HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1890-07-04, Page 7TEE ILLS OF BILBYHOOD.
Some Advice to Mothers About the &WAS
of Infants.
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. THE SACRIFICE OF CHILD LIFE.
(Nell Nel11?-i'3,---''' - ir
iiiil a p meal standpoint babyhood, I
which enabrecee " - rat two years of life,
ie the most important period of life. In
all the animal kingdon.i the most helpless
is the human offeprmg. The new-born
babe can utter a feeble ory and is posseseed
of a degree of autornstio motion, but until
the ninth day of existence there is no
evidence of intelleeteel. lite. Infancy ie
more often than otherwise the vtotim of
ignorance, and in the very first stage of life
ie laid the foundatton of dieser that swell
the lid of mortality.
This fearful saprifiee es -ea'
a na ural sequence of the
violence done to nature. There is no more
reason why the modern baby !Mould run
the liat o so-called infantile disclaims than
4
the par a aihould wreath) alternately -with-
- the bo oat and rheumatic twinges, to
whioh the clubmen of the day ere subjected
for violated laws of health.
It has been proven by the registry of
vital statistics, that one out of every five
infanta dies before the completion of the
fret year and one out of six before the
second year, the best argument that can
be advanced forthe importance of a more
general knowledge of the oare of young
children. For the following facts I am in-
debted to Dr. F. J. Bowles:
Daring the early weeks of existence the
conditions essential to growth are food,
' digestion, nutrition, respiration and sleep.
It is not until about the sixth month that
the muscles and ligaments have acquired
sufficient strength to enable the child to
support its head or to eit upright. Parents
who do not heed this natural process of
develop.. , .t must not bo surprised to find
indicationm of pressure upon the internal
•organs or curvature of the spine.
A healthy baby will sleep a greater part
of the time for„the first few days, and it is
not necessary to waken it for nourishment.
It sometimes happens that the milk does
not supply the required amount of nourish-
ment, and nature offer a oompenaation in
an increaseclatmonntref-sleepi-Theue two
states mut not be confounded. In the
latter a regular habit of weighing, and
of noting the • oonditions of the muscles
will show a lack of firmness, and that the
month.
baby is not 'gaining its one pound per
The demand for warmth for the first
week will require that the baby sleep at
nightin contact with the mother, but not
that it be wholly covered eo that • it
breathes nothing but impure air, freighted
with emanations from the akin. It is well
So begin at an early date to hoonstone the
baby to going to sleep in its orib. This
will do much towards establishing& regular
and early hour for retiring; and will save
the mother a good deal of care, in addition
to allowing her the disposition of her even-
ings.
The position of the child in the crib is
more favorable to development than that
of lying In the lap, and its sleep ie not in.
terrupted by being transferred to the crib.
Some one has suggested a basket for carry-
. ing a baby to and, fro in the „nursery, the
swaying motion being agreeable and the
sides admitting of a covering being thrown
over without interfering with the motion of
the limbs,
A baby that is held in the arms of the
,
mother or nurse a great deal and rooked
to sleep before being put in the orib will
soon become so exacting that the mother's
time and strength are all consumed in
waiting upon a healthy child:
As the child inoreases in interest with
age' the wisdom of having atriotly observed
the hour for " patting to bed ' will be
apparent. The domande made upon the
nervous system by vlgoroue playing in the
fresh air can only be met by a full night's
sleep.
No child should be out of bed at 7 o'clock
in- the --evening. sHowever pleasing the
iktercourse with children may be, they
cannot with impunity be allowed to figure
at evening receptions. Of the many fail-
ures to succeed in adult life, how many oan
be traced to unstable nerves. The way to
keep them strong is by Supplying in full
doses that best tonic of all, " Nature's
svveet restorer."
It is not well to h VO the room painfully
bilz
adcill in order that by shalleleep. Rasher
anoustom it to sr ing in a room where
there is the ordinary noise incident to
melting about. We are creatures of habit,
and this, when acquired, will nave many
vtakeful hours later, as well as add to the
chanted and freedom of those in charge.
