HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1885-8-28, Page 22
1PA.1QLT OOOIMIL1lt *$T.
edsme aidialle fide M /,wed
geselleme
THE HURON SIGNAL, F11I111►Y. AUG. 28, 1155.
seen ttrea.sd •etl die dee* Nodding%
When the aeedegeai was lassies Md
nee foe the lisighteW. r. Semsoa wrote
to Lord Wefeady, isteralia(t hitt 4 the
Good
Ole
-Otto
d +ger r `ee
•
wgyh het trwn Tek fop airy.
slues , thjijda of tsars in these lovely
eye and gtrlveriag sobs beet these
red lips was atteadorable, lladsmeeelle
had her own way, ams/ bid Rohr b bedew
w ieima00 i• the bease. Togo come
home tae day .ad fottmd b. s ereaminrg
and ki,nkim. uo the floor, sad Sally
ataajine by her with • woeful fetes,
'What's the matter here r b inquir-
ed
'Oh, Tom ! she sow the new delft
knife in the drawer, sad it is epi bgbt
she wanted it to play with, and1 cent
IN bet have it can I Y
Tee's face darkened • he bad lows
hall his own thouvbta about Baby's me-
maaypessent,but be Mtedtu hurt telly so
mash that be kept putting off what he
lett to be a thankless but disagr.ahls
duty. Bot he had been well brought up
himself, and looked back on the rigid
discipline of his childhood as the source
of ell the strength and apei.bt.ssis 4 hr
character. And now things had home to
an ups issue . hu child must be govern-
ed, however (tally objected, ,t wee his
duty. He picked the child op from the
Goer, 'ensued trod lucking more vigor-
ously still
'Merry !' he said, sternly, 'stop ! due's
cry any more ''
It wee cede: Marva had Dever
tended her *amber in the two conscious
rem of her life, and her father had
wow before saga her in such • rage.
M. did not stop .t all, but roared the
loader. Her father lolled her in the
elie>•o'Meegy !' he said, 'stop, or papa
wid
'Oh, Tum ! Tem !' cried Sally, 'don't
whip her, oh, don't ! she'll bet stood
psotty soon ; she's never been slapped.'
'So I see,' said Tum. 'Stilly, this
elided is spoiled ; it is my duty to her and
tem God to brier her op se the child of
Christian parents should be reared.
Witt you we inea the other mom my
dear, it this s going sr, bort you r
Mars wets en authority in Tom's voice
Nal!y bad heard before, and .t
1rie.ned her as aagsred bar. She
thoeght of her marriage vows of humor
and obedience as mere sego forma Ns
ver before had her will and Torn . come
sato direr t connect She was reedy to
defy him ; her fees biased, but Tom's
look wee sot to be withitwi, he was
1u•ster and she must yield. With
rebellion in hast, Boit as vehement if
not se out.ptken as Margy's, she west
out of the room and out of the house,
sod sot down on the shed steps with her
hand over sats. Tom picker. np the
scrsaminechild, turned her over on his
hese, and after the gond old fashion pne
oeeded to reverse the naKnetic currents,'
as the modern 'esthetes call that form of
taetytatinn.
Marry was moire astonished than hurt ;
the tonna and Ilse sting recalled bee to
1u'rarlf ; she stopped crying, sad when
Sail) carps hack the child's area was
round her father's neck ; the tears stood
w Tom's eye, and the baby voice cried
'Me deed baby, mamma
After tea was over said the little gill
asleep Tom said, 'You were angry with
"'a today. Sally, and you haven't gut
oyer it yet.'
Tears welled op into doily's eyes and
chocked her voice ; she could nut an-
swer.
'Let's have it out, dear,' said Tom,
tenderly : 'we shall beth feel better than
to base a silent sulking. Do you want
Marty to grow up such a girl as Dells
Mix r
'Oh, Tom ' hut 1 don't see how you
could slap her.'
'What would you have me do, Sally 1.
'Oh, nothing. she's such a baby ! I'd
let her alone till she is old enough to
understand that she ought to mind.
Why, she's holy three. wait she • ten.'
'And by that tune habits of di. obed-
ience and giving way to temper will be
hied utnn her, dally. and the stauggle
made dreadful for both of us.'
'But it seems s, cruel to punish a p,onor,
helpless little child who ain't resist you,
but who you can twat ;ust as much as
yeu like without fear of retallati ,n.'
