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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1884-02-08, Page 3- - - • POETRY. 4‘141tfie IrroVen • Whey drive home the COWS from the pasture, Up through the-loilg, shady lane; Where the quail whistles loud hi the wheatileld Thatflayellow with ripened grap. r..2heir find the 'thick 'Waving gresies . • -Where the scarlet -lipped strawberry -grows; , Oleg gather the earliest snowdrops, - _ And the first crirason budsof the rose. r.ifhey toss- the- bay in the meadow, , They gather the elder -bloom -white, Thal?' find where the dusky grapes purple -7 In the soft -tinted October light. They knoiv-where the applea hang ripest, And are sweeter than Etaly's wines, They know where the fruit hangs thickest On the long, thorny blackberry vines, gather the delicate setweeds, d build tiny castles of sand: ; 4:pickup the beautiftd4ea_shells;. -weary barks that havedrifted_taland. -They wave frorif the tall; rocky-iee tops, • Where4he oriole's hammock nest swinge, And at night timeare folded in flinnTher - - By a song that aloud mother sings. . - Those who toil bravely are Strongest The humble -and poor become great, • And. from those brown handed children. " Shall grow mighty rulers of state. - The pen. of the author and statesman, . The nobietnd Wischof our land. - be svrord and chisel- and palette 'Phanbe hel4 in the little brown hand.. Doi'hy Little; Ho it Well. - Da thy little -do it well, - Do What right and reason tell, --- Do what wrong and sorrow ela:m.; 'Conquersrn, and cover sheathe. Do thy little, though it be . it Dreariness and drudgery, • 11 They whom Christ apostles made - "Gathered fragments" when He bade.. Da thylittle. God hath _made Milhon leaves for forest shade; ' Smallest stars their glory bring; God emploYeth everything. - Da thy little, and when thou Feelest on thy pallid brow, • - Ere has fled the vital breath,. ' Cold and. damp the sweat of death. Then the little thou= bast' dOne, • Little battles thou hast won, 141e masteries achieved, Littleviants with care relieved.- . tittles words in love expressed, , tittle wrongs at once confessed, tittle favors kindly done, - Little toils thou didst not shun, tittle graces meekly„worn, Little slights with patience borne. Theseshall crown the PilloWed head,. . Holy light upon the shed; ' .These- a.re- treasures that shallrise Far beyond the smiling,skies; . . . Fractured Sabbath. - • • - Gimine thargun !"the iAd ream cried To his son, a sprightly urchin; • " "It's Stmday, yes, but Ell have the hide O -. that coon_ if it costs a chiirehire." 40, father, stay,” the youthlet,plead; 4 -Remember, to -day is Sunday, - Call not down vengeance- on -thy head - Wait, father, and shoot it Monday." `Gimmisttliat ganr--7-the man was stern--;" - "And girame no more palaver, •••• You are young,* years, and had. better -Meru - . When Et. COOlfe hi sight ril have her-!" The yeah passed over the heavy gun - A gun which himself had. loaded, Like A bold! bad, Unregenerate Bons By the spirit Of mischief goaded. - - An ounce of powder and "three of ihot - He had dtraped in the darbine's rautzle And gloated over his dreadfill plot, - Like abhild with a Chinese puzzle. Their he hied away to a, safe retreat 'Neattra stone wail's friendly cover; . "I'll wait awhile;" did the lad repeat, "Till the din of battle's over." , . • - . - -Then comb a burst of thender sow:AL'. • The old. man, where- was lie? Curled like a_ sqiiash vine 021 the ground, 'While: the coon -skipped up a tree. - . • 4t0, father,rfather I" the youthlet cried, - "Remember, to -day is° Sunday !" •° . "You bet! but I'll tan your tender hide - From -noir till the dawn of Monday!" _4 I A._LON0x0L:P!EP• - „ - On dealei4goId bier the mother laY, In