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The New Era, 1884-01-25, Page 34:ary Q451884. amt Txm. 1.4DIE5' COLMAN, VI/ Dora IlItaittie4 1444E00 100p Wp lekek Dtel$101 ABOUT BABIES- AilD THEIR TREATRAINT, Tite Latent. Recipes -eat -low t BiaePlants. t4unt IXate's. Budget.) Ives. /Keep Epour eitosic. tendo to remove freolitee MA athtten the Akin. , For Sprain..-Batbe with erntoei diluted With water, said heudage with oft flannel moloteneed with the eaves. A- oprained wrist time treated will genit well and etrting'in a few devil. .$) 'Viten peeling onions plena) e pin tightly 1 between the front teeth* Thus prevents the tears fromowning. Peatoalses are easier to pour when pre.; pared in a tin kettle with a epout. A email one oen be purchased for the purpose. It an egg is added to the butter for flour griddle cakes they will be ourprieinglY improved and brown Weedy. Apiece of mattiog neatly tacked down by an outside door will protect the carpet, and will require lees care than a pieoe of oil- cloth. . Frosted Fee.. -.Bub the parte affeoted with kerosene every night. 1Jae plenty of it and sit in front of *moderate fire while applying it Three or four applications eliould complete the owe. To Olean Damealretertaints.-It crimson, wash well with ordinary soap and water, then rinse in clean cold weter,wringthrough a wringing ntiaohine, and bang IP the open air to, dry. • If the curtains are green, use X *great deal better to have musk) in nig , Dict—itome-Made 011isio—thall al- most anything aloe. Neap up your practice at 'the piano even if Bowe tither things do' get less attention than you with. Prentice eve*, day. In out sprightly contemporary of the Reformed Church, Aunt Marjorie save that one hour a ,.day coresolentiouely • given to the piano will keep the beautiful accomplishment .which you acquired by so many asters of study, and devotion. You are a busy metron, with Bemoaning to MI in all the flying moments, an you are con• tentedlY letting your music go, new that the children are taking leseone, The girls mono- polize the piano, and they are learning to play beautifully, and your pride in their: •progrese ia very great. Nevertheless, it ia not well that gide should excel their motherti in everything. It is not welt that • girls should have the drawingaoom espect. ally out apart for their evenings and their gueste, while mother pits upstairs or in the basement. The pothers of to -day are quite too prone to tetire • into the shadowy Jierikground, leaving the young ladiea te queen it in the fob* , We always like to . visit a house where the. mother keel* her true place ot gentle pre-eminence. We . think mothers would leso frequently elip from tido, it they evade, very little,,more . about not becoming. rusty. A woman. , shoolarownore and More charming as she, g%. ' a hi lite ; also -Mier of resourres, and, r 42 r than lose any acquisition once gained,4e ahould add to her stook as She approaches middle age. One hour a day, • dear madam, will enable you • to surprise your husband, its he tilts • beside the. table in the evening, with -the 89,1110 sweet old melodic* which you used to play to him in the long' ago. One hour a day will se give to fingers and brain the power and magi° of harmony, that you will be able to play &terry littliipalliee and jigs for the &Haven's entertainment, and to ' exit:Wise; to their delight and profit, the ambitious performancee of the °lacy ones. * What else will one hour, set tweet ,to a • epeeist use, anotimplish? It• is quite safe tosaythat, devoted fitithiiilly to the read. ing of good literature, it will broaden your outlook upon the world, and add to your interest in society and conversation. It is a pity that really welhedune,ted women, at. home read so fewriolid books. Want of time is usually pleadedinatom, whereas ' it is quite so probably,want of inolinatinar or indifferenee toreadibg, which lathe true reason for the. mind's lying follow; Onw hour a day, religiously dedicated either to • good similar books or to devotional books, will In the course of a year tell upon your mental life in many ways. gall instead of amp. Silk trimmings must be removed, as they owlet beasleaned. One of the moot prolifio causes of deAle. meet and offensive odors in kitehen sinks and their outlets is the presentee of deonY• nig grease. Thio comes from the conrityinge of nettles in which meat has been cooked, in the dioh water and in the peep. The grease lodges in every orevioe said, catches* every obstruction. A remedy may be toned in the use ot the common &Malice inatead of soap, aqua ainmonia in washing lawns and laces, and washing soda in cleaning dishee. Theee'alkaliee prevent a gelid iieltP from forming.in the sink and ite pipes and neutralize all effeetB of decomposing fat. Lemon Sponge. - To one ounce of isinglass or gelatine add one pint of cold water ; let it stand ten minutes, then dia. solve over the fire; add therinds of two lemons thinly, pared; half * pint of loaf sugar and the Juice of three lemons; boil all together two aniontes ; strain it, and let it idea unfit nearly cold; then add the Whiten of two eggs well beaten, and whisk ten minutes; then tt. will beemite a con. sietenoyof epolige; Put it Iightly into a glass. dishimmediately, lemming it itt appearance as rooky as possible ; whisk At in a cold plane, and add more sugar when the lemons *re fresh and acid. " _ Bilk no Food tor Children. Wherever milk is used plentifully, there the children grow i into robust men and women. 