The Last Hymn. The Sal: both day was ending in a Village by the Set]. The uttered benediction touched the people tenderly; And they rose to face the sunset in the glowing lighted west. And then hosted to their dwellings for God‘s blessed boon of rest. But they looked across 0 waters, and a storm was raging there.l .A ï¬erce spirit. moved aoove themithe wild spirit of the air ; And it lashed. and shook and tore them, ’till they thundered. gronned and boomed ; And alas! for any vessel in their yawning gulfs entombed. Very anxious were the people on that, rocky coast of \Vales, Lest the coming of the morrow should he tell- mï¬; awful tales; . . When 1 )0 sea had spent its pllSSlUn and had cast upon the shore . ‘ Bits of wreck, and swollen Victims, as it had done heretofore. \Vith the rough winds.‘blowingr round her. a brave woman strmned her eyes, And she saw along the billows a large vesael fall and rise: Oh! indid not need a prophet totell whatthe end must be ! I I For no ship could ride in safety near that shore on such a sea. Reminiscences ofthe Flight of John V‘Vflkes 150 0 on I'm .u Washington. A WILD RIDE FOR LIFE. 021 a cool, chum“, day in March ’69, 1 :h'm u \nth a wuer and tmm of horses m‘cr Luv ground UUYCI :«i by Booth in his wild thu'n; 1mm \V “11â€,ng the night he amm- >llxdlkl|l meuin, I followed the cxucbx'outu Hum}. pm stud, for u disbemue of nearly forty mihx», to [nu house of Dr. )ludd, near the Viilagc uf “cantown, St. Charles County, Maryland, thl‘c he had his broken ankle wt. -Xchr Illla 11c and his companion, Harold rude seven miles furtlicr,wlmrc they struck the lorry on the Potomac to Virginia crossed tin: rim-1', and penetrated as far as Garrett’s farm, where the one was shot and killed and the other made a prisoner. “as ruthlessly seized and hurried oil" to the UM Capitol Prison in \Vushington. ‘ llootnis original intention was to abduct l’ru:ident Lincoln,':unl to carry him down to Virginia, over precisely the same route ihat he took when he attempted to make his weapo, and deliver him ever to the rebr‘ls. For six months hcfm'e the fatal Hood Fri- «lziy evening, April 14, 1865, Booth had frequently travelled over this route between Washington and Virginia via. Marylamhaml haul mule himself aeqnaintcd with every house. every tree, and many turn on the maul. JIC Visited the hon: s of the people, puinl attention to the girls, stood unlimited whiskey to the men, and mzule himself aren- crally popular. All this time he was prepar- ing for Then the pitying people hurried from their homes and thronged the beach, Oh! for power to cross the waters. and the pcrishing to much ! Helpless hands were wrung for sorrow. [011(101‘ hearts grow cold with dread. Andthe shipurgcd by the tmnpost, 10 the fa- ull rook shore sped. She has named in 1110 lniddlo! 0h!th half of her goes down, _ God have mercy! is His hmu‘nn far to seek for those who (1 rown ! lo! when nexttlm white shocked fares louked wich mrror 1m Um svz , Gulyonelust clinging [imm- on :1 spar was; seen to be. tossed by the wave, And the man still ulung and flozitt-d, though no earthly power could save, Could we send him a short message? Here. a trumpct‘s shout away ! Twas the preacher's hand that took it and he wondered what to suy~ Any memory of his sermon? Firstly? Secondly? Ah. no ! There was but one thing to utter in that awful hour of woe: So he shouted through the trumpet, Look to Jesus! can yon hear! And “Aye. aye. Sir!" 1mg: the answer o‘er the waters loud and clear. 177110 is singing! “.lcsu? lover Then they list . ue» u“, _. ,, of my soul!" And lhe winds brought buck the (who, “while, the nearer \\ atol-s roll!" Strange, indeed, it was re hear him. lill lllC storm of life was past, Singing bravely from the waters, "0h rvccive my soul at last.