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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1891-02-04, Page 3The l if on News -Record BO a fear -41.26 n Advsitee Cid The ma', 'ides ant .te joetic,• lv Ain ttaiseav 1ko spends feta lit a.lee.£i11ou than he does is Ceti—A. r. tits watt, Mc millionaire merchant l New York. Weduesola r. lig eb. 4t11. 1891 VIE OLD 11 AN ELOQUENT. SIR JOHN'S SPEECH AT TUE ALBANY CLUB, TORONTO. UE CHARACTERIZES THE GRITS BY THEIR PROPER APPELLATION —THE GOVERNMENT WILL STAND BY TUE N. P. --THE ALLEUED DISSOLU'1ION !REFEREED TO. 'Jhe Ali,.toy Gull, T0101110, was brilliaw u44 1'u.'.,i ., . t hong ou Lite o)0asi1/11 of the lnu•,N limner given in honor of 8:r John Macdonald i1r. Frank 'f'ur'l) r, piesid•-ut of the clue, oe.;upi•'•1 the a;I•ui. Dinner having berm disposed of, the p.resl dent prop •e I the 1.,llth of air John l;ac,lo, uiJ, eAptt•e4i)4 1) , 1115 pleasure le .t'i ng him in such good flit alth alai holding that he .fetal long Let spewed in o.aupy Rios i.r(st•tit position. The toast was drunk with grant en.Iiu,ia.,w anti the sing - lug of tie's a Jolly Cloud Ft'i uw After the Itpphtuso had sol hitl,•Il, Sir John nail he was not the one to (leny it. He had ted, great a regard for t.hei, ju:l.;n, Iat,all.l for their prim- ciples,w'l,ieli en :.1:, Ile.1 :'seal to speak the truth oe .111 ,.cea,ioo5, ILO,' I1. LOUSE (P1 .n. Ile ilu,l „cC•-i.,ted Iheir invitation w Ili Lino tie.-' .Ln t of pleasure, and *•'. ohtetticisi tt a. 11 Colli- plitueml to 1,e . i u,.ur..,: especially it1 Torun t.,, a 4') e, w 1111 111 U t.tt:.••I5 1}ud 11).+0l't '1.4, 11.' i(411 I,, . I, 1' ltet:twl for 1141f a t;eututy. .1 i yuu aro all C:u:l •'rva! T.s, need t) try and , 1 .. ,Int rt ou —that will, tl tYt' to n. I'c, 4'rwud 1111' the U11• regenerated Of its. (Laughter'.) Their fi ight when tl .y hr.:kr ruul.irs of iliasulutioe Is Ilim.t amusing, fur, although they have been valiantly I)rucL•tiluin_• that they wanted the opportunity to appeal 10 the people, they immediately begin to abuse the Goverhor-General and call upon him to refuse a dissolution. Then when there is a prospect that Parlia- ment will last the five years they grow valiant again and call for tui eal to the people, hot only to return to their abuse of the Gover- nor General when rumors of an election a4ain become current. (Laughter.) They have as many aliases for their poii.:y as a thief has excuses for his wrong -doings. It has been colttllereial union, unre- stricted reelprn.:lty, and latterly tariff reform ; but there is another name by which It must be known, and that i.4 atinex tion, which is . treason. (•.pp;)utse.) But we are prepared for thele. Wo have. a Minister of Justice at Ottawa, and we have an Attorney' General qt. 'Toronto who will certainly put the law in forum. (Laughter.) Their organs have declared that Che policy of the Grits is now free trade. They are going to sweep away the Custom house's along the Mlle, and at the sante time surround us with the. McKinley tariff. That is not your policy, geetleinen --that is not the policy of the. Government. (Applause.) Tee Grits are so afraid now that Sir Richard is going up and down the country styling we are going to steal tRiair thunder, but thunder from such a quarter would not he worth stealing, and we will have none of it. The policy we introduced in 1878 we are going to stand by, (Cheers.) Look how it has built up the country. . L')ok at Toronto, Montreal and the towns throughout the country. While we are going to stand by our national policy, it is•tlle fact that every mea- sure of reciprocal trade we have • got from our neighbors has been got be the conxervative's." The treaty of 1854 was got by a Con. servative Government. The Treaty of Washington in 1870 was negoti- ated by himself as Canadian Cont. misstoner, anti when the treaty of 1888 was made Sir Charles Tuitper, who bad long been a colleague, was specially appointed a commissioner. So that every treaty extending trade with our neighbors had been got by Canservetiver', and by Governments of which he was a member. He believed utero wan room for extending our trade on a it basis, that there were things in hick we could enlarge its bounds without in any way infringing on the National Policy. Ile had occa. tion to know that many of the obnoxious features