The Exeter Advocate, 1891-7-30, Page 3k•Nl:AT s'is,‘,‘•:• • ••• ' • ••
ss.", ' ssss • 's
for Infants and Children.
s. ell adapted tochildren that Catania cures Colic, Cousti/Ildir
I recommeed it as superior to any prescription, Sour Stomach, Hiarrnosa, Xriliotsktih.
"Castorits is eoiv
"jowl, to inc."n,,. A. A,,,, it D Eills,,,p7tiorms, gives sleep. attl 1*..2tet di.
111 So. Oslord St., Brsoklyu, N. IC. Witke-iii°itjurious ruedic.ation.
I
True CENTAUR CoidrANT, 77 Murray Street, N. A..
"TY ",„, 'lasts sts.SSi Ssiss:s,S sis;Se.;.'s
11111111110W
Iterornal Ivo Advocate*
In this pretentioes;heartless age
Of cant, mid eizata aud, show,
'Where the extremes, on evcrY street,
Of wealth and PoVertY do meet
In a, Call iiiaa011$ Bow.
Where wealtilY men Moreau; in wealth,
The poor still poorer grow,
Is it a hellions crime to ask,
And bind our powers to the task
Of finding, why 'ti
Is it a Crime in usto strive
To equalize the strain
17171fich faulty customs, vicious laws
Made up of fallacies and flaws,
Have caused so long to ebtam?
Is he an object tm be shunned,
Or treated with diSdain,
Who points directly to the wrongs
Which keep the nasses bound with thongs
Of poverty and pain?
Three sources of distress and woo;
Vice, fashion, human greed,
Mankind must certainlyforego,
E're all will have the faintest show
Of getting what they need.
Extravagance and, foolish pride
Must give place to good sense ;
All luxuries be set aside
That honest income can't abide,
Or fairly recompense.
Cash, down must take the place of trust,
Credit go to the shades,
Dead beats shall then perforce beiust.
Pay for their goods because they must,
Or find thear place in hades.
Met debts at once no longer be
Collectable by law,
And SOOli our land would be quite free
Promparasites, for all must see
Their credit wouldn't draw.
let prohibition have full Swing,
ftrant licenses to none
To inake or sell the accursed thing,
That doth so much destruction bring
To commonwealth and home.
The tariff is the brewer's hope;
License, the seller's pride;
To make groat wealth they give tbern scope—
With prohibition the revoke
And drinking muse subside.
Then to knock out monopoly
In land, a tax apply
So high on unused land, that he
Who wants the earth would ratberbe
Translated to the sky.
Thus doing, those who speculate
In thousand acre plots,
Bolding wild lands as Teal estate,
'Would Ben them at a righteous rate
Or pay big yeerly shots.
•Just make monopolists land-poor,
And Lazarus at their gates
Will tind mere comfort in an hour,
Be much more happy and less sour
Than they with their estates.
For Baby Boys.
Sailor collars ending in revers to the waist
line are edged with embroidery.
Leggins are of cloth or ooze calf in tan
or black. Black shoes and hose are always
-worn.
Figured gingluuns of the plainest descrip-
tion have a gathered shirt and round waist.
Pique dresses having a round waist are
trimmed with collars cuffs and bretelles
edged with embroidery.
Little boys of two and three years wear
their front hair banged and the rest in loose
curls or waved ends.
Jacket suits of pique or gingham have a
plaited or gathered skirt, short coat sleeves
and a square three-piece jacket.
Cotton dresses are cut with a round,
'broad waist in three pieces, corded aud
sewed to the full gathered or plaited and
lenuned skirt.
Flannel end cotton dresses for little
jii
chaps just donning boyish gowns have one-
piece 4resses in three box -plaits, back and
front, caught to just below the waist line.—
Emma M. Hooper; in the Economist.
The Duke and Duchess of Fife.
