HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-05-22, Page 3Old Saws in Rhymer
Actions speak louder than words over do;
You/Can't eat your cake and hold on to it to.
When the oat leeway, then -the-littl9in tae- play'
Thera"theeis'a 3vill`tldrd le always a way.
There's no nee crying o'er milk that le spilt ;
NO scowler le needed by ooriooienee of guilt.
There must be some fire° -smoke;
-Wbe pitcher -web -Oft a wli el It ll it's broker.
By rogues falling out honest men get their duo
;Whoever it fits, he must put on the shoe.
All work and no play will make Jack a dull boy
A thing of much beautyie ever a toy„
A half-loatik4etter than no bread at all ;
And pride always goeth before a sad fall.
Fact bind and Last find, have two strings to your
bow;
CoePtitnl t -is. ,t-_
The devil find + work for hands idle to do ;
A mise ie as good ag a mile is to you.
You
of tho
You scant make ae silk purse;remhe's sure to aoutpe of sow's
oar.
A man* his company always is known ;
Who lives in a glass house should not throw
stone.
.
iii'd'ile r a . . ,m , .g a Id-_.. •
P.
oT"rke the fool wbo is old.
-Detroit Free Preys.
The Old Cow -bell.
Bossy, Ws spring -you'll soon be free,
Six months of gladness are your°, I hope;
All winter you've been a care to me,
ABut d now round younck cutting your
olwell-worn t ierope.
You cannot hide -you are always mine,
At home or do the dim sido-line
I'll tithe cow -bell
ill sear h.when the
evening
The boys w 7 '
Barelegged they II trail throughi briarland
weed
They know the time when the night -hawk calls
And the place where the straying cattle feed.
The children will bunt at the close of day,
And Oh, Bossy, listen,
ossy, listenwho gives yoid theiru away -
The cow -bell l
The mother stands with her wooden
And ehe.do'ws her anxious eyes; And
Lo, out of the swamp with a muddy tail
eee the rise I
She's ranked -and family
-1cowaiden and robin bird
Wink at each other and say no word,
And downinthe swamp the song is hoard
Of the cow -bell.
-TRE Ensue.
Bats We Move In.
Did you ever notice what a rat you will
• get to moving in union you exerciseth
greatest Dare ? Take for inetan e
th
" I9 THIS TOUR SOF, KT LOBO Y"
An Interesting Letter From Helen Oar-.
dener,-the_thor, ger Habits of Lite,
Partety ot Gommanleations She Re-
ceives.
I Emily S. Bouton, in .e Telede_B r"_
ablishee the` fo`7lo wi.th
ng entertaining facie
about the woman who in her recent novel
"Is This Yom. Son,My Lord ?" has created
each a genuine sensation by.. her fearless
anmaekiog ot aonvan,gaud fmmerality
and hypocrisy :
The personality of an author who hae
won a wide reputation by long•oontinned
o�and excellent work, or by some sadden,sfp,
• , .Mani e-e--reeaget -e i ,i =r.^ • • pro. ilii e
'm'l, ehry'bit'tibmee
interest to the great world of readers.
They want to know just bow "this wonder-
ful woman -if it be a woman --carries
hereelr; what is the color of her
hair, her eyes ; who were her
father and mother, her grandparents,
and where is her home -in abort, every
minutest bit of informs io •
picture before her readers of the person
who hae so won their admiration.
This is true of the writer, Helen $. Gar-
dener, of that n1uoh'.talked-of book, " Is
This Your Son, My Lord ?" and all sorts
of paragraphs have beers going the rounds
of the papers regarding her, of which the
following IS a epeoimen :
Mrs. Helen Gardener, auttror of tiro novel " is
This Your Bon; My Lord ?" is about 30 yours old,
audio described as a really beautiful woman, a
little above medium height, of well-rounded
proportions, with ,an intellectual face, deep
[own eyes, full red lips, and high, broad fore-
head. She is a daughter of Julia Ward Howe,
and possesses radical views.
This appeared in Current Literature, and
it being naturally supposed that that exact -
lent magazine must be, odrreot, it hae been
widely copied.
Helen H. Gardener is not, however,. a
daughter of Julia Ward Howe, nor is ehe
even of New England origin. Her an-
oeaters have always lived in Maryland or
Virginia, and she, herself, first saw light in
the latter State, near Winoheeler. She
traces her family directly from the daugh-
ter of Lord Baltimore, Mies Calvert, who
married a Mr. Chenoweth, he being the
firsteberiff of Mry-
ends Herown B Baltimore
rwas Rev. A. G.