of the McKinley tariff were the result of advice of traitors in Canada. The politicians ,tan the other aide had been told :- "Put on all the screws you can on ti Canada and you will drive them into annexation." Ile had the word of sten of probity on the other Side that such advice had been tendered. We have all this to fight, rind we will fight it. (Cheers.) In b; • conclusion, he thanked them for .111e honor done him, and hoped the .club would continue to prosper. Sir John sat down amidst great •fpplause, and shortly after retired to his hotel. NAKED BABY ATHLETES. HOW T'IGY ARE TRAINED AND DEVEL- OPED WITHOUT CLOTHING. San Bathe the I 'test Fad—It's Curious but It Goes—A Sce»e in a Progressive Nursery —Health According to the Newest Whim. That infants are being brought up in puris naturalibus is being made known to the pub- lic through the medium of "breakfasts" and lunches. A whim that cannot in • •,)e way be aired does not fulfill the first eol..,ition of a whim, and so it chances that cards are be- ginning to go fluttering about in certain circles which bear, or bore in one instance, in the corner where one would naturally ex - SHAKE RANDS. poet, " To meet Mrs. So and So," the mys- terious inscription, " To be present at the suet bath of Monsieur le Bebe. - The breakfast tun Well this allusion is Made wt as probably the most elaborate that has Leen given. The ten ladies who were bidden slit about a table that differed in few par - :Alders from the dainty coarses which mod- ish women pride themselves on serving, Sawa il::!t the t',.w .'i'' 1:tl li,tt1 wh!eil heft' ferns held also ','l'.. mid fifties of the strange irll•y" outbids. At each plate lay t) small, faintly 1iagr:.ill ^told.• sachet" d. nu' tq) ill satin 1'ai"t,•ci N i:h 1 1114•:. ;a ids, nail into the k of 11 w•,. lee • 1 lire .t 0 cluster of 1u weird S t 1• ' •t orchids, l' d h t h.i L, a view• , 1 their tic • white to infants. Just as the fruit was served the door opened, and there trppcurcd uu the threshold twin lads, probably under :I, who wore short black velvet skirts and bits of round velvet jackets with great puffs of flimy white lawn • THE BABY VICTIM. seeming to bridge the gap between. The urchins had brown curls and peculiarly bright brown eyes. Messieurs les bebee lis. appeared, and curiosity rose in a crescendo until the hostess left her seat and eahuly, yet ILS one on the brink of a great coup, 'vivito(' the little proce.,sinn to follow her to the nursery. The big sunny room papered in pink and white with seems front 'Alice in Wonder- land" had for occupants a crackling fire aid two puffy pink cushions lying in front of the great bay window. To these there en_ •tercel after a minute's pause, during which one observed the stage setting of toy furni- ture—ribboned baby chairs and low round pink -enameled tables and white fur rugs— and water color sketches of rosy faces framed ill piuk and gold—two white -capped and apronecl nurses, who advanced with even pace and paid upon the cushions in the full flood of sunshine—Messieurs les belles, Pinker against the pink background kick- ed and wriggieil two little human balls, un- clad except for tissue paper caps that covered the flossy heads and shielded the eyes. There was a gasp and a gurgle from' every mother's daughter as four fat fists and four heels wild- ly waved. "Nannette and Marie," said the hostess, " you may go on." Nannette and Marie knelt by the pink urchins and rubbed them and rolled them and pinched them and Horde them scarlet with laughter and massage. "Nannette and Marie, aro they warm!" "Yes, Madame!" "Archie and Reggie, up with you!" The twins struggled to their feet and stood, tubby, toddling youths, obedient, blinking. "Nannette and Marie, start the ball!" The twin nurses produced a small black rubber foot ball and threw it to the two ur ROUGH AND TUMBLE FUN. shins, who understood the programme, for presently they sent it bobbing against the ceiling. They kicked it and tossed it and tumbled over it, all the time preserving the most comical gravity of demeanor, Since Nannette and Marie had taken hands off them they had not smiled. "Nannette and Marie, the measures: Archie and Reggie, how well can you stand 1" The nurses brought out two oak and silver sticks, and the twins solemnly walked up to them, touching to the