Tim nursery should be an airy room on the
sunny side of the houee.
Fresh air should be given undiluted and
unsparingly. Children born in warm/
weather may be taken out when a week
old. 11 18 better at first to go out often,
for fifteen or twenty minutes at a time,
*. an to take a prolonged airing. 15 18 a
had practice to cover the faces of babies
with a thick hood for the' purpose of
keeping the cold air from the lungs. You
compel 'the child to reathe the air it has
i
already eihaled, at est but partly Mixed
with pure air. Thi noreasee liability to
take cold, in addition to deptiving it of
, what the blood and °theta tisanes need so
quell.
Ifihe advent of a tooth with its attendant
irritation, oes not offer an exam° for de-
priving a • of its outing. Neither should
a slight 9 a little mugh. Fresh air
withoist will do more to improve
both oo an unventilated room
with nt
As irr . v:ke accompanied by
fever, , ; e mole to a child's
goingh ni' does require,
tie:nip,: 1 • "e lilobitits. ii +
ore warmly
VILts, &ere
, e int.
porl ainst
ea,
tit
lie
•nto
and the eye); very sensitive, and greet
harm may be done by Oareleetineom in WO
respeot.
While strongobildren will be invigorated
by exposure to a degree of cold, others who
are frail and weak would" have their liven
endangered by an equal course of treat-
ment. It would be inhuman to attempt
making these vigoroua by recklessexposure.
It is tb be remembered that manyeeebl
°hackleeanusek-ersoRibtee
nIM r die I
4174,4rit. 4P7Z2
EIZ/Valutril la •
to the con-
trary are present, babies should be bathed
daily in water at the temperature of the
body, dried and rubbed with a soft hand,
and then dusted with unscented starch
powder. The unscented is to be used, as by
xt an odor pointing to a condition oalling
for treatment is not masked....
.After time the teniperature of the
water 'should be lowered to that of the room
in which the bath is given. The best time
is when the, baby wakes in the morning
and before it has t k
a ranqui ming
effect upon the nerves and invites sleep. A
fixed rule as to frequency for all oases can.
not be given.
15 18 well that the regular morning bath
_ba followed by feeding and then sleep
before the baby is taken into the open air.
Children are very tineceptible to odors
each as from flowere and certain oils; and
their nerves are often disturbed and they
made irritable by them. ' A. German
physician reports disastrous results to a
baby by the. father....ruhising--a-erhaeur
'natio jet& With sabine oil while near the
crib.
The praotice of drying wet and milled
clothes in the nursery is a pernioious one,
and should not be tolerated for a moment.
They should not be used a aecona time
sentil washed, het baby's room should not
be used for laundering purposes. Nothing
ehould be permitted that takes from the
purity of the air that the baby breathes.
*
b b b OW Locum)
fourt I Friday and Seto
Having puichased a la
reduced retell, I am pre
meta of teeth for et() an
inutdallor 412. Filling and e
JKA. Jsuocr.
The Girls' Brigade.
The Girls' Brigade M Scotland is fast
becoming as popular and benefioial an in -
saltation as the widespread and famous
Boys' Brigade. The girls belonging to
these brigades are usually from 12 to 18
years of age, and are wage-earners in print-
ing offices, factories, shops, etc. They wear
red aprons with red and White borders and
red and white shoulder sashes over •
r gaAF4-onet---tiar-gtr o airs have
scarlet and silver stripes denoting the rank
of the corporals and sergeants. Their drill'
consiste of caliethenics to music, without
apparatus„ but with precision and graoe,
exercises in which rings, flags and ropes
are meal, and marches, including several
intricate figures -wheeling turning and a
maze. There is also singing, and some-
timee a May -pole dance, with a little
address from the superior officers, who are
usually ladies of leisure with philanthropi-
oal purposes. The work was inaugurated
by two or three young ladies in Edinburgh,
who formed the first brigade, and there_are
companies now in all parte of Scotland. In
addition to the drill there .are °Z�� for
singing, sewing and Bible teaching, and
kindly talks on temperance, thrift and
parity, somewhat of the same nature as
our working girl's clubs inAmerios.-New
York Sun.
