HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1884-02-01, Page 7-
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REVELATIONS OF THE—BOUDOIR.
• • • 7 7 I I Eq..
Don.net. anft Bipshea,--witat. /advice Nat
LO- voitovr„--Eticipette-,A -:-Decepaive:
- costanize-me-vribte l IIIftkC.. shish
Sold.b t 'ha:Ounce', Goideti astir"
1.7 the Dottie. • : •
T deavd,ress or to well and teat ful
14
by: tb. 7
of faehion Journals is something
. like ing to learn the -.manners of good.
society from- an etiquette beok. Both may
afford very useful items ..-of advice, but
frosts, _neither -can the very essence of the
matter in hand. be gleaned. It. is always
dangerous to eat Upon isolated pieces of In-
k:mil:niacin, and these whoniociel their ,bs-
haVior and costume upon priated instruo-
- tions are 'liable to produce a " scrappy
- effect upon their acquaintance. e4 The hair
is- wern high, on the head,'" says a fashion
Journal, 'adding; "-and no-one in good society
is now seen with the cheveluie`dresiediow
. on the neck.' The *Iffect of tails announce-
-- pawnt on the minds of many le- to make
„thane at once, regardless of the harmosious.
-/ or the becoming, drag everyhaie in their
, head ato the eleyation conaman4d by the
• oracles .and there dispese the hairecolleo,
tively to the best of their skill. The: eeeult
is oe_e onelly painful, and :frequently
Judi
•
ssui wrrn Essust ANY trosE •
, will ppear in a coiffure .anggestives Of
. Velion cin- Ossa piled. - The nose .beconies,
. therabisso palpably diminished in 'appear,
'ante as scarcely toi.. be notitieeble. Or,
some one- . with. a . long neck. reads that
" turned *down collars of lace and muslin
have, replaced the upright . linen colter,"
-and straightway the world is favored With
a- view of "the: °Wuhan of her throat," a
revelation of the direst soreggines* The.
'
fact is that- those who possess an innate
sense of what is fitting experience the same
semica of froedcnia- and. liberty in the .midi
- ne Sales andrestrictions as is felt.in the
-
matter of etiquette. by those Who have sun -
bitted its ruIee.fronetheir earliest years - and
bo- whom the customs of polite society have
_sbeeeme a. eel:stud:nature. The..wcimen who.
dresses beet is she who Studies. the-chaaoges
- of fashion only to find among them just
what -suits herself, and ' who knows -how to
adapt every shifting phese. of it - to the
exigencies of her-apPeaiance and her purse.
• This is an accomplishment which- may be
, .. partly a gift of nature, partly duet° eulture.
• It may„ort the other had, be wholly luau:
. ral.--s-lt can -never be entirely the result Of
- training.- A. peasant girl may—often does
spoesess, i1, and a_ woman who has spent
- . her fife in .making deessee is frequently
° -wholly without it. Perhaps - ' •
,
. . . ,
SOME SLIGHT INGREDIENT OF QoQITETRY
may be. necessary . to its fitlittet ' develop,
meat ;
but be thisas if may, it is -certain
that a woman gifted..with such- perception
will never wear an unbecoming 'color, and
does not need:to be told in what foldp her
gowns shouldbe arranged. If tall, she
knows perfectly well that Phe may flounee
'Therseit to the waist 'with impunity. If
short, she is thoroughly aware- that a
. trained skirt gives her a- dignity .Of outline
that she mightotherWisti lack. --- If hr head
134 small in proportion With-iher body, she
Will menage by some Means to make her
_
looks "wide dis
the unkempt
taken ,for .pt
of the present
ani so readily
- .
_form and -face
for Wearing T
are•lo* nd
ce
ile '•is at -
feria _ 6-
v issib . . fi
viith ,iit bin'
. severest pia
°there who 1
• • ADD. AN APPA.R.
Persona who
4.• subject soon
suitea for fit-,
lend then:web
Itis 16„pity, fc
a bench& silk i
• of the -design.
• A plain satin
its best *hes
- bring its rids
play of light t
•
very SOQII disi
-an extremely
by; the .exer
• -effect tc
whiph. less .sla
• does it take t
little gleams
piously placed
• . as a rule muel
broad patches
effed as a can
compared wit
painter. A dr
• for instance,
gold plush at t
as where the t
-at the back.
