HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1902-01-23, Page 3ALMOST A MIRACLE
„ Wrought in the Case of a
Charlottetown Lady,
Ilertiter Sant be Was in Con-
sumption ruin Held Out No Hope of
ReceVery e- Toedaa She 1$ Well,
Strong and Active.
From the Lawlor, Cherlottotown, Pala,
Statistics publinited from time to.
time oliow tee nureber of deaths of: -
tattering throughOut tbie country 'rem
voineumption to be an great as the
number (Mused by fill Other preyeat.
line diseases comietned. It is no won-
der, therefore, teat the niedien1
fraternity has at last awakened:. to
the, fact that the most urgent means
must; be, taken, to- eerevene its ferther
spread, raid to teach; the public that
while the disease is readily commutna.
meted from One persorn to Another it
is uot eecessarily inherited, though
the tendency to it may be.„ 'et is
thannfore of the utmost tmportance
that peonle with weak longs .ehould
take the greatest care an themselves
to prevent ooneumption obtaining a
di hold upon them. Pure, oat of -door
nn air, lots of eanahlne, win:1ose:11e food
and a good tonic medicine to keep
the blood, rice, red anal pure, will en
able anyoaeo to resit the Inroods
of the disease. Asa blood fornang
tattle there L nte medicine the equal
of Dr. Williame/ eaule Pide. Those pine,
where freely and fairly mach
will strengthen the weakest coast/
tution, oral hove, cured many cants
O f ooneumption when token In Its
eaely stages. Proof of tiles Is given in
tho case of Mrs, Abram liOnry, of
Charlottetown, P., E. 1. To a re
porter of the Ielainder, who cancel
upon her, Mrs. Henry staid: "A. few
years ago I found myself • growing
weak and mete anu emaciated. I aook
various andieines on the advice of
friend, but none of them appeared
to do me any good, and two years
ago my condition, Demme so much
worse, that I was obliged to tette
to my be iota °all, be a doctor, wto
said that zny hinge were affected,
and that 1 wos gong into consul -up
tion, and he told my mother, who
was mostly in attendiarice upon me,
that my recovery was very doubt
fut. I grew gradually weaker and
weaker. I could not sit up for five
minutes; my lunge pained men I
coughed severely, lost almost all de
More for food, and wlien 1 did eat I
found it difficult to retain food on
my stomach, e fell away In weiklit
from 148 pounds to 100 pounds, and
I dp not think any of: any friendex-
pected to see the get better. - Bat
norne of them urged me to try Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills, and I decided
to do so. ..1 beganetty taking one
pill a day, for nty stomach was very
•weak, bat I was,,..soen able to in-.
ereaoe tbis to three pills a (day, and
finally ail my strength, woe increas--
ing under their use,.I took ninepins
a day. The change which came with
tee tan or the pills was little short
of Miraculous, and so merited and
s•apial that leekle .of two months
after I langan their use I was able
to leave mel; bed and move aboet the
house, and soon after I was able to
walk °bora in* the open air one
make short visite to my friends. thl
one of.theee ciecasions X met the dinn
tor who. had. attended me, and ale
• asked not whet I had been taking
;that -had Mode such an improve-
ment. replied that I had been
taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and
he said `all rinhtn. continue them;
they won't hurt you anyway,' Well,
I coettinneci taking then* until I had'
treed seventeen boxes, with the re -
alt that I never felt better than
do now—not even in my girlhood
. days. It is more than a. :year eince
I stopped taking the pills, and you;
can sea fon yourself what they did
for me. I may ser.y, too, that my
• weight has inereased to 137 pounds.
I am not aniloue Tor publleity, but
111. wilen I think of what the pills did
for, me, I- believe I ought to sacrifice
My owe feelings for the benefit of
Vote° other poo a etrtiorer:"
Dr. Williams' Pink 'Pills have pro-
duced such remarkable cures as the
above, becense they are oniony un-
like ordinary medleinns, which only
act upon the sy'reptoms. These pills
go direct to the root of the trouble,
making new, rich blood, and giving
increased strengthwith every dose.
en this way they cure consumption
in its early stages, also such diseases
as paralysis, rheumatism, St. Vitus'
delete, heart trouble, neuralgia, d,vs-
pepsta, chronic erysipelae, and all the
e functional teroublee 'that makes the
Than: of so many w'ornen miserable.
The genteine pills are sold only, in
boxes bearing the 'fail name " Dr.
Williara Pink Pills for Pale People,"
If ,vore do not flna them at your
dealers, they will be sent postpaid
at 501 camp a bon or six boxee for
$2.50, by. addrestsing the Dr. Williams
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont,
Ile Won't be lexpelled,
Moldy Mike—By all tin saints, has
yer lost yer mind? Wot you carry -
in,' that star ter?
Ragged Robeet—It's all right: I
stop at houses an' offer to -saw
some wood fer me cannot,.
."You'll be expelled front the Tray-
elin' Gentlemen's Thelon."
"No, I Warta. After dinner I tell
'ent I can't work tili• I filo Me saw.
They lend mu a file an tell me to
go Way off where they won't hear
Me filth'. Most any paloen w111 give
a drink ter a good 'Ikea—Nate-York
411 ;Weekla..
" Ills Oven Ores VVill,
Dear Birs,—I cannot speak lear
strongly of the ekeelience of Attn-
./111D 9 LINIAtENT. It is THE rem-
edy in my household foe burns,
Opreins, ete., teed WO W01141 Oat be
:without it.