garments cold and. white; . Her little child comes full of play And wanders at the. sight. . • The roses,iti her golden. hair Thenhild with joy dc; fill ; . On bosom, cold -the flowers tilt' ' Do please it -ay, more still. • It calls, in tones caressing, mild.J. -7 "Mother, dear mother, prig, Lower give thy darling child, Ilut One from thy bouquet!" , . - But since no sound the -silence breaks, - thinks and whispem low: _ "Dear mother sleeps; when she awakes, • She'll give it mei' know' - •. - • On tip -too een it quits the bier, Her slumber not to break, - And comes, from time to time, to heei •tt If mother's not awake. • • • ESKOC101114 AT.E.A.VS. •. - Ca a Fanner by a mulatto -;•The Vieth's will Die -The murderer Arreated. A. last (Friday) night's Hicksville, L. I., dispatch says: At half -past &this morting Sash Sprague, a well-to-do farmer at na.at •iceadow, went to thjitbarn to feed his horses Ei had lust reachedthe barn when a tall mulatto_ attacked him with a - fishplate iised • for coupling on railroad tracks, and after istrikinghimseverai murderous blows 072 the Wad left, him for dead and Ingle his way to the -house. -4.:Upon entering Ire saw Mrs. Sprague in the kitchen, and struck - one .blow at her and demanded her money, --She told hirato get it out of a drawer and then' ran 'screaming from the house. Before she hadgone far the man -overtook her and p3ss0.„.her, soon getting out of sight. -The • rteigT&Rs hurried to the spot and found s. Sprague s almost lifeless body lying in a pool of blood. near the barn., . The colintry • was scoured, but . the. miscreant was tiot: foimd. Great excitement prevails. SPrague. and his wife are about 50, years. of age and • amongat -the most respected residents of the country. There is no hope of Spregue's • reootery. Later.--Tke Mulatto has ,been - arrested. An elegant out -door garment is the long 'bIgok velvet paIetot trimme&,. with bear- ' skin. - • -An Irishman Was' heard to say that he' *ould have been a man of oonsiderable IIPPertY /this father had never entered the , • 0 - ' There is a man wbo knows how tb :play on two cornets at once. The neighbors say • they dont object to hisknowing how, but • he had' b*etter -n try to',410 it. ' NI A .6E 8 OF DEATH. The Remarkable Discoveries Made in the Rums of Pompeii. soDIEs-, WERE PRESERVED- FOR: intl.,- ' Who that has an object before him -.ever -grows tiredin.Ponipeii? .4,7s I hayesaid,the aspect of the local museum is smart. It glistens, . it gleams Withlts polished :Oaken fittingeand glass cases. The pots and pans, . the fishhooks and ..stirrups, the cialcined 1-Oaveliand.fruite and 'wits that have alipost, but not quite, brought me face to face with. the people of A.D.79 are from carbonization bb.ok„ .but they , are .comely. The whole rcio-m Woks -bright and cheerful, yet on every -side are there mementoes of death, sudden, violent- and . terrible. ' Ranged,: round the .walls are skele tarts: of men,-wOmen, infants, horses, mules, dogs, oats and poultry,- all dug from the ruins. Stay; the little eucking pig yonder, that was found .in the baker's oven,eadapecta violent end. He had -,been mercifullyattick to death beforetheyscored and trussed .hirs • for , the bake -house. " His tender craokling, the gristle of his snout,his ears and eyes have long since been resolved• into, dust and ashes, but the osseous Struc- ture of the .tiny creature is yet perfect, even to the _bones of the pettitoes and.: the vertebr� of 4he- Oncecurly tail. Plum .sauce :and not -pumice stens should have :crowned the funeral pyre of that -little. pig. How brown and shiny :he mist •havebeen growing, how Mae . he must -have, smelt,. when the black rain of- ashes came jipon'him and cOvered-hira up for - eighteen ceitturiei. But