aes 2 \-< * fearless as one of his Viking ? but on and on and out of sight. - another bark, bow on. A SPECTER OF THE SEA. | THE BARK THAT SAILS BY THE} 'SHORES OF THE UNSHAPEN LAND. Gaines Set, but No One at the Helm. don, at the Tremont house, and at the chaflock, the poppy and bindweed. A Skirting the Crushing Pack and Dodg- same time to see the many curiosities weed is detined as any plant out of place. F INTERESTING AFRICAN CURJOS. | "Th Paginers' Gasette, of London, re- EGYPT AND HER ARTS. A Peep at the Trephies Mr, Herbert 'ware : Brought from Africa. ps weeds and whence they come. It is probable, according to this article, that 'A few privileged friends were asked the six most Dbnoxious weeds found on hrenenthy. to meet Mr. E. J. Glave, of Lon-' arable soils are the dock, thistle, nettle, Edwards, the Eminent Pgyptolegi«t: It was a large and cultured audience which was gathered in Chickering hall recentiy to hear Miss Amelia B. E wards, critic, authoress and lecturer, d@liver the first Of a series Of lectures on Egypt | fing the Crumbling Bergs--Now John Which Mr. Herbert-Ward broug cht from Cultivated grasses are frequently found ang her arts, They expected mach and Haneen Was Shocked. Stout John Hansen, wrapped all in furs, stood at.the wheel of the bark 'po These articles are not Sowing in arable flelds, and there they are distinctly weeds, inasmuch as they are fed upon the food which the culti- vated crop requires and occupy the place Africa with him. exhibited at the lecture, but are privately to friends. Mr, Glave, ¢ of them, ia a young wero not disappointed, the address being a choice and Instructive « j Miss Edwards is preeminently an En: | glishwetuan--relined, intellectual, trav- | shown ntertainment, j who hus , chars Englishman e Whence Weeds Come. E l. What enbanecs the beauty of fine fe; - o mplexion. To :ecare thi *, bi .od with Ayer's S crapail! equal. Price $1. Six b tt ine, $5, $) above ers your It bas po Wer bh When you are buyitg nuts, candi-s, figs ralsine, er ryent Guid tas tree, cull at Waleh to's h esiaaadt to you cheap. iin des s *hildren, but em Pade: detest wn WORMS Pre were's 8° deer, a whaler of the Arctic seas. It w for advent ho has be whith it should occupy. In answer to eled ahd well read. The principal points ' : fe ; . * night, and the vessel was working 7 Soe aren taste Tor ac ? M ore, * Li ee I TF ® the quostion- whence weeds--come~there 77 jhe loctiire follow: | . e ice pack with Cape. Stiythe just | into the inte ros po is = he salir Hei: writes ac orrespondent of The Man We would naturally s DI the arts j looming in the distance. The biting * Stanley and Mr. ~ ae een eer oe chester Guardian, "eight replies given, , f sculpure and pointing, whi _ hs Ave wind twirled about Manden's fect, catehs 2 Oe sided reputation aa @ sticce ms Ar to oho or two of which I may refer. --lteegiies down to us from th n izes ion up the light stiow and sending it hunte r, Tt is mar ry inter wating zg to 'the is rnarked that the seeds of weeds are tians, to be twins, but pa 4 is tiptions of the + among the ore a es = "" anil swirling across the' darkling' water, "* OO%C™ 'yr eapoe wadeatly-o tie often prese OS RNIN the "7 ds whic h are eal His pre -_ teen, are S not only a distressing complaint, of ere was a brisk brecze and the' nig ht me nyses, ore ' +t a op the ts sown, and that especially-is this the case oblereas auchent as Exypt , itself, but, by causing the blood to ¥v = "" ré ' oe 3 'a was too cold for comfort by reason of OSE PEOWs babel Shion? Msi bs > ingots seeds: Poguard against this the .1)0 00) 45 ATi Winanlimelf Drawing' become depraved and the aystem en- . Of Gthier niet aan til Mons SEAT EP was = firme . =e = the proximity of the tle: but dtansen cared litth and cheerily 'whistled the tune of a folk lore som he learned while * @-child-sporting on the shore of a Nor -wegian fjord. He seemed as strong and Ancestors when they faced the unknown Atlantic until "'cloudlike they saw the American shore stretching to leeward." THE PHANTOM OF THE NiintT. Sudienty, right out of the pack came Her mizzen was gone and sle veered and yawed strangely, but her sails were set andshe was making fair headway. Hansen could hear the swish of the wind in her shrouds and the swash as she munched the bone in mouth, In an instant she tucked and bore 'away. Then, before going 100 yards, she came about ga Hansen hailed her. There was no an swering hail. His voice rang hollow and strange as the wind took it up and scemed * ~to make of it mmockitig chs, Then he * hailed again. No return, Hansen's lips grew white. His-& shook. He put his helm hard over and made for the open sea, Then he tnuttered a prayer which had not come to him since * a ship burned underly feetin the South- ern cosan-way-back in the 60's, He had seen the spectral ship, the Fly-' ing Dutchman of the frozen ocean. The * phantom came so near that he could see the glisten of the salt spume frozen on her rigging and the icicles which hung from her spare There was ice upon her deck, and upon her wheel, and upon her battened hatches--ice, and nothing more, Her decks gave back no echo of f00t- ns ~wateps: Her exiting tights wire ait She' was so low in the water that she seemed almost awash --but she kept on into the darkness, reeling, staggering, unsteady, ' eae gat watching by his bedside. He tered and™ glibbered;-and-starad With straining eyeballs, For no man may look upon the phantom ship and live. THE WRAITH OF THE YOUNG PHCENIX, But what Jobn Hansen saw in depths of thar July night was not a spec- ° ter of the seas; nor wus it the grim vision of a fever stricken brain. - It oe some- far more derelict of the Poet: Itwas the wreck of the Young Phoenix, which, since the Sth of Aug., bind has been sail- _ ing through. ice and kalo, breasting the bergs, guided. by an unseen a tan and sailing hie no known port. Noone may say she has not touched the pole. Noman may tel] where she will be seen again. On Aug. 3 of that year the whaling fleet.was riding between Point Barrow and Cape Smythe, waiting for the ice pack toclear, when down came the south- west gale, beating the sea into ridges * and tossing the stout ships like the paper argosies of children, Down went the bark Fleetwing that had outlived ad an arctic storm. The Mary and Sus; strained, plunge ds and foundered. The + seas oot moe teek in the schooners Ino and Jane Gray. - LEFT TO THEIR PATE. " Thing 3 were lively on the Young Pha nix thei an. Both anchors were let go and the men were ordered to the pumps. She * was leaking badly ond the hea swept clear over her, With the the wind shifted to the west and in stronger gusts. One after the other the cables parted. and. the bark - drifted. Then an effort was made to get but the vessel fouled the Triton when trying-te-get over the bar. Her ruddes, ibboom carried away and: freer. an hour or two longer. The sails on the ™°S* fore and main masts were set or partially furled when Capt. Millard ordered the men to the boats, and the Young Phosnix sailed away, rudderless and undirected, to meet whatevef fate arr come. She was not seen again that year, and Bite supposed. she had focderes ce Argperg diay: : Seer. 50 On May 5, 1889, she was seen and boarded by Mr. Leavitt, manager of a whaling station on Cape Smythe. She water- oraft-4e-probably-the This plientoni whose ice-sheathed shrouds and silent decks loomed upon the start- Hansen that _Bearly & Year she had roamed thé chart no te band, answering idl poetain, and alone.