'!;all our phis holds g ood against
hod's imimes with us. He an do with
was He will : u i► right, therefore to
arraign His protiJenc.. when they bort
us
'But tl.at isn't the same t:un, ; He is
God.'
Ile is oar father : He tells u. that He
soourgeth every .ane wli,,ti, He menet h,
Bally. He maker laws ansi al we nfuae
to obey them we are hurt either in round
or body by so d •. Ileo you think we
are bette Phan our Maker i -
hall, h never looked at the matter
faint this punt ,.1 view before ; almost
adoring her lab•y..he }ail ..uly thought
10 make the chose we 1 a it !,appy. That
its government .w. tn',o itr,I in her duty
ass C'hrs.u.n woman eel nor entered
her mind. 1.,,; she wise an !i.onrst servant
el tot r Mater, and meant to do. His sill
just as tar as she knew it. '1 guess you
are right, Tom. she said, wi•li a wistful
Ione that went to Ted* heart ; ,lout
oh '' she sent ort, 'I doe deb rut wadi
do alt the gov.rns.g.'
'How ran I, !tally 1 Y.•o are with
.11 day, the overlain* fur dsse•plin 'ars
almost all in your own teats 1 d•.
not hesitate to give her *holt.•.
far her body, eau 1 l .0 do u
her character
abs never .nes s
tat isn't geed fir her ;
beep any or hide fro
she t•nesei1 mus
« ;eo•,-nes
, seek after I ked peeidol
peg obese there d 6re uwa
pua punish het ealml,, sad
(.11 that yogi bate to do it, but
will sad Aj hien burry for you messed
of angry. I shall Dever forget what my
bull cmasin said trace to her suet.
'Nae' 1 /mks you dram tae hstier'o
anybody.'
'Wby, dear f esked.ths aunt'
'Cede you'd sn d'sdful, d'edful
season with cry se' you lees ea bad
'bout punishes' me, that I inks to my
own wind - though 1 doesn't by any
st
taes tell you ser --alit I adder, «abhor
s'all do w attain ,!sib gibes Patty oosaes
long, and says 'you bad, owlet eugbty
dirt,' w slaps ea' shakes ms, I iii joie
ea mad, an 1 inks I'll du it adds, iso
se I pussibly tan '
'There's the whole history of ge/rern-
n,ent in the mind of the guverottd,rislly,
and it r pretty much eta
For Its soothing and rr.tefsi ineuenoe
on the scalp, *red for the removal and
``ressotlue of dandruff, Ay... Hair
Vigor has no equal. It restores faded
or gray hair to its original dark color,
simulates the growth of the haw, east
gives it a besutdal, soft, dowry and
silken appe•e.ne.
Thiess a sseiesee:
Strength of character consists of two
things -power of will and power of self-
restraint. It requires two things, there-
fore, to its existents--•atrotig feelings and
strung eomgo*nd over them. Now, it is
here we make • great mistake ; es mis-
take strong feelings for strong ohmmeter.
A man who bean all before him, before
whose frown domestics tremble, and
whose horse of fury eke the children
of the household quake-►ecs..e he has
his will obeyed, sod his own way u all
things- we call him a strong mat. The
troth as, thee g the weak moo ; tt is hie
pasew sithi --Me Strong ; be, neared
be than. is weak. You neat maser'
the strength of a ars by the power of
the feelings be wbdoea, rut by the power
u( these which wade him.
And hence composure w eery often the
highest result of strength. Did we nes..
see a mut resent* a fl.gnuat insult ane
only grow a little pale and quietly reply 1
That is a moo spiritually strong. Or.
did we ever s.. • man in anguish stand
as if carted out of solid rock mattering
himself 7 Or one bearing a hopeless
daily trial remain silent, and never tell
the world what eankered hie home pesos*
That is strength. He who, with strong
passions, remains chute ; he whn,keenly
sensitise, with manly powers of indigna-
tion in him, can be provoked and yet
restrain himself, and forgive-theee are
strung mem, the spirituel beroea.
DE114.41171 WOMEN, Pale faced Sickly
Children, the aged and infirm alike, are
hene6tted by the Strengthening end
L'lood-nuking Power of "Haningtun•s
Quinine W. and Iron." It stimulates
the circulation, improves the Appetite,
and removes all Impurities from the
bkrod. It is the best medicine you an
take to give you lasting strength. See
that you get ''Haningta.n's,' the original
and genuine.