Archdeacon Farrar on Meat.
Secondly, I venture to believe that all
society would gain by diminishing the con-
sumption of meat. Queen Elizabeth
ordered a fish diet on Wednesdays and
Fridays, not for any ecolesisetioal reason,
but (ostensibly, at any rate) to encourage
the fish, trade and to diminish the demand
for flesh. That interferenoe with the mar-
ket was not wise, but I think that the ad-
herents of the vegetarian sooiety will do
good if they persuade multitudes to learn
the value of whole -meal bread, and oat-
meal, and vegetables and fruit, and not
rely so exclusively on beef and mutto.
he poor especially might find in porridge
and lentil soup and well -cooked vegetables
a far cheaper, mom wholesome and more
austaining diet than the often uneatieface
tory, coarse and even unwholesome . scraps
which they buy from the ,butohers at a fat
greater cost.-atrchdeacon Farrar in English
Illustrated Magazine.
Moved for Herself Alone.
A young lady of this city who is said to
be worth not lees than $50,000 M prospeo-
tive was the objeot of the attentions of a
young man with whom she was very
favorably impresed, but who with encour-
agement continued to pause just short of a
proposal. The young lady managed to put
in Ohm:dation what appeared to be a retie-
ble report that her pecuniary expeotations
were simply in the. public mind, and in
two days the young fellow had proposed
andbeen accepted. It is not Mien that
$50,000 constitutes an obstacle to a young
ldy's matrimonial suooese; but it did in
this case; and the lady in question doe'nt
feel in the least put out about it.-Bieg.
hamton Leader.
Extremely Ingenios.
The Russian policeman when he, arrests
O prisoner invariably kicks hiriira The
Nihilists therefore carry packages of dyna-
mite in their coat tail -pookets, and line the
more remote regions, of their trousers with
iron. The ronult is that when a policeman
kicks a Nihilist the dynamite explodes, and
as its force is always exerted in a down-
ward direction the Nihilist himeelf in Un-
hurt, although the policeman's leg is blevin
off. -Paris Edition Herald.
ForeranSmith is a good workman, but
he's in love and taken so much time to wait
on hie girl that he can't tend to 'buiness.
Manager -Wel, hire a good looking dude
to get his girl away from him add he'll be
all right.
"What cameo pimples ?" repeated a
Boton, girl in town to one of our peach-
cemplexioned girls. "Your ignorance stir-
priees me. They are canoed by the ologging
of the sebamoun glands with sebum."
The total amount &pontd in the Do.
minion Post Office Savings' banks during
May Was $414,164, and the withdrawals
;•706,084.
Bridge wori,as it is called, is a new dental
mess of inherting artificial teeth on what
ht be called e band plate, oonsisting of
iow band of gold to whioh are tautened
ubstitutee for the miming teeth. The
'-is-pormanently anchored to remainin
otgeots and,eannothe-removedr----
_
pinigwip,ixamt mem ratOrr#E.
WhO United SlOtes mime is taken this.
year. The other Countries that take their
census in the year ending with 0 are
Austria-Hungary, Colombia, Denmark and
Bwitgerland. In Great Britain, Canada,
Ceylon, Fang, India and Venezuela the
°emus ia taken in hefyeare ending with 1.
Our tarn will therefore con
,,Wsislas!t.earre*sseszersZt
of the Population Bill M 18
provielon for a stat t
GETTING IEWINGE3 MIXED.
pIn a certaha W pa er -offioe
waer—pes toreteorornuf..: wo
The Lives of Two Ifewspaper Men
Saved byeader.
the gentleman whose business it is to record
the fluctuations ot the live etock market
efts across from the. vatenags,men-tesaietteear
,
e„ssaaa aests,, .adattaata'ssekha-,--S•asersitrosrt's saialig ceremonies.
