HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe New Era, 1884-04-04, Page 8.A.pril 4 1120$4.
IP We inn&
Oa; Of fibitifialll•
Heard we gladiy, "out of pa,lurning,
When bright Pelle and Blariohe
Chose at last or their adorning
Hues of almond branch.
Blue of iris, gule of roses,
Cross Oare's sable line;
13orrow's marble cup enclose()
ConsolatiOn's wine.
And the low chant, "out of mourning,"
Heralds fresh'niug spring:
'Reath the rugged Moron wind's warning
Crleams her emerald ring;
Silver crown with sapphire eyelets,
Cestua rich with pearls •,
Aoril's jest, deW-washed, the violets
Wipe upon their curls,
Out of mournink 1 From their weaving,
, Sisters of the cloud,
O'er bald de erte, wild storms cleaving,
Bring the rainbow's shroud -
Violet, deep blue, azure, golden,
°rouge, burning red --
Shroud that light and life have holden
For the darkness, dead.
put of moarning 1 Life-long vernal
.Love's "blue. newer " gleams
On the border of •th' eternal
Garment "without seams
And forever " out of mourning "
Snakoloth, eabes, earth,
Drop at threshold of the dawning,
And celeatial birth. -
Among the Dead.
My Sold is sad to -day, I know not why;
Against my will, the brown loaves swirling
round
Carry my eyes down with 'them to the ground ;
I cannot see the blue, unolouded sky.
Against my will, before my vision waves
The hazy draperzof the golden air,
In semblanceof such veils as mourners wear
Going with Pleasured pace about new graves.
Sad eadericeritritighty billows surge .
' Around we like the billows et a sea
Of melody; but still the melody
Taketh the solemn beauty of a dirge,. .
•
I call on memory, and wnuld fain go book
With ber to the glactseasog Of my youth;
But stumbling progress do we make, in sooth,
Because of graves that lie across the track.
Well, it is well if sometimes we be led e.
To sit in sp,rit by some grassy mound,
Or strew some tender thoughts, for flowers,
around
• The quiet resting -places of our dead.
11 1, in truth, might larmy tired head
• Down softly on the grave I love the best,
As if it were upon my mother's breast,
Iknow ray sad peal would be.eomforted. •
• What to Love
(Translated from the German by S. Gale.)
Of thy deep feelinke, oh I my heart
I fain would question thee.
' linciw'st thou this secret? . What is love?
Ahl then reveal it me.
It is two soula last united, '
Bound by a ulagio spell -
It is two hearts only beating
Each thought, each wish to tell."
• Then when is love the purest?
Sity„is that moment known ? '
"Yes, wheat( quite forget() itself,
And loves for love alone:"
• Canat tell when 'tis the deepest?*
Is't when both hearts are glad?
Mau they're still and silent,
ars think thein sad."
Once more -:when is't the richest?
When on bright hopes it lives?
• "No ; when it afore everythirig-
'Tisriehest when it gives!" .
When does it fade ?-for all things fade!
When the spell is snout and gone?
"Never, indeed: though hearts may break,
Love fades not -but loves on I"
FAST LONDON LADIES.
flabits
ot the Princess ot Wales and
Princess Loutoe. ,
(London Correspondent 'Frisco Argonaut.)
•
A fast woman in England is a totally
different creature •.from her sister in
America. What is understood by the word
in Englaud w,hen it is employed to a woman
is an independent manner and lien -posses-
sion not only beyond the bounda"of affected
prudery and straight-lacedness (as. some
claitio), but giveler asmanniehntYle,-,insalL
she says and does, of whioh horeeithness
and .slang,are, the usual adoompeniments.
It does not follow, nor is it necessary, that
she should be a flirt (though, of course, ehe
may be, being a woman), for her, fettucini,
as such, does not , lie in the direction of
affection for the opposite ilex. On the
• oontrAry, .thould there be any love
exhibited. by her one would expect it to
• • be for anotherwoman, insteadsof a man.
In short, though the may be rough and
- Iona., and do thioga that shook one by their
lack of feminine Bottum, and refinement,
she is never Unmoral -that is to say, ao
far as her fastneet is concerned. At all
events, if she is we Phould not deactibe her
want ' of is,
by • the term
fast." .A forward, masculine' woman
Is, I take it, as distasteful to all
men•as must a bashful and -effeminate man
be to a woman. .My objeot only ts to point
out the dietinotian that exists in both,
oountriea ne to the Meaning and application
• of the term.
• WithOut thee° few remake, as an 'ex- •
planatory preface, it would not be believed
when I say that in her Cavil quiet, way the
Princeas of Wales ia fast. • That ie. to Ray,
she ha.a a. good time of her own, end pioka
out all the goodlooking fellows to donee
- Wits at a ball'. Ot 'coarse, I .know . she is
vers dignified and cald„and all.thitt sort of
tbi. g--m-publio.,. She can't well be other,
• wi-e with the eyes of Europe upon her.
