Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 12 Apr 1883, p. 2

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 "MMPPip 4- 5-,4-iHI|P|" -^ ESPECIALLY FOR UDIES. Thres Noted Woanenâ€" CoBjncal C«ib- panlonaklpâ€" VUl-Cli»t. Tbree Noted Womca. That's a feather Albani is a woman. That's a feather m her cap, which even G. Washington couldn't lay claim to. She is not a prettj' woman, either, but she has a pleasant face and sucli gri- woman ways! She is a lictle nearer to ui than the others, because she was born jn this side the Atlantic, and though no: an American by birth is one by adoption, and she gave up her re lly pretty name of Lajeunetsse for the ugly one or "Albani," as a tribute to her adopted home -Albany, N. Y. "Don't you believe in stage nomencla- ture " said Dickey. "Most emphatically not," said I. "People shouldn't be ashamed of their names if they come by them honestly, and if the names they have are not good ones then it ia their duty to make themselves such characters that the names linked to them will be honored in all languages. Bonaparte and Cjesar are neither very pretty names, but time will be forgotten when they are, and " "What about Mary Jane?" interrupted Dickey. "I'm talking about Albani,"' said I re- suming my writing. Albini's record is pure and she stands as high as a woman as she does as an artist. She is married, too, and as far as anybody knows Mrs. Gye fills the heart of her his- band quite as full as she fills the hearts of those who hear her songs. She is one of our greatest and sweetest sopranos, and I have heard her sing in the fifth-story regis- ter until it seemed as if her voice would conne out at the top of her head. At the opera festival she made thousands of friends, and it did olb good to notica the warmth or applause given her. She is young yet, too, and her life has a future before it filled with the fairest prospects of triumph and of gratified ambitions. I said she was not pretty. Slie has dark-blue eyes, a good complexion, English blonde hair, rather pretty figure, and looks like she might be a .L,'Ood, solid German girl just arrived from ratiierland. Americans are interested in Albani and slie in them, and she will ever receive a warm welcome in this country, ;:!id her victories abroad will be set oi;r Ijaiiiicrs as ti;e work of one of us, •â- iJo you«think Mrs. Langtry is hand- â- â- ' :nt; ' ' taid Dickey, just as everybody else ii-iil rai.l. .^And I answer. (1 him as I answered tlitni ail that 1 think theif. JN'oc j)ictty mind you, for a pretty woman, 111 tlie real nieaning of the term pretty, ;s as insipid as a wni^ivey toddy with tlie whiskey leic out, Luc l.andsonie. Whioh iiieaus a great deal and juciu.les not only laee, Imt ii:,'ure and manners. Mrs. Liiig- i.iy IS iKindstiiiie, but not handsomer than nuaarc.ta or otner women I know. She is ;.ini'jLis lor he:- Lcaiiiy because by some v.iiaccouiitt.d-rn- li.ck ^ne lias been noticed y l)iii,e-.a, and tl'c v\orUl is so lull ot Uuu- i-.^ystha; ;t a i,'r.i;idee sliould say hell were K-javeii liieie uutd.l be a new ortl.oloxy i.i,-,:iii;:ud witii;a the next tweuty-four :.;ia.s. ^ll^i 1.-, liij actress and makes no pre- leiisiuns to being one.for wliich she isworthy i I crei'it. 'ihe jackdaw m tnu fable v\ ho n-;ed to palm himself off as a peacock by [luttiiig peacock feacheis in his tail was made a guy of, not for trying to be a pea- cock, but loractually a-juouncing himseif as i;ne. Mrs. Luigciys motive in taking the stage to help her husband to a solid financial iKisis, is, 1 luiiik commendable, but it was iier own extravagant living which embar- now what and the tear contend for maftwyin herTaiee and aye. That's the knd at s woman 1 fike to ftmne and tiH*'« the kini of a ^wmmn I bate to see a maa get, nnleaahe is«tw of the veiy few special cases that the Lord liaa bletaed the world vith, just to show that fle can tnm ont a respeetable man when He wants to. Her -married life was a happy one, tecaaae she married, not for position and wealth; but