improvised perpendi culars their noses, their chests, and the tips of their toes. Their round stomachs they drew resolutely in. Then, in soldier -like at - Merles, heads erect, they marched to and fro in the sunshine. "Archie and Reggie, breathe!" The twins stood where the sun was strong - act and drew air into their lungs. They still held their stnmaehs determinedly hnlloweot, but swelled out their chests, mirthless but mirth -provoking. They lay down again on their cushions, and slcwly and with absorbed eAttl1tenances lifted their dimpled legs to form wavering right angles with their bodies. Then Nannette and Marie held their feet and they lifted their heads and shoulders till, after repeated tumbh ngs back, they were in sitting positions. Algernon, the pug, took a paw in the romp and the vests blessed him. He gave them a chance to laugh hysteric- ally. " Marie and Nannette, the beanbags!" The twins threw them at a board with holes in it, taking the hoses of chubby Cupids. " Archie t:nd Reggie are really distressed,,' explained the radiant hostess, " when they have to be dressed for their run on the ave nue.-That is sufficient, Nannette and Marie. -Don't you know how the Greek youths and maidens got their figures by work without clothing in the gynmasfal Archie and Reg. pee practice several hours a day."-Philadel- WORKED SUCCESSFULLY. • A Ham Puts Up a Job With His Wife and Sisters at the Theatre. The theatre was crowded. The cu•talu had just risen. Jewels flashed, gay plumes on wondrous head-dresses fluttered in the heated air, costly fans waved slowly to and fro, and the fashionable audience turned its eyes and opera -glasses toward the stage and settled into the bush of expectation that precedes the opening of the play when the the experi- enced stage manager has waited considerate- ly for all the late -comers to be seated before the bell taps for the curtain to rise. Ina conspicuous location about half -way between the orchestra and the front seats of the parquet circle were three ladies who had come iu unattended about five minutes be- fore. They were noticeable for the wide, flaring, umbrageous hats they wore. Directly behind them sat a nervous -looking despair- ing man, who was making wild but fruitle s efforts to sue the stage. The wide huts w 'i their wealth of tropical bird foliage 1 everything he wanted to see from his vie In vain he wriggled and -squil'niosl and craned his neck from side to side. The hats were too large. too close together, and too richly upholstered. Apparently uncon- scious that be was attracting the at- tention of everybody in his neighborhood and bringing the ladies in front of hint into unpleasant prominence, he persevered till sounds of ill -suppressed laughter were heard on all sides of hitch Thou he settled himself back in his chair with a world-weary sigh, but the next moment took advantage of a lull in the performance on the stage to lean forward and address ono of the ludic, --the one who sat in the Middle. "Madam," he said in a loud whisper, "I %beg pumice', but it is utterly impossible for ole to st't' through your hat, and the Lord (lade me too small to see over it. If you will kindly 14 41144V0 it you wwill make a wretched plan happy for a whole evening." The -NI or a0 persons wenn were loo11ing on saw rho laxly remove her fiat at "ace, turn round and smilingly mulinely bug his pardon. They saw the.44) eller two lurlit•s. ' takt off their hats also, and the example be:•:.lar• instal; ly con- tagious. Ten or a (1447.011 of her c•utnn ous 1tats came off w11hi11 the next hall' -initiate, much to the relief of the sufferers directly behind then[. Then the star of the evening stepped on the stage and tha attention of the audience was attructec1 on the performance again. The details of this pleasing little incident are given in full for the purpose of explain- ing to those who witnessed it that the whole affair was a put-up job. The lady whole that mai addressed was his wife. and the other'two were his sisters. —Chicago Tribune. Children's Sunday Play. Two young mothers were gravely discuss- ing the question a fow days ago of Sunday games for their children. This subject Seenei to furnish 110 end of perplexities to mothers who have certain conscientious scruples against making the day a holiday, but who still wish to keep