. It le trely 'a wonderful medicine.
JOIN A. MACDONALD,
Publielter Arnpritor Chronicle.
Art Alphabetical " Ad. n
Tiae alPliabotleal adVertisetuent
hoe been discovered ht an isale of
that leendlni Mime In ISO: TO WIclokee
and single gentlemen—nlatetea, by n,
lady, a ,situation to supekintetal tlie
household and preside at table. She
la Agreeable, Becoming, Careftil, De-
.Arabia tugliell:, Inthetioue, Generteat,
Iloneet, JudieIoas, Xeen,
Lively, Merry, Natty, Obedierit, Pini-
esopineal, reitiet, ilegUiree, Soetahle,
Tasteful, tisetul, Vleati011e Wontan-
tele, nrantippleff, YOnnithornbs Ztntiolla
ate. Address X. X. .4.1. Streams'
labrary EdgeWare /1.00.(1.-eTite Sehoel-
Mareter.
TO 0.11/100 A COLO III ONE DAV
lake taxative trade titielee 'tabldte. All
drueglat refunt tbd mosey it It „fees -Watt%
W. Wee% Nt Itt.N eel inlet sis,
T11E:WEEKLY PAPER'S SPHERE.
It Remains a Valuable Medium
in Many Districts,
ITS UMITY FOR ADYERTISING.
Teo wee.kly home paper, the only
newo fibeet probably puelteluel ht the
town or vilia.get far rernoveti from a
large tiny, 10 the moat closely read
Aral "Hort/1101y • reopected publica-
tion to b found auywitero. It earries
greater weiget, ias laeger influ-
ence wine the conservative old fogies
who have boon brenight up to await
ite weenly coming over :ewe they
00.0 remember. Ito combeg is intieed
ulto of the weekly event, and it goat
through the ltaade of the lumen -
hold le their regular order of pre -
variance, The reading of its columns
never. becomes perftteotory. The.
load of the household gete it rirst, of
worse, and retiring into tea calm -
nen Corner of a, winter evening, or
some cosy nook on the porch ef
etoniner twilight, no ernmateneee, at
tho top or the firsacolume, lits fore-
fiager perhaps marking each para -
grape and reading through at, takea
up the next and the next, until be
hag digested all the oews and tee ecli.
torial opinions, •nut he ie not ,yet
through, for the oavortisements lo
their turn alsocommand his atten-
tion; A generation ago the country
weekly was regarded with main,'
veneration throngliouto the land,
awl Its Influence we paramount
et eryweere outside of cities,. Now-
adays ite sphere has become much
clrouniecribecl, but there are still
many erections whero its influenee is
emprome, In these the weight of an
ralvertIsement in its columns is still
greater than any presented to a city
cliontele through the paper that
hoppennat tbei moment to be their
favorite.
The great oesential difference be-
tween ten patron of the country
Weekly and tile ierhabltant of the
city, as far as their respective at.
tatudee toward newspapers is con-
cerned, Is thatthe former is intense-
ly coneervative end the latter is
inert the reverse. Let the mitiale
claeses—the most satiefaetorY from
every -Point Of view for the ad-
VertIser—furnish th representativee.
The countryman's coneervattsm Ina&
him toadopt a new thIng very, very
slowly, and to rellognish an old
thing equally deliberately. He In
01: (Illtelf to try experiments and
he must have a reason for licang so.
But this holds good AISO In tho eaue
of le arm efainmet for his favor. On
the other hand, the city non is al-
ways on tee lookout for an improve-
ment upon what he Is using tonlay,
told to -morrow will already find 11101
relinquishing the tatter. These are
extreme cases, ofeceuree.
Vol, the permanent adoption of a
new article hart Intrinset merit
what eattree would Lt be wiser to
pureue? A campaign In the country
would involve much time—and "time,"
they say, "le money," In the city,
on the other hand, returns and re-
mits woula probably be very mph],
but notwithstanding the merit of
the article would they be permanent
enough to Dulld a future upon?
If you ItaTei once mode a founda-
tion, resting upon the favor of the
middle elaesee in the ,country, nou
can safely rear an edeflee of "airy-
ectraplaig" proportions. Would you
have Out mime sense of security if
your patronage were of the city papa,
lotino ?
Aed another fact which tips the
scalestill more for the former is
In the city people live much
more for themselves—their Inter-,
wore() with friends and neigbbors le
very constrained and restrietea. In
the cientrian people are thrown very
much more upon their own resources,
neighborliness le unconstraineti anal
natural. People go very much more
out of thelr way for eatell other,
Hence, if they know of a good thing
whieli will servo a eeiglibor, thee
will do 1 .'Yj' much t have him ad-
opt it.
The country people are on the
whole In a, very prosperous condi-
tion. If you linte AO article that ap-
peals to them and le ' adapted to
their needs nod use, they are In the
large majority in a posttion to be
able to buy It., In this respect they
are; much better off, man' for man,
than their bity prototypea. The
strenuous life of a metropolie
leaves the middle classes scarcely
able to Indulge in much more than
their neeessitiee.e-Printers' Ink.
Four Good
Short Stories.
