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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 22 Mar 1883, p. 2

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 â- K- SACEl il ESPECIALLY FOR LADIES. AKoButnoe oftlie Opera u*' tbe Ceseert Hallâ€" The Piiaeess Clotllde. Harried by Halesâ€" SauOI-Talk Ladlesâ€" Chlt-Cliat. for the u l a 111 .!l not ;. .l.|,.. Iron '.h:. 111.' " -a. .-.:::, iUl" il auii IIKl.ti SiVll 'S .-ll P "" win \,A. Stransa Komaao;:. 'Speaking of the vicissitudes of profes- sional peojile," said the manager of one of the Bowery museums to a New York writer, "let me narrate to you a touching experi- ence that came under my observation re- cently, and which I know t be true "A retpectably attircJ lady, about io years of age, clad in thin, faded garment." that had ofce been fashionable, applied to me for an engagement as vocalist. I was compelled to decline her services. Bur noticing that the lady was better educated than the^generality ol people who come to us 1 -.eld her in conversation for a few mo- menta, and elicited the fact that a child of hers was lying dead at No â€" Clinton place, and that she had no means of burying it. ,She told me a pitiful tale of being in arrears for rent, and confessed she had just pawned her shawl in order to buy food. She ex- pected to be dispossessed, and saw no way to meet her pressing needs save by an en- ga-^ement. Hence her visit to me. W e see. ao many beats in our line that I have come to be habitually suspicious of all afi;ony yarns, but there wad something in her man- ner that convinced me that she was not a fraud. She pleaded so earnestly that I gave her permission to ait down at the piano and try what she could do. Much to the aston- ishment of everyone present she sang in a sweet, cultured voice a selection from "Tra- viata" in Italian. She then gave in a most bewitching manner the German song, "Der Wasserfal." Her voice was thin, but re- markably full in its quality, and far superior to anything we have ever had in this muse- um. She was given an engagement, acd re- mained \dth us three weeks. Day after day other facts in her history came to light, and now I will tell you the story of her life "Mmo. H was born in London. She was highly educated and received her early music il training in the conservatoire at Mil- an. Si^e became passionately fond of music, and according to her urgent request, her parents pDrmitted her to accept an en- ^^acenient under the direction of Col. Maple- Ton ill 1879. Her voice developed into a rich and 11 ind soprano, and to her was as- signed the duty of supporting Nilsson, Patti, and Gerster. Her contracts were re- newed, and she came to America. For the tirst three years she got along exceedingly well, a;id atthe expiration of her engage- ment with CjI. Mapleson accepted another under Mix Sciackosh, and went south. This venturt' w.ia not so successful. She conse(iuentlv leturued to New York, where she ni.iilu tin? ac(iu.diit.ince of a handsome, acjonipl;.-.hfd man, who turned out to be the villain III lifr life's luL-louraraa. He is a (lirimn i)y iiirtii, fir hf. i-. still li\,'in£,' and 111-. '.;sii ri"lu, iilthiji'irh ho has d ttiv ti-l 'ii; married him, aud la'c oi' \\\:v ni '.rri'A.!.;i; ht-r woes coin- 'I'lu-y \i\ri[ ii,ippily at, I'lvst, but irliii.ng t'ortiiiies 'le ^reu- care-less •rti!-. lo lifi' m-cii.i. With her I- (.r'^aiiiZ".l ;in oper'i 'joutfe com- jii proved at iluio in one of the easteiu c:t:eo. Her lug-a^'e was seizt-d and her compnny lrol;e up. Then hei'husband tieJ. Sue again retunud to New York, aud commenced an .-ic:i( n fur divorce agaiost her husU.uid for ci-uulty and abandonment, and itlthoagh the ciurt awarded her §50 a week aliiniiny, not one cent of it has been paid. i;.nng a capital singer of the German vodeli',^ she readily found employment in one or two ot the better class of summer beer gardens. The constant dread of meeting those who had known her in better times caused her to relinquish this means of support. She next procured an engigement in the choir of an up-town Hjmau Catholic church. Then, worn down by cold, worry, aud exposure, she was taken seriously ill for several weeks. Matters grew desperate, until final y want of food oi.iinpelled her to come to m' At the cii oc o' iicr cugagemeut with us she ob- t.iiuf. 1 iit'icr 'turns' in similar establishmeuta wl'iiM-.