Chenoweth • h
mother a: grand -niece of
evYdent that
coming down town 08' a Sir Robert 1''ael,eo_that at ee
l3asinee8 in - the 'norning�ome
en v
lines, but moat of- em have only the one
line. If it is a oable oar, of course he has
to alight on the one side ; but he will fol-
low the same rale. with the street oar just
as made as though the iron gate was thee,
too. This is partly became hie place -of
baseness is on the one side, but meet1.
from-he33it. And -mast_() well not wait c
for a street oar to atop. They have a eort
of sneaking. idea that it ie unmanly to have b
a street oar etc t i
abuse back of her she culture of genera -
*sone.
The personal description given in the
nearly
paragraph
lierted faceeis fullof intelligence,
and the earnestness that is vieible in all
that she writes looks forth from her dark
eyesea�ys,.e that
And 80 they will
fall, and anything rather than sto most an d
1�aic5,�
•
:'v+. .idaccr
ONTARIO LEGISLATURE
The firs* session of the seventh Perlia•
men* of Ontario wag formally prorogued
yester (�rnoon-,e,t3-oksloolce-gir Alex.
empbell gave hie assent to the Bills passed
during the session.
Hie Honor then delivered *he following
',peach from the Thone :
•'u' -r. > Sker-andd Gentlemen of the Legislative
Assembly :
In relieving you from the duties of the
eeasion, I desire to express my appreciation
of the zeal and,�ttnn*'
alekeyeee
eeinienciW d' ii areoue matters sub.
milted to yon as a Legislative Assembly.
I am glad to perceive that the development
of the mineral reeonroee of the Province
has been receiving your consideration.
The provisions whioh you have made for
regulating the wile of mining lands, eub-
jeot to, snob an intereet in them bein
retaine. • e
e hinjury to the
the capitalist, meet with my miner ory
approva# I look forward with cnfidence
to the time when the great regions lying
to the north hitherto comparatively ta unprodof the uctive, will
yield- rich revenues to the Province and
abundant employment to labor and capital.
The ooneolidation of the laws with
respect to education will facilitate the
working of our school system. The amend-
mente to the Public, and High School Ade,
and the previsions made for restraining
truancy and seonring the more regular
attendance of pupils at the Pablio aohoole,
cannot fail to extend more widely than
ever before the advantages which our
schools afford for a liberal English and
commercial ednoation.
I am pleased to observe the measure
adopted for removing the great diffioulties
incident so the administration of the laws
respecting drainage.
in
to t
du*
Wil
in t
Th
the
you
n
Ase
the
neTh
of e
bene
It
*ionWiSoonHonoroguemoorHiedieper
The improvements whioh you h
the law with reopen* to loan o
he liabilities of directors, a
lee1 prove, i have noldoubt,eto b
he public interest.
AM espeoting the Pe Pablie Lando ablo, e Hes
r amendments to the,Manic
esement-Aots, will, I am gore,
objects for which they were fr private bill legislation has b
lly large, and deals with a grea
objects, and will no doubt
fit the interests afieoled.
hank yon r the liberal ap
s
which yha made for
leanted e sues w-hich yo
grshall be expended with oa
thr, "ublio interest.
th the usual formality the P
*try announced " That it
is will that this assembly
d, and the Legislative Asset
dingly prorogued."
Honor withdrew and the ass°
sed.
ave made
ompsnies
nd to the
trustees,
e greatly,
ioal Act,
Ith, and
ipai-and-
promote
tamed.
Oen an.
*variety
greatly
propria.
the p11b1_ao
u have
re and in
onviotion intense inward
points her pen, and it is *hie
orality that wakes her novel, with rte
sok r d
p o e that get on or off. g can of resign], 8o vitally pregnant
jump and .stumble and almost
meaning. This book bas taken an
oar. . And this continual alighting we
weight of th
p the preoe. anted hold upon the think-
ing flublio. an'l i learn, hoe sold, to the
extent of " 25,000 (),pies in five months. A
knowledge of this foot will explain the
raison d' etre of the following mmanioa-
oth well
believe, Is almost submerged by the tide of
oommnnioeieons deicing towards her :
I have been.asked a great many Hines to write
things about myself for the papers. I have
always declined. In the first place I dislike the
the ook of anything likepersonaladvertising, and in
was of and place l did not feel that mypersooality
great interest to the public; butI do wish
could -without seeming to advertise myself,
my personality -say one or two things
A ittle tokereat ns thattouchm dee ly, and yet one
not reply to half of thorn. Each one, doubtless,
:pests a full reply and feels hurt that none
tames. It is not want of appreciation, but want
of time and strength that prevents me from
endieg a kindly recognition and sincere thanks
or the attention.
