-e i) LORD BOSBIIBRT ON IBEL.A.MD, ManlT Statement of the I^lberal Position BeganllaK the Inland. Lord Bosebery, addressing a great gathering of electors at Leeds the other day, said : If our policy is simple, the prin- ciple that anderlies the policy is simpler atill. We believe, to pat it as shortly as I can, that Governments are made for the people, and not the people for Govern- ments. (Cheers.) The people are not even made for treaties of anion. Treaties of anion are made fi)r tha people. All Governments and all treaties are only arrangements for the popalar good, and when they fail to satisfy that re<inirement they are doomed. (Cheers.) If yon view the Government of Ireland according to that standard it stands condemned. (Cheers.) It has never existed, it has never even pre- tended to exist, for the good of the people. It has been conducted on behalf of a class, of a party and a sect. It works, and has worked, continaal misery and shame. (Hear, hear.) No one has denounced the aitaation of aSairs with more vigor and with more eloiiaence than those two mem- bers for Birmingham who now employ .so much vigorous rhetoric in denouncing their old friends who have attempted to redress that wrong. (Hear, bear.) I believe that that trath is so patent and ao obvious that Her Majesty's present advisers see it them- selves. I hrmiy Lolieve t'lat the Parliament of 1881) will not pass to a natural death without Her Majesty's Government en- deavoring to offer the Irish people that measure of local government which they denounce ua for .jfTering. (Hear, hear.) Bat whether their hearta be turned to the good of the people or not, sure I am of thib â€" that the democracy of England and of Scotland have embraced the cause of the people of Irelandâ€" (hear, hear)â€" that they are determined that this iniquitous farce ot administration shall cease â€" (hear, bean â€" that they have determined that a Local Legislature shall be set ap in Ireland for the dcterininalion of distinctly Irish affairs so long as the Imperial supremacy is safeguarded. (Hear, hear.) Thoy have determined that Irish govern- ment shuU no longer be a happy hunting ground for Tory principlesâ€" (i;lieers) â€" or the mere machinery for keeping the dis- cordant army of the Unionista in order, but that it shall be adminiatered for the beneMt, and for the w^e benefit, of the Irish people. (Cheers^ To that compact York ahire baa set her handâ€" (cheers)â€" to that compact Leeds, the constituency of the Gladstones (loud cheers) -who chose the aon and who chose the father â€" (cheers, and "And will do again") and who would fain have kept the father only we held tiKlit on to him (langbter)â€" I say that Leeds, the oonstitueuuy of the Gladstones, and York- shire have set their hands to that solemn attempt. I do not doubt their saix'ess, be- cause, more than Leeds or even Yorkshire, the Libenil party has taken up with deter- mination â€" and the Liberal party has known adversity, has known reverses, has known calamity, but when it has once set its face to an object it has never known permanent defeat, i Loud cheers, amid which the noble £arl resumed his seat ) BILE. NYE. He HeArs from the Youngr Author of "The Quick or the Dead" School. The following letter, written in a nervous, cramped hand, on an empty stomach, with red ink, was received some months ago, but politica and other matters of greater importance, yielding more money than literature, have crowded out an earlier reply. I do not ase the full name, which is that of a young woman, I judge. At least, her Urat name ia Jennie, and, as nearly as one may be able to approximate one's age by simply knowing one's name, I would say that she was no doubt Iti years of age on the Ist day of last April. HtMBoLDT, Minn., Aug. 12. 