their children front loom ing to dread the day because of its restrie- tions. These woolen agreed that it was very very hard to know just what to do. Said nue: "I read to my children just as long a. they will let toe. But they're too young to care for very much of that. They walit to play with their toys and I don't think they ought to (144 that. Last Sunday Jack played with his soldiers, and I was really- shucked when I went into the nursery and found hila. What do you dot" "Why," said the other, with au air of con- scious superiority, "that used to trouble me but I've got it beautifully arranged now. I got u dissected map Of Palestine for Janey and Harry and I let them put that together, and then I let then[ play l ogounachy, if they will spell ont nothing but Bible naves." "But Harold and Tom—they're too little for that. What do you do with them?" asked the other, with the air of one sitting at the feet of the prophet. "Why, I've fixed that ton," she answered. "I let their play with a big Noah's ark." How to Test Duck's Age. A writer in one of tho American dailies says: "Are you fond of duck 1 Do you shoot your game or buy it 1 If you buy it how do you know it is young or old 1 Do you want to know 1 I'll tell you. Take the duck and hold it at arm's length, straight from the shoulder, by the lover part of the hill. If the hill breaks from where it joins the meat then the duck is young. If it doesn't don't buy it. The duck being old the meat is tough, and the bill is too firmly hung to break. It is au initllible rule." Speculative Heredity. Matcrfanilias—Imogen, you mmstn'tmarry George Rockpate. He w•as such a hard-head- ed boy! I couldn't bear to have my grand- children like him. Imogen—Yes, mamma, I know all the Rockpates are awfully hard-headed; but you must remember thele is s>fteuin f of the brain in our family." it Takes Two to flake a Bargain, Mrs. 11'eigwood-- I know I')t cross at times, John, but if I had try life over again to live I would marry yntt just the same. 1W'. Ny-tvlgw-oud--1 have my doubts about it, my dear. . The Way of the World. " My ](other was tin elegant cook. 'there was only one person she couldn't please," " Who was that!" "My father. He rom[;nlberal his mother's cooking." An Evidence of Wealth. Mr. Grump—I can't sen,, 'sty clear, what gond that border of fur does you around the hem of your skirt. Mrs. Grump—Why, it shows that I can afford it.—Ha•per's Bazar. She Took Hint at His Word. Ile (1I:45 p. m.)—Why, I'd do anything in the world for you! She (yawning)—you will? Then for heaven's sake sneak home. I'm sleepy. - Texas Siftings. A Start In Housekeeping. Venetta-Docs Charlie really think he will ever marry yon 1 Beatrice --I'm sure he does; his parents are so verypractical. 1. It Exp eases the ] lea. Moneybags—I want an en, agement ring that will be expressive of the sentiments of the Indy tower& myself. Jeweller -How's a dollar sign set with dia- monds? - 40 ' HJ; 'V •;iii) OF FASHION A WIDE -BRIMMED VELVET HAT OF CHARMING APPEARANCE. The Latest Styles In the Smaller Tial len - The Favorite Flower Fad- -Novi lues In Fans—Muffs for Evening W•tar— k'ashionable Handlterohlefs. A youthful round hat with soft crown and peojecting brim is of marrow velvet trimmed with ostrich feathers of the same shade, and high loops of satin ribbon at the back. \VIDEalRIlt IED VELVET HAT. Tooth powders held by leading jewellers are put up in cut -glass bottles and silver jugs and tubes. The woman wlu> knows how to wear le r clothes well I.s the one who has solved the question of economy in dress, for sill• is at her best always. If you have a register in your fluor or the wall of your living-i-oonl a touch of gold paint will brighten the gray worn irnu grating. 1f you t1,iike the tint of avarice use bronze er copper 11141.1. The eomlbivatlun of blue nail blaelc is nit nlh11irab11 one; sol only is it a yn•ie:s fruit the fasldonablu stnu(lpuiut, Ltltit is also 411(5 from the artistic, the two ride's, dark though they be, eolith ug out wend. Trolly wwell. YOU 11111st 118w10 a favorite newer, wer, i.l.