- THE-LNFER
aye is that tilt
plush in •qi
laid on in m
ria comps.
time •n
d hsv he,
dueling co'
kirt-will-
veal wb
re un6
The
silk
bge
be
Pc(
sir
•hitt(
° 'libel
aftin
au est
satire
means°.
tal or or.
audhinte
- tb
episodic's°
'her
UPS' net
it at
Most
Tilte
illOvii
4Y-the/eat
Wet a is
steresie':
011.the
. White -ths
, Pes
• i,taceeth
umelY ret
owner; ho
resew
ttess-'
..6,1941 and yet to' avoid
k that is too often ints-
esqueness. The fashimis
eare:so infinite in variety
aptable tosveriois types of
at no one has any -muse
t is unbecoming. There
eful mantlesfor the tall,
e jackets • are equally
the short. 'Flounces are
Q88 who can wear them
the figure, -and pkirts of
ss may he adopted by
they ',would like to
ELL UNTO THEIR STATURE.
to the subtleties- of the
that .plain textures are
„ while figured fabrics
ore readily to draperies.
twos, to fold into pleats
vet, for thus the beauty
great measure concealed,
Alt,
onthecontrary, is at
iterated _folds or gathers
into prominenceby the
shade upon it. -They also
er that a- 8'6011 uantity of
material can be made;
of skill, to produce. an
-leery large - quantity -on
• been expended. Nor
.4cing to find out that
lin* of colors' if .judi;
Wide intervals, are
ly artistic than
e. The one is in
teat artist when
ered by a scene
ze green viougna,
suggestion of -old
wrists, as . well
ws Its under side
UNINITIATED '
Slit is with
ere the latter to
effect- would be
•probably five or
costly material
vorite mode of .
is as follows:
ee at one side,
a portion of
inal orsorange
over -this by
Is. The cardi-
the:waistcoat
and collar: That
urse, introduced
eats, continuity.
art that only
finets that the
lira perpetrated.
erally ---4kseed, of
_ d.Ostar
that she would have endeavored to slur
over. If a- Woman -Possesses a . mahogenY-
°aorta face, she is almost pure to select a
mahogany,colored bennefsinstead �t those
tones of vivid orange and -brilliant scarlet,
tioatteredover adull greener bronze surface-,
that Would bring out all the red inher coms
"lesion; subduing the11ow. Those wh9
ppseesi A sense of what iefit; or the opposite,
select as naturally what suits them as a bee
flies to the hoziey-yielein -flowers: The
pale girl -avoids all pallid tints, though
soheetimestehe finds that .a - warm shade of
cream:color-suit's her Clear skin. If sallow,
she Will shun green and beware. of blue,.
though among the tones of the • latter are
one -or two that suit -even' the Sallow: The
very rosy will :shooed thosesubdued tints
which fashion how affects. Brown, for
them, is especiallyNaluable. Suitt bronze;
and- bcitli ' of - these are in great favor just
now. A hit or bonnet made of brown
. velvet and trirru:ned with a knot- of yellow
ribbon must sensibly tone down: the roily
tints of the moo rolliaking (mantes, cheeks.
There is altirther. form Of art which is
scsercelyte be.tionimended, - and Ithatsleeds
.tits
_i_pos!essor to .an ideal bonnet and
;notisesxiots up
to itsiofty standard. This Thiessreversing the
nsual order, of things, but it is a practice by
no rcieans-unknown among -us. ' And there is
`even a further height. The hair znuat ,be
dyed, to Milt the bonnet and the false
'colors of the cheets, and lips.. In. these.
days, When a " syMpathetio Insh "is -eold
-
, by the ounce, and' I...sun:1,1v rays .for golden
hair" by the bottle,lt is scarcely surprising
to find that a _lady of :fashion - -alters the
color .7.of- her hair at will, and carries her
blushes in her pocket, together With one of
those "-cunning" little_ powder -Oafs - of.
