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The Sentinel, 1883-06-01, Page 3
• • • ‘•-‘, • - . . • 114tikes fSeasens. • i!3 tat pala with bay laughter, Reaven-sen.t eyes that wonder all they say, Feet that only yet have truant wandered 7Where the primrose hides in woods ottday - Wbat-in-liftee great Boa is written alter ? where Crooke :meandered ? • 'Will the linnets' warbling sound as ay?g Maiden 1 triping from the primrose bowers Into June,..whose• roses flush, thy4See, • Life to thee ishut a dream of beauty; ' Tbou bast only started in the race. , • Thou haat learn't not yet to :miss life's towers,: Let it be in after -years, thy grace- Zfaar by paha be mellowed. Who would show thee, °Mid eart4's. sufferers, which shall be thy place. • • Fax away where atiramots, ilea leaves quiver, ' May and June Are liults of what is past; And a woman in life's full September, ' Ripe with sorrow, weato a. crown at last - Wears the crattn that home and love cloth give her Brighter than earth's gold; for lovS is vast f ' - And life never can be quite December, Where, o'er heart', love's golden web is east: * * • * „ • • • Wrinkled brows. and tottering feet deicending . •• TO the grave where alt. our loved•ones go • Journeying Heine to rest, irr thankful ever 'For the saffering God'b ve doth bestow. • Heaven and earth o'er human failure blending, Golden sunlight hissing winter snow; • : .. Angels stepping down from God to sever Mortal ties, and cancel every woe. THE LOW COLUMN. 4 • • la there anyInatertal Whieb if40 a more woodetful gradation of tints. The palette richest in. CelOra 4004 AO furnish a more complete, 040 of tinhee SATITIh [PAY C11111111tellr INOTV ' The income the -R-8138 eoukl-haver , Oita 0111111GeteOltillh'0 omt•rio••••.: stroarae lexpeatileneca-lit?dinetli ,.eases7,402,3_13," love te,Italiati Government tt t_ttte.t-tt• t•-•••ttattt 't7z"-"="•'.'• IVA/ft y r .ts s -t„,•• . t _ ..• ititilsoracr -shadlifi The reader 4 d.114'1414''Silt"'"}: % 11*j""P allied by rilOLIVe"esil Ir4awel° L. Crflati014. With & lieothZiefint re= maY eerniefflaeutly judge what reeouroes Ws. 3Philip Goss, of Lyndon. Vt ia parteryeetereay afternoon itiseepBewizae in this oharnog ,material Preterits to fashion, her 83rd Year, audatu conducts a©lass in . said ' Very much the same may be igaid of the the 84naaY Scheel' a obtereae woe, wheat bj equeuit supple so A lady, on the etrength of Name ovii, „,„.47;Lara net a believer in 41519aern sm and do net believe that spirit* soft, and which is being masa both 004 17, le, contends that the inettirod writer and breeheda The pyttt patterns* will be cells the advocates of an exolueive vegetable eeepalitetiebhaeeiree aaenede emb°eveereteabhtir ety' hauctaalueear eleoye used for skirts, withwitle the-broohed alet. "feebtr"• Many remarkable experientoee I nave had during my life under different eiroihn- stances. We are much nearer the, _spirit world than we think, perhaps, and the spirits of the departed tleedeT believe, have a Certain inthience over our minds. "When voyaging on the Red See I made are marmfactuired expressly for the season it a practice to pray every eight and morn - and are very smooth and light mousseline ing for my wife, from whom. I was absent, velvets. They are plain or figured and who et. the time was an invalid. One stamped or 4 6 OiSelc.80 " By this last term evening: I knelt down its lintel and triedto pray for her, but found I could not do it. _This •worried the very . inuoth, but I attributed my . incapacity JO hray for her to nervo,usness, Bathed preaohed a sermon to the