'It is perhapamorth noting that since the
• daughters of Henry VII.—both queens—
married into the Peerage there has till the
present day been no instance of a direct de-
seend,ant of the sovereignbeing the child of a
Peer of England or Scotland. Margaret
'Tudor was Queen a Scotland, and married,
for her second husband, the Earl of Angus,
lier daughter Margaret marrying the Earl of
Lennox. Mary Tudor was Queen of France,
a,nd married, secondly, Charles Brandon,
Duke of Suffolk, their daughter Frances
marrying Guy, Marquis of Dorset. Till our
present Queen's reign the house of Hanover
has refused to ally itself with the nobility of
Great Britain, even the marriages of George
III'.s brothers with ladies not of royal rank
being so bitterly resented as to cause the
passing of the royal marriage act. This act
was the more disastrous'as thelimit.ations of
the Protestant successionnarrowedsogreatly
the choice of suitable partners for our
Princes and Princesses from the courts of
Europe.--Exchunge.
The Easiest way to Clean Lace.
An old lace maker, who has woven many
a gossamer web for that conmoisseur of laces,
Mme. Mocljeska, and has targht the fair
actress to fashion some of the daintiest pat-
t,erns her deft fingers delight in doing, gives
this simple recipe for lace cleaning : Spread
the lace out carefully on wrapping paper,
then sprinkle: it carefully with calcined
magnesia; place another paper over it and
put it away between the leaves of a book
for two or three days. All it needs is a
skillful shake to scatter the white powder
and then it is ready for wear, with slender
threads intact and as fresh as When new.
nude While Ton Eat.
Several restaurauts up town have small
orchestras, principally of Italian perform-
ers, to furnish mem during the dinner
time, and now the owner of a neat res-
taurant on Union Square has placed a large
music -box hi the rear of the dining room.
It stands on a richly carved pedestal, and
has an ornamental dome. With one wind-
ing it furnishes low, sweet mimic for over
an hour.
This music -box has proved a success, and
the restaurant is well patronized. —New
York Herald.
To Cleanse a Carpet of Stain.
Put a pad of blotting paper under the
velvet where the mark is and a pad on the
top, and apply a hot iron, as is used for
linen.
—This year there have been a dozen
cases of death in England directly attribut-
able to hijmies received in football matches.
A Perfect Heathen.
• Indianapolis ,Journal: Mrs. Watts—How
is your new girl? ,
Mrs. Potts—Oh! she's a perfect heathen.
I left her to straighten things tip before the
rninieter called, and ehe never even dusted
eff the Bible!
The Scotch °onus returns jest issued
show the total population d Scotland, in-
cluding the shipping in Scotch waters, to
he 4,033,103, of whom 1,951,461 are males
and Z081,624 females. Compared with the
year 1881, this it an increase of 297,3O-
151,986 male e and 145,544 females. The
population of Glasgow is given at 565,714,
as compared with 511,415 ih 1881. Edin-
burgh is given at 261,261, as compared with
234,402 ten years ago.
Jack—I love you. Mand ---How nide I
Jack—But I am poor, Maud—How roman-
tic 1! Jack—Yet I want you to be my
wife. Mand—How stupid t 1. S—Pmen Topica
ENTIMI/10110 74.111% GURISTS
Give Jewelry, Beal state and Children to
Carry on the Work,
MR, 4.13. SIMPSON'S CAMP.
• farm York World.]
Parson A. 13. Shnpeoa'sFeith Curist camp -
meeting up at Round Lake, near Saratoga,
is attracting widespread attention. 'The
Rev. Mr. Simpson himself is the central
figure, and the marvellous ability which he
is exhibiting as a money raiser is rapidly
giving him a world-wide reputation. Ap-
parently all that he needs to do when he
teels the need of funds to carry on his Chris-
tian Alliance is to make his wants known to
his enthusiastic folio wers, and they will at
once strip themselves of all their earthly
belongings and cast them at his feet
Such Is the religious fervor of the camp -
meeting people that one day this week
when the preacher called for $500 to send
just one more missionary to carry the
Gospel to the benighted heathen, Col. Burk-
hart, of Kentucky, jumped up and pulling
his costly gold watch and chain out of hie
pocket, went up and laid it on the altar.
"That's the way to give," 'cried the Rev.
Mr. Simpson. "Give of your pride; give
the jeopardizing adornments of your perish-
ing bodies." This appeal so stirred hi
hearers that the women present began to
shower their rings and jewels upon the
altar.