4,..yE:weezoaQ2_,R.;.2,
A Canadian and an Englishman
were one clay discussing the spell of
meld weather which has recently been
elpping across Britain and the Con-
tinent. Said the Englishman;
"It Is indeed bttterly cold just now;
but I remember one winter when the
ice-oream men, who; kali to children
eal the year round, had to keep it a
fewoiegreee above zero"
"ou tell meethat," said the Colo-
nial troeper, lutist . returned from.
South" Africa. "Well, 'I quite iselibee
it, and it reminds me of a cold snap
we OlerltD hail In -one of the coldest
corneae of Canatia. It was this here
way. I was running al pub, at the
time, and one night I had gone to
“iga up In the third story, and heal
just got to sleep when I cliecovered
the house WAS on fire and the stairs
Were already gone. Knowing that all
the boarders would make for my
room, I threw up my window and;
yelled for the Brenadcler. Word was
soon passed -up that it was broken,
and the 'brigade, started to draw on
the street plug, but the water was
frozen and wouldn't Come ant. Sud-
denly the captain remembered the
hot spring opposite, and, putting his
hydrant In it, lin :tent us a big
stream of werm water, which, now -
over, soon trete into n. long Ice eta -
men, and down this all the boarders
and myself slid into safety."
No further remark in recorded ;-
enough had been Rani for a time.
The poor ScCoon atowriat"—what
lie may saffer-in the Emerald Isle 1
'Mere is a story on recond of three
Irishmen ruching away from the
race meeting at Puinchestowe to
catcle a traln back to Dublin. At
the moment a train from a long
distanee Polled up at the station,
and the three man scrambled in. In
the carriage was seated one other
passenger. As soon as they regain-
ed tiger breath, one steici:
• "Pat. have youj got -nth' tielcate ?"
"What tickets ? I've got me loife;
thought I'd have lost that gettin'
In tin train. Have you got 'em,
Mena° ?"
"011 Begorra., I haven't".
"Oh, we'te all done for, thin," said
the third. "They'll charge as roight
from the other side of ()Ireland.
'the old gentleman looked over his
newspaper and said:
"Yon aro quite 'safe, gintlemen 1
wait till we get to the next sta.
tion."
They all tbree looked at each other.
/3eclad, he's a- directlior—we're
done for now', entoirely."
13ut as soon an the train pulled up
the little gentleume jammed oat and
came back with three first-class
ticket. Vending, them te the as-
tonished strangers, he said :
"Whist, I'll tell ye how I aid It. I
whit along the -Liman—Ticket%
plaze; ticket, pirtZe,' I Celled, and
these belong to three Saxon tow -
10 another earriage."—Harry
Fuentes, In Mho Sinned.
:Hero Is one 'Owl: n young man
Who kiloWto a. good etory when he
hearer it beard one re1ive:1d Man toll
anortner Ina depot pp. the line the
o•ther day :
"We plokeal "up a new Irishman
eotnewhere up country and set him
to work bread& on a eonstraction,
train at three OMAR tt tell 0 for
Wager& One day when hint an' me
Wes on the train she got novay on
ot16 ne them mountain grades!, Onci
the firet thing we known) s)e war:
flyin' down the track at about 00
Milee no hour, with nothin' in sight
but tho ditch ned tho happy buntlin
grounde when we mite to '111e end.
tiwisted 'mu down ns bora as X
410111(1 all along. the tope,. awl thee Of
a Seddon X see Mike crawlie' along
towital that enti an one cd the earn 00
all There. With his faco the color of
milk. I thought he WAS gettill. ready
to jump, Mai I see hie Mash if he
"Afiken1 «aye, 'for thee mike
don't julep,'
"Ile Matinee hie :fittnere on the
Main' board to ghat 111111 11 ehanect
to turn, retina, Mel, lookIn' at me
conitemptuctua nnewere :
"jump, le it ? yee think I'd In,
aftlier jticulelln 101 Ine Makin' money
as feet as I an ?' "—Krone the Morn-
ing Oregonian.
--
Those • who know the conceit with
which *Richard Ilarding Davbs re-
gards himself and his 'achievements
wIll appreciate the following story.
1 -Xis wife had entered a, number of
(Inc. dogs at the recent New York
bench slow, and Mr. Davis was in
the smoking car on his trip clown
from, Marlon, Mass., where he lives,
when he was „abeosted by an en -
afraid strairgek of "sportO" appear.:
alma
"Are., you," said this gentleman,
cheerfully seating himself by Mr.
.Devis'' Side,. "are you Mr. 7"
limning a celebrated dog fancier. I
"1 'allt hot,' Mr. ' Davis replied,
halMly enough, knowing that he had
faete up hie sleeve which might
easily be made to- annihilate this
preetunpthous individeal. "I ani Mr.
Davisaellleharci Harding Davie."
Tile sportillg ,gentleman drew back
with an air of deference and naVe.
"Do you mean to flay," he said,
"that you are the husband of .1lfrs.
Davis, the, owner sof Woad -cote jum-
bo? I'm glad to know won. That's
the finest bull"----. But Mr. Davis
had vanished.
SOZO on
Tooth
Powder
' a'e'eee:'nee~aleenee'eeen.ne"ernranea..eentfeeatnenneee..aeeeOf',ne..aeaeireennner'Taeosnee.n. 'Oleg
Good for Bad Tenth
letot ISad for Good Tenatla
Sexodont Liquid asc Lugo 1 issalantiPnwtinr 7.4e Ag
00040' by Mail lor tIn• "In rt"otos 4,4
HALL & ItUDICEL, Montreal].
