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The Wingham Times, 1889-03-15, Page 7B.'1.MY AND DIET. geaion. eni:tit to tllo semieit of diecon- tld t t i f roe" stn+;nate:° her 1er S 4Ut11Gt# ALL DAUGHTERS Ct= EVA tHODU ALWAYS QDIY, cat for limit lee rennin ; in this sclicdtite; t o r", owe velriaaf,11trir»;l Tea arid Overdone Peer u American cane ]Mot-•-I'ttisicting reel Coag motto* tacit tai / ewe Uzi Memel leeuut'.. .a, SarhgeAtion or so. I leslt tea<ture anal tint perform a Most important 'function i s f'ezla,e beauty. To preserve and iunproro them -domande the strictest Observance of sanitary laws, A bad skin, lacltiu g tint, plumpness and elasticity, inclieetes want of good- ness irr the vital or nutritive syatc9iel. Diet, digestion. temperature, open °air 'exercise, sleep and tranquillity of mind ore absolute neecssities to every woman who wishes to keep her youth. ,As to diet, it is only necessary' to ask what does tho average American girl leas': She sits doieu to •a potato and a pickle, three or four came 'of strong tea, hies, cakes, sweets and fiery condiments. If olio includes beef in her menu it is. only After roasting, frying pad ;spilling has reduced it to a state o complete in-. digestibility,. What is the resultof such a regime? By the time she is 20, just at the ago nature intended her to boas ties- ible as a sapling willow, her eyes are dull, her tooth yellow, her gums pale, her lips wan and pallid, her flesh placid, her skin horny and sallow; in fact,, all tlze swell and sap of her womanhood is ,either undeveloped or else quenched, de- stroyed, dried out. What thenTo ree pair these nn,iglitiy damage sho resorts V? padding, whitewashes, stains and bel- Iadbene and kola for her eyes,•. Theta seta a ghastly aanbstitnte for the burnished ,glow of health. Once to bie dulgo in artificial cosmetics is tisbetlaeir• elave through a tl eternity. TLIIt• h SI'3PLL i:U11:S, • . The once famous beauty, Lola ±i ntee.z.., Was heard to say tho only real secret of »reserving beauty lay i;r three simple t s—temperaucc, o eeroizeand leanli- Peppered ..cups •and stews, Ohn-e pas ties, ragouts and spices oven moderately indulged in will exercise deteriorating effects upon is delicate complexion. Women who do not restrain their gas- trono,uric propensities will acquire hetero 30 the heated, blotched face we aro wont to associate with "high living," while the firm texture of the flesh -aud the Supple shape wJi ;soon be roplaced. by flabby softness and scraggy leanness. During my few .years of rattier broad and variegated experience studying beauty and the habits 'of its 'fame pos- sessors, I have known only one who for a series of years accustomed Herself to late hours, constant excitement, brari:a work and censurable feasting, without *erasing every trace of boaiity. lsaw her looking as dainty as on ivory Isis after eight years of such perilous self treat - anent as Ishuddor'to describe. Physi.-- clans consider the case unique. Women of nervous and sanguine tem- perament should restrict themselves to a diet of eggs, milk, bread, salads, fruit, light broths and the; Crustacea.,They should accustom themselves to drinking aerated and natural mineral spring we. tors, avoiding apices and condiment.; delicious and tempting as these fiery «lo. Eights may be. In the matter of diet the blonde is, by force of physiological tendencies, constrained to store. self de- nial at table. It is an old saw •amo n 'doctors that blue oyes, iiaa:en heir and tlio pink and white face mean struma. Struma is a, prettier wore. than scrofula, butthe condition is the same andquito as troublesome. These inflammable tem- peraments peraments are congestive, catarrhal, .gouty, and tea, coffee, underdone beet, oily food, spices, ;alcoholic beverages and opiates concur to produce a general un- healthy action of the skin an dryness, 1pimples, blotches and discoloration, Condruaents,malt andspirituousdri s and tincture of iron thicken the 'I food. giving it color and constituency-. Tlho philosophy .contained in the advice pf tho expert in skin troubles to .a lady who consulted him in reference to a rod nose,, upon hearing her habit to be a nightly tipple of wliisky.and water, "leave eu e the water and your nose will 'soon be Tipple," is as old as it is reliable. EFFECTS Or a aunt taannE..x A case which carne nudes any Imme- diate observation was that of an ashen blonde whose skin