Miss Louise Shepard, of this city, MA one
of the first to strip off her diamond rings
and bracelets and lay them before the
preacher. In a few moments $1,500 worth
of jewelry was piled up on the pulpit desk,
and the 4ig congregation broke out 'with
"Praise God, From Whom .All Blessings
" Miss Shepard was one of the lead-
ing belles of Saratoga a year ago, but now
she has become converted to the Faith-
Curists' creed and is one of the most en-
thusiastic followers of the sect.
Everybody seems to be carried away by
the craze, but those who saw the offerings of
money and jewels the other day saw that
the peculiarity of the occasion was that
there was no manifestation of undue excite-
ment among the congregation.
Those who contributed to the treasury of
the Alliance simply walked up to the table
in front of the desk and quietly laid their
gifts upon it. At one time there was quite
a crowd about the pulpit, but there was
no disorder or disturbance a:bout it. After-
wards Miss Shepard and Col. Burkhart
took the platform and addressed the meet-
ing. It is said that Col. Burkhart has
already given $10,000 in cash to help along
the work of the Christian .Alliance, an
that many others have given money in
sums from $100 to 81,000. Such contribu-
tions as these are matters of daily occurrence.
Miss Shepard's mother lives at the
Berachah Home, or House of Rest, at 250
West Forty-eighth street, which is the
• headquarters for the Christian Alliance in
this city. Both she and her daughter
have contributed largely to the funds of the
alliance, though it is said that they do not
possess great means, and have personally
interested themselves in the work under the
Rev. Mr. Simpson, the Rev. A. E. Rink
and others, who are at the bead of the
order. Miss Shepard is 22 years old, of
medium height, graceful figure, with dark
ha r and eyes. Since she became a member
o Mr. Simpson's Gospel Tabernacle and
professed religion some six months ago, she
has been untiring in ler zeal and earnestness
for the cause of faith cure.
Some of the members of the church
believe that Miss Shepard is an heiress and
Possesses vast wealth, all of which she is
going to devote to the cause ofthe
It was only a few weeks ago that Joseph
Betties, a wealthy and aged resident of
Elizabeth, N. 3., gave a large amount of
real estate in New York city to Mr. Simp-
son's Alliance. The property deeded WAS
worth $50,000, and this, in addition to pre-
.vious gifts by, Mr. Battin to the sarne cause,
make a total of something like $150,000.
As Mr. Baths is a decidedly ebcentrie old
gentleman, it was believed by many that
undue influence had been used to secure
thesegifts, especially when his children
were represented as very inuch displeased
with this sort of wholesale generosity.
13oth the Rev. Mr. Simpson and the Rev.
Mr. Frink, however, denied that any influ-
ence whatever had .been employed, and
declared that they had no knowledge of
Mr. Sattin's intentions, until they received
the gifts. It is said that Mr. Battin is now
at Round Lake with the other worshippers
at the shrine of Faith Cure and the Rev. A.
B. Sirnpson. In addition to giving their
money and jewels to spread Gospel among
the heathen, several of the Round Lake
enthusiasts have pledged their children to
the service of the cause.
The Rev. N. H. Walker, of Bridgeport,
Conn., got up in one of the meetings and
announced that he would give his daughter
of thirteen to the work, as he had no money
or diamonds to contribute. The Alliance
will take chargeof her and educate her, and
when she reaches a.proper age she will be
sent out into the missionary field.
Rev. mr: Simpson was formerly pastor of
Knox Church, llainilton.
.32unsey's Weekly: Mrs. Fanglo—Why
I'm so glad to see you, Mrs. Wallace; I had
a presentiment that you would call this
evening. "Indeed 1" "Yes, whenever
Henry and I sit down to have a nice, quiet
evening to ourselves somebody is sure to
Indiara,polis Journal : "Hum !" said
Mr. Wickwire, "here's a great story in
this paper. lt appears that a man adver-
tised for a boy, and the same day his wife
presented him with twin sons. If that does
not show the value of advertising, what
does it show ? "
"It shows that if he hail confided his
business affairs to his wife, as a man ought
to he might have saved the expense of the
advertisement," answered Mrs. Wickwire.
A newspaper in the Gypsy jargon, the
Romany tongue, is soon to be published in
England with the expectation of inaking it
the organ of the wandering people. It will
be edited by George Smith, the "king" of
the English gypems, who counts upon getting
20,000 subscribers to it.
