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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1897-03-05, Page 22 ruE l\til.11l1lAsl. MIES, MARCII 5, t. -it), BARMAIDS IN LONDON SOME VERY RESPECTABLE GIRLS CHOOSE THIS VOCATION. ° One of Them, a Beautiful Irish Lass, Ex - pintas Why Many of Theist Do So --They Are Looping For Goott :Uatritnonlal Catches—Tides Warded Usually. Meier the title "Feminilte Types In London" Jesse Francis Sheppard gives iu Le Nouvelle Revue an account oP the London barmaids. "They are recruited," be trays, '"`among the bourgeoise as well as among the lower classes. Some of the most in- teresting types can he found in the bars or pubic houses of the west cud, close to the frshionable theaters. Among them are very many perfectly respecta- ble girle, who have chosen the career of a barmaid in order to make a living and, (•FpEcially if they arc pretty, to get a chance to catch a rich husband. "A peltlic house, situated at the angle of one of the principal thoroughfares, is both a gi:thal palace and a aline of gold. It exercises a strange fascination upon the poor country bumpkins who have just enough to pay for a drink, but tho dude corning out of a theater, the coun- try greet:l•orn, the fashionable snob and the frequt utor of the must) hells are al- ways to Le found there. It is among these that the barmaids hunt for a hus- band. If there is one class of London society more stupid than auother, it is that cele which includes the frequenters of the pulite houscP. With a pipe in bis mouth and a glass of beer dr wbisky in front of him the .youug Englishmen, dressed in fashionable style, with _ a slight and elegant figure and regular features, remains stauding for more than an hour paying pretty little compliments to one or several of these ladies. "Tho barmaid .judges her customers by the cut of their clothes. If you want to attract her attention, you roust pre- sent yourself with a silk hat and a hkudsenle cane iu year hand and a suit cut fu the latest fashion. The high hat is de rigneur. Without that there is no possible chance of sucoess, "It was not without difficulty that I managed to get an interview with one of these young ladies, whose intelligence was equal to her beauty. .At first I was astonished at finding so much intelli- gence in au English girl, but I learned that she was Irish, and that explained the mystery. Her father was dead and her mother was left without resources. So she was deteruiiued to come to Lou- don and look for a husband by posing behind a bar in Piccadil:y. "'I was hardly more than three days hero,' she said with an amiable and roguish air, 'when I cr:,derstood why it was that so many pretty Ei:glisli girls don't get h-asbands When they are beautiful, they arty generally stupid. When they are intcliigeut, they are cold, 'masculine and egly. Englishmen travel a great deal ni deal and meet in their ramblings through the world very malty sprightly women, and they do not care fox pretty girls who don't know how to chat with than.' "'Bat in this mixture that cones here to drink and chat,' I said, 'how do you 42istiuguish the men of the world from the others?' "'I recognize them by three things,' •elre said boldly, 'by their figure, by their clothes and by their complexion. lt'or the most part they aro tall and thin, dressed in the latest fashion and have a complexion more or less bronzed. This last trait is the surestsign.' Seeing that e looked astonished, she added: 'Noth- ing eau bo more simple. An English gentleman, if he has a fortune, passes three-fourths of 1.