'Whenever the place is usurped by tea, we have degericaboy swift and certain. Dr. Ferguson, who has devolecl a large share of his attention to this subject, has 9 ascertained, from careful measurements of numerous factory children, that between 18_0auL.1.4_y.eare-abeygr0vanearlyfourtimer .-- - as fast on milk for breakfast and supper - as on tea and coffee -a' fact which shows the benefits of proper diet. No diet is no suitable for growing children as well-000ked oatmeal, porridge) and milk. Owing to its easy digestibility it 18 of equal 11 benefit to invalids, and more especially dyspeptics, who often regain healthand piok up flesh at avironderfully rapid rate on • • milkier milk and good bread. Good as • cow's-milk-is-for-ohildreirandliiiialids, the milk of the :goat itt much better; and it often happens that persons -will thrive and grow strong on the latter, who could not digest the former: For this reason, goat's milk is lerg.ly prescribed by thejacutty, and would be more so if it were more plentiful. Dr. Pyo Chavaao seems; "Tho finest, healthieet children are those who for the drat four or AVG years of their lives are fed principally upon it. lie else states that awes' milk is more valuable, for delioate infanta; goats milk for strong HOW IUMLWAS AWE Mr, Hickson Inserviewest as to the Lobs Accident, TUI MAT iteettlie , `.4 erorontoWerid./ A reporter el the World had an interview wish Mr. lliokeon at the Queen's laetnight. Railwaya, he mead, were run on a system. The system under wbioh the Great 'West. OPENINt 11 TINS Pt OBT,111ist"ri. Some Idea rot the Buoratette , Extent ot • One,i)nsettled .iLiends! . (Battleiord, N. W. Mr. W:771011g, who has had charge- of the public, surveys in the Territories during the present year,'has' gone to Ottawa to prepare his report ot the' season's opera - Awns. Mr. Ring has at different times vtsited 'every Beaton of the country, and is consequently able to speak of the, several centres of settlement from personal know. ledge. na says the North Saskatchewan country is -particularly favorable • 16r set, dement, it being well ,wooded and watered, and the ;toil very fertile; All the Country from the houndery line to the North Saskatchewan, and in many plenee north of ib, and from.the Birch and Tonobwood Hills west. ;to. the foot of the 'Rooky Mountable,. is "ready ler. which can be done with very little delay at any time. Oa the 'south aide of the North Saskatichewe.n the oonntry itt subdivided tem the confluence Of the two rivers up to the Elbow; west of that dome Subdivision is chine on both sides of the their, and again ,alt ivitt and Edmenton.are Several groups of 'townships subdivided, . and besides' these points others *int() laid out immediately,. as it is the intention to keep several partiee ,anatiatteld alt.:Viniterri-Nextrayeatai opera- tions will begin early in April, and =effort will he made to do even more ;thin lots been. accomplished this season. Nearly one hundred and twenty stirvey parties- have been kept busy, which- gleams over twelve hundred men. A greater amount of work has,been done this season than ever before, - upwards of fourteen hundred towndhipe haa, ing been euodivided the greateetadount 'eVer gone) over in Antericsainder One Men - 'ligament. :Perhaps the ,reation of so muoh work heating been done was that the 'parii teal were enabled to go by rail within 4 few miles Of their Work inateadi of having! to Lravel long diattences in oarte. The Section of country this : year surveyed extends from Moose Jaw • and Tonchwood Hills to Calgary; and from the third.'base to the ninth ocitreation Hee and mOsi of the townships which have just- beeu Bur. *eyed will he placied on the market next summer. : • ' • It will• take at least threayears, even it the present rate of nrogreee, to °complete the natty& ,Vevi ,,people, Air. King says, have any, idea of the -extent of the terri- tories, From Winnipeg to Ednamitorils thoneandimilefil a thousand Mita north,of• that itt Fort 01mm:en, it contre_est ot the Hudson's Bay Otiinpanyl, tnilee north of thet the Maokenzie -rivet floe into the Artinsee. • : , • ern was run was the result of years of experience, and it had been graduelly ifrintrived and altered as experience mtg. geeted. Men were fallible, and in dealing With them Or with sooidents of this kind regard