New York city's real estate valuation for
the Current year foots up 41,464,247,820,
and her personal estate $321,609,518, making
a total of $1,785,857,338—an increase of
$88,888,648 over the valuation of last year.
New York city pays one-third of the entire
Gen. Butler is writing a book. Whether
he will deal with the charges of appropria-
ting goods which Obtained for him the
sobriquet of "Spoons," and the much mom
serious charges made by Southern women
during the war, the announcements do not
say; but the main object of the
writer re clearly set forth. It is to be a de-
fence of Ben. Butler. Gen. Grant's report
of the conduct. of Butler in Virginia eailed
for,defence on Butler's part, from a merely
military point of view. But Ben. has de-
layed the defence till Grant it beyoud re.
joinder, so that whatever may be the merits
of his book it will always suffer from the
reader's mind reverting to the story of the
live Aaoltass kicking the dead lion.
TIM antis/HUD QUM.
Ohe is an interesting Crenture and Tou
Like lier Ways.
These are the days whoa the escorted
girl 5prevaleat. You can tell her at A
glance, The girl whose brothers are acme-
torned to take her about has an air of good
fellowship Whiell is umnistaleable, She
isn't the °Sorted, girl, Oh, no:
The escorted girl has the conseious eir of
having just discovered that she is desirable,
but not having yet learned for a certainty
that she is worth while. She has the con-
sciousness of suspecting that man is her
natural prey, but of not being certain that
she will get the chance to devour
him. She enjoys the sensations
of being desired without the full knowledge
that the desire will grow by what it feeds
on. She feels her power, but does not quite
know how to use it, She tries it, but with
a slightly timid manner. She has not yet
gained confidence. There is usually an
open Attempt to please in her manner,
which draws marked attention to her. It
is while she is in this state that she gives
away more of her real nature than she ever
does later. And it is while she is in this
frame of mind that she comes under the
head of the sort of girl I have been noting
lately, and for lack of a better classification
have dubbed the escorted girl."
There are women, I find, who never get
beyond this stage, s There are girls of sug-
gestive possibilities who never realize all
• that they promise, for some undefinable
reason. They never grow sure of their
rights, never wear them with authority.
This class of women is not uncommon. I
recollect them in my youth, One often
made great efforts to be made acquainted with
them, and never got any further. They
are often prettier than less attractive girls.
but lacking reality they are Only inspiring
to the imagination, Femininity is hard to
classify, however, and there is as much dif-
ference of opinion about it as about religion.
—Boston Home go arnal.
Sunday Reflections.
The loaded dice top proves that turn
about isn't always fair play.
This is the season when the girl not at the
seaside is beside herself.
Fighting is a variety of fruit better nipped
ID the &Id than picked after it is ripe.
It isn't safe to estimate the quality of a
man's time by the size of his watch chain.
It doesn't take a shipbuilder long to learn
that it is the fleetest yacht which has the
quickest sale.
The bump otself-esteem of the man who
loves his neighbor is himself must be some-
thing prodigious.
SAME OLD THING
Day—I believe that some of these clergy-
men who turn away from their creeds do it
to make money.
Weeks—What is the harm in that? In
old times when a man turned heretic he got
staked.
erre DEVIL.
• There never WM a house of prayer
But what the Devil roosted there;
And though to tell it makes us weep,
, He giveth his beloved sleep.
'WERE / A PREACHER,
Were I a preacher 1 svoulcl love
The man who's truly wild and tough,
Far more than him who stays from church
Because he feels he's good enough.
THEY STAY FROM CHURCH.
Some men there are who stay froin church
And preachers one and all condemn,
For when the good men sinners warn
ThesefeilowS feel they're whacking them.
THE TURNING OF THE CRANK.
Whene'er a new scheme of perpetual motion
Arouses attention from ocean to ocean,
Experts come to see it from far and from near
And, gathered around, at 18s mysteries peer.
Perhaps it deceives them, more likely they fled
,Thot a, cute little belt snugly sneaks out be-.
hind,
And there out of sight behind lathing and
plaster
A crank has been turning, now skewer, now
faster.
'Tis thus with new schemes in religion's great
' Held,
A wealth theo/ogle they promise to yield;
Full many proclaim them a true revelation,
• Producing the balm flt to heal all creation.
