inspector sticks the closer. He is there when the sand is drawn in. He may know sand from blue clay. but is not required to. He may know the paver, but he has nothing to say to him. ‘ When . the blocks come he may pick up one now and then. turn it over and over to see ‘whether it be walnut or cedar. and then ‘ lay it down with a trembling sigh. but . that’s all. When the blocks are all laid he iremaine to see the hot tar ured on and the gravel spread out. He nows hot tar from mineral paint. and he knows gravel from clover seed. but his knowledge .is thrown away. When the street is opened :lor traï¬lc he certiï¬es to that effect, and his ‘tremendous mental and physical labors are concludedâ€"except to draw his pay."â€" Detroit Free Pun. The children’s new missionary ship. the Morning Star. has been taking on cargo for the Sandwich Islands for the past week at Lewis’wharf. Boston. The present mis- sionary ship is the fourth one of the same name built by the contributions of Sunday school children all over the country. One was sold. when worn out by voyaginge in the South Sea. and two were wrecked on coral reefs off some of the remove islands of the Paciï¬c. Each time the money was forthcoming to build another ship. and when the fourth Morning Star was com- menoed. more than the necessary 345,000 was ready. Nearly 100,000 children own shares in the little ship, and all of them living near Boston have been down to see the vessel during the past fortnight. It is many years since my own pennies rattled into the Sunday school box to help build a Morning Star. but the pride of past ownership now passes to this latest ship that wears that name. Until the missionary ship was made fast to the wharf the sailors never saw such crowds of just such people in that part of the city. Children have trooped allover the ship and explored to the lowest depths of the hold. and dear old ladies. main props of the missionary cause. have gone cau.‘ tiously up the steep gang-plank and inspected all the admirable ï¬ttings and arrangements of the cabins and state- rooms. This neweet Morning Star is 130 feet long and registers 470 tons. In nautical phrase it is a threamasted barquentine.but. in addition to masts made eighty feet high in order that the upper sails may catch every lightest breeze in the tropic seas. the ship is supplied with auxiliary steam power. to he used in calms and among the islands. Everything is good and substantial about the cabins. but ,there has been no unnecessary extravg. lance. unless it comes to the presents. souvenirs and bits of fancy work that adorn . the captain's sanctumâ€"Baum Globe. Ila-pectin. a Min-Ion." ship. The Paving ln-pector. With every diueee unegineble for the lent three yeue. Oar Draught. T. J. Andenon. "commending “ Ho Bitten" to me. I two bottlee I Am entirely cured. end heutily recom- mend Bop Bitten to every one. J. D. Welter. Buckner. Mo. I write this a n Token o! the grant spprooisuon I hue 0! your Bop ‘ ‘ 0 Bitten. l was nmiotod With inflammatory rheumnusml ! I For uou-ly Bonn youl. uud no medicine seemed to do no my Unul I med two hoitlel of your Hop Bitters. end to my surprise I em as well eo-doy u ever I sue. I hope “ Yon mey heve sbnndem success†“ In mis greet and " Voluohle medicine: Anyone! ‘ ' wishing to know more ehom my care ? Con loom by addressing me, E. M. _ Williams. 