ivasaa fair and epnquo as white lead, and whose hair was•iuno- lievod by ono amber gleam. •After .rs attack of typhoid fever, `which, by the way, is an elective purifier of the aye - tem without being more dangerous than many of the advertised complcaion rem- ediest she was restored by iron tonics and liquor, and the element these intro- duced into the blood dyed` her cheekti orimson and her new suit alien' a ruddy gold. There aro temperaments which are irritated by aryl, 'buckwheat and hot breads. Hives, soro eyes and annoying skin disturbances are the outgrowth of their use. For the slender,, bilious brunette, whose blood is thin end whose temperament is watery, a free dict of xtuderdono beef and port wine should replace the severe tegimen of the 'blond. Tints, rather than colors, aro beautiful, and a. blonde of the ruddy type shtittld a 'ercise care in selecting tonics. %%Of& cenntaining red whit and Iran color the skin to an tialy brickclust, and I rare confidently assert a natural aperient is Mote efficient in cop- %acting all disorders of congestion and ria elation, find the ovil'coi equen+ es of indiscretion in diet, than its printed labels claim. '1,17heri it is necessary to renew the vital energies a 'two gratin pellet of quinine taken every evening .for a month, will furnish the bloudo with strength without increase of lei tient. Not only diet. bat detente au temper- ature, exert a powerful influence upon • beauty. 7`he whits shins, turritu kacl .,, • l:ron..o tints, ri:.., •. 'wi.Ii.chrorro..o or is ., ivabla to clicordor from sudden changes of tome rature and imperfect v ntilattian. Strong�,biszcs of•aun "ghtan 1 rude winds liQYh daziaginz, to tit1J t F ir:, ova" Com t o already t p x reettl'e circula,tina blood. Sae i:i h,alppieob during the ,.lays: of pro, twee ip: apiration, wince is tlto very eaten c1' c :mei:age Sudden change of etele.•=p'.lere L3 tb room where dm neer- c.uay bas felled tea degrees over night has I era anewn to produce a thick real` rash on ra delle ate Aloe, A mna dietand a mild c:a eato aro Inaln feeaorsof beauty. VA I'12il0,:l0p14u Tildes, When .Cron, Grant was in. Japan the Tapa:icsa nminister, dosirin,, to eompii- meat Ida by toaiia him .that ho was bels to eomiaancl, tried lib hand at the 1,ug,i li language and said: ""pipe, brave !*loboreaeral, you vas made to order,"—Boston FEEDING VERSUS FiGHTING, what It Alcune to Even tiro Army'e Its- mo'nse Stomach Filled—The (dory. "There is one feature in active military operations," said an old Union veteran in the Course of a long war reminiscence, "that the general run of people little realize, and that is, what it means to feed au army, and especially an army pushed far in advance of its base of supplies. An army is a terrible creature to feed. Ib fights oceasionally; it feeds all the time. It is an immense stomach With thousands of mouths always crying for more. It can't bo put off er ordered not to be hungry, With 20,000 or 30,000 men in a thinly settled, mountainous cot}ntry—an enemy's country at that—and with that enemy in possession of a'liart of tho only rickety railroad running through it, and his cavalry gallivanting around,you know not exactly Where, between you and tho place you draw your tons of supplies from, your only means of getting these tons on tone:of bread and salt beef or pork and other things is to have them hauled over this half mado mountain road, which a man, brought up in a finished country would hardly darn to travel on anyway. "lou iiabo creeks to cross or rickety bridgea, aur you find the bridges destroyer.. You"lravo small 'rivers to ford, liable to bo swollen at any time in a fow hours by rain. You havo only a single wagon track to travel on, running up and down hills and mountains, or along their sides,. not kept in repair, and if a wagon breaks down, your whole procession of vehicles is stopped until is can bo got out of the way. You don't know at what moment in this country, new and asquad of guerrillas, to every roa. and pass 'has been farm rom "thei youth, will swoop down • from ambuscade upon some ., of you long drawn ' out,` stra a train o wagons, all of which, fr• e narrow uess of the road, it is im le fully t guard. You must drive also, os sibly, a herd of half wi f starve cattle, who will dash off ray off i tho woods through whirl are pass ing at every chance they " . "You have sixty or 'elg nes of thi sortof country to pass gh bofor you can reach the 80,0001 men, liv ing; now on a csacker per You ma advance • ten miles a ou may twenty. You may make Ivo. , Dis tancee in an up and down y like thi are verynuncortain. 