,But when heads more level would view them
aright,
'Tis discovered that something is hidden from
sight;
And later adherentatheir folly must thank
' For bowing in awe to the ttum of a crank.
Why She Was Angry.
• Boston Herald.' ° He put his arm around
her 'waist for the first thne, but, realizing
his boldness, quickly withdrew it. "Are
you angry with me, Katie?" he asked,
timidly.
"Of course I am," Georgie," she
answered. "What business had you to take
itway your arm ?"
Hunting for Kitty.
Mrs. Smith (to Mrs. Jones' servant gir1)—
What do you want ? ,
Servant Girl—Mrs. Jones sends her re-
gards and says would you be so kind as to
count children and see if you haven't
got one too many, as our Kitty hasn't
come home, and school has been out two
hours.
A Striking Likeness,
Rochester Herald: "Mr. Weber, this is
your son's photograph which he ordered.
Does it not, look like him ? "
"Yes."
"But he has not paid me for it yet."
"That looks still more like hint"
That ROAM&
Buffalo News He—You told me before
we were married. that you could live on
love, and now you touch me for a twenty
dollar bonnet.
She—Yes, dear .; but it is a love of a
bonnet
No Hanger.
New York Jury "He sat on my joke."
That was safe."
" Safe ?"
"Yes. There wasn't any point to it."
The soul of the Stratford Times man is
-vexed because of the invasion of the Claitic
• City bya couple a diseiples of the Latter
Day Saints. What amuses me is that it
does not insist just at present upon the
Mayor preventing these youths from talking
on the Yffirket Square, so long as they do
not commence the proselytising business."
A new King Billy come to defend the faith !
• Those heretics may talk, by grace of this
Stratford editor, but they must beware
proselytizing ! 'Now, 1 am not ihterestecl
in defending the Saints, although I know
I many who are good citizens; it is the
principle involved I would refer to. Clearly
.
it is the proselytizing, not the speaking on
the Market Square, that is objected to ;
and, once the principle is conceded, where
are we to set the limits? How could we con-
sistently send missionaries to foreign huids ?
How consistently tolerate any differences in
creed or doctrine? Unless we could ell
agree to make this Stratford editor the
arbiter of our consciences there would be no
THE RUSSIAN SIJOICIISSION.
What the GZerowiti Had Been ASMIltttli•
Bated?
Ilad the Japanese assailant of the Ovaro-
wita been permitted, te accomplish his pur-
pose, the most terrible confusiou wouldheve
arisen at, St. Petersherg in connection Wit1.
matters relating to the eneceesion to the
throne, for the Emperor's second on is
dying of consumption—the result, it is said,
of a blow in the chest, received in jest from
the Ceara witz. Alexander III., it may be
mentioned here, is stated to owe both his
cherming wife and his throne to a similar
blow inflicted in play upon his elder brother
Isiichelas, who died at Nice of consumption
in 1865. The third and only remaining son
of the Emperor is the little Grand Duke
Michel, a boy of 12 years of age, who, in
the event of a demise of the crowa, would
require the guidance and guardianship of a
regency until the expiration of his minority.
To whom would the regency belong?
That ie the question that concerns the Czar,
for more than one of the Czar's kin
would claim the right to train the royal
twig.
In official circles in Russia it is believed
that Alexander III. has already designated
Ms brother, the Grand Duke Sergms, as
Regent, in the event of the minority of his
successor. Sergius is renowned for his
fanaticism, and for his aversion to every-
thing foreign. If the necessity for a regency
were to occur the world would probably be
called upon to witness, if not a civil and
fratricidel war, at any rate a repetition of
the teraoism and bloodshed which marked
in 1825 the accession to the throne of
Emperor Nicolas in lieu of his elcler
brother, the Czarowite Constantine. --
Harper'a Weekly.
TEA. TABLE GOSSIP.
—Do not imagine that every man who
says nothing approves of your conduct.
—Success in life is very apt to make us
forget the time when we weren't much.
—The heart must be beaten and bruised,
and then the sweet scent will comeout
—All of us complain of the shortness of
life, yet we all waste more time than wense.
TUE JUNCTION.