Bur in private, when staying at a country
house with a jolly party, it is safe to say
she is as larky BA the rest of them. There
• is -another thing, too, that people seen to,
• • forget when they holdter up as owl an icy
paragon ; 4n4 that le that ehe wears her
gowns es •decollete as an ores bonffe
actress. I know she set her face against
the -sleeveless garments, and why? No ono
Would wait long enougn for an answer who
B&W her arms. • The Princess . Louise
is decidedly test. She talks unblushingly
with men on eubjeots ,whisch are'ustially
euppoaed to come exclusively within the
masculine proving° of discussion, and can
appreciate the point. of a joke whose re.
oital would have delighted peen Swift, or
-4' would make • some • other women's hair
stand on oda. She has a jolly, hearty
Leigh.
• itoiebery's Aultual Sliow • .
'
THE LADIES' COLIVIYMT,
a••••••••nillia.
Dectorationts that tv't11 Make the
House Maitre Heauttfut.
THEI LATEST RECIIPES.
Bay Window Decoration.
A novel decoration is a wbeelbarrow,
ordinary gardener's aim. Fill it with
flower -pots containing. flowers, hiding the
pots with green moss. Round the edges.'
inside AZ a wooden trough, and in this and
all along plant halving creepers and lyco-.
podium; also some ivy, and let thts latter
!all over the wheel. After the' flswers are
arranged, gild the barrow on the outside.
11 18 best to get the dry gilding powder,
Iwo paokages of bronze and four of the yel-
low giltpaokagee, with a liquid that ooraes
for mixing with it. tine a fiat camel's hair
brush an inch wide. When the gilt is
thoroughly dry, varnish the surface with
white varnish and it will retain its bright-
ness. Stand on a bright red rug or mat.
Arrangement ot curtains.
A tasteful way to arrange the hartow
curtains at each side of a hall door is to
make them of muslin or a lace, gather
them at the top and bottom hems the
muslin full. A.boub midway between the
top and bottom tie a ribbon around th
muslin, make a nretty bow and let it come
next to the glass. Tie the ribbon so close
that the muslin will be drawn in at the
• ware, let the muslin hang loosely and
.gractefully, pot in stiff folds. It there are
no other windows ill the hall, plenty of
light will be admitted by this arrange-
ment. Dotted muslin is preferred to plain.
Fancy Basket.
Shallow open basket of wicker -work acv -
e3 with a dear earn -colored satin, tufted.
.Che flower pattern is worked on the ground
88 followa : The centre flower with coral
silk of three ehades, in eatiri stitch, and
gold bronze in overcast atitch; the eepas
rate point rinse and chain stitches with
red silk, and the calyx with rends wool.
The rest of the flower with three shades of
blue in buttonhole stitch, and gold bronze In
overcast atitoh. The nine leaves tendrils
and. arabesques, with etaveral shade§ of
olive and rased& (crewels; -the raised spots
in satin stitch with crimson silk. The
scollops at the lower edge are worked with
brown orewele. Tne basket ja flniehed with
bright ohenile, braided with Bilk pornpona.
The edge' is decorated with 'long taseels
made of bright -colored worsteds and silk.
Tile handle is twisted with satin ribbon
and tied in full bows at eaoh end. The
batket can be gilded, and looks witch
brighter. '
Regime Recipes.
To warms harns.-When the hams are
smoked ready for canvasing roll them in
stiff paper. Cut your brown nought to fit
them, and OW it on with a large needle
and twine. Then -make a Oars% of flour
and yellow ochre, and with a small white-
wash brush cover them well with it..Hang
them up tit dry.
'Snow-Flake Cake. -Three eggs, one oup
and a half sugar, halt-oup butter, half -cup
milk, half•teaspoonful soda, one teaspoonful
cream tartar, two cup flour, 'whites of two
eggs, half -cup of, sugar beaten together.
Bake in jellyoake tins, frost each layer and
sprinkle with grated cocoanut. This is
.excellent.
, Delicious Hot Cake for Tea. -Beat two
eggs to a froth, add to them half a cupful
of sugar. Into one awful of sour cream
beat half a teaspoonful of soda dassolved
boiling water. Stir it into the eggs end
sugar. Add a pinch of salt and flour enough
to make it a thick batter for griddle cakes.
Bake in "gem pans " or ehallow biscuit
pans, and serve piping hot. •
TOR DORROILINO 01101111.41117tent.
Sereardtaary Cato 1st an iltakellek (*art
-A Wthes oak *swam Nor st•iimuo
1.r nom tar,
Mrs. Georgina Weldon appeared in per.
Elll in oupport of ker moton against an
o der made by Mr. Jobe* Mathew in
ohambers, affirming an order made by
Master ream° etaying an action Which she
bad brought against her husband,
Henry William 'Weldon, for slander. Mr.
Wood Utll appeared on behalf of Mr. Wal-
den. Airs. Weldon began by median liar
atatement of olaim in the action, in winch
ohe alleged that the defended (her buss
band) had at divers times uttered words
altinderons to her. Firstly ttete "Mrs.
Weldon is the best, purest, °Wettest wonoosta
alive; but'she ie horology ir ea in owo.
anquence of quarreis in her family."