To -day brought mea large mail. it contained
range, beautiful and pathetio things. I appre-
ate them all, but I cannot reply to all. Let me
xplain and let me beg my unknown friends to
warm* expressions, y thanks
he a expressions
eke a written or an objective form."
sample of my . mail is the one received to-
y.aIt was composed of innumerable adver-
ements, of course, a number of letters from
ends, a number from literary and scientific
een and women wbo are known to me by name
t book sermons recently preached upon my
thorn ; several h books with a request' of " reead
d give your opinion "; two MdS, of aspiring
hors with the same request -one a novel, the
to be read with sumoi sufficient Dare the enable
to recommend it to a publisher I A pile of
wspapore, with notices more or less personal
interesting, marked for me to read; a box
gold ore from a miner is Ndw•Mexioo ; a live
ned toad from a miner in old Mexico ; with
tter saying it was his desire to send me
mething' no one else in thin climate would
and a very queer and amusing little fellow
ad (that is the toal'e name) is, too ; a
er filagree 'bracelet, a most beautiful thing,
anish workmanship, from Centra`` America;
her box of ore and lava from Oregon,
last, most pathetio and touching, an in-
cly religious ' Easter card ' of the nasal sort,
b this written message on the outside of the,
lope
od will bless your footsteps, wherever you
y light-footed angel.
Yours trniy,
" MARY Me neLEN2;'
to eacch fromme woman !wbo entad i1 should
carte,
Dena her some personal message ; but
I do riot, I hope I may reach her this way
make her understand how deeply that little
sage of here and her signature touched me.
tatfor.s I Theyrepaywmeefor all worthre my do, for
are chiefly from those who need help, and
feel that i have givers it to them. The let -
get
htf ifrom
me mmeen n who aro engage8 scientific,
ems of life in one sold or another. They
s a rule, from calm, earnest, studious men,
of them well known In their fields of
ht. But the women who write are chiefly
ire who ory out with wild, passionate pgro-
r o all; but iflIidid so, I shoulthat nothing
wed
ray time
m fornthis reason that I should like
throotters anthe
evidences othat
interest and confit
are not only appreciated by mo, but they
iptul and stimulating se well, and I hoppe
ming neglect will pain` ib one, and will be
tood, not as an unkindness, but simply as
is-neo@ssity,
Helen Gardener has a future before her,
vee devoutly hope and believe, in which she
may, with strong, fearless grasp, handle
the evils that eat into the heart of a people
and bring, unless *hooked, their glory low
in the deist. Everything that she hae
written shows the keen perception,' of a
pure woman who has the courage to do
battle for what she believes to ba right.
She has the literary gift of so choosing her
words that *hey slriko home, .and hence
(Menet fail of their nitimate temposo.
Heiner S. BOUTON.
body
th the
e o y thrown upon one foot
has resulted in serious injuries to many
man an
There le always a shook and
that reaohes to every portion of the
and We repeated daily is bound to
ila effeot in time. Think on these 1
and while you are • weighing the m
don't forget to stop the oar to aligh
Cincinnati Times Star.
Saved from an Awful
" Gentlemen," said the. Boston -.jadge,
" you have done your duty by oonvioting
*he prisoner of murder in the first degree,
and 15 remained for me to pane sentenoe of
death upon hie head. But, gentlemen,"
*he judge continued, " the enormity of the
orime is SO great that plain death will not
expiate it. 'I have therefore deoided to
meet the requirements of the oaee by a new
and effective punishment." A breathless
ailenoe hung over the court. " Prisoner,"
went on the to be oonfinejudge,'"
for life inharelk sentence
you
coat." But the dull thn3 that followed in-
dioated all too plainly that he spoke to a
corpse. And a subdued murmur of relief
passed over the court room, as the epeota.
tore' realized that the guilty wretch had
% . prised beyond the terrible power of earthly
jastioe.--Clothier and Furnisher.