passengers on board that afternoon. Olathe following morning' again ttied to Pray for Mre. Bowman„ experiencing the same difficulty that prevented me .from itecomplishieg My purpose on the evening previous. I wondered what had hap- pened. Was I Mains) my sensee? • At length the thought ocoutred to me:•• 'IOW' Wife may be dead.' But . this ' I. considered improbable, as I had received a letter a few days before, stating that she was much better than she had been for a long Woe. However, I was anxious to reach. a. point where r soula expect to receive additional tidieee relative to her condition. VinallY, pia M. ":e;I:turr:1:02:944: ev .1elte_r„ awaiting nee conveying the newiethat Mee. 13owman was dead and buried. She had died on • the same evening. •_futittot ' w teiveittable to taeopiint for, .yet I shall never forget . . 4. About the Same time my daughter -had another extraordinary experience, but it was not similar to Mine.. t " When in Paris elle would shut her eyes and could•then BOO her mother's face dis- tinctly. the -evening , her, mother's death 810, attempted to do and Wait to terrified at not seeing the hsualthat she ran out of the roorninto another ape* ment. She felt that something had bap- peneclebut. Mende told' hec thatther leers wee° all iillaginary.- Subsequently she rawly:ell news that her mother had died about the dine she found it Inapt:legible to see her face with her eyes clotted. In this ,hotise (referring to his residenco,where the conversatioh . took 'place), Omit -this One lett year, I 'Wes" lying Sick, at the point Of death, the physicians being unable to Prot diot whether I tvitulkfiyeor 'die. • Then lied seine very happy :tisitine,0,0 X Stated in a, sermon delivered recently in Vivid Halt; or tulles, bodies,. Louis XV. vests, Xbe'llielmP of Nottingham surprised the Dire,otoire redingotes and Marie Antoinette bile°11° mind in Lineeillehine' England' just au corps. I whet also call attention to reeentlY kr Putting% on a Pair ef will" Ida the foot that the present fashioni no longer gloves trinlmed with g°14 fringe to e°44rm' vielude velvet from the mitteriale ettiploy d a number of boys and girls. In summer dresses, but ths- velvets used The COngregatioeal niinleteiii of Chicago have taken an intportent step towards reforming the invoice 1.4Wg by refusing to marry those who have hien divorced for other than Seriptural reasons. is meant that the pattern of figural which Three of Arabi Bey's childree, aged re - are either spots, flowers or birds,. are in spectitely.8, 10, and 12 'years, are in the relief, embroidered in silk ° either of the United Presbyterian School at Cairo, Egypt. same shade or of a different shade as the Quiet the female missionaries of the United grouhd of the material. „ PresbyterianChurch has had the opport •.,•; • Mai the sf aid That ivies tunity of conversing dreely With the wife • • , 1 It is not the style to item formal tusti„.4 tse of ...hi, bons for ladies' luncheons. ' : Sinall and early"t is the fasbionable tarot for good old-fashioned suppers. news. - days. White neckties, especially of satin, will be all the ,re, among young society gentle- heoeuse soap is too dear and a man cannot ete Gossip About Fashions and other House-. go pend four hours a day in the•bath-tu men this summer. • . • . , • Rev,Oeorge Thomas Dowling, of Cleve- land, Ohio, who has net .been called to a church la Cincinnati, gets even with her uneppreciative peeple by declaring that he would not live in Oinobanati on any terms • • • held Matters. • WHAT. MAKES WOIYIAli DEAR. • • indous Styles that (nest to b� Tabbooed -Truth and "*.'