Secondly, "Mu. Weldon, agenot my wish,
introduced into my house a path of dirty
obildren, whom she cruelly ill-treated, and
ehehen driven me out of my house by
their wireamiog and crying." Thirdly, "
am glad to see that in Rohe of her immoral
oonduot all her friends laws not deeerted
her." She Wag also charged with
irregularity ot lite; and again, Geor-
• gina is a hopeless lunatio."
Weldon then went on to say that Master
France had held that ander the Ant of 1882
ahe could pot' maintain the action against
her husband as she did. not allege special
and on, which she asked leavca 10
• amend her statement of claim, on the
ground that her lonabana had deaerted her
fOr three years and had deprived her of
her property. The barrister who was
against her when she made One applica-
tion laughed at her outright just as if he
was at a theatre (laughter), and BO dida
number of clerks then present, although in
her opinion it was no laughing matter that
a husband should desert his wife and rob
her of the property she had brought to
him. He had deprived betted an income bt
2500 a year and a bowie; and it was to -be
'said that beoa.use of 210010 informality Bile
could not briag her casehoto court.
The Lord •Chtef justice said he must
remind Dim. Weldon there was a difference
between written and spoken words.
Mrs. Weldon said she knew that ; but
she was told that under the new rules she
could not put libel in her statement of
elem. •
The Lord Chief Jutitioe-But this' la not
legal slander.
Mrs. Weldon -Not legal slander. ,to say
that a woman is a hopeless lunatic? I
have seen it so laid down in a book, Then
he says, " Dirs. Weldon is a dangerous
lunatic," and so I am to any one who
annoys me. (Laughter) "1• would give
any one 21,000 who will help me to catch
her to -night -mind, it must be done to:
night." But I have the written statement
of Mr. Weldon, which he Biped to an order
of Sir Henry de Bathe, to commit me to a
lunatic Asylum, and although by law the.
person signing it must haveseen the
alleged lunatic within twelve houra, Mr.
Weldon when he signed the certificate had
not seen me for three years. In answer to
the questions, put in the tonal required,
Mr. Weldon said these thinga ." What its
her religious primed= ? " Answer. '1' So
far as I know, Church of •E °gland."
(Laughter.) "What her reitidenoe?" A.
" Taviatook Howie, Tevistook square."
"What age '? " A. "About 4Q." " When
did she have ' her first attack ? " A.
"Twelve months sinee." " What vies the
CraWie ? 41A. " Heriditary inaanity "-that
Is not true. • " Is the insanity suicidal ? "
A. "Doubtful." (Laughter.)
The Lord Chia juatice-Who appeared
on the other aide? • • •
Mrs. Weldon -Two or three barristers.
(Laughter.) .
Mr. Wood Hill -And I tnia one • Of the m
my lord.' (Great laughter.)
Mrs. Weldon -Yes, and. Mr. Wood nth
says that this station is not maintainable in
tort, aa a has no relation to property ; but
I say that a woman's reputation 'is her
property. •
The Lord Chief justide-I am afraid that,
we cannot construe the Act in the sena°
you-would-wialos--it-doennotrrelatesto-ohar-:-
enter. I are say, Mrs. Weldon, You have
read Shakopee° ? • '
Dirs. Weldon -I have, and I have got it
here. • I will read the passage:
Whoiteaniray purse steals trash; 'tie something,
•
'Twas mPitnbein, gl;is hie, and has been slave to
• • thousanda.
But he that filches from ine my good ni&se
Robri me of that which not enriches him,
But makes me poor indeed.
The Lord Chief justice-Yes-"thathot
enriches him."
Weldon --Yea 1 -Ile took away' mY
money and . ooy house, whiob have made
him very rich. I only wish I could goes%
so easily, (Laughter.) . •
• The Lords Chief Justine here reminded'
Mrs. Weldon of the provision of the Act of
1882, declaring that •except is aforesaid
"110 husband or wife . was entitled t'to sue
one another in tort." .
Mrs. Weldon -It would be a very good
thing if all the 'women in England knew
that. (Laughter.) Then I oan not cattalo
bioo in any way. (Great laughter.) '
The ' Lord Chief Justice -Certainly not
in thie way. (Renewed laughter.)
Dirs. Weldon -So that a husband oan.
libel his wife, Or do anything he likes. It
is a • very good thing that, we are not told
this before we get rnarried, or else the men
would be very badly off, (Great laughter)
The Lord Chief Justiots,-Yotir. appeal is
dismissed. • •
•
Mrs. Weldon -Very well; I don't .see
that the married women's property yet is
of nowno good. (Laughter.) • • •
° Mr. Wood Hill -I suppose, my lord the
appeal 'is dismissed with costs.• .
The Lord Chief Justice-14re% .
Dirs. Weldon then retired:-Ztottion.-Stan-
Pudding made of cracked wheat is very
agreeable and nourishing TO one quart of
;tweet milk allow nearly. half a cupful of
tweaked wheat; put it m a pudding .dieh
-and-belte-slowlysfor-two-hours,.titirring\it
several times. If you choose to do BO you,
eariedd raisins and•oinnamon for flavoring,
but most people prefer it well salted, and
to eat with a little cream and stager. This
ie rioe, both warm and cold..