What Dundee Missed.
"Hooxonian" in Canada Presbyterian : It
is a grim oommentaryy on popular election
that Dr. Marone Dolts had some difficulty
in finding a plaoe to grow in. Dr. Candlish
Dame very near being planted in. Dundee.
What the great Free Church leader would
have ripened into had he Dome to Dundee
le a nioe question. Probably he would have
spent hie days in that beautiful village.
Perhaps be would have beoome principal
of Knox College. No doubt he would
hate ripened into something deoidedly
useful and influential, t at Ibis time of
day there is not BemueQin gaesaing at
that something.
Blood Oranges All Right.
Medical Direotor Wales has furnished
Health Offioor Townsend with a report on
an examination of the " blood " oranges
reliantly submitted, in,whioh he says :
" The oranges are naturally stained, no
artilloial been used. The small sof pot one the side nd having
s
fange° !pct and not a pnnotnre. It ie
impoeeible to stain an orange by injecting
any artifioial staining fluid into the frail,
either before or after plucking from the
tree." Washington Star.
d probably permanent injury to
some.
strain
body,
have
hinge,
atter
t.
According to Ability.
Buffalo Express : Inlead of agitating for
whorl hours under thpresent syetem,
workingmen would do tier to demand a
new aid
for he work hstem e don tregard regardless of wheoh eaoh man is ther
i* takes him a long or a ehori time. The
,good workman who as maoh
in eight hours as the p or workn do man would
no* then feel . that he was being un-
justly treated by receiving no more pay
for it.
Augnetne Barrell recently expressed the
opinion that " a child bought up in a
a house where Chambers' Encyclopedia,
Pope's Homer, ' The Vioar of Wakefield,
Shakep are, Burnet The
nd Scott are upon the
shelve!, has within hie reach enough to
make him a man of tante and a lover of
good books all the days of hie life.
Mrs. Alextcilder, the novelist, is a tall;
handsome and rather portly woman, with
a fresh complexion, fair !fair find bin
tion from she author, who,oI
1
0
e
fo
el
e
ac,
ta
a
tis
fri
m
on
la
au
aut
an
ot
MS
me
no
and
of
her
a le
80
113
Bila
silo
of ep
snot
and
tens
with
env°
"G
go, m
Th
how,
cert
slope
and
The 1
hard
they
Mrs I
thoug
probl
are, a
many
thoug
test, o
reply else-
su to say
these 1
are my see
Herbert Spencer is now a man of 70,
though he looks ten years younger. He in
of medium stature, and hie head ie bald,
exoept fen. a thin fringe of hair h an
. aquiline
rovjnoial
is His,
be pro.
bly is
mblage
Look me in the facet "same ids 'Might -have.
been!'
I am also called 'No-more,"Too-late,' 'Fare
well!'
The poet who wrote the above, must have
been in the last stages of consumption.
Perhaps he had only learned, for the first
time, that if he had.taken Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery in hie earlier an-
uses, he would never have reaohed his pres-
ent hopeless condition! What can be more
sad than a keen realization of what
" might have been ?"
Physioaane now admit that oonenmption
le eimply eorofnla in the blood attaoking the
lung -themes. It ie never safe to allow the
blood to reeklees,ewhen sucmain h a plc ant, hand it is armless
remedy 'aa Dr. PIerce's Golden Medical
Discovery will drive every taint of eorofnla
or impurity from , the system, causing a
current of rejuvenating blood to leap
through the veins.
-rte
Neatness and Dispatch.
Rochester Herald : A oorreepondeni
the New York Herald cells attention to a
oaee of event jnetioe in Canada, where a
man who murdered his wife on March
23rd was eentenoed to be hanged on May
21e$, jug* two `months between the two
points. , The Herald makes a comparison
with bowing vlthat sfor instead murder of two this
menthe
elapsing between crime and punishment,
from two to three years is the more pro.
bible limit. There ought to bean improve -
mut in the administration of criminal
justice.
Oat on the Right Track.
