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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1883-07-27, Page 2r 1.41.1rc. • Mese Turn. , for the see -whore the chowilersbe, the eipia winde his horn be star -ash Ettfizac t4rough the spumy 0, . • Rae mammoth oysters; yewral liarnitole bloWs tpd the congor crows e clime the Plohl0cligawlie • 1 Wit the Captain's gig. niy las E behetaYs harnessed. be I • a breeze shaft And tore -and -aft , drive o'er the witid-whipped sea,. bo's'n. shout -u Let the port -hatch nut the anidavies taut* owy cteude spread the white, white mucus . e the dead -light's gleam is caught E o keel till the conwass heel the water -line runs short!" n -sheet lille with the mad Monsoon, are foiled tiae fore-crosistree, " 'Hy laced the vessel's waist, e skim o'er the creamy flea. _ gulls ehrleh frookthe fortard peak sbrimp go prancing by, niermaids coy, kiss the whistling buoy, a the urchin pipes his eye: ' • • sh bark at thetipsy shark.' the halibut Join the ory. eer, niates; cheer, 'as the good ship e make the 'hawser gee! ' nol in tho safl blowe.a Martin -gale, . e Plough ,.the furrowed sea. ••• • le, fly trona thecapstan high ',- the min-souppers fast nyszd's light, through the naety night, 11 mud before the mast; reese is a -lee, and the rover is free, the schooner of beer has passed. • • or the ship t Hurrah for the crow l • , merry boyo are we - course is pressed for the ree-tion%werit p rise on the yeety sea. , tile 1 tilble 10. in she cigY• u the soorching Iseat.of summer on Millionaire and bununer ; , the rich inatilieeri and daughter, the mountain and the water, • . • ug eff at breezy highlands, • tooves and ersagirt islands; the babiee-7,oh, the pityl • - .•in the crowded atty. - g fathers, sons and brother; leeetahlesOiapless mothers Y Peplos; weak and ailing,- • • 14 groaning, °riling, wailing, ff. bairingstewingefrying, , g, failing, gasPlaVdYing 45,15 bables.-oli. the pity In the crowded city. 'the blessed air of 'heaven an ea freely` given, ' 100 portion of the dwellers ' °yarrow and the cellars, °Alio nations odor smothers In the arniti.arnothere; • *Mitts that we should cherish, bieftWal and Perieh- ' he aultry days ot summer • ; the grunimest Mau grow grimmer • n thenights are close andtorrid, dotty smells are horrid; - the babies, feebly raying, eir mothers' arms are dying, ey swelter -oh, thapity I 0 het and eroWded oity. Dail it Down. , , ;otter you hia1/03 to say, my friends; ether witty, or grave,er gay, se as much its ever you oani 'Way it in the oleareetvesee; hethet yon vitite on rural again,. . e ertioularthings in town. Word of friendly'advice- Soil it dewh. Writing an artiOle.iorthe pr. ese, ethroilnitirgiriaiNgettgYest WOrOs let them he crisp and dry.; kW it is thdalie4 and you suppose hone-exaotit brown, _ • 00,1titrWer again, end th•n•- B411:44,down. tare d_ not like to pii, nt • While luny long. . • , he general reader deea net card a couple of yza:ds of song. r your wits thearnallest lipage On'il win the author's crown, _ ,Very titneyoitWrite.any friend. ' s Boll it dows. 110110'S Mora* ir tiny boat they floated the reoky. weeded shore; _Otto_ og. A110110-1hregtod. 0 Alpe the 'lender oar; 00 fa what*OuId you more ?. 1 'twos a bugle soUnding, that spending on the bay. Witt 0 -the atiho•bounding • the cliff dies rioftawnY, to in air like allow "pray. FATO•0111.04 Sweetly, , BLI.OGET For, etlle 177palizer 'Vessel arta .tho lieotter • SWEET SEVENTEEN AND THE ELDERLY LOVE • Cossip-,Gecoratiye Notes -Cooking 'Re- " •, eines and Generalities. • The etiderly What a spectacle is that of a respeetable, elderly, steady -going married man malting a find of himself with a young ,girl. Grirls feel a happy freedom with a man old enpugh to be their father, and with daugh- ters, perhaps, oder than they are them- selves ; and he on his aide, I am sorry to bay, often allows himself a little too much freedom of manner in return. The ,young girl puts on, as you say, "her pretty man- ners " for him, beoanse she is better brought up than her brothers, and ID taught to be owl; to all coiner& And the elderly gentle- man -what of him? He forgets his grey and probably bald