Domestic and Useful.
Never neglect a cold. The attains may
hot seem severe, but a cold is a cold, and
therefore an enemy to be looked after with
the greatest watchfulness. '
15410 INIX.felrY 91111111011EIN
The liveable, Which leaskisei Heaps ma
• Ohs Male Sim.
The chief particular in which the dreatt
of our day erm against 00114113012 oense Is
the excessive 'weights that eloskaotertses 40,
Owing to the onantity a Material now
nod for drosses. "$iF is sold by the acre
now, Is it not?" asken a gentleman in the
days of round crinoline mod diatended
Aids, referring to the qoantity.needed tor
a gown, and the ogre is appintable now,
though eventhe duodecimo editinn of crino-
line known as the orinolette is no looger
known. The stuff is absorbed in occasion-
ally incoherent trimmings and too often
irrelevant draperies. It need e ekill-and
skill is too cooly to be at the command a
any but the wealthy -to produce a 008.
Immo that shall have tbe air of being elabo-
rately trimmed, and yet be light enough
to wear without inconvenience during a
brisk walk. It has been within the expo-
rieno,e ot thousands of Englishwomen
during the let few years, to have chosen a
fabrics selected the style of making, and de-
oided upon the trimming, with the result
of a gown delightful to look upon, but im-
Poesable to wear. Thua arose the demand
for woolen materials, combining wartnth
and lightness, a ,demand which was
promptly responded to, with' the 'occasional
result of disgusting old-fathioned shoppers,
who test a fabric, by its Weight, as well as
by as peculiarlyhorrible way of tryiog to
"sorape a hole in it with the thumbnatii.
Minds open to more enlightened impres-
eions were soon; however, convinced of the
value of these viougnas, Borges, tweeds, and.
other cloths; but, unfortunately, they
• have bad thp effect of encouraging,
rather than discouraging, elabdrant
mings. Thee, the fact remains that for
the million un,duly„beavy drosses are the
rule. It seerna absurd that fonrteen or
tifteen yards ate needed to Make a gown for
'a woman, while about five yards are auffi
• Went to make a great motor a, man. It is
tortunate, in view of this fact, that trained
dressee are worn only at dinner and in tne
form of tea -gowns. The added weight and
• inmate:net:toe of a train, which must be
held in the hand, would render a walk a
penance instead of a pleasure. It may be
hoped th at fashion will never reintroduce the
long skirt for out -door work. It has nothing
to recommend it, even from the point of
view of the dressmaker, who hen now found
it possibla to crowd all bearable trimmings
upon the limited eurfttoe' of the short
dress. When trains first- went out, leav-
ing the feet plainly visible, coquetry
brought them more prominently into
evidence by the introduction of the
high -heeled boot. Thie, in its turn, has
now almost' entirely disappeared from the
walking gear of the faehionably dreesed ;
and there Is even a gleam ,of hope that high
heels may vanish from the ball -room before
Long; and, with them, their reenlist influ-
ence on the dances of the day. The jerky
valets now in so mob vogue, would soon
be consigned to oblivion, together with the
eharp little "tap -tap" of the • narrow,
elongated heel of the fashionable shoe; and
those who realize thati • even ball -room
dancing might be softly poetic and dreamily
graoeful would cease to be irritated by the
sudden swing and the violent onslaught of
couples engaged in- the arduous trois,temps.
Let Bath as theae hope for the abolition of
the • high -heeled dancing -Owe, even though
it be followed by the mournful elegies of
those definient in stature though not in the
-
ambition of preferring 'a tall partner. -
Landon Standard. •
To ensure the cracking of pork being
(wisp and eating short, just before the pork
is done moisten the akin all over with a little
batter, dredge it with flour, and place it
near the fire to brown. •
It may not be known to some housewives
that it flour is kept in• a closet with onions
or cabbage it will absorb unpleasant odors
from them; you may not notice this until
the flour is ocoked, but then you will.
Trish poplin le likely to be once more
fashionable, and hainterest in its manatee -
tore is again instanced by the action of the
QUOIN:4 who haa selected thio material for
the bridal dreea of . her granddaughter.
Princess Victoria, of Hesse.
To Whiten Linen that has Turned Yel
• low. -Take a pound of fine white soap, tont
it up intoegallon of milk, and hang it over
the fire in a wash -kettle. When the soap
has quite melted put in the linen, and boil
for half an hour. Now take it out, having
already a lather of soap and warm water;
wash the liaen in 11, • and then rinse it
through two cold waters,with a very_little
blue in the last. '
Pinottahions-Pretty round pincushions
win be thade in serablance of a sunflower.
Make the &tale, -of yellow "cloth, each one
curled and fastened together like a email
paper bag with the top opened and pointed,
and arranged around a stuffed circular
cushion of brown velvet or velveteen; with
'a frayed row of gold -colored silk sewed
round the oentrer which is studded with
pins. The whole is the size of a large real
sunflower.