1103 16m street. Washington. the beat remedy 1n Existence For In igestion, kidney â€"C'omplamt “ And nervous dehility. I have Just" Returned “From the South in a fruitless ueoreh for health. and ï¬nd that your Bitters are doing r_ne more ooqagligneg_tqd or} m__y improved appearance, and R is all due to flop - »Bmers! J. Wiokliï¬e J nokson. la'None genuine without a bunch ot'gmen Hope on the whim label. Shun all the vile. poisonous amt! with “Hop" or Hopi" in their Don Oarloe recently expressed his‘ 00!:- fldence that the crown of Spain would devolve on him M Altonsc'a death. and meanwhile he will make no further 0301!; to secure it. Is forever. It is not the great difï¬culties of life that try us but the small_annoy_ances that ceaslessly wear away patience and good temper. The smallest grain in the eye or the pricking of a pin, even an aching corn. upset us completely, and therefore it becomes our duty to protect ourselves against the lesser evils which grow great by repetition. To remove come all that is necessary is to purchase Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor. It will very quickly remove them and without the slighest pain or discomfort. Putnam's Extractor, like other articles of ment, has numerous imi- tators. Be on your guard against such Ask for and get Putnam’s Extractor. The novelist. F. Marion Crawford, bass pet out on whose gold collar is inscribed, " 1’1? F. M. Crawford‘s out ; whose out are you †Why suffer a single moment when you can get immediate relief from all internal or external pain by the use of Poleon'e Naavunxl, the great pain cure ‘I Nerviline has never been known tofeil inn single one; it cannot tail. for it is a combination of the most powerful pein-aubdning remedies known. Try a 10 cent sample bottle of Nerviline. You will ï¬nd Nerviline a sure cure for neuralgia. toothache, heed- aoho. Buy and try. Large bottles 25 cents. by all druggiete. "BI“y" MoGlory, in New York; city: hi; bpenrreqpenedaa a ao-oalled " temperance theatre.“ About two years ago. a prominent citizen of Chicago was told by his physicians that he must die. They said his system was no debilitated that there was nothing lett to build on. He made ug his mind to try I “ new departure." He got some 0! Dr. Piexoe'a “ Gallon Medical Discovery" end took it moot-ding to direetxone. He began to improve at once. He kept up the treat- ment for some months. and la to-day I well men. He says the “ Dmcovery" saved his lite. It is predicted by a fashionable New York opsioian thei ladies mil wear the uingle eye-glues very extensively this winter. Victims of youthful indiscretions suffer- ing from nervous debilmy. lack of self-eon- ï¬denoe. impaired memory, and kindred symptoms, should send three lelter slumps for lugs illnetrned tresiise. givnng means of oernin cure. with numerous testimonids. Address World’s Dispensary Medical Asso- eietion. Buï¬slo. N. Y. Thu: anything else; A month ago I was extremely “Emmiatod! ll " And scarcely able to walk. Now I am Gaining “tsunami and “ Flash I " And hurdly a day pasaeajmt vghat _I an} The New Orleans Exposition 0 ns Dec. 