Wily Charles "Mew. spelled Rus tame
wIta ewe re
He went to Ireland to visit the seat of
his ancestors at Beilangare,in Connaught,
the result of which was that on his, re-
turn he changed the orthography of his
name. Before that time both he and his
father had spelled Connor with two n'.,
but be then dropped one of the re's, on
discovering that the family name was
spelled in that way.1 was once asked
if I knew why he changed the spell-
ing of his nese from two tem s to one,and
I answered that he was descended from
the Irish Kings, and found, when he
visited Ireland, that they spelled the
name in that way, which inf.rmatins
:athanisl Jarvis, the witty clerk ,f the
court of common plc, who was present
supplemented with the remark that he
ruppousd the Irish kings had always deo
so {pour that they hall never been able to
make both n's meet.
Mlrye. Day.
How varied the range of aseocieteon
upon the human mind. Memory ie ever
fond of preserving pictures of events
taut the therscter of each e..M. tarty he
different to meet the peculiarities of the
iuditidus,. The pleasant recollections
of one would fail to find • prase in the
memory of another, but es: vor mind the
hyrlon days are those that follow the use
of Putnam'. Painless ('orn Extractor, the
same safe and painless corn cure, for it
prt.mpsly relieve the misery by remit- i
int the •thing corns Try Putnanr's
Painless Corn Ettrsctor, and see to that
no sul•titute is palmed off a genuine.
MOM tlgaeraarr.
Teo Indians un a village neer yeelsee
were recently discussing the term of the '
earth. One ethernet -1 that it was round '
herause men 1 .d travelled in a straight '
e food Ince antcones look 10 the seine poser. '
uch fon 1 To this it was replied that men were apt ' P
to tram el in circles. as they often do shun
t�yusing to eat. I lost. Then it wan argued that white 1
as how an I men said s,, and they knew mote than
her everything ' the Indians ; but it was answered, white ,
mre knives, and i men often lied, e• the Indian• very well
sinensis. and eros, red needles to use,' ' knew .4 Fwsetie*l phil's••pher shored 1
'it would mak a Asbhy tort "f mono I the shoos tbf ieulty by dnviag a stake ,
training ler tate .fiery hurtful thing oat 11)1• tht srwu,l and plating an apple 'in
of ber way. Try the 11.hl.. Bally ; it has It At nicht_ in the morning the apple '
hied fl. deed b whisk it
ssateUy demotes, the phoniest Wages
which it usually addle, sinal the
prominence which it given to the
one the stead ode of saw aseesw esw
Mostly •aleglrtiatw to the deeded imet-
lehrlee by ebbs/.tpmstitatioss are alba
sn strusssly outored. Bet stern we Beets
to spalyee • sportsman's Read, we tied
that in cruet eases it embodies its hal
share of superstitious sad,p pseispa,
nowhere ie this doubtful ty
more clearly displayed thaw to the sport
of It awing. wry to onder.tsad why this
should be so. The imperfect kneeledtte
of the lower somal., opera which oar
sporting superstition are breed, Is
doubly intensified in the ammo( fish. The
i,ipentrable veil which congeals the
habits of the salmon tribe whet they
leave the river the river for the sea
boded eves the roomette* of a [task•
lend, and though many pseltseiaary
poiute have born settled, we are sab
.tentially as far off as ever from n ret!
solution of the question. But eves the
tumbler river Gab, whom in • cried
mews we have sways with us, if rut sl-
ays with as, if not abrupt eriehia nosh.