',Ida-, she passing rBoth, says the NOW TM* nines, sio gra.
.
00 aims th.? firsii Phio writers and •
oensue The
original proposal for such a measure dates
from a period some fifty year(' earlier, when
a bill " for taking and registering an annual
amount of the total number of people " was
brought in by Mr. Thomas Potter, son of
the Archbishop of Canterbury, a barrieter
of the Middle Temple, and member for St.
Germans. The project was violently op-
posecla Mr. Thornton, member for the city
of York, declaring in the House that until
then he " did not believe there was any set
of men, or ind•yer_euse ; 4^ • '
- •
o presurup
abandoned as to make suoh
This gentleman declared
that the project was " totally
the last renasine of Eng!
" Moreover," he added, " an a
of our people will acquaint
abroad with our weakness"
ciator of the °ensue was not
antagonism "to the schee.
was widespread. There was
the proposed census would pr
erersof fresh taxes, and wool
way for a conscription.
By the returee of baptisms and burials,
reaching back in the case of many parishes
to the year 1571, estimates of the popula-
tion have been framed whioh show
marvellous remits when compared with
recent statietice. It seems almost
incredible that the populat on of Engand
and Wales in 1651 was actually less than
the present population of what is
called " Greater London," a designation
which includes " Inner London" and the
"Outer Ring." Ya a good authority fells
us that the figures may be relied upon as
sufficiently correct. It thus appears that
the population of England and Wales
underwent an int.:mean of leas than a
million in the hundred years which ended
with 1751; 'whereas in the next century the
ins:Imam was nearly twelve millione. Be-
tween 1851 and 1881 there was an inore
exoeed'egeightairoasiorse-,--heinging up the
otal for,England and Wales to twenty -slip
millions. This point being reached, it was
/calculated that the population in 1891
would prove to be about 29,843,898. Ao-
cording to the yearly estimates since 1881,
there is every proepeot that this foreoaet
will be found to approximate very closely
to the truth. A feature of great im•
portanoe in regard to 1871 ware that it
afforded the first inatamie in which a °ensue
was taken of the entire population of the
British Empire, the total at that date being
found to be nearly 235,000,000. The under-
taking was described as " the vastest
census that had ever been taken in one
empire." At the last census the number
had risen to more than 254,000,000, the
3,400,000.
incream in the United Kingdom being
tuous and so
a proposal."
his oonviotion
subversive of
ish liberty."
Eland register
our enemies
This denun-
elone In his
The feeling
a fear that
ove the pre -
d prepare the
Lost Its Ball Club.
An editorial from a recent issue of the
Punkin Holler Weekly Bugle lawente the
death of its pet baaeball nine in sate follow-
ing touching manner:
They have gone I The darlings of the
diamond have evaporated from our midst,
and our hearts are bowed down in woe,
while we eadly tarn us to our patent boiler
plate visoera and embossed paste -pt.
No more the antics of the tape -wrestler,
suddenly taken ill withthe cramps, will
disturb the serenity of the dry goods store.
No more will the post office close its
pigeon -hoe at 3p. m. sharp. No more will
our notes go to protest because the (lathier,
teller and Werke of the bank go to spend an
American holiday and swell the 'multitude
bitters.
in whooping up things lively for the heavy
Ab) The flower has been plucked
from the stem, and Punkin Holler is no
longer repreeented among the GreatUnited
Consolidated Empyrean Baseball Contel-
latio.
They were the very flower and gems of
our ohoioe ; they came among us etrangers
-and have left us without [fettling their
board and beer bills. Bat such things are
chronio among the fraternity, and we take
no note of common occurrences.
Like Hagar in the wilderness we wait 'for
our Jim Dandy pitcher, and he returneth
not. Gone to a distant clime where his
pristine glories will be lost among his en-
croaching creditors. ' As the prong -horned
deer pante for the water -brook, 90 do we
sigh for our modest catcher, who wore a
bird cage, a pair of boxing glovee and a t wo-
foot liver -pad. In the sad silence of the
long-drwn hours of the night, we Hutto the
yells of the bull pen -where of eld the kids
were wont to congregate -for just -one eoho
of glad rapture, and we hear it not,
The dismal flap of the banner we won
last season, and hoped to defend with
pride this season, sounds like a knell of
folds.
mockery as the breezes toy with its rippling
The l-cle-da shortstop has gone, and the
ruminating bovine has rienrped the stamp-
ing ground of our diadem -third baeman.