because there was love in her heait and an honest parpcse to be a noble wife to a good man. up on Cosjn^^al Comjianionsnip. A'lother discouragement that Dr. Dix might have prescribed for divorce is persis- tent, ueselfish intention, on the part of married couples, to be companionable. Companionship is the basis of all animals. It is quite snre that most married couples were originally mismated, but no fact is better known and recognized, outside of family circles, than that extreme diiSerence of Intellect, taste, acquirement disposition, and nature are no bar to the most delightful and enduring friendship, nnlefcs in one per- son or the other thare are positive vices or selfishness that prevent the formation of any true or honorable bond with any being whatever. Even heathen philosophers have urged man and woman to perpetuate and perfect their onion by mutual and persis- tent devotion toward each other. Bat Dr. Dix has indirectly discouraged this in near- ly all of his lectures. His injunction that MTives shall be obedient to their husbandd: his reprobation, or at least suspicion, of modem women's desire to be well informed on subjects of which their husbands talk; his criticism of women who are not content to be housekeepers and nurses and nothing more, are all calculated to make the women inferiors of their husbands, and, cons^ quently, to a great degree uncompanionabl The lecturer might justly have given his male parishoners, respectable and other- wise, some hard raps, for the ctistom of many of them is to devote the better part of the day to business, and most of tho remainder to their male acquaintances, and only their stupid hours to their families. Andj if marriage is the holy institution that preachars proclaim it to be, why did not Dr. Dix blame the clergy of all the churches for not making its duties and blessings the subject of frequent sermons and instructions Sermons on regeneration, adoption, sanctification, total depravity, re- demption, backbliding, malice, envy, and uncharitableness abound, but what veteran church-goer has heard during all his life a dozen sermons on marriage? â€" The Hour. CHIT-CHAT. Sealskin sacques will soon be tacquerificed for linen dusters. rie\'L:; hai;gtr_ nioui.' r'l inca^ii.e.' recluui 1 n,oie w .r.s •_;;\.:i; (-it:! I. tile iui 1... lassed him, and she is only doin ^â- he ought t do. .She dresses m excellent taste, and while she may have a big mouth she hasn't a big :oot fcir the proportions of her body, and i .lun't care what judges have decided other- w-se. I haven't been taking off and pulling i.:i my shoes for these many years without kjowintr a little foot when i see it. Tiien I kuLW Emmet Log vu, and what other evi- deace aoes human want on this subject. As jr h r mouth Leing Liig, I like it. i have yet seen a womaa with a big m uth uouldut ;,',ve a puer be jgar a hearty V. ::ik- rl;,- won.au wiiha ii tie nioutu ,:Li,i;e liim ccii a tooth-pick. ii-ciiii I be asnainni of her bi"' li.-r lieurt ia made of ti;e same â- :;:. Ti;o only anatoniiLal cur- ' o 11 biigu'Lst would b." a little • Ad m ail, the lady is worth a oi hoiK-a;. admiration, autl 1 am ,; ji.nie ttj America, on y I do wish :;is!igii:ly mere regarniul of pub- lic o;iiu;eii. As 1 hoktd ai :Mnic. Nihsjn.wheu she lamv ioruard to sing atone o: her concerts r.vHEtiy 111 t!ds city, I never was prouder in my l::c that 1 was a Moxan, lor 1 felt that not vr.!y invbel!, lut all women, c.uld lay claim to higher honors because she and they were- or tiie same sex, sisters in all that per- taiue.I to the pure and beautiful of earth. She is a woman acquainted with erief, and sorrow has thrown about her a halo ot beauty time nor circumstance can dim. As she stood there before that great audience like a queen of the north, clothed in her widow's weeds, every heart went out to- ward her, and when she sane the soft, sweet notes of a familiar ballad, the very heart- throbs of music kept time with the cadence of her voice, and the wonder of the woman's art was lost in admiration of the woman. •Whoopee," said Dickey, "ain't we soar- ing up among the clouds " "Soar or nosoar," said I, "If there is any woman in the world I can go into real first- class- warrantod-not- to-fade, ten-by-fourteen raptures over, that woman is Nilsson," To continue. As an artist Nilsson is second to no woman, and while she may not be given complete precedence in all depart- ments of musical rendition, she has so allied her art to her pure a.