present some problems wbiab have as is
• hopeless state of perplexity. Blew,
thee, is • soil on which superstitions may
be erected to thrive, and the reality
felly justifies our anticipations. Natur-
ally enough angting lore has advasesd
with the times, and we can smite with
oondesoe cion tem some of the beliefs d
oar forefathers The simple faith which
eatable/3 uld'lt'altow to .tate gravely that
"divers Gates are bred of a weed called
piokenl weed," is huuted by the ea -
lightened scepticism of the eineteewsh
century. Furies and natural magic
have d before the areas en-
gine, and r when throwa into
ponds so tosser boodles eels -a MI I -
itfamilisr to the saturated of
rue haodred years ago. It may be
doubted whether matrimonial relations
are now at all frequent between any 4
our British fishes and "she gnats spas
the plain"; but in the social mmpGgitr
of an Arcadian pat, alliances of this
kind seen, to have been celebrated, ase
with the happiest results. But thrash
supeewitiuns of this clam Tuve disappear-
ed, new ones have arisen to 3111 their
place, though three being to • sosaewbat
different order. We have reaped the
natural history of fiehea to the undis-
puted ountrul of science ; bet we bats
allowed a good many superstitions to
creep into the theory and practice of the
art of their capture It is true that the
fads of the ase give thee beliefs a gond
deal 4 prism /ace justification. The
extraordinary caprices which seem to set
upon the appetitites of fish, the apple -
wetly meaningless distinctions which
they draw between equally uneaten!
baits, and the perfectly irratineal pee -
foresee which they sometimes show for
shams, drive es in despair to supersti-
tious explanations of their wayward-
neea The old staoza which commends
the south aud the west wind for angling
purposes., while it condemns the north
and the salt has been too often refuted
by individual experience to need sol
formal disproof. At the same titre K
contains an element of truth. It is, of
Doone, absurd to suppose that fish can
recntnine any distinction of wind, min
wind. but it iA obvious that they must
be inhume d indirectly by the different
temperatures b] which the different
winds are usually attended. An east
wind is ordinarily bad for the fisherman,
n ot because it contra from the east, but
because it is generally cold, and in aon-
sequerlce generally checks the emergence
of the insects on which fish feed. Apart
tom this condition the et wind u un-
objectionable. Souse Scotch lochs can
only be fished in an et wind, and •
sudden Trost from the et in November
often makes grayling rise greedily, be-
muse it brings down the Sha IS It tool -
Wee open the water. " v in
h is edition of beak Walton, laughs to
senra the oils and unguents which this
venerable authority recommends for the
anointing of buts. "To treat any bait
in this fashion," says the critic, "u, if
pesl''ble, more superfluous than gilding
the fittest Australian mild nugget." Tbie
may wad be; but, on the other hand, it
mar pos.ihly. not b9• . Mr. (Inuit Allen
creeds fish with an acute sense of smell,
and it isnot imprsible that fish may be
attracted by some odours, as cats are by
valerian, which have no relation to food
et feeding.
It is asserted by &time anglers that a
fish who bleeds when taken off the hook
.ill invariably die when returned to the
water, and may, therefore, as well be
kept to swell one's creel as to die •
lingering and useless death out of it. it
is permissible tit guess et some illicit
courideratiuus which may help to41fortify
this doctrine. it is a real blow to re -
(tore to the water a fine grayling in per -
sect condition merely t.eauee the month
is April, These fish are very irregular
in their spawning periods, and it con-
stantly happens that stray .pteimeans in 1
rine order are taken during the fence
In1e. Agan, it is undoubtedly hard to
ret with a suecitemo.i of bright little
aft pounders because "no trout under
posted- is the rule of the river. if
hat convenient theory of the hleedins
uh cele ono foe fi 1 estahliahet
at•
a «sat
ilhe Unita.
tion easy►, SAW hy
earn
eoetp•rwoa the reality. het H. fif
beat, diadem eaepidoa by being he keep•
ire witut t ergs p is d Eng ewe,
la wat-d• av plants, .a ag(�eker-
la*a try be fowled wbeMiss kit heels re
.ted doable% le the eater wide, sed there
dresses ohs y that he requires. If�eer-
thelees, ell this has been dectarsd ea
'wry high •athority to he little better
than sepentitioe ; sod • distiagttteked
s.g1er-netoralist has •sled es these re-
v•! pnacipt.e with m,ssidse•bte
-esnsm, Hoe deotsses that lid sew d-
eeds/
frets/ tet b tb p•rtieshtr 6;, hot he
the patticel•r color, sad seeddiasly
eoaden himself top three fumy ties,
prss.stisg three different odors all the
seam. thread. It hardly peddle to
go quite to this length, even at the risk
of thing deemed imperilitiona It is
obvious that in sad oases (s y., the
nnta fly) the flak tate the artiieial for the
real inset ; while on the other head. the
*tttraoedtwry taste which %key meets
*times ecinos for purely fancy lies tido •
good deal d support to the odor theory.