• Cheerfulness in the time, • - • . (Gompliedny„Anetartst.att Invitatione- to teshionable 'balls should always, be given in the lady's name. That is, if you want to be very etylielt. If you want to be just right, don't use your option in sipping tea or coffee in com- pany. Etiquette says it ain't the thieg. For twenty -pine years there 'hail beset a Tow Society connoted with the Baptist Church at Memel, Eaat Freesia. 11 ltuys worn -oat cables and ropes of vessels, picks them to pieces, andaells the tow to ship repairers for oalkingpurposes. •Thousands of dollars have been received in this way, Graceful Moveniente in dancing are all There is a wonderful revival of religion •frora the hip downward, sted never in the taking place it Adana, ointetthe•moititteae, knees., Cut this out and...Dade,tt itiffouliL 'n. • ettptet•ertetot ,• -4•1147'1:1:44C,'14tV4244.414,24N.L.444.61/iiii.444‘14411 • -.There •nitiSt: he'' no haltmeasures, no compromising with' viciotie.facitiions. We • '..stre told that all , shoes should have fiat soles ,aed Woad. toes a that all waists should .be guiltless of restraint as . that ef the Medician Venus; that sleeves should .he rocinty, skirts straight . and bonnets. 'fit to proteathe bead effectually IFona 'Sun and wind, mid a great many other things which I, for one, should . like, to see etemplitied, only on the personsof young anchpretty. . girls,4ho look well in anything, but on the " more mature ladies who have hitherto done the talking andwkiting,•ind Who are, . :naturally, the „perschisa • to show the World -- thee:Mello:me of the new way. .• Trhthiothese in the Biome. ' : 0! all happy houeeholds,•that is the hap- - ittest where faleehoed is ittiv,er thought of. •; • Alt peace is broken up When it happens that . ' „there is a liar. in the house. All . aomfort has gone when suspieien his once 'entered, ..---lehen.thereentitt be .a.reserie in talk and '•reiertation 'in' belief. .Anxious patents; who are aware of the pains ;of ')suspioion,. ' Will place :general ..confidence ' in _their . children, and rectaixewhatithey eattfreelyt. liuith�re is Strong reason' to distrust the . • truth of any, • ,If 'Bitch . an ocoasioh should unhappily . arise., they Ramat keep _ the ' intepicion from spreading atilong possible end avoid disgracing their poor child while , • there is a chance ot its. Mire by - their con. lidential assistance. Ile should have their pity and. assiduous -ati if he ' were suffering tinder Bettie disguatierg. bodily dis. - order. If he can be cured . he will „become' •, '"gratefilf tet the •tteatinent, the. • endeavor' fail4inestua • insist Of cosine be taken'to prefehehis example trona .doing • .. haute; andthen, as I ss.id, the familypeace • hrOlietillin, bebause the family confidence . . , . • , . Is.$0Pe, . " ' . • • •• A • WaviatiaN •Asunist 7relliper. . • • , . • Whiit hleasing to a hotiseliedd is &merry, cheerful woman -one whoge"Spirits Are not ' affected by Vvet daYs, or little disappoint. anent& or whose milk Of human kindness . doter not sou* tlie aunthine prosperityl • -Such ateonhin in the darkebthenthriglitents '7-416; addles, ovementsraffeetievetyamirt--Thirtihildien.- iihool with a. sense of -something .• . • : - *great to be achieved,.her- huabeed goes into ' - the, World in a .coequeroes 'spirit. No inatter how' people -worry. him, far off her -,:jpresence ithinee, and he whispers tO, hitaa' 800;1,, At home I eliallfind test." • • - Glaie.L. • ' , • .t.;,• A Paris' tiorrespondenk writes about •••• gloves: "The fashienable'W hi nte virttie 'Of. which gentleitien, in the 'everting appear- , in seichity,ueglOved, *heti .destroyed oireiof : the few instunfactures which -dote soot break utethe operative's home. • .The masohline 'hand is now .