the Middle Of the rousedin ; what is therein the riiidet of the museum:? Sudden, yiolent, and. "dreadful death, the aspect of which -is almost supernaturally revealed to us, but.vrhich bears no appalling look., .Fliave,,..rarely known' a oivilian- Who, hating once been °ter:a:- -field of battle, say three -. days after • the, -. slaughter; ex- hibited the ['slightest desire . to make .0- second •time that . .journey full of horrors. - 'ret there is nothing. shocking, and. scarcely anything, -indeed, .thatoin be calledpainful, in the appearance' Of the _images of death ranged at lull- length on the tables. The prostrate figure: of the man who, from the aquillitie outline' of his .countenance, -is known liathe:- Boman, and who is girt with a money ,belt. .His death must have been. frac, asphyxiation; ; -head- • reposes on one of his arms. ; the: expression Of the : countenance is one of deeply thoughtfnlgravity-scarcely....sleep, although theeyes are _closed,' but -rather profound • meditation. : And, then - the. thiboy of 11 012 • sjimpiers,who had tumbled face foremost on thegrOund, and 7died there in .-a moment. And the .ragazza, the exquieitely. famed :young girl 'of 16 Or 17,iier•face turned a little on one side, to - that you: can see- her Sweet innopent - . and her hairi -fixed in girlish coqUetry. These- images of sudden and violent: death are all nade; but when they were stricken: down by death theywore the garments of their time and rank -garments .whioli the heated ashes Calcined and made to :vanishin a moment. :But the aqua boltantei the baling por_ permeating the .puMice, the scorke nd. _ashes formed round each body.a fine paste,' which received the imprintof the corpse which it Surrendered. .This . paste - after'somedaye driekand- became a sharply- -defined mould, i and then came - the eighteen centuries of entombment. :The bodiek decayed, the bones fell away :from ligaments whiolv. 'turned todust, but the sharp mould remained, retaining every. -detail of the: external form'. Of s hat had once been human. . And one : day, CaValiere superintending the .proofs of the ".scavi,”.: was told . by one of his -.workmen thatwithhis pi -01144e: be had :struck into a .cavity apparently. of considerable . - _done. The cavity was Sounded; and by - and -bye sonie. 'vestiges of . -mortality-a vertebra, a bone of -,,a. 'tarsus or a roetai Carptis . Was broughtto the eurfat4 It • instantly occurred to - the .. astute :mind of Cavailiere-Fi�relli that Iiiiman- bodY had : once filled --- that cavity,: and that the long -since.-: indurated ;mass: - of pumice and ashes had - formed a.lraoUld which:should present an, ekaot imprint Of the disintegrated corpse. Liquid plaster of Paris was brought and poured through the apertureef . the oayity.': The : plasterwas allowed- totardezt, ; and then the Surrbrind." ing Mould wag' gehtly.reinoyedes:and-ie astonishing, tranactipts oflife f.suddiaily turned into death were reveajed.:•_i In Only: one of these bodies, strangely resuscitated the' ',paradox caii' ;be pardoned -by Meer:dot a buoketful of liq_uefied plaster :of Paris, are any signs of. &Cute:physical suffering tisiblei: Vhere,i0 a reproduction' of the body of a -dog which, With a collar .round Its neck, was found- by the side of the -vestibule of a patrician's. house. The -poor dog his died bard,' it has rolled over in its agony said lies On its back, its mouth Open, its limbs vio1eit1y ocintorte& . The' stretched -out: fore -paws are croised almost in an attitude .A3f supplication; and the whole frame is twisteiLaudiwrenched441, Manner suggestive of fearful pain having' been, suffered ere theri.olief ot deatkeame. -L0-4401 Te 9. Pk;• - .