--San Prancieg Ex- The Title Fitted Him. deel Wl, wink do gon think ot oC woe He talks with- + tg Bui and. made straight. for ther 6 four feet in height; with small frames 7°" r wong opi £0 to seedsmen who are ; art the world possessed, the earliest question brings an answer that he can- I ' 20t help givi: m5 " > bare bey air an a precautions and we puss at onee from the nrest an 'PE in/the cleaning of their senda. > ox osx eet trau:t The world al grown accustomed te centitacsrs te-the kgyptian draughts | Further, it is remarked that many seeds are introduced with manure which is distributed upon the land. The wind . is responsible for carrying the seeds of weeds both into our gardens and fiekls, this is one reason why farmers tan. We cannot measure the tue which elapsed between the two. We) anER cuess how tony it took the pris: | txve bE syptian to Work up frou his orig - | inal b irbarista to the time when we first hear of him, for even then he was a fin- ished sedentist hand a wide ture. eaatern curios. China, India and Japan areno longer unknown lands, and the arts and industries from those countries are almost na well known as those of Europe and America: but in thé quriosi ties shown by Mr. Glave one is brought gioatd not only keep their fields but ree to fate with a new people pocns * their hedgerows also-e ole an., The hedge- hith rto unknown land. The first sens ' sowsere the cause of a gre at deat of tion which one has is a wonder how 'ie > mischief, aa well as the strips of land otf pone oe to -- a cmARY. ra WES: either side of the high road, which no- they work ta iron and other meal, they poay owns aitd which few atte mpt to weave a cloth from filer, they carve in clean, If tho farm is to be ke pt free wood and ivory, and their straw or cane trom wee "1s, the hedges, the ditches and weaving is wonderful from its fine work the roar : 7 ' manship, its beauty of design and por nisl. This.svas best shown inthe which + OOV™¢. and mathematician, and | knowledge of arts and litera: } It is with his skill asa draughts man and as a painter that we are con: cerned, The earliest Egyptian paintings are at temple of Denebra, on the Nile, and ante- date the agi of Christ by 3,000 years. Isides must be kept clean also, +. with the Among other methods of distributing kate: al. , pe . heads and legs are the whole body when held in { front z ld ser igneirigee ep pai ag oe represented in profile, while the bodies - oe "Ip resembles' more than atythiag™ "ee . . am = ropped SY and eyes are fulk front. Having no idea the" tine cane work of the East Indies It irds and are found in their manure, of perspecti ie-emeoth-and--glossy, and some of the 7 ogre si pranatnageen 4 -- t, 'rawn upon the same plane. Still the fibers are'as fine as thread. Black and Seendaie, . a cles ae ae cbth. actual picture is not se preposterous as 'white fibers are used, the design being ng heen 7 rr te use od the, tie description would seem; the lines are wrought in black on the white pe after Rie ine a of France by the Ger drawn with such freedoni and graceful- and is even more beautiful on the back Mi which had bee ied ness that we forget the deformity. In side than on the front. Of course, all the G 1 nccgpeenenegr a conti' by coloring, the men were painted a deep this work is done by hand, and it is as alcass they had 'been brown and the women yellow. leven and regular as if shade by sachine,. re before? y practically The features and dress also received. a { The ornaments worn by the women ne 'conventional representation, The ancient s igyptian was not a painter, but an illu- be Sy of shape chat teuaarpcl vee ot oe minator, He could not depict the widow anything medern, Copper is a If religious festivals make a people re- weeping at the side of the munmuay of her deal used by them, and also iron: he * ligious the Sardes areamong the most husband, nor Pharavh slaying his thou- first is to ornament almost entirely, and religious of nations, Seldom