must be had to humtan We learn by experience where things tem he improved. But it io only after Meters deliberation and expetience that our ruleet are changed, as under the circumstances it Boinetinies happens that an alteration may end in confusion rather than improvement. Nothing 0)114 be olearer, it agents: to me, than the working time -table . and the rules. noder which the Great Western Os operated. "The World the other day, I noticed; Bald the Great Wept= had been fused into the Grand Trunk and that The s.00ident would not havo ilk:1;0110d had the Western re - is not a sininaginleeorifffacesr°oPna.thateeekirie4aQOATr.Tehaeterren diviuiou that lusit to do With ithe operating of the line who has been moved from hie post, and there has not been , a angle chaoge ita the regultstions. 11 changes had been made that charge might have been levelled with sowe force against the eemPanY. The 'suburban trains are run for the con. venience of the 'people Of the suburbs, not for the profit of the company. There is one. thing lett sight of sonietimee, and it is - this that the suburban trains both here fain the neighborhood Of Montreal wen startedto puppy a felt want tiu the -part of the people intherespective localities. It the officers • of the Grand Trunk con, suited their own coo.venience, and perhaps the interests of the contpany,they, would' discontinua these trains, which are not money -making, and' are a source of ninth trouble, and requireaergreet deal of pains Id working them; but I personally felt that• • in the neighborhood of Montrear and no. doubt tlie late manager of the eked' Western similarly thought the' same with regard to Toronto, that au& a service Was required. by the people in or neer theoe °Mee, and so gave MI. People oleo are- apt to lose sight of the fact that if yon,eall ter this and that additional' convenience in toonneotion with these: trains; it becomes impossible to-,giva euoli•--a-servioe on the termi under whichit was first given. ,As it is the trains' ire a great convenience to thapublie, and of no peemniary bedefite to the company... Ail to GoVernment or any. body inquiriag lute the twoident, ..the Oorn- pany has no, objection whatever. Are to a settlement with the representatives or those killed or injured, whet we would like to do is to see tioniebedy looking after them with whom We me deed, and deed' with them in • a. fair „and proper ispirit. The Greed' Trunk has been .Workiog at double tracking its line for the lasts three or • font yeare, and are are looking forward to a double lino all, the way • between Toronto . and ,Montreal. Perhaps the company may ask for legislation this nom - hag session ie that direction. , And While • tweaking of double tracks that reminds me a goad deal has, been said about the so - culled °atelier,. trip--upi the Grand Trunk ,and down by the. Great Western. These Very Circular trips do iu a measure give the benefits of a adouble tree*. We send as much as poesible Of our. threu li.bound western traffie over the Grand Trunk oe northerly line, and have the east.braind traftny Come deign by the) Great Western. This avoids an iminenee number of traini. ierossing one wither, prevents tnany delays and therefereileSeette the time of the jour- ney (a mater of .great leoporte.nce) and. le consequently anneh easier on those who operate the lines, on the train men, the 'switolimeri; eta. The northern grade is the easiest to olinity and therefore We send the -weatbound freight, which ie thitheaviest, over,that road. Of metres there id a cer- tain expouot Of head and the ,passenger traffio on eaoh of these rinse which has to *go in beth 'direotions, but this system of oirdula tripais pritotiOollyttnd efficiently • tt.' great step in the direction of double - tracks. • CXVIC Atisiam oAstiemar. Ilfew the (great Mallen Interregional to Bove _ Oa Thursday evening, at half -past n, the cierneowall vestry met for the niirPeee of electing^ rate collector. 'There was a ft* meeting. Kr. goild moven the adoption ot the report of the committee ot the whole Board, whioh Mooted five can- didates to be placed before the awry. Mr. Goode moved that the name of G. A. Potter,. churchwarden ot the parish, be added, and atter some technieal fencing the Chairman ruled that the name of Mr. Potter. be added. The prowess of the dieousoion up to half-Paet lf! p. mwas interrupted, by a great many unseemly scene*, Dlr. T. 8. Jeenings who aware against the candidature otlilr!Potter, alluded tothe proximo of the vicar of the parioh, who, he Raid, never attended tbe vestry when the sanitary condition of the parish, the homes. of the poor, and the, cholera outbreak were being ditemeeed, but pereistently attended to vote for the churoliwardep. Mr, Kelly-" To emptied jobbery and corruption." The disouesion was continued amid greante and hisses, brayings, and applauee, intermingled 'vitt' cries of 'Shame," "Disgraceful," "Lie," and other expreeeions. Atter the suppliee of sand- wiehes and honor were brought in Mr. 1.eyone, amid slum% and laughter, called the Chairman'sattention to the fact that the whiskey bottle was being remised mond among gentlemen at the other end of the table. The Chairman-" I • cannot prevent gentlemen from introducing any food or drink which they thigh At to consume into the *vestry hall. 