1888. DKAJt Em: Will you pleaH to tell iiii; what wouiti be tbu price (or a f^ood aised book uot to liirgu Qor not vorry small auw this iB Just ouf- thac I have commenced t«) write myself and i think it is goiun to be ii verry i^ood one IMea.'iO to tell me when? I could get it printed and also all you know about it aa 1 am vurry proud of this oat) plea.s be so kind as to uot uien^biou thia iuclimod And a stamp for aa answer pleasB to )bledge me 1 am Vours truly Pleas to adiiross It to luo at bt. Vincent in care of Mr. Thn s Ilrowtt a.s I ;im hero now Yours Should I write it on both aides ot the paper it heing so you can tear it out and turn it -jver V, a. The aauie of it is The Polly of Blarkoycd Sellâ€" The Second Daughter ore The lirenott Hirt • Replying to this long, neglected letter, I would say briefly, yet succinctly and even tersely, that much would depend upon the size of the book. There is a tremendous call this season for an eight-oaacL> book, with small decks of foam on it. Can yon write aachabook? Can you write a book full ot implied and expressed passion? Can yoa churn up the great depths of human natare and shorten the longing which one may have for another heart against which to throb? Can voii do this and still go on with yoar primary studies at Humboldt .' Can you prepare such a work and atill get your spelling les. sons every day ? I do not know why you shonld have referred the matter to me, however. I would rather refrain from giving advice in matters of literature aa a general thing, for I am not a regular literateur. I could not write a book about "The Brennutt Flirt " to save my life. Writing passionate things in red ink, on both sides, I regard as a ijift. I caauot do it. A Totully Ulliid l*roiipectlv« Lawyer. At Osgoode Hall yesterday morning the articled stadents were formally admitted andergraduatea of the Law Society by a, Committee of tlie Benchers. Ainongst the Students waa Mr. William Stewart, B..V., of Queen's I'niversity, and his admission was unique in the history of the Law Society of I'pper Canada. He ia permaaentiv bliod, having met with that terrible alHiction in Montreal in IS7'^, through amallpox, which he contracted in the summer of that year. Ue had just graduated, and was making preparations to move to Toronto tt< pursue bis legal studies, when he was overcome by the blight in his career. He is now determined, notwith- ataiding his blindneia, to become a barruter-atlaw. in the study for which he will be assisted by a large number of his fellow students of oM Quoou's. The Law Society will be asked to examine Mr. Stewart orally at the various examinations, and it they accede bis frienda are ((uite oontidsnt that three years from hence be will be enrolled amongst the gentlemen ot the long rjbe in Ontario. Latent Scottlnh News. The Faculty ot Advocates, Edinburgh, Scotland, have appointed a committee to draw ui> a letter to Lord Moncreiijf express- ing the regret of the faculty at hia retire- ' meat. The Glasgow Town Council have adopted a minute of the Gaa Committee containing proposals for the city ac(|uiring the works of the Partick, HiUhead and Maryhill Gas Companiea. The Glasgow Volunteers neither desired nor applied (or payment of any expenses incurred by thorn in connection with the royal visit. The Ueufrewshirs Volunteers did aud v;ot snubbed. Msssra. Clark, the thread manafactnrera. Paisley. Renfrewahire, Scotland, have bought the Liusido Narsery (J rounds, which lie to the cast of their present works, at a coatot t:14,U0U. They will build a big extension. At a recent meeting of the Glasgow Chamber of Commeroe Mr. McEwcn described the propused intelligenoe depart, nient ot the London .Jubilee Institute aa " tli9 ureateat burles<]aeof buainoaaot wliich be had ever hearJ." Not a little sensation' was caused in St. Ninian's Free Church, Leith, on the 7th ot October, by a middle-aged man, just aa the minister had uttered the words, " Let us pray," suddenly rising in his seat and exclaiming aloud, " Prince Albert Victor ia my lord, god and king. Amen. " The Scotch Kstabliahed Church receives from tho teinds tJ'ioO.OOO a year, largely augmented since the last Parliamentary return on the subject ; manses and globes are valuud at £5U,00U ; direct vote from Consolidated Fund, t."25,(X)0 ; church and manae rates on feuars, C 12,000. A OIBI. BLACKSUITH. Flr«t-ClB8s HonwBlioes Hada by Flfteen- leur-Oia AuDie Bole. Among the exhibits at the Mechanics' Institute Fair, tew have more interest than the dozen horaeshoea to the right of the mam entrance. These horaeahoes, per- fectly shaped, handsomely poliahud and withal acientitioally correct, are the work of Mi.ss Annie Bole, aged 15 years. Miss Bole ia the danghter ot a teacnater, and lives in the rear of a blacksmith shop at '.tU Battery street, kept by a man named Walab. It was in this shop that an Ex- aiiiiner reporter found heryesterday. Waleh said that the young lady had been taught by him, and he was very proud of his pnpil. " I've seen dozens that tried it," he aaid, " bat none of 'em had the natural talent for making horaeahoes that the young leddy'a got. Mia' Huntington, chat'a worth her forty millions, made a good offer at it, but couldn't quite do it. There ain't a man this side of Lunnon that oould make horee. shoes like that yoang leddy." At the blacksmith's request, Miaa Bole made a horseshoe then and there. A piece of round iron was out off by Mr. Walah and Miaa Bole rolled up her sleeves, thereby revealing a rather small arm, tied on a leather apron and plugged the iron into the tiro. The young lady is about live feet throe inches high and rather fragile than strong. She brnahed the hair back from a laughing face and aoon the hammer was ringing on the red iron with a true aoiimi. She made the crease in the ahoe. turned it into shape like a veteran, regardless of the dying sparks, drove the nail holes, and finally tamed out as tiue a shoe as ever graced the foot of a race-horse, for Miaa Bole will have nothing to do with ahoea tor ordinary dray horses, but contiuea herself exclusively to the liner shoes of composition or polished iron. Misa Bole said that abe flrat became animated witli the idea of making horseshoes by watching the blacksmith. Finally she aaked him to let her try it, and he waa ao much pieaaed with her lirst effort that he showed her all that he knew, and the result was the exiiibit at the Mechanics' Institute. She saya tliat alio will not make any practical use of her accomplishment, though she seemed anxious about her exhibit. an>i several times asked : " Will I have to go out to the fair and make a shoe there before I get anything.' " Her instructor conddenth e.xpecta that she will take a premium. The horseshoes were tiled, polished and liuiahed in her own little viae, which she keeps in her own room. Mr. Walsh declares that he is going to send one of the horaeahoea to the Queen of England. --Sun t'raticisco Kxitminf-. PH09FHOBE8CRNT EYES. How They Light Tp Wbtsn Their Owner is In Love. Take, aaya Shirley Dare, in a recent letter on beauty ot the ayua, a yoang aen- aitive person of consumptive habit, in or- dinary health and in love. Watch the eyea of sach a one, and you will see an pretty a specimen of phoaphoric light aa that which playa about certain flowers in full bloom. The state ot nervous excite- ment uses up the phosphorua ot the body pretty fast, and it will flash behind the eye- lids like the Uro on summer waves. Butan- iata and other people have seen the mimic ilaahes a white lily three days blown will send from its petals on a warm electric summer night. I have seen aa literal a tlaah leap between the eyelids ot a lad ot 25, dead in love aa he could be with an absent woman. He waa nervona, a trifle poetic and overstrung, bis eyea dilated, changeful after glittering like a cat's. In abort a hnman battery, overcharged with nervous electricity. In one caae beaido, that of an Italian actor, Rossi. I have noticed the same flash which appeared to leap from the eye, not play- like aheet lightning within it. But then Rojsi waa a highly electric aa human beings are, in normal condition. Love and genius both are literally a com- bustion of nervona force, and the eye is the peep hole at the fire in tho brain. He Oot Her and a Blesnlnc. Banker â€" So you want to marry my daughter '.' Youth â€" If you please, sir. B.