ORIOIN OF THE POLKA.
A, Dance That Was Inveuted by a
Peasant Girl.
Xit "Bygone Dances," in Cassell's,
Tolin Collett time recounts. tee °Ogle
ef the polka :
The polka to the natural dance for
the feet of the people. Take, au evt-
dent* int origle—a Bohemian peasant
girl was :Seen detecting "out of Mir
own head," extemporizieg frOin Clio
Amer joy of her boort song, tone and
stelae This site did on a Sunday at ter -
norm in Ilibejeletto, and an ortlet, one
,neeef Nertale, who spied ber, made
a note of all he saw. -The people( of
the town adopted the dance and
called it the Pullen, ball stop. Ill 1981
it reached, Prague, and Vienne, ea
1810, thence it spread ropially through
Europe. When M. Cellariue Introduced
It to the Parisians wt. hear that ell
else gave way before the
pursuit, the polka, whielt em-
braces In ite qualalee tits intimacy
of the waltz with the vivric,ity of
the Irak jig." With becoming gravity
the Illustrated London NelVe re-
, ported the first drawing -room police
danced at Almack's, and followed this
on May 1.101, 1814, within, descrip-
i tion of the five fin,m.es, adding that
those who, wlehea to shine should
datum the wliole.
D NEM UNTI Ci
in the iffIgloiands ef Otitarlo.
The Grand Truuk Railway System
anassuasse tenl,t ttli: deer fleecing sea-
son. in. Ontar,o resneeel meet satis-
factorily to the hanters that went
into time orstrect aterlog the open
eceteon ot 1U01: Margit the mon-
plate Ineormation, with regartl to
the number of intenorte ire:meat tnleyear
leas oat yet come ,to Itaarlo It le era
timated that over, 5,000 licenses were
leaved, arid bantam parties and' oth-
ere eetireate the deer killed to be
about one-centaa-nalf deer to each
banter. This *Quiet make a .totad
of 7,500 deerkilled, and it is some-
what marvellous how the stock of
deer keeps pace wale tiee number
killed, but it,seents that each year
they aro becOming more numeroue,
and tbere is an increase instead of
a diminution. This is accounted for
by the ebortness of the open season
(which runs from November let to
15th0 and by the atrict prosecution
by the Ontario Government of any-
one transgressing the laws. The wan-
ton slaughter which, ato doubt„ would
leave prevailed had hunters been al-
lowed to kill ast their pleasure has
thus; been preveated to a greet ex-
tent, aorl one of the best heritages
of the pubite saved, Tels year the
Canadian xpress Company alone
carried 2,372 deer,, which ht an in-
crease over the season of 1900 of
878 deer, the total weight of theae
shipments amounting, to 2E8,637 lbs.
Alt of these shipments were made
from points leo:feted on the Grancl
Trunk Railway, the largest number
of carerteeeebeing taken out of the
nfagnetawan niver region, the
Muskoka Lakes dietriet nate pointe
Orr their northern division north of
Huntereille. Of course, Vele is not
a criterion of the number that are
TU. LOW COIFFURE
POPULAR IN PARIS NOW,
among all the ehangee wliluli fafile,
ion imposes, ana whiett her faithflo
arta devotee adruirere follow with so
nunalt attention, there is one Point
011 Whle/1 they (UP I'PrrAlittOr °Ma
OU witielt they have to do violence to.
their paselve docility—that Is the
dreesing of the hair.
It retparea years of uniotard of pro-
m -interne, of animate preliminaries, to
intim) n woman to change the or-
tatigement or her hair ; conseclerelltier
it loot tenon struggles extending over
many seasons to bring about the
radical chenge Into tee "coifftere
basee."
Is it to this resistance than one
meet be grateful for the pretty re -
(mite Obtained? Perhaps so; in any
ease, I can certify that the fashion
of now chignone has become quite
generta, and fleet none of those who
have adopted It nave lost the slIght-
oet therm. Nevertheless, women en-
joy grate sufficient Independenee ana
modem edoention 18 to eclectic to
sacrifine io tt fanhion for the sole
satisfaction of being 18 the move-
ment.
XL in clear that those who have
round facem or very short neeke will
,still keep to the light edifice on the
'Lop of the head formed by their
hair, whielt will lengthen the pro-
file becomingly. Others, having oval
featores, have every advantage 111
diminishing their length, Moreover,
women have the invaluable instinct
which lends them to dress their bair
"a Pair de la tete," and, to make the
general etfect of the colffirre har-
monize with the Ilnee of the face.
have had the pleasuee of paying
11 Vitlit to some of the hairdresser5.
nail they all agree that title winter
will witness the triesnpli of pretty
eolffareff. They showed me a num-
ber of modele, finch as a pretty wo-
man might dream of. Tee front
hair IN now loafed In broad, vague
waves, and in the centre tit the nape
of the neck the linSr is twisted into
broad, supple twists and tufts of
wild, little male, beneath the chig-
non and along' the edge of the large
comb and the side comb. Some -
them': the cora are placed over two
wavee very, low on the nape of the
tilt tnore linportaace then a run'.
night epread le one of their college
n' dortultoriee. Whoa they awake to a
eneomoneneen of what it lute Meant,
' they ere noterally on that large 10
feticide.