head, his bulky propor- tione, and his general heavy-fatherish," appeeranoe.. He pulls. himself together, and struts beside his young friend, feeling again the yonng and .jaunty beau of days gone by. He beoomes almost insolent in his depreciation or women or his own age; especially of his wife. Sometimes he is weak enough to imagine that, were it not for that hard and fast knot which ties him, he might enter the lists with younger men, and earry off his prize; his elderly and rather rubicund face glows and shines with the thought. Every look of the girl who is the present-objeot of his heavy attentions is transformed. by his eelf-ooncsit into a token of admiration. He given her little presents, which are received guehingly by the young lady, and afterwards shown by her to her friends, with a laugh and the remark. What a dear old thing he is! • yon know he was an oldfriend of papa's when they were both young." And the girls have a good-natured laugh at his expense. Now a word of advice to my dear, elderly. ,fifty-yeare-of-age married man. Stick to your wife and your own daughters or nieces; they appremete you and love you; they know you for -what you are, and do not laugh at your grey hairs and heavroivilitiee. Remember what you are AKat your age,•110 apt to forget -that,, give you ,always a ten years' obit, you grow old just at the same rate as women do; and your pride in yourself as a Mail ill so great that you often take a little paine to preserve any, of those youthful grave; of manner or aPpearanoe which helped you, 'when young, to charm women and win your wife; therefore your growing old is often not a pleasant eight, •and your labberly flirtations with young girls make you the laughing -stook of your own 'sex, -both young and old.-" Sweet Seventeen" the World. - -" , Gossip. I/ there is anything. above another that le perfeotly revolting to the person of a refinad,nature it is goseip: And yet to what a fearful' extent it is indulged in by people who.'pride theineelves upon cul- tured manners, a fine education and good idianding-in Society. They mint manage their neighbor's household affairs, their inoomingand outgoing children; servants, and, in fent, have ooniplete supervision Of clerythingrand then say they am net like Mrs. Bo -and -se, always minding other peo- ple's: businese. • . Oh, wad some pow'r the gatie gie no • To eedoursere anothera see us. And the Worst of it is that. a story never low by repetition: I earl not better express inY thoughts than by gieing.Pope's lines: The flying rumors gathered ite they rolled; Were° Any tale was soonititheerd than told; • and all who told it added somethingnow, And all who heardit made enlargement, too; In every Mr it epread. on every tongue it grew. How -many hearts have beeriMade to ache, how many hard feelings beim been caused, how many f ' dships broken by this ter. APAt,egtror 4,7 thitTIKliirdteMr: • er m.p.riztto, 4 knOWa thatLa_gentlemin-can-Texpress-,-a- -Volume in a shrug of his shoulder.... I fo my part ape:heartily -siol&br hearing that A. oan't possiblyaffordFalk," and that does not pay rent. And then because a gentleman finds pleasure in a young lady's society, and be- catieerthey have. pleasant tithes. together, it does not stand to reason that he would in- stantly die Halle were. removed from the fade of the earth; or that she is desperately in love with bine and readyto give him the devotion of a lifetime. There is plenty to talk aboutin this beautiful world; books, music, flowere and a thousand sithjecte that are entertaining and pleasant, and, what is better still, harmless.