'Later on Mr. Osborne said the leader of the opposition in ,the vestry was atteMpting to " =ear it grain. yard. (Laughter, and shouts of "Sit down 1 ") Mr. hfortyn• said if Mr. Ross was any., Wherwelse but in the Vestry hall he would Anook him down.. ' (Loud spelausei) Mr. Brighty-4 trust the Chairman can DOW see the effect of allowing the whiskey bottle to be passed roiled during the die. mission. (" Ilear,laisar," and °beets.) Mr. Rose-Mortyn is half drunk. Mr. Othoree-What of that 2 Lord Brougham drank twelve bottles Of wine before he made his maiden speech. • Mr. Maggire-And• 5‘ the Voratiloue Vestryman" ate three •sausages. (Laugh - 01108. Only iittie Ivbt. ' ' A. little baby -only a little baby 1 Gnly Ah, well, nobody knowe what a little baby can be but it woinani. What comfort there is in the towel of its soft he:nd-the heed that does not yet knew how to reach for what it wants, and hi no larger then it little bird's clew. How happy the little headinalies the breast it lies on 1 What it charm there la in it, wind a joy I Its bath, the laving of its tiny limbo, the dressing it in . soft white things, wrapping it in oozy shawl, putting the toes into the tinktiooks. Its sleep, an it lies under its' canopy, its wakinwrni, and rosy, and hungry. The _way_ Which it first a takes nonce " of the orange or the bubblej Oh, all these things fill a woreartai heart if she is a real woman. She forgets her interest in everything else, and hvel to be it mother. And, oh, the hopes thirtjatihte up in her heart, the dreams, never to be realised, perhaps'but just as sweet for all that. Next tothe young girl's' love•dreams come a young mother% dreams over her baby. There are so many babies, men rib not know them apart. They believe) that all babies cry alike, whereas a mother knows that herown baby has a softer sob than any other woman's. There are women who never had any 'Mandrel:4 who think it " graceful to be dragged down by a baby' But mothers laugh at them. There is hard work, there is °are, there are vigils, and much weariness; but theta ie it baby te love to pay focal all. To liaise Plants,ILlady,whose heautifal plants aro. the delight of her life and the envy of all her acquaintances, revealed the secret Of her success._ The soil is, she says, about two. thirds good garilext....soil, and the rest 18 1 sand. It is kept?Iightand 100130 about the roots; they art watered as they Appear to need it, and notaeoordieg to any pertioelat rule; but their chief reason for, their won. aortal growth and bloom ite thie :-,"When any of the 'twee wither and ball,intead of poking them tip and throwing there awaY. I, make little rolls of them and tuck them dOWII In the earth, arid let them decay ; and this is the only fertiliser X have ever used. This, phe kidded roodeatly, seems to be nature's way. And the Pante that have tbe afternoon sun only Vow and rival those that haVe the inOrning's sun." „ 1010ititatie /Wangs. A little baking oda placed upon a hut) will open remove the fever.' • Lemon rubbed oil the) fade and „Irandel estrexttna WIX414. (MIN who Phial Atct ittg Gentian Tralltegir-0 Conecience-dirlento 01141,1. Nearly two years ago a farro-hand aerea a ohoPhorfl in one of. the distant pm:1140e of Germany. The murderer, in 'order to escape the wrath of itietioe, fled te &aerie*. Last September he sought atill was given. work by Baptist Deueter, it farmer living near Hawley, Pa., but the realization that be was a murderer and the fear of beiug captured and Sent balk to the BOW of big -crime - en -prayed -WE- bin miud that hie actions livetei the comment ofi Deusterai family. AII efforts to ascertain trent him the °wee ot hie eingular actions were unencoessful, the only reply to their in:midge being "1 have, had agrcat. sorrow." The other day Me. Dimmer Bent ' the young man to a neighboring house on an errand. Thehired man knocked on the door of the_ houee, andit wee Opened by lady. The man stepped inelde, the lady threw up her hands, and, staggering back into a chair, exelointed German , My Gad ! the man who killed the shepherd." The n3an turned t)ale; but quiehly gaining his composure, Instantly trot:waded his business and departed. The next Morning hia body Was found hanging to a beam in his room. 