• A Remarkable mosaic. - A. very remarkablii Mosaic has just been discovered atIcimes. Itie over 15.0 qure feet in size, and represents a Boman bin'. peror seated on a throne, by the side of which stands a female figure. There are .also two figures of men, -leading, the one a lion -and ,theother * wild-.liciarv47Awarifor. .with a Rom -an 'helmet and a itiniber of slaves complete this highly -interesting group. The work has happily escaped injury; the lines and the colors are as fresh. *sit dated from yesterday:714'1'5 de �I -by cOnlietOtiu44 to 4ith6iloketit triisiify yet, ilistiiivered,":.no Europe possessing one to match it. As for its value, they decline to. name a .4defirlite though they express the opinion -that it cannot be -,wortli„ Jese, thanloop,000 francs at, the lowest. -1111f„rtrirafe. 'owner -of-the:house in whiclikthisAreasige: kfic4-:139e!1: disi;rove;ed ilad-Atiat -sold tbec property tO the municipality -for - less than - £2,000, This body twill frame the mosaic, and place it inthemason& of the town, already so rich in local relics of the Roman period. -.St. James' Gazette. • - The _brown .and • gilt plush hit which young women inaris wear in their after noon promenade on ,the boulevards is a reproduction of the hat worn by Charles I. in he portrait by Vandyok. AKTIiDISCLOSU ter oit-A - , .Etew a ,Fortune Eventla • I1ioUsafldDoJ1nrS. 'Old Pioneer's. tement.s-- *as !Spent in Vala-Aa • ' • Vereer-litescited Lent. ,-1- • tatt nikcific al. --;The Dat,phronick pulllisliesthe fel lig .'editorial cominnni cation -beta: Capain .,;..Wf..'R. SWasey, the oldest Pioneer in San._ FranciscO, a gentle. mai Well -kneiail throughout -the' • wadi .wh(olk will be etexplantfory : :1 -', *- ' .. - ' -: . ditor of the. Wkoniele.-.--SiA i, Anything cOn erning the •hii3bry- of aiield Californian, especially if be it.fi.tokteneitely- and favorably .knqwp througli0P,„. the „Pacific Coast, never fails to attract atoention, but when the oir, turestances atte ' ling hiscareer areroLtuoh a.p culler - char ler ', that a knowledge of the „will , benefig:-..the' public at large, the imparting of molt; knowledge becomes. not onlyla:pleasure, ltt a duty as well. •: There... fore,- the writer '610ms - the following brief sketch :not onlyVanently .proper, but also. feelconfident ..0.4. it Will .prove - deeply interesting and b4ileficial to tliethousande, .. - .. wbo-Will-read itinki : -. . -..- `. 1. • ' -- ' • ' ': . Colonel 1:)., J:lailliarnion, -,thei,:stibject_ Of this letter, enterthe Union Ariny in 1861 .as Regimental Quartermaster of the Fourth - , - • :California Infain ., aliC in 1863 he was appointed by -P ' eident Lincoln, . Captain, Quartermastera United %alai Arniy. He tserved with Ltinction to himself and holiOr..ta • the Gc,ernment, Until 1867, at _whip time hole •Itthe military Service -and Meanie a prom- 'int. operator,: ii.,.stOcks in San Francisco. In this 'business he con, tinied Until 18 A When he reoeiVed- from .A.ffairs of that Ai. -hblio,which: latter pod, it -PreSident Grant ,... ...e appointment of United States Consul -at 011ao; Fern. . In 1874 he # appoipted. by.Rresident ; Grant Consul at Aparaish, 0 . ili,...and:.-- also :Charge d'. tiOnle . he - was: .00Velled • by illhealth to resign in 1878. : .,11, i,..,. i. -- z ' .- .. - I -. :: - : -:.---- . . I Ii. thd viinterOgi8W2,.a Ns/litter that wag uniXsuallY Mole At, vrhile on. military duty al.Saoramento, :, , lonel. -Willianismi . was obli ed. to sleep ,iL tante, and then first con- tracted .,: -. . - - • theterri , scourge of, rheumatism, from 'which -he' *V *Mee suffered pp:ISO:at- ing pain, althOug 1 e was not incapacitated from duty. .Aftem he had left the Service . andi-J entered.: upo .business :pureuits. the raise* pertinaci , , ly clungto; his system, although he..tase:401 to the Most eminent medial advice's; to every known remedy for Oallef.'