6th. The main buililng in comp eted. In the machinery department sixty-six boilers no in position. A system of water- :cliks suppliee 8,000,000 gallons of water s: y. That she is frail. otten in body, " "l‘ie true, ’tia ewe ’tie I pity. And pity ’uu, 'tie true." Dr. Pieroe'e “Favorite Preeaipeion" in the beat renonuve tonic for phyeioel lnlity in women, or female weekneeeea or derangement). By druggiete. Price reduced to one dollar. ny- nm the way 3 Western town In built in ubout no follows: A nuns is given to the loodity uahmty in built. I hemp. r in ennui um! I powomoo ambush . A nitrond mun than be procured. hum! bills um! oimlm distributed ‘hrongh the Eaten Shun. tow ruldgnta oomo. 3911:. build- -_.I AL- The uptogipus divg‘ longer!)v yepï¬by DI-WII. I Iv" lwlâ€"‘râ€"vw _â€"__v last. an a . uloon. no oid‘oidï¬uid “IO town II we 1 on the way oibywud. Have You Thought About An observing trsvellermin‘ gho on th Name I! WO-“‘†FI‘III'IYv V _Hamlet. 'lho Dav at Small Things. “I Ilnvo Galen-ed!" Another Lilo saved. Wrecked Mnnhoo‘d. I cougldpr yqu; â€"lVilmin§ton Del. The meet deenuolive pnii‘x in Momene “nee white men e1“ know. tenitor broke out in the lot in the moon ne. nee: elm “mp. on m' 15' Octobet. It aged end I reed. endth a ened Fort Alduibolue. mop. venue. on. he ï¬ght it while eeverel mueu Ml}: tort. hue they were dtiven heck. loroemenu vete sent. end an. eouree o! \ flunee wee and]: tamed end the to; eeved. but they deem» ed everything within any yudeo! the buildings. A tree. ‘0! over 900 mile wee burned out. A new villece in Kentueh y has been nemel } Cleveland. â€"Lut you-'3 lumouu ore out of do“. hm [on you". friends are still our own. This in why Mn. Piuhhum‘n Vogotohlo Compound nave: loses (not; every [say who knows its worth (out! who doe. no") tools shot the hindly (mo of Mn. Pinhho- is thus 0! an honored friend. Adinner wu given toten gonflomon a the Bananafhï¬lrpdolphi-y. lu|_ week. up cl moo of which in s an «jam 0! much NI in ionuhlo circles. The menu: were in the form 0! s booko! muiquu lather with a solid silver olup There was nine to the book. ouch we roprmndng s gum. spd bountiful]! illumip-{ed it} oil. This gdasipo duly um. aunt-v bookn o! m muonomio libmy con 810 each. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S * VEGETABLE COMPOUND " *. .* IS A POSJTIVE_ CU_R_.F ‘ ‘l For all or those Painful Complaints an; * ‘ “'enkncues so common to our but ' * . * . *FEMALE POPULATION.‘ . i J; IT WILL cvm: xs'rmnu' 'nm won-1- ronl or any: Com‘ulsrs. ALI. 0mm»; 'mounus. I PLAxxnmx AND lsznnmx. Fuuxo AND rucsumu‘s, AND Tm: mxsuqvnxr Srlxn. Wm sass. AND 13 rmrruunu ADAPTED 1‘0 1- meas or Lure. ' . ‘ .. * . l . * 11' wm. mssou‘a AND Eer. Trauma ruox l'nuu's Ix AN mun sum: «r.- ut-zvnxm-mzxr. '1‘ '1'E.\'l'mt£c\‘TOCA.\‘C}::lml‘:lHUMOR:l THERBISCUL‘ vmu' sx-mmnr.‘ m’ 113 um. . ' § ‘ . a * IT mmuvm Fuwxsas. l-‘u-n'mxcr, mzrrnofl aumxuux‘u ruz: srnwux-rs, AND xzxzugvns \\'I:Ax~‘ x135 OF Tm: S mnmtu. 11' ovum limxnxu. "any? Arm-2, leumrs l‘nu>TRATlo.\', (uzxsnu. DEBILI‘I‘Y.‘ DHI‘IHZSNON AND lxmuasnox. .. " . ' .