“ He could have no other1‘cfx1g:e!llung% my 1101])- less soul on thee; Leave, 0 leave me nvl"-rllle singer dropped :11 last into the sea. And the watchers, looking homeward. lhl'uugh Iheir eyes by tears made dim, 'd In- pugsch to be with Jesus. in the sing- The Object of my mission was an interview with Dr. M add, one of the alleged conspira- tors in the murder of Lincoln. He had re- turned to his home from the Dry Tortugas, where he had been banished forlife,but was pardoned by l’rosident Johnson after four years’ eonlinmnunt. ()n the trial of the con- spirators heeame within an ace of being hanged fin fvlk't, it was as close a, share of tho noose us any 1 ever remember -and yet. prnetioaully, 'Nludd had no more to do with the assassination 01 Lincoln than the child nnlmrn. But in those days (1865) a» ï¬erce and vindictive wave of passion rolled over and it is understood by those who know the facts of the L 0. best that the ideal of 3.5535? sination ne\ er came into his head. and was never hinted at until the surrender of Gen. Leedess than :1 week before the awful crime was committal. Among those whose uc- (luziintunee he culti nted was Dr. Mudddnit to none with whom he sought to ingratiate himself did he hreathe the purpose he had in View. He pretended to he very fond of hunting and fowling, and {is St. Charles County, Maryland, is fanned for its wild game and sportsmen, no suspicion of his motives were ever entertained. There was a numerous Catholic population in thecounty and Boothwas on the best of terms with H, was a tavern when: Booth was well known, and where hundreds of dollars were spent by him m1 «111': , for the rustic fre- quentel‘s. Nearer [llc‘t‘l‘CIn‘bUng‘ Wil‘u'hL‘l‘s (tame the wrcvk the coim try, and victims werodcnmnd- ml to appease the cry for blood. Any 0110 against whom the least suspi ion existed ‘ m; .1 Father Flanagan, parish priest of licantown and was well recommended to his congrega- tion. At a place called by two letters, T I At the moment when Buoth Shot Lincoln, Spengler, the stage carpenter of Ford's Theatre, was standing in the lane hack of the rear entrance to the stage, holding Booth’s horse, a. fine, well-groomed blooded bay. It took less than three minutes from the time Booth jumped on the stage from the Presi- dent’s box, after doing the fatal deed, until mg u‘t'flthul, hymn. THE ABUI'VTIUX 0F LINUULV |¢0<OÂ¥ co; 'xu‘clln. he was mounted on his horse and breaking away down the cobble-paved lane with the speed of the wind, the sparks flying from his horse’s hoofs as they struck the uneven paving stones. From the lane he turned in- to F street, continued along to Four and a Half street, and then down to l’enns ylvania avenue, wheeling to the east and hearing on by the north wing of the CapitolJHe swept swiftly past the east front of the white and silent building, and struck the continuation of Pennsylvania avenue. Here he gave his horse full rein for he had a straight and level course before him, as far as the bridge leading across the east branch of the Poto~ mac into Maryland. At the Marine Hospital harold, mounted on a horse, was waiting’ to receive him, and here the course of the nar- rative has to be checked for a momentary digression. and gloomy highway. what thoughts must have filled Booth‘s miurl 1 In every nmlnlin'g pine branch hc 1]111:<tl1:1\'(3 imagined an arm of vengeance stretched out across the road to smite him ! \thn nine miles from Bean- town he had to turn to the left, and tnke'u kind of bridle path through a strip 01 pine forest. “"110 will envy his thoughts as in the darkness and solitude created by the m‘erzn‘ehing trees he enuhl not help reflect- ing that, no matter to what enzl of the earth he might fly, the :Lrenging hand of an outraged nation would reach him and pun- ish him ,‘or his unpardonahle crime? After emerging from the forest path he had to ride through a number of ï¬elds, the road taking that course along:r the headlands. At 4 o’clock iiitlxo morning he reaehcd the fence that surrounded the point on which stood Dr. Mmhl’s dwelling. Booth and Harold dismounted. The latter opened the wicket in the fence, with Booth leaning heavily on his shoulder, for his broken ankle was now giving him great pain ; hoth moved forward- to the entranee door. The knock was answered by Mrs. M udd, with a light in her hand, and, as she told me four years subsequently, she was shocked at the uppea 'anee of Booth. “His eyes,†she said, “had a most unnatural