. ,When e arrived in Bern, where the -raatism is very preValent,.the. disease -assuMed &still niike ;Virulent type; and his suffering be0aMif Ise. • utterlY.. intolerable that'. he . was 1 f Obliged •_- to submit - to -thel..: application.' ttof _ : . hYpodermic. . •_ injec- tions of niorphiolrequentY• administered as _Often:as, twen*fiVe times in twenty-four bOtirs.. ;'He visitill7 the' famine baths- of - that country WittiOut avail, and When he reached Chili, irisortedto.- the .- baths Cotienes and afteriiardi tothe baths on -the Suniiiiit of. t14,4 Andes, whioli latter are . : o elebrated-throuillont theworld for their efbiaoy in the cue Of rheumatisin.. He still found no rel ogo.jiOweirer,. and . in .1878 his )inees and lortr eiitternitiesz became . so powerless frord, 0 ' dises,Se that he was obligedlo resign, position and return -to California.- . fie .onoe :repaired to the Ratio Robles Sp tugs, in Sari „Luis ()age cOwity, where .11 *bayed - bit slight tem.. porary_relief,tha ' iliguant Complaint con - tinning, te Odd 4.1. and-- rack - his .frame, aliPost, without 'Ci*ationi From 1878 until within 'about - to, Mouths, he has ...been tail!), depriVedf the. use of , his, lower unite; botig 4.kball4te13i unable., to perforin thel moat* illiniii el.'.phygleal; act, withOut. essiiiiiiiii. . So* Six. Months ago: he was lapped br hislihrid;.Ferdinand Vaissatilt, ..gsq:, Secretary :.Okthe,California- Pioneers, to try St.. Jacob Oil. Itis fortunate . he: didl." so; ,- for -. to4:6y,--•..after long Years a intense agony at utter prostration,- he •.is: • able to'walk abo, .with- Comfort and witk.. f Out the aid of eit4-er Cane or orntches.: He , laeiAliscOntinuediall medioig.-treatment an& the use of natC2otios, and he '-gratefully An i•„Most. ,erapgiatiiially r... attributes. :thii. haj Py- result:so*, W the -use of St. Jacobs 1.3.11' he Writef- ',iit letter having hin2, 'eel been a ._.e ,)r. from rlieumatikin,:and,, , ha ,iiit beenthOxtiighirlaUred by, tire -same' *eniedy;:feelaiM elled.bta4.iiense of duty to ligiletedlimni.ani; cjiriPart this informer tio to the plibli . -.- - . . , tire- respectfully; .- :... -', , W. F. SwAsic.T. *Sit ,Fitociscai. -04. To .0-aptain -Steamy, Pioneer : gall,: .Vitt-D$AwCAPti -:, gayingoarefully read. lthe foregoing; I.c *iritill.Add MY. uuquah- fled:attestation tthe truthfulness Of - the 'statements dontiVed therein: Of course, no language is adeOate to : convey: a realistic sense of the fear01 suffering and agony -I have passed through -in the last eight years, I Mur' ! . 404**,4 1414,,Ilend#44:' at last 42 ' 01 : 1 . ,.-f6r ...ren*: .04 ieffe4 pie dolii attendance , :an x-iti; rifardebiesideiicil at igOinereigii*i.,:r rtliiiiiifidl?..."idd - this .1 : teii iniony: becauitt I feel ' perfectly ciattaiii the/ a knowledgelifjpy:-oureby St; _ Jacobi r.011.' will :pave -the Atialit :of relieving 1 ' dredsof egiffirers from the pangs of:the :die dfni difiease101704- to. Confident?.:4,,:.:a. -40 soma044 •le' to resume 'my former active life, I re'. IlWaYS,• !tour friend*-: D.4,----W174LIAME01.1.,- 20 Taylit's btig.au Vrane1000, Cal.:: - ',. , t 1 T be St. Loui, Io•I'ost-Dispatc7z, says Aostrernarkale ease has ltist come to, the -notice of a ' orter of this• paper,* who havMsbieninfo ped ot the wonderful Ore of Mrs. Phoebe Iii';'1,208 Madison street; • asieter9t.,4944Clay Seiton, Ohief of - thetSti EOM'S _IA '090:94tMentipisited that` lady at h'erreeld;nce Mrs Aloe mirde her 'eta eilient,Witir *the lealitrelhotante and said that for - the past seven years, she had been a sufferer from acute, inflammatoryiheuniatism, whrth had effected the intuit:lea of the . hinds, . iChtracting thein so .badly• she . could., not .'comb her. hair, hold a nee le'. or piak t4P. & pini;, and .rendered: the!jotrer'• -hong. -Bo -helplOre qUird drutohOL.: to.move -,abOut. Dur- ing'! ten Mo h.bs she , ,!Eibliged to.cfirry- the rigl hand in a. aling. Physi- Clans were call in, but gave het only 'IPP4 , . , - temporaitylelief.