•only glitied in the morning ,,and at race courses. A strong kind of old- ' fashioned ont cavalier is alone permitisifile. . It is the gicive which appears .as an acme.. eery in many Of Vandykets portraits, and 'which Was Weria by Louis XIII. When he • ....Went to hunt... Ladies,hatte only renounced Whiteltid gloves. • In paying visits of Care- ' molly they may 'don white Swedish gloves, ' with , their 'heraldic beariege .painted or .embroidered on the book of the 'heed near 'the Wrist. Thegleye uoor follows in tint,, -evening as well us morning, theoolor of the Areal, or harnioeizes with it. At, the old. ':.COurt of Frani* ladies only; were gloved in. tiding out or • travelling. a The glove in !moiety Wawa' device of Josephine to hide: the coarse tirtris of Marshal'e wife: .who • luta been a laundress. The Duithese dtAiagoule had old-fashioned Prejudice tigetinet gloves. But the veins' were probait Mint int hebaoke of her hands,. • and rings, ,. of which jewels the was fond, ,aoeentuated • " .thie ugliness so' she vote lage Mittens.• ----In Louis Philippo'atimo tho wali. and the, dances7rendered. gloves oeligatory." • • " • - Manioroter rualsjona. ' . . . The vogue et• .oliethe and Scetch plaids is undindeiehed.. the toost popular next ' filinanier :Will bet ,Scotch plaide eed cheeks of two, sclera," white- and black, white and blite.tabite toa louter, pink and grey, out , of which fresti aild-pretty .costurces will be made at most reaeotteble prices. Nearly Illthe-dresaes for young girls will he made ; *ith. round.WaistPt Opining down very lo* over , the skirt, which giVes them a very ' youthful and cherming appeatetice: • know, as: a matter of fact, that an the leeding, hoe. maitihg • establieli meets, , Use Metilitains ; • • • 'VII • • hitWhga7144 Tattetine prayerfully for 'Many t mg tn the:Jewellery' way,' wear hll' your Yeats in thiti great Turkish city with vary - bangles on one arm and all the rings on One iPg 80008$1.''suArtow • the liesrteet. time hes. finger. Theta the style now. • • °erne. • „ . -• •••A• methodist ,Episeopel Chore') at Balth chin and spread it out are said to be ill-bred. more has -made; uew departure. laoit People Who. tuck their napkin under ' • h c rgy u A Engli h le MO, 'preached a skin; Felton, • e. Maybe they are, but Of What, useie a napkin SitotlatY, *•17 pastor. ofthe if it is plastedoh.,-the lap? • . • , cii ro question, se , est , onsiye services 'Eridegrimina, will be delighted . to from the PrOtestantet„.Episcopal. Prayer that etiquette requires the bride should not Book, intluding that Aptostles' . Creed and be ' driven to the .atittrph. in aeeerriege fur- the Psalms of the day. '.The oongregiititin niehed by him, hat by the'beide or her adear appear to approve Of the innovettiou.: P4/314f. :"! • " ' • • • mon lately from the text," God. fOrhid. that A Young lady should mover visit a rebtaii. • rant after the .opeict or theatre alone With a toeihtentlede'llg:0°VebietaTveeposLahilhaete' eTasti•te°e1.: °nPeer.. male °Qm131Mio,13.• ekttilid alTO't have .of the,•eineifil, as an •aid to eVetiOne •The young ladyfriend with her, even -If at deee 'eta& the young man for:60 extrii...NticiOtte • Bishopef the diocese alien be present, and before the -audience w miseed rose' Must be observed. •-•'• • • • and made a pithlio and • ea nest ''.protesit. INTOtea.an40- reins .Und the • against the "bold per version Of. the text." . High ceiffures are again in vogue, though tiaatinni," said a • little Sunday is:hoc* the low,00il. On :the nape -of the neck is by Sebeilart "doWe all to Abraham's bosom .no mealier abandoned. • • .