SN ney emenenmeneinn ae i NE i TN NT eR TE i Bt CHIP i a SH ene smo, ms -- cp Daa Pa rene sm eee cael ae one AO A a i . ht one Nt SE Rat i EN | PR OE i ane ea IK aetna ~ About Diamonds. pcainepomaniin Colériess. diamonds are usually the hee, near to thes, oft, inmy roaming, most valuable, but a colored stone with INFATUATION. Parisian Barber Shops. Long ago'a royal decree compelled A Remarkable Cave in Indiana. i 4,.« . H. Sturm, of Indianapolis, and « Il. _# PHENOMENA OF MEMORY.) 7 liming thee ever, like will-o'-the-wiap, PEOPLE WHO NEVER FORGET AND) Sul I hhave followed through fight and througe ; "4 loar A SOME. WHO COULDN'T REMEMBER. | S rser 8 wasneertothes, § scasicaoptominaia 4 Feit I was dear to th Mezzofanti Was YA Walking Potygtot" ordi oz." Master of Languaces--Carious Lostanc uaa | Dreamed f was held fp your arms to be kissed . works of Virgil, Cicero, Juvenal, Homer, and attended the funeral of one of his could reper > awe ORE ' hin my sky, tive Enthroned in my hea : iA} lovalte thee | will live and will dic of five Iyindredt : Tea onc# vr twite, could recite verb sti' & sermon. or speech, and enumerste che, Pity me, pity me, fruitiessly seeking, names of the shop signs from the Templo ant cov gs apap dbaerd pai to the end of Cheapside, with a descripy tion of the principal! articles display in each shop window. Refore the days of «b+ ing. Pll f wilt ery to thee, Btrive ta get high to then', 1 aa for Lite, for iae sound of thy spoaking, * Hark to thy silence with exquisite pain. nd still, if thou beckon, my star and my king, have no choice but thy fallowing " fhe 1v- rthand repo ..wimory Woodfall" used to atten hodse of commons, and, after liste: ing to a debate, would "tg th i whole without taking a single note, same power was possessed by William we Radcliffe, the husband of Mrs. Radcliffe. fF tang Ne ps gg the novelist. i my ubtiring endeavor, $ and. Sir Walter Scott, lf count4t great joy if discerning thy face, ' wherever you Both. FE had prodigious memories, yet neither of = near or afar, them could compare with Reronicious, of Middleburg, who knew by heart th SG ERIS | How Hall ts Formed. the two Pilnys If, 4 ent of Nature contributes this was an example of "rote" only we ¢o that journal a theory of the formation have in Mezzofanti,. the celebrated lin-! of hail, which is so short and clear that o one of the most strik- jt will interést many readers who have ing instances on record of what, by dis-' at times opportunity to test its tinction, we call intelligent memory. He ness, was described by Bsron.as."'a|. Limiting our notice to such com bac lg nae a a of oe a hailstones as are the most destructive, a Briareus of pa: speech. t and are produced during a tornado or a PS ed sig Barr fig ah ee ee arp bn 2 "in a few wi orma- tion, idiom, grammar and colloquialisms jon: . --and before his death he added twenty) When the winds gyrate rapidly round or thirty more to the list. He used to'gn axis, more or fess~inclined to the say himself that he never forgot any~ earth, the space at and about the axis is thing that he either heard or read. lente When air charged with vapor It is recorded of La Fontaine, noted jg drawn into this rarefied space, it may for-his eta He OCS. be condensed into or..rain, 7 most 9 greater elevation into snow. oe a hraabsg = hs Now supposing the rain formed in the niinded by the astonished servant of the cending current into the snow region omg rity pe etter Lhe Mbecthraed and so held for a short space, the drops shocke SS true; Of will be frozen; and-then, if Pinna t recollect now that I went to his yond the gyrations, it will fall to the unerat rround:as a shower of ordinary hail. A curious instance of memory in sleep - But if in the reannany ches es again is related by a French writer on dreams. drawn in by the inflowing current, they -is represented; [-get the aecuracy that I have again before me soon it will be idiocy, heart disease or every expression of her fine features in death." all their loveliness." ression, the insomnia, which, at the There are endless stories of tho hiding outset, was the symptom of somo local places of missing deeds, and so forth, disorder, becomes itself a disease. being revealed in dreams. Let ustake One lies with open eyes staring into one as typical. the