- ",ir h'story was unkiK'wn and she was safe Ir-i'.a di-.-ovcrv. Since then she has been turtir.iatc cnougli to obtain another rcLjuLir engagement m a Catholic choir, v/here .-he siiig-i on "^unilays aud high festi- vals, bier earnest wish is to obtain a few pupils lo enable her to make out sntlioicnt tor the support of herself and her child. In addition to h;.-r musi jal accompli.shmer.ts^phe .-â- pL-aks Italian, (icrinan, and French, and l"rc ch iiue:it!y. She is thoroug'ily ^•ell I. red a'lii pciwcriully rcaliz':s that she can :\eve.- ii'.l 'ler old position on t!ie operatic s:a;4-' " Tls2 Princess Ciothilus. retAvccii the voung princess ^say i'aris I'ii'jro), whose proud yet timid graces so won the heart of the imperial court, and the lonely chateau of ".Moncalleri" there would seem to be a great difference, but in reality there is none. The Princess Clothildc has always and e" erywhere remained the same always sup.,-rior to her fate â€" always noble and of the bravest and truest among wo- men la this daughter of Victor Emmanuel a childlike sitiplieity ind a heroic chaiacter lire strangely blended. Without being beauti- ful, the princess is charming without be ing haughty, she inspires respect by her native dignity. She is now 38 years of age, aud has snow-V-hite hair. A blonde in her youth, a premature snow has powdered her abundant aud beautiful tresses. At present she is only a mother in all the majesty of that title. When she arrived in Paris for her mar- riage she was scarce 1 6 years old, and the day of the wedding was marked by a little incident which made her very unhappy. After the ceremony a grand breakfast was given at the Palais Royal. Then the prince wished to leave immediately for Mandon, and in hastening the departure of his young wife she lost one of her slippers, but dared not make ber loss known. It was not the prince who restored the slipper in this case, but a messenger, sent in great haste from Paris, who ceremoniously deposited a seal- ed packet in the hands of one of the maids ef hoiior. Judge of the confusion of the princess when she was obliged to open themrysterions parcel before her liusbaDd. She became purple, and appeared more charmiug than ever through the veil of her blnahM, »M «he stood like a child fearing to be scolded. Profoundly pious, the Princess Marie Clothildc was as true to her convictions airid all the splendors of the Palais Royal u she has since been in the solitude of "Mon- callerL" Amid the gayety of Paris she regulated her life as if she was in a convent. Rising at a very early hour, she fultilled her duties of piety and charity most faith- fully, while she neither disdained aor re- pulsed the world in which it was her duty to appear. Her natural grace and true be- nevolence lent an unspeakable charm to any relations held with her, even the most official. At 10 o'clock the princess would have beeu only too gl^ to retire, but she felt that she must attend the receptions.the court balls, and the gala theatrical repre- sen ations, though she would have deemed it much more meritorious could she have seated herself at the bedside of some suffer- ing woman and ministered t her needs with her own beautiful hands. On S«pt. 4th, 1870, the doors of the Palais Royal were thrown open for the last time, and in splendid apparel, iu her carriage with the royal arms ou every panel, with the domestics in gala livery, the Princess Cloth- ilde, accompanied by her three children, drove out ot those gates and tkrongh the streets of Paris for the last time, receiving the salutatious of the people as she pa-ssed with her royal suite, while her heart was throbbing with the greatest emotion. She came as the aaughter of a king â€" she depart- ed as the daughter of a king. After living at Prongius on the lake of Geneva for some time, she finally retired to the chateau of "Moncalleri." Her sons have always pass- ed their vacations with her there, and her daughter, Marie Letitia, never leaves her mother. Jn France we have only seen the little princess in the laces