expression, either from excessive drinking,r or excessive mental excitement, I don‘t know which. His hair was in disorder, his clothes covered with mud, and he appeared unable to stand,†Booth was taken into the parlor and laid up- on a lounge. To go back to Dr. Mudrl. Little did that unsophisticated physician dream of the trouble he was destined to undergo from having entertained Lincoln‘s assassin. and for a while after its close, military sen- tinels were posted at both ends of the bridge that crosses the Anacostian or east branch of the Potomac from the District of Columbia. to Maryland. These sentinel’s sharply challenged and inquired the business of every one crossing the bridge. To Get over this difï¬culty it was arranged between Booth and Harold that the latter should stay in Union City, on the Maryland side, until night, and then about 10 o’clock, ride down to and cross the bridge, answering the challenge of the sentry of “Who goes there?†by replying, “A messenger going for a doc- tor.†This answer was, of course, bonml to pass him over. On returning, and after meeting Booth near the Marine Hospital, Harold was to ride back ahead, and after answering the sentry’s challenge again of “\Vho goes there ‘5†by saying, “The mes- senger who went for the doctor," Booth was to ride up, and t0 the challenge of “\Yhu goes there?†answer, “The doctor.“ This arrangement worked to a charm. Harold met Booth at the appointed place and they crossed over into Union City, a small Village on the Maryland side, without suspicion 0r molestation. At the other side of the bridge the road turned to the left,and for some distance was up hill. The night was ï¬ne, but cloudy. The roads were heavy here and there from recent rains, but Booth took little thought of that. \Vhen the level road was reached he dashed ahead at the fullest possible speed, and never drew rein till he reached the place oddly called T ll, sixteen miles from \Vashington, where he was forced to dismount, owing to a broken saddle girth. This was quickly repaired by a handy man in the tavern,who remembered well, four years after, what an enormous drink of brandy Booth swallowed before rc- mounting his horse. No time was lost in getting forward. Both fugitives kept well together on the wings of the wind. Beyond T B the road becomes very lonely, and the country wears a desolate and deserted look. Groves of tall pine trees on one side, and dreary stretches of marshland on the other, are visible. Dr. M lhhl was then called and asked by Booth to examine his leg and see what was the matter with it. To do this it would be necessary to pull ()(l' his boot, but, as it was very close ï¬tting, the pain of the operation would be excessive, St» the Doctor took out his knife and cut the boot leg down from the top and around at the instep. He then slipped (AT the remainder of the hoot from the foot, and Mrs. Mudd otfercd one of her soft woollen slippers in its ' place. just as a stick of candy might be broken in the middle and leave two clean smooth sur- faces. He then dressed the leg and bound it tightly at the point where the break 0e- cni'i‘ed,pntting ona boot made of pasteiioal'd, extending from the instep to a point below the knee. The bootleg that he cut oil" he threw away in a. corner, and never thought no more about it, and yet it x 'as this hoot- ]cg that uznne within it hair of liming him hanged, and as it was had llllll sentenced to the Dry Tm'tnwis for life. The Doctor spent some time feeling for a. fracture or an induration, and could (liscov- or none, but at last found that it was a. clean. Neither Mudd nor his wife had the faint- est idea that Booth had ‘assaSsinated the President, and in the remote part of the country where they lived they were not likely to hear the news for several days. Booth told them :1 plausible story about be ing out hunting and falling elf his horse. After an hour’s stay in Mudd's house,during which time he consumed :1 bottle of whiskey and three ham sandwiches, both he and Huroldstzirted on horseback, Booth feeling much pain from his leg, for the Virginia ferry. seven miles away. They crossed the ferry, “ith their horses und,pulled up at Garrett’s farm, where Booth was 'killed a few days after, and that was the end of the wild ride for life of John Wilkes Booth. I'LYJ\<. .