• Lord and Lady Rosebery seen to have
been a great Buono at Melbourne. They
were feted by every one. As wealthy
Australians invariably pay this country a
visit every two or three years, Lord•Rose-
bery will, doubtless, have every Oppor-
tunity of returning the hospitality that has
been shown him. He brioga over with him
sufficient parrots, cockatoos, kangaroos,
eta., to establish a small zoological garden.
-London Truth.
Wrassn's Smoortnt VAiE.-4 Biddeford
- gentleman found in bis woodshed a' dead_
weasel with his tongue frozen to an ,axci
• blede. The are has been used in catting
hot in the morning, and the animal, in at-
tsnipting to secure a piece of the root which
adhered to the -blade, had singularly met
his desth.-Boaton Journal.
Buffalo capitalists ate preparing for
another Maid of the Mist voyage through
the Niagara whirlpool rapids, and have
stsitirod a met who is Willieg to risk his life
in making the perilowl pottage for money,
•
Oh; yee, it is easy to oast e gloom over a
man. If we jot want to agonize him we
say: " I out a mighty pleasant notioe of
you out of somn. paper this morning, but
I've lost it." A•.nd then he frantically
wants to know what paper it was and we
can't remeMber, audit drives him nearly
to madness.
In the attaok on Bsoninh the French
forces made. use of oaptive balloona for
observations, heliographs for signalling,
pontoon trains and other tioiennflo re.
sources. ,
Geniuti never rstwa old ; young today,
mature to -morrow; always immortal. It
is peculiar to no sox or condition, and she
is the dtvine gift to Woman no leas than
MAIL
The editor of a paper published in Con-
tra COM County, Canteens, vatints
self as follows : Much as the fabny men'
have to say in in ironical -way about
editors' diamonds and so forth, there are
really some wealthy newepaper men. J.
Gordon Bennett has two yaohts and the
same number ot four-inhanda. Charles A.
'Dana can afford a Pullman oar for, 1113
own special uee. Bonnet owns 170 horses,
soda myself, though this is atriotly coal.
donna, intend to toshinglo my woodshed
before long."
_
WORAN'ita 01711106110(..
Wh" 'bow& 11 is Jrgioust....glaritetit Net 11
spersor.
In the country haute of a ruined demi°,
where witobtalitanKls *aging and entertains
Ment Wnateft sn4,101sh lady 'ttsnetling In
J'apet, I waa a cause ot much ilialsement.
4 number of ladies were nitrite' to meet
ma at afternoon nioe (the name tor dinner.)
They sat Ion their beets Around that litIle
table which X used am *Abair. Mx toot
were steatobed oat beforknie. The gosling
with, as I took it, many apologiee; began
to inspect my boots. • As ber curiosity
was keen, I drew ahem off. AU the ladieo
pounced upon them, and some astheto
asked leave to fit them on. Before doing
this, they caused bowie of bot water to be
fetched, wohed their feet carefully and
dried them by foaming them, which made
the wet evaporate qutokly. As tbey a1 bad
obildren's feet? my boots Were awkwardly
big and more riliculotte than I on say.
The lading next handled my ;skirt and
corsage, and, to askant() them, T , took thatal
off. The petticoats had their Run, then my
stockings, which they did no laugh at,
after them ray buckled gun°. garters; and
lett my Maya. Japanese politeness here
broke down. Every one ebook and cried
with laugloter in looking at tbe stays.
Oue, of the Wise bad pioked up atnne
French at Osaka, (a. treaty port). and ex-
plained 10 me' that. the Ohara wished to
know whether the sta.ye had been invented
to serve as a, cuirass to protect hair Euro-
peand from rude teenor wala it worn as a
penitential garment tn :,expiate, sins? I
sed: No, bats to beautify' the figure."
This sower oonvulaed then. A. stayed -
up woman. affected their impreesionable
and well-edticated eyes as something mon-
''japenese dress
is beautiful, and so easy. There- was yet
another question to be answered. Tnere are,
so fax as I know, neither ()ORB nor goats in
Japan. Children are not. therefore, weaned
until they are nearly big enough to go to
gehapt. I had noticed that poor little Miss
Mite was an object of general commisera-
tion. I did not know tyhy. The re1113011
came out when my stays were being -ex-
amined. They weres barrier beta -teen the
mother and the Ohild, which was 'out off
by them from its lacteal rights. I told
them that we delegated the nursing duties
to poor women and 00WB. 1 am afraid I
was imperfectly translated, for 1 saw that
was for a moment an object of horror. •
Slow Fashions Change. ••
A lady of proniinence in society can
almost start as a fitshidneny freak that
may occur to her. If it te in dram itswill
be slimly copied. Women, as a rule, ate
like so many sheep and must be led. Yrs.
Ogden 'Goole Was the first lady to Wear a
jewelled in at the back of, her bodice,
where the lacing meets at the top. The
pin was handaome and contained some
very prooioua stones ; it was first Been in
its new position at one of theDelmonico
balls this winter. At the next ball two or
three ladies appeared with handeome pins'
attached to this part of the dress, and it
was only a few weeks later that the number
of ladies who Wore valuable pins on this
peouliar opot had considerably inoreased.