and rufiles of her dainty infancy, but she is now a young girl of great beauty, and intelligence, and chari- table like her mother. She divides with her cousin, the "Prince of Naples," theadoration of the people of the environs of Turin. She is their'litile princess and he their little prince. The stiadow of the gallant grand- father seems to fall on those two buds of the old tree of "Savoy." At "Moncalleri," a fashionable Parisian lives with two princess- es. The Baroness Barofer accepts this life of exile aud solitude out of pure devotion and friendship. The chateau of Moncalleri is the nest from whence all the children of Victor Emmanuel were fledged, and in the associations of the place .the eldest daughter has found again the sweet dreams ot her girlhood, the dear remembrances of the past. Great-grandniece of Marie Antoin- ette, and, like Marie Louise, sacrificed for reasons of state, this Christian woman has never allowed herself to bemoan her fate. The daughters of kings do not seem destined for happy wives. There remains, however, for the Princess Glothilde that which will suffice her noble soul God, the love of her children, and the respect of all men. .Married by a Drove of Males. A little circumstance happened in Rich- mond, Va., last fall, that bore great issue. A trifle as Uaht as air, yet it made a ^nan and a woman meet that but tor this episode would never have known each other. As it is society talk, of course everyone knows it, and I will narrate it just to show what in- considerate events, which some call chance and others fate, shape our lives. A large drove of mules, just after dark, were taken from the oars of the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad, and corraled, but something stam- peded them, and they dashed up the street, a half hundred or so, with all the clattering and tire of a squadron of cavalry at full charge. Pedestrians hugged the sidewalk or hurried into the nearest open door, and then looked pantingly at the dim, rushing mass. Now it happened that a young lady from Boston, Mass., who was on a visit, was coming from a friend's house, and just as she was crossing the street the head of the column came toward her with the velo.nity of an express-train on a down-grade. It was so sudden that her presence of mind failed her, and she stood directly in the pathway of the advancing drove. A thrill- ing tablciu it must have been. She clasp- ed her hands, and the light of the lamps showed her dilated eyes and rigid figure. A dreadtul death seemed inevitable, when a gentleman passing by, with a valise in bis hand, saw her. Like a flash he was by her side, aud swinging her with a lapid motion to him, he carried her to the sidewalk just as the thundering mass passed by in the darkness. The danger was over, but she was too unnerved to continue her way. He offered his arm, and together they proceed- ed to her house. She thanked her deliverer. He presented his card â€" Mr. Louis Shearer, West Point, Miss. He had just arrived on the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad, and was on his way io the southern train when the vision met his eye. He asked her name. Miss Alice Beauchamp she answered. Mr. Shearer did not go on his southern trip that night, nor the next and so â€" and so â€" well, the same old story. When the roses bloom in bleak New England, then will be heard the sound of the bells, and the southern palmetto and the northern pine, entwined, will adorn the altar. CHIT- UH AT. sign A Boston girl describes a s'atue as a bust with two legs under it. Atlanta has a female barber whose reads Man wants but little hair below. Nor wants that little lonr. The reason why a womas can not succeed as well as menin the ^valks of life is because when she is on the walk one hand is usual- ly employed in holding up the dress. Mrs. Burnett, it U said, will finish her story, "Through One Century," in the April number of the Administration Maga- zine, and then give us â€" we would say take â€" a long rest. When a Leadville man fell in love with a woman and swore he would kill himself unless she married him, the gentle creature bought a pistol for him. He carried out the promise and shot himself. A Leadville woman wiU do anything for a man who loves her. Mrs. E A. Jewett, of Georgetown, who celebrated her ninetieth airthday recently went out last week on the ice and coasted down a steep hiU several times on a double ranter. Bo* ym cant make ns beUeve the boys enjoyed walking np the hill with her «. much a. they did event y-fonr years "*J;ofe.»r-My dear ?»