•titifw yourself with it, wear it in 1 ugne:s, posit•.., perfume, millinery and (11.4,4; good., 0, the ex- clusion of every other desids, scent and bins- suM-1)11his '44. this 1 1 t 'ttdl w-' IthU1t ,•, . . I .lh tl ].m IY a women wants to wear 1: jewels . n her eats and does tot Want. her ear. 1 •Ickes she can provide herself with a pair of ear -vises for them alert sum n1 lfi. So 1'ortilled, rings, pendants lr screws in previous luota1 or stone can be readily and securely attached. One of the late novelties in farts has ono side of silken rose petals in the natural hues of the flower and the other gauze. When this fan is open it seems' impossible that it can be closed without hopelessly crushing the delicately curling petals, but the clever designer has overcome all difficulties and the "rose four " may be brought together like any other with perfect impunity. The great rage of the season is for velvet ribbons—narrow ones tied under the chin or hanging down the back in floating streamers. Black ribbons and white ones, and all the new malarial colors, that would look like mistakes if they weren't so stylish. Collar- ettes of piece velvet, shaped to tit the neck_ and match the bonnet, are worn, aucl are sometimes fringed with pearls or bordered with diamonds. Muffs for evening weal' favored by the el(ganto( are very dainty and tiny little af- fairs trade of violets, rosebuds or humming birds in (' mjunction with lace, silk and plush. Au odd little affair is ruched with steel lace, lined with chinchilla, and on the outside a diamond crab hohLs in its claws a bench of tulips. These muffs are worn sn.pended by a gold snake drain, which goes round the neck, and their chief raison (1'etre seems to be to afford an opportunity for wearing the chitin. The most curious hat -rack we over saw, says Upholsterer, is fashioned to represent an old wooden lamp -post attached to the corner of a country fence, about three feet wide; sticking out of the post and fence are hat and coat pegs, and perched upon the top is a cat with back uplifted, spitting at a bark- ing pup below her. The animal flgures are done in life-size and presumably bronze: the fence and lamp -post are in oak and in close reproduction of just what some old country fence and corner lamp -post look like, even to the old-fashioned iron lamp which surmounts the top. The newest black capotes affected by girls withfair and •*44 e 1 1 ld n hair „ are o1•rlamentcd on the front with two.velvet horns stuffed with cotton wool tw keep them in position, the whole idea being copied from pictures of Bacchus accompanied by a group of dryads, and the elrect, when one recovers from the breathlessness of the surprise, is piquant and pleasing. Another odd little fad is the em- ployment of a group of excessively light feathers, with no mid rib to them, of the ex- act color of the wearer's hiir. The little bunch is placed under the extreme front of the capote and above it in such a manner that it waves about, or would if atmospheric in- fluence did not destroy its curl. In the line of handkerchiefs the most fash- ionable are made of erepe lisle, with an em- broidered edge and in every color imaginable, from brilliant s•a•let to pale Nile -green, and froin jet black to clear white. Some very unique effects air produced by contrast of color. The black handkerchief is usually a square of silk muslin, with a full frill of fine black lace about it. Any girl eau easily make one of these for herself. 1.w every -day use the white handkerchief of lawn, with a nar- row hentstitdle,l border, a Very narrow nuc, and a fine frill of lave— itlencitame5—nut half an inch wide, about it i.preforr,.'d, Ela- borate monograms am no longer fancied, but instead the initials of the owner in srnall letters, and in what is known as running - fashion, are chosen. New French skirts, with most of their ful- nem taken out by a sloped seam in the middle of the rack, are cut off in three hori'rontai pieces to break the monotony of straight breadths, a fashion very becoming to tall, slender figures. The foundation skirt of silk has two straight breadths joined by a seam down the initiate of the front, fitted over the hips by three duets in each breadth, and meeting at- the haul; of the waist. The space at, the top beyond the fastening is sloped diagonally to meet two shorter breadths that aro similarly sloped, and party of two three -cornered breadths. also sloped in the middle, are set in at the foot to give fulness to the bottom of the shirt, rhe outside material is usually of cloth of double width, and