-d blameless life that dissociation is almost sacrilege, and there are few who care to mar their pleasure by resorting to such hypociitical disintegration. Nillson bas been before the public for years, and has, thronghont her life, been a true woman. Rising from the hnmble home of a peasant, she has never been ashamed to con- fess her origin, and in all the greatneas which has come upon her, in all the atten- tions of kings and qaeens and nobles, she has never forgotten her blood and when she speaks of home, or htsars the language of her childhood her manamr warms aadSe smile When a girl travels on her good looks she passes for her face value. Some railroad employs a female switch- tender. Those officials are on the right track â€" wcmen are ahead of anything as switch-tenders, as when they are on duty the switch is never off, and then they are al- ways i)Osted on the proper time for trains, you know. "Lo'jk heih, Tho. r.as Jefferson, disheah's a nice time fo' you to be gettiu' home," n;rovvled Aunt Polly, as her boy came in long alter midnight. "Oh, g'long " re- torted Thomas, "you dunnonullia. Habn't you ncher beam dat de darkey's hour is jes befo' day? " List summer, as he lay in the hammock dreamily gazing at the smooth, flower- sprinkled lawn, his darling approached and said: There is a difference between you, dear, and tho grass plot." "Communicate the variation." "Ibis is a daisy level, while you are a lazy " I couldn't hear the rest ot it. She said she wanted a ticket to Wyan- dotte and return, and the pale, gentlemanly agent wit'i the dark mustache asked, as he took up the pasteboard, "Single?" "It ain't any of your business, as I know of," she answered tartly; "I might nave been married a dozen tiiius if I'd felt liice pro- vidin' for some peer, shiftless wreck of a man "' The first quarrel: Philip Fogg, (who has refused, after prolonged discussion, to get gaudy raiment and take his wife to the Ueroruno's fancy ball), morosely â€" "I wish 1 had married a sensible woman." His recently- acquir 'd spouse (to whom the said ball is for );he moment much more attractive than heaven), vindictively â€" "She wouldn't have had ou " A day or two since a Duluth lady was passiiit; along the street v/hen some fiend ill an upper window threw out a bucket of slops, deluging her from head to foot. Wip- ing the greasy stuff from her face and neck, she turned to a crowd of men, and with clenched teeth said: " Oh, goodness! Won t one of yo\i gentlemen please swear for me Oh, please do " "Mary, my love, do yoa remember the text this morning " "No, papa, I never remember! the text, I've such a bad mem- ory." " Mary," said her mother, " did you you notice Susan Brown?" "Oh, yes, What a fright She has on her last year's bonnet done up, a pea-green silk, a "black lace mantilla, brown gaiters, an imitation Honiton collar, a lava bracelet, her old ear- drops, and such a fan " " Oh, yes," said madame, after the usual domestic racket had got itself well under way; " oh, yes, you gentlemen want your wives to be angels " " Not at all, " replied Mr. Dasenberry, wiping the dish-water from his head and face; "not at all we don't want them to be angels at all; we want them to be ladies." And then the row began all over again, and the cat crawled sofUy into the cellar to drop anchor until the storm should be over. DiLiCATK Ptodiso^IBx w^the wKta, of four egs{8, to whi^ two taW«I»5»_0j rich cream is added, a h*lf cujf powdered sugar, and two tablespoons of anow-root, Utnd^ in milk; pour in an extra oqp of rich milk, and a little orange tnteic; put this into a shallow white bawl and p»oe it to cook in a pan of boiling water, stirrmg for half an houc Breakfast Eolls.