Title woman told nue Of talon tilltin
; liar illetaneee. Uhl mon s e vp -
cal man and flail 0i380 le 0. 14)...111,1
; ease illaetrattige the peculiany Jay
' vend/110u Of arrant le WaNiOngtoon
tioulul life. There is too Mirth
ehampagne alralltle at the rc•atte-
LOAM In Waelangton to mako them
se te pioneer for inexperienced younee
girle. There le toe liLtJe eltaperon-
ano of girls. Tido ie the real tenret
Of the -trouble. Many of the hos/L-
oewe theniselyee are taitoriously
free in their behavior with thee
mett gltef3t11 at. Mich "reeeptiene."
Society at tlie capital -1s teei eon—
glomerate and free.
MeMbere of the foretnri legation
In their gorgeous robeso otticers of
the cliquy and navy In gold laee ona
buttons, dazzle the YOUZIG"110(4310,
who concert t, the eity fresh fnout
tier eratool life, Perhaps, t*04 hn -
plunged Into tbe diselpations awl!
free -and -easy conditiousthat ex
-
let in Washington, A. waltz or twee
(4 ltd what Emma like -A homeliese
flirtation on each a. Orris part
lead her late Sienle ivalleap reedo
from which sbe finds there is ne
esvape but death. Her very inno-
cence and inexperience are the wea-
pone which Maw her •stiliodetatrue-
tion,
Tile whole labrie Of Worthington
lite in a certain circle le eorralta
There are certain .men Into will
never be excluded from: the drawing -
rooms of the Wives of Knee ea th
fereign diplomats. The license of
the hostese leads to the illsgraca or
aqua amounts to the diegrace, of
innocent Was. Some ef theeeselirls
are sent. home; some go abroaci
with relatives others coatinule 011
the reckless course tha,t they have
aecidentally fallen into; others die
by their own hands. The necolotiono
giyen at a eertain one of the for-
eign lenatione are marked by such
aIf utter lack of ornlinary deeorunx
or dee.ency timt the men of Wash-
ington attend Clem' as they would
go to a French ball in New York.
On the altar of politics there
must Do many sacrifices, but the
sacrifice of innocent girl -life in
Washington is a shame upon the
records of the entire country as
well as of its capital. The morals
and principles of foreign courts
combined with the freedom and
"progressiveness" of American stria
Ints resulted In a social condinion
which must diogust and discourage
every thinking American man and
woman.
11e011, 1.1111S prodileing telaraling af-
fect.
it le OVIlleht 11104 apart front a re1V
/meet{of l.xnEtptil)11ItIly robust Lair,
warble: noturally, few heatie of Irate
are worthy an the famous stiolon, of
Victor Ilion, in "Lee Orientalite
neat (7103v1(8 (1131 rer Wont earl lairbi
anal they becanne extremely weak.
•Flie great Ituntan dailies Old not die-
idthlutioir /01 01111110 ill,/ 14.7111 '5,1(3! Voir mitVeltnho je,
11114.1 who umeng modern Parhiennee
woulal yawn* tee useirctouce of
nue. poetichean to relit their own
bele ? It la a custom berrowed from
antiquity, and one 11111011 modern art
lenient as pretty as it is Itygienie and
tettemelleable.
At Dendete runt Hyacinthe Plerrea
I Ineve atinarea marvellous miracle and
obtaine(1 valuable information.
There, ire tp be a return to the nat-
ural cuter pf the bair, and wall the
exietieer mature three-quarter trim -
mooed will bo most in falser.
Tea foliage used to garland the
chignon wilt be. for preference oak,
whir glit acorne, ivy, (‚00(18 1113(1 willow
leIrlie
el6.xquisitat "art nouveau" coiffure
coneleete of two large metallic roses
[tilting behind the chignon. This trim-
ming is made 111 ali shades and is
innueneely becoming for girls. Feathe
ere artistically placed are extremely
graceful ; also large velyet flowers
with light foliage.
To keep the twist Of the hair in
place, handsozno tortoiseshell Pins
with rolled heads are coming in, also
large torteisestell combs.
Lastly, for the headdress of a
bride, fashion, drawing inspiration
from our neighbors across the chan-
nel, has given up the traditional and
emblematic orange blossom, or at
any rate mixes it. with some other
pure white flower, such as the My,
the garaenia. and the white rose.
Myrtle is very much in fashion at
the present moment, when geese-
Hertal marriages abound.
I particularly admired, recently, a
wreath ef gardenias admirably ar-
ranged over the aureole of . brown
hair of a fair bricla This example of
pee80nel Initiative In the uniformof
bnidee will not fall to be followed,
and -while noting the fact I heartily
approve'on it.
WASHINGTON IS -
A WICKED PLACE,
Alarming Number of Suicides by Women--Cayse of
the Epidemic—Too fluch Champagne, Too
Little Chaperonage—The DiplOmatic Set.
(Kate Masterson in Leslie's Weekly.)