}s time hunting and in other teen air exercise. The chaps who remain always in London baso n paler and more delicate complexion, aud moreover, the e::pressiou of their faces is quite different from that of the others.' "Noticing with what attention I was listening to hcr, she continued: 'Tho gentlemen that I refer to have nothing elegant nL'out them except their clothes, for their conversation leeks novelty. How can a man who understands noth- ing Out hunting and cricket interest an intelligent woman? The eouversation that goes on here in the native of wit makes me tired, but thesegentlonien are the :easiest of all to deceive. They are great big children in everything except sport and politics.' "'But you are always engaged,' I said, 'and it is difficult to got an oppor- tunity tochnt with tort. YOU must el• rencly have had several offers cf mar- rinitt'r' " 'I have been only one mouth here, and I have already had three. Two were from very rich sportsmen, but riches alone won't do for lee. What I am after,' she acidc,d, lnnghing, 'is a title. You know, I Must have a title.' "At this moment the play in one of the neighboring theaters was over, and the public house was invaded by' a crowd of 1nen, more or lessstylish. The beautiful Irish girl kept herself seine - what aloof and only eerved customers that had the appearance of gentlemen. "Well, i left London. A few months to ber'ward, on returning there, I wanted to tone once more my beautiful Welt bar. mid, She watt gone. Another lady was art her piers, and nitro told me thet Mies *Oa had left to marry the seaooacl eon 'rdt A prominent nobleman." ONE OF NELSON'S CAPTr`.INS. A New Yorker Commutated a British Y'.ix•, la the Battle of the Nile. The fifth ship was the Theseus, Cap. tain Ralph Willett Miller. This gentle- man, whom after his premature death Nelsen styled "the only truly virtuous luau I ever knew," was by birth a Now Yorker, whose family bad been loyalists during the American Revolution. A lett to front him to his wife gives au no. count of the fight which is at once among the most vivid and from the professional standpoint the most satis- factory of those which have been trans- mitted to us. Of the Theseus' eutrenco 'Pito the battle be says; "In running along the enemy's line in the wake of the Zealous and (heette, I Observed their shot sweep just over uo. And knowing well that at such. a leo- went Frenchmen would slot have cool- ness euougb to change their elevation, I closed them suddenly, and, running ander the arch of their ahot, reserved any fire, every gun being loaded with two and samo with three round shot, until I bad the Guerrier's masts iu a line and her jibboom about six feet clear of our rigging. We then opened with such efi'ect that a second breath could not be drawn before her maiu and raiz- zeu masts were also gone, This was pre- cisely at sunset, or 44 • minutes past C. Then passiug between her •and the Zeal- ous and as close as possible round the off side of the Goliath, we anchored by the stern exactly in a line with her and abreast the Spartiate. We had .not been many minutes in aotion••with theSpar- date when we observed one of our ships (and soon after knew her to be the Van- guard. place herself so direotly opposite to us ou the outside of her that I desist- ed firing on her, that I might not do ml ohief to our friends, and directed ev- ery gun before the mainmast on the Aquilou (fourth Prowl!) and all abaft it ou the Conquernut, giving up my proper bird to the admiral."—"Nelson In the Battle of the Nile," by Oaptaiu Mahan, in Century. - THE CRANE DANCE. • Vinare the Soubrettes Got Thetl'r' idearer • a Specialty.. There is a dance nailed the crane d^nee, which is popular at the vaude- vilIe houses. At Lincoln. park there .is a real erano which does a crane dance, and those who have seen Ste saltatorini feats say the.bird does it much bettor thau cin the featherless, two legged ani - 1 «. RUM FiLLS THE JAILS. Drunkenness Is Cho ,whin Canso of the Commoner Crimes. i The courts of any country are Kee edally qualified to render authoritative opinions regarding the effect of the liquor business. There is probably ne man who ever won a higher elute in the jndielal circles of any country than the late Lord Chief Justice Coleridge of i:Iugiand. After years of service et the