„ *ben we dieelf we are reel good /9' a' Tee, .EOrtie aed Havana biewirshadespioinise my.ohild,ao We are taught." -i‘f.81l of Us,: ' tefind great favor forquiet refined- toilehe materna; all the littleboye 'ale& the little' to be worn in the street. . •• • . girlie and the grown-up people to e ?" Yee; • Ise col Ofdeierie a high collar with be* of darling, My eve., maineta,, the. setae, and ista-sgreattittvorit ,*hitt-a-,:grf3at*. big !iota "rt 'PI bosom French. . ' ,s• • . : . Abraham pallet have, 1:4.11,en't he?. The. silic and linen' gloves: are almost- 'Voltaire's. Untie now. used by the superseding the the lisle -,thtead, • They. are. Geneva Bible • Steiiety •is a. repository for serviceable for ecimmo wear, :The 13titish Bible Society% bowie women are .E4iivair,3. oalie.a.upoo to. iooko ,in Earl street. Bleekftiarit. .stettde in 1378; the Clouneil Virycliffe, circu- 'sacrifice's, Just now tha..deniand.Put Upon 'them. . to stvedloiv. the , east wind . and ltiwaeeurge'el)etteltteed. of ewlYeeSta°,i.fP.tTtibre:teuutea. sinile *bile . spring toilet*: are hanging shall prevail,"ea* Tract unworn inthe wardrobe. • • , seeiety'e premises*. are where Bibles were The heuselceep'er• is reaoheiled at One publicly burned. time to the "clutter"of newspapers. for • •The titieeese ot the Salinithin nay bas they become her chief atitistant.in peeking given rige.t0.0, huMber of similar c,igattiase. aveer the tore sed,i'vainter garments '• ,The tient' in England end Wales. Theretiee Moths .recognize their ". devil . in printers the Army , 'of the King's OStn, Chrittiati ink. • . '; ' • " - , • * Army, • Goespel. Teniperanoe Blue "Ribbon • • 'Fine:checks in sating .ere shown in bhiet Ittnak, Holiness Atiny; ,Hosanna . Army, blue and'edrue, strawberry pink and white -11,edeeined Army, Hostel Gospel Arniy and and.: Sevres blue and White. These satinee -Salvation ' Navy. These • bodies, : together are preterite]. , by • many ladies • of refined `with the Aletheans, the .Cititieititio hide- Her little dim had caught -the : trick of Oa taste 7 in • the. huge . .ffoviered •.pornpadisii, pendent& , the •':Christian,: -Evangelista and 0,And sighed amitl its PlaYthing0-7, • '• the Ohtiethin Punicseia, have.40;009:Rlacee asiatz;:. se' • :oat ' Sf'S 4 ivhere tithe vipreselohor ali.JOM'OtiOP13.4.,',OehltrO geeillitei_tteeedie IttetiL•biiii_theilesisOmt,- I'remtibiltilie : hearing,: ite lady. 'say,. "When .Icaiiaelittlo ohgd, used to wish 80 often ni3i,Mot.b4ovould look olteeit Then laugh, mothee, 'even it you do feel alinotit tootweary.,to exert the • facial nine - ales, and you ,havetti niiihtta effort • .whieti.eointato401 bringing tears', instead of .a, laugh, Son will feel 'better 'for the °Hort' and the `children. The little ones, • unconsaiohelY to xod and themselves, are 'Catehing • the. :expression • of otenitenance Which will. go far to brighten or .ohiud sante future home. Then leugh, Mother...parlor, nurservind: kitchen ,all.feel the .effect of your emile. or frown. when. the mother's yes are olesed, the liteliencl hands forever there is no, swee4iFepiteph Which Obildtete and friends Can give .theint • itElhe was at; Faye bright, and cheerful." The Celld.Weive inieal• • Was affirmed many- yeers einsae, And has long been believed., that a .day or two of abnormal told. aimed' always omit% !rem then.