Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1884-03-28, Page 3• • A $ I Poem. .=. lifiu=E-Drroi.. - I have been shown. yofir Paper,. Sir; in which you: - • say yozell.pay — • -. • Three dollars for the poorest poem. Sent: till the •. , fifteenth day. - - Of Februarf. NOW I can get up poor poetry ' With just aslittle trouble as the squirrelsgo un - a. tree. . • . ' When Widow Johnson!ft barn Was burnt (some think 'twas setafire kT0131 sparks froinoversicross the lot, wherethey ' were setting tire); ,,- .- The time she lost her little boy, whom cruel faf,le did smother, The neighbola kindly set about to help her o raisaanother. • - = .L - -', They madaher a donation call and made tae do' the sp.eechiugi' , , . . • . ithe were tickled, and declaredd.- 'tw,as. nigh fia gooas preaching,' 4 .' Ands! en we sung the -piece I wrote, tor verses, - •oufmon metre, - - • .-. And, Which 1 gays out line by line• -.-said nothing could be sweeter. • - , . ,. , As like is not this poetry will be: too good by half, ' • • - , , . . .1 • 0911131IN. Dress tope 'Worn Etterixile the Enerainse Season. - _ , • As S01330 you get maybe so bad itwould makethe • horses laugh, • . . - „ - But never mind; I shall feel pleasedwherever,, good luck pitches, . ' <Remembering the•Good Book says: ?tit not thy ' :trust in riches'. • —josh. Boston, i•It .Rookland Courter -Gazette. • • Odd Facts and Fancies. Some people think a little salt id/Coffee improves the taste. In the Boston bird show is an eagle whose wings spread nine feet. . _ The champion_ well-behatvd baby is in. a • museum at Dallae, Tex. It is petrified! . . - An objection to electric lights urrittees of anejOement is that they do too much hissink. • An electric -lighted sign board with a surface of 7,000 square feet, in New York, •_ is the biggest thing, as to space, in the trey of advertiseraent yeti exhibited. sil.ir)RT NOVELTIES INTBODUEOD Mew Fashion Slavery Kills Women -New Household Hints. (Aunt Kate's Budget.) Notes •on Drees. Lent is a, capital tinieto Plait and arrange thing titt put a little s otherwise a rusty nail Tinned- 'meats and. made hot in the tht opened, by plating it ing it for a -While. - • • "to/e th water, g°°46 getables should, be afore the lailibr is hot water and heat. If cayenne peppe4 is sprinkled plenti- fully in ,the resorts oftlats they Will resent the inhospitable treat' ;Ant, and. will retire, from the premise?. A teaspoonful of "o ooal in half a glees of warm witter often lieves a dial hese eche. It absorbs the eoses and relieves the distended, stomach 6essing againgt -.the! nerves that extend thastomaoh to the I head. arid older children, Oatmeal wafers • meal.and a pint of 'one's spring. clothes. .Bothering .over and artaying spring clothes is surely a good Lent mortification. Green is pronounced by the powers that be the color which will be most worn this spring, though almost every other conceivable shade will -share its honors. The new hats are manttof them high • and large crowned; and. amongst the straw hats far more, colored ones are imported. than white. Straw bonnets are shown.in great quantities, but it is said thatlancy. nutter- ials such as gauzes English -crape, China crape, tissues', embroidered batistes and lane over silk will be used for very dressy bonnets. It. is ' generally _ptedieted that -long mantles will continue in favor, Sven for the spring and for young terls'who have hitherto exclusively worn jackets and short wrappings. For spring nittny elegant ladies _in Paris utilize ' their beautiful India shawls by . draping hem ingeni- ously. A. few &grates of old °hosed ',silver are used here -and there to fatten the shawl at the Waist, neck