'The neighbor's wife called soon afterward and told the story. She watt in Germany at the time of the murder of the shepherd, and had min the younrmurderer very often, but never knew his name. Soon after she left Germany tor the fatatee. She never forgot the face of the murderer, and instantly recognized it on the moming of their meeting. (SWIM utaaiden; Ntah4tPeo.1,$880, Gentlemen - 1 offered with "thicket at ;tick headaehe." lietiralght, female troubles, tor years in the most terrible and excruciating manner. Ivo medicine or doctor (meld give inc VMS; Or aurorae anti! I used Bop Bitters. "Tbe itret bottle Nearly cured met" The second Made me as well and strong 30 when a child, "And I have been 00 to this day." My husband was an invalid for Monti PDX With iierioas "Sidney, liver and Urinary complaint, Pronottneistliv-Botitoll'irbearphydeiens,- "Iniltizahler Seven bottles of your bitters cured bint end. ' know of. Mad " Urea of eight perilon0 " Itt EtY mdgiabOrhOod that have hems saved your bitters, And many more are using them, with area benefit. . " They almost • DO miriteles?" z stook A. initA119 NWT Tiny be taken eA liver and bilious disorders with D. R. V. Piercelo " Pleasant rorga- tive relleto.” Mild yet certain itt. opera. tion; aud there is none of the reaction ono- oequent need takingHevere and drastto cathartics. By druggists. Mauy speak the truth when they 'say that they despise dollies and preferment, but they triEtitn the. riches and preferment • ,Posoeuted by ether men. •• "'W031Aal AND Ulltt DISMA.S1100, is the, title. -of an interesting treatise (96 pages) sent. post- paid, for three stamps. Addiese Vi orap's DIMNSABilt AtillOCIATI 810, ° Alen do not go out to trieetinoiefortsne as we do. They te ve it: and we -we. tiiirine tt.-Mme, &vetch:vine. Par. Osborne -Which you know to be a — lie. (Shouts of " Chair," "Order," groins and roars of laughter.) ;Mr. Mortyn said that Mr. Ross had threatebed to retitle his assessment if he did not vote for it certe.in candidate. Mr; Ross denied this, and said the rea. son Mortim went over to the other aide was because he (Hr. Ross) refueed to turn the mangle in fderayna-.-.back--parlor- ,-- (roars a langliter)-and it Mr. Martin was , not careful he would stop his outdoor relief. Mr. Illortyu-You dare not do that. A.fter a sitting of six hours the debate was ;adjourned. On a -division by the narro* majority of two. -Pall gall Gazette. • , . Wily to Lir* on sixpence, si Day. • •Mr:.T. Allinson Writes to the London Pities an give the moult of some experi- ments which be hes juet made' with the purpose of solving the difficultyof feediog the poor in London., The ory is that food is so dear that thb poor. cannot live. This is only true, Mr. Allinson says, if they want luxuries. ' On' plain and wholesome fore they can live very cheaply. This. the writer proves by expetiraents that he hag niede in his own cam. A Month ago he determined to live without 'flat& of any kind, 'milk, butter, egge. oboes°, tea or ooffee. Alter it month his weight had ire creased patinas, The following' passage explains the diet, whiottit cost mxpence it day: "Breakfast misdated -of a basin of porridge, made from a ralittUre Of oatmeal wh and wheat meal, ich I found more palet. able than either singly. Thie usually ate with bread to ensure thoroughlnealiveAkin. Then cable bread fried in retina cotton: seed oil or fried vegetable haggis; for drink I had woup of cocoa or fruit syrup With warm water and sugar. The cocoa used was an ordinary oat With plenty , of • starch in it, whioh make* think drink, and no inilk is then required.. Pinner consisted Of a thick vegetable soup.and bread, potato pie, savoury pie, vegeteman pie, vegetable) • otevr, stetted rice and teioaatoee, etc. For itt seciond echlree I hod bread, plum pudding, Steered riot! and fruik baked sago, tapiOeit and applea, etewed prune% lige, resins and bread. Tea ineal consisted of bread and, Jam, steWed fruit, or, soine green eta, as watercraft, celery, tomatoes, etc. I had only three meals a, day, and frequently, .When X had only two, and a oup of cocoa. and a bisonitlor supper," dISS111 It ill *ND Tull coax.. • PretICheif Who i Thinks a. Biblical Character 'would have been a Good • itgodorn specalgtor. • • A ReferringAo 'Joseph's great adouniulation of grain and provisions previous to the famine in Egypt, Rev, Xt. Newton, Cr New York, said: "Let us not blind our eyes to -the fart that this policy of loSerh.was a gigantio corner in grain, planned .and ear. rieif out with pitiless severity, by whioh ,whole people were entrapped into serfdom, their refit estate and personal poliseesione made the property of the king, and a crush- ing tax laid in perpetuity upon a nation, By 'malting • vast provisioes for the pro., longed famine -which he anticipated he wait- enahled,*hen itroet in open the people, to carry out measures at it sweeping &area- Aer. His superior foresight placed iii*hie hands' • the absolute necessaries of life, Which the oterving.people were compelled to purchase from, him on hie own terms. After their money wae exhausted the poor people • ported with their cattle,' getting bread in exchange for their. horses ' and , flocks,; Cattle and hinds. 