\!.HXH ’l‘HL‘ DARK BREAK 4'1" ’I'HE LEU‘ DURING THE W 'AIL _.,. "7â€"4.. 4... y cop-i -~ Spiritualism Exposed. S. Baldwin, a Cincinnati spiritualist, tells the Enquirer that he came to New York expressly to investigate the perform- ances OI Slade, the noted medium, who was then giving Seances here. He had ahout ï¬fty sittings at $5 to $10 each, and it was not until his seeming,r eredulity had disarm- ed Slade and made him a little careless that any trickery was diseovered. Beyond lead- ing the medium to transmit numerous ines- sages from persons who were not dead, not much was accomplished until four months of effort had been made. Then Juuterialixa- tions were called for, and the spirit of a fe- male put her hand and forearm into tangible shape under the tahle. “0n the night fixed upon for an exposure,†Mr. Baldwin says, “1 took my friend with me. I .requestedthc niaterialixation of my deceased female friend. The light was turned down, and she was promptly produced, and her hand extended to me to fondleas before. The hand wasquite admit, but after a while 1 succeeded in grasping it. I gave a signal to my friend, and the table at which we sat was turned over. I drew from my pocket a little bomb prepared with chemicals for the purpose, threw it upon the floor, and instantly the darkened room was illuminated as with an electric light. There was the whole secret exposed to \‘lCW. My female friend from the shades of the biest v. as a 16-year-old boy." Mr. Baldwin mentions the Rev. (’lcorge ll. Hepwurth as coguimnt to this event. ~ 7â€"«004‘O~>«pâ€"â€"~-~_ A Royal Diary. The Austrian Crown Prince has published the diary he kept in his tour made last Feb- ruary in the Holy Land. lle wanted to see the countries in which the ancestors of \Vestern civilization were obliged hy tlie‘sea and the desert to halt in their migrations, to take up their abode, and to found the primitive societies and those Biblical beliefs which the Caucasian race has assimilated and lived upon for thousands of years. That is the Prince’s expression in the open- ing chapter. \Vhen he descends to ordin- ary prose he is more interesting. His taste, amounting to a passion, for natural history frequently breaks out. He brought back with him a large collection of birds that he had shot and plants that he had gathered for a museum that he is founding at Prague. No technical detail as to the manner of pre- serving them is left out. There is a com- plete list in the appendix of all the birds, beasts, curious stones, shells, and plants that he obtained by his personal enterprise and patience in the Holy Land. Frescoed Cheeks. A San Francisco sign-painter, who does at large business in disguising black eyes, sail- ed for Europe recently, the profits of the holiday trade having justiï¬ed him in taking a, pleasure trip across the Atlantic. Just before he started he told a (,r'ln'onir/v report- er that his ordinary price for ï¬xing one eye was $2.50. He made the astonishing state- ment that some of his best customers are ladies. “ Yes, sir,†he said, “accidents, you known, will happen in thehest regulat- ed families, and the feminine weakness for black eyes must he gratified in some way. Nearly all the black eyes are obtained in the same way, if my information is correct. It’s always either a piece of stove-wood that jumps up and hits the unforLunate ladies, or a). piece of hrie-a-hrac that drops down and carroms on their lovely eyebrow. Poor things 1 It’s astonishing what dangers they incur in performing their household duties. lt’s astonishing that the legislature or the board of the supervisors doesn‘t do some- thing to suppress the quarrelsome dispositâ€" ion of stovewood and hric-zrbme. There’s a collection ofold plates and mugs in a house o _ u . “ Have you notlccd that these lnhumun ams of bric-a-brac and stm‘cwood are aï¬'cct- ed in any \ "1y by thcscasous .’ ’ On the following Monday a company of ca\'alry,under the command of COLO’Beirne, which was then, in conjunction with several other companies, scouring the country in all directions, stopped at M ndd’s house and made search for Booth. One of the cavalry- men picked up the discarded boot leg lying in the corner, and scrutinizing it all over, found inside on the leather the initials “ J. \V. B.†That was enough. To the cavalry- men it was proof strong as holy writ that )ludd was one of the conspirators. They then threw a rope round his neck, fastened one end to the pummel ofa saddle, and lit- erally dragged him on foot all the way to \Vashington, leavnig his beautiful wife in an agony of grief, and with a family of four children to lock after. on Van N033 avenï¬e that l'dbacvk for$l,000 to whip Paddy Ryan 01‘ any other prize- flghtcr in the countryj’: “ \Vellâ€"yes. ' Such festive occasions as Christmas and New Year seem to excite the brutal instincts of both to the highest pitch. 1 have noticed, though, that other articles are much more afl'eeted hy seasons and by outside events than hric‘aâ€"hrac and stovewood are. The latter are always till:- cd with an impl "the animosity to married women, and grati y their hatred whenever the defenseless victims give them a chant. .tockingvehairs, hat-racks, stail'..'ays, ma . doors, and mantels are only the mortal ene- mies of the male , , and do more to keep up the price of st clung-plaster than Harry Maynard’s gymnasium. Hardly a day passes that I don‘t have to fetch up Some worthy citizen who has been knocked ofl' his pins by a rocking-chair or garroted by a hat- racli. The other night one of the most seâ€" date merchants on California street was quietly crawling up stairs to his family, boots in hand, when a. tr *aeherous hatâ€" stand (lea-1t him a blow under the ear that nearly lifted him out of his stockings. Be- fore thC“1fit0n‘lShed citizen could defend him- self the stairs joined in the brutal attack, and belahored him so umnercifully that when he dropped into my shop the the next day I thought he must have come dcwn head ï¬rst through the stoveâ€"pipe. This is one instance of the murderous instincts or" the articles I have mentioned." Booth rode the forty miles from \Vashing- ton to Mudd’s house in six hours. It took my team of fast stoppers ten hours to cover the same distance. The breaking of the saddle girth of his horse was an evidence of the halter-shelter pace at which he rode,but in vain the riding, for if he had ridden to the end .of the earth he could not have escaped the fate that befel him. HESILY V. O’CONNOR. ¢v<4oo> '§‘ RUBT. EVANS <‘ “'c beg to intinmtc that every well rogu- lated household should have a bottle of Star Cement, as it monuls everything as good as new. Lame Back. Llunlmgo. Kidney complaint, Ncul‘algia, Rhuumatism. and all pain and inflammation are speedily cured with Hagyard’s Yellow Oil. Group, sore throat, colds, burns, scalds, ln'niscs. frost bites, cliilblains and all wounds of the H0le are quickly healed liy Yellow Oil. This Machine is for lighting privntu dwellings. mills, factories, churches. Dublin halls, hotels. Semi for circular and price list, 01' call and or amine tho machine in operation at JOSEPH PHI LL] Pa“. Solo Mmulfactul‘cr, l’lnmhm‘ and Gus-Fitter. 17E) King-st \Vcsl, Toronto. An Editor in Luck. St. Jacobs Oil cures rheumatism; of this I am convinced. For years I sutl'ered with rheumatism in my left shoulder and right arm, and last fall I was incapable of at- tending to my duties, and lay many a night unable to sleep on account of terrible pains. A few weeks ago a same attack of this trouble struck me, and this time I concluded to try the St. Jacobs Oil, 1 must acknowledge, with but little conï¬dence in its merits. 