â€" What are your means? Y.â€" Well, air, to be frank, I haven't got any. B. â€" Haven't got any moana and want to marry my daughter. Confound your im- pudence ! Y'.â€" I beg your pardon, air, but I hope my means will shortly be ample. B. Have you any business ? Y'.â€" I am the confidential clerk of a mil- lionaire, sir, and B.â€" Confidential clerk ot a millionaire ! Take her, my boy, take her, and my bless- ings with her. . ♦ No Anset!*. " Qriodstone, I am sorry to learn that yoa have been compelled to make an as- signment. Will you be able to save any- thing out ot tbe wreck .'" " All loan save. Kiljordan. will be my own self respect and incorUDtible name." " Grindstone, you abockve. I had hoard it waa a bad break- up, but didn't know it was a total smash." â€" - â€" • An Kdltor'a Warulog;. A Weeteru editor has this bulletin on hia door: " You can tell all you know in live minutes. Thia is Presidential year. The editor does not know who will be elected. The editor has a loaded pistol. He baa shown signs ot insanity within the past tew days. Don't camp on his shoulder." â€" Some men will persist in sleeping in church. It's a nod caper, too. â€" The man who keeps bis own counsel does not often have to hire a lawyer. â€"This old-fashioned china, tor practi- cal purposes, is not what it ia craoked up to be. â€" Kev. Vt. Archibald, formerly, ot Knox Church, St. Thomas, has gone with hia family to reside in Denver, Col. -Sneer not at the boy who patiently re- maina tied to hia mother'a apron strings. The boy who anbmita to such loving tetters will never, later in Ufe, find himself tied to the end ot a rope. Why She Wait a Rnruiue. Wo were running down from Cbarloaton to Savannah, and the train was humming along at a high speed when the danger signal blew and the air brakes wore put on hard. As the train stopped all tbe paaaen- gers piled out to see what waa the trouble, and we soon discovered that a culvert around the short curve had been washed out. A negro woman bad flagged the train with a white apron, and ot course we looked upon her aa a heroine. " When did you discover that the oolvert had gone .'" I asked. " Just about half an hour ago." " And your first thi night was t(j stop tlie train ?" " Ves, aah." " Well, you are a brave woman. Wo owe our livea to you." " Does ye ? 1 nebber thought of that. ' " But you stopped the train." " Yes, aah, but I didn't want dat bull- gino to :^it otT de track an' go plowin' frew my cotton patch an' trowin' hot water all obor tbe place. Dat'a why I stopped tbe train, aah." Fe<;uUar Fatal aud Oilier Ac<:l<teuti*. While a Tyearold son of P. L). Henry, of Whitedeld, Unt., was playing with an open penknife, be ran against a door frame, tbe blade penetrating hia body to a conai- derable depth. The lad is likely ti) recover. Gavin Wallbridge, a atudent at I'pper Cana>la College, dislocated his shoulder while playing football on Wodneaday .John Bertram, another student, full oil a ladder in tbe groands yesterday, breaking hia arm. A few days ago Mr. Win. .lones, of Alter, clitfe, with his brother, went to Pelhsm with some cattle, both being on hoseback. When returning William bad juat croaaud the Chippawa bridge when his horae bolted and threw him. The unfortunate man broke hia neck and died instantly. A Uaysville, Waterloo, despatch aaya : A cow bulonging to R. C. Tye, of thia place, got an apple stuck in its throat. Mr. Tyu thought that he conld puah it down with a whipatock, but the uow did not like to be treated in auch a way, and gave a jerk and broke olT about a toot of tbe whip in hur throat. The animal had to be killed. I )n Wednesday afternoon, while Thomas Foley, sen., waa operating the barkuig machine lu Davy'a pulp mill, Xhorold, too knives came in contact with aome hard substance, breaking the machine in pieces, one of which struck Mr. Foley in the face, severing his uoso and producing a fracture of tho frontal bune. Aa Mr. Foley is ad- vanced in years, the doctors consider his injuries very serious. Some of the pieces of machinery passed through the roof and croaaod tho canal a hundred yards away. Sreum-Heiitnd Piuisenger Trains on tlie Now ViTk Central .