And so it is with almost everything that
appertaina to clressi--N. Y. Mail and‘Bel.
prest.
4$ He stood got feet two in hia stockings,
and every inch a man," says an exobange.
Hnn! That m seventy,four inches;
every incra, mato," would make seventy.
four mons This must be the Otte identical
castanet who was 8 "host in himself."-
Tne Judge.
Tho irritation a the German authorities
againat the:United, Statep lilinister at 13er,
• lin seetno to have , died Out. Mr. Sargent
het been invited• to a attire° given at the
palace to -day in honor of the 87tb birthday
of the Emperor. He alao dineand th Prince
Biomarok itt honor of the event.
0_,04e7-
,floWe4e*
LYDIA E. PIN.KHAM'S
VECIETABIZ'COidPOUND.
A Shire care for all PEIIIAIM WEAK.
MESSES, Including Leueorritteas Ir.
reguIttr and Painful Menstruation*
Inflammation and Ulceration of
the Womb, Flooding, PRO.
LAPSUS UTERI/ ace.
• ITTleinant to the taste, eflicacicas and immediate°
effe.t,:,It is a great 110104 preifallnr4eiid�
eaviiii Pain dUrillE isnot and id iiirldar Ported& i •
sttlayesarskrr mosso= rr sow,
istsFou j.nWiti.1001813za of the generative organs
of either sex, it is second to no reined,ythat has eves
been before the pubUei and for all diseases of the `
-IMIOnre BO the Greatest Remedy in the World.
W -KIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Eltlter $ex
Find Great Relief In It. use.
LYDIA E. PrkriliA3VB BLOOD PURIPDM
eradicate every vestige of fitunors from the -
Blood, at the same time will give tone and strength to
the aystem. As inarvellous in results as the Compound.
EirBoth the Compound and Blood Purifier are pre -
parish at 283 and 05:Western Avenue, Lynn, Hass.
• Price of either, $1. Biz bottles for $5. The nompouxut
le sent by mull in theform of omit os of lounge; an
receipt of price, $1 per box for either. lire. Pinkly/3.m
freely answers all letters of ,ineldrY.' Endue S cent
stamp, Bend for pamphlet. ofention thia Paper.
rgr-Drapi.B.Trazrara's Lyra% Prue cure Constipa.
tion, Itillouimess and Torpidity of the Liver. 25 cents.
Jar Sold by all Druggists. -in (0
- England's Necessity:
•
France is reconstructing her navy; Ger-
many ikreorganizing her's ; Buena is fast
streugthening her's ; and Italy is develop-
ing a very powerful fleet. All Europe 10, 111
fact, recognizing the necessity of having
heavily armored ships, fitted with modern
ordnance and carrying trained screws. • The
British Admiralty are not unconitoious Of
this signifinant fact, and the conatructive
programme which is arranged for this
finanoial year .will show that Lord North-
brook and his oollee.gues are also alive to
the importance of increased- expenditure,
rather than retrenohment, in the building
of line -of -battle, shipa. During 1883, four-
teen vesaels were launched for Her Majesty's
navy, twelve veesels were ordered to be con-
• structed,and in most oases were commenced,
and at the ptesent time there are, in ad-•
dition to the number jwit mentioned,
• seven others on ' the stooks, which were
under conatructiOn prior to the commence-
ment of last year. •The vessels now in
progress; some of which are in a forward
state for latinching,.Moltide a sixteen -gun'
soros corystbel, built ' of ateel and iron,
cased with wood, 2,770 tons and 3;000
horse power engines ; a fourteen.gun sorew
composite corvette, of 1,420 tone, .with
engirtes of 950 horee power; ' three
twin screw steel armor -plated ' barbette
eaoh 01 9,600 tone and . engines of
7,500 horse power, to carry ten guos each;
a . similar vessel, but • ot, less tonnage-
narciely, 7,390 torus, but with engines of
greater horse power -namely, 8,000; and a
ten -gun double sorew steel seobnd class
steam oraser,sof--.3,750 tone, with engines
of 5,000 horse power. -
• A Dakota Domestic Blizzard.
The other day a Bismarck gentleman
was coming up from kitanding_Rook, and
stopped 10. 800 a man who livas fleet the
Cannon -Ball -,River. In response to his
knack at the door he heard a thrill, sharp,
"Come in 1" and on 'entering found a
sharp -faced, angular woman sittiog in the
room under an open souttle-hole leading
into the loft above, with_a shot-zin on her
knee. " le the gentleman of the house 10?'4
he asked. " Yes, sir, he air," "Can I
see him a moment?" "No, sir; you
•'can't cute a lnde nor hair of 'm I" "Why
Can't I, madam? I would like to speak to
him on busmen." • " It you Was a dyin',
and Jim was the only doctor in Dakoty, yo
couldn't set an eye on him till he give in an'
talks descent. 4mdiner a white ago he told
me to peso in the apple toP•03, ao' I tor
him it wasn't nose, but oasis um' ,110 seid he.
knosved better, it was Bees, au' I tor him
that w'en he tuk a, notion that a little apple
'easit'd feel Boothin' to his atouraell to say
so, an' he stud )oe'd'have that" BOSS or die.