â€" Take four cupsfnl of flour, h^f a cupful of white sugar, two cupaful of milk, two eggs, and two tea- spoonsful of baking powder. Beal; the eggs and sugar together, add the milk, sift the baking powder among the flour, and stir all together. Bake in a sharow psn, in a quick oven. Potato balls are very nice for breakfast. Boil them, and while still warm mash them until there are no lumps left; then mix butter, pepper, salt, a little chopped par- sley, and one or more raw eirga; b^t them together thoroughly, then mould in balls, dip in beaten eggs pnd then in flour, and â-  fry in butter. Baked Codhsh. â€" Pick up the fish and freshen a little as for cooking, then into a dish put a layer of cracker crumbs, then one of fish, over each layer sprmkle pepper and butter, continue until you have two two layars of fish and three of crackers; lastly beat two eggs with milk enough to cover the whole, bake about three quarters of an hour. Watkin Wyvs's PuDiJiNO.â€" Quarter of a pound of raisins stoned and opened and laid round a basin or mould, half a pound suet, half pound of bread crumbs, quarter of a pound of brown sugar, two tablespoonsful of flour, a little candied peel, and a glassful of melted currant and raspberry jelly. This pudding can be served with the following sauce: Juice of two large lemons, quarter of a pound of sugar simmered and poured over warm; the lemon peel cut, and used to decorate the pudding. Soft ginger-bread, if eaten while fresh and warm, is better than more expensive cako. One egg, one cup of molasses, one- third of a cup ot melted butter, one cup of buttermilk, one teaspoonful of soda, one tea- spoonful of ginger, two and" one- half cups of flour, and a little salt; dissolve the soda in a very little hot water. Bake in a battered tin. How TO Cook Fruit. â€" After being very thoroughly washed, all fruit should be soaked for several hours in cold water, then ccok in the same water by gentle simmering until very tender, and just before the com- pletion of the cooking process, sufficient sugar stould be added to sweeten. Most fresh fruit, especially berries, should be carefully washed before serving, as the washing when properly done does not in- jure their flavor, but greatly adds to their palatableness. Drop cakes are made in this way: One cup of^iolasses, one cup of sugar, ont cup of lard, one teaspoonful of ginger and one of cloves and of cinnamon, two tea- *-«Hdea(Mi '^te pd^t al*^*iti^'or remedy, tha*ViWi golfcn opmiona from _^i who nae it for any bxnaef, from ^OT^W Mtnple, bUrtch, or«TiptlbD, to tl|»?^CMn]» ible%*ofalbas siralling, or uloer.,:^Jntea*l fevodBoc^s aiid ulceration,^ y»|d to benife ii«Wfe*»ee?. CbBBumption, whicHs-i^ but ascrofnlous affection of the luiigs, may, in its early stages, be cured Ijy^.a free use of this God-given remedy. Se«r«rtiole on con- sumption and its treatment m Part HI of the World's DispiBnsai-y DimeSeriesof pamph- lets, costs two stamps,, post-paid. Address â- VVobld'3Dispk-saet Mebxal AsSOCIATIOIf, Buffalo, N. Y. The jar of a railway trsin fa not hermeti- cally sealed. A Lady Wants To Know the latest Parisian style of dress and bonnet; a new way to arrange the hair. Millions are expended for artificial appliances which only make conspicuous the fact that emacia- tion, nervous debility, ond female weakness exist. Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" is sold under a positive guarantee. If used as directed, aH can be dispensed with. It will overcome those diseases peculiar to fe- males. By druggists. Inn-competencyâ€" fortunes derived from hotel keeping. What's Saved ia Gained. Woi kingmen will economize by employing Dr. Pierced Medicines. His "Pleasant Pur- gative Pellets" and "Golden Medical Dis- covery" cleanse the blood and system thus preventing fevers and other serious diseases, and curing all scrofulous and other humors. Sold by druggists. The cork is the article that often gets in a tight place. Rheumatic Repellant, an internal remedy has been in use for the last 13 years, and proved the most reliable specialty ever discover- ed for curing Rheumatism, Sciatica or Lum- bago. It is neatly put up by W. A. McCol- lom, Druggist, Tilsonburg, and sold by Drug- gists and Merchants at 25 cents per bottle or five for $1.00. Sun-showers must alvays be counted among raining beauties. J.