did we en- sands, but in the representation of race the latter is used for money, as well as @F & town or village without finding the characteristics and individuals, alien for the cruel implements of war. Among 5 ind senerdeclran paved _ llecaaing ts ne pa alien costumes, he was inimit- the me r ' o 1g ming or discuss able, ie notion is snanae Pronicett Wat teat nod the festa just en Seattered-over tha~ "EY ptMi AACE took more liberties with eran of dwarfs, a newly aeenenid island area multitude of small chapels rye human form divine thar any other, people, who have given Stauley a great dedicated to obscure saints, and to which put it ig not the case. The e arly artists leal of trouble during his last trip. the villagers for miles around flock with jy al) times and inall nations be« in inthe They are a small people, only about provisions si bedding otice or twice a same w: ays and make precisely the same , : y camp out in- OF errors. hing: in' Exypt tas been dis sleep in ajjacent caves; a priest says mass covered so ludicrous ly feeble as the draw- ing-peuple, and-sery-eavage--andtieres; in their-midst, and the, sy all eat and drink 'inj onthe proto-Homeric vases of. Greene, they are not physic ally strong, but are as if they fore "hada good cont: mmporary with the time of Rameses very quick in their movements, and meal, or as if the rest of their lives was AL, at even which period true Egyptian have a less degree of intelligence than to be one long fast. was in its decadence. most of the other tribes. The axes are A disagreeable litter of ox bones, ribs. Here were displayed a number of pho- short handled, broad bladed, ugly look- of sheep, orange peel, bean skins and tographs diréct from the original, by ing affairs; the bows are very small, al- stones of olives 'strewn amid the grass mears of a powerful stereopticon, Miss most like toy bows, with corresponding! y near the hermitage or on the level earth |Edwards pointing out their salient char- small arrows, = pany thet the very church door, bears constant acteristies.-.'The-contrast between the sharp iron tips. Small-as ~ ot they witness to the traveler of this sort of re-' 'early Greck- pictures and the are deadly, if they strike, as the poison «7 a junketing UP | and 'down the land. ' Egyptian, was indeed laughable, but it is very powerful and quick in its action. was noticed that the former developed, and short necks, a most repulsive look- sarage idee of creas tance ier tea aba traditional gathering. merely tocol while the later, shaving arrived at a cer-| in the waist. braeelets, earrings amd netination ots: priest ie: Abe tite cd at a anklets worn by the women; these con- district of Mamojada, shadows forth the standstill. "Cantina, the lecturer said stitute the entire costume, but the richer i of the Sarde festas in general. 'the Greeks learned from the Bgyptians, and more powerful a man.is, the more Two thousand five hundred people were put at len; sth the Egyptians adopted the veccene y loads his wives with these Present, and between them they ate 22 progressive Grecian ideas. When the ens of his esteem and their worth, °°¥" 26 calves, 28 deer and wild boars, jhuge labyrinth near Heliopolis was de- on more of this kind of ornament a 140 sheep, 300 lambs, kidlings and suck- | \stroyed by the Roman government, a woman has, the higher is her financial pd pigs, 600 fowls, 65 measu 'portion of its site was made use of as a value. After all, civilization and bar- rminate--of sugar, emcee 'place-of -burint-by-an~extensive Graco barism are not so far apart as it would © ot p = and spices, 280 measures i} colony. Here the new art came eom at the first glance, »a hundredweight of rice, a tate a being; perhaps a variation of rolling A spoon carved of wood is in a grace- dredweight of dates, 50 sugared cakes, ':} bandages