and shoulders, which they wear -with true Parisian grace.; If the pretty pink ghighems1 nciw So mucih worn by children are dipped lin waiter with, • enough vinegar in it to give it a sour taste; • the pink will be brighter thin if rinsed in water alone. If' you have any old Muslin dresses that are good;andstill are faded and so unfit to wear, it is it. good time to trythe experiment Of bleaching them, and if of good quality they will die much eervicie as. common white= dresses.1 Mon of the delicate -hued muslin can. b bleached by boiling them in strong sOap 4tids, and then laying them on the grass for a day or two; others nifty havesseak amdronia added to the Water. _ • I - • 0 Slivery still exists in.China. The female: slaves are by far the most numerous. The.., ' average price is from 40 to $50 per hoed. Young and healthy.girls of 12 sometimes - fetch as high as 3100. Reed and Peatee, of Mmporia, have been sentenced to remain. in the peniten- tiary one year and, at grich time. thereetter as. the Governor shall fix; to he hanged within the prison - • According to Japanese. • 011iitOD1 ago is counted -from the first day of -the jetuctry .succeeding birth. At that date. & chid is one year old, whether born. the previous January, mid -Simmer ..or on the 31st of December. . - • _ A -butcher of Wyrctore; Neb., put a hand- some fat pig, ornamented with rosette% on • the_Christmas tree for his pastor. He Was • very angry the next day Vzhort he saw the . pig in it rival shop, where the dominie hed sold it fer half the market pike.° • • • The blowing down of On oak near Wash- • ington, Ge.,..revealed. a: little- heap of gad and tewels, cliamond,0 rubies -•and pearls, _said to • he worth 520.,000. It hi suppose& that they are part of the _treasure lost by - members of the Confederate:COInele relished by ibabies Take a pint of oat ter With alnint a teaspoonful of salt. 4ix and spread on buttered pans. Maltlt JO just as thin as it is poi; Ile, and yet has e hot -trot 'the pen cio•- d. Bake slow. Iron Rust Spot Be tar,' fif:ty parts; bi tpowdeted), fifty p one part. Rah 'to, Moisten the spot; • plate and rub with t “ oft coslosesti Ask for " Rohe; on Coughs: for Clouehs, Colds' Sore Throat,Zioszseness. ..,h00,1r?e, "Liquids - 4. Notice has been given in the British Man fa Lords that when unit, matters are be- fore the House the proposition to change tbe uniforra of the forces Min red to grey oter..-4Crearii of tar -- ate of potanden ;• oil of rosemary, der and mix well.. see on a ..heated . • tin mseistened• powder. Dessert in a Er dessert is this : 21' • SOMD1011 griddle ea some fruit, say stove' dram the juice from into the batter ; fry, serve with pudding 4-lutee. • . - • Arrangernent of polts.—If you have a plethora of boas getta carpenter to make a wooden frame with -rti beck, -'and a series of shelves. Set this • the top With any: suitable; and the el fringe, as also the s -- • .. .... : Tom Crawford, a •heart-srciashei of, . Crockett co., . Tenn.; was arrested in Hay- wood County reaently, on. the 'eharge of 'bigamy, having married five wives, En of ,whom are said to be living. He is a clarkeer/ over 50 years of age and has a most *repul•- / . . sive countenance. . _ - -- - , A. fellow in Cleveland, O., has taught a -dog to steal .newspapers from, the doom - steps of houses, where they .have been left. ItY carriers, and bring - them to him. The. ..question with the exasperated subscribers • is whether they shall kill the dog or punish ' - the man. . .