-*, ' ^eadache is one nf.B^ idci,«uktioD^,72«^« |toma«h.. liver^ JoJ^^ ^dpropnelorofthn^«t^ mfi cored after twolf "J" Burdock BloDd BittS^ On the beulevar.i " "' «««?" "To the i' ' hedoforyou*^ ^r'I'I" twenty francs." Mr. Tilton of Soutu v pain. I took eight 25LT,"i« maticRepellant:and,^"««l returrofit i;ork^««r- sinct, aud advise all tm„Ki di-ease to use this «S^ The motto for the L the^post office-WWeS,, â- very Person to be a B^, In this life must have a sw^ must concentrate the abiliS' mmd on some cne pursuit b Bitters has its specify ir^ radical cure of dyspepsia, aj complamts, and all impurir ich spoonsful of soda, dissolved in a cup of warm water; stir in flour enough to make a batter that will drop steadily from a spoon; add a little silt and a cup of dried currants, En-gli-sii Rolled Pudding,â€" Boiled past- ry should be prepared with chopped and sifted suet, instead of lard or butter, but otherwise in the same manner as pie pastry. Roll jam or preserved fruit out into* a tbin sheet; spread over a thiek layer of fruit, and then, commencing at one side, roll carefully until all the fruit is inclosed within the paste; pinch together at the ends, and tie up in a strong cotton cloth, then drop into a pot of boiling water. The cherry is the best for this purpose, or some other fruit possessing acidity. To be served with sweet sauce. Indian Pudding.â€" Take four eggs and the weight of three of them in meal, half a pound of sugar and a quarter of a pound of butter, and the juice and grated rind of one lemon. Beat the sugar and butter together tillliorht, then brea'i tha e?g3 in the dish with them and beat briskly; then stir in the meal. Bake in a quick oven; serve in saucers, and pour over it some thin jolly or jam, or fruit sauce. Wash a coffeecupful of rice in two or three waters, then let it soak all night in three pints of new milk. In the morning add a little salt, a large spoonful of butter, a little ground cinnamon, and grated nut- meg. Put in the pudding dish, and set in the oven, allowing ample time, say two hours, for it to cook. Stir it frequently, but without remoung from the oven. When It IS beginning to bubble add a quarter of a pound of st.ned raisins. Serve with powder- ed sugar sprinkled over it when it is put in saucers. A tourist leaning out of a nook Fell on his head near a brook, The hurt he received, St. Jacobs Oil relieved. And he says it cured "like a book." Great oaks from Tnm nus Into .** Tnnaaaa." A fast man on a fast day took his fast horse and went to the end of ths fast land, and there tied him fast,and as fast as he could he broke his fast. Then he rose and took off his hose and went with his hoes ^ong the rowa, and patthe nne on the end rfthe ho«(â€" i«Ji^ Merely one knows, is a ^ni^*^ So^ HOW. waters every n»e bring; little acorns sprinc Great aches the little toe-corns °' But for every com. That ever was bom St Jacobs Oil is just the thing. Mr. J. R. Seymour, Druggist, St. Cath- arines, writes that he finds an ever-increasing sale for Burdock Blood Bitters, and adds that he can, without hesitancy, recommend it. Burdock Blood Bitters is the grand specific for all diseases of the Blood, Liver and kindeys. (18) The Czar keeps his crown en a shelf in the pantry. Thus he lays up something for a reigny day. A Run for Life.â€" Sixteen miles were cover- ed in two hours and ten minutes by a lad sent for a bottle of Briggs' Electric Oil. Good time, but poor policy to be so far from a drug store without it. "You are setting us a bad example, ' as the algebra class said when the teacher v rote a hard equation on the board. Have You Tried lT?