over fhe face of the mummy fal and unique pattern, that might be 7), $,000 exgs, 25 large barrels of wine, 8,000 su; pouiet it: d a vast quantit of confectionery. | FE. -- ' copied with advantage by silversmiths 92 an q y aceg and heads were painted full face --Chambers' Journal, iwith light and shade to give the sem- ho are in search of ecmmething «new and blance 'of relief, a material was gen- ps D-ed When It Reached Its Value. fat the shape is very graceful and TAX, SAS 0: se | endin Vethe feet of-the fisures-were}- _prevalent that the J on e--finistied T- feebled, is the parent of innumerable maladies. That Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the best cure for Indigestion, eren whencomplicated with Liver Complaint, id proved by the following testimony rom. Mrs. npn Lake, -of Brockway Guan Mich. "Liver complaint and indigestion made my life a burden and came near my existence. For more than four years I suffered 'untol! agony, was reduced-almost toa skeleton, and hardly had strength t »alrag myself about. 'All ay ls of fodit-distressed me, and only most delic hee coukl be digested at all. Re the time mentionéd several i $ treated me without giving re- t. Nothing that-I saan seemed todo rma: goe til I commenced e the Sarsupa- Fills ? could seean improvement if my condition. to return and with it came the abi ity to digest the food strength im- directions, I found myself a well. woman, able to =e to all saenpenen duties. The eg ¢ bas given new legse of Ayer's 'Sarsaparill Dis J.C. Ayer" & Co. Lowell, Mass -- Pree $1; etx bottles, 66. _' Worth $5.0 bottle. | ' NOTICE. -- oS ie ED o: the premises of the yong » Con IS, nthe Townenip of , head young cattle. "Oter can ve same by proving property and paying expenses, ayply te Ellice, Der 31 88. Notice. y He MEAT MA REELT ib noe fom dic me eC Mr. JACUB raULl, Bute it. ai kinds of Fresh Seat, Puultry season, &c. Matisection cuaranteed. Give bim a call. 7 JACOB PAULI, roprietor of the West End a, ng stratford, Dov 1Y, 1-88. --THE-- Banner Ward Grocery Store. DOUGAL M'PHEE Bo raed ala CHE PUBLIC that he has Reiss by Faxp Cotvis, butcher, near the 'Janesion ot toate and WHTERLOO STREETS, Which as Gitted up asa Grocery Store, he wilt be plcesed to wait upon the 'public. laid in a fresh tine of SUGARS, TEAS, COFFEES, SPICES, CURRANTS, RAISINS, CANNED GOODS OF ALL KINDS, FLOUR, toe whe He ray tarze more than aclearskin! Exen ple a AUctioszer, ¥: 'cently made some practical remarks puiie. from « atkicte . Mrs. Amelia B, 2¢*tures cre made attractive fy a go d Rg ya ly as Rostock, FP... Ont, Tae 'Ww. 8. COWAN, ~ Soot, Aime. eve. HUBER & } NICHOLS ASM CTION EERS por tux CITY = Baigireaitey ro agche Covsty or Prara attended to om the ste and ah ost reasonable tertna ara: --4¥id 90, Market St, § Stratford. Stratiord;-Avs a) ____ tema W.D. WHIR, Bb Whe voidenrd AUCTIONEER sed Appraiser fo Counties of Perth a: tended ix all parts of the Cont: ken hesidence : healed . verton » Feet Se 1288. WB. FREBBORN; ' eee Beg Cumvepancer, Agent Po ' a¥i FL har Uttioner, &e. _ Momey to Lend at s ieee asc eaha be Faaee al Interest. Sea tentisn paid to Keal Briscaanng tink gyre t, Mill nok ne i "MILY ERTON, i ese. or Stree! dnt. Stratford. Seas Isth, Desa JAMES. PRCCTOR - A VETIONERR, VALUDATOR, ote, Special attention to Keal Ketate, Farm Stock and netane Farniture Sales. Sales the Stratford Market Orders left at the Te. rrapin Hotel, Ontario .atreet, will receive promp attenten tr = pri = -- Classic City Parber Shop, MARKET STREET. JAMES HARTL sub, Proprietor. £9 Give usa Call Batistaction Guarantesd, TO THE PUBLIC. Po. TAKE NOTICE E that ie Steam ie om the crrner of Price and Patrick # Tee ta, ombie: y in bitin A order for a short time, but work wil be don the Four Barber shop, er gine st, until | felthow police, i. Dor, etal iotive