* Hiulsuu Ulver Kiiilriiad. The stove an a means of heating oars on the Now York Central >v; Hudson River Railroad will bo entirely abolished. Daring the past yoar tho otliciala of the New York Central in charge of its pas- senger eiiuipment have been actively em- ployed ill testing various devices for heating cars by means of steam obtained direct from the locomotive, and have decided on a system combining simplicity of construction and management witli the most satisfactory reaulta. A two-inch iron ateam pipe runs under each of the cars, connection between the cars being made with \ metallic joint and a sleeve. This main pipe connects with a system of pipes inaide each car, one running lengthwise of tho oar, with branch pipes e.xtend- ing under the seats. At the centre ot each of the interior pipes is a key by which the steam from tbe mam pipes can be cut olf, thus reducing the temperature ot a single car without inter feriug with that of cars more distant from thb locomotive, which is tbe source of the ateam aupplv. .Since the advent of cold weather nil the cars composing the trains known aa the New York, Chicago .V St. Lonia Vestibule Limited, and the Now York, Chic.igo, Cincinnati .v St. Louis fast express, besidea a large number of the local trains running on tho variouH parts of the road have been sucoesstully heated ay tluH means. All the drawing-room, sleeping aud din log cars, paasenger coaches, aud tho hag gage, inail.espreae ami postal cara m service on the line will be fully o.|Tiipped with tho steam-heating appliance. IS AIABRIAGl!: A FAILCBB ? One View. 'Do you consider maiiiage a failare, madam ?" waa asked of a Chicago lady. " No, " she replied. " No, I do not, although I have been divorced five times. My little book hero will . Imw von why I do not regard mftrtiBt;e nn n failure." The reporter scanned Us paguh audfonnd therein the following account : Alimony payable, George W. Barrowly, of Indiana, 3 1,000 ; Henr\ F. Smithera, of Michigan, f 1,500 ; Thomas C. Carleton, of California, 3;),t;00 ; Jamea H. Dawkera, of Tennessee, 81,'JOO ; Charles H. Wilkie, of Flordia, S5,000. Total, SICUOO.- .V.'io I'orJk Sim. Look Here. Do yoa feel blue and despondent .' Do pains rack and tear away at nerve and muscle, and have you been iliaappointed in finding a remedy that will atford certain and speedy relief ? If so, go at once to any drug store and boy a sample bottle of Pol- son's Nervilino. Polson'a Norvilino never faUa to relieve neuralgia, orampa, headache, rheumatism, and all internal or e-\teinal pains. J. B. Carman, druggist, Morris- burgh, writes : "All the parties I supply speak very favorably of Nerviline, and always purchase a second lot. " Polson'a Nerviline is sold in sample bottles at III cents : large size 25 centa â€" by all druggists and country dealers everywhere. Try a ten cent bottle. Au Huuurary Member. Tommy â€" My father ia a church member. Johnny â€" So's mine. Tommy â€" But my father says your papa ain't, cos he don't never come to ohurcb, nor put nothia' in the collection box. Johnny (bravely)â€" Well, my papa in aa honorary member, and honorary members don't 'diip in. A Teu Years" Myalory Yet L'iir»v«ll«d. The death is announced of the wife of Mr. John Mc\ ey, Yarmouth, near St. Thoniaa. Deceased had been speechless for nine years ; tho death of her aon, Jolin, through an acciilonl, and tlio disappearing ot her daughter, Maggie McVey, >n Novem- ber, L-178, since whicb time no trace of her has been diacovored, having worried her so much that she was stricken with paralysis. She waa aged 71 years, 7 months and leaves a husband, two sons and four daughters, all of whom reside at home. •A Word to tbe Wise is Sutflvient." Catarrh 'S not simply an inconvonien oe unpleasant to suflerer and disgusting t(» othersâ€" it ia an advanced ontpoat ot ap- proaching diaease of worae