-If so, you can testify to its marvellous powers of healing, and re- commend it to your friends. We refer to Briggs' Magic Relief, the grand specific for aU summer complaints, diarrhoea,cholera,morbus dysentry, cramps, colic, sickness of the stom- ach, and bowel complaints English sparrows are said to be good on toast. They are pretty good on' bread- crumbs. Thousands upon Thousands Of dollars have been spent in advertising the celebrated Burdock Blood Bitters, but this fact accounts only in part for its enormous sale. Its merit has made it what it isâ€" the best blood medicine ever devised by man. (13) " Storied earn and animated bust " â€" Tell- ing a lie for a dollar and getting drunk on the proceeds. Petkolia, Pa., Jan. 5, IS79, Me.ssks. Kennedy Co. :â€" Mv hair is growing out so fast that I can almost see it growing myself, through the use of your Oarboline, D. NIXON. We frequently hear the expre sion " bee in a bonnet." Who ever saw bonnet with- out a B in it Important. When you visit or leave New Vork Citv save Baggage Kspressage and Carr H re' Tnd cKl^Delfnt^T-^^^^^?^' •• OfiiTe GrSSd (.^entrai uep ot. 4oO elegant du â- â€¢ litted nn it a cost of one mUlion dollars, :educed to |l and upwards per day. European plan Ellvator Restaurant supplied with tht best Horse cars, stages and elevated railroads to all de! ??'?h/o°"'iP\°.^? "'« etter for less monev at the Grand Union Hotel than at aivother first-class hotel in the city. A bald-headed eag?e is no more the har- binger of spring than a bald headed man is of a missing heir. C^TAURii-A New Treatment whereby a Permanent Cure is effected in from one to three applications. Particulars and treatise Son "n'^T'P^Q." ^l^""?- ^- »• Dixon Son, 305 King-St. West, Toronto, Canada The jovial yachtsman speaks of the groe rations as a-crew trimmings. VEGETiNE._The great success of tRe VEGKTiN^as a cleanserandpurifier of the blood 18 shown beyond adou^t by the great numbers who have taken it an! " A queue-cumbrous thins A pigtail. » ' How frequently the niio.»- ' heart, and how unwUliiS?? S question on its merits 'Ks\^iy ment. and the question a^o s^" there no remedy ?•• To th«lS answer. Putnam's PaiSe»^ " the great corn cure.' wilf ijâ„¢. painless relief. No danirer of ' nam's Corn Extract or. v c Pn Kmgston, proprietors. ' ' These fellows who write nwt-l kill time" will find outtS' time will not be murdnred by m! out retaliating. Burdock Blood Blttea Cures scrofula, erysipelas, si];. and all humors of the blood. C sia, liver complaint biliousness i dropsy, kidney complaint?, hei vousness, fema'e weakness debility, when used in time. A certain shoem-iker of Lwnb divoiced four times lias j'cs; fifth wife, and people aie nov.'adi to stick to his last. "Grunt it Cut." The above is an old saw asEiraj senseless. You can't "giuut ocfi nor liver complaiat. nor nervonsi once get a good hold. Thcv dcij themselves in that v.-ay. Thet doses of Burdock Biood Bitterii than "grunting it out." Whitwd let's not endure. (Lj] A "wihl cat" mine has mml lives. Vegeti] Rornr.sTER, Xovemtel H. R. Stevens, Esq.: DearSirâ€" I ha%-e suirercdfortteli four years with Liver Complaint siil troubles. Previous to taking the TiJ was under the doctor's care for sii| but he did not help me. M.vfriendsi I would not recover. I began nsnglll TINE and realized good effect fronj away. 1 had taken but tbree bottIa| was much better. 1 continued tit bottles more, and c.iii trulysayli thebest of liealtli. I havedivenittji daughter with great success. Sii'l done me so much good I have recomi to several, and they have all beeng fited by its use, " Iicspectfull" C.J. SMITH, 2li.I Place of business. 7- West Areme.] Mr, Smith is a well know dealcrin^ tinware, for many years in businesir tcr. Worth its Weight m Toronto, Ont.. Jwj n. E. Stevexs, Esq., Hoston,MaSj.: Sir â€" Ilavin J been persuaded by ' mine to try Yegktini: for Kii«l\ with which I have been (ronbledfofJ Iconscnted and have .â- .'ivcn it afairt happy to say I am relieved to sutt" that 1 can attend to my -sverkm:!