we '5 d-€: Bi LJ7. ISON. "A NICE LOT OF our'| NEW WALL PAPERS AND BORDERS JUaT OPENED And added to my Stock, which makes a grand variety melon Hla # tag Now ie the time to have Painting, Graining, and Papering Done Neat; Cheap and Expeditiously; CITY WALL PAPER and PAINT SHOP IDINGTON'S BLOCK, ERIE ST. ie 'CURES "RHEUMATISM FREEMAN'S WORM POWDERS. Are pleasant to t:ke. Contain thelr own Purcative, Is a safo, anro, and effectual Gestrever ef worms in Cullen or Adults -- --U-- Will save money by buying your |BOOTS and SHOES: ~AT-- Also a big ratty of Tranksa, © finest . ay ne Ladies Gatasels, she American Ov FELT note A at your own price to be had at JOHN SWIFT'S New Boot and Shoe Store, Waterloo Street. med niger a ~ Mg _ SWIFT'S. . et artistic. This is simply wood carving, | nue. ttally wax laid o3.p nals of cedar. ood. beau tiful, Some of the spoons carved Henry J. Mowry;-of-S}racuse,"is* whet colors were on lied in tt der form 'in ivory were not unlike those of me- Tat horse buyer and a man who can to the surface of the soft wax by a seed 'dimval Europe, and it makes one wonder tell the good and bid points about a'brush. The result was an immense step anew Tow ideas could have" grown borse witir his eyes shut. He was s0 ex- for ; among people who know literally noth- Pert in horseflesh that President Cleve-, By means of the stereopticon, a scrics seas 2S Of a life beyond that one in this land trusted him to buy his horses, and of specimens of this latter portraiture we, savage land. It certainly proves that the finest animals Washington has ever found in recent excavations were pro- those ideas must be common to the seen were brought there for Mr. Cleve- jected on the screen. The faces were whole human race, and that some of the #24 by Mr. Mowry. Several years ago, exceedingly interesting, thedrawing, ex- very best of our civilization came with in yracuse, he went into a car stable pression and light and shade effecta be- us from barbarity. had just received a fresh stock of jing excellent. The faces, particularly A beautifully wrought copper collar He was asked to look them over, those of the women, bore an exceedin::- worn by an African chief was as finely and did so. After he got through he told ty modern look, and were complete tothe Sograved as some of the specimens of te hostler to bring out a certain horse bp sane minute detail.--Boston Advertiser. ares brass work, There are also some "Bow muuch did yoo pay for that ane st at Of: enna Oe pr of horse?" he asked one of the directors of road. The English Royal TI hear that the Duke of E has worried the queen ae about "Seventy-five dollars;* ithe question of the succession to the "In two years, with careful training," throne in the event of Privce Albert Vic- said Mr. Mowry, "that horse will be tor and Prince George dying without ? worth $15,000 or I'll eat him." jissue. The duke of Saxe-Coburg-Got! 12 terre ee een an nth director followed Mr.. Mowry's ad- and the: Empress: Frederick are under- ple in the 'dark country," of pape gO had the horse carefully trained,'stood to be strongly of opinion that, in litele has been known.--Boston Herald. and in one year more was worth $15,000 order to. prevent any possibility of dis tothe owner. But on his first race he putes and troubles in the future, there made a misjump over a hurdle, broke ought to bea formal unde erstanding on wases his neck, and horse and $15,000 went'the subject. Tt is undoubtedly desirable Elequence. According to this year's, 'Hansard,~ skyward. |that such questions sliould be properly there were, during the past session, 123, _When Mr. Mowry told the director to and publicly settled in good- time, and, sittings, altogether 1,043 hours. take that horse out.and train him for a human life being uncertain, the antici. jumper he did not state that he pated