hes, therefore, fewwor lenglhwi-e seams than the foundation skirt. it is cut in threecrossw•isepiced's passim; straight aro'n:d the figure, each lap] ing li,.hl1' "pen that below it, and eneh n thiol of the lenu•th of the skirt in der' h o hen th'(' Je•1 w. 1111 it sttt( 11"1 h5tn. 1'I ,• e + i,va•a also have dm sloped :.cant in tit! ' • .:r•:,i ni ', ''wed on the foundation skirt. a 11.3 .ill f(11Ine.s, f41!e'.1 11(1rts etre most worn with rout :d w-nis10 that ere slipped under the skirt ; hence the lop of the • skirt is trimmed with paoententrie to give a pretty finish to the bodice. At the foot of -the skirt is usually a band of fur or feathers and pasaementerie. A sealskin coat is not an all -kind -of -weath- er affair. While the little seals live ill the water and swim as happily as a seal who does not know his fate can do, rant cleans destruction to yotu' coat -that LS, ivauy rains. If you are tmfortunate enough to be caught out in one storm, us soon as you get home hang your cloak, not on a willow tree, but on a clothes -horse in a cold room; do not allow it to dry where there is but air. It will flatten the kap so that it will not permit itself to be brti5bed up again. After your coat has dried in the proper fashiou, if it has a crushed look take your hand and go over it, brushing the nap up. The not showing the beauty spots having been tallied "common," which means that a well-dressed wumau prefers that some one else wear it beside herself, is no longer in vogue. It is certainly true that the beauty spot had au undesirable knack of getting jus --t where it shouldn't be, and a beauty spot is not (ulfillhlg its bbjet't in life when it decor- ates the entre! your nose, islets in one 0001na' of your eye, is. by sticking close t, the caner of your lip makes your mouth appear one- quarter of a size too largo for the fest. of your face. This so often happens that good -by to the beauty Spot is said without any grief whatever. Oatmeal for the face and hand:, wet with water noon sows, but ',repinesi i'1 the follow- ing way will keep good any length of tints. Take three cupfuls of oat111(111 and five of water WI' loss quantity in the sprue propor- tion); stir well, let it stand over night in a cool place; in the nt"ruing stir again, after awhile stir thoroughly and strain; let it stand until it settles, then c•ar4,fully put(• off the Nortel' and add etiot1 11 hay ruin to make the sediment ale eit as thick as Crean', or thinner if liked. Apply to the fltee with a sort chit It, let it reluaiu until nearly dry: then rub briskly with a soft flannel. Shake well be- fore using. For [mourning jewelry eh1 :,r in limited to black eutunolwl gold, 1lneker•tvl silver, cut onyx, pcai.h i or imp!!! he•l, and any do.sigti net w'i111 diamond- , r 11 him and Mark pem•1.. 1'he blued -lite hcnuttit:• pin o1 ire:) ole has the plefer(uoe 11s a 1..' ..' net pits; oar screw, of bbu•k pearl or plain onyx are ceied,tered ill better 11)5)4' than petdnut .r owing',: onyx and euuulclled gold 111••' 44.441 1)s bleu pins 114111 brunches, 1111ho1(r,h pins with and 1.114).,i fur ur(' .4 1,•.h' 1ne pertinent its well as f':-hiou4)ble: d0-' 1,eer1' bracelet., are also ser••,•!,"1, and oil i c. o:;, 11- izcd silver and enamel e 1 gold are wont e•.1- let•tivtly and singly: eyeglass chains mil holes are ipreferred 111L h,tlldboiugp.•r- mittetoo; black eunuch! •laic or surround- ed with 81111411 (Haim:oils, 4le::eriln,s the roller button, scarf -pin and .sari ring; very many watches of biuekenwl al'or m•,•sold to 11100011- ers, and 146.11 1111 ,i1 1 watch is put 11) u 114W ('4150 of black enamel. The most fashionable chain i8 the ladies Langtry fob of onyx, pol- ished or unpolislt •d, with some useful pen- dant, generally a key or coin box. EVENING HAIR DRESSING. Freed Prevails lit Fashionable Coif- fures This Season. Harper's Bazar says that the utmost free- dom prevails in fashionable hair -dressing. The coiffure may be piquant and modern, it may be demure and classical, or it may be a flu de 8101-15 Illeditttn between the two, with those features which are best adapted to the individual facial characteristics of the wear- er. The hair is worn high, and is alg°o worn low, but not to the extreme of either. In the low coiffure illustrated the hair is gathered back in a loose plait of three strands, which is looped up, the strands pulled apart, and pinned with ornamental hair -pins. The hair is parted from ear to ear; then two small strands of the back hair below the ear are divided off, and plaited together low down at the middle; this plait is to be pinned up to fowl a support for keeping the larger braid to the head. The front hair is then combed hack, and added to the rest of the hack hair to form the large single plait. 