'Yet go' at` gallop with a wagon train i you ar the officer in charge of tl;, lumber ling, long drawn out, clu,,ocession 'ou•areresponsible for i' deliver to the hungry army. ,rot you hands full and your hen nd who you've bossed road repel brides pushed everybody and e to tee them moving, and the ern ou and half dead throughc he titre' of the responsibility, yo ur tr i through in safety, and few day more feed. this collectiv aomac w rc otherwise would. have"starved, how much glory awaits you? "Well, search oar pictorial military an- nals and see how much of the pomp. cir- cumstance and sensation of war you find =illustrated about a wagon train. But society would tumble to pieces today -without cook kitchens and: beef Butting mer withwhito frdeks and cleavers, and all the opauletted-'figures on horseback about an army dwindle down, man and beast; to very 'poor critters' in a very few hours if they've no crackers to nibble on or hay to chow" I *tell eroiee war moans feeding as well as fighting; and there's a great deal of unrecorded glory due' the quartermasters and 'sergeants 'who had to look after the bread and beef which gives men strength to stand on their legs and 1.all triggers." -Prentice Mulford in New York Star. A fling and His will. De Launay, Italiam ambassador at Belo lin, served for a time as the private secre- tary to Charles Albert, king of Sardinia, .cud after bis resignation was his com- panion in his ;retirement at Oporto. A fow days before the death of Charles Albert his trusted friend approached him and said, "Perhaps it would be well for rev majesty to give your last wishes, ing writing, and make' your wilt" A melan- choly smile passed over the ifionar'e1i'a face as he answered, "My 'will=•you are tight; I hail not thought of it—toe morrow." On the fallowing day Do Launay appeared in the ante' -chamber with the proper persons, expecting that the Ming would dictate his will to ulna. Ho knocked at the door of the bed chamber. "Is it you, my friend?" in- quired Charles Albert. "Ahl I had quite forgottenl My will. Close the door so that no one shall hear us. Como to nor bedside." The king then whispered into Do Limey's ear: "I do not own 'a single centeshno. What sort of a will shall X stake? I have lived in poverty, and in poverty 'I shall die. Thus it behooves the kings of the house of Savoy."—IToxno ?r�tas=uat, Trost, who I:t .Els Uiflr a,getiont or the place combines a lucrative business with a limit generous charity. me prince, the eldest son of Delo ilfn$uuiian and the brother of the em- press of Austria, surrendered to his younger brother, Irar1 Theodor, all his rights as the head of the family, because he wished to marry a lady of inferior social position, with whom Iia had fallen in love. The marriage proved to be a happy one, .and to thin day, though more than thirty years .have passed since theywere united, the prince's manner to hs wife is more that o€ a lover than a middle aged married man, They have no chil- dren, and live for the greater part of the year in a simple suite of apartments at Bad-Lt'reuth, where, according to a writer in The Cornhill Magazine, she dif- fusee brightnessand happiness around her, and he shows homy a prince may earn an honest livelihood, and be the first, not to receive, but to render aid. The whole of the health resort belongs to the ducal family. The servants • are theirs, and tho entire management of the place b under Prince Ludwig's sue perintendence. Ifo le hie own butcher!, brewer, dairyman and baker. During Juno, July and August i reutb, is filled with southern Germans, who pay liberally for their rooms and board, and make these months tho prince's harvest time, During May and Septem- ber the prince receives no paying guests, but fills tho house with those he calls his "friends." They arta those who are too proud to ask for charity; but need a little 01p —cancers 1 —e 11cers denendtng upon their pay, university atria -outs, poor professors, struggling literary men and artists. Teeo or three hundred of thestp "frieaclo" aro housed, fed and tended at the hotel during May and September as carefully s the wealthiest= genets; and that, too, without its costing; flienx one palmy. If at the height