Rzzzkwng Jnkshn ! Ohjkrzsz frrr Wixzzzbry,
13rinktn and Yngzzzlsg1
On, no; 'tis not Chinese or Welsh,
Nor Hebrew, Sanserit; Russian,
These raspingsyllables I belch
Are a Ci
s S. nstitution,
rn tell you all what they're all about;
It is the brakeman's function
These wild, delirious words to shoat'
When coming to the junction.
—There are 6,250,000 Roman Catholics in
the United States.
—Many a girl who "takes the cake"
wouldn't if she had to bake it herself.
In my travels I have -noticed that the man who
wants the earth,
And who pulls and hauls and elbows in to get
the lower berth,
Is the same who always tells you, with hie
• overflowing love,
That the atmosphere is better in the other
• berth above.
—Considerable British indignation has
been aroused by a fancy-dress ball in India
ID which officers dressed as fiends, with
horns and tails, danced a quadrille with
eight ladies costumed as "reluctant
angels."
—Operations have been commenced in the
construction of the much -talked -of C. P. R.
bridge over the Niagara, above the whirl-
pool. It is supposed the structure will be
finished before the snow flies.
•
AttOliNIS THE HarsE.
SOIIIC of the Here Trifles That HOP to
Brighten Home life.
Pieces of licorice laid around where ants
run is recommended.
Meringues should be put on puddings
after they are slightly cool, as, if the putt -
ding be hot, the egg will liquefy.
In cooking vegetables, always remember
that boiling water evaporates rapidly on the
approach of a storm or when it is raining.
Old newspapers torn in small pieces and
Wet in water softened by the addition of a
little ammonia are excellent to wash lamp
chimneys.
• To remove scratches and bruises from
furniture, rub them gently with a fresh
walnut, butternut or hickorynut kernel, and
they will disappear as if by magic.
A little memorandum book, or slate, in
the kitchen is a great convenienoe for busy
housekeepers in which to write a list of
things needed for the kitchen and table.—
Ladies'. Hanle Journal.
Golden Notes.
Who -would not be a fashionable opera,
singer? Here are the fees which were paid
to the leading voices for a single night's
performance of the "Huguenots" this
season:
M. Jeau de Reaske 5800
1Vfaclante Albani 625
M. Maitre' 400
M. La 11 ... 400
M. Edouard de Henke300
Guilia Ravogli ....... . . ... 250
Mmvina . 250
The lowest of these, upon a basis of 300 con-
certs per annum, is equal to $75,000a year ;
the highest to $240,000—Saturday Altana
The Dublin Choral Union has a woman
conductor—Dr. Annie Petterson. The
choir, which is a large one, is entirely under
the training of thisyoung woman, who gives
concerts which are most delightful in their,
exquisite rendition. At the last concert an
Irish cantata, entitled "Pinola," was sung.
It was composed by Dr. Petterson, and was
given with such delightful precision and at-
tention to light and shade that the large and
select audience which gathered to hear it
went away charmed with the talents of the
young doctor of nausic.
The theatres and music halls of London,
according to Mr. Irving, represent a capital
of $15,000,000.
WilIMIZOMIESOMP
A Prominent Personage.
_3-wising—Who is that man yonder who That
oes along with his liaise ii the air ?•
. Hogg—'Sh He's a mighty important
personage. His picture and beegraphy are an
all the papers.
Jawkins—What has he done.
Hogg—He's the rnan who was cured of
catarrh. --judge.
LIEBE is no waste matter in. nature
Everything has its use. Even the garbage
gathered in ash barrels possesses a
'value, though it is more often thrown away
than put to any use.' Hamilton spends a
good deal of money annually to try to keep
the city clean, a good deal of which might
be saved if the authorities only knew how.
The Cockneys are trying to solve the
problem. There are about .750,000 tons of
household refuse to be disposed of in Lon-
don every year, and many expedients have
been resorted to in order to do the work
well. Much of the refuse is sent down the
Thames in barges and spread on the
marshes. A new company is now trying to
make better use of this material by a sys-
tematic process. Upon arrival at the works
all the refuse is sorted by passing through
cylindrical sieves and screens of sizes ranging
from three-inch to half-inch mesh. Paper
and rags are used for paper -making, straw
for straw -board and fuel, wood is burned,
tin is saved for scraps, bones for manure,
bottles and glass are sold or remelted, ana
stones, vegetables and animal refuse, rub-
bish, coal, etc., are ground up and mixed
with dust, thus befog reduced to a harmless,
dry, powder. The cinders and coal are
burned under the boilers or they are saved
and sold to the brickmakers, or mixed with
pitch and pressed into bricquets for fuel.