The outfield grows gease and smartweed
where once the agile dandies olomb the blue
ether to pluck from the clouds the pigskin.
Where the first and second baaeneen won
renown, the fertile temato cans and anoient
Billy -goat flock together. •
Thu e we bewail the aching void that is
left us, and will know no comfort, becenee
O vacuum ha' been left in our being. In
the quiet of the night the wnd Malebo along
the gland stand, and thedim phantoms of
the Punkin Holler Nine arise to mock our
WOO.
Although 85 years age Isaac Mo.
Ulan, who was at college with'Longfellow
and Hawthorne, and who wrote the
"Poetise of the Rod and Gun," never
misses an opportunity to fish.
Polioemen ought to be very suooeestal in
°peculaion. The servant girls always let
them is on the ground floor.
It is learned that during his stay in
Europe Andrew Carnegie will call upon
Mrs. Mary Sohenley to indium her to give
a 30-aore site upon which to erect the
$1,000,000 library he proposes to build for
Pittsburg.
Temperance Vlatitier:-ttave you ever
taken the pled e T ut-Pve
tam -ever hid r -
y go.
.joy a latitude of ex-
preasion oharaoterietio of Western journal-
ism. Both use the same kind of paper and
their penmanship is not unlike.
Not long ago the wedding reporter was
suddenly called out of the office, and left in
the middle of the table several sheets of
paper on Which was a, description of a
fashionable wedding. These sheets were
gathered up by the live stook writer when
he finished his report, and the two stories
became mixed. This is what he zeal
oare of ILDroat,e,...4.
eao mg the publio eye:
"Tho church was elaborately demented
with holly and evergreen and the altar was
hidden in a wealth of flowers. Out of the
recesses rose rare tropical-plantsaand from
the ceiling hung.15 western veals, which at
this time of the year are scarce and corns.
spondingly dear at 6 -to tii• cents per
pound. There was aleo an motive demand
for choice lambs, and farmers east of the
Mississippi river oan profitably turn to
sheep -raising and take the bride, who wore
a gown Of white corded silk, a creation of
Woeth's, with pearl ornaments."
" Then came the maid of honor, the
cousin of the b 'd
, um Henrietta
a
Blower, of Chicagbeen made to
wearing a dress of remedy this by converting the little lakes
s
white tulle with diamond ornaments. in Minnesota into storage reservoire, after
bunch of Montana sheep,
and she was followed by a mall the pattern of Joseph's old arrangement
which for the irrigation of Egypt, but none of
on board and shipped to the winter hot I
bleated most piteously as they were driven these reservoirs can oonopare with Lake
in B Michigan Wh
A NEW WATERWAY.
A press despatch gays that the
Supreme Court has affirmed the validity of the
act known as the Chicago Drainage Law, which
has for its general purpose the taking of the city
line of th
sewage and" the water of Chios °Ely
ng the
ois and WM Canal end
theneelo the Illinois and
Chimp km suffered fre.m the quiplying
of the city sewage into the stagnant Chi-
cago River, from whioh there is practically
no current into Lake Michigan. The water
supply for the pity had to be taken from
the Lake, and it wise hard to get &inking
water unpolluted by eewage. Now, it will a
be only a question of providing money to••
complete the oanal from Chicago River to
the Deeplaines River or some other branch
of the Illinois River, which empties into
the Miesissipni. Lake Michigan will serve
failin
as a huge mill pond, from which a. never -
Trees
a -gaze -a
e loago, Desplaines and Illi-
nois Rivers into the Mississippi, carrying
all the Chicago Sewage with it in diluted
form, and leaving plenty of pure water in
the Lake oppoeite Chicago_ tobe pumped'
-into -the citesbY the waterworks. The
change will certainly muse a great redno- •
tion in the death rate.