darkness, The dire possibilities of A landed proprictor in England was the future, the interruption to business, involved in a lawsuit in consequence of the ardent, intense desire to sleep, all a claim upon his father's estate, which flit through the night, like dim and he was firmly convinced had been dis: menacing phantasms. Tho days are op- chargud. Judgment, however, was. about pressive, The body is weak, the brain to go againg him, as no voucher could confused, the blood sluggish. An over- be found. Butone night, ina dream, his powering tendency to sleep possesses the father appeared to him, and said that the tired frame, Ho throws himself down papers relating to this affair had been ona bed with tho impression that be placed in the hands of a solicitor ho had must and will sleep for weeks; ho drops not generally employed, but who hap into a doze and in an instant later wakes pened to be engaged for this particular with a start, and then isas wide awake busitiees, In the dream the father said as ever; if a wicked man he flings off the that if-this person had forgotten a matter covering with bitter malediction, and which was atready rather old he would with tired frame and dulled soul re- be reminded of it by the mention of a sumes his daily task.--Chicago Herald. | Partuguese gold coin, concerning the value of which there was a dispute at the 'an Unhappy Position, time. "The dream was curiously veritied, The man who seeks a wife for the pur- as the solicitor only Wid recollect the cir- pose of cumstance on mention of the gold coin. out working does not merit the respect He was then able to'produce the missing of the meanest person that walks about papers, and the son gained the suit after the earth. His intentions are so mani- all. ; : fest that they deceive noone. He plans Beth Plato and Aristotle have' noted hisattack with the ingenuity of a general. that in old age the recollections of child- Hisis an aggressive courtship, andahyp-| 4 ¢}, hood are renewed; and it is recorded of ocritical one as well. He cannot afford Kant that, in his old age, when ral to let the flame flicker for a moment. He memory was decayed and infirm, he had, must act the role of deception continu- he vers last. moments beautiful Greek sentences, These to blamed the fish commis- as any. an exquisite tint fetches as high a price The famous Hope. diamond, which weighs about 144) troy grains, and is said to be worth £25,000, is of a ! that you ¢ailed and I mid "IT am coum superb sapphire blue. color. Large dia- 4, monds, of the first water are tery rare, barbers and hairdressers to hang at thei door a white basin, so as 'to distinguish covered . rd them from surgeons, who sheltered night they explored it. Tha entrance is themselyes behind a copper basin, and 4 hole these basins are still used for siga pur- ¢ Richard Penckert, of Spencer, have dis- a cave near Spencer. Last 20 feet deep and about 3feet in diameter. At the bottom begins a 'nar- trow and steep passage, running northenst about 35 feet. At the end of this passage | s. i They are of oval=-shape, and a small : ished by its own px wer, is oned into a "rose" or a "brilliant." the forzser, one portion is made flat. mond, which can only pe cut and pol either fash- In Follows thee, wistfully, year alter sear, and in the whole of Europe at the pres .7 0, ic ehinne: 7 ssa . was & step off. cf about 5 fect, and imme- ef Memory in Steep--The Lmprestion: | oved thee, and missed thee, and longed for thee, ent time there are only Ace of Soon Chath aa oe nivns at at one end. _ Eb mi bmi a rr enn an Average Brain Holds Re dear. : . 100 carats weight. (A carat is 3} grains the neck antes the chin "ee ' 3 feet in diameter, the walls rising grad | The varictics of niemury are as re Lost to me, lost to me, er rand ever, , troy.