- Let us. have pleasanter , topic t of conversation • than' " Otir Neighbors.". They'maYbe pleaaant enough to us, but like the boys and the frogs, what is fun for tho boys is death to the frogs: • - -" - • Decorative Notea. • • . A handsome and durable nig cap be made by taking a piece of burlap and having a large pattern etamped upon it. There are netv patterns' which havelately comeinto Vogue that are sold by the yard' or piece,' and which any one oan &admirer, to the most delicate'materiali with the nee Of a warm iron only. Work in - the, 'pattern wit ravelled, yarn; Over • and over on a lea pencil, taking care to leave the loops long enough so that the work when done will not 'Pasterul aurtains for the- sitting room windows are made of drab Monne cloth. Put them up with a cornice, and in the Usual Way.; then,. where they part, fit;iii piece or the uiomie cloth . on which it pretty group of floWers is embroidered in Kensing- ton stitch; the edgee may. be, trimmed with fringe or with lace crocheted of linen thread. ' Tie the draped part of the curtains baok with narrow bands of the made cloth on ,which is a vine matehlog the bouquet on the oedema. • • • • For a pretty table-oover take flee linen or a °testily tint an the foundation. ,Seleet a piece of finecteto'nne • figureci oimson poppies, roses or any flower that eau. be out out and grouped to form a. petty border. Out Out the flowers and arrange them on piper.; With'it pencil trace their outlines on the paper, then, by mattes of tracing paper, transfer the der•igint 'dine made to the linen. Next stretch the litoe'zi in a &wee and peke • the flowers upon it° • c-InlktItza-)0S=64-keittiy; the mow reply,be thinet" said-"-YearherWeiliha,-wine.. he, "Does my darling love raer - a-moineratirliWas stints - towered, "Darling love ine,".. • 0.00ftlY eald. aq Will I" ner lips with love'ri warm thrill; tinvotin BIGHT AND otkaqii. _filitlOnbligt; gone, where grdoetteorfaseirt !ITT dim, pnantora Worm that no stare lignt; tiie, like pallid flamer; Sit to anfro; ve is not. nor memory of Woe. • vOlos Pleads through that eternal night: those ileitis and &nut iatheir no cowegeeeinee no fear they know. t should. seem to bar Yatir WaY,.- tfrom that Vague world that I return ; but moonlight silvering some spray- ot hear you, hoot:Seer ycii yearn tar,' 00111d follow ray far track, • , ' m bane orblies I should COMO back. is Advents's* s USW. , . .year-old eoia Of Benjamin Plane, ity,, narrowly esoapd a terrible bade., afternoon. The 'Pierce °ivy rooms on the third floor of Market street, and yesterday about 8 o'clock, the child was a Hoban night clothes opposita. a facing the pollee station. Mos. ad her back to the window, and °Mid just in time to see the child'a, PPOnre Half wild witkfright,she stairs, expecting .to find the remaking of her boy on the pave- loW, but upon 'reaching the ground Mtraoted by soreeMii, and, looking her child suspended in the sir by Own/ which had fortunately caught projeoting from the .witidew sill. her shrieked and started Up stairs, he bay would before she could The gloth Was strong, hoW- d the boy ives 'reeoued from his position tioinjured. After the • wit was over. MreePierce fell in a tit across the Window sill, but she revived with the assistance of the (Del.) Evening. eon kali bean knockedoff the rail - d killed," exclaimed a intim, hing an Arkatoesen colonel Who him off ?" eteitedly demanded the "A• railway engine." "Wel, that ehplaip Matti -34i; kr I knew very kneeked oft by an ordinary WaS One Of the boys, let me tell 1444W, with smooth peek). Wheel the work is dry remove it from the frame and britton.holle etitch around the Ogee' a Orb &Were. Then angina veino and 4, e,r1:14ga with Alccollo cm& weglz1 thz,, stoma za stQm. etitob With crewels. ,with a fringe of the linen aid'a band bt..drawn work and tlepirleeitY yr. all p.auel is Malle by taking a pieee Of cardinal satire nine inchee square. In. the centre out out it piece illOt Vita large enough for a .photograph ; ,next turn in the -edges so they will be when fin -haled the required size. .Around the bottom and one side of the centre piece. work in Kensington or satin stitch' a yine of yellow blosson3s. Umtata and bottolla with a border' of . cardinal Plush or -velvet, ;Ong in the edge acacia a Whalebone. Turn in the aides and fasten down on the wrong side. the lower left hand owner place a double bow Of cardinal and yellow and hang up with orie yellow • and one red ribbon. Put in the photograph and 'eaten securely; do not let the .stitollea show on' the wrong aide. Line with red sileeia. • Cooking Recipes. . Rye Bread. -Make sponge as for wheat bread; .clet it rise over night ; , then mix KY with rye flour, not as tiff is wheat bread: Plaoe in baking pans; let rise,. and bclke half an hour longer than wheat bread. Chicken Pie. -,Stew until tender two thickens, jointed small, Simeon and thicken gravy with flour. Line a dish with bieciiit °rust, fill with the 'chicken and gravy, place on a top orust and bake. Green Peas.