1 freely confess that the result has completely astonished me. The first ap- plication relieved the pain very materially, and the continued use of only two bottles has completely cured me of this chronic evil, and that, after the most eminent physicians and their preeript- ions had been of no avail. I therefore consider it a duty to publish the above for the beneï¬t of all sufferers with rheumatism and kindred complaints. G. AHEILMAN, Editor Republican, Pittsburg, Pa. â€"-â€"â€"â€"-¢o<a->u»â€"â€"â€"â€" The problem how to get the Czar to Mos- cow safely, in order to have him crowned, is solved by one ofï¬cial with a suggestion to take him by the carriage road instead of by rail, and then to completely isolate the im- perial procession from the crowd by trench- es and barricades lined with troops. This would be a queer ceremony, and one that suggests anything rather than an irrepressi- ble desire of the people to accept their sov- ereign. It would be like a coronation in a state of siege. Emacs" BUTAXH.‘ BITTERS are the cheap- est, and we believe the best, tonic in use. Sold in packages at '23 cents and make oneâ€"half gallon of the ï¬nest mixture: As simple as making t‘a‘ 01' coll'ec. THE UANADIAN AIR GAS MAUHINE. - -v~7â€"«‘90410'>I0Fâ€"â€"~r 7 Colds, coughs, and such diseases as lead to consmnption, may be checked, and oltcn cured, by the use of one 25-ccut bottle of \Vistzu"s Pulmonic Syrup of \Vild Cherry and Horchouml. It is worth a trial. were the 111emm‘ahle words of (10111111011010 Perry. “"0 repeat, "Don’t; (Jive up the Ship,†poor, despairing invalil], but try Burdock Blood Bitters. It cures others, why 110tyo11'.’ It I'mmvabus, 1'cg11111tes and tones 1111 the organs of5131-1'1:ti(111,:11111 restores Vitality. how to Cure! a Cold. Upon the’ ï¬rst feeling of chill or shivering remain indoors if possilble, bathe the feet in tepid water, gradually increasing the heat as long as it can be comfortably bornc,to in- treely of warm ginger tea or sage tea, drink (luce perspiration, and take Hagyard’s Pec- toml Balsam according to directinns on the bottle. Ha yard’s Balsam cures coughs, asthma. and ronchitis: AGENTS WANTED, lijcnl cases. The formc i 33 s: “We in (e great pleasure in stating that ST. JACOBS UII, is in use by many ring ur- tists now engaged with P. '1‘. Barnnni’s Greatest Show on Earth, united with the Great London Circus, Sanger’s Royal British Menagerie and the International Allied Shows. From its happy effect upon those who have oomsion to employ it,v.'c have no hesitation in pronouncing Si Jiwons OIL the best lininient vvhieh hm ever been brought to our notice. It is'wonderfnlly cilieuâ€" cious in subduing pain. (Signed) BARNL‘M, Bimini; & TII'TI‘IIIXSON." The Press Agent of Coop’s Monster Show says: “In eases of rheumatism or com flithlis of that kind our artists know how to en re t ' emselves Very speedily. ST. J Acons OIL is a very popular rem- ed among our people for rheumatic ziins,anzl as 011g as they can get it thoywon’tsn erinueh.†Mr. Frank I. Frayne says: “ I have suffered terribly from rheumatism in my right Shoulder and arm, and at the same time I had severe pains in my chest. Sometime since I read something in a newspaper about the remarkable cures 01 ST. JACOBS OIL, and I thought I would try that remedy. I tell you I am mighty glad I did, for after using one or two bottles of that preparation I felt no pain whatever, and have had none since I am ï¬rm believer in ST. JACOBS OIL, and I wan! everybody in my company to keep it near them.’ Hamilton. ()nt R I“? AND 1‘0!“ IER1‘I'} MIVI'I'AL FIRE l'lide‘li (‘1 ll 1“, (PF IDN'I‘ARIO. A pply m S; (‘0‘ A REGULAR CIRCUS. “ Don’t Give up the ship “ J. Hanna Sen-e . r . u ()x'onto. Untario. application. mm Fresh Reliable Seeds. 5mm '1‘!) 21m} guc ' ' o l'rcu on 8 mlication. ; l GardenKoFarm Seeds A. P.59 Supplies the blourlwivh its Hm] Principle. m- ,l‘ifv Eilvmz-m. Mil“. infusing; Strength, \'ig01',uud ch Lift: inlu all pm'lsol' the 5)“;- tom. AYER’S HAIR VIGOR, Had Suffered many Physicians and grew no better but rather worse. Mr. I). H. Howard, of Geneva, N. Y., after dis- missing his physicians, tried nearly half a gross of the \ anions blood and liver remedies advertised, with no beneï¬t; when one bottle of Burdock Blood Bitters cured him of I’m- alysis and General Dehility. At the adâ€" vanced age of 60, he says he feels young again, and is overjoyed at his wonderful reâ€" covery. N/ OI'LDINGM I’lf’l‘FllIi FRAMES. MIR- ; 7 ROI! PLATES, (‘IIR “039'. div. Prim Listto the trade on application. II. J. MATâ€" T†“'5 