- . Some time ago one of herchildrenwas &Sided: with a (rabic: - tion• of -the 'muscles of tbelower jaw, whieh turned herMouth to one side;- a 'few appli- catlons of St. aacobilDil restored; the fea- tures to their natural- condition; and Mrs Elsie began look hopefully ,towards it fo. her own cure. A single,-appyoationi sh Said, made her iirmbellever in its virtues as the. bffeit was Instantaiieotte- and eh; wafgreatlybenefitted: • The. continuedtus of it brought • her to the happy state i whiolt the reporter .Satv., her, With- th free use of her limbs . and in pe.rfeo health, .oured. She was very enthusiasti hi her obnithendations ' of . the painrelieving and ourative powers of St. Jacob. Oil, whioh She said had acoemplished more for her In a - few weeks than all the • Other remedies the physicians. had recommended in the 'past seven years. - She can now ran up and downstairs, sliesaid, and her hands were as useful, in_every respect, as they had been before she began to suffer, seven yearn ago: "God bless St. Jacobs Oil,". the .good -lady•ezolaimed, reporter was about to leave. I Eirsi Rice - has lived in this'oity thirty years, and her statement,' worthy of all credence, is fully oorrolmated by her friends and neighbors,,,and by her own children, who were filly cognizant of her helpless condition before she -began to use the Wonderful remedy. • t • - - - Latest News Noses. . - • . : The Humber relief fundhas reached a total of $8,580;08. . The Chinese are now reported to be gen- erally less disposed for war. - *. -York County - Council will consider as motion t� abolish toll•gates. - - 'Toronto harbor receiptifor 1883 exceed • those of thepreyibus year. _ A FATAL BILISTAIKE 2 . , 4 would lid not to take Dr. R. V. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" ifyou are bili- ous, suffering from- 'impure Blood, or.fear- ingoonstimption (scrofulous disease of the lunge). Sold by all druggists.. . . . •Alarge ...lint arrow -head was found firmly imbedded in the teak of a whale Captured -off- San Diego; Cat., the other day. ••• - • • Dr. Pierce's "_Pleasant Purgative Pel- lets are' sugar-coated and eholosed in glass bottles, their virtues, 'being thereby preserved - unimpaired for any length of time, in any climate, .so thatthey are always fresh and reliable: No oheapi wooden or pasteboard boxes. By druggists. • Several years ago a flock of tame goats were turned loose in the Santa Catalina, Arizona. They have 'multiplied in number till they new amount to a large band. • -Functional derangement of the female system is ejuickIycured by the use of Pr, R. V. Pierce's ." Favorite Prescription." It removes ' pain and . restores health and strengtn: - By all druggists. - • Five s :nen and five women in, -various parts of the United Kingdom have lost their lives during the gale. • • “ElDC111U-IPAIBAAM Quick, complete cure, 8.11 annoying Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Diseases $1. -Druggists, The pen may be mightier than the sword, but if you get a hair in it you begin to be- lieve that it may sometimes outlive its Usefulness, _ tar Millions of packages of the Diamond. Dyes have been sold without a single Complaint Everywhere they are the favorite dyes. . • A lady recently sat down on the slippery pavement of a Minnesota • town with ; a "dull siokining thud.", It has struck the Northwest, has • . , . It seems impossible that a remedy made = of such ctommonv simple plants as Hops, Buchu, Mandrake, Dandelion, eto., should