* The largest of these is the gem But nowadays Deere atts no such basins. Ually in the form « f nqone, mecting at : ~amarkable as its vagaries, Lhereisofor to fad ipair poet Dep hcg ageell Oe Siem craps rind scepter of Russia, which j,.ig6 French barbers' shops. You must. % point overhead 39 feet frr ce flpor instance, so wide a rane between Nie Tv hold thes as lost {6 me, Caine from India. d . wash the lather off your own face when' The walls were hung with rumeron Suhr, the grent statesman, and a certais Wisate'er the cont to me, The others are the Pitt or Regent dia- Piesro haatinished shay ing and cutting ~ water at the'time. drip divine, that one can acarcely rees grikes Peas aan Hiya Pert ; gnond belong oe an tae French OVENS ves Tien,.if you wint.csour hair PIMs « mes ¥ 18 inelses the same faculty inench It is a To i that the aioe vatasdivuses from your mners (this -- the jewel Napoleon used ari 1, you get back into.the chair-- "ive a t lon tal Trim thi pp ne Niebuhr that he remenbered every thia; } 1." 7 i Wear Ww the hilt of ? his sword); the and such uncowfortable chairs as they - oH west t Wother he had read af any period of his life }Oas sever be traversed, Whatever the pace. Tu cany dinmon i, which is. now the wre too--aguin, and the fellow recor imilar to the first tut GO > and it in anid of the reverend dottor that piest is fase: AGG US RScover aut over. - first crown jewel of the Emperor Of once :. ' { he forgot he tad been trarried within at om Wawel sow of prewenon near ur afar; Austria: the Kohinoor, in thie poyes" There are some halrdreasers who are y th brovht the parts : Dbews or tw of the intorestin': eyent ? Friend of my soul and closer thandover, sion of Ques n Vietori te and the "Star of not barbers, Lut all Garbers are@ ate her poom, it be a bittle 'John Wesley tad a remarkable meth | cence wr tenth; wish wrhginalt cae 6008p art met ot hem are Tew the tht, "From this a nar ory, and at $5, even, it was still vigurs au that thou wert to me slow to discover-- Brazit, nod napioiets lying JR. PAWN 10 nk m They put sume very queer ct hope and 7f bi rail ous. Andrew Full at a poaryy Grand asa t ing and calm ¢ * star some banking Louse in Paris. The dia- signs over their shop doors eornshinns gs. northwest te a very sm © rt and set hig Phere is one old mnan * through whic | made my Hfe a barden and came near [Tundigestion [s not only a distressing complaint, of itself, but, by causing the blood to become depraved and the system en- feebled, ia the parent of innumerable maladies. That _Ayer's Sarsaparilila ia the best curéYfor Indigestion, even when complicated with Liver Compiaint, ia proved by the following testimony from Mrs. Joseph Lake, of Brockway Centre, Mich.: ~ . "Ttver complaint and indigestion ending my existence re thai four years I suffered untold agony, was Frediiced almost to avketeton, and hardty bad strength to drag myself about. al kinds of fool distressed me, and on the most delicate could be digested at all. Within tie time mentioned several hysicians treated. me without giving re- iel. Nothing that I took seemed to do any permanent good until 1 commenced ses rer's i which Waa produce'? wordertful results." Boon after commencing to take the Sart*m%s rilla I conld see an improvement in my condition. My appetite began to re and with it caine the ability to digest all the food taken, strength im- proved each day, and afte ew months. of faithful attention to. your ith soul that is faint and heart that is break: While the rest of the stone is carved into a faceted dome. asthe rose, 13 atwass C'" : . | so as to form a kind of double pyraniid, with a common central base or girdle,-- Condon Telegraph. liever in rest, and chinkc that, next to oo often promised, is it not the most bit- 'may be-taken in the open. air... Talking that we are acquainted with?--Cor. New Pies of Feat recently, he said: 'entirely upon the person who is wanting the rest. If busy man can sit stil} for should take theif rest "inthe Any change of thought is a rest to® imagined by one who has net a touch of | , e lower region to be drawn up by the as- b |hardened. When this "'hias" been done while his horse is galloping away in the * distance, and below the following words- are written: "If he had worn ene of our ! . vtefartune would not havo The latter, which is elways made about three times as thick : . intr foceta. but ett re * Wipe sss happened him." A barber of my neigh 'sign which readst "Shaving done here today for money and to-morrow for noth- ing." This "to-morrow" that never comes, aud which the evening before is Nest to the Open Air, Dr. Oakman 8. Paine 1 a great be- 5: leep, the most beneficial kind of rest ter sarcasm of all the illusions of life ' Orleans Picayune. "How rest should be taken depends Terrible