One day a pistol shot rang out tile serving of refreshments at their
'Exceptions for the reason that the
courtesy was abused by many who
seemingly attended these (onetime
for the purpose' of witting and din-
ing elaborately at the too lavishly -
supplied buffets of their liostesees.
almest at the ease of the Lafayette
monument In Latayette Square in
Wortaington. 'Fhe weapon could
not have become cold before the na-
tiomal capital knew. that there svas
"• ivenban in the case, The trial was
the sensation of tliheght country. al it Bevond a general admission of these
threw. a (ticketing on a soci•
statements. it was Impossible to ills-
eonslition in high places, The acquit- .
tam nestles or details until X Haw a
tal od afro. lamina on the ()barge of .
svoina.n who occupies a high position
i:7asbinge7,and who was shocked
and indignant at the tricondi-
t01ofaffal8. ,
"The reason for this sudden burst
of indignation against the society
gluttons," she saki, "is this. A week
ago a woman—the wife of a foreign
.
. , . . - I —gave an at ernoon eacep-
, they are. ini the wocels. Taking all tide , nis widow of t d t a -Lion which was attended by the
When washing greagy dishes or pots and into consideration, there could not 1 tonna in topool of blood in. ber guar- usual mixed' gotherIng. The Nyornan
pans, Lover's Dry Seep (a powder), have been lase thee .8,000 or 9.000 tars. fele nacl been poranded to, in- herself would Dot be tolerated in New
will ' deer killed during the seaeon of 1901. ' p10
young Ayres in a Wathe
killed, as tilese,does. not include those Ing • -ton hotel, known to the country
not have te express their deer to phone of life 10 the national capital
I
killed by settlers, Indians anclnala 115 the Army and Navy Ileitel, ie re -
breeds. anil by those limiters who (10 cent. The trial revealed another
their homes; nor the wounded ones which accentuated it e; reputation for
which' get away and die (nom those scandal arid mystery.
killed and eaten by the 5,000 hunters 1 The trial had not been conclaued
and abeir acne' 11111-1 ng the. two weeks f when a dressmaker, Mrs Ada. Dan x >lomat t
remove the grease with the greatest ease'
Triangles on the Teem).
Hew manyeof the women you meet
wear triangles on their heads ? There
are examples of the marquise cha-
peau, It type of headdress aistinctiy
becoming 'CO "la belle Americaine,"
The marquise hate various modifie
cations, triangular brim and round
flat crown, and triangedar crowns
with soft araped brinte are both
rieen. The general line of the tri-
angle is observed, and the most con -
forme to the mIllinerar desire to set
off her customer's good looks.
TEETHINO BABIES.
A Trying Time for Mothers When
Great Care and Watchfulness
Is Necessary.
'There Is searcely any period in
baby's early lite requiring greater
watchtraness tho part of the
mother- than when bab:v is teething.
Almost invariably aim little one suf-
fers emelt pain, Is cross, restless day
reed iiIglit, requiring 80 11111e1I care
, that the mother is worn out looking
Oftel In Jeut there aro other real
datigers frequently accompanying
this period that threaten baby's life
itself. Among these are diarrhoea in-
digestion, collc, oofletlpatbon and)
convulelotta Teo prudent mother
will anticipate and prevent these
troubles by keeping baby's stomach
anci bowels In a natural and healthy
condition by the uso of Baby's Own
Tablets, a medicine readily taken by
ell children,. and which, dissolved In
water, 0107 be given with perfect
toady -to even a nesv-born infant. In
every home where these Tablets ore
used baby Is bright and healthy and,
the mother /me rota emnfort with It
and does not hesitate to tell her
neighbors., Afree j. Delaney;
Brockville, snys: "I have been giv-
ing my - fift reannotalue Old 1)11.1137
'inlayer Own Tablete, whenever itecee-
eery, for Rome menthe paste ;the
-WOO teething owl Wan erase and rest-
less. Iler gums were hard and In-
flamea. After using the Tablets the
grew toilet, the inflanunation of the
gum was redueeneand her teeth SI -1
not seem to bother her rine More. All
improeentent in beby's condition Was
ratticenble almost at onee, anal
think there is to better medicine for
teething balnee." litany's Own Tab-
lete eon be procured from aruggiets
or \gill be sent post pail itt 25 email
a boa by Adana:ling the De. W11-
101110' aletileine ot, iirriekville, Orat '
A filTA.RANTEE—"I Itereby (entiry
thi1 1 lotve nude rt (*annul eh:lineal
Annie:Me of linbe Oa Owe Tablets, •
which 1 pereonnily purcIttteed in It
drug ntore in Illontrad. My Innen&
lois proved that the 'Fabian eon:tide
absolutely to opiate or nareatie ;
that they Mtn be given with perinta
enfety to the yourtgeet titre ; that
they tiro 11 safe /11/41 effleient medic,ine
for the troub1e:4 they are inalental to
relieve and cure."
(Plemealt
MIT/FON f.. HERISDV, )O ne.,
Parvinena Analeat tor tetiebete.
Montreal, Dee:. 2:1, 11101.
no
e, tly wi a, piano stool. ThalYork's society. After the reception
robbery was not the object of the this hostess found a young woman
assault Is still the theory of tile who had been her guest, in the lel-
pollee. The case, like many 0)10 018 liard-rootn on the top story of the
In Washington, le a mystery. And In residence where the reception had
the fog oe the mystery there is the taken place. The girl was 00103-
0 139-1175 in the atmosphere lessly intoxicated with champagne.
the' city on tile Potomac, of scan- She was unconscious, and her condi-
dal. Back of the Boinine-Ayree (tee° tion unmistakable. This girl was of
and the Dennis mystery is an 'appall -
leg list of wornesee suicides in Wash- inalettbtedly good family, the claue,11-
ter ot a publie official, axel almost a
ington, The appalling list le not a scnoolgiel so Inc as experience goes.