make SO many and such great cures as Hop Bitters do, but when old and, young, rich and. poor, pastor and doctor, lawyer and editor all testify to having beed cured by them, you must believe and try them yourself, and doubt no longer. - An explosion occurred in amine in the Rhine Province, Germany, Tuesday,- fin which 16 persons Were killed .and :12 severely wounded. "ROUGH ON COTAGEIS.Y9 Knocks a Cough or Cold endwise. -For children. or adults. Troches, Itic. Liquic\ 00e. At druggists . A negro lad, of Carlisle, My., was taught to *rite by a son of R. Beyard.. He returned the favor by using.the copies of the. name and - trTing;. to.. forge it. Se has been -pladed in. jail in -consequence. - [from Bev. Dr. Ripley, Editor of • the Christian -Advocate Buffalo.] . - . A Vga:ramai MEDICINE. TXTE WISH -:TO CALL THE T Y • TENTIOR of all persons' Suffering from throat and lung diseases to* amedicine which lye-. have -personally tried to - Our satisfaction, and greatly to the benefit of : our health. Having suffered for some time past from Bromihitid, And more or less* 'trouble with the lungi, we coin -- roomed taking Dr.' Wheeler's Compound Elixir of ,Phosphated and oalisaya IDBrebrusr# lest, and steadily Improved, through. the -spring; the worst season 01 the year for suck diseases... The chord of sympathy le often best expressed by a Cord .of wood: Test.a. tuan's profession b his "'Whoa,. PhYs4., Oiawhear thyself.*APhysicians not -calf heal themselves with Kid ,WWOkti but preSoribe it toriothersfor the .wOrst.oaten of 4 biliousness and OonSiPationt,as W.011-,-AsI for kidney plaints. If you feel out of sorts and don't *now, why, try a package of Kidney -Wort 'a;iidlop Will feel like a- new creature. 1 You've no 'idea what ai:.liOrtor it *gives "min to steal up-behitid'a girl Who, it -0340'i 'bling; look over her shOulder;"ahd•A0d thitt She's idly writing your name With a prefixeck-.- • " . tRevelation. anggeeta .the ;that from - Woman comes _the, power to" brigsathe serpent's •bead.' !' The -wortte tAke.a: new meaning_ to -4 since preiiisely3thet E. P hazel Remedies do for the physically diseased - patient, Her Vegetable: Oompeunst.macilies the -ultinnite eottrtea of the evii. Its action, is gentle- -and noiseless, but it is:more powerful- than the, club of Hercules. -Bazar. - -Thiele the best country •-_ in the world for, a poor Maur- Exliept when heiO4:01,004 he has a right to do as he -.Pleases with .What he makes. , 4 • *44: .111011G11101,1 CORPillsw. • ; Ask for Wells" -Bough on Oormi.". •150. Quick Complete, pern2anent .• Corns, warts, bunions. - - • < • k. Foit KIDIUSI OYER ANII RINAJY ORIAB THE BEST MAO .PIBRIETER. , There is only one way b"4ichanydIseaaeo&fl be cured, and that is by -'moving the cause - whatever it may be. The eat medical author- . !ties of the day declare tha;neariy every disease is cauedbyderangedkidLs or ver. To restore thes herefore is the -vay bywhlch health can -be secured. Here is Viratre arner's Sate thare has achieved its gri.lt.4,rre tatio It •acte directly upon the kidney a 4434 liver and by plea. and pain from the 'For allHidney, Liver . -Ahem In a heal+hz3c*dition drives disease • and Urinary _troub es, •;..--;,4-.--;the distressing disk ' orders of women, for ,Vatariaend physical troubles generally, this est remedy has no . • equal. Beware of imp. 'rs, imitationsand concoctions said to beius51.i*good. . For Diabetes -ask for lArnerte Safe Dim; - bete' Cure. . For sale by all,dealers, ;•• • 11. "WAR, li°r°1*. 