Than Itord toim I'd defend that axes with
life, an' made a break for the shotgun, an'
he . made a break up through the souttle
inter the loft. • Wien his anuses come t0.
him, an' he gives in that saes is saes,he kin
oum down, but if he makes a break afore
that, off goes the top a his head. Thar
sets the sass, stranger, and thar's Jim up
in the loft, an'_that' the way the matter
etands jist now, an' I recital' you'd better
r000ey along and not get miked inter the
row I" As the gentleman moved &wattle
• hoard her :voice saying "Jim, w'eu you
get tired your durn !colic' an' want this
saris, jas' squeal out I" And a gruff -voice
from the darksome garret responded
"Soso 1"-:Ditmarek (Dak.) Tribune..
• A Wile Murderer's Welcome.
. An interesting ceremony took place at
Birmioghano, Eugland, reoently, on the Ins
onion of the" home -coming" les man
named Hall after twenty yeark penal nervi -
Jude for wife murder. Thousands of
people, it te stated, met Hall at the railway
, station and gave him au enthusiastio recep-
tion; greeting hien with loud cheers until
he was driven off 'no a cab With lois rela-
tives. These tokens of sympathy and
esteem nonst nave , awnewhat surprised
Hall. Wife murder was twenty years ago
looked upon as a rather serious offence,
even *hen adin the case of Hall, it was
committed under circumstances of extreme
provocation.
• , •
. While Governor Hamilton was in his
office at the State House at Springfield, Ills
yeaterday afternoon a pistol bullet was
fired through a window in the Executive -
Mansion. A man at work In the neighbor-
hood said the abot vies fired by a boy who
viaa shootitig at pigeons, but from the faot
that an ocourreuce of the'same nature pre-
oeded it a short time ago there are ap-
prehousions ofs plot to assassinate the
State's Executive.
Very high prices were obtained recently
at a sale of a oolleotion of Burnie works.
The first (Kilmarnock) edition of poeme,
obiafly in Scottish dialect (17E10), fetohed
251. A unique copy of the second and
enlarged' edition (Edinburgh, 1793), with
annotations by the poet, wept for 230. The
original lease of Burnie farm at Ellialand
(1791) went fa 233, and 413 was given for
au imperfect autogtaph letter to Mr. 11.
Aingib. The BUM of 410 was recently
naid at Glasgow for the MS. of ,, Holy
'Willie's Prayer.' ,
The Prince of Wales has an income of
6500,000 year, mod his wIfe 650,000, yet it
is said tb require raanagerpent and moss
• sional spasms of retrenchment to enable
then to ltve within their means,
113 N. I. 14, f14.
• (0 ontinneci) .
CHAPTER U. .
wonderful and mysterious curative power' I
developed which is so varied in its operations
that no disease or ill Neaatir-sarr-poissioly arta
or resist its power, ttndyet'it is
Harniless for the most frail womairoveakesb
invalid or smallest child to use,
t . . • "Patients
"Almostdead or nearlytlying"
For years, and given up by ph—ysioiaaa of
Bright's and other icidney .diseasaa, liver oom.
pia:Jots, severe coughs paned consumption, have ,
been oured. • . ' •
Women gone nearly maul
From agony of neuralgia, nervousness,wakefull- .
nese and various difieases peculiar to women.- •
People drawn out of shape from excruciating
pangs of 'Rheumatism. .
• Inflammatory and chronic, or suffering from•
scHroryluBliapel
• Salt rheum, blood. poisoning, dyspepsia, kid_
gestion, and in fact almost all diseases frail •
Nature is heir to •• .
Rave been cured by Hop Bitters, proof of which
can be found xn every neighborhood in the
known world. ,
WhY da Women Laugh •
• A divorce coo in whioh an elderly for-
eigner souglot to tear !Amon away from a
young and pretty wife, who had proved to
be more ofe tornient than a biasing; walls
up the • above question. He wanted to be
forever rid of her becanse she laughed at
him. Her " siltery peals " tot " ringing
laughter" made life a burden to him, uutil
he finely told ber to " glear avut," and
went straightway and filed s petition . for
a divorce. 'She beamed with emilett in, the
court-rocon, and when the judge asked her
whyshe laughed at her husband 1uopen
court ahe laughed ,and said " I like
to lett& ; I was born to be mem,"
• and laughed again. Are all women
"born that way ?.',' asks the Bos-
ton Globe. They certainly laugh &great deal
more than men ao. It Was a mistake 10 call
them "the sad eisterhood." They are the
laughing sex. Notice then in conversation
ei her with their own or the other sex.