-ITse only enough Neater to boil them tender.P When, dry, add rioh milk and plenty of butter, set them, mi the back of the stove to • 1311311310T ten or fifteen minutes, which brings this dressing to a er000lk 00rioloioneYe Season with salt and pepper. .• Rye Tea Cakes. -One pint sweet milk, two eggs Nell -beaten, one tablespoonful of brown sugar, half a teaspcestral of salt; stir'into this sufficient rye, four to inake it an Miff as .00ran1on' griddle-eake batter. Balm in gen' pees half an hour. ' Serve Good Spiel° Cake. -One .oup of auger, once half oup of butter, yolks of four eggseone. half coup of molasses, one-half oup of. sour milk, two and a half -Cups of flour, one tea- spoonful of soda and a teaepoohfuk eaoh of ground chives, einliamon, allepioe and nut- meg. . • ' ' potato Rolls. -Season cold mashed pota- toes with salt and pepper,, beet to acreitm, with it tablespoon of melted butter to every inip of potato; minae With two Or, three beaten eggs, and add some minoed.parsley ; Toll into oval bailie dip 'into a neaten, ,egg, thenein breadointribs, and fry in het lard or drippings; pileina pyramid on a fiat dish and serve, • • : • ° . Spanish Oream.-Dissolve one-third of a box of gelatine in three-quarters or aquart of 'milk. Let abandon° hour. Put on the titcreee and .when boiling stir in the yolk or three eggs; beaten withe threao-urthe of a OU of anger. When • it is boiling hot 'remove from the fire and stir ig,the whites of three well -beaten eggs. Mailer ' t� taste, and pour in a Mould to oda.' , Cabbage, -Strip 'off the outside leaves e_ont quarters and 'lay for an hour in wild water; cover with boiling water and 'wok fifteen minutes; turn off the water. and cover with 'fresh boiling water; cook Until tender; perhaps, an _hour ; drain well; ohop•and btir in a tableepoonful of butter, pepper and salt. Serve hot. ,] • Vegetable Soup.e-Sorape two curets, An onion,4uarter or's oabbagnd Itwo tur- nips. Cut them in Rims a little larger than dice. Pa the piecee in- large sauce - lien with a little btittet and water; let it 000k half an hour; then out your potatoes in the same way. • Take your meet out of the soup -kettle, skini off thegrease and put all into your broth, and Jet cook another half hour. , Chutney' Elattee*,0ne `. Pound mustard seed, one pound stoned raja*, one pound brown sugar, one-half pound 'salt, twelve came& garlic. six ounces cayenne. pepper, two quarts Unripe gooseberries, two, quarts best vinegar. Bruise the mustard seed, Dlla110. a syrup of the .sugar with a pint of aimar,„:09*.e.et--,,goasetzgrizS av,i,'130216-1F-,ATifftiosii a mortar: Whenoverithingia_bold,-1,.:mix-ali-together With the remaining vinegar. Tie down elose. -The longer -it- is kept thebetter.' Weileraitsles. . Nine girls in SkLouis organized a base- ball eine:, While playing ptactice game the miss at the bat refused to play because. the Pithlier aveuldn't throw the ball "real hard." . • A Chicago girl: has set the fashion of sending around natiiies to her friends that she has mealier lover the grand bounce. Any one .who wants a soond-hand lover Oen then prepare to claw bite in, *gen Francisco girl: is hunting in Vain for a young man who • has .eyes like sapphires. She awe that axe the only kind, she adinires, and when Cali find such a man she Will marry him. She ie worth $2,000,000. , „ ' ae_boiidoir-7"-What lively hair DIM has, I suppose it is her own?" " Oh 1 Yee, of opuree it is. NO doubt if you •ask she will prove it; for she told me only a few days ago that ebb Was 'ortrefid to keep ,all her receipts." • , " Have you ever had your eare''piereedl" asked. an old baohelee` who prided himeelf on his tenor voice of a brightgirl who lived next dorm'. " Ilshonld think 'so I _Hearing inguyery dayl" was the ,bright girls reply. • „ Said Harlein reporter to a young lady "1 have bet:mine so profloient in writing up things that can even write