bead of the highest court of Britain, Lord Coleridge (lied two years ago and Wee sueeeeded by Lorci Charles Rune'', the present chief - justice. Lord Cole- ridge was profoundly impressed with the evils of the rum business from his experiences on the benob, and frequent, ly spoke his opinions in the plaiuest language. At Durham in 1877, refer- ring to the drink business, bo said: ""The crimes of violeuco, which in a 1 largo proportion fill the calendar, with - 1 out a single exception have begun in I publio houses and are due to drunken- neas. I think it is in the course of my duty to say that, within shy experience as a judge, and having lived some con- : siderabia time in the world among other i judges and judges of much larger expo- ; rience than myself, it is certainly the cape that if we could male England so- ber we might shut up nine -tenths of the jails." I The next year, at Bristol, he express- ed himself thus: ' "I suppose it is because the fact is so • plain that nobody pays the slightest at- tention to it --viz, that druuienness is a vice which fills the jails of England, and that if wo could make England so- ber wo could do away with nine -tenths of the prisous." - At Manchester, in 1881, he made this remarkable statewent: j "All the c;;ses.that'have come before me, with one exception, have had their beginning me;elidiug in drink." ' i ' Tel? yomrs^latei:i •iii a 'speech at Bir- mingbarn,lee gave it as his opinton : "I?rankenness.1s mainly the cause of i that, commoner soits 'of 'crime, and if 1 Jilglauel could be 'inacle -sober, ihree- 1 fourths of her jails might be closed." Two years before his death, at Liver- pool, ho-nmaile Ibis publio declaration : "At a moderate estimate something like nineteen -twentieths of the crime that has to• be tried "in conies is deo to . drink." This is the cold opitiiou of one of the 'greatest judicial. .minds that (-heat Britain over produced.- • On another oceaeiori Lord Chief Jus- tice Coleridge said : ' e "I can keep no terms with avice that fills our jails; that destroys tho.eca_licrt of houses and the pence of families, and debases and brutalized tho people of these i,,;ands," PROGRESS OFTEMPERANCE. mals. ' Pio purely imitative dancing could fail to gain by being au .exaot copy of the performance of the long necked, epindie legged sand hill craue. Its steps aro not only grotesque, but they are of a kind to wake (ba gravest onlooker Iose his dignity and lang:t like a delighted '. boy at the ciiczi . This Lincoln park . bird at the outset of his deuce is the ' prrsonifhcatinu cf c':iguity. When in the days of his freedom Ile tripped it on his waive sand Neils for the solo benefit of his mate, be did so only in the spring- time, but now, in his lowly captive state, he Glances in and out of reason if the keeper who feeds hitt will but wave his arras and take an awkward step or two to give him encouragement. The crane begins its dance by shoving one long leg, with its claw attachment, straight out in front of his body. Then he lowers it and draws it back slowly until it is within an inch or two of the ground. Then there is a lightniuglike double shuttle, and the other leg is pointed to the front. Then the dance begins in earnest. The wings aro stretched and beat the stir in perfect time to the movement of the feet, be 'they going fast or slow. There is the semblance of a clog; then the sinuous foot and body movement of toe nautch pirl, within a moment tine whirl of the dancing dervish, to be succeeded as n finale by u sort of wild "all hands round," in which every feather of the bird is alive, as it enters into the joy of the dance with an utter abandon. The act of stopping is like the "halt" of the German soldier—sudden, stiff and in- stant. Then the crane marches away to a corner with a still stately tread, but 1 with an eye which appears to reveal em- ' barrassment.