Tusllf, • word moat be said with re -
epee to the set itaelL Asglisg is train
goodly described M • contemplative
pectus., tae that soothes the east,
pros exercise to the hody, and sheds •
holy calm sr,esd, which maker the
*ogler at peed with himself tend the
whole world. It is to be feared that the
view. toe, duth snmctbitag smack d
superstition. Of the past we comeot
speak. Possibly swab a dream may eves
now be realised oeeadosally ; bet if it is
eve is snag se invariable palnrosa.e
it most be in a future wherein gut doss
out trey, flies do ant whip off, trout do
met pluag leder sags, where the breed.
is always lodged ora, and tress ere out
tot reach, when the water is always in
osier, sod where there are no brambles,
no mad dykes, aged, abort all, so belie.
-IEx-
+ teak 1('bs*se.
The beet eradiatot of foul humors of
the Bleed is Burdock Blood Bitten. A
per bottles presides a radical ob•age ler
Mee better ea health and Assay. It re -
none the blood taint of 1�ela, that
terrible disease so common in the coun-
try. 2
More k sets mrrpswa.
In many parte of Znglami eel agricul-
tural lahorer with • trite aid half a dot-
es children earn twelve skiUsp a week.
Were he in town and were oars d his
dtildren ill the seeder Obeid take it toe
m•dicids mid dines fji a hospital o to a
dispensary. 1a the eogestq village there
an gaither hospital* nor dispouseries
What h a poor mss to do f The reply
of the Lords -end who bare were moe-
ey than they know hew to speed -is, that
he ought to subscribe to some dealt
club which would give his family medial
rid geed. But the laborer hat to pea-
eide a roof sod fond for himself and
Ilia family. This absorbs his weekly
watts. Where, then, is the nargio for
'Amirante asreiet c ontingeneiea 1 The
, Lords know that it doe* not exist, and
they gin the agricultural laborer the
choice of losing his vote, or possibly
losing his child, eos6dent that in the
majority of cases natural affection will
lead him to do the former, -Lesion
World.
stef.vsaenta Speedo due%
It u pupolarly adsaitted everywhere
that McGregor. Speedy Core ie the
safest, most reliable and by for the cheap-
est remedy for Constipation, Liver Com-
plaint, Indigestion, Impure Blood, Lass
of Appetite, sad all similar troubles. It
is not necessary to take a great quantity
before any result is produced. A feet
doses will alevines you of it. neerita.Trisl
bottle given free at Geo. Rhyna.' dreg
store. 1 m
J,.mprlate to ogee eeeaalsa.
"'motherly is something of a musician,
and was attending an evening petty given
in honor of the eldest daughter of the
tamely.
I would be glad if you would sing
something, Mr. Fatherly, said the boot-
ees
Certainly, my dear madam. Will you
sanest a song
Ob, anything that is appropriate to
the ooc.sion. I will leave the selection
w ith you.
So Featberly, with that rare tact and
discrimination for which he is en justly
popular in society. eat down to the piano
and sang "Backward, Tern Backward,
U, Time in thy flight.'
a taeserr aagee.eweewr.
The people. the press and the profes-
sion all heartily end..rse the merits of
Burdock Blond Bitters as the host Blond
and Liver regulator and purifying tonic
row in use. 2
'Gentlemen are requested not to Angst
when an honorable member is in fine
with the Augae$es P. Collins window.'
This pathetic tn•cr;pti.m wan onee to be
fiend in the plc. of meeting o1. West-
ern Letealatsre. Augusto P. Collins
had patriotically presented the Senate
with • rideable stained -gees window.
and it was felt that it would M •wwtorthy
4 an ecnnnmie State to ret it broken by
owrnual nvnlrer .hots. iwgiaketnrs
ecoid .h',nt tach mase or the Sp.e•k r
just as well without 'dowing a head on
the Augoeeu. P. Calling window.- (St
y rm y
anngler% would be spored many a par',
but it a t•s•ibie that a gored itsany an.
itemised h.h would come to a premature
•
end.
man of what the poodle call eimmon w..s sill there, t.. hie great ettiefaetion ;' 1.
MON help for every etotreency. item. r•i u, the might the apple wou•d hat., ,hu , i t v dunes exlenmra, Mt
oy not that ' such eridsnce se thane is on the vnbject
*water .het Chins? avid •1 f. len .,R, i lea with r het l t '"4" *t on fon tope sllevahun i effort/a.