abotik, nothing.. Yee, indeed," he *eat on, ,'" I °Old even, write about you." The reporter hasn't the slightest idea, 'thy the yoting lady has out his acquaintance. A 'lady poen asks," How Oh I ion -him. I lovehitn no morel" lirObahly the best way is to get bina into an ice-cream selood. Eat five diehee and then break the nom gently. • If he doesn't iiocept the situation yeti:had . betteritry and love him again. Vim ootild never do better. •' '4 Where should I wear an engagenient ring V' Wear it on the 'seabed finger Of the right band if everything' is open and itbp„vb board; but if you do not want any oYie to know of the engagement we would advbe you to wear it in the right hand corner of an old striped stocking in the bottom of the bUrOan draWor. ' The latest anecdote about, the old lady' who thinks that She 4 knoWeleverything itt• ahotit how she went to a.ch rich seetabio, and aa she (Altered the ore° the: Young 19.01iee said, Good eveningkanntio, We are', , glad you came ; We are going to bVe tab- les.= this evening." "Yesp I know, I ku9v7," was the rely ; " N3111 Wizen Erst caimeln," ' .solitude. esteu Sunday Herald.) _ 'this is not a monastic age or oountry, delhooracies are gregarious and of aviarnaing tendency. Popular government is a government a naajorities-o:d the greatest number. The multitude is a socia4 many -headed tyrant. There is no lonely despots here sitting aloof, raying out from the seclusion of his zealously guarded, palaoe ukases awl decrees, which are to be obeyed and not questioned or disoueeed. The people, under demooratio institution?, live and • deliberate en wale, as it Were. Publicity penetrates everywhere, leaving no shady 1100118, retreats and seolusions. The men whose name, is most frequently in print; and ofteneet on the tonguisi of his 'fellow.citizens, is the greatest' man, while the recluse, whetherhe be thinker, scholar 9r religious devotee, is of hot the least sooial Or politicial amount. Thus WO are in no danger of becoming menastics or lovers of a pione or stildious solitude. We can hardly appreoiateNor understand the rapture •of the holy anchorite, Who exclaimed, "0 blissful solitude Is 0 sole blies I" Our piaotical, business people find no delight or companionship in solitary thought • or self.00nonliinion and retired contemplation. It is a gregarious, social and sooialistic age throughout. the ,entire area of modern civilization.' Even in Skein. and Portugal, countries least under the halluenceof the 'modeXn spirit, monasticism is for the most part an obeolete institution. The Attempt et the ecoleidastic 1 reao- tionists in France and 'Englan revive. Benedictinism in those countri s a genera - gen ago mooned to be more or leas success- ful, but all reactions are a ' et the grain and drift of the Zeitgei t spirit .of the time; and mast, t erefore, result in failure. Still it is iznpossible to predict With • any certainty. what will be the next mood of the world. lead mankind -titter the fever of material and, mechanical activity which has trans- formed. as by -art magic the entire earth .within the last half oentory into" a sort of race mune, over which we now career ad tibifion from sunset to eunrise and from pole to line-I:civilized mankind, we aa, may ere long be seized with a fit of loathing for political economy, .utilitarianisai and. the endless and itimlees heaping • Up orpiches and for the knowledge which deals with insensate matter 'and force, and rush once more into a , contemplative, ate:tette mood. Who knows 2. Rome, at the very hei t of her -power and grandeur, witnessed a ge e al reaotion :against the spirit of luxury and worlcllineee. The victoricius West, to quote from one of the &eine of Matthew Arnold, suddenly • • • , yelled her eagles, snapped her _word, And laid her sceptre down- ier stately. purple she abhorred And her imperial crown. a Lust of the eye and Prideofiiiet- Sh.e left it all behind, , And hurried, torn with inward strife.. i The wilderness to find. Then the solitudes of the Egyptian Thebaid became Populous with hermits, the folloviers of St. Anthony, the original monk, who had renounced all worldly ambitione , and ohne and the pumuit of plebes,' fame, power, love and ' philosophy, under the irdluenoe'of a mystical yearning for. Boinething higher', purer and . 