* to the 1861 Of May. This year the. kind condition was observed, with a continuance of the °old. for several days after the Usual time. • In 1,884,24111er* by eiraniining Ahe meteorological records , 'These. were published a ',short time ago in The- RepOlican. In there 'tne Bishop was transported to .the threshold of the spirit world, where he saw and con- versed with„ the aptrit of his detteased daughter, ,who told him his wife was wit - lug for him in heaven.—Bt. Louie, Republican. :tittigiti, 'Nether, lilattigh. Mothers do not laugh j'eociugh. The, house -keeping hi so onerous, the Children so Often trying. to nerves and temper,the servant most exesperatingeand evenJohti; kind, good , that he is, Cannot Understand all Mt Vexations sod-. dis- 'ooitragenients, and so wearied do we Often feel that it ie.,-tets mit& for ,the household. to depend on us, hi addition tt, all our tiaras*, for social sunshine as well. Yet the belie* hold's does, and It Father May be bright and . Cheery., his laugh ring out, but .if thentothettelaugh failavven the father's' oheerfulnese 'thump to lase game of thhtnt fecition.•• 'In the. sad. but forcible Ilea of Joanna, ' • •, , " ion& iltshet_-- • h 4:14:1.1* -4-2"6c. ei 1; t:g *vi eitt", rt t tral le ;Ili Ily1 ern. vc' 6:s -"‘ big.' There was some rivalry ad to which of thorn could jump the Moat times. "I'm sure I On jWaap 100," sag 81.014' old Nary Carroll, Wheat, haoth,er liVes in the reer honett The rope..ws,ii eet motion, and Met/ began to lump, *bile her ,companieha counted in chortle. ,.*She jainped 100 times. and then sa,t down on the steps of ;the *tar wbueinlatintogbetao,r4estt.4 oitoloonek canftverrwidaarydenr them. ing She Woke her Mother, with 'elope the sleeps, by oryiogout that her yead paiueI biT• NM. Carroll bandaged it With wet cloth, and tor a few meinentS the Child was relieved; The pains, returned, lanWevert and attt o'oloch she`died. Deputy 'Coronet Dfrotoittirestolotrthatolif etri.4siebtlx:tahia.11_adisrertrylorte,41 Sun. . • • ' ' Omar Vist . tilaieteit;Pright% Disease, Iiidney, ttrintaly or Liver ComPlaintseannot be contraeLed by 'Von= Otir family if Hop thtters are used, and if you already laiktre any.of these diseases Hop BftWit • lathe only naedicingothat positively cure Yale " DOn't forget this, Ansi don't get Some .Puffed *p. atuff that will only barn you. • - Deliberate with eaution, but at with. .0dpecolastemtv4tahndfinnyineella with- ge,tteitsitrealt -• • WHITEHEAD, "'the Airtiailakhapa dynauilte- fiend," maintains an air of the :-gtiatest -sang froidio.jail. iiteltercietelyjectiker and stillen, at. one time 'treadling jokes WiOt • the warder and tit 4454i:ter thawing a most • turulyaipirit., It has been deemed .neciett- . Soy to place, a light in his cell at 'night; .that he may be more ,Seegrely watch64: To this he.ettonig$mbjedei am -1'011 Jitett ttitaeAtet,...1 ete.-aihtteeear tatt, -40Y -*/,..44,7* 'intriisted to the arc tot :the governor., He eats his meals ivith 'remarkable- appetite, graned4aeript appears tft co rreengostar 1.2 his Petition with the . • . , „ geode. • , -thing ladies Who •have the.bw, bread. z_legeateheadaMgt‘titatta act,...nazrettyl#note tfrfAir ---yor!!/i" Ira trfghttbiolt and bragh- its&it smoothlYttithe_coll-hehindr-showhig- ihe-oontour of ;:chd :omitting alt shading �f looks above thebrow. . ' • • . This is a sample of English taste. It is described as o. spring gown :. 