American origin, whioh are turned easily
inside out, and when not in use pretend td-
be.ionsicent tittle- pin -dushions, guiltlees of
even a pin. AR' slayer of powder, however
carefully 'rnithed in. :has a -tandem:1y - to
attract to.itself any ,dust tnat- may be in its
neighborhood, . a small. -pooket-mirror- be,
ponsee an indispensable accompaniment Of
those whomay be desaribed as "artists," •
and purees are often now seeu with a small
looking -glass inserted in one Of the f1.4s.
It will thus' be keen. that the choice of .a,.
bonnet is a serious niattersinvol4h4 quite
a series of addehda of more or less impor-
tance. -
A.$60,00o . sit04allt$14C1C":
Otto of the Items that Blake Coal's! Ex-
. . • pensive. .
coal -dealer said in a--.0/eveland,
view: The abundance of coal in the
United States ought to render it cheap, but
mine operators -claim that it cannot be
proclueed any ceaper, and point to the
fact that a ton of coal in England,. which-
-has- been wrestling so long with the °Cal
problem, costs about as much as in Amerioa.
"Take, for instance, the Hocking coal,"
said a failroadanan to -day„ " T -he Iminers
charge 80 ..cents -a ton for mining it. (In
the Massillon region they charge -95 cents,
while the Brier Hill men have been. getting
only 65.) - The dead Work costs 60 'cents a
ton (down in the Massillon 'region where
they have to pump out their mines it is 50
cents a ton),. the . freight will amount to
1140, and it will cosb-20 'cents to load and
unload it: That swells the cpst t6 $2 60 it
ton.. The freight cannot be lowered much.
It Son1011ntii now to but of -a cent per ton
a Mile." 'Few of -the coal operators have
gotten rich. - Down in the Brier Hill region
they. pay as high as 50 centsa° ton . to
tarmers whose -land they have leased for
mining purposes,. while itt the Massillon
region from 15 to 20- cents a ton is given.
Then therearehorse-backs: Horse -backs
are rook projections which are met in a
mine Where they rise up and - shut off the
coal. It is an expensive task to remote
them. Price, the Pittsburg Miner, -once
'Struck a horse-baok which 0084 him. over
/60 000 to get through. In England; where
capitalists are more patient than we, they
run a long shaft from the mouth to the
farther end of a side -hill mine and begin
from - the rear and work _forward. Here
-thesiperator, unable _ to Wait so long for a
return -from his money, begins at'onoe to
take out the coal, opening rietras 0119/1 side
of the central, shaft and leaving.great
lars of -opal to support the roof of the mine
The pillars, which are very large, contain
many toneofccial, which are not available
till the .mine has been exhausted, when
they are taken out and therobt allowed to!
fall. '
• -
A Girt Worth -Looking Alter.
The great heiress of England at present
is Miss- Hamilton, whose mother,. Lady
Niebett Hamilton, has juet died. The
large -estates in Haddingtonshire and-
-Lincolnshire, the annual intioine - of which
is estimated at $620,000;liave been for some
years, owing to the lady's incapacity; under
the management of . the Scottish Courts,
and animmense sum has acorued. Miss
Hamilton's father,' whose original name
Was Dundas, hadthe. agreeable fortune -t0'
adopt no fewer than three additional
family names-,-Chriiitopher, Nisbett and
finally Hamilton -�h ahatige bringing -a
large increase- 0! fortune. Her 'mother,
just deceased, had been first married to the
Earl of Elgin, father of the Earl of Cana-
dian memory; and of Sir Frederick Bruoes
Minister at Washington; but was divorced'
from -hied.
leen Victoria's 'Gold Plate. ••
. No living monarch, European or Asiatic,
not even the Ozer of All the Russias, can
boast of _such a -service of plate- as that
owned by Queen Victoria, to whose' guests
t is. often -exhibited on- huge buffets at
either end of the banqueting table -in St.
George's Hall—vases, plateaux, imps and
T/14.41Epr
• • "
,
- :A IVA 111EICOINX..
••,
likavery oi an A ugh. Lady, Alone:in: a
• -_ - Pon' Colony.. •
. .