'nobler than earth eouldafford, under the atinitilus Of a shored thiret, which' no draught of sensual pleasure : could slake. These armies of solitaires and swiety-renounoing devotees 'Nought for eatishietion not out- • wardly in external things, but within; in the depths of their mauls. It is impossible,we say,:to foretell. what will be the next mood Of the world after the perfect 'fever, and fury,rit political; social and mechanical and acientifio progress; which has pervaded almost the entire earth for the litet half ,oentury. Obviously this fever will not always Wit: There are symptomssyen now of its subsidence. Men do not live .ley„ brP7AaP.Jeno---.T—Lnitk-kh-wlwiffh%r-: tataMresigarydifolitittiiva,invatiail-leloment, viz., the soul„which__every-now-and--then- --fienhea-through the dense olouds ,sonse and sensuality, in whioli We are all apt to be tciomuok-NrapThe soul, or higher nature, oecasionally-vassiiits itself by in - (miring men With now and oveeniastering erinvictions of right; hasticie and beauty. Such oonvictions are antidote for sordid and luxurious generations, curing them of theifinaterialismi; low aims and bensnowe. nese. '` The higher nature, then, once more Caserta its • supremacy. The world and society are refashioned and -recreated, as it were. 'They were thus reoreated by the advent of Christianity, which. Was a new, spiritual leaven infused ;into the pagan civilization, leaven whioh transformed the world. , The etoul, Which is the univer- sal, myetical element in. human nature, forever lives; and at long intervals melee itS might felt as a transforming social fac- tor. Possibly, the world hi even now. drawing nigh to another radical, transformation. .History teaches ma that -thelie manifestations of the soul or over. soul are periodical and recurrent. :Bud; dhism was each a manifestation in the -remote oast six centuries before the vulgar era. The (*reek philosophy was ehoh mimirestation or spiritual revelation to ,the pagan world of twentylive or :thirty Cen- turions ago. Such spiritual reVolutioris showed ,each ether after long intervals of many centuries. Each one et thein lights mankind to ,a higher plane, achieves for humanity an added measure of moral, sooial and intellectual elevation., Thus; HtiU doth the goal from its Imo fcsattlep JAW' Upon our life a ruling etilaence eon& 1 .J111 You are Stained in health from any cause especially from the use' of any of he thousand nostrums that promise so lamely, with long fictitious testimonials, have no fear. Resort to Hop Bitters at once, and in a 'short Ulu() you will have the most robust and blooming health. • 'What is it that makes moat people shilt? Eating too much and too fast ; drioking too Much ; want of fresh air, want of sun- light ; want Of exercise; want of oleaelt- nose. Few persons die .of starvation -many do of glettony. But you will say, If I get sick 1 can't help it ---it's Only bid luck that br trio fever and rheuinatieni." Not BIS, friend: There's no lack in , °kitting ,Out fingers if you fool with edge tools.. 1tore than half thireiektiefis in the worid is pre. ventable, as any doctor will tell you. A sick mania L teacloth seme one ba a said, be. omise ho has no hutiinese to getroick. ? Home Items. —4' Ali your own fault 12 you remain sic% WhOld yon can . (act. bop. bitteristhut 113Ver -rag, -The weakest, worraan smallest child, and sickeet invalid. an, use hop hitters with safety and, great good. • -Old men tottering around from ithenniatism kidney trouiole or any weakness will be alradst new by using hop bitters. • -My wife and daughter were made .healthy by the U90 of hop bitters and Ireconanarand. them to my people -Methodist clergyman. " Ask any'good 'tor if hop Bitters are not the best fatoalY medicine • On earth. • , • -Malarial fever, Ague and Biliousness, will leave every neighborhood as soon as hop bitten arrive. , •-=•.