11e short loose locks on the forehead aro waved. A more elaborate coiffure is ornamented 'with n jewelled comb and an aigrette tied in a knot of ribbon. For this all the hair with the except ion of the short curled front locks is draw 11 up to the crown and twisted to- gether: it is then arranged in several irreg- ularly placed rolls, with the ends drawn downwwrird end twined in loops at the back. A 5inele ringlet of the front hair is drawn down at the middle of the forehead; those at th,• side. are pinned as closely as possible to the heal with fine invisible hair -pins. .Ch. ,"!finis1 Cares Burns, Cats, Pitts Lt their worst foam, Swellings, Erysipelas, Intimataua Lion, Frost Bites. Chul,ped tiouds 'tad all Skin Diseases. ' Hirst PAIN EXTERMINATOR —cwurs— Luutbego, Sciutlen, 18 lien lital (80t, Nen- "nigh. 'Toothache, Pains In every ((tall. By all dealers. Wholesale by F. F. Dailey & Ca HUMPHREYS' Da. HUMPHREYS' SPECIFICS are scientifically and carefully prepared prescriptions; used for many years In private practice with suecess,and for over thirty years used by the people. Every single Spa- the is a special cure for the disease named. These Specifics etre without drugging,purg- ing or reducing the system, and are in fact and deed the sovereign remedies ofthe"sVorld. LIST Or PRINCIPAL NOS. CURES. PRICES. 1 Fevers, Congestion, Inflammation... Worths, Worm Fever, Worm Colic.. crying Colic, orTeethingoflnfants Diarrhea, 0f Children or Adults ... 5 Dysentery, Griping Billouscollc.... (1 Cholera. 111 orb us, Vomiting.... ... Coughs, Cold Bronchitis ! Neuralgia., ,koothache Faceache ch e Headaches Sick Headache, Vert igo 1? yepepsia, Bilious Stomach a pressed or Palnfal Periods 12 %V Ii, cs, too Protuse Perloda 11Rroup cough, Difficult Breathing Salt alt Rheum,p heum, Erysipelas, Eru tions. 5 heumatism, ltheutnunc�Yalns 6 Fever and A Rue, Chills, Malaria ( 19 Catarrh, Influenza, Cold la the Head 17 Piles, Blind or Bleedlugyslcui 'LO Whooping ('(ugh V)olcntCeoughsweaknets `L•1 'rnurul I)ehllitv,Pii5 27 KidueyDisease 50 28 Nervous Debility 1 00 30 Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed00 32 Diseases of tbuHuart,Paipitatlon 1 00 Bold by Drugggtsts,or sent pnstpald on receipt of price. Da. HUMPIIItEYs' slesuAL, (1.1.1 pages) richly bound in cloth and gold, mulled free. Humphreys' llediclueCo.(lSFallon St. NY. 2 25 23 25 33 1 zR PEC�F� VS. WELLS & RICHAILD1ON LO. Agents, MONTREAL. A SURE CURE FOR BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, DIZZINESS, SICK HEADACHE, AND DISEASES OF THE STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS. THEY ARE MILD,THOROUGH AND PROMPT 1N ACTION. AND FCRM A VALUABLE AID TO BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS IN THE TREATMENT AND CURE OF CHRONIC AND OBSTINATE DISEASES. 1Gt"l� ' DESTROYS AND HI_MOVES WORMS Dr Al.l- KINDS IN CHILDREN OR S" "ETAS %VP.LIr, AND ▪ i._.'; l,•(.!' fr'1! ID ID ✓ v a 117 S -P-11 — JN T11h,'— m rod THE KEY TO HEALTH. Unlocks n11 the c i 41(•ee , . • , s of tilt Bowels, Kidneys and L: re; . carrying off gradually without weakening; Os system, all the impurities and foul he -non, of the secretions ; at the same time Correcting Acidity of the Stpmach, cluing Bili- ousness„ Dyspepsia. _headaches, Diz• ziness, Heartk'urn, Constipation, Dryness of the Skin, Dropsy, Dim - nese of Vision, Jaundice. Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Scrofula, Fluttering of the Heart, Nervousness and General Debility ; all these and many other simi- lar Complaints yield to the hnepy influence of BURDOCK' BLOOD BITTERS. Sample Bottles 10c ; Regular size $1. For sale by all dealers. T. MIILBURN & CO., Troprtctors, Toronto, ROPERTY FOR SALE OB RENT.—Advertisers will find "The 04 News -Record" one of rho best mediums In the County of Huron. Advertise in "The News-Record"—The Double Circulation Talks to Thousands. Rates as low as any. .�-:tli$ti4w