'A costume of moss -green velvet. Tbe. cape dame just below the waiiit, and/ was trimmed with dark fur., The gown opened over ea Balinon 'petticoat 'With Urge 'petterit in green,velvet of 'coavOlvulf and leaves; round the edge ..dittimiltive &stings of green satin and salmon ; the back looped up, satin being initodinedt with the velvet; bonnet uf .velvet. • • " Nothing 'New Under *he , . . The hammered metal now in faBbion oomparetively • neW to the many; and is. deemed -beautiful 1 but the dude who oar - flee a cane with a head of hammered silverand copper may be pained to learn that this decoration of metal is, not Angli- can 'in its origin, but was common 'to the aboriginal tribes of Canada and the States. The discovery of a orucsiform pendant in a stone grave of Teniiiiiisee shows that the topper was hammered not only into imple- ments', but into ornaments. The design, however, need not alarm theologians; for it appears to have been a natural 00;106Ption, inetead of the symbol of Christianity, juht as the Sioux chief draWs a, °toss to -repre- sent the four winds. • The 'number of copper f•abjerote collected in the Peabody Museum from North and South America indicate the 'extended use of the metal, 'which seethe to have been hammeredas well •gis smelted, in. Chili, Peru, Central America, and Mexico,,end the remai4s. -0f's --fUrxmae7e-viaeUtTY—uied for °elver smelting, heere been discovered in the hoins of Chimu. ighestkealarY' paid to any minister ig_thePreatiyteri,hik. two congregations have paid this sum. These are linox Church, Tor -onto, •ReV• H. •M: Parsons, and Crescent Street Clhuroli, Mentreal; to Edw.AleXay: But these are otanpletelY eclipsed by St. Paul's .Chureh, Montreel, new tendering • a, !Wary Of over t7,000. ,Rev. Smite ALgolay, of Si. duibbert's, Edinburgh; lielitlatid, whom the St. Paul's people have dialed to be their Minister, has signified hiarteeeptatiOe of the Jewish Chronicle says: The Jews of the pest were English Jews;• the Joys of the present hate). beconie Jewish Eng- •lishmen. Greeter tolertinee within. the contratinity has led to greater communion outside it. Eduotttioit at . the , public schools hits -lobed down the aharaoteristie delf.tenfidence: . of Jews -of t the earlier period.. We are, begining to recognize that the difference betWeen oareelves and our heighbors is not eo great ka our pride itt dudaisila used to lead us to think. We mix more more with them; imbibe their ideas more freely and impart Out own with no lees. readiness. Thesituation heti its dim- ' gers 8.9 well as its advantage, but it has to be :recognized in contrasting the paet and preset of English Judaism." • • . - • , kept at Perlin for haywire, found that the ' -=Halmiltork Re , White. ' Of Stra01280,• a average temperetnre of the de,ya1 lined had nephew of President • 'Andrew D. White, been than 2.0 below that of the days , anda ntillioneiree amities hinnielf bygoing immediately preceding. (See Humboldt's to all the fires in that city, and the other " Onimont",„volume I.) Mr. Ermand, a * Ohl - day rescued two children from a burning tingdished German physieiet, tionjectured house with the aid of.a fireman. ...with his that such .depression of temperature might own molleY•he built and, supports a splen- be explained by the isissage= of .meteoric didly-equiphed engine house and is midi '0. streams between the earth and sun, thtte favorite with the firemen that he has been intercepting a part of the toiler heat. This eltoted Atieistant Chief Engineer of the theory, however, seems extremely imiirob. Vire Department. able. From' what we know of meteoric bo 'live in were it ar4 eaiSy •to go- to hod at man WO talliellieletidest 10 thek 6150014 2,. dieteortiitle are tee Sparsely ',scattered to. it is 'Bate'. 