^JS? ^^ Ve of modera astronomy » "^J^'^^d the know the distance between tf«Xi*°M^. planets within a few tj'of^'^^f 'Jfit ;lSt U-Ye.. prefessor ^^t f'^^^'^i^tant we know even the names of alltneso u«i. luminaries. u„„_«f u A phaosopher informs us that a bonnet is no longer a Sonnet when it b?^?»^ » ^^^ womaS. And theinferenceis that a woman is no longer a woman when she cecum ^derread: "Dinner f« '^°*^' „t the desk " '83." "vegetables," "please pay atthe desK, "t^er'vant girl who had b^n ^^f o^«J«^ by her mistress to be "^^ "' '^^ ^Xrt- and wasn't to__catch it, I reckon • I shouia just catch it. A jealous young woman in Pen^^y^^^^f; hearing her lover come up the "tairs, swai owed a whole bottle of laudanum, and then pointed her pistol at the door, intendang to rh^t him as^he entered. But h« attention was attracted elsewhere-perhaps by an- other girl-and he went backâ€"not return- ing for a quarter of an hour. When he en- tered the room bhe was unconscious, but still holding the revslver m her hand, lo add to her misery, he had her resuscitated, and then left her. Morsels for Snnday Contemplation. To know how to wait is the great secret of success. He hath riches sufficient who hath enough to be charitable. Of all evils to the generous, shame is the most deadly pang. The true eye tor talent presupposes the true reverence for it. Tee mind grows narrow in proportion as the soul grows corrupt. Be a philosopaer but amidst all ycur philosophy â€" be still a man. He who can a; all times sacrifice pkaanre to duty approaches sublimity. â-  As charity copers a multitude of sins be- fore God, so does politeness before men. Revenge is an act of passion vengeance of justice; injuiies are revenged crimes are avenged. A man who keeps telling a woman he is her friend is either in love with her or is afraid he will te. A man's ideal of intimacy with a woman is that he shall be allowed to talk about himself, and she shall listen. Cynicism in jiouth is a deplorable ana- chronism â€" but it is an inevitable conse- quence of age and experience. The difference between the gentleman cir- cumstantial and the gentleman direct is great, though net always perceived. Tlis Rel Man's Bloqnence. The writer, soBe years ago, in the North- west, heard a y»ung Indian chief make a speech before a Covernment commission and Army officers vbich fairly deaorved to be classed among e^quent speeches. Ho was a splendidly fatied Indian, with large, muscular limbs, »i unusually fine head, and expressive eye. He was dressed in all the paraphernalia ol savage taste. He was painted with riii, bright colors, laid on without stint, aifl when he rose to speak he looked, in prolissional energy, like an athlete about toenter upon a hard contest in the stadium, with his veins standing out like cords and his lips compressed. He pleaded against the removal of his tnbe to some other rese^ation, and his heart wasm his words. Hetras in earnest. He meant everything he sfid, and there were bursts of eloquence wlich would have electrified members, lobbie*, and galleries of the House at Washington, had they emanated from a Congressman. The Indian's eloquence was all the more eC^ctive because it was spon- taneous. His clpquence and his rhetoric, impassioned both, were forest born. It was oratory in voice -and gesture, not garrulity like that whicbjobtatna t»o often at Wash- ington. Tlie anadrlUe. The quadrille) says the London Evening ^^elcs, is rapidly disappearing from the pro- gramc of society^ Its formality is too much tor the rapidity of the age and its amuse- ments. It is now conside»e 1 a fond and foolish dance, fit only for chaperons and elderly men of rounded form. More youth- ful partners have for some time past engaged themselves to, each other for the "square," it is true, but not to dance it merely to s'it it out- -a pleasant process which they prefer to the