1h 1 u
teres to it then a• y earthly book : and whtreaa• M std. if Ike earth had reroly- nGonunstely ;t it not wy to test
Jame. (1.atte.
In the history of medicines no Mlle
needed
04, ISMI.
adwi d
bBaio,-alIje.w.14hied
1 woo..
w'•• m�psesr..esntleash ekdgeY bao
tangoed after tats 1 wish that ledge every
puseible memos with ail my heart.
Yoe will, 1 sot mro, be glad to leers
that all the trouts of the Nile in the
Soudan have now bon for aYoatbs wlth-
u.t either beer or sante ; sod no tittle
army was ever mere «iatented, and an
one could abase heed is wimp or eget
harder is the Geld than did oar «tidiers
to their late galled effort to reash Klux
team et time to 'seethe Idea that noble
hero Gordon.
I lean this in a day or two for Swaim,
*dee I shall sets the men et the Aussie•
Gat es.tingat, sod perhaps bre an up
portage" of oiegrstul•ttag them un
their Rellaatry in .Niue when recently
lighting slide by side with the old regi-
mes& al bee Majesty's army.
We are all proud to have Australian
momrsdes in obs held with as, and should
any serious war overtake our Empire, we
bupe the other great Bettie& ouloaw will
follow the pstrsotie example set by Nee
*bath Wal.., end will help ee to tight
the oommua ~say of oar native. -1
have the home to be, ear, very faithfully
yours,
( ) WotsgLET.
To W8,341.11'. iltsatoa, $eq , bh39 Geur2e
sires, Syd.ey.
Gudry'a Lady's Book for September is
• somber futi of notable attractions.
The frontispiece this month r an 11!..-
1.5%.. to oma of Dorgthy tiolruyd'e Poet
t,y poems entitled, 1 . Dryad and the
Nightingaia' This plate u soother suc-
cessful adaptieu of the new style ,.i en-
davdtsg tee whish G„dey'J Lady'. Boos[
ie fest e•isitlg * reputation. The faahitn
cots and fang work designs are admin. -
blew, both in drawing and color. Among
other atrikn g tuatara of the September
bona, is the centre pews of the new
song, • mevebts design which is changed
from month to smooth. The literature
of this issue eanbraoss a powerful story
by Amelia B. Edwards, entitled *The
1R`etthsgl &press' The translates
d the "'rasa serial 'Tae Yoke of Hoo-
d,' is earned forward to an i.ter..tiag
died, and a new illoweated popsr on
Rowe fill. 1tb. department 4 feminine
oeeupstienc, Edith Robinson, a peptide
young mag•*ine writer. has • quiet but
witty sketch called 'Michael Ai,islu and
L' sod Julia Scott contributes 'The
Rxile'a D..ghter.' The quality of the
stories is Gedey'a is certainly impros inn
Indeed the whole maeasine abow* the
effect of a ptnareesive influence. The
publisher added" the speedy forth-
coming of • new serial by Helen Math-
er*, the title of which is 'Lore Lee A-
Bleedieg.' This story is bright and is
hf•t<iew, in the author's beet style, and
peowiw to do much towards enhauci•g
the attractions of the Lady's Book during
the midwinter. Cedrg s is sn old friend
the a valuable one whom every lady
should cultivate. The cues of the man-
ed by the year is the nominal sum of
Iwo (/2) dollars, and such an amount
cannot he expended to better ad ventage
than in a seb.crtptloa.
N. B.-Watera paper" will pied
caution the public against Frauds repro.
ssmtittg tbemselres ...ge1t. of
Godey s doe. not employ regents,
sited Oen • M ttMn- aee,.ea AMM
"A.bers trometero i► k
deem eta Ashen
Pboadeapbta
:rd-
sla..t
,4 tea mi.M..'
Tutt , at the kstwtt
whiff to bet/ the eh*
•, • ole beim guider -
wildly
tel re tad th*
wa•rly all odd fence Teen -
toe. w Yid sada but • sew, sad
l'htladrlpblb eoidtbesgs mads shL -•1_.