BRO, UiiYongc St. Toronto. GENTS VVAN'I'ED to push sale of “lio- j; mlniun Family Bible." It Pays Big. J. KICAUUUG & (70., 50 Yonge Street. Toronto. To its Natural Vitality and Color. ofIHUGI’AliEI) LEA THERDumblc, Light Elnstit‘.undchcap. First prize at Provincia‘, Exhibition. London. ’I'cstimonials on applica; Lion. Satisfaction guaranteed. Address. J. DOAN (z SON. Dravvmn‘ Ont, “'0 all consider Iron the embodiment; of strength and power, but how few are aware tllatit is this same element {in the system that gives us strength and Vigor, and that an insufï¬ciency of it causes weakness and (lebility. The Peruvian Syrup, a. protoxide of Iron, is prepared expressly to supply this \‘italiziug element. Timely Wax-r. ing Now is the season for sudden colds and distressing coughs, treat them with Hag- yard‘s I‘ectoml Balsam, it cures influenza. asthma, croup, whooping cough, bronchitis, and all pulmonary complaints leading ‘to consumption. At the Centennial Exhibition, 1876, the Wheeler & \Vilaon received a silver medal. The \Vanzer Sewing Machines were awarded a gold medal (the only one given to the Sew- ing Machine Trade). The public can decide as to which is of the most value. The W'anâ€" zer C and F machines are all the rage this fall, and deservedly so, owing to their many improvements and general excellence. ()I' I‘rimlv am} ’l'rusl Fundmo loan on Mortgage or improved I‘m-m and Town property at Low- 1 Rates. Apply to 'I‘lxost- going to Manitoba will ï¬nd it 1011;031- advantage lo correspond with 1110. Subscribe for the (Jolonz's! l\"u:s, il paper giving just t‘lm infornmtion you require: Sample free. Pam- phletsnvlthinaps,senlfrco. llnlbrnok‘sï¬rslparty with sleeping: (R 1’3 ullavhed, will leave on Is. March. and vominuc (‘vcry otliur week during the s usnn. prvvocrlml a l'ow days before by their fast frcight train. Please address wim stump for reply. ' I). A. I and Hm] ! :00“. Nurthâ€"wost I‘llnigmLion an Agent!†Kian vast. 'l‘m'onlu. Hall‘s Vegetable Sicilian Hair Lenewer IS the most reliable article in use for restoring gray hair to its original color and promoting 1ts growth. :rany. Miller. [Riggm'd' lHurkslm-k. OFFICES :~ Bank of Toronto. Toronto. . , ....u u. n w.) a surely restores its color, when izulcd or gray. it stimulates the nutritive organs to healthy activity, and preserves both the hair and its beauty. 'l‘hus brashy. weak or sickly hair becomes glos y. pliable and strengthened; lost hair rcgrows with liver expression. falling hair is checked and stuhlished: thin hair thickâ€" ens; and faded or gray hairs resume their origâ€" inal color. 113 operation is sure and harmlem. ILcurcs dandruff, heulsull humors, and keeps the scalp mo]. clean and soft ~ under which con- ditions, diseases 9f the gpulp‘arp inipo‘ hlo. FURNITURE. MANITOBA! Rheumatic Remedy. There is no better cure for Rheumatism than Hagyard’s Yellow Oil used according to directions on bottle. It also cures Burns, Scalds, Frost Bites, Bruises, Lameness, and all wounds of the flesh. All dealers sell it, price ‘25 cents. As adrcssing for ladics‘ hair. ï¬lm 1mm is praised for its g [tofu] and :lgl‘e *thlo perfume, and \‘aluml for [he soft, Insm: and richness 0: tom- i1 impm‘ PREPARED BY 3 1 DR. J. G. AYER 86 00., Lowell, Mass. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGIS'I‘S AND DEAL- ERS IN M HDICINE. $1,000,000.00- ERUVIAN SYRUP Cures Dyspepsia, Wervous Affec- tions, General Debility, Fever and Ague, Paralysis, Chronic Diarrhoea, Boils, Dropsy, Humors, Female Comâ€" plaints, Liver Complaint, Remittth Fever, and all diseases originating in a bad State of the Blood, or accompanied by Debility or a low State of the System. For Restoring Gray Hair l‘rnflir Ind .hudylil-ul (annulus. J. “CAN :z’SO'N. Dravvmn‘ Ont 1882, USHAVVA (‘ABINE’I‘ (50.. 97 Yonge Street, Toronto. Onf. A alum V11;â€" 0R, bylong and ex- Lcnsivc use, has proven that it stops the falling of rm- hair immediately; often renews tho growth {and alw Advmwing ymw‘, ‘: 'kucssmarcflisap‘ poinunent. and hCI'< diLzu'y predisposit- ion, all tum me hair gray, and either of them incline it 1.0 sht‘zd )irnlaturejy.