—Chicago Tirces-Herald, l English Administration of Jamaica. The English administration of Ja- r Maims is a thing to be thankful for. i '.there are Iaw and order, excellent 1 roads, comfortable house:*, adequate pa- ' }leo, lawn tennis and cricket, plenty cf • manly, companionable English army and navy ofifeers and a governor who is strong, able and genial. At the same t time it would be folly to maititain that tho island is producing a tenth port of the we that is latent in sail and t atmosphere, or that most of the wealth that is beginnitrg to make its ap- : pearance is due to anything so much as to the American enterprise aticl cap- ital w11;e11 are opening up railways and cultivating fruits, Another eeriono fact, though not necessarily alt tuwel- COtnc one,. is that the island's 4,000 Eimer° miles contain a population of 000,000 persons, 25,000 of whom are white.—Julian Ilnwthnrne in Century. Tho Ted carnation is regarded in Spain as an emblem of despair. There is a tradition in Andtainsia that the mower sprang front the blood of the Vir- gin Mary. The distaece between gape Town, Booth Africa, and. Washington is 6,084 ratio+t. The I3abituai .Brinker rr) No Longer Tol- erated la Inosines. After a11;•ltotwever, the thing of maiu importance, is the sicry cf the program of tenrpernl:ce durinet nearly a quarter of a ceutury that the Union has been in existence. In the (aur=e of this compar- atively short period a remarkablochange has taken place in public sentiment and in private conduct with regard to.tho sale and use of intnzioatiug liquors, - There is 110 longer any indulgence for the publio man who gets drunk, nor is it possible any more for a man to main- tain a first class standing in private life if ho is known to be given to iutosica• tion, It is exceedingly difficult for the habitual drinker to prosper in any pro- fession or • to secure a situation in any branch cf bnsiness. Most of the ccrpora- iious make sobriety one of the tests of fitness for employment, and society shuts its door in the faces of those who ca»uot or via not control their appetites. This gain for temperance has brought with i't a general (levet ion of the stand- ards of morality .cud propriety. -•St. muffs Globo -Democrat. Whisky's Yearly Work. in the Cuban army are some 50,000 men. Should it come to pass that Gen- eral Wcyler seizes and butchers all of these leen, what a righteous protest would go up from tiro Awericau couti- nentl Civilization would tura livid with grief and rage. And yet the arum power of the l7nited States hi guilty of the massacre of this vast i:ureLer cf hu- nmall Whigs, and thousauds tnore,'every year. --Exchange. hear:,: It Polson. There is n good deal of talk about passing a law fixing the standard of beer. As the kW/ is poison the law oigl►t to make that standard declara- tion, bave the commodity tutarked with the regulation cross bones and skull, and then let it take its ehauces as a bev- erage with the other death dealers, -- Voice. Mai I►ills One-tenth. DR. Beujninin Ward it,ichardsou, the famous English authority, from a life- time of study estimates that one•teuth of the total deaths of England are at- tributable to the use of alcohol. Apply - lug this ratio to the United States, the deaths due to drink would amount to from 70,000 to 80,000 per year. • ,K+rr....►Y+.wvesM ICE CAVES. t%t ' atiferuta With Their 'Wallet as Vivra as Crystal. Iu Dfocloo eouuty, Cul., is an iuizneuen field of lava covered with a beautiful Calvet cf conifers, wbich is inhabited by deer, beer, panther, lynx, coyote, porcu- pine *met z:tuncrors fur bearing animals whose pelts aro of value to tho•trapper. It was iu these lava beds that the liodoo 'inions merle their stand against the government troops snlue years ago aud were with very great difileulty destroy - P.1. It is here that the ice caves are found, and from them the elocloes drew their water supply while besieged by the troops. One never having been over a lava field can form but little idea of the eiraotie manner in which