^ comfort, v.-hich 1 was deprived c';or» years. The best medical m.^noiTiij" given my case up as bepc'c-s. I every kind of medicine 1 bare over i but with no avail whatever, iu!' i® may be aiilictcd with the .=an;ct_em» 1 would certainly advise to "'.. //ri assure you [as many c::n tcst.i.vjtM'.l doubtedly tne beat medicine on i Kidney Disease. I aaiab'eto' trade as gilder and earn a bving » J two children and n\v?clf, throopt f which I consider is wortli its .^"'ili Hoping that these who m.ayfi" '.^ trial may receive the same bcnci.tii*! may 1 remain, relief, with such received remarkable Died in the wool-A defunct sheep Poverty of invention-Being unable take out a patent. " ""*°' Lady_Blessin«ton siys a woman should 8 ceased to bas become immediate cures, Funny, jsn t it, that you alwavs ppa the night-faU before any %ura Tgx ' to P." 120 not p^t sentiment "tlfrshe hr^ea^edl? inspire It. That is, until -i."i-?^*^ " an ,. she old master," so to speak. A Jackson County milkmaii while w^-t ing the pump handle calls out '^Rl°'^: 80. boss so there nowriJ is\ 15^"' has of easing his conscience " ^y ^e Electricians measure pl»t«.-„i Mary setting foot inside of the ap^ boards strung, coupled as it wu~k». from W yo^ nSi. aJdi^"LIS:^?° went ifertmoSi at hS2^faA°^«^ deacon: "Mm^ w«^~^2^ " » ranee of a noted recently. th« temptaibn'^;; " appearance of a noted^tol j!!""" een%. the wSw^i?" *« Yours Kespectuillr. CHAS. (.'OOKE," I gave Mr. Cooke the mediciiie. i this statement to be true. ,,;« JAS. D. MElUDlTIhooAsi^" Vegetine is Sold by JU ACRES TIMBERj-^.1 RAL lands in iVisonnj 2,355 „ oak and pine minerals, $15,000. For particulars 404 Market-street, St. Louis, iron ont LYON ALEXAl PHOTOCRAPHIC C Ofeverydescrilitii"' I Swnn'8 MaHon's KiigH»* " The Best in the Mar«^ S. A M." and Eagle Pen** ,!^^b» Outfits and Instruction BooWi" UO, 112, and 114M. ^gp ggtism.'^jfeurliqia. Sciatica, I TUB Toronto General »: and 89 WcIIIngtoa St HON. ED. BLAKE, Q.C ^^" ^^ E. A. MEREDITH, Esq., I^*"" J. W. LANGMUIB. -^ ThlB Company, which hsaWiaJl by the mgh Coart of "f^ •ert of every description, and sew -rfjS ministrator, to., and algiVrf^ ti ' Ml e ea executors, c- ^^ to loan upon real estate «»» further information appw •" vinB. School of'Jfc^c\°e«^ S^Vifitoria Univeml beorderoftbe ArchbJ l*ftoU. 8liPP«^ 0" f P^* I .- named Frank Overy L"f^r S. Cunard K With nearly $5 oney. _,. aepartment at Moutre iSrahabs, tobacco maiiufa tSTcost., for omitting 1 Ktitampona package of ^t to a customer. CNTTBD STATES, Ino abatement i i the small L»nd Galena. jken, one ot the pimeersi â- notion in America, is dead five hundred thousand bus utingtheopeningof navi ^.General Joseph Barnes neral ot the army, is dead L Arthur and the Secretary I have gone to Florida, lutionists gain ground in Ec gradually being establis ttions. ndred raft hands cot drr ^e, Ky-. created a riot. d( "'^Kjl'g posse and demolish' York, Barnum' elephanl Isto Jumbo, was shot. His ry for the safety of tl ny, N. Y., despatch says J life and two daughters were 1 a bouse three miles fron go County. I Waller, son of an ex-As! [UUer County, waa arran charged with uttering fcarg. Mo., a colored man t to church, locking the c The building was bu^i Ichildren perished. ch of promise suit of Dst Miss McLean for iDr. Petsboid testified ha ]iis attendance the plaintiff ate of an insane asylum, GKyEBAL. iliTes were lost by the e rder depot at Paiso, C ements will be sent I the Congo by the Belgia has been destroyed at he extent cf two million pntraotint: Governments ha pmmercial treaty between G porw^ian barque Poseidor "roadhjem, Norway, is agt â- fld will probably become noti have broken out bet^ I and Jamaicans empl canal, and twenty of t f**!*^* fieem Pesslble. ^.•f I)rtToit who had bee ani I which lasted almost ^e happened to menti a^'and France?" '^fionte ud eeen the ruii Ltpavemen .,. -t""" nouses, i frjij**, winch woul |^;i^'*^; Jij|p||J .; 'â- *-â- . ;â- ; :%:/' i-

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