, • The Andaman nd Nicobar Islands
situated in the B liof Bengal, .e., few days
Many Of Ahern, 'longing . to - the , most
-sail from -CalcutAii, are the great penal
sett enient of - Lid* especially- the former;
.wli re more than 10,000.- native- Convicts;
desperate- blase i eriininals„ - are. kept
• uno r restraint, orte pIoyed in out-of-dOor
label; under vigilaktieupervieion. A braiieb
oonvict eettlementi!e:Xiste. at Camotte,„ the
citeltal of the Nit** Islands, _where there
are .t present 20 ISOnticts. guarded by 30
°hie - constable. . Officer in charge of
ment0! the 2nd three Native Infantry;
and a like.nurieberi police under a native
the . statiOz was 41 r. de. -Roepsterff, ii-
Dan'sh; gentlematit tonging to the Indian
Civi .,Thicovenanteez Service. s A havildar,
Or native Sergeant the.Madras Infantry,
:a - Man- Of 30...ye - service, had • been
itemised by: a snats. watchman of appro-
riating cocoanutte nd. • had -iii _return
stru k the . Watah ' n and put him for a
hert. time tinder entry: The next day
: de Roepsterffe Omenced the inirestiga--
tion Of the case, and having taken the
eviclimoe for the pitieecution adjourned the
.hearing till the .. fol;4veiiig.. day, wnen the
-, avildar was order;to bring -up his wit-
ness ii, - Shortly afte,wards he - was 'tiding
past the Native I
'thirty yards off w
hiralfrOM his roomt
the shoulders, the
breitit. He fell fr
orderly and groo who were with him
went mstantly to futJassistance. lie- was
Only able to-sai, not be confused,'
take care of the -sahib.' (his wife) or
she tit he shot to Mrs. de' Roepaterff;
' ho
try Barracks, about
the. havildar,fired at
d hit him between
let: poming out at the
•his Urge, and the
,
was riding a qkle behind; came. up;
t ei Inisband WO Unable ' to speak fur-
ther, aud died in '4 few . minutes... The
POsit on of the poOell4dy was dePlOrable—
havit ar immedia t's afterwards reloaded
hiii.'r flerand.hiew iilown-britins out. The
her husband killed -before lier_eyes, not a
;Out who_ could spiiiiti a word of English
nearer than 000 ini - off by sea, 200 don-
-acts. to keep in 6 i . without- a .•prison
--i�. c nfipe - them-fip. n., and • bad . feeling.
exist pg to e dangeteras extent between the
Sikh ate& and the Madraii Native Infantry.
In those trying cuinstancies :the lady.
1 .
eVnic d a fordo of :of- aqter amOunting. to.
herOina, - *She hakilher husband's - body
carried it once. to tlielblingalow and :after.'
wards buried. Sis; despatched a -native
to .Port . Blair; . th4pitat,of Government in
t
• s - .
'oraftiwhich heppene- to be -in the harbor
the Atindainans, wit4wO constables -to . re-
port What had take#1,41asie.. 7 In the mean!
time cthe assumed nein/nand of the station,
ordering all reports '10 be made, to herself;
I m . a -
and managed it :Wan: perfect moose,- an
ililiStOion of how ieVutally Oriental?' sub-
mit to and rely 011 a Ouropeaii mind when
einirenied With firmiit and discretion. ,In
six 'or, seven , (We '':i ajor ,Protheroe, the
• ?feting commandant Ati Port Blair; -arrived,
accompanied . by orri§e other officers and.
the cliaplain, and ren-4Vekher of her terri.
Isle re poneibillties.. I hen, on the Chaplain
readirig. - the funeral l gervice over her has-
• ' ' , .
-band' - grave, . she '-- ,- k qwn;• . Mei
hersel on the .gr and. had to -
rata° d by force. . sl appears that Mr.
sidera le progress ! v!,i.: atranslatien Of the
j
'Beeps erff, with:hiait fe's assistance, had
nearl completed a htztionary•Of the Nieo- t
bakege language, tif,... - had also made eon- a
Bibles His widow !i1 -6 -sires. .to remain far
.. s.
:011RONIG WASTING
. eases is- -Understood those old lingering
complaints so 'protracted in -their course and
debilitating in - their effect upon; the health,
which ordinarily depend upon hereditary -Will-
ences, as consumptionand scrofula, o.r are the
relgilt of depraved. --nutrition, from imperfect
assiroilation of -food and iropoirerished blood.