'When the peoplo. realized, titter the danger from starvatien wtt.9 crier, that they were serfs, their discontent became intense. A gigantic • 1 system of eviction was carr e 0 t, 0 . VOIN4VNIS. less under the:forces of 'the army, and the —7 • population of. the provinces were. mutually A Uellc Bonaststic illoPetwent with a Interchanged, thus breaking up the old ties ' • Earth =had* • - And We sensed freedora that roots in the The daughter Of s:Ohelmsford 'farmer 'Pntertial homestead. . A tax of a fifthiof the named Nelson is s&id to have -eloped with a produce waafixed upon the land xn per Role nalned Tileski on last Friday night. petuity. I have nodoubt that this is a Tileetki had 'been in the elaiploy'•of Nelorip record of it real historical revolution, and, in as a Zarin,. hend, and Became infatuated fact, lust such aooial changes have been with the girl; whoher father had'aiselitred, historikWrialn eln many countries under Was to wed one Mdee .lo auson. The girl's similar pressure. Land eerfdomlias gene. decided preference for Tileski so enraged rally arbien'in this way. The pair have in her father that he ordered Tileski from the tinies of distress sold .themeelves for bread, -howler and threatened to horoewhip Itini to the rioh_end the great. :Let us face, the; should he again pa in an appearance. The ugly fact. that Slavery, serfdom, villeinage next native watt itt disaatrous attempt by the -the various fi forms of humau bondage lovers to' elope, whioh was thwarted by•the have usually arisen by ouch statesmanship wary farmer, and the -girl Old under and financiering as Seeeph'e,Letue face the ' uglier faot that the social eystera of Europe • Young men or middle agegi ones, suffer- ing from nervous debility and kindred weaknesees, should send three stamps for Part VII. of World's Dispensary 'Dime Series of books.. Addreos „Womes Dis raNSART-IEBT-OiL'AssooinloN,13uffalo, N.Y. The hog, or at least the pig, should be protected, bece.uee he io, ate Elia says, a. weakling, a flower."-N.Y. Sun. - 9E1HE STOMACH •AND ITS DE- 1. rangementsare the cense of thoSil old lingering convplainte that so commonly under- mine the ,constitution and impair the general health, When the food is not digested,aand 'assimilated, ,the blood headmen impoverished and incapable of nourishing and repairing the tissues, and diseases of the vital organs, spinal affections, nervous . derangements, eruptions; ulcers, irregularities, and exhausting discharges manifest themselves, according to the constitu- tion aol habits of the individual,. Dr. Wheeler's perapound EMU of 'Phosphates and Calisayai containing active agents of the 'gastric juice, and elenaents of pure blood, is obviously a physiolo- gical remedy for dyspepsia, and has prated to be the beat,preparation known for its cute, • D. L. 4 KIDNEY -WORT FOR THE PERMANENT CURE OF CONSTIPATION., . voter disOiselki so x3revalenthithis eon* tr7Aff nstioatIon, and no hOlittedybee over equaled the celebrated Xidney.Wort se Mil% Whatever the Cause, however obstinate the moo* Able rerned7V1/1 overcome it. p1L,ES. strengthenS the vireakenecipartaaa. quickly MORO daldindO :non oven. when vhysiebine end medicines have before foiled. it- war you have either of these troubles (J8g 1 K. 1 ON EY - Druggists Sell RT -*We Often do raiood by our sympathy Wm by our labors. -Canon Farrar. . • ; Tu clewing allies, lookto' their .power as • well ail t dir will to aid you." In choosing it —lefaedy for bowel. liver and kidney diseases, try, ' I.Cidney-Wort, and you will never regret it, . If you are Milijeot :to ague you must be sure to keep your Hirer, bowels and kidneys in good free conclition,.kWhen.sp, you will be seta from attacks. • v - Epitaph for a policeman: • He sleeps .his last sleep. ; sit:Wrings' and' ion garments can be colored' successfully- with the Diamond Dyes. Fashionable whirs% Only. 100. look and keyaine,- however, managed •t(I4 communicate to•Teleillit, by notes dropped from her window at night, through the Medium of *Which a plan to elope was laid for Isla Friday Meat. • About 9. o'clock on that evening the .young lady feigned a violent hieltriasa, which -caused her father • to drive to the 'village - for a doctor. Immediately on i his departure oho took a satchel and hurriedrf left the house, roeetieg Tiloaki on the read with a horse) aud sleigh, in , whioh they started for Lowell tek.be married. On the way their had to pise through the village to *blob her tether had gene ler the dootor, and had nearly reached there when a bolt in the sleigh gave way, and they wets unable to proceed. While trying to repair damages the termer owooped down on :thein on his way home, and, reooguizing Tileski, jupi peel from his sleigh and attacked him, • Tileski was too min* for buni, however, and soon had him down and bound with the reins taken from his bottle. Atter wrapping the old