It will also be of great importance to the
•
shipping interests of the Mississippi. Of
late
years since the country has been
cleared and drained, eprusg floods have
been common. The rainfall of the country
has gone down to the Gulf of Mexico early
in the spring, and later in the season there •
was not water enough in the river to float
the boats. An ff
a a. They will there be oat en
train and slightly decollate, and after the
•rest of the nartv h
e Chicago oanal is
completed, there will be no scarcity of
water on the lower lIiaaiajpPi We do not
reach ed the rail the flaPPose the Chicago people will Mike -
minister turnedl and said impieseively : their works big enough so dry up the
"1 cannot bid more than si cents for State. Detroit and Niagara Rivera. Geologists
veals, but cablegram!' from London quete say that the Lakes used to have their out-
refrigeraed beef at a price that will enable let through the Mississippi Valley, before a
me to pay $4.90 for a car of Ohoice Indian alight elevation of the land just west of
beeves, and hearing this there was a rush
for the young married couple tina-the bride Chicago forced the etreara down through
fell into the arms of her father, vrho is Lake Erie. The contemplated partial
known to bear a striking resemblance to_ rightdontait_seasala-nosteshe-eris
resumption of the old watercourse is ail
a Ceeneoticat-ax-F-waighing-Z875 pounds. The thing. If Lake Michigan were once
The market here took an upward turn, and
the gueets, who numbered etbout 200, were encouraged to widen the canal by a rash of
served with a sumptuous dinner at the water, she might sweep Chicago out of her
house of the bride." ' way in her mad haste to marry the Gulf of
Mexico.
Fruit as Medicine.
It is very seldom that trait is taken as a
preventive or cure for illness or dimwit), yet
She value of many varieties in came of
slight ailmnt, and in some instant:lee of
eerions indisposition, is indisputable, and
advantage 'aught well be taken of this fact
by those engaged in the fruit trade to im-
press it upon the public more strongly. Of
She various fruits -English and foreign --
grapes stand first from a medicinal point of
view. They are both purifying and nutri-
tion& Peaohes also are most hygienic,
especially if taken at breakfast time, whilst
nothing is more palatable and wholesome
than this fruit. An orange eaten before
breakfast will, to a great extent, prevent or
cure dyspepsia, and the juice ae well as that
of lemons is extremely useful in cases of
fever. Stewedapplea might with advan-
tage replace many salts, powders or pills
given to patients by physiciane. A
tease for tomatoes, although not natural,
is madly acquired, and indulgence in thi,
to many unpleasant, fruit, -bas a good effect
in liver and gastrio complaints. Currants,
raapberries, strawberries, figs, and many
other kinds of fruit are equally purifying
to the system, if taken regularly and
frequently but not spasmodically. We
might continue to cite exsmplee to a con-
_siderable length, bat the preceding will be
sufficient to indicate the value of this class
of produoe as health producers and sup-
porters. Besides the almost universal use -Brigge-Say, old man, what are you
of the orange as a cieeserathe sweet variety doing for that Jold ? Grigge-Coughing.
abounding as it does in oritio acid, posa
The British vemelaareported as
seem in a high degree anti-soorbutio ing My, 1890, and the number of lives
dur- • -
properliee.- -The enermons consumption of lost, were 46 sailing ships and 16 dominant
this fruit among all classes must have a with a total 1088 01 79 lives. Them repro.;
very beneficial effect on the health of the sent the shipe reported during May, not
populaion. The late influenza epidemic those actually lost in that month.
undoubtedly gave a temporary spurt to the
orange retail trade. As is well known, the
medical profeesion strongly recommended
the fruit a� a means of alleviating, if not
aetually etaving off that distressing com-
plaint. This fact was endorsed by the
analyst of this publiostion, and then made
the most of by the metropolitan retailers,
who, especially in the poorer districts, ex-
hibitd large placer& with the quoted
medical opinion respeoting the antii-
fluenza virtu ee of the orange. The bitter
orange is a valuable stomachic, and the
astringent properties contained in the rind
make this fruit an excellent tonic. Orange
slob made in greai quantities from the
Bibrade.Feuit Trade Journal.