Exchange : Now, young sir, get rid of
the nonsense that you are a genius, eettle
down to the conclusion that you are jest
an average North Amerioan boy and
then start in. Keep yourself alert, look
after your digestive apparatus, doni awoke
in all your dealings, and we will wager a
cookie that at 60 you will have to look
bitokward for those who began the ran°
when you did. Are you ready ? Then, go
&belittle girl in a 97890M0 *Ones, " know
something awful about our Sandsy Sehool
Tell me," said Tommy.
you never tell -but I saw him -
I saw him laughin' to -day.
Angel (Jake.
&eked MN. Mandy, poking her head oat of
her flat window and addreasing the polio°.
"Matter enough," said he. " A pleas of
your angel cake fell on a man's hesd and
we're waiting for the ambulanoe."
No Kind ors Fellow.
*here's no spirit in Harry. He .offered to
kine me hot night, brit didn't.
Ethel -Why not ?
Julie -Just Waimea I told him to stop.
•
she wotild be a Living Witness.
of prorate° 0019 -Do you intend to deny
sir, that you proposed to me ?
Tis 110W WO 704th faelti (VW
'Of blOaktillftraiJilligaart
Ws Test spring tremor -
More than an ith0,
66
war
How does he feel ?—He feels
blue, a deep, dark, unfading, dyed-
in-the-wool, eternal blue, and he
makes everybody feel, the same y l„
sante
How does he fel?—He feels a
headache, generally dull and con-
stant, but sometimes excruciating—
August Flower the. Remedy.
How does he feel?—He _- -
the stomach
bitter -tasting matterr orr a he has
eaten or drunk --August Flower
the Remedy.
How does he feel ?—He feels
the gradual decay of vital power ;
he feels miserable, melancholy,
hopeless, and longs for death and
peace—August Flower the Rem-
edy.
How does he feel ?—He feels so
full after eating a meal that he can
hardly walk—August Flower the
Remedy. , do
G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer,
Woodbury, New jersey, U. S. A.
These for the earls.
r-Tbe summer girl'd parasol in pare white
is as charming as of yore.
New'fane are of crepe, embroidered with.
ohryaantbemnme and huge pinnies.
It ie hinted from across the water that
there is to be a return to white hosiery.
E
_ is
-gyp* n-xed-nnderweglr-ie-oho-wain the
shops, bat is very little bought.
glass enameling hae succeeded china
painting me a fashionable indaetry.
In Amsterdam now it is *be 'fashion to
announce a broken engagement of mar-
riage.
An excellent lotion for the face and neok
when -sunburned ie a -m ture-of-twit parte.
Jamaioa ram to one of lemon juioe.
Gowns are being treated with plaster
applique work,;aomething of the sort walla
are aooaetomed to. It doesn't sound well,
but it is very•effeolive and mnoh cheaper
thin embroidery.
A Pointer
that would guide, unerringly, into the haven
of health, all &hal are on the troubled sea
of impaired womanhood It is nothing
lase, nor oould be nothing more, than Dr.*
Pierce's Favorite Preaoription - frail
females' faultless friend-tin3e-tried and
thoroughly tested. Internatinfiammations,
irregularities, displacements, and all
conditions peculiar to woman, controlled,
corrected and oared, without publioity, by
this safe, sterling specific,. Purely
vegetable. Only good oan come from its
use,: The only remedy of the kind warranted
to give satiates:Aim, or money refunded.
The Streets of Jerusalem.
Philadelphia .Record An old clergyman
onoe said that the street,' of Jerusalem
were kept clean by every man sweeping
before his own door. Some snob plan as
this ie to be tried by the Street Cleaning
Aid &misty whioli has just been organized
in New York. Bath member of the ectoiety
pledges himself to have the sidewalk in I
front of hie residenoe or place of business I
ewept early every morning ; to take in hie '
aeh-barrel as soon as it WWI have been
emptied, and not to throw wane paper in
the street nor orange or titian% peeling on
the sidewalk. Houeeholders and badness
men may *has materially aid the muni-
cipal authoritiee in carrying oat the
sanitary regulations of the municipality.
" Dame° not the day Of small things;" as
the tiny pill (taken from a vial of Dr.
Pierce s Pleasant Purgative Pellets) °aid to
the 300 -pound man, euffering from indiges-
tion. As a gentle, thorough laxative, these
Pellets reeemble Nature more olo3ely in
their action than anything befere dieoovered.
1;lasiness and professional men, whoa°
habits are sedentary, need soreething of this
kind to ward offsiok headache, bilionsnees
and dyepepeia, but which will not strain
and raok the digestive organ° as did the old-
fashioned pills. 25 cents per vialent all
Next Best.