solemn walk through varions figuros that has taken place of the lively chassez step characteristic of the quadrille in our mother's young days. Consequently but a paucity of couples "stand-up," to use the quaint old phraae, when the masicians grind out the first bars of "La Pantalon," as the first figure used to be called. Recognizing this, the average hostess arranges her dance programme with valse alternating with polka, and perhaps a set of luicers for the ' 'supper dance. " There is also almost inva- riably a Highland schottische, a movement which a French spectator recently char- acterized as egatK. There is thus abun dance of "go" it a dance in the present day, and when there is a cotillon vhe i to- ceedings frequently degenerate into a de- cided "romp." Ti-Piarce's "Favorite Prescription" is a Bv drnggists. Cond^ed elephant's nulk is the new ton- ic It 5o«Jd be*^taken by drummers, as it doubtless developeb trunk*. Dyspepsia, liver comjAiint, and kindred affSS For treatise giv«K 8U«essf ul :5Satment address WoBi^'s DispSSsakt Mbdscal AssociAnon. Buffalo, JN. x. ..I'd have people know I'm nobody s fool." said Fend. rson. " Tn other words,^^ remkrked Fogg, "you're your own master Consumption in its early stages is readily ruredbytheuse of Dr. Pierces "Golden Medical Discovery," though, if the lungs are SSted no medicine WiU elTect a cure. No known remedy possesses such soothing and healing influence over all scrofulous, tuber- culouB? and pulmonary affections as the Dis- covery." John WilUs, of Elyria, Ohio, writes- "The 'Golden Medical Discovery does positively cure consumption, as, after t'ving every other medicine in vain, this succeeded." Mr. Z. T. Phelps, of Cuthbert, Ga., writes "The 'Gclden MedicalDiscovery has' cured my wife of bronchitis and incip- ient consumption.^ Sold by all druggists. When a pickpocket gets out of practice, it takes a long while for him to get his hand in. Catabkhâ€" A New Treatment whereby a Permanent Cure is effected in from one to. three applications. Particulars and treatise free on receipt of stamp. A. H. Dixon Son, 305 King-st. West, Toronto, Cnada. Life is a tiresome journey, and when a man arrives at the end he is all out of breath. Important. When you visit or leave New York City, save Baggage Expressage and Carriage Hire, and stop at Grand Uniox Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot. 450 elegant rooms, fitted up at a cost of one mQliori dollars, reduced to ?1 ana upwards per day. European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse cars, stages ana elevated railroads to all de- pots. Families can live better for Icis money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other first-class hotel in the city. Size ain't everything. A watch ticking can be heard further than a bed ticking. Erysipelas, Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Erupt- ions, and all diseases of the Skin and Blood are promptly cured by Burdock Blood Bit- ters. It purges all foul humors from the system, imparting strength and vigor at the same time. (2) Family tics become sletpers when the twins sink into slumber. Would you .avoid the Biliary complaints incidental to spring and summer Cleanse the system with Burdock Blood Bitters. It regulates the I-iver, Bowels, Kidneys and Blood, and ia the purest tonic in the world. Trial bottles 10 cents. (5) Subject to fits, and pretty bad ones some- times Tailors. A common, and often fatal, disease is jaundice. Regulate the action of the Liver, and cleanse the blood with Burdock Blood Bitteis, aiid the worst case may be speedily cured. 