the ingenious workmen have left tbe products of their l:jr. The only order observed is disor- der of the meet exaggerated. kind, wherein every mass of rock bus .been twietcd or raised ar clr•preseed or arched ever Borne cavern iu a eletrereut weey from that of itsueighbors, The cares scatter- ed throughout these Ian bode are •of very- varying •shapes t:ncl dimensions. Scale are were covert ways, with an arch of stone thrown over them. Others aro itnmeuse chambers souse yards from tho surface, auother kind is sunk quire deeply aucl may be it a series of cham- bers united by n• corridor that opens at the surface, while another kind seems to go directly to the center of the earth without stopping. It is Hero thae the stores of ice aro found, which is formed froth water that filters fit annually from the Melting snows above. Every winter the lava beds are covered 'with ' a fall of suow which varies from two to ten feet in depth. The temperature over this region iu the coldest Weather is often 20 or mere 'degrees below zero, so that any water that might be in the caves is frozen solid, unless tbo caves' months should be entirely covered with snow, which is notoften.tho case. Now, when spring costes and the snow melts the water percolates through into the cold storage chambers beneath and is there congealed by the prevailing cold. It is in this say that the ice has been made and stored •for years. And were these caves acceeeible to market they would furnish the purest of ice to wavy cities for years to ootne.--Popular Science News. • _ sr. PAUL'S ROCKS, A Submarine Mountain In the Middle of the Atlantic ocean. Almost at the very center of the At- lantic, ceean-only a trifle north of the equator and about half way between South America and Africa—is a aaub- ntarine mountain so high that, in_spite of the iimueuso depth of the sea, it threats its peak 70 feet above the waves. This ;teak, startling from its position, forms a laLyrileth cf it lets, the whole not over half a nolo in circumference, kuown as St. Paul's rocks. ;3o steep is the rmouutain, of which this lonely rest- ing place of sea birds is the summit, that one mile from these rocks a 500 fathom line with which soundings were at- tempted by Hess on his voyage to the Antaretic failed to touch bottom. Were the bed of the sea to be suddezily elevated to a level with the dry hand. St. Paul's• rocks would be the cloud Capped peak of a mountain rising in sheer ascent in the midst of a broad plain. They r.re supposed to have been formal by the same disturb: rice cf na- ture which separated the Cape Verde is- lands from Afriett. Troaclierous currents make navigation in the vicinity of there rocks dangerous. A Brazilian naval officer, who passed them on an :English steamer, tells me that the evening before they expected to sight them he was told by the captain that at 5 o'clock in the morning they would appear about five miles west. At that hour the officer went on deck and looked to the westward—nothing bitten expanse of heaving sea. He chanced to turn, and thele, five miles to the east- ward were—the rocks. The currents had, in lets than 12 hours, (tarried a full powered steatner ten miles out of her course.—Gustav gobbet in St. Nich- olas. Tlanning and the Jesuits. Edmund S. Purcell, Who wrote the biography of Cnrdiunl Mourning that was no widely ditenssed and iu some quarters condetneed, wrote a paper for The Nineteenth Century entitled "On the Ethics of Suppression In Biogra• phy," in wheel he makes an interesting statement eonc'trning lbtanniug's Ma - tions to the ,7e.euits: Cardinal Iliauniug could not endure --it was not in hisnature—to bo looked upon by the Jesuits as en "enemy of vital godliness," They foil under his bun. Metaphorically he "cursed them with belt, book and caudle." In a laughing fashion their retort enure quick: Cardinals may eo,ne, cardinals tnay gn, But we iso on forever. CardivaI Manning, as is known of all