of tho payurg eciazon. a room is left vacauf; some prior n:ry ilei is invited to occup)! it, and non ono can tell from the manner of the liosil• or his servants that the piety" arrivalis; not a millionaire. Prince I udhvig never forgefeee factf at' a name; add has a pleasant word for' every ono,:'f:•hethef' a paying guest or a:• "friend." Hie moonief is the same to all • the cyzapathotio gieeting of a courteotVe host and the k-iiidly greeting of a we bred man.. I,L•eot of tho Copyrl; ht Law. he book trade of th=' neilleitillerneelleilismniiinate JAS. W. I N GLIS,. MIANUFAOTURER AND DEALER IN; Villefi�',Rc !! pyGpqur� Gutters, Sia/ �,g) REM �% dkce, CO Repairing of all kinds attended to. P' PRICES VERY MODERATE. GIVE ME A OALL, STOVES AT HALF , PRICE , D. SUTHERLAND'S STOVE and TINWARE ROOMS Having purchased the stock of HINGISTON & SONS, we are offering: : GREAT BARGAINS S IN STOVES for the next 60 DAYS. COAL and WOOD STOVES in Great. Variety, and at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. Owing to the number of Furnaces put in this year, we have sotne SECOND-HAND STOVES as good as new, at LESS THAN HALF COST. A. Princely first. 'One of the Most lovely of .Mpine health resorts is lied-Iiroutft, aha let of tomo half dozen houses built by the side of a spring of mineral water. 'l'ho charm of the resort is not, however, due to its loveliness, nor tea its healing waters, but to tho fact that rte landlord ;.I?ritlgilT;ttil .vit of navariat. u.4c0ut ec :l kindly glance for the stranger aequaintaanec. It costs nothing, and, a ray of sunshine, it warmsand strong ens many a frost bitten life. whereon i falls. I think some women and girle have the idea that a haughty and proud bcarin impresses a strangeenith asense of their importance. This is a mistake. The truly great are never arrogant or cold but modest and kind in demeanor, while tyro unworthy and presumptuous often assume an air of supercilious die dain with strangers to hide their natural deficiencies.---- Ella Wheeler Wilcox. The Verdict of the World. The men who conducts his business on the theory that it doesn't pay, and he can't clic ird to advertise, sets up lags judgement in opposition to that of all the best bee iness men in the world. With a few years' experience in oouduc- ing a store cm a few thousand dollars capital, he assumes to know more than thousands of men whose hourly tran- sactions aggregate more than his do he a year, and who have invade their mil- lions by pursuing a course that he says doesn't pay. If advertising doesn't pay, why is it that the most successful merohonts in every town, -large and small, ate the heaviest advertisers ? It advertising doesn't pay, wbo doses the most business 1 If it doesn't pay to advertises, why do the heaviest Buri• hese firers in the world spend millions of dollars in that way i Is it because they want to devote those millions of dollars to tne nowspaip"el's and maga, zine publishers, or because they dont know as much about business ars the &x-for-aa.dollar "store keeper" in a rcuntry town, wlio says money spent in advertising is thrown away or do= ated to the lean to whom it is paid 1 k. telt talk is simp`y ridiculous, and it ti quires more than the average patience to discuss the propositionof whe=ther dvertising trays or not with that Icinil f a man. His complacent sell .cotxa'it •u assuming that be knows more that he entire business voila is laugh thie. A SUPERB STOOK OF OEOICE LAMP GOODS. BES'' PROCURABLE COAL OIL. READY -:MADE TINWARE, A HEAVY STOOK AT VERY LO'.V PRICES, O11.1'`3ERE$ WOItK, A SPECIALTY. WARE ROOMS Altn SHOPS Opposite Exchange { otel, corner Josephinee' and Victoria Streets. OUT OF THE FIRE HAVING FULLY ASSORTED THEIR STOCK, MESSRS. MCINNES• & TALBOT HAVE OPENED OUT IN El enderson's Old Stand, AND OFFER SPLENDID • INDUCEMENTS IN READY-MADE • CLOTHO, GROCERIES BOOTS & SHOES, AND GLASSWARE Wend, 0,01 White Shuts T RT C 1U P 1 a GREAT BIG BARGAINS, WHICH EVERYBODY OUGHT TO CU'OBSERSIE AND PROFIT BY. PA1 LOR, § BOX 0 UFFIELD & SON give;all;claeses a chance to invest their means to the best advsatage in H tfl •m C) eta § saOv &Tuns i amps; Lamp Goods, Cut1Mry and Woodenware. American and Canadian Coal Oil, .ulielesale and retail, 1 a'tetroaq l.itag ` specialty. Repairitg treacly and promptly dour. Don't /cadge any /ff: mistake but call and inspect our stock atd ;et our prices, DUIPPIELD & SON,, 1 STON*„"" I3LO0KA