type. Do not neglect its warning; it bringa deadly evils in ita train. Before it is too late, liso Dr. Sage'a Catarrh Remedy. It reachea the seat of the ailment, and it ia the only thing that will. You may dose yourself with luack medicines til it is too late â€" til tho streamlet becomes a resistless torrent. Ik is the matured invention of a scientific physician. " A word tu tho wise la aof- ficient." The Near Futtir«f. Elilerly Bride (to her hnaband)â€" Darling, wlieii I begin to grow old and plain will you worship me as passionately as you do uow ? Yoang Hasband -Ah ! dear, can voa doubt me '.' Do you imagine for a moment that my love for you is so short lived. Style. The moat fashionable color at present, is the hue of health, and it will never go out of style. Its shades and tints are vari- ous, but all of them are exceedingly becom- ing. It is perfectly astonishing what a change is being daily wrought by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescriiition in the looks of sickly wiiiiien. Sullerers from any sort of "female weakness " or irregularity, backache or nervous prostration, shoiUd give it trial. AU druggists. Cruel Nell aud the Lovesick Farson. Young Clergyman â€" The great hope of my life ia to marry yoa one of these days ! Miss Nelly â€" Certainly you shall, my dear Mr. Primrose, jast aa soon as Charley propones. » While a ciroas train was standing on tbe track at Chestertown, Md., a locomotive halted opposite the car in which the elephants were confined. Six of the elephants thereupon thrust their trunks into the water tank on the locomotive's tender, and in a few minutes bad drained it dry. â€"Young lady (badly frightened) â€" Oh, George, there cornea papa. George (ditto) â€" Where? where? Young lady-Hear him sHpping along the hall in his atocking feet? George (greatly relieved)â€" Be calm, darling, be calm. George is not atraidj,of t":kingfeet. Near Hopewell, Pa., yesterday, several miners, when riding on a hand oar on tbe Kaudy Run branch ot the Huntington X Broad Top Mountain Bailroad, were I hrown from the car by a train. Sam Hastings was killed, Martin Mahsr had his skull crushed and seven others were | Nut an Bnsllab Name. 'â- George," aski.'d a brilhaut young K streot girl of her best man, " isn't tbe British Miniater that everybody is talking abont an Englishman ?" " Of course he is," replied George. " Well, I don't understand how that can bo," continued the charming creotaro, "for I heard papa say his name was Dennis. Dennis isn't English, is it, George ?" And John put on the mantle ot charity and went out into tho chilly nigbt.â€" U'anhimjton I'ott, Tlie Health of the Proviuoe, On Thursday afternoon Dr. Bryce. Secre- tary ot the L'rovincial Board of Health, visited Cookaville to aacertain the cauae of the outbreak ot typhoid fever there. The probable caase he found to be impure well water. Some ot the wells were too close to the houaeaor wereolherwiae badly aitcated. In all, fivi5 cases have occurred there and one of them baa proved fatal. No new 'â- aaea of amallpo.x wore reported yeaterday. Keaentliig an Insult. Robinson - Jackson, I hear that Drown called you a liar last night. Jackson (bitterly)â€" Yos, he called me a liar. Uobinson- And didn't yon resent it ' â- lacksou (warmly)â€" Rosent it .' You bet I did ! I told him that was simply a mat- ter of opinion and not of fact. No man can call mo a liar and get away with it. A ComprouiiHa SuffgeBte<Z« " Thomas," sternly said tho small boy s father at the breakfast table, " don't throw away that piece of bread. Flour ia grow- ing ao dear that I can hardly koep you supplied with bread enough to eat, ao \<-<a mustn't waste any of it." " Tell you what, popper,' aaid Thomaa, " I'll agree tu stop eating bread, it it's aodear,and eat nothing but pie." â- Forced \'irtuo. " What ia Sniggina running for ?" " I didn't know he was running tor any- thing." "Oh, but lie ia, then. I saw him going to church last Sunday." serioasly injared, â€" Chicago Globe : " It doesn't take a goose or goo.Hobono, a