Boston Sunday Herald : Next to going to
oharoh to -day the beet thing the dwellers
in the city oan do is to tuake a journey into
the suburbs. They are clad in all the
glory of epringtime, and there are sermons
in the blossoming trees, the verdant
meadows and the eweet breath with which
*hey load the atmosphere. There ie time
enough to take in both *he sermons in the
pulpit and the sermone in the fields.
Blowing Hot and Vold.
New York Sun : " That gait /dove iti a
dandy," said the agent. " You oan nee it
for heating purposes in the winter -make
yoar house warm as toast -and then' in
eammer you oan cook with it."
a Bat it would be hot in summer," mid
the customer.
en t. atm
" Oh, no," returned the agent, " it hardly
gives out any heatfall." '
ottsOP
Ernetangsgmr-
TO `IMP
named IV'
sea 1 Jut000 wry.
A en tannery of the Arguments for a Redns-
tion ot the Szabo.
al deputation of Soba000 manufaotut'er11
from points in the eastern and western
Provinces, with a number of wholesale
merohante, -sited upon the Minnie:a of
Ex`-" es, Y'imGiiee and Unat� ni at Ottawa
snbjeol of ezome on toba000, and alio
statistics reloting thereto. The argument,
of the d"
patalion were, briefly : The
exoise duty in Canada no-,pq beiti 11..
ice"�t80 op1y; . , ;�, .
er ib., it oeasee to be the source of revenue
to Canada that it should be. In the Inland
Revenue blue book, of June 30th, 1874,
whandn that! oft theanada was United States 24o, 15o the e
was a steady increase for four years pre-
views in the manufacture of tobacco.
amOnntin' , • 1,11 li,n •rr _ •� r
woul
'e by sixteen (the
years whioh have einoe intervened) 11
what dwae the p oduot at that tihme namelis added y,
'x,154,182 lbe., would make a total of 13,-
842,182 lbe., whereas at the present time
the average for the last four years in the
manufaotnre of tobacco ie only 9,080,269
lbs. One will readily see, even it
Canada hoed only five niliione of population,
that would not bo 21be. per bead. Accord-
ing to the bine book of the United Staten
the consumption of toba000 in that coun-
try, not including cigars and cigarettes, is
actually five pounds per head. In other
words, the ited
Mateo collects mo e revenue ernment of perehead na 8
Dente per pound than Canada collect° at 20
Dente a pound. Another argument need by
the deputation to show that high esaiee
did not mean large revenue was *hie:
During the years 1883 and 1884 the exoiae
was lowered to 12 gents per lb. in Canada.
The output immediately jumped up to
10,000,000 lbs. in the year ending 1884, and
11,000,000. in the year ending 1885. But
when, in the beginning of 1886, the
excise woe inoreaeed to 20 dente per.lb.,
the preclude fell •book " to 8,500,000 Me.
These are startling figures, as it cannot be
gainsaid that Canadians use the pipe se
freely as their neighbors aoross.the,
nd.abe-diffeenoe-t1f-14' oeniii'per pound in
the pride ie such a strong iaduoement the*
there must be some live or six million
pounds annually emaggled into this coun-
try. Canada's consumption -is three pounds
per head as, oompared with *he United
States' five pounds per head. Then (taking
a basis of five million population for
Can4da)_.there-should=be-1-5;000,-000-lbs. 01
toba000 imported or mnufaetared annually
in Canada se against a" little over nine
million now.
The deputation did not ask for . a reduc-
tion of the onatome duty on mnufaotured
toba000, but wanted the excise duty re-
duced from 20 Dents to 10 cents per pound.
The duty in the United States is now 6
cents per pound.
-Baron de Rothschild has a collection
of postage stamps that is valued at 140,009.
He is aleo a prominent and enthusiastic,
member of a Paris philaliet society.
In Australia the Married Woman'a
Property Aot became law at the beginning
of 1891, and wives are now free agents to
earn and to hold, to make partnerships and
to dieeolee them, to hold triune and to
make assurances.
CURES PERMANENTLY
!Lomat'
CIATICA
Qc1Ceitebes
I. all Ache% d
LIGNIkt
IT IS TI -IE
Best. Easieseto ljeci and Cheapest.
-Sold by druggists or mit by nutil,500.
Bew
NOTIC
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