Wby the Jersey elwald le l�
a muses; d on Io
1 s•e't iasags ride teem .Ae� ar
.d tl''s.r hair, wed .re atm or, e( .
shore The eukir hal a pled, tall
brick, but •carer that el a rips. trembly
pocked Jets*y strawberry. After they
have kali • dip is the eget tike eels
parade up sod dam. the beech with their
loot bright treads lanai ever towed
down their bends, and when e.tenl of
towe urewberty-hooded girls ether Mt
a group 11.e speet•els u an s.terestine
.ase Big, jeep blue nese tied ehwr,
fair skins -without s freckle--po with
the Triode hair .. • rule. A atomisers
here, who also drama hair, toils see that
the yearning 14 red hair a just tutees',
.rid yueng women are coming in every
day to enquire what ostler the eats will
give biu.de and black tresses • straw.
ferry hue. Soifer uo podia bas been
a.oerwoed, tot if one .brwW be fasted
wt before the summer le over tes de -
«.serer will he likely to make • dollar or
two If be wi11 kindly come b Ashur,
park. Vanities vuattatum ! list lee t
rt strange that rod heads should down
the rage r'
la0. u age.
Few men die of age. Almost all die
of disappointment, passion, mental or
bodily toil, or accident. The psanous
kill mut sometimes, even suddenly. The
common expression choked with p♦aeio,i,
has little exaggeration in it ; for even •
though not soddenly fatal, strong pa.
sitma shortest life htrmg-bodied ,men 1
often die young -- weak men live longer
than the strong, for the Strung use their
strength, and the weak have none to use.
The latter take are of themselves. the
Ioniser do not. As it is with the body.
so it is with the mind and temper. The
strong ars apt to break, or, like the can-
dle, to run ; the weak to burn net. The
interne animals, which live temperate
lives, have generally their prescribed
n umber of yeas The horse lives twen-
ty -bee ; the or fifttaeen er twenty : the
dog ten or twelve ; the rabbit eight ; the
Quina pig six nr seven years. These
Inumbers all bear • similar proportion to
the time the anunal takes es grow its
fall adv- But mums of the animals, is
one that seldom lives this average. He
ought to lire a hundred years, according , C3.ODERICI-I
to physical law, for live times twenty are 41,7 -G . 1ILL
eras hundred, but instead of that, he PL . _ l
scarcely reaches on an avenge four times; - 1 ABL1r1IEU
his growing period ; the at six time.
A e.nrat Rett.
There u no queetiou but th*t Dyspep-
sia is the national draw of oar enentry,
and when a,mpl,asted with dimness of
the Liver sad K,dueys a the cause of
untold mis.ry. Burdock Blond Bitten
will aloe* invariably cure the wont
case k,.oen. 2
Every true eon n a saws. $ country,
and an age ; and peterity sestets to fug-
ue his steps u a train of o,ienta. A
,pian Caner u born and for ages after we
have a Roman empire.
'Will Jou have some more base,
Johnny r 'Ito.' 'N'o what r Ifo
bases, says Johnny, daddy.
• KING'S EVIL =
Wm the aide 6wmsely glom to tfegAri
basses* aid • st�snujise hist it...M be
cured by a lee rs touso. The warm is
w1.sr sow, add kaows that
SCROFULA
.S
nae ooh be eared by • thorough purees
the of the based. If die le
the disease perpetuates lea Amami
generates atter generates. Amamg
..ispam.de developments w
more,dodo,CarbonItategass ado,
Parolem1kew% Nervous mad Papo
deal
t e1[llodea etcslowed 1e o eo-
Tsbssesl•r LiwmKMa.eow sod Ideew D•ed vert-
igo
e t-
e+dmeid byether yse1* g fetal ts•rBss, ,
Ayes s Sarsaparilla
�fooips,eely powerful end deep reliable
rifl'(W medicine. It b se
teal eta tatters«? that k er domes Mee
the the kindred poisons dam of cogatalese & eal�es
sad merrore. At the asset doe k -
r'w6a sad riatises this breed. tastmt•g
bsalthtul action to the del eek ed
rejuvamsirg the entire sypou, Tlrgrgst
Regeser'ative iedldns
Is composed of the _�n foe Houdin*
&n.aperilla. with Tigre, Dock, Puf-
finess". tlhe iodide o� Poresnwm stud
luny and otbrr ingredients of grest Po`
ttsry caret. ov and seleatfica�r ewe -
Its formula 1. generally hews
tie medical profession, and the best
phyakfans rowtantly prescribe AYtaaty
BaRa♦NQrt r . as IS
Absolute Cure -4
For all diseases reused by the ?mitis of
the blood. It Ia eoeastrated to the high-
est practicable degree, tar beyond nay
other preparation for wbkb Ilk. ethets
are chimed. and L therefore the cheapest,
as well es the hest blood purify:tag meds.