'Unless the digestive process is complete; mater-
ial is not prepared for neuri-thing the tissubil,
and repairing the waste resulting from mental
and physical . exertion; diminutiori of constitu-
tional vigor' is boon apparent, and the vital
-organs, partaking of thegeneral debility, speedily
manifestSymptoms of derangement. It is inthis
east; of cases that DE. _ WilstLER'S Conn:min,
ElaxinnF PHOSPHATES AND CALISAYA demons.
trates - extraordinary nutritive properties,
being at once a ehenticat food and medicament
of the highest value. • •- -
- That action is best that. precares the
-greatest happiness for the greatest. num,
-
. .
*Both Lydia E. Pinkhani's - Vegetable Com-
pound and Blood:Purifier are prepared it 233 and
235 Western. Avenue, -Lynn, -Mass. Price of either,
$1. Six bottles fcir $5.• Sent by mail in the form
of.pillsk or of lozenges, on receipt of price, $1 per
box for either. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers all
lettersofinquiry. Enclose 30.- stamp. Send- for
"Guide to -Health and Nerve IStrain "
There was recently on exhibition at the
shop of Mr. Cooney, butcher,. Belfast, a
side. of a- carcase, of - a heifer &frying an
extraordinary kidney, which weighed
upwards of 100 lbs.
. 04" i3ettei' bear _r present evils - than -fly to
these unknown:" :Better still, use 'Kidney -Wort
and Make your . present evils ly to parti
Unknown. If you .find yourself getting bilious,
head heavy, mouth:foul, eyes yellow, kidneys
disordered, Symptoms of piles tornienting_ you,
take at once a few doses otHidney-Wort. Use it
an advance guardHeither in dry -or liquid
-form-it eircient.. _
_ .
The Inverness Town Council have re.
solved toopposethe Great 'North of Soots
land Railway Company in their applicetion
for pdweesto.construct a branch line from
,Grantown to Inverness.
On. *December - John -Crowley,
painter, Cork, was arrested by a detective'
on a charge of having threatened to shoot
the Hon. Captain Plunkett. .
If You feel dull; drowsy,. debilitated; hay
sallow color of skin,. or yellowish -brown
spots' on face or body, frequent headache
or dizziness, bad taste in mouth, internal
heat or chills. alternated . with -hot flushes
low spirits•and 'gloomy forebodings, irregui
lar appetite, and tongue coated, you are
suffering. from" torpid liver," or " bilious=
'ness." In many oases of " Hier -complaint "
only part of these symptoms are experience;
ed. As _remedy. for all snob _oases Dr.,
Pierce's "Golden Medical- Discovery" has.
no -equal, as it - effects _.perfect and radical
cures. At drug storets -• -
cziarW,'
, "Malden, Mass., Feb. . Gentlemen-
-I suffered with Attae;91.A., sick headache."
Neuralgia. female 'irentlbS; for Years in the
most terrible and exortleit4Ugg manner.-
. No medicine or doctor e.;....-401 give me relief or. .
cure me -until I used Hopt-S.st.t.ers.
'The first bottle- • t-'
-Nearly cured me;
- The. second made me , well d Strong as
when a chikl.
. "And I have been so to a day."
-My husbandwasan in ;,‘ for wenty year .
.wi- '"thKiadriey,°liaVser and urin,41, omPlaint;
" Pronounced by"Bostok
Incurable 1 " - -
' Seven bottles of your bi
know of the
" Lives of eight persons .
- In my neighborhood th.9
your bitters, „, •
And many more are
bellefit. •
They almost
Do miracles ? "
st physicians-
• anted him and
ve been saved .
• .
them with Fee
7111rs. E. D. Slack. .
• N•
HE CREA, CURE
11-11-E11.-
• •
As It is for all we parab diseases. the
-
E KID N E TB, LIVER 4."•, -ml BOWELS:
es It cleanses the systenkVf the. acrid poison
• that causes the dreadWilgufferifig which
0 only the victims of Ilhetal;Wimi can realize.
5 THOUSANDS Vf.`ifo ASES
or the worst forms of ' :*;errible disease
have been quieklyrelievC land in shortiime
BEM
BY DRUGGISTS.