‘ * Tun FEELING or ltmmxu Dmvx. (‘AI'SING Pun. \Vmaur an BACRMCIIR, u ALWAYS PEI‘JIANIN‘I'I: cu mu m' rrs USE. ,, * . * . i . * IT WILL AT ALL Tums AND rxmzn ALI. (uncut) snscns A(‘l' 1x HARMONY wnu Tu: uws Tm! comm THE runny. arm-nu. .. * . O . * a-I'rs rr u-nsa xs SOLELY r01: Tm: Lmrnnfl nxAuxo or msmsu AND THE mzuzr or run. m 'ruxr 1r DOES ALL 11' cums 70 no, Tuumuxnao! LADIES CAN (sums: TEETH‘Y. ‘Ct . i . R * * Fun rm; mm: or limxm' Conmxm ll EITHER sax nus nsunnx‘ ls l'NSL'lu‘ASSED. . . ' LYDIA P. PIXKIIAII‘S VEGL‘I‘ABLE COXI’OUN'D I pmpand at Lynn, Ham. Price 51. 8k homes for I Sold by all drama“. 8cm hymn: postage paid, In for. of Pills or Inn‘ngva on "Nip; of prim-“Above; In Pinkhnm’a “Guide to Health" will be mailed {No to“! lady sending stump. burrs nmflnlonthlly unread. ‘ No fami honld ho wflhnut 1 \‘NA R. PINK“ LIVER 1‘! They cum Constimtl '1 muousnm. lbrpidity of the Liver. 25mm“ 1- r box. ' . . BER .. ..| A. :‘n M.) FLLC-TROAVOLTAIC REL? mu! - ' - ELFP‘IP"? A AI'I'LIAXCl-s z-ro soul ("I :)I h:'.\s‘Trlnl Tu HEN ONLY. YOUNG Oll NH, “‘l'n are sum-n lng from NERVHl‘S Dlleh. Ln: \‘rnun. meo mexrmm. and all 'lvmo «E'corscs of a PERSONAL Natuar resulting lmnl Au'sss and 01mm cum-3. 'hpmly WNW an! complete tulorallon to Fun", \“m-u and Muuoon Gmmwnsm 80nd at once tor mutruled Pamphlel (roe. Address . tghnll. M101]. Voltaic Bellow!“ r; (i); 39 13.51.ch .-'..‘;L:§.flla 4 ,1 †Tï¬YEi \5 1g: ‘mVounmo Bum 00.. of Ila-hull. lion. one! to lend their oolobntod ammo-Yam†Pun undgsiergmom‘xo â€amok-‘1)! :3 his orthmy yl. men young or 0 mat with nmounï¬ebiljty. loan of mum und Inm- hood. 3nd .1] kindred troublu. A100 for that mum, nonn' :, punlysil Ind mm «In: diseases. Oomp on mini-“ion to had Vin sud msnhood umntood. Nu rink in mm uminy dun n in snowed. th mom once for illustrated punphlanno. - â€"- â€"â€" â€" When‘ru cure I no nun. moan mum; to won “in: h “hue and: on hm; them rumru nguln. ( .unn a cal cure. lhnvo made "an Illa-mm) u! FITS. BPILI ol’ FALL“!!! SICKNBSQH Illa lung ï¬nd}. I Inn-nun. tuned; to cure cho wn‘" v . 4 mmuno «thou In†tuned auo reason (on. nu r c" nu: acute. 80nd. once {or u Iro- n An 3 I I m of my lnfllllbh ‘- v v nm. It cost. 10! II‘ ‘ )I-u n 1-...“ no ‘11-an- nuns ms; When any cum I uq nu; moan mun-xy to .mp1 em U 8. 3., room on the Eye, Eur Ind 'mn'ou THnlty Medial Oollogo. Toma». Donn-nu Lorin to me Toronto Genoa! Bocpihl. n gllnlgq Lynn) 30on [30139011 Oplmnlml v--â€"-'â€" -__..... - nouns-1. ‘inoonnona‘i‘ "ind ’ 0'.th undo gum! tag! 33:: flgcplhl. _811 Church emu Toronto. mulch! Buniiii Bye. B. G. 8. BYEBBON, L. B. (LP. 8. 8., Loomgn thojyo. Eu |_nd 3mm: “I a ' III" on! Inatmotlon' In. by mail In Book-keepln‘, Bu no. Forms. Arithmetic. Shorthnnd. on em- n.- loncblo. 80nd sum 5 for PAMPHLIM‘ to 008â€"- BESPONDENCE b SINEBB SCHOOL, mun- Bt , Buflllo. NJ. “a“ svunv $5°§22$$3an$ by mall In Book-keeping, Bu no. OMIRSPMIR‘M BURIIMS snlm‘ph 4511mm 8t. 13313.10, N. Y: _You_ng _Ilgn V m min ax. Bnfldo. N.Y. Young Ion ml Women momnshlr prepared [or tickets, at home. Book-loop nu Busineu Rom; Penman .mp Arithmetic nnd hhonhsnd hmm by an“. Bond to! ottoman. YOUNG NIB" lâ€"IIBAD 'I‘IIIC. fnl'thlnl, mill 1 \\:'.. u ‘ )1 n damn Dr h. lun- u PM" at" New Yorl EYE, Eâ€? AND THROAT. I). OH. .1- 48 I'LAOI to not". . Bum“ .‘I . . . .pc Inn and. but 3 ' § ' 0' rm or nus. I ‘AND a. Wm TOT «'0 mo: rzxr. '1‘ man 6 . a nm‘rnofl H \\'!:Al-‘ 1,1112“)?