situation might arrive any day. and 28th of August, when the house met would cians to break his neck before he Bia Salisbury iy, sal nmouch poe oc at3. o'clock and sat for over thirteen made a cent for his owner. Therefore for letting the matter slide in order to hours. By mémbers of the see the director was out $2,000 for training avoid threatened disputes, as a formal 1,625 speeches were delivered, and by' and a $75 horse. announcement ought certainly to have a0 ex-ministors, 965. oe speaker Sheet! Ide to pariiainelit before the mar- Quong Leo's Revonge. riage took place.-- London Truth. Quong Lee, a Bridgeport (Conn.) China- SES Eee ca. Speeches de- raring truck- A Whale and Hie Mx livere om by private pe bers, to the i num), cil de 20 doe Eeidgepert Pucener The big whale which caused a oda ber of 5,187, brings. the grand togal for he had been over-, Quong -tion in the bay last. week reappeared off the year "up to 6,340. Owing to tits sed by a trockman. It continues: Sausalito on Sunday with a mate as large greater length at which speeches during aa tela co te : the past session, hare been reported, the) eens was mad, and, calling at the ky as bimse The two monsters = freight office, he expressed him-, on than on pleasure "Hansard" this year @rel oie as follows: 'Me no likee the tluck- fegrp nad pay! out the best- unusually formidable.--London Life, man ini this place; makee pay in the for and kept at it Aged on "Boiled Victunisand Johnny Cale." Ihorse and wagon, charge you six cents part of yesterday. The noise of their Walter Haynes, of Brimfield, is cele- le-land carry your goods five miles. Man spouting could be plainly heard in Sausa- brating his 100th birthday today: He isiand five cents. horse here twenty lito. They were very shy, starting sea- in excellent health and ~-- igre t¢fToo much. Chinaman washee thlee shirts ward whenever approached ly: iy walt or beover7i Asa Mr. Haynesifor twenty-five cents; take two hours, 'row boats, The abundance of small fish : Welped ta buijd the first block 'erected in\Tluckman deca: cache ceneeven Sec conte ie bea wae Sthak Séatoalaee tempted them Syracuse, N.Y., and alone excavated s/minutes. ae ene Seen ithe bar, and_thes- divided the tuck: alte red Ma ole thins ul and ele A water front | estimates | ROLLED OATS. RICE, PICKLES, And all kinds of Gools uenusily found ip a first i ve Goods deli d to an the city. TEAS and COFFEE a Speciaty, Stratton', Jan ish, 1500, = XMAS. PRESENTS. An tlegant line of PLUSH GOODS such as COMB and BRUSH CASES,ODOR CASES, LADIES' COMPAN- IONS,SHAVING SETTS, COLLAR and CUFF BOXES, &c. Beautiful Goods Very Cheap ~AaT-- E.J.JOHNS' DRUG STORE, Market Square. Dec. Mm, 18a8. Mne-that w a a Dollar tn Li area -one <p ath yaa moment eal, This friend d P AIN-K ILLER. TA EER INTERN SEE, at coves Dyaentary, rd ter's Colic, Colds, Sore , Couges, Ke, USED EXTERNALLY, Ly Bruioes, the tery Touthnet:e, Pain ty the ee eect ime. in Family ledicines the Arvund. bs 25 Cenrs poe Gorris. : Beware of Counterfelts aad imitations. Use " ene Venateon Pow ders for loss Sree ere ee A _toiway: Quong Lee move goods alt over' 'the tength of the; "boiled victuals, and johnny cake."-- leity, six cents.' " larger one yt forty feet and of the smaller Palmer (Mass) Car. AtvGHY Times ig Rene 07 ope at thirty.--San Francisco Examiner. 7k be 6 iets : wien va time nd then AN mea AL CURE. Ties eerawa disease of FIiS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS =: life ~ I WARRANT my reme.t A paploapieenrny new par pow gerne se others have Aye # a LA of my 2] onee Logs ean dose Ghee Express Mice. It costs fe acres x4 a piel es and Beret sill cure oa AotW a - ROOT, DONT DESPAIR. --or F YOUR HAIR 18 FALLING OUT, thin or gray, there is a way out of the dif- "HAIR MAGIC." DG@:RENWEND'S PREPARATION, air and f So Peale gree neon fc