OS
-
PERFECTLY.;
0 ram,- $1. LIQIRD OR D1111,•4,,
14- Dry can be senti, „74.'Caa, "
WELLS,RIOITAZDSON BurlingtonVt.
V"\;
r WVAAR
SYMP/Z112..: W1
..-tvemSN.
;
11 OF 1.4/0MA
KO PE :Of
E RAPE
• The inveterate woman -praiser - is quite •
akin to the man that runs -a•sheep farm.
The litter is a sheep raiser, and if the
LYDIA E.'
former isn't a she -praiser, what is be ?
Young or middle aged men suffering
from nervous debility, • loss. of memory,
premature old age, as the result of bad
habits, should send three stamps for Part
ew VII. of D41:118 Series pamphlets. Address
db:WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION,
Buffalo, N.Y.
_______ •
"There's many a slip 'twat the oup and
he lip," but -there are many more slips
fter the cup has been emptied.
Bad temper often proceeds from those
Painful disorders to which women are sub--
jet:it. In female complaints Dr. R. V.
Pierce's "Favorite Prescription "is a cer-
tain cure. By all druggists.
frJoking about her mise, a young lady said,
"I had nothing to do with shaping it. It
was a birthday present."
—Professor Wolcott, C41-0 arvard urti:
varsity, is the first American who has ever
been made a member . of the German
Chemical Society of Berlin,.
.soMe-time at Fort; [I,Bhur . to 'finish -the
work:J-10.'14n Sand -
•
- La•
Wbat JObn 04.1guanian Bum .
' ..* " Ill. . . -
wi 1 probably aro; Ifilh. Many -to -know
that three4oliethe RN all the chickens
brought to this market - are . _consumed by
the Chinese, and. thattfline-tenthe of. all. the
tante dOcks brought if, Ore -share the same
fates : The. longer OI:6, lives the nattre he
.finds by jiniminy OW Pand instead 0! . the
Chinaman - feasting. „i40, rat_ pie, is . he is
popularly supposed td:1•49,. he has just three
tithes. a - muckohiokeii tee on his bill Of fare
as the hite inate anti ?hie times as Much.
Stetted- lick. -- The - ainaman- is peetiliae.
- . • . - - _ i
Geese 0 turkeys hei OS not -care :for, and
wild ducks or any. Aher game Whielt.has
been Shot are an abo dation in hthilmOnds
-shapectjeyes. ". geari,ihke 'em alive " , is
John's. reniark whetthOtry. dead fowls are;
offered_ Ihitn:- His,. On in fish is also
-peonliat, - He avoids p*inion, but "gogehis.
Iasi niokle On sualteratitnd sturgeon, or any
salt!wa teffishiwhiehiAs bean. .long out of
I
water.: Well, the salon is aroyal fish. - It
is death to _doge and 4613. -not seem to agree
with Chinamen. Thtinassive braineif the
Caiiaasiaii is the-onln iie: ablate:cope with
and successfiillraSill late the - phosphorus
. and.'phat of the hisOl - AChinooki.:=Portland
- Oregonian. - ...
J ar-No family dyes
the Diamond Dies. The
is far superior talogwi
elegant. I .
wouli you say th
barber amuse- he
- having?
-
e -.ever -so popular as
never fail:. The black
Thenther golkis are
carPenter is like a
t get along without
isouGta ilOomielso,
As /of "-Bough onSlo s,"for..,CouRhe, tiolda
Sore fihr at,Hoarsenesd. .,`oches,15e. Liquid; 50
•-
Many a woman w `does not know even
the rriu tipliteatien." e can "figure" i
,sociiety. .
r'
1
.. • DEA31.11,18 V SRAM = I
. Nervous'. , weakness, ispepsis„- Impotence,
,i., ,
Sexual Debility, cured It " Wells' ilealthl Re-
newer.'/atth w. .4.tnold, ot ''S risturn to Eng,.