Tennyson was once asked to supply a
dozen birthday poems of eight lines each for
1,000 guineas. The poet refused.
Mrs. Thomas A. Edison's eldest daughter
is a brilliant performer on the piano. She
is now in Germany under rare musical
tuition.
Tired Feeling
Is a dangerous condition directly due
to depleted or impure blood. It should
not be allowed to continue, as in its
debility- the system is especially liable
• to serious attacks of illness. It is re-
markable how beneficial Hood's Sarsa-
parilla is in this enervating state. Pos-
sessing just those elements which the
system needs and readily seizes, this
medicine purifies the blood, and im-
• parts'a. feeling of strens,ath and self-con-
fidence. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best
remedy for that weakness which pre-
vails at change of season, climate or life.
A new pianoforte keyboard having six
rows of keys has recently been enhibited ID
Manchester'England. An octave is formed
by six keys ID two contiguous rows. All the
keys are on the same level, and each note is
separated froM the next by an interval of
uwu •
A Texas infidel rode ninety miles to get
religion under the auspices of Major Penn,
an evangelist. He listened to two sermons,
professed religion, and, mounting his horse,
started for home,
The property left by the late Sir Richard
Sutton, owner of the Genesta, iS estimated
at over £7,000,000. The heir to the estate
is a posthumus child only just born, and by
the time he becomes of age the fortune will
be among the very greatest.
'1'he report that Florence Nightingale re.
fused $1,000 for a short article on hospital
work will not deter a thousand or more
less melodious writers from going right
ahead.
Stuart Robson's manager has engaged
Ernst Possart for an American tour in 1892-
1893 for 575,000.
A new play by Johh A. Stevens, called
" Christmas Bells," will be menaged next.
teason by S, IX Levy.
John Stetson is to star Marion Mamie
and Jack Mason in The Tar and the
Tartar," next :season, through territory not
levered by the McCaull Opera Company,
" First nights" are generally set in Lon-
don for a Saturday evening, ancl, there
icing no issue of 'Aimee car the following
Pawning, the critics have fully 36 hours m
vhich to leisurely Incubate their artaeles,,
end of trouble. But some people are always c
too ready to constitute themselves cham-
pions of the faith and rush to the hel of
the Lord against the mighty. The Lord's s
work is in no danger.
The possession of a yacht at this season s
lehich are usually exhaustive and worthy et
is very pleasant for the friends of the
poesessor.
iatnatio sortsailsook
Sarsa
iS
arilla
" I believe it is to the use of Hood's
Sarsaparilla that I owe my present
health. In the spring, I got so com-
pletely run down I could not eat or
sleep, and all the dreaded diseases of
life seemed to have a mortgage on my
system. I was obliged to abandon my
work, and after seeking medical treat-
ment and spending over $ao for different
preparations, I found myself no better.
Then my wife persuaded me to try a
bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla. Before
the first bottle was gone I began to
, amend. I have now used two bottles
and haYe gained 22 pounds. Can eat
anything without it hurting me; my
dyspepsia and biliousness have gone.
I never felt better in my life." W. V.
EuLows, Lincoln, 111.
akes the
eak Strong
Early Ixst spring 1 was very muLb
run down, had nervous headache, felt
miserable and all that. I was very
Mush, benefited by Hood's Sarsaparilla
arid recommend it." Mas, j. M. TAY -
1,01t, 11 ra Euclid Ave., Cleveland,O.
I was very much run down health,
had no strength and no incli.natiou to
do anything. 1 have been taking
Hood's Sarsaparilla and that tired feel-
ing has left me, my appetite has re,
turncd, I am like neW :Ctratee;-
GEV, LATHAM, North ColuMbus, Ohio.