Asian Heat. business utes, he will find that he would be great- tive of Scinde, Central Asia, the shores of ly refreshed by so doing. There can be tho Persian gulf, the sun of Greece is but a 2° stated never take rest, and if the rest was taken ju- sufferings. d never would get so tired ts to be com- the red hot air penctrates to those under-| and just dream for a few min- ately trying sometimes. But to the na-; time to take rest. One should a trifle. The utter helplessness of man| so tired as tobe. compelled to under this infliction adds hcrror to his. iciously and at certain intervals, one Thore is no hope and no resource when ' pelled to go away for rest. ground chambers in which the summer bi- } "Literary men, or men who do a great ig passed in Contral Asia. "The inha deal of brain work, require a great deal tants," wo Jearn, "are shutting them- more rest than manual laborers. Physi- selves up 'to escape"--probably closing cal workers only get their muscles tired. 91] the apertures of their subterranean teensiti The muscles are much more easily rest- ghodes, exce pt those absolutely necessary, ed than'the brain is. Brain workers for ventilation. The air down below, open -aityaander such : rain worker, and after he has been experience. Houses of good class ar studying hard and exercising lit brain solidly constructed under- ground, with' to any great extent, a walk or ride in chambers and doofs and corridors, but the-country..will be. the greatest possible the mass of the people inhabit big holes,' rest 'that he Could' have.""--New York roofed over, with no kind of permanent Mail and Express, 'convenience. Every winterthetfroetrad --_-- snow and rain play mischief with these The Turks and the Crescent. He says he once saw in a dream a num- in catri The crescent was not originally anem- nor often, repaired by the following sum-, rere ines ber of men passing out from a feast. wacked wo Setite ahttnee Gotu -- of oe we oa soit mer. Fancy thousands of Mongols in Consumption Cured. - He observed them all_very attentively, w,or, if wetted i : ' e primitive Chr of Constantino- these dens, pursuing theirfilthy habitsin = An old physician, retired from practice, ~ ol and the face of one struck him so much ae i Use oe tor kcet ple and the eastern provinces of the old semi-darkness, suffering the awful tor-| having ha pl in his hands by an East nitinnd cenit ee wan ~ that he remembered it after waking of transparent ice, In this way the Roman Empire as an emblem of the ment of heat, children wailing, adults India mi the formula of a simple STOMACH, LIVER AND SOWELS. . Exercising his thoughts as to wlitre he 215) en = ene wing. influence of Christianity. It raving, always in want of water and gen- vegetable remedy fur y and per THEY ARE MILD, THOROUGH AND PROMPT "Sen, globule may make a number of ascenta**" ~~ ; : - manent-cure.of n, Bronchitis "had seen the face before he at last rec- and descents, and acquire a fresh coating was not until about the year 1453, after erally of food, in an atmosphere beyond ()) 5, Aathale apd.all T) cat and Lang 18-ACTION, AND FORM A VALUABLE AID oo '* " ellevted having seen it some days' previ- each time. ¥ the Turks had overrun Asia Minor and conceiving,--London Standard. eae sans waaaioad spate "> -Buacocn B.c0D. Brrrens 1m THE Sa ously ina book of fashions, which: he - > a parts of Europe, and had reggie 20 postive all Nervous | | T8£47MEwr amo cunt oF CHRONIC had carelessly glanced at and cast aside. "What in" that. the Turks A 2 5 CG after having tested ite sf AND OBSTINATE DISEASES. Réichenbach, a German writer on «nsomnia is not pain; that 4s, physical the. crescent as their national The valley of Gressoney is one of the' fulcafative powers in thousanns of 'cases, . ke Sigh mental phenomena, says: It here aeeees | in the -- ofa ee i 5 -- the use most beautiful localities in" the Ttalian' a ee ing {el "to ee: ang Ts nd MICE. LOT OF aes "Waking, I cannot with whatever blank, a ° . ly desert on of images and sym Alps, ~It-< i ln Hering igiiows. Actuated by this | , ' effort Secsil the features of my wife, who Which there rests a dull glare. One ceremonies of bee age or the in- tasEloventh century it was alee "motive sods doe to 'relieve ong WEW-WALL PAPERS distinguish- strange land, have stuck fast to their