1;
•
- 1. :._ 4_• - - - . .1
i . . . .
land,. will be Secrete of the Education
-
candelabra, .all wrought in the preoious.2,PeParOnlebWat a saIry of $10,000 a year.
metal, tbe net value of whiqh is said to ext- ; ." '-_,.1: 1 '. - ----4r-- ' ; •
ceed two millions sterling. 1 Conspisuevi '11.A. -(11i#4.1 8)*Yalls01.417,"1431: sitimP
emeng the trophies are the roimicilyre-bitt,it . InfatlibiL‘tasteless, ' ft4ii,,hiess, cathartic e for
and tger's head, -taken. from Tippoo Bark 'Yerhltui - restlessnse-4 , constipa-
. ,
eight...! years ago, and fsesented to II" It5"L°'
Ile -grandfather,. ]ng George 11'1!):!" -1•
t :re -bird's body and #I are aornPost
studd
-'14ineraldie and -
served a
lotstool. • It '
itt soli
:AlAnisltdIttoot
*149our •os-
Ateg: Vrarl IUStIcta
a ate o ronto iiniver0
. • .
Jb
o HAS:BEEN-PROVED
The SUREST CURE for n
E ICIDNEY- DISEASE&
•;Does alma- e back or disordered urine Ina-
• ate that you are a victim P %MEW DO -NOT '61
. E MRSITATE; use Kidney:W ort at once, (drug- ts
el eels recommend Wand it speedily Over
come the disease and restore healthy:ad:Ion.
• 0• • I ei Asa FOr complaints peculiar
• to 70172r sem, snail as pain 3
andweaimesset, Sidney -Wort is unsurpassed;
4.1
es as it win act promptly -and safely. .
O EitherSex. -Ineontinende, retention °filen%
pbainsrlok,danusittpeOrerodilypy
yidePwield tritainCuradd4litlydjpOaggingwer.
AS- *SOLD. Br ATM DETTGGINTS: Price $I: MI
DN,
--WORT
WELLS,. RICHARDS.0 ,Cp'S
1 M PROVED
•BUTTER CO LGR
A NEW DISCOVERY.
VP' or several. years we bave fn.rnish., ed the
Dairymen_of America with; an excellent
arti-
ftcial colorforbutter; solueritorious that it met
with great success everywhere recerphig the
highest and only prizes at both International
Dairy Fairs. . • :
OrBut by patient and scientific chemicAl re.
eearchwe have linprevedin several Points, and
now offer this new color as the hest ft; the world
It Will Not Color the Buttornil
WHINot Turn Raneld It
Strongest, .Bright
- Cheape
-
ed that ibis
tarisE
other.
, .
HAM'S
- VEGETABLE "01IND.
A gar' e 11:16.71e
for all '1 LE WEAK.
-NESSE% Ineindliug reues, .
1.• elligit• tahlaraemWmanoitinid .b91,1arinirl"fetiale4W24***,:i'antruatRid°01::::::' to
LAPEitrig -
*gban-, rrpecifFamoydrlantd
, nerative orgami
of either ser, it Is second to nociiiii,edythit has .ever
illen before the public; and diseases of the •
kmigicreit is the Greatest BensertEiliOe ,
gar:KIDNEY COMPLAIN4,11.pfEither $ex
Pind ^
Great Relief ;.!•ta Use.
/alma E. Premiums AlF4f.m1) "'Tumult
will eradicate eveiy- vestige ortvj;rimers from the -
Mood, at the same time will giv0:4,ce,and strength to
the system. . As inarvallousin resuw•As the Compound.
- - r: .
11,13Oth the elinpound and Blegetpuriller are pre-
- tared at and 235 Western 4-;; e, Lynn, Haag.
Price of either; $1. Six bottles The Compound t
it sent byvaail 14 the form of pq, ,x -r of lozenges, on
redeipt of price-tta per box for els Mrs. magi=
:freely answers all' letters of. Iinelent3 Cent
Oarnp. Send for pamphlet. A 'Ai. Paper.
larPleasent to the taste, ea
; in its effect. it Ise great help in
• neves pain duringhthorancl at
'12ITYSI.CIANS res IT AND PRES'
IPoa itirArtuantsszs of
•
.....,, 1
gariili'DIA. E. PIIINHAXIS LIVER 4,1*, f- cure Constipa-
tion. Buousness and Torpidity ort/17,4:Ziver. ,;D cents.'
.
-. Sold by all Drat fiteelES • Ito.
. . . - ,
T H
•
-
4-,,
:-
-
• • 4*,.•