,r41
)1,6
Al
J
,,ass
Vee ta a 4
Sea! as. doe esi as, ,
only by l". fie,t)11
100., DiCsC,0
t.
tyk,,V
Cl
(",.. • .
ilk') 9(144 r,
CA RTE R8
NEER
PILLS.
LIRE
Sick Headache and relieve all the tn.:sables inch
• dent to a bilious state of the system, slleli
llizainess, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distitia sifter
eating, Pain in the Side, &c. While their Mast
remarkable success has been shown in eurink
SICK
Headache. yet CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER P
are equally valuable in Constipatiots e
and preventing this annoying complaiht,
they also correct all disorders of the stom ii
stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Even if they only cured
HEAD
Ache they would be almost priceless to those
who suffer from this distressing comp/flint;
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, and those who once try them will fled
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be willing tO do without them.
But after all sick head
CH
Is the bane of so many lives that here is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are very emelt
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly, vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. In vials at 24 cents;
dye for $1. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail.
CASTER MEDICINE CO., Vow Yoh.
Small Small Duo. Small Trice,
OtANc &coma
/ MP1CrUS
°CIE A ;loam
, AG
A pamphlet of information and ab-
stract of the laws, showing How to
Obtain Patents, Caveats, Trade
Mark,. Coarrightirt. spa five.
AddXIB.11 MUNN- & GO.
361 Bron.dwriy,
New York.
PERISHED AT SEA.
Two Women and Five Children Lost in the
Pnbnico Belle Wreck.
• A COWARDLY CREW.
Particulars were received by mail to -day
of a harrowing disaster on the Newfound- •
land coast, the schooner Pubnico Belle being
wrecked and two women and five children
lost. Capt. Samuel Butts of the lost vessel
states that the Pubnico Belle, with crew of
four men left Catalina on the morning of
Wednesday, July 8th, bound for St John's
with a cargo of lumber. She had also on
board five 'women and five children as pas-
sengers. They made Baccalieu about 8
o'clock Wednesday night, the weather being
fine. The wind then veered to south-eouth-
-west and afterwards south, and a storm of
wind and rain came on, lasting from 11.30
Wednesday night until daylight Thursday
morning. The vessel lost her mainsail
and foresail successively and ran ashore on
the cliff at 2.30 o'clock Thursday evening.
The crew let go the anchor, which checked
the vessel, but the chain parted from the
violence of the storm. William Rose
jumped ashore and the captain threw a line
to him. By this means the rest of the crew
got ashore and the following passengers
were saved : Mrs. Rachael Burton, Miss
Julia Burton and Miss Wells. Mrs. Free-
man and Miss Carolina Higgins were
drowned. Five children were also lost, one
being Mrs. Freeman's infant, another a,
child coming on to St. John's, and the re-
maining three belonging to Mrs. Rachael
Burton, a boy of 12 years of age, a boy of 9,
and a girl of '5.
Mrs. Freeman, one of the lost, was the
wife of Wm. Freeman, now in Victoria,
13, C. She left two children in Catalina.
Mrs. Burton and her whole family were
coining for the puirse of altina passer.
by the steamship ortia for Nely Yor ,
where her husband is. She had but one
child left her. The only thing saved was
a small trunk of clothes which was
washed ashore. Capt. Butt stated that he
stuck to the wreck as long as there was any-
one to be saved. The first man to jump
ashore was Wm. Rose. He was followed by -
James Penny and Sol. Evans. The first
person Ise got off was Miss Burton. After
putting a rope around her waist he saw het
safely conveyed on shore. He then tried to.
put the rope around her mother's waist, but
while doing so a sea washed her out of his
hands. She had a 5 -year-old child ID her
hands at the time, but it was washed out of
her arms. The captain got pinned by the
spars. The sea took Mrs. Freeman and
infant overboard, When he recovered he
found Miss 'Wells, and was in the act of'
fastening the rope about her when another
Sea came and washed her away. Tho next
place he found himself was on the rocks. He
says if he had had another man with him
all might have been saved. Ile further said
that the crew looked after themselves and
jumped ashore the first chance. Passengers‘
who were saved corroborated the captain's
aecount.
According to the LondonEntr'acte several
tnglish managers think of introducing.
inueie hall perfoimaiseee in the bill of the
play. This mayonean that variety farce is•
to get a foothig on the En lish sta e