ed persons. The adoption of the cres- German traditions, They still speak cent by the Turk as a national emblem German and keep up tho clouest connec-| is an oddity which has, so far, remained tion with Germany, which they consider, unexplained,--Exchango. their fatherland. Their daughters are - ame men 'educated in the best German schools and Artificial Teeth, seminaries, When the young women! The finest artificial teeth are made of come home. from the -big cities-of the) the best ivory, but the great majority of north, however, they are compelled by, false masticators now in use are simply their parents to lay aside their fine Ber-| pieces of specially" ed hard por- lin and Frankfort garments to don the: celain. The following is one of thé pro- curious custouis of their forefathers, and cesses adopted for their manufacture: %0 learn to bake, and serab, and wash as, Fine calcined or roasted quartz powder, their mothers and grandmothers aid be-! well ground fluorspar, china clay, and a fore them.- The cleanliness of the' very little oxide of tin are very intimsate- '"Gressonari" Las made them famous ly mixed and ground together, and af- throughout Italy. Itia a prover) that terwards mado into a soft paste with their barns are cleaner than other peo-| water. This paste is poured into molds ple's houses. German is spoken in the of various kinds and sizes of teeth, and family, French in the churches, and) allowed to set. The plastic grinders are Italian iu the schools. Consequently cl then transferred to a furnace, where the Gressouari kuow at least three lan- they are *"'cured"--that is, half baked or guages.--New York Sun. | they are covered with am enamel made Maug It Up. securing the means of living with- of paste of spar and quartz, and finally An awkward young countryman, --_ Rire Bargeius that were never offer- subjected to an intense heat, until they Vermont, some years ago entered a are sufficiently baked; when they are ton warehouse and asked for employ-| ready for the dentist.--Surgical Reporter. ment. Hocould do any kind of "chores," --___----_--- he said, and boasted of his Spoiled His Programme. | "Stout as you are," said one of tho who was recently imprisoned clerks, "Tl give you ten dollars if-you* India, having been caught almost in will carry that bag of salt twice across tual ,com- the store and never lay it down." plained bitterly to an English officer at . The Vermonter in 'for a moment,) vivid recollections of his youth. ally. Ift should ever come the mo- : pportunity thou hitfully e the and then Most of us, probably, have witnessed ment when a feeling of self i dance ey ins -- beam a Lary, shouldered Ne -- paler spect it some aff. instance of an aged per- aod self respect enters the young wWon)- ji¢, with the fixed determination to kill t¥ice backward and forward, walked > gon Hving-in the acenes of the long past, 40's mind, his hopes in that instant onan : aud at to & with a hook at its end, which with a mind almost blank to the present. beyond redemption. TherS 11.5 time of his captare was in a fair way titig voroay® ® seuttle, and hung: the This is latent memory reawakened, but is the necessity of ever presént to carry out his design. Hoe had already bag on the hook. with powers of consciousness by and @ constant recotrse to hypocrisy.-- pijjed 406 gevscds, endl it the au "Mister," said he, "I woees 17 trouble an enfeevled brain. sia sais Pree 'would have let him alone for quite a lit 7ou ---- ai ton. 1 didn't lay & Even at the very entrance = longer reached down--I bung it up! ' ley of the shadow," the memory plays) ealde't Need P ee ee a in oung the money in his wallet. ; hardship that so a re should be refused.--San Francisco . pasion. Hew the Heart. Works. calculation has been made 8 | More Money for Tobacco Than Flour. | "Your office is a Au.D at te, 1 man who fi : ie 6 ee ee . and one-feu: ils to the} ah fee ngger--Yes, Miss Dorothy, | Mr, Ly father likes me. Said to mo today that "You don't protect the fish," he said. | te eet ee A prominent contractor who does bus- by Dr. Ric has employed ® the heart in months, and on tho- a i ans giving the -- tobacco for these 19 men was more than tain at r.the entire, crew, The out- cars, The num eart in the same long life would stores < , oe jtrought out the fi ' ab. -- . borhod has a ~- seme place under this ta se. This week a hole wifl be drilled to find if stich A cavity exists, ant also the: en trance wil] be enlarged, making it easier. Oo appears downward, the upper current of tioned, go to prove that there is another from the general surface is 150feet. The The horror of the heat is unknown to Party spent an hour and fifteen minutes a few minutes at odd intervals during ys, or indeed to any part of Europe, under ground.