Tnetr faces are invariably wreathed with
smiles, and they laugh incessantly. Is it• -
ha,bit, or is it the • result of a more
-highly organized nervous systeno-whes
the superior agendas conteoeptuously
call an ". hysterical organization" -or lie it
the woman's inborn desire to please finding
expression by owning interested and
amused, or is that a woman really ta
more easily amused than a man? Per,
haps it ia a combinationof all four. At
any rate, it forma as diatinative a bine be.
tween the sexes as any of it oe common
peculiarities which ars supposed to theme.
teriza one sex or the other.
_
Other People.
• From the lciweat th the highest all of UE3
in oar way spend money, and dress and
eat and drink, and ,generally order our
lives, on a scale we thoold not think of
adopting, if it were not for" other people."
The great bulk of our money troubles, and
nearly all the cheating and lying and
wtokedneati in the world connected with
money, which has beet deoribed as the
4, root of all evil," may be traced to tho
love and desire of standing well in the
estimation of ' "other people," of being
thought ether than wa.are, and of being
credited with the poseession of property or
resources - which do' not, 88 a matter of
fact, belopg to us.
• • A World ot Good. ,
Doe of the most ponwarinedicinss now before
the American publio fir Hbp Bitters., You see ft
everywhere. People take it with good affect
It builds them up. It is not as pleasant to the
taste 88 805110 other Bitters, as it is not a whiskey
drink. Itis Wore like the old-faabidned bone.
tot tea, that has done a world of good. If you
don't feel jut right, try Hop 13ibters.-.Nuncia.
• News.
Horses hard at wotk need water Much
1111r/re freqtently than the morning, noon, Or
night plan. If not allowed to dritik between
morning and ntioti they boonoe extremely
thirsty, and will overload their stomach
with water, so that their food will not
digest quickly.,
gneezi Viotoria'a well.known objection to
making poor men peers gave way lathe out
of Lord Tennyson, • Ilia eldest tion io a oletk
in a public offiee.
•
WELLS, 'RICHARDSON & CO'S
IMPROVED
BUTTER COLGR
.A NEWDISC'OVERY.
tar tor several yeare'we haie furnished the
Dairyinen of America with an excellent arti-
ficial ornerier butter; so meritorious that it Met
with great success everywhere receiring the
highest and only prizes at both International
Of -Rut by patient and scientific chemical re-
search NVO have improved in several points, and
. new offer this new_eolor an the beat in the world.
It Will Not Color the Buttermilk. At
Will Not Tarn Rancid. It Is the
•'Strongest, Brightest and .
Cheapest' now Made,
egrAnd, while prepared In oil, Is BO compound-
ed that ft is ire-ossibie for it to become rancid.
re -BEWARE of all imitations, and of all
other cill colors, for they are liable' to become
rancid and epoil the butter.
' . 13-1/ you cannot get the 'improved" wilt° as
to know where and how to get it without extra
exlmIUM ' . • .;
• WEIIS; attorsososs s 40., Burlington, re.
1 KJ '121jY WO R
FOR THE PERMANENT' CUREt
CONSTIPATION:
trylts°thCoensr aintipectruaerlia, 80,623drenvalo reenmteindytbla.°:z;
;
equalled the celebrated Eidney-Wort an a a
cure. Whatever the cause, however oh-id:Inaba 0
(1,1 theizasO ieLtiEhiestromen plitindwyrastvillt maisovvetzwerr:ogingsm:Ato"be.
complicated withconstipallon. kidney -wort
ettengtbens the weakened part* isnd quickly
0 cures all kind§ of Piles even when physicians
and Palre'llifeinyoUtjuhmavveeebitheTer otptilerhued.:141:roist-usbIsasen
PRICE I. USE
0
4.
1
DO ' ELI ; F. -
M H. .DOiri!..AiSb
•. Vi,qTABLI BALF81110
ELI Xi . .
Has stood the test for FIPTY•TRREE
YEARS, and has proved itself thehest
remedy known for the earn, r
Consumption, Coughs,.
Colds,Whbotiing Cough
and all Lung Diseases in
young or old. SOLD EVERYWHERE.,
-Plo 25" anct1100 per lUttle.
etOWN18' ELIXIR
• BRICKMACHINES.
-,1END FOR "Pgr.SORIPTIVE °IR,
CULAR, Price List and' Testimonials of
Brisk Machines arid Fria Proofs We also
make the " hureka Conaluned Brick and Tile
Machine" for horde•Or steam power.
•• CLOSE 80704
•• Woodett Out:
• ,
ONSU PTIONt
1116801 pootte Mime y /or the above dIsetusai ay
use thousonds of cases or the worst kidd arid of meg
standing itavo been cif red,e ed, so 8 tron g Inc NW
In Its efficacy, that I will send TWO 130TTLE3O PRE% tti.
gother with a VALUABLE TREATISE on this distal" te
any,suffefer.. • Pivot:sprees and P. 0. address,
DR. T. A. SLOCUM, 181 resrl St., lien York.
YOUNG MEN 'sail' 8801103onginearing
and earn $100 per month
Send your hatae and lOo, in statirpe to P. Emery',
ungtheer, laridsoport, Cit. -