‘ . . _ _Mathew Cohen, . at New - York: youth, *being found uneouscioas vrith. a bottle • .; labeled ." laudanuni" in it, ;Was suspected ` &suicide. He', came to &Hee the applica- tion of a stomach pump and explained that the bottle contained "holy water," which. • he had taken internally, having felt un- -well. • • ' ' . • ' , • On the melded" 'dopy of the Month says the Shasta (Cal.) Courier, Rev. W. H..119*- eird baptized by -immersion eight, reeidents of Big :Valley, Modoe- . Co. The pegitor, - however, showed- eoicie judgment m the business. He loaded . the band into - a *big waggon, took theta' to the outlet of the hot springesand gave them a warm bath. . . The plow ingeneral use in Mexiiio notes- • days tithe same the Egyptians used 5;000 - years ago: It consists of a crooked- stick with an iron point pellet' to it or tied to it ? 'with &piece of rawhide, a Small han- ale -for the plowman to steer with, and a pole to .-• hitch • a . yoke of oxen -to. This so-called view will scratch ofiireow in. the soil three inches deep. • . _ Robert P. -Pullman, of cerneeviflei gra.; Publishes this card in a local paper: "1 . • hereby. give notice to all draneuellera and .-olskelts"--drinitere that I hava,•Ieft the old way - - IMPS che old year, and have turned into the - . new Way with the new year, and I want all Of them to give Me -the go-by. ..Iiniend-t0 redeem my tame and oharaeter; and 'shah look upon. the Man who offers me liquor as : . my deadly enemy." • 1- . . . Last summer the wife of - Benjamin. ' . Smith, of Hancock,. Delaware Comity, N. Y., was so - badly inured by a sunaway - horse that she died in a few hdUrs. After her death Smith and his son James; _aged 16, continued to live in Hancock. Two -melte ago the father was driving on a steep hill near the village. with ..a load of bark. He fell from the load in some way one - runner of his- sled pessedtver his, head, _ crushing- WM to death. -The,son then went to live with a manta sister at Patine, a - .ttei hboring villap.. Last ' Stitttrday_ he IT stol ss ride on the -caboose of a freight trai' on. the Erie. Railway, to 4aittioidt... The 'train did not - stop at- thet Station. Young Smith jumped from the train, and, falling beneath the wheels- of the caboose,. was instantly killed. - . - - • ; .„ will .hirtipPosed. •. • • • - --ink the Maur of Need ' You Want not to try experiments, but resort to the old -and wesseeteenteens that afforded relief in the peat. When your corns •ache -don't take the first article offere4lon, butfind out just the thine/a-answer your innoose, viz., terentove the troublesome crinakatid.to do this without pain, and to do it proMptlyi Putitana's .Painkse Corn Extractor has been used for many years. It has never been known totfail. - Putnam's Extraetor makes no deep holefign the flesh, hard to heal d more trottbles than the original die . . • r. * comfOrts. It works nicely and efficiently. -A Port Glasgovt 'firm of shipbutlders launched a tug of 1;500.- horse power, 'said to be the moat powerful in the world, for. quickly made batter as if -for then add an egg and tor - anned harries, hem and stir them a little lard and 'Colors which* were oncecitisideted Ina& missible, worn together, are .tow fashion- ably cotabined. Whether their combination la in any better taste than , ver . is a ques- tion; but certain 't is that from becoming i accustomed to se them ,. , they, do not looklquite so siren e as formerly. _ A foamy . costume may &mein of- a tiky-blue waist ornamented with loopizof i sky-blue satin ribbon and pink roses, and sihot round ikirt of cluindrons, . or coOer-red - velvet, decorated with clusters ot jacqutnetnot roses. . - - - , • ' • • _ 'Aaiun the wall cover prig you may. .think ; border it Wtth.ball ves...