7111* Ct. it9Cli.Nteati4t:11. rio--114"Eng. . ' Home: --A--I'your-OA fault If you remain sidle g en you can Get hop bitters•thk, ever -.Fag. • Theweakest woman, sm , est :child and sickest invalid can use hogbittf4 -with safety and great good . -Old men tottering agAina from Rheumatism kidney trouble or any Weg.r-ess will be almoell new byasmg hop bitte wife and daughtev, are roads healthy by the use of hop•bitters, recommend them to my peoplelletho rgyman. • Bitters arAake napntYth'ge% On earth. • • - -Malarial lever, Agu,g,,,a 'Biliousness, will • leave every neighhorhocA os soon as hop bitters arrive. . - -my mother drove thopiralysis and neuralgia all out of her systeiWtIlth hop bitters. -E4. Oswego Sun. - • 1,. _ -Keep the kidneys heal4ty with hap bitters and you need not fear stwa*css. • -4ea water is render mien and more re freshing and reviving draught. -The vigor of youth in hop bitters. - ARMED. BUT 17llaw -Pqrronz the Globs.] otorif hop. . amily medicine gaop bitters in each ' he . aged and infirm 4orl. , .if Mears. lititora The above is a good Pk, Of Mrs, Lydia E. Mb. of Lynn, lissa,whaahdit other human beings may be truthfully ealledtheneSr Prleitd ef Woman? 00 sense cf her eerreePendeUt#love to call .ker. She 13 5e31323ly devoted to her VI.i.:=Awhich is theeatcome of * lift-stedy, and b to keep six. My .appiamits, to help her ansWei.,41arge correspondence *hi& (idly pours in upon kiwoieli bearing ita speci4 burden of pueerina,,or 3o release from it. Her .1regetelle Componndis a Wipe for good and not • .pimpos.e5.1 I have. pe investigated Wand on satisfied of the trath-o • On account of ite proven reemismended and prescribed by the best pl,volgane In the country. One nye: “it works like Wriltrin and naves nraoh 'Obi. It Will etre entirely'..atiltotsi form ot falling . of the uterus, • Lea0orrhoki.-*egulav sad .p&Intal Heinstruation,all Ovirien 1miez..-4419a and laceration, Floodirgs, all p Ityal**3=elit3 and Oa-- eecluent 814nAl weakmess 8,40,1girt,sPerterq adapted the Change , , It pernieates every portio4... theeyster..-. And Ow n ew life and vigor. It 1.mi-tile:MEE." 'flatulency, -destroirs ail craving for stiiip,44e,&nl relieves weak. Ness of the stomach. It.c0.01.-,..1raiii,g,.Ileadaches, IfervoutProstration, Gene* .peti•ntr, aleePielinelsa DePregslcikezd IrtagestioN .190 feeling at bearing down, causing -WA weight*t.tookaohs, bit always P8miamentlitured by Its iis*..c;It will it all times, and under all cirjunreheices, ad1-4,„*.z#Y, with the law that. governs, the feniale sySt4-.4 - - It Costs MO i31.'per bottle 0,„%fibr.Si., and, fe sold by •dritggis*-.1117 &Ivies reqogota Osaka oases,ead pene.nws oz,pAlly who 40.#0.::!„.:}04 teetered Overfed heath by the isie Of 'the V*;.thble Conipeen,,e4 MEW! obtainabiaddreseogara;_citith WWII) for rep% ,Of,boy,iiiinze ipWiliglilaas+': 4,1 a: 7 • Fictng 907ipla.a4t ofersextb1scornpouzid1I ”pneeedii iittindaliff,i4opgars ouie. .41iVrs,Rwi4vgoaverraarionewtiter, °are caa bit in :themor2 fok tbe Act3.4. oonsnpaucia, -Torpidx#kthe liver. Her -Bleed Rr.rifieriorkteetimdeifiii40 -,-;44tItl ilialbide fair W1_90-3411, tecOlrund. 4'1:#0041171t1., rand:inspect ho...‘ as 403 Iterc7 .15nhftlat'ilitesiitigitidie • f° 9.161e414*,..." • fgRkNT c RE. pc 11 oiiietdimeaseiseetC'p.:4*An' 09=- ittkas Constipation, - remedy has ever • aegurttliedt. ,...siniztl44cto;Oale9r .t4e13e•CrigioVbcr9:4Wroortbie43303` si - oVereonieGO 44 "4.; plisatbcivovocgagok* ,PILE rengthens the Weal) rallithldlid epileirietkaff„;7filve,h-3t1414,fAtegencl.'11,..r..- 'Ifyoavc'ofthese tide. 1,4lialzaseing 09za" very dirit to be ugatidnelilvrott barts and Lizzian O<IDNE , ORT 'Evia positive remedy for ;me above, dinette; by it& nse'thousands of ClUlf41 Of VI* *nit kind and of pog standing have beim curedlicrit-ed, so strong Is ray 01= in its Money, that I win. seair.M.0- BOTTLES FRHZ, to - Esther with &VALUABLE Tktt.u;TISE on this dimmest& im pram. Give Expresse„n4. 00. address, • DR. T. A. alkoo:45 Vint Ogg Nes Tocki . •••