mere, regarded the suppression of the ariety of Jesus in 177:3 as the work of (cd't hand. fie Iikcewit;o looked upon its restoration in 1827 as (iod'n work. But his abiding hostility to the Jesuits, It was formerly the custom among based, as he declared, on their corporate l uglis1' cloth dealers toadc) the. bzearltl't netic,n iu England and Benne, was testi- of the thumb to the yard measure. fled by the prediction which be uttered on various occasions, "1 foresee another 1773," Ituron and. Bruce. At tt spt'ebtl meeting. of the Blyth puhlir• seitnol hoard on it ontlay evening the motion was made and ipietset1 that, tli a •a-eesulent eltiletren attending the Iiiy'th palrlic school pay a fire of 60 cants pet' ntouthit- aclvanee, and the non-restdaut child- ren t eking up arc ,class or other work, than regular public school work, to pay 15 cents extra ter ►nontie, Alt'. Arch. Rankin, of Sau;;eon, was surprised to find one of his cows dead on Tuesday. Not having notic- ed that the animal had been tailing, he held a post ni.tt'tem examination tt, find the cause of death. No explanation was needed from medical roan when the stntuaell was opened. as thirteen common nails, one ser'ew 11111}, nnid tt colipie of small stones were there found. One of the itails had perforated the stunint:h. The rruruntu Stat' saes: —` Oil Sen- d .y afternoon a 6 -year old son of Mr. Robinson Pirie, the manager of Oak I all, was buried from the home at :l 1• Earl street, Today a 13- fear - old daughter also died from the scarlet fewer, the disease which carried off the little sun and the other ehihlren all ill with disease which is of it mali- ignent type." Air. Pirie is an old, Ciintoreian, his wile bring Mies Df. ,fq:slfn, a neice of 11r. Cooper Aubert St. On Wednesday of last week Cap- tain ZVtn. Itueitsou, while itt the big tug front n. imi4tfewnr• twelve fret from the ground, stepped back and in do, ing so came.in contact with a block wvhiclw caused '-rim to stumble and all to the ground Ile appeared to strike on his head and shoulders and when picked up it wane thuug.ht he wad seriOnS injured btit,he is now nt work again appearantly its wweil as ewer. 1.0004•, ill lo#lo0 •Reliet/orr • ®Hung • m '7'o0 Severn' Exeter boys appeared be. f,ry Magistrate Snell on Dinndaay morning, charged with disturbin; the ;gement the residence of Mr. I) )nu1d Taylor, on 1Vednesdiey night of last tveck Tho' marriage ceremony of hie daughter was going on at the time and the bots took it into their head to eh:tele:Ire the newer' wedelt'cl couple. Mitl'.1, to their cline -;1'1 time etaelt had to •')vhae'ic up" fi t' veto.; .or terve meow teem. •1 ! j ,il. '''hey all preferred tier runner. A child belonging to Dir. T. 11. Frankish nf \Vnll:ertein, mc't net% a. peculiarly sad atee elent on if villa lest, and front the r•tinet.3 of which it died the following day, The child in the :essence of its mother, seized hold of a p=til of hot st.reh thttt wee sitting on the table and tippad it ',ver itt such a way that the contents ran down its neck anti breast, Weide tete clothing. 'fico h tt suhdt'ance burnt the fleih at mt,t to the Trane, and no eff.arte of the doetnnr could relieve the child's sobering or save its lint. Mr. Franki.h, who is a bridge builder, wee' away from. home at chi: time. i A certain indivietual is at present going the rounds selling quack enedi• eines. l:I_s role is to p,rte as a For- ester, cIt11 on b'urester-'s f amilie, get the names of their friends and call on the latter, representing that she had been sent „by the formes. In this way he has succeededin gaining the confidence of the tlnsuspectin„ and inducing them to buy his wares at figures rale ing teem 41 to .63, it is all but intoes, however, to warn people against tiles sort of thlrtg, since from the c, cation there alwa,\ 0 have been, people in the world who are patiently waiting for some ono to come along and }tutnbn,.; thetn— Palulerston Spectators fev•a 4.‘ 1. 