1 If you should happen to want your ears pierced, just pinch the baby. Well as Ever. Lottie Howard writes Irom Buffalo, N. Y. â€" "My system became greatly debilitated through arduous professional duties suffer- ed from rausea, sick headache and bilious- ness. Tried IJurdcck Blood Bitters with the most beneficial eft'iict. Am well as ever. (3.) The first negro criminal was the original "Black Crook," From Mr. Percy Perdoa. ih: oldest Mail Clerk now running on the G. W. RaUicay be- tween Suspension Bridge and Detroit About 18 months ago in convdrsation with you I men- tioned that my son Arthur wis a great suffei^ er from rheumatism, being so bad that for months he had not been able to put on his boots or walk. At your suggestion I purchased from you four bottles of your Rheumatine. Three bottles, however, I am happy to say, ef- fected a permanent cure, as my son has never sutTered from rheumatism since, although the past winter hhs been a most trying one. I may add that the medicine had the effect of improv- ing his health in every way. ilake what use you like of this testimonial. lean thoroughly recommend your hReumatine to all suffering from rheumatic complaints. I am. yours trulv, PERCY I'ERDON, Agent Great WesteJn Rail- waJ^ .7. N. Sutherland, Esq., St. Catharines. It is said that deaf and dumb people al- ways take a lund in conversation. Davy Clark, Druggists, Renfrew, date June 3rd. wiite ;â€" "Burdock Blood Bitters, though comparatively a new preparation, has taken the lead in this locality as a blood purifier, our sales of it being equal to that of all other medicines used for the pur- pose during the last year. " (G) Woollen goods are quoted quiet because of their nap. Thousands Speak.â€" Vegetise is acknow- ledged and recommended by physicians and apothecaries to be the best purifier and cleanser of the blood yet discovered, and thousands speak in its praise who have been restoied to health. The raott humorous member of a dog is the wag of his tail. ^A.P. 117 Net a Tear. A girl 7 or 8 years old slipped down the other day, and as she was picking herself np a pedestrian laid ^1 r "Don't cry, stay.' -i i "Who'ago^nsc to I" she sharply demanded as she rose np. "I goeu when a *irl has got her mother's shtfwlon ahe ain't mune to let anybody know she's hart !** THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relieves and cores RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, backachk; HEIMOHE, TOOTHACHE, SOKE THROAT. QCINSY, SWELLUfQS, SoreiMts. Cuts, Braises, FBOBTBTTEB, BITBin, SCAXAS, And all other bodibradies and pains. nFTTCBlTSJIBOTTlE. BoMbyaUDnugtotsaad pealen. DbetMonsln U langnages. T hsChl s t lLltmsiwCs. For Throat aad Luc lM«e^ h fermenianon on tfie sVomZ! »«4i oonnteracts the effect of ttS^^.«^«i "â€" «^ rheumatism by de8ti;iP*"S phosphate of Ume in^r?«ft? T* I I»»«taMi, ^* It Is tmly a marreL tv^tW' appetite, pre fermentation a marreL Tae^u^. promotmg digestio,^' ^oi* OR, ^•"ebui "«^ daces and pi membranes inclosmg the loint Price 25 cenu perbottrt,, gists. (Eclectric is not Ele(!tri? 'f B«l«€S«I«lJiMKEiBCn„ SUetricUy fetda the brain anw yord,itUNaturt\f^ The Electric Oil possesses »n7 that it IS possible to combine ' thereby jciving It a wide raiLl," ' as an internal remedy for man a^J happiest results follow its ngptrj!**? Diseases, such as Rhcumdtism v'"" kindred diseases, it has no equal ' According to the last censj. n, only 27,794 deaf people in Uerli'" French editor takes these fir ' that Wagner didn't get a fair own country, chilli, 1 Carrying the W ar, into the enpmv This isl verified in the case of K'" Vxtractor, so favorably knowri .i'"" Canada. The large demand from .71 States has induced the proprietor. 1 there, and boldly p-sh it to the """I leading Tticle initalme, FromE»2* a demp has arisen. This ig thp jS the usu methods, as a large x)Mt\\ proprietory goods sold here eraanaw 4 countries.â€" This speaks highly in hv^t nam's Extractor, the great corn \.n â-  change, ^^ Dr. Tuke, the great Eaglisi, Im^l tor, in a recent lecture before tuTu Society of Edinburgh, severely comiJ competitive examinations as ino'tir, to the young. "' â-  ,.,1 20 to Mrs. H' ?ea A%ndelthat »• ""!doWDhiswine-g '"iSe bright wit i^^rfuerso, Ru.. ould come the ° s meet her b; ' Le ou from. ;%ngVemeut -i inamtna," auswei. it has 1] nVofLeii"' continue. "^^Lret delicately on ui 1. litl said verv quiet •' jt^" continue! er claret ftyuo's pleasant kl of courtc, s 4ther nice, I -hiuk "^Ibelievel^vast â-  ,ht after night RHEUMATISM, KIDNEY COMPl i:!«TIRELl' CURED BY THE ISE«F| TIXE. So not think a ike. becoming out otchu "e asked me if I little too early tin ,or Kate I" laughed ^pitysheis^ucaas. leVes enjoy societ; â- â€žinT to it "' in"'^!