man up in buffalo re,bee, they left him in the snow, and, taking National tearre,• contitued on their way to Lowell. On the • road they met the rival lover, Job:limn, Whom.they informed that Farmer Nelsen. was waiting down the road to -rise .him 00 urgent business, ;ohne= soon found Nel .60ta,.9.na, relocating him, both started for Lb97011, but arrived there too late, se the couple found a stiffing paracin, and had ,the knot securely tied hoot° Nelson's arrival. -.Anton Herald, A. tratap who had been given, a hearty mealin Nathan Tailor's bens° in one of the deep cuts at Turkey Rill, Pa., hurried back breathlees half an houtlater And, gave the family Warning of a terrible ono* elide that was moving down the hill behind their barite. A few Valiiables Were taken etit jUst before the *avalanolie with it nighty rOar swept over the halite. • (soon to become ours also) rests upon a monopoly of tend, which, as it 'matter of history, has been largely built up after the methods of Joseph.": Destroying nith la the illble. The Rev. R. -Reber Newton is stilt -11nggintraWity at the Pentatenoh. Reworks bard to make out that Moses did not write the hooks, but cannot tell who did; perhaps io dif!erifiat limb, in different eget, and summed up in the work of three great editors, each of differentideas, viewii and style, wheats names have goad into utter oblivion," Pretty much everything of •the hietorical kind in the books he Makes out to be a Myth, an allegory„or it fragment from the lost annals of 8013213,- neighboring Syrian people, The first ohapter of Galatia itt " a simple but sublime . poem of the dawn:" The lives' of the pa,triarehe were made up from traditional . and legendary accounts written long after the age it -which they lived, and, nt that, were probe. lily not the liven'. of individuals, but of the tribes or ' elan& Sta eo on, reproducing inany_of the Views -of (Jolene° and his tribe, tearing down the present faith of the great body of the meat learned and godly Chris- tian minima, and giving little but vague guesses, legends, and unsupported dicta of his oven itastead. Hew a Chtiation. minie- ter, 001 feel that he 'pan best serve this worldly, Benetutl, unbelieving age by go undermining what hottest faith in the Bible there is left, surpaisigle Ordinary ciontpre, hension.*:•Cougregatitoutliet. Wealth, fashion, and perhaps Wit, were preacInt at the Yew York charity, bali, but appeare' that bdoely• illifOrtituately waft absent. •New York Truth; yobleh probably, in WS (Mae, telle it, soya there Was tin Over, abliiiThince of old ladies at the ball, and it very, octant eupply of young °nett. And Truth adds; o.And yap the debut of a hundred oortitilstatdouovia,..premised- at- llialisifietiftir ball. It is evident the New York girle are not to have a chance Until their grandmothera tile," Dead brolar-itA'shattered nautonly. Two foressent*-Bride and groom, • Women detest it jealous man whom they • do not love, but it angers therdwhen a man they • do love is not jealous.-Ifinon de Leneloe. • * Thcise'who deaden ,sensaticai and sttipify the patient tO -relieve suffering 'make a grave mis-.. take. They proceed ,upon the false idea that it is legitimate to procure relief from pain .by destroying physical sensibility. Tlvis meth!! earMed to _the last extrentity, would kill the patient to end aufferino. It is not presumed that Lydia, E Pinkhain's Vegetable porapound will raise the dead, but it -often does restore these who are given up es -hopeless oases. , • It is one of the inconsistencies: of 'life that we throw bouquets tit the soprano, and boot-jaoks at thetem eat: ' • LYDIA' E. FiNKHAssys VEGETABLD 0014101Tht. • Is a Positive Cure ' „ For all these Palatal Ceniplaints and Weakeeembe so commort to our beet fennel° popislatlea. A .31edicino forlfeman, invented by &Woman. •'• • -Prepared by s Woman., •„' 'I'hs Greatest Sealed Discovery Sloe the Varna . gxt revives the dm:taping' eplrlte, invigorates and harmonizes the orenle functions, gives elastioltyl. and , firmness to the atop, restores the natural lustre to the ” ,eye, and plantaon the pale cheek °tummies tho fresh roses** life's spring and early stunraer time. VF-Fitysiclans Use It and Prescribe I( Feeely.11* It removes faIntness, flatulency, &strop an °rade' for stlraulaiti, and relieves weaknees b'2 the stomaoh. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight ".• and thickache, is always permanently cured by its MIN • For the Mire of Sidney Complaints of either, twit • this Compound ts unsureeised. • • LYDIA E. PINIDIAM'S stnoen ranuilints . will eradicate every vestige of Emma from tho , •Blood, andaive tone and strength to, the system. et. i• man'woman or (tad. Insist on having * •• . • . . Both the Compound and Blood Purifier nee prepared •' at 233 -and 235 Westertnue, Lynn, Mass. Price of ether, $1. Six bottles for $5. Sent by mail inthe form ef Pills, or oflozongeSi On receipt of price, el. per box, !or either. WO. PInklitun freely answers all letters of "agutry. Micmac) 2ot. stamp. liend for pamphlet. ., No family should, be vritheut mots. E. IINICHAWS LIVOR Pmts. They Cure eonstitfation, billousnoffe, fandprpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box. hviSold by nil Druggista.