0 coholude that the. , The eegle in one 1101100," saye Gressett, "male' .. 4 ,. 71Efote inoolitpleasenter this world • walk' "'lathe fool in another," Certainly. -The night as it is to remain there ha the more- intercept any taeasurable quantity. of the itlg, aria as easy to get. lip Art the Morn: ti,r, tied eontradiets everybody at Ite hotel 1;beervetaielis'ettelltbiedrarbeatftia4..aeleum.,e,P,;reeeealleeeet table, geuerally *SACS the baby at home. . hag as it is to telh of getting 'kip when you of a cool epoch at the date wed above, go to bed. ' , , • —A oubieitob of gold is worth $210 e a its physical cause remailieto be discovered. Luttrell told of it roan who was not oubie; foot, • $3022380 •' it °tibia „yard', • ' • r - - , .,tt,, . . always actually inthehtahle, •litit was 09,707,762. This is valizirig it it VS an 'Two young 663/ladies inthe 'country, always as disagreeable as the mourn: °elide. 'At the' codunenoetnent of • the were t tending by the sidebt a wide aitoh, stew% would permit. ' Christian era, there Was In the ' World which they didn't know how to cross.. They DrtHoltea eats that bad itir,- bad.Whis. i $427,000,000 in gold. This hsa diminished appealed to a hoy who was Coining aim* key, and i re it keepthe dootote I to 457,000,000at the time America wo,dis- the toad for :,help, whereupon he pointect aose who havtrurged I coveted, when it, began to inorettee. Now behind them with a etartled air and yelled • v iiljtatiokis be ever- y the amount of gerd-innse is estimated tobe "Snakes I" The youngladiee otoetecl the • ' 110 000 000 000 ' , ) ) , • cliteh at a tingle bound; ..RAL, PHAn:a4Mal:11:1s1:PrAiiinti:Liisc:ht15A0:21::(104..:10Verl„..47tIlretn:turlt. .44.‘for - "all the ilW that flet.hia,....„.lialetu„tar,ATE,Ue• • •,. • . . , . - complaints of,Rh -einintrie. , . naturet:-( ' ' '- rritt!kaultit :Cults , . , ha- ,i;404eii.*irri'';j:Iiiiiiiiirillititualli,...atr; zpil'i'elvpia . lotuttioll'.-vvii...tioatigiteilll:gitaotioneferetri $041Pitiol, : it,. •3:44. t,.;,..:;s8v' till. . rot,, > 010•: ,,, ,• 2 , ..,,' ..t ;, . ' , .Ditait fenear. Weetufferleg with rheiimatiOniiiii.: MY shottitiebbiktrattimee• thet .i conla.,n.,iit , .gettitdressoffiWittiOnt aSaistanes. • I teelt tviti,'.. obaclyttlettplEh5termttEil')elltheleyUP:i,enrftteidil,Yabniiiirea. truly, 11'.13. Y'l':;114': . . • • ''" . ' ' . - ..',i)111Y3.4ilift.e ticCOURT. 4., SOLD rty '44.4.4,,,ilt.tIriorf!iTs. The,, 'Ithe)1100,1111.0i :,:SamiractiOpg ST . 'OATH-410ES,- 01ST. j. titrice, :'*".', Co.. .4 vilskieisity Agents, - ' 41iiiiitithet., " . .. , :• .• - , -•••• traffic ARPPEliatfc'7;14ttetti tat:63100 DO Ti TO • MENONLIG1,10011$ OR. OL .v4,0„, Aar= WEAxitX • `. • ifetTorat 0,11:2ttiASN' •t a Pgasomaraixruale timid thus& °Aunt. EVeedy reett and ratonotHeatori.vzoostas1dah1ni00 T#Otrandeittlitoo"rary 08 th�1O*t -andatoneeformuswatedramplue 'VOLTAIC Billet MARSH People wishing their Teeth to 170o," Teaberry mo eliVeeterti3 the breath and giihisneeti the beaOty Of ding t 14- onitiogtinA. s and sook, alb.. • :‘ • • •.- ,„ • ,AL evince itieettato ,- 6 ,, . ....,,,,, t,...:.4- . ee:.,-7.: . eA • so Minted With liver complaint that ha was • to .• I' Nil A Cll. , W .111111fro Anstint Jay, Copenhagen, Ont., says holvois 1'71%0li votrwork.!he drigglst atAyIoer1%,04,Itouyzopeovithsuougc04rtsnitti that after using two bottlehe Vas. able to re2111110 Work as Usnal.'. Says be got relief froini . the larst doge, end ik.eatisiled there is no bettet liver rentedytn tatiefelleii, /TO gladly alleive iiii to • Co his liable. . :.. • .z•