1.1,,K ut. ear �l.falit:• ai . Chi.'riii. °t'he tan. "We will • never sell these cloaks at , %15," said the clerk. • "We don't don't expect to," stti't the manager. "They are nattrlte'l 0.5 now that they may be marked down to 1=8,50 next week. "Is a he scintilla fighttti?" Scienti(1 i" echosed the pugilist contemptuously. "Why he couldn't parse a single t.entcttee of his chal- lengel" Ethel --You may ask papa, Mr. Van- Ishe. Van islte•—Mv darling, I'il nevelt be able to find 1ai111. fie owes nae £25. To iicez141,4-LO:EMULSION: la CO 04Et.wi r"rl•t►N a i all I L!NG d GO11;,iw.:r;,S1,11•r11NGowBLOOD. 0 , Vollit311, LOSS OF Axai`l:Tx'rE, ' 1)2 3P5111.1'. the It -twills oribis • 0 lartltt.a'•ore most man' fest. �. £tythe idolTer"n..t'."f•••,ntston.1Ism pot (,} ",wwiedror raa h 1.• •n1rd1. ugnrul ,.da ,. wuhnu'r h5t.ta(o4poaKun••uIota1n J.4t.r,i.I• kee+e°roatittre,bt.ilt .+-"4ina)bnlyognu'. T.11. WINtr,tAif. C.C.,1(ontrrar. 0e, runt at n'e xt,altle 0 RAVI3 & LAWREilee CO., LT,,., MONTREAL d= al a e rte fti 0 Q. o 0 i For Stuts that suit, SUITdive uowfurt. tc the a t , tvr,nr?r hurl Patisfy 0' �'a�'yF vourfriends,yonhad a,,; y Art ,, benne ttw as. Our .itrtnent cankers TROUSER a. knnw t.eow todu their work ; clan t think , there foe any better Anal vet ta'a rh'trrra ,,,t mute( +hxn ntbet% do for ittrort ,r '•,)•;: 111111 Irnt14 ref new full and winter s:!•nt,ta•' to (lino,* from, rat prices alr.ut t),t q•t- , .nn hut•,• tea pay liar hid e'' - 1- v Ic t•,np :ur ;r t tries furnishing their „"•n Moth If you retina r(ntt n 't'u•i tin(naot 1)a prnl,AliY n:•'r• t'r.t• tl Qap,i'(tt t.i1"£IB(la.Rall anti sen nor work. One t. rose to r'- e.£fsh i r1P.lysrrEI? & CO., Opposite the Mnucloualtf Black, . 'Xi:—,lam. Ont. Cook's Cotton Root Compound Is the only safe, reliable 'monthly medicine on which. ladies can depend in t1u hour and time of need. Is prepared in two degrees of strength. bro. 1 for ordinary cases is by far the best dollar medicine known —sold by druggis's, one Dollar per box. No. 2 for special cases—lo degrees stronger—sold by druggists. One box, Three Dollars; two boxes, Five Dollars. No. x, or No. 2, mailed on receipt of rice and tiro e-ccnt stamps. T:^2 ^v..,^o:t f'oti£te2'Tty, Windsor, Ontario, `•l.] err (:.em ' • .•.1• u., tats. A Prominent a•. kr. Thos Bennett. for over 22 years in business a;, a wholesale and retail butcher, gives his experience with the now famous remedy, Miitturn•s heart and Nerve P111S. "Gentlemen,—I have for a long time been afflicted with extreme nervous-, ntss, and ailments resulting tnererrom. it'requently I had sharp pains under my heart. At times my memory was clouded, which was a. great annoyanoo to me in my business, causing ume to forget orders which were given to me, and my attention had to be called to ouch matters frequently. Very often there was a sort of mist Cama before ray eyes, and I was extreleeiy dizzy. One of the worst features wee that business matters of small ,bmpor'tatice assumed exaggerated forme mut T. broodedover them unnecessarily. At right I would often wake up with a start and it would be a long time be- fore I eould again compoab xrayt se:f to " sleep. a. o un tt ming ( ::ere my nerves that 1 had fits of trerebiing occasionally, t.ud cold sensations would run dewzi my limbs. The least exctaetarent ue Haase startled me and sec my l,eaae-t gutter- ing "1 have taken a box of :trillium's Heart and Nere'r Pit1s, which I got at Ill.. H. W. Love's drug store, corner Broadview and Danforth -avenues, They restored My nerve -v to their enema t teeteittien, and ten d up ivy sy-tem to such an extent. that all the dlt•treesing ailtnents l have mentioned have cemplettely des- enilen.red. lea: it wtthottt any qualiiT•- eatirei tetvote • e .t t.} ;,- .. ...... dict rt•ri c ii it . t :•;irt t "ut :en arid the tr fit'en•ltr.'• t. '.. ..n. •.;:t Iter► highlyt. ;�a..:;t t:: . . , thette pille L. all : e:'ti. 1 '4 «a„F.1t. Ulm" (write.. r_ 'r:t: , : . • ..1