"myotery" to those wlar, aro aware A man whose; name would be recog.
of the cosrupt condition of what is niezil immediately—a dapper foreigner
cucta111,ecl "society" in the national cap- who was received eoeially in New
York and Newport—had induced the
To particularize in t1ie. canes' that girl as a 'lark to go to the bililtrd
hove so shocked anal saddened tte room with 111111, where waiters were
community within the 'met few Yearo bribed to bring luncheon and wines.
When this girl awoke to conscious-
ness of what had occurred she was
almost demented. Her hostess had
oared for her and hat notified her
of them cannot be traced to suet) a fainily. Sho felt that she was dis.
eource, and It woold be unjust to in- graced. She wept and refused to see
-Stance those tine particulars of even her people. It ts throne the
which are Well known to all in the man, undoubtedly, that gossip of the
inner elreles or the conglomerate so- matter finally worst. Went Wash -
alai lite of Washington. ington. The girl gone to her
The charity that must be accord- home In the west, but It wee tide
ed the dead, the bnpertanee of the matter which precipitated the °ru-
nt/nines Involved, and the Influence sada against gluttony at Washing -
of men of high diplomatic station, ton receptione.
have all been factors la suppressing "Title is not the only case," said
o true recital of events, details of my tailor/mutt, "In which this par.
Which have come to every prowl- otitttiulelarreirtn;a.nuiliatisiepwaioarilcrawtoelcilid 110
It 10
possible for him to continue on Ms
course of reekless disregerd for femi-
nine virtue or reputation. The pe-
culiar network of oiplomatle.relation.
are taken to change or restrict so- eleat in this city lute HO far protected
Mal conaltiora in the city, which has
been =eked by swell n, continned
wave of self -weeder among beautiful
and cuitured girls.
Some timo ago the writer visited
SIZE OF HEAVEN.
Tilts mum ieigures*OutThat There is
Room tor All.
Taking a verse from Revelation as
the basis of computation, some ta-
dustriours anal probably uneasy fel-
low has again been figuring on the
dime/is:one of heaven. The text is in
xv, 21, and reads as follows: " And
measured the city with the reed,
12,000 furlonge. The length and
the breadth and the Iteighth of it
aro equal," He concludes that this
repnesenle a space ot 469,783,088,-
000,000,000,000 cubic feet.
The enterprisitig etatistletan sets
aekle tole -half of this epace for the
Throne clad tho Court an Heaven, and
one -11011 or the balance for streets,
which would leave a rematnder of
124,198,e72,000,000,000,000
feet. 104 then proceeds to dividOcutIbill:
' by 4,090, the number of etabical feet
in, a room sixteen feet square, anti
this proceste gives him 30,13:41,843,-
700,0b0,000 rooms of the Mee 1.11(11
catal. Ile thon proceede upon the
hypothesie that the world now con -
tams, &wawa has coatauted, ad Will
always contain 900,000,000 ittliabl-
tante, anal that a generation lents
Tor thirty-three anal one-third years,
which gives a total number of in- ,
habitante etery culture/ of 2,207,-
000,000. He asmunes that the world
39-111 stand 1,000 centuriee or 100,000
years, which would give a total of ,
2,970,000,000,000 ineabitants for
this period of time. Ire then reaches
(11)1 •
g003101(15.00 1)101 11 100
Worlds of the same size anti duration,
anal containing the same number of
Inhabitants', sbould redeem all the
inhabitants, there would be more
than 1001 room! of tho sine Indio:dad
for each person.
Mee have not thought so muell
about the EA.Za of heaven. They have
probably :away% felt that there
would be ample, room for those who
would be able to got there. If a
leek of room were pet:aline, in the
divine, order ot tillage, It would pro -
130017' bo at the other place, judge
Inn frotn Hee prOnotratemente that
are metle front thee to time. Room
hoe never bee0, ti mattee of Orions
oonsideration with men wire have
patureti long enougle in the whirl of
Manta to meditnte on the blessings
which aro to follow a 110 of right -
menage. The matt queetion, anal
the, one In which all men tire most
contemned, ie the simple question of
the ehorteet, best end safest way.
Put in (111Tereet langua.ge, they
went to know how to get there, and
if the eteulione rantletielan Will fig.
'are out «one plan that wilt meet
witle general attic:faction: along this
line, he, will probably entooth out the
terroven which now Mark the Omen
nueasy ribitiors.—New Orlrettne
Tim, et Denitheent,
Steen the Cough
read Warns Off the Celli,
leezetteit neereceOninIcie 'reelea cure s eniti
'a mutiny, ale Owe Ne t'Sr. tr100 *neat*
Would be aft impossible ate it would
be cruel. While ante or two of tire self-
inflicted deatlee have resulted direct-
ly froan conditions related here all
nein: newspaper office in the coun-
try, But the tragic suicide chain
will undoubtedly stretch from the
past far into the future unless means
lam The ttoiture of the occurre11eer4
in themselves is such that exposure
elvoontelledrnmeetian rnin to the young 19-010011
'This 111.11.11 is ft favorite- with the
Washington os the representative of women of the foreign diplomatic etr-
e New' York paper to ascertain' the Mee. He is to their Muscat
facts relative to a report that lied met there he me. te innocent awl beau -
Come throngh one of the Oress asset- tiful gide who eonue under the spell
Mations, Title report stated that of his personal attractiveness and
nany of the leading matrons of the. Wbo imagtne that they are simply
eity bad decided to dispense with entering Into some escapade of lit-
.BIBULOUS POET'S .