OW, m the world.
Ayers sarsaparilla 1
Ts1T.aiD BY -
Or. J. C. Aber' & Co., Look Meer.
(Amalytled Chemists. )
bold by all Druggists: price $1; six
bottles for $6.
the egient The 41,1 *lit �,n is. BacUaan,LaWsoIl Rabinson
-man ie not only the meet irregular and obese., rcatna(or
the moat intemperate, b h I
pr ut the
most Sash,Doors latxpa..ua and hard -worked • ( all the f,,/'r Blends
animals. He is also the most irritab.e 1 _
of all animals ; and there is no reasons to ne.t.tSs IN ALL gay na o►
believe, though we cannot tell what an i
animal secretly feels, that, more than Lu%fiber, Lath, Shingles
anyother animal, men cherishes wtwth and buaatr's material clever; ieaer*psteet4
tt keep it warm. and consumes hin,self
with the etre of In. own meant reflection IC400[ fUCgITYflI l'S►(CIiITT.
�amrA1 tir,!er erompt;;.attes,:ed
The biggest man in Aa.traha i.. ne. ( oder eb Aug. 1. 04*. ifla ly
ties of Yorkshire. His name a Themes ------ -
Jennings and he was h.'rn in 1524. tie
•
is five feet ten inches high ; weighs
thirty ten atones and a half ; measures
silty tight inches round thecheat. eighty. l Ib. `c jou ^resin,* +►large etpek of
GODBRICH BOILER 1/0813
ten inchew n.aroa the waist, and twenty BRASS & IRON STUN FITTINGS
end • half round the .gist, and twenty
sad • hall round the calf. He was on-
gireJly a strongly built man and did BOIIEllS & ENI1INESon mach fish till h
reduces his hulk., he is euresntl f
root
ration has renewed such unfrereal corn
y ions
_ r w pew. p o t, v in este apo a only at. too snab a ley.
taco. „►,bol 1.3 seise ton out of the r. 104 the ti.MMge of invariable ansI tht permanent cornu e*1'. ,n Tent At the Theatre &tyal in Hobert they
world. hat that thaw .i•w 5M,uldet keit, i �etiny is Believing. Road the testi death,
°pttrey di.emw, u Dr. ran Bu11ren's K,'.nry ha re to on Med (o!di.g doers to osis
twin fs•nm the evil. la', t try to make mo•iiahs in the pamphlet en Dr. Van
her world into herein, teat tach her t•• ituri.a's Kidney d'art. then buy • i.aas
moist tempt.ti•'n, to obey the T' -were i an,l relieve yonrwelf of all those thiamin
tient he, to have eta-etmtr•l %,',1 ee!f h hog IF'"Penmen four enggtet can tell our
reopen 1' n wait ;•step's t o ' , .• !ter, all about it. 5. 1,) by .1 Wilann (iods1
doe t you 1 2re
The Mea Are .a Ventortant fort in ewe. he sstiott in theme diatreesing bun into the stalls, and by the fact „f
the SeeMimy of cwt planet, and the o'nmpbmta a molar woadsrfol- Auld the ds..rs being •pint the pohlic knew
seaside aha potency .4 1te tailgate, rte- by J. Wilson. 2m eowninw t" the tlsveetre. is is said
Minty do not softer at the hand. .d The pone ribbons embroidered with tow is the only instance of • very f.t nein
p psi)ar iwag'nst,on. Osiergait, as neer �dnb sod palmst on sat tints sod anti- efts, has preserved hie health and bulk
other terrestisl M i:,,;s, it is suppled to teval patterns are a sweaty. 'together.
hex salt P
T
US anti Boll
,tv;ltlre shortest V
of Tees.
Il.eder, for new work tad revelry w
noose prompt stteotlen.
CH Rti STA L & BLACK,
wens wear (a. T it. Posttest
(Wench. reb.7R 11114,
en
A