--Put your balks On these, and -youttteliiiia, cites -on the.top and you will have npt only _a useful, but a handsome piece of ..f‘rnituret- Three dips of wood- strung h caner with .blind obid,.knotted wheril#31trough, So that they cannot slip, the .fotti)iieces tied together at. the top, and passe ,tiver .8 'nen, give e con- venient kind of be qoorn Utak shelves. .• . • service in the- ooghly. , m. With Diatnond Dyes any lady can gat as •good. restate as the best practical dyer. EV,a7 dye warranted true to name and sample. . • • • • s The ." were the Egyptian of Diana at Ephesus,,thts, of -Babylon, the • Colossu Statue of Jupiter Olynam at Temple of Bolus and Lake, Xceris. • - • The British royit ocattietttxmo/ with - ialapealt lion and unioorll; 4.08 been' a COM- niOn feature of English eitl*rtisillit in tiff, -• A City of MerioO despatch says yellow fairer is raging at Tehuponepeo oity. JOhn Meyers, on American' railroad tontracter, died of the Many people -Red and pink, outrageous flitch a mix-, tnre seemerpronlise to be a favorite con- ceit for spring millinery. A capite of Tuscan straw may be encircled with a puffy cloud .of•pink tulle, fastened i with a bunch of redroses ; or, on the -same principle, the Scarf may be of red China &ape caught with a cluster of pink rens.- . h hT e newest use to Which darned netas been applied is to form yokes for chemises. • The net is first out out. 'inithe forth of a yoke, and _then darned with linen . floss hi the pretty_ conventional patterns so long -employed for tidies, window curtains and the like. When finished ihe yoke is edged with linen lace or embroidery on net.- -.New oilers are' oat straw yellow, apriboti resembling that the peach; Panama yel-b pink, the pale pink of the apricot blossom low, the tint of Panama straw hats; Suede, the ecru shade of the -long popular gants Suede, or undressed kid &yes. -• The Wo • Min Elizabeth fog a lifesize po dog. wonian. k, of Chicago, is paint - 1" of Mrs. Langtry's The lady who sote the popular little • g"0- is said to have 0,000 out of .it. Her, the gloaming to soni long " In the Glo cleared. a rotmd•i- Sweetheart left h • . purpose. SIOTIKEIL• • sease yesterday- mottling. leaving the city. • WAN'S woult torsur Infallible, tasteless, harmless, cathartic ; for feverishness, restlessness, worms, constipa- tion. 25c. • What's the par value of a Southern gentleman's " sawed honor," anyhow ? ,Here is Colonel promising, "on his Sacred honor," that he will cause his son to give himself up to justice, and then using the opportunity thus pined to help the young gentleman offlo the woods. A Northern tramp could do no worse. and sign-boazds. A. new; Lew, which has on imitation of Ober royalty or uteinOnge tinbrroeffyiaeotars imsni .0t, as a ilne of 1100 tOr 15, without the consent •the Government. gi SoOts-wha has we; written by Burns,. to' thirt atonal air of "olio tutti tutti." It id:t e oldest air. now known and is mentione4 - 1488 by Gavin . DoUglalis, Bishop of Dui?It was. the brilliant martial air w notes kindled the war flame in the tents of Bruee's azi'ocknlYburaBnh.e. lea "ern' cul e field 61 Ban - 1 . - Ate° 'bloc' 2' "wait - • A French wornes$Countess de Miramon, exhibits in the Patil *Salon portrait _busts that are worth feting. But then great •painS are taken U.:14dd that she IS ?1St a "professional soul or" Dear, dean! Miss Ley, of Elgland; : -is one of 'the , bservers who havkheert studying the green Isuis Ind 'red isuttets. • She estimates the height, of the MaSkilf meteorite and volcanic There is no en wisdoinin this remark lof somebody:e wet common error of imen and women: :that of looking for hap- jpiness somewhere;utside of useful - work." Moreover, it is q - as true of women as Of. men. : dust in the atmos ere at thirteen miles. • - Proof