--Martinsville (Ind.) Cor. the day and put away all thoughts of though Naples and Athens are desper- St. Louis Globe-Demuocrat. rough pits, and the damage is not always, _ ; a3 he deposited) --Youth's Com- hat pour at times down the whole cat directions, I found myself a weil At the end of this last passage there woman, able to attend to all household cl off two openings, about as lasre as a duties. The ine has given me & ' + te" aujangy OD the * round - re wee "at a chatter was last passage, 'i @ +. 8 Ayer's Sarsaparilla, DOr; J. C. Ayer & ge Mass _ Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. W. 5. OOWAN, > f access, The factthat the water dis- tir, and the hollow sound above men- lcavity, probably targer than any of the | at Tax Trees Office ottended to. tase 5 rest. The estimated depth of the cave | fon. Ang. tard 346-ly HUBER & NIOHOLS A UCTIOBEERS ror twa CITY of STRATFORD and the Covert of Pearu. attended to on the shortest W.D. WHIR, TEED AUCTIONEER and Appraiser to ties of Perth and Waterloo. Sales at- tended'te all parte of the Hottoway"s riiis.--Enfeebled Exis- is med embraces every uired in a general and do, y; it overturns the foanda- attribute mestic re tions of disease laid by defective food and | kom. Residence: MAIN-ST., MILVERTON. : air, ja sencmeiioms congestions | Y¢rton Feb. of the liver, lungs, bowels, or other organs, these Pills are ally serviceable and me Xen ns eminently su ul. Should be kept in M RTOS, seeee Ee ener te readiness in every family, as they are | Lend at Kates of Interest. Special ad- medicine without a fault for yeung persons to Real Office At hie Street, : , Princess Millbank P. U., Ont. St¥atford, June 13th, 1-88 669-ly and those of feeble coustitutions. They never cause pain, or irritate the most ve es, of most tender bowel, JAMES PROCTOR | a Holloway's Pills are the Lest known AUCTIONEER, VALUATOR, ete., etc. Bpeciad of th ° attention to Real Estate, k and Stor Fornitare Sales. Seles every Saturday om the - * ; ee 3 Terrapin Hotel, Outario street, will receive promp ~ altention Stratford, April Sra, 1889 of tion an move hpegiins anil noxious particle rom both solids and fluids. a). Would Not Be Without It. Sirs,--We have used your Hagyard's Balswm for severe coughs. and colds and can recommend it to be just what itis represented tobe. We would not be without it "af Sanixe, Cataract Ont. 1 will send free of charge, t AND BORDERS suffering, all who dcsire it, this recipe » in German : French or English, with full directions for TvaT OPrPHEW DD Let rh pa ein re 2 bY | and added to my Stock, which makes a grand fersing with stamp, haming paper. R WLAT Nowe; lit-2oter's. Black, Bockes | Cee Oe ee en eee ter, DR LOW'S WORM SYRUP will re- moor W rms and Cause, qui ker than any other Medicine ; Neat, Cheap and Expeditiously, -- TA THB -- CITY WALL PAPER and PAINT SHOP IDINGTON'S BLOCK, ERIE ST. 690- D 1OYS AND REMOVES WOR '5 OF ALL KINDS IN CHILDREN OR Every Saturday We will have a CHEAP COUNTER, Vn which will be some rare bargains. We have just opened up E git crates of 'DON'T DESPAIR. IT' YOUR HAIR IS FALLING OUT, becoming thin or gray, there is a way out of the dif- China and Crockery | I's ""HALR MAGIC." Direct from.the Makers in.. England, Borer: and are going to offer the public sich DR. DORENWEND'S ~ ha At »' ed before in the city. Watch for our Seturday Cheap Counter and don't miss trose rare chances. P.WATSON. Ontario Street, West. A POOR MAN'S FRIEND. One that will save days of sickness and many a Dollar in time and Doetor's Bills, one always sa. oleae -PAIN-K ILLER. bon SALsy, cue Bri Tykes the Gras FOR NETTLE RASH, Itchina Piles, use Prof. Low's Sulpher Soap. a Use "Maud 8." Condition Pow teach the grand total 2,309,776,000. \ Medical World. : = {Stories 2 me eg OA Se tr caie ders for loss appetite in hore vs . e