^- aaely this eve uu liio. e some one o Loi] «*A.TaaBsa*oa) %ltlMn,U„V.S.i. Hamilton, 0.,MarchHa Mr. H. R. STEVEXS-DearSir: aIUim entire stranger to you, I wish to infonl what Vegktine has done for me. Afterid ing for several years with the RHEUMiS I can truly say the Vegetine has entirely^ me. I have not had the slightest toucioiil several months. 1 Have also been badly afflicted with M COMPLAINT, sufferinggreatpaininBijfl hips and sides, with great difficulty iiu urine. By the use of Vegetine I fli entirely cured of this complaint. I taliel, pleasure in recommending your remedy til Bcquaintances and friends, and all speuki ably of its good effects. "Respectfully yours. P. H. GILBERT, Undem I am personally ac(i'iainted withllr.M and believe him perfectly reliable inhiis. ment. R. S. JAilES, Druggist, Hamlltil KE.iD TUE FACTS. TOROXTO, April3.1SS0, Bear icsi ^Ik. H. R. Stevens, Boston, Mass. Sirâ€" I ha vr much pleasure In bearing a mony to tho efftcaoy of your invaluable i medicine. Vegetiks. For three years In great suffeier from Chronic Rhcumatismi Da'angemeni of the Kidneys, andatterK innumerable so-called remedies, in ther of last year I was recommended to Rite j Vegetine a trial and to persevere in Miii?i;| some time. I did so, and in the cour.^eof f months found that a perfect cure had bra S fected, and 1 am nov/, thank God. in tie If enjoyment of the oest of health. Iconside:| the most effective remedy for the disire complaints just mentioned and for Migci Biliousness and Liver Disease. It is «J pleasant to take, vitalizing and invigontij I can most confidently recommend it, knoii the great benefits I have dcrivea from itsii and consider I cannot overstate its pestu important value to those similarly affliciai I have been. Yours faithfully, I R. L, COLK, Accoaa'x'.l Vegetine is sold by allDrugg^ """ETTLER! ^: â- Z •;;.; :il! I" 3^H4'», Gili.IPS. r'nti ' 'â-  f â- ":.:. ... r ' S r • ' .1 .;il â- â- â-  1 c riiti* 5" L :.-y w.:i i l»:'irt.nfnt »f t::r.;sr;i!::i:i. W. r:. C i.t,l.l'.V.H" JI:raascr. M King-st. PROFESSIONAL. R7F0RSl^lt.ARtiSTllAs'llETUr."Ej from Europe and opened a "]â- â€¢' J Europe E.gst, Toronto. Portraits inoi'lij^ •»^Mx*i»i-V â- â€¢ PRICE TICKETS, SHOW CaRDs, ^-v DOW SHADES. Newest n"'?^" " for price list. F. Wi r.r.i a_M3. 1 K:ii:,'t-. i»_â„¢ NOTICE TO IMMIG HANTS TO M'n"3 -Passengers by the (,' I R- 'i"' S themselves bv retaining thoir "â- "Sg^* L a until thev arrive at the Winnipeg ..ta'^-*^,. stead of delivering the same '" "^Pr'j, gage clerk on trains, as the '^,nQcrsisn,'^jj^ convey all baggage, trunks, andscuicrb to any part of the city of ^Vinnlpe^,at3n. _.J at much lov.cr rates than by any ot agency. P. McKEOWN. Baggage ana l^k j Agent, "Wiunipeg. Refcrenf^es-uou pi Sutherland, Winnipeg; -S. M. (-'Icmc^J^'^.i I Birtlo, Man.: Col. Tyrwhit, M. P. "â- â€¢ "L Coo ke. Esq., ex- Warden, cou nty higSS-^ DRobbins Bros.? ARBITRATORS, PUBLlCACCOUNTANTS.TROST-t-'j 37 Wellington street East. Toronto. FIXANCIAL NEGOTIATION. I'^J* "S?! formation of companiesâ€" procuriiio v^ jj^l and capitalâ€" the purchase and sale nesses, debentures, c. MONEY LOANED olk^Sog-:, the lowest charges. rates of interest. No dciiK If y«u -want a loan or.i pa"'""[.*"irH«» a bnsiness iKiUKht ordlspuiril oi " â- 8. THESUN^^ifM THE SUN'S first aim is to be tratbTO « i useful; its second, to write ancnter^ni history of the times in which we live. ' • j;^ i oaan aven«e, more than a m""° ,hinev« week. Its circulation is now la'^^" 'rU) V. before. Subscription Daily (* P^'i-t-viii^ mail, 55c. a month, or $«..50 a year ^^ 8 pasea), ai.8« per year; Weeklt (»p" $1 per year, vnrkCW' L W. ENGLAND, Publisher, Ne wJ°I^ â-  CanadaPemanentLoan^SaviMst^ Patit up Capital. Total iissete estcc; loffi Lends money upon Real Estate a lo jfra* rent rates of interest, and on favorsJ i of repaydient. ALSO jjcK Porchases Municipal Debentures an gragesion Real Estate. For further particulars apply to Tjaisfff" J. fiRRBERT MASO-N.f %V" Company's Building, Toronto Street, [â- "fim; darling • littlocry ^•rey Evring F*«y, who dr l^i his arms T^^ u the mat *.»U alonn, cr j r»|»d her tear-' "ly got iuto 1 pot J^Z"' ^5 rrv* moment 7?«mel.tt!6d hj ♦^t t» th rf,"*»' Jacki L'^fowtter wer f â€" Wen .s^---»-^. .. â- '•-â- r^i..^ ^£J^^::":^'V^% 'â-  rl

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