That's What She Is.
The sweet girl graduate is the personifi-
cation of pulohritude, the sublimatien
symmetry, the idealization of intelligence,
She embodiment of enthusiasm and the
typification of tenderness. _
If He Spent Less.
• If the American workingman would
attend lees money for rum, less money for
clothes, less money for food, lees tnoney fat
rent of houses, lees money for street ear )y
rides, less money for newspapers, lees skS
money for ehaves, less money for hair
trimming, bass money for -but pshaw, *',A•a'
no use! We were trying to prove that if '
he economized on six dollars a week for the . •
year round that he would leave enough :41'
cash to his widow to bury him decently
without going into the grave on the inetaL
ment plan. But we can't do it. -Harris- -
burg Patriot.
Not That Hind of a Critter.
Silversmith (to rural old lady ordering •
tea servioe)-Would you like to have it with
reponse° decoration ?
Old Lady-s-ao, I reokon not. If there's
got to be any critters on it, I don't want
oats. I'd rather have canary birds and
butterflies.Jewellers' Weekly.
Broken glass may become as useful as it
hi bothersome. The British Warehouseman
announces that. a propos is now known
that will work glass into lth, of any oalor
or thioknees, and incombustible.
The pope has protested against the
placing of a tablet to Garibaldi's memory
in a church at Florence.
Mader Eddie Leo, of Ceder Rapids, Ia
11 years old, ie about to 'take the concert'
tage. His yoke differs from that of young
Kavanagh, in that it is a boy's voice, while
Kavanagh's is a felhgrown eorano.
Many a man has made his fortune by'
keeping hie 'month abut, but the rale won't
apply to the $2000 tenor.
A writer says: "There are some things
a woman doesn't know." There may be,
but no man can tell her what they are.
1WIEN
D. 0. N. L. 27. 90.
Bermuda E3ottled
"You must gin to Bermuda If
you do not I will not he responsia
hie for the consequences." "But,
doctor, I can afford neither the
th
time nor the money." "Well, If
that is impossible, try'
110
ULSION
OF PURE NORWECIANI
COD LIVER OIL,
I sometimes call it Berniuda Bota
tled, andiany eases of
CONSUMPTION
Bronchitis, Cough
or Severe Cold
have CURED with ft; and trio
advantage is that the most sensi-
tive stolnaeli can take it. Another
thing which cominends it is the
stiniulating properties of tlie
pophosphites which it contains.
You win find it for sale at your
Druggist's, in Stallion wrappr. Be
sure you get the genuine.'
SCOTT IoWNE;Itelicomel
TROOSAMDS OF BOTTLE$
GIVEN AWAY YEARLY
•
When I say Cure I do ndt meati
have them return again. 1 MEAN A RAIDICALCURE. 1 have made the disease of rite,
merely to stop them for a time, and then
• Epitepay or Palling Sickness a life-long study. I warrant my remedy tocure the
worst cass. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at
qnce for a treatise and a Fr Os Bottle of my Infallible Remed. Give Express and
Post Office It costs you nothing for a tral, and it will cure you. Address ot, octet,
M.., Branch Office, 186 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TOR0h1TO.
ottstito
sttv,tr
—tittE,1117
b TUE EDITOR .1 -Please inform your renclecs,that,l-hopositifiViet-iiiiff
above named dIsease.--By,-ItsAttielrasethbiaUds ofbopeles s cases have been permanently tfor t
red.
thitlrh-e-gad to send two bottles of my reniedy F'RE to any of your readers who have reet
sumption if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. Respectfully,
Kees Nit W•et Adelaide St., TORONT. ONTARIO. T. 40 860011,11mer •
ad\
•P
....,44•1•Ssessaila