-Ztt , "1111)1l7-;."--*"--_1111YrrilliilA." . quiet; cornplete cure, ail anndying Manes, Bladder and Urinary Diseases. $1. Druggists. "Why don't atone women get bald- headed?". Yes, why? •Maybe if one wo- man were married toAnother they would .both be baldheaded before Many years.. Shotivss sex comiNta," Aik fon Wells' "Bough on Oorhilt," lac. complete, permanent cure. Donut, Siws.rts, bunulw et was covet:it. There is no spoil ward, as efail-it its mollified down into aseignment. • • • IXOEGIX ONADOXIGilit4.." adults. Troche ,150, Liquid -Oh At druggists " Snooks a Oonort Cold etielwini, Per children or Arrangeniente. are "already being made far the English Volunteer Review e,t Easter, which, itis expeatadaVill take place at Brighton, although Dover, Portsmouth and Aldershot are, it is underetocid,aniieue to welcome the Volunteers. tlainslinL31, Ohio, Fob. 11, 1860, Love itt never lost, If not reciprocated it vflii Ito* back and eoften and purify the The largest living animal is the retool wh0,1e, 102 feet in length; the emallest, the aineeboid forms. Whales saa elephaute live to the i -greatest 500130 Years: may au% the shortest, only a few hours. The most intelligent* of the lower animate, ahead even, of the Australian buthrten stalOthere, are the ants. I am very glad to say X dove tried itop Bitters, 'midi:lever took anything that did me as ragOli • good. 1 only tools Om bottles, actd...t. would -net IWO $100 for tho good they did We. I recorathedid theft to irly patients, and •got the best resultil froin their ttse. n. unnonit, • That boy.May be a LordlAaYor•before he has done.-Philanthropiet-" Blase Me, imp bey! Why are you sitting there, looking so miserable'?" Boy,--" 1 ain't michible," Philanthropiet-jo You have only one boot, 1 see?" Boy..." Yes, Xi.'stv." Philanthro- pist-" Why don't you wear it, then?" Boy-a'flos Pve loaned it out for a fardela to another WW1 aii hadn't got none." Philanthropiet-J,,Eh/ Olt! Whet for, pray?". Boy.," To kick the nicker With, 'That's htta over there, a, playin' 'opatioteh." . • John El Redding the Rootlet /rut, died ethic* on o nes ayib olve g t 111 Ind.,da ht Wan 108 pounds. It took 114 feet of luta. abit:long, inttlies wide. and g4 inch� E:o. make hia. coffin. *bleb vole feet 2 DN EY -WORT IS A SURE CURE for all dieenses of thekidneys' sail LIVER . ithas spades action oxt this ratan important Organ, enabling it to throw Off torpidity tind inaction, etinuidating the healthy eeeretionef the Bile, and by keeping the bownla'fro? condition, oftheting its regular discharge. seil 03i, if youeresoffering from -.Maio's some nuaaria, have the 4411e, are bilious, d.IsoePtio. orconstipated,Sidney. Wort will mainlyrelieve and quickly cure. . In tho Spring to cleanse the Et/sten:4 every ono should take a thorough course of it. , SOLD BY DRUOOISTS. Price' di. EY'W0RT 11- K E'LLS, FMPROVED • ,B,UTTOR CO L. -QR • A' N EW Di SCO,V E R Y. irloriseveral years wilily° futtutshed this 'airy:non of America with Alt e35e116 t egg- aciaiboiorforbottoil so meritorious that it met with great success everywhere receiving the highest. and wily prices at both International eairTrairs, tirhut by patient and satellite° chendoal re- search we have improved 111 &moral points, and now offer thlonew oolor 30 53* heat -Os the world. it Wili Not COlor the suttermins, "I ' Will Not Turn Rancts It te the " Strongest, brightest and Cheapest Color Slaclei :Dread, whiie prepared in oli, Is secede:mead. • cd that it Is impoSsible for ft to become reaeld. • 9tr•Xliet-fgor coeor0Rg, for tahltcylintarotatrianbaleAroodbefaltomo ralleid and lipoil the butter. r.ric 300 cannot got the ulfaMiovedo. Write ue to know whereand h Arlo got it withoutestra • s, ineitalensos 3 ce., ltdrllnOtfln,it, DO ' LI: • f: •Ar. IL DO el) SA's =sax . I • 'Ras' stood the test for rivrir*T4attaz Yx.tas, and has proved itself the best rented); known for the 6cire of Consumption, Coughs, Colda,Whoopind Cough and all Lung Diseasesin young or old, Sow, Eytaxarlitna 254-, att 1,00 Tot Zottle. euk R - ow*. SDMPTI a I I hay* 1 peonies remedy for 'the above disease; byhti , use thdatiands of mhos of OM *writ hind and Of long standing have been Mita. In dead, to strongis my Pthth. 10 11, efueacy, that I wilt fiend TWO BOTTI.It's FIXES, to., gather with a VALITABLIll 111331183 00 this 01seaso,t4 any sabre. Oleo EX0111114 nnd 1.0. addrese, Olt. T.. A. SLOCUM. tilt Rem+ a, sl.....ei Vork, . . OS, ifi kit% CO 000(G 61 Bil Ilfdtiestiert or ifitieneerian Pen* • Attanship, , At the. SPENCI ft ' IA11 nreettallia 0O 8 . Cat (3' Flab Cirduldrs tree ,. so, i.i: 1- •