▪ RHYMED DREAM.
aefeleesletease+.1.4.14.1.+1-1.4.44.4.+4.4-ex
A. policeman pa.ssing the Queen's
Borougit Hall In Long Island City
found a, man asleep in the gutter
there. Ile took bins to the station and
later the man was arraigned charged
with being drunk. He said his name
was John Smith, a.nd that Ills home
was "907where." Hie occupation,
was "Jack of ail trades," He insisted
that he did -not belong to the union,
and for tbat reason could not get
work at his trade.
He repeated this and mueberapre 00.
the same line to the magistrate. De
also Informed the court that as a side
line he wrote poetry, but only did
that when moved by the spirit. The
magistrate coked elm 11 119 had any-,.
thing original about him, and the
prisonet said he had. Ote explained
that while lie was sitting asleep be-
fore the borough hall he had a dream,
rind before being arraigned lmd made
notes of it. He banded it to the court,
and this is what the court read : .
Last night I dreamed of a land so
fair,
Where the rivers were Pilsner beer,
Wherea ftcnttglie of rickeys sbot 01)
•111 ( 1
And everything else was queer.
Wide brooks of gin fizzes on ettern.
Grellatit'lres of cold Rhine wine,
And pltitittlintee.pbsisnidouting cocktails to -beat
For the thirsty ones standing in
Creme de menthe swalnpe of a
beautiful green,
:With islands of fine cnacked ice,
Stich a sight; was ne'er before Beene
Oh 1 but that dream; was nice !
Mint stjrarieleepbr puddles tho
til,
The gattero were flowing with
In wIbo
lizeiclziekireci hoboee soaked their
feet
Viten enjoying a heavenly snooze.
Champagne flowed from fire plugs
In bubbly streams with a, Wes,
And street cleaners drank it from)
deep stone jugs—
suielt a dream of blirie 1
High balls galore rolled about on
the ground,
Arid were chewed br a thirsty
WhIle1P:tyeadipaloutnadlyzed grafters hang-
.
In drunken glee shouted aloud.
011 1 title bibulous dream was a
happy dr earn,
The result of 00, allnaglet bat
Where the wet things: flowed in a
bountiful etr etthr
.When they carried me home on a.
WhellitIto had finiebed reading, the
ispnaognie.
steratn looked at the prisoner
eynmathetically
for a Moment 011(1
aekea:
"Hot oreather ?"
"Yee," your honor," was the re-
"Dieeharged," Said the Wert.
BRONCHITIS ---A Serious
Disease
1300011109 Chronic and Returns Year by Year or Develops Into ronohaI Oneurnottioo
Croupous Oronohiti% Asthma or Consumption.
The real dangere t,t bronchitis are reonetimes overlooked. It. Is too Perkiest a. disease to trine with, and
Inc that rette011 eN (71'7130117 shonki be huniliar with the to -umlaute. • (
Children are most liable to on ire& bronelvitte, mei, If negleeted, it becomes eltroOle, cind tetartte etear
atter year:, until it 3711(118 (1113 patient tett or cno elope into some (Madly lung disease,
The approach of bronchitis 'marked by cleille aud fever, niteal 00 throat catarth, quick MOO, loge et
appinite end feeling( of [Minuet and latignme
Bronelatis is also knoWn by pain in tho upper part of the (Mesa whielt is nggeavattel by deep breathing
or ernighing until 11 Fame to burn anti tens. the (11 hIN1t0 11111114;5 of the bronchial tubes.
The cough le dry :eel awl is necompanicsi bo leapretaration of at frothy itaxture, Which gratittally
inerensee ;lo very strintcy and tourtelota mid is frequently etrealuel with Mood.
There le pain net unlike rime tn•ttlein, ht lintbe, j tent s 1(11(1 103117', eon stipallart and Matteotti deprecation and
leetooleese113 moue 1)7,0010, tilto none loan nweeinte ninerst to nervous eOletpse, dentine/ folholver, Anal 10 eattlrele
ehlhiree eartettinione nely 1 01 low.
Dr. fliase'e Syrup or teinserN1 Mal Turpentine be we believe, the neat effective treatment fon bran-
eltitle that nteno,v will buy. Tim tact hoo been platen tinto mid time imam in tneny thonattule of easna
It In the moet refeetivc remedy for hroneitille, berethee It is inr-renehing hi ate elteete an the whiele
iensteen„ mei merely relieving the rough, but neineny and thormighly Ourlen that ateeetse. It !omens thii
cough,. 11 0tee the (Owlet of tightnerts anal tate, aide expect:tetra:a and permanently entete.
There -erre otl, i preperatonto et turpentine Met Meant put up In imitetiela on Dr, ("13,111» 13 "-Vi 119 afthe
/seed naul T be retro (133 ((t'(' getting the genuine see the portrait tout eteltatIlre, der Dr. A. IWO
Oaten on the bon nen buy. an leente 0 bane, retinae :les, Meet) time (18 unwire 'at) ciento. All dealers, or Ude
011105041,Datea A. tee, Toyota*, .
• • ' tg
-