weather prophet or a ground hog, a corn huak or the burrs in a steer's tail to tell that this ia going to bo a hard winter. So prepare." Ticket Agent Moflfett, of Knoxville, Tenn., fonnd among his father's effects recently a gourd over 100 years old, whicli contained, among other old papers, a note from Davy Crockett, payable to William Molfott, for one shilling and three- pence for a barrel ot whiskey and a keg ot cider. Millionaire Flood was once worth $10,- 000,000, it is said, bat his present fortune is estimated at 31o,000,000. The di£forence ia due to the great shrinkage in the values of Comatook mining stocks and to his loss of $5,000,000 in tho Nevada Bank wheat deal. ExtenuatlDK ClrcutiiKlaiiecH. Wifeâ€" I waa ao annoyed, mv dear, to- day to lino one of my pictures displayed in a photographer's ahop window. Hnshaud â€" Why didn't you go upstairs and tell him to take it out ? Wife- 1 declare X didn't think of that and, besides, tho picture ia a very good one 1 KatMesnakeH aa Kood. It was aaid of a strong political partiitan that ho would swallow rattlesnakes if party interests demanded it. It is only men of thia sort who, without protest, swallow tho large, old taahioned pills. Sensible people, requiring medicine to cleanse their systems, invariably ueo Dr. Pieroe'a Pleasant Pel- lets. They are unrivalled in all derange- ments of tlie liver, stoinaoh and bowels. How Far It Went. Misa Weatond â€" Oh, Miaa Tiptop, is it true tliat while abroad you became on gaged to the Duke of Oldcastle '! Miaa Tiptop (reluctantly)â€" N o, but my waiting-maid got ac<|aainted with his valet. ^ In a missionary aermon in Chicago last Sunday tho Kev. J. H. Barrows aaid that " along the Congo River a population e<|ual to that of the United States ia living amid a tropical laxnriance of vegetation on a aoi that produces throe crops of corn a year. Tho Rhenish mission in Herreioland baa 2,500 baptised converts among a giant race of black herdsmen seven feet high, tho tallest Christians on the globe." John Guy Vaasar'a will beqaeaths about f(i)00,000 to varions uduoational, oharitablo and religious inatitationa. -If a man wants to get a good idea of the way hia personal interests appear to tbe world in general ho wants to go out ot doors some still, oalm night and look at the waning moon throagh the amall end ot the opera glaassB. Tho oorner-Btone of tin big S ireoklo Sugar Refinery at Philadelphia vts lais with appropriate ceremonies yoalerdad afternoon. The White House at Waahington derives ita name from the fact that the Virginia freeatune, of which it is built, waa painted white tu conceal the discolorations caused by smoke and water. There is only a distinction without a dilference between an auburn haired sweet- heart and a red headed wife. HlSTOnV OF COLOUA.r>0. By couiiUeB and siertioiifl. Coniploto statistica III reitar'l to ita miiiHrril, ^igrieultural, paetoral, timber land and water inturodte. .^11 you want to know. Ijar^e book, well bound, uiailiul to any aidrefts ou rooeipt of $1. .5;l per du,-,. .lOUN L. Kl.SUUl' Jt SON, Filublo, Colorailo. MARVELOUS MEMORY DISCOVERY. WlKilly unlike nrtlllclHl Hytit^iufi, Cure 4>f uiliiil wtiiideririK. Auy book leMrnutl in uuu rotultng;. Claasusof 1,087 at Daktmorti, L,005 tu Oelro 1.500 at L'tiiladolpliia, t.ltJ tit W'iahuiijtoo 1,'410 at Boeioii, lar^H ulihscieH of Columbia^ i w BLudoiite, at Yalo, WulIttMloy. Oljurliu, Uuivoraity of L^uiiu,, MicUifjati Utiivursitv. Ctiaiicautiua.rtUi. tjtc. ICiiJorrtiiii i)v Uii!ii\n[> l.*H'>i;r(jii, tluj HJtoo tist, Uiiufl. W. W. .-VHrou, JuoAii l*. Hi'Injaisin .ludKOtiiHHON, Dr. HituwN. K. \i 'JooK. I'riii N.Y Htato Muruial Culle^e, otc. Taufjlu by uurrea puDilouce. I'roBpectuH poht vhkk fruiu iniOb\ LOIBli:TTK.ii37 Fifth Ave.. N.Y. D C W (.. 45 FOR SALE, A Morthey 12 -Horse Power Boiler and Killey Automatic Cut-off 15- Horse Power Engine.^ WITH BUCKjBYB GOVBRNOK All ill bebt of oriler Can bo aueu at tliu oUioe of tho TIMES PRINTING CO. HAMILTON, IJ.NI'AKIO. BAKINC POWDER ITHE COOK'S BEST FRlENUn