°4 My mother drove the paralysia and neu- ralgia all out of ter eyatera with hop bitters.".,-, Rd. Oswego Sun. • —Keep the kidneys healthy with hop bitters and you need not fear sickness. water is rendered harmless and inOre refreshing and'reviviug with hop bitters in tack -; *aught • -The vigor of yotith for the aged a•nd infirm: in hop bitters. CAN liEAM1 OF MIMS i( I"? SYfilrArif,ZE WiTH1 THE HO PE 13 * W,OMAN.' .e-rf-IE. RACE tt":4••• • ,4*.t ;- eXaet4;„:. LYDIA -E. PIN KHAM'S •VEGETAMA COMP013171).' A Sure Core for all PRMALE *RAIi. • NESSES Including ..Leucorrhea, Ir. • • ;•• rinfiliar and Painful Illenstrdation. • ..,A,yudianunation and Ulceration of' - • the' Womb, Flooding, PRO. ' •LAPSUS UTERI, disc. • rirPleasint to the taste, eilleacious. and. immediate its effect.; It is a great help in pregnancy, • and re - Heves pain duringlabor and at regular periods. • " " • PHYSICIANS IISDIT'AND PRESCRIBE IT FREELYton. , . sil,Wasahenssas of the generative organs ' r6f either sex, it 'is second to nO remedy that has ever beon .before the pane; and fog all •diseases t.he Romp Itis the Greatest ,Rentaly in the, World. rfirKIDNEY COMPLAINTA•oftither Sex Iliad Grand Relief in Its 'Use.• • • LYDIA E. riavinifiils BieOU PURIFIER will eradicate every vestige of Humors from the. Bleed, at the same time will give tone and strength to the syst•3m.., •Ari marvellous in results,ad the CainnotiruL . ,KrBoth the Cam.paand nod Blood Pturifier are pre. pared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue Lynn, Mass. Price'Of either, Sixbottles for $5. .The Compound • is seat bylimil lathe form 'of pAls; or of IOzengss;on receipt of price, ill per box for either Mrs Pinkham • freely' nnswers all letters of inquiry. Enclose 3leeirt , AMP. . Bend for. parniphlet. Mention this .Paper.. • animus. Priniasies Lrvim rams cure Constipa; tion, Biliousness and Torpidity of. the Liver: 25 cents. old by altDingelebhin .O0 • , . . . WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO'S IMPROVED BUTTER COLOR A .NEW DISCOVERY. tillibr several years we have furnished the Dairymen' of America with an excellent rut!. Belot color for butter; so meritorious that it met With great success everywhere receiving the highest and ,only-prizos at both /International ornat by.patlent and scientificoshemlialAe. ItWlI1Not Color the 13 utterm Will Not Turn Rancid. It le the _ -Strongest, Brightest...anti__ Cheapest Color Made, crawl while prepued in oil, Is so coMpound, ed that itlis impossible for it to become rancid. FM -BEWARE of all imitations and of all other oil color' s , for tLey aro liable to become rancid and spoiltho brit ter. 121rIt you cannotth get e "imprOve'd" write us to know w.l.ere and how to get tt wit omit extra exPense• • (1) • WELLS, linliARDsON ic 0., Ihmlingt on, Vt. re* DNEr-WORT IS A ,SURE, CURE . , °ft tor alt ..cliseases of the 'Kidneys and LIVER —.nu It has enpoifte action on-tbisinost intpOrtiult organ; enabling it to throw off torpidity and inaStion, stimulating ,the healthy seeretiou.of the Bile, and by keeping the bowels in free condition, eftboting itaregular discharge. Malawi .0, If you aresuffering front, II GI• insiarie„havathe ObiliN aro bilious, dyspeitio, or constipated, Kidney.. Wort will surely relieve and quickly oure. • in the Spring' to cleanse tbe BYetern. every one should take a:thorough. course qf it. 4.1- SOLD filf.DRUOCIISTS. Price el. tfi( l•• ••1, e ••:k. .$79 A WREN.. $12 a day at home easily limit o Coetly onfit frpe. Twirl er0o., Augusta, Me • • ltiE it1170i1SNlO - Ift/IAY BE ENTIRELY CURED .1.34- in a short time by Using one of • • NORMAN'S ELECTRIO BELTS, without any fear of injury. • Try one and be conviuced. Q11[Y.A.ILA.N7EM GmThrin$p Otroulatt and Consultation Free; • A. tgOBMAlst, 4 WSW ,street Met, Toronto tr teFIEUs' F1E1011 49011STA clir VIGOR Oteliki a teara on tho omoothrd then in 20 rtnyg money refunded, Novor fni le. /len t. teeolptor60o stamps or skit or ;.3 peeknges PM BOVOAVO of cheap initiations; none °war gonnine.' Pond for eiroblar. Address, T. *iV..SAXE, box 22,, Wan..w, Ind. El. A. $ft 4.0 :,30111 Per day at home Samples wOrth • Hi a 46)Prea ifria Son &Ron Portland Me THE WILLIAM8 EVA.1?OR-Ar.COR,1' for the preeerVation of all kinds of fruits . and vegetables. alanteactured. (y 13 n. kJ. IA, fitirOUt,BamUton Canadagelid for circular. .