Everywhere,. If any invalid or sick 'tenon has the leaet doubt of the power and effloacY of Hop Bitters to cure them, they can And cases _exactly like their own., in their own neighborhood, with proof positive that they can be easily and per- manently cured at a trifling. costor ask your druggist Or physician. _ GREENWICH, Feb. 11, 1880: ' Hop Bitters Co. -Sas, --I was given up bythe doctors to die of scrofula consumption. Two bottles of your Bitters cured me. - .0nee loosen the latch -strings of honor, the door thorinie and -folly swings easily. • Saxe the Old Paper. After a stove has beed blackened it oai be kept looking very. wellfor a long time by rubbing it with paper every morning. Rubbing with paper is a Much nicer way of keeping a tea -kettle, eoffeespot and teat pot bright and clean than ;the old way of washing them in Isuds. Rubbing with paper is also the best way -of polish- ing knives, tinware and spoons; they shine like new silver. For polishing mirrors, lamp chimneys, etc., paper is better'. than - dry cloth. Preserves and pickles keep intiell -better if brown paper' instead of cloth - is tied over the jar. Chinned fenit sis not sie f • Among the h est industries whereby ilia ID soul and body ar ept together Europa is that of findin American wives for • - . - • . • ' • the• tatio "-God t the wind to "° n 1-Wers e shorn lamb" is fro M stourence Sterne% 6,6 Sentimental journeyttf'_ It is probable, however, that' Sterne, WO was intimately acquainted with •Fiencltk, literature and is thought to have .inaitetArl 'Rabelais, para- phrased Henri Estiennittr1 *titer of the latter part of the sixenth century, ...in Whose "Premien " is Ntuid the sentence, Piets tnesure 4/mid a la 4ittt8 Multi& - titled paupers. 41 se a pity. One honest American thhisliereditary respect for women, is wo h all the titled libertines of Europe. •-. The other de;t4 at a °irons BMWs Mme. Marquise 'ttutefeuille went into the lion's Gage with keeper and playedwith the beasts self t y had been so many oats. During the p menace there was a, heathenish roar apple,* and the bend played a nations4 *r "La' Brabaneo e." " ilnoleStim " as a"1,lmanie for the - United States arose the c'rar of 1812 o Troy,"14'.. Y. Samuel Wilson, an inspec- t of ariny suppliee,4-Who was widely - known as "Uncle Sate," reeving marked a number of casks wit*: 'the Government insignia, "U. S.," was'seked by a workman if the letters meant -f.:;t_Incle Sam." The joke travelled, and the thrase has since become a current " A6artpan." The Eng- , lish option was -first pOsfanified as "John• - Bull" in a political i titOire by Dr. John - Arbuthnot, published tex', 013, and intended :to ridicule the Duke litf. Tczr1hnVAI1�h.. ' • The Wei ether .& Worldly father, a4ttr, the etyle ef' Lord , Chesterfield, is -gi.vineggood advice to his son who is about 50 estat sooiety :• "'And, above all; avie:g flirtations. Bet if you must flirt or fa: ge, love, sir, be sure that itis with a prett, 9Man. It is always safer." *Both LydiaotlignItham'.0 Vegetable Com- pound and B1 Purifier are prepared at 233 and 235 Western avenue, Lynn, Kass. - Price of either, $1. Six bottles for $5. Sent by mail in he form of pills, or of lozenges, on receipt of price, $1 per box for either: Mrs. Pinkkam freely answers all letters of inquiry. Enclose 3o. tamp. Send for pamphlet. Monti,* this paper. On Victor Hugo's recent birthday—hiit 83rd—the Government struoks medal in li , honor. The presentation of this Medal was the feature of the celebration. Crowds of- frienda iutd admirers flocked to his onset - he drawing rim= of which was filled with choice flowers sent from m y parts of FranOS. Goethe'. adeo years. By that time to -benne ttioqiiainted, and if they didn't like it th4.4cotild change off and get Polish" oman in Chico tocarry this . pleasant *tide. She applied for .• ried for three years only, • sbaild Was coming over stry at the end of that time. d marriages five me couples' would have • somebody else. pee, Mass., tri pestle fancy hitt a license to be M as her:present • froin the old co Vers:DOxe. ,The London Acet discusses the subject of ritting at th -end of sleep. 'Dozing, it O declares, is not missible from any health point of view.tlhe brain is the first to fall apt to mold if a piece of Wr, itang paper, mit asleep; and is f owed by the active organs, to fit the can/ is -laid direetly on the fruit. and It Is onlYsilletfect and natural when Paper is much better to_Put under &carpet share sl by all it he several parts of the than straw. It is warmer, thinnei-' and organism. All ie parts of the system are tnot equally etPlausted, • and those least makes less noise when one walks over i. DEMEANS OF k • ...3" Nervous Weakness, D Sexual Debilityi. mired newer:. $1, . Impotence, si:Heaith Se- . . "Why?"se " Because- some otter4. fellow will he BUM to be attracted and Ottts yoti.out before. any ondon Post. harm has been done. Mr. George W. Chi, editor of the Philadel office back, up stairs, It found: But -it is acuriselty shop, filled with brio -a -brass . /.0bilog.11.1.10111111111.111.11 ; the owner_ and Ledger, has his ere he is not easily • Emperor Wil •• m's eyesight failing rapidly, and i is feared that - he • .may be7. come blind ore especially as he : °hints • o any m e of treatment, t 4 }, &doubtful frie is Worse than a certain I y," and vice versa • certain friend is,_112811- mwy better than a d btful enemy. 'Thus, Kidney -Wort Is an co-Ma. numbly hatter friend /to the human race than whole catalogues full Of 'doubtful nostrums, It is an unfailing remedy or,thatd,ormenting disease piles. It -moves the bowels gently and freely, and thus removes the cause. Do not fail tO try it faithfully either in dry or liquid form. . ° - • . -.»**• ene t •• - . - , fatigued vrake, while those most • FaShiellable *omen. exhatistea. ire At -eased with the greatest - • " . Fashion kills More women than tell and difficulty. Th of the organ:. sorrow: Obedience -to fashion -is a- greater ism -should nee rest at the seine times. To transgression of • the • livis of • woman's :bring - "wake nature, -a greater usury to her phy.sical aid -earlyand-feel y, .03134-.04. fair and mental ._ constitution, than • poverty -arid :equal. -start ,sieeparii!. should T. be neglefet. • The eleve-, woman at her tia21F2 secured, and a Ise selftManageitshOuld not will live and_ grow :Old ada-see two or three &lime a drow eeling &the bonseionness, or ad eehatisted system to She follY of -.going: to steep hiii,coitscionsness has been writerdeolereXthett a :matt ow hinitiolfthiliezi will; in himaelf,aliiiest ;bee)• . generations of her mistresses fade and pass for weary Bens away. The washerwoman,with scarce _a ray of hope to cheer her in her toilswill live 50 see her fashionable sisters die all around her. The kitchen maid 'is he and _strong, when her lady has to bell lilt. _a • stok ,baby. It is a* sad, truth th fashion -pampered won:fedi:ire-almost wontl lessforallthe endeot human ; they haVe, but little force Ofeltizsoter ; they have Still leas power of moral will, and quite as little Physical. energy. .They live for nei great purpose ID 'life; they accomplish' no •wer- thy ends. They are only doll forms in the hand_ss3f milliners and tiervants,6who•slinit and feed to order. They • welts to books, they set no- xi& examples of,virtiseuritied womanly life. If : they 1, rear children, ser- vants and nurses do 011 save ..gtee them birth, and when; rearmd whatare tio. Whit do they ever - amount to but week:Ann one of the old stock? Whoever heard ot- a fashionable wOnitin's:, child :exhibiting any virtue or Tewer of, mind -tot ..7fitich • it be came 'eminent ? Bead ithe --biegraplemis • of great antgood.:men endwomen.. Not One of them had. a -fashionible.- blether- The/ -nearly all 'sprang "train_ a strong-minded woman, who had _about es.littte-tio do with. fashion as with the changing clouds.: , The .-beggil0 agautiwhon'o *typed.", T .Who -will not a -few -dem: Wooly an - in Unhealthy Mixture. , Before -the Senate Committee on Public. Health at New York Charles Masse, oleo- margarine packer, testified that his hands - and feet beoamesore and the nails dropped • out through handling oleomargarine. His system became so impregnated with the poison that he had to go to the hospital. The doetorssaid if he went to werk,thefe it would be his death. James Gardiner said he had a frien1. wise worked„st Month' . At a sporting place in Meriden,.Conn. Alfred Bison, a pedestrian, wagered 35 that he could rUn three and one-half miles .in thirty minutes, giving the man who bet with him permission to choose the track. The track ohosen was about the red -bet stove in the place. Bison accepted. The draughts of thestovewere opened and more coal put on. The course _required 176 laps to the mile. Bison ran 400 laps and then fell insensible. tt S"‘Traelia ' - -- - W apt '-.thtts-F describes. a 't- that recsently Motored on - ' Of. thes,-,Colorado Central 5 as the train ,otresill that ad. `but a - shiirt • distance from the S1111'2.bs of Georgetown -fire- man looked. -,!-sk and. saw the .rear end of , thiseeat.,Co .` --11'.:taised bodily.fionkthe track. - al juinpeilirom tse engine. ; Itist't eel' the, He„Yelloidte _.,3,,e engineer . and ilitEr., both Vila roared fit-slitl- and the -Othele-Ir -.'n . was *lifted . 5 . id turned - Obitipletely ievet ' landing obo. / *Ithittif ' gift there was • gr roaringWind the meiesindt suddenly lut- a news of i of the pain O with him/ ' 7 leettireilet fo vexedthealoginfaubject of 1.1 Baptiim, on of his anthem*, not agreeing Gamble Witillaelivering „Otte:Of a Beriesiof Liisi;Sunatty -Oteniiig •as, the Revtlkt.. e&t,ld for :proof of lertaintenets, - at the same Imo explaining his tesen views. V., colonist ' ' A Denver' le shtellior acoid a winding cut Railroad : portion of MI' 1" • . . D iDNEY VOEASESall di -Does alame back op,amorde cate that you are a viOtiMP TEEN DO NOT HESITATEk ime SidnelepWort`at once, .(drag - gists recommend it) mid Wwillepeedily ovet. come the disease anUe4ore healthy action. • Ladies ---4;•°°mPla'nta Peculiar • 15'497 sex, such as pain andweakneeses,Sidne/A, ort is unsqrpassed, as it will act promptly4V. safely. Either Sex. Inconti, retention °Curio's, brick dust or ropy ispueite, =data dragging 10 to its curative power. ;1 t., •aiapeeu 43- BOLD BY ALL W,Ttp4aISTL tirice 31. kft WORT*, . A Single Trial Is all that is needed to- prove -:Polson'ti.. Nitisninte it the most rapid • and .cortsiti remedy . for pain - .in the • World. It only 'boats • 10 cents; for istriel bottle. A single tilal . bottle will prove -Nerviline to -be equally .effiescious as an .external or ,iii-. ternal. remedy, and for pain of every de- tioriptiOn- it has no:equal.' - Try a 10 *pent sample:bottle: Sold at any drug store. Large :bottles 25 cents, at all druggists. - Untie the -Strings. ..t •'• Said one of the lent stionefulmetchanti. Of Cleveland, a; ,to it tad who waitopening a parcels, -6' Young man, untie the strings ;. do -not :ent.them.' • .../. . , - - It-vnts.the'first *Mirk that he had made. to:a new employee. - It Wits theft:mat boson the lad had :to learn, and it involved. the pr.intiples of success or. failure inliis busi- ness career. Pointing . -to it viell-dressed Man behind the Winter he said: . * i -"There iii ii man - Who • tilestyit whits; t ;fit his schwas an ode • the strings- of the paeltages int -three or. lonr, places. :He s it goeksaleimaasbut he never. will be any - g .,inera; • I. presume he lives from te mouth, and witinoie or lestintelit.' he trouble, with him. hi- that .he -. was. --never taught to Save. -. ' /.. ' . . ... "I:told the; boy just now to untie the strings,. not so . tweak for the value , of the stringas tci teaoh bite =that everything is to be saved :Mid -nothing Wasted. -. If the idea _eat be -firmly impressed;upon the Mind of ii, beginner in lite that nothing Wite made to ,be wasted, you have laid the foundation of Buenas." . .- •%/.. .- -.- • --. - ,* '', - -THE. WILY EGETABLE URE FOR =WS -.77'.011PSNI.A., Loss piietite, Indigestion ur Stomach, Habitual Oiveness., Ick Heidachd, d Biliousness. Ptice;25. per botil;.- 4by all Druggist,» - . in an oIeoznargarme factory Oise hands' tit" as.e, man may say too ro were poitoned by oleoraargarine and hediedt syt-oha' - s' b• tt • in- / • eyen ont e.best.,,ot Int% w . answer a year afterwards. 0 feet. frene,the ',track and *lug , tail )or Then t confusion. The howling, d the yells and -20iteannrof omen. who had been so` cermoniimely. upset made. aralleled cotifusion..J- Seven ra *Eire injured. • . • BEPORIL) • _ (AFTER.) TRO:-VOLTA101-MIN and other' &norm A.PPLIANCES are tillt` on 80 Days' Trial TO MEIN ONLY, YOUNG :O ofm, Who are suffer - :11A1 front, Nattvons -20ENILITY, LosT VITALITY, -WASTING WEANNF,435EISOIld alI those diseases of a PBBSONAL NATURE, Atiting from ABUSES and OTHEa Muss. Siiear re of and complete restoration to MEA.t;H VI on and _MANHOOD 017ARAIMED. EleiotAt once,. for Illustrated Pamphlet free. Addr-1- • -1t14o Belt.. s . - • here. - i •Hems to mousekeepers. The oldest female sovereign living is * - I . .. , Empress Augusta of Germany, .who te-st Mirrors used in dressing -looms are • Years old- The youngest is the Queen of triinmed elaborately withiphish. / - - - i• When birds are moulting it is the usual --victoria ' Sortie who is 23 • £ , L'Alsilistance Publique, of Patio, took charge in 1802, as is shown by a recent -ie. port, of.948rbad children. Of. these, 167 were takento the director by their parents,, 156 were Sent by the ,pciliee arid p35 iere- / ' I milted bz magistrates. Theis thlidren axe. 'sent to2-trade schools, and are 'impistid by the Government until • able -,.tik-mitkean bonen living. A small portion of Iltheir wages is retuned by the Government to aid ID seenring them isiainst fixture want: The • ' • - TJAMELar. OBtRiPSPAIFBOT WASHERS • - to be had on154.1rom authorized agents_ n. - you want to get agevOyand make money rapidly, don't let Some one ,,,,,1 W, get ahead. of you. and 1;Am secure your town or-, county rtght. Too good to go begging: Pardo ars 3 cents. Val7 suitable for ladies. B. it. YC BB, Agent for Patentee. _ Grallatto09• _ • V When I. say curet o ,Ox mean merely to stop them fir. a dine arid then have ett return again. I mean a rad'. • dal cure. I have made, Al•e disease of FITS. EPILEPSY ' or FALLING SICKNESSA, lifo? long study. I warrant my remedy to cure the ,00*-1t*c . 411.- Because Others have— failed is no reason forml, 1.10(1 rIceiving a cure. - Sendat once for a treatise oo-3i,a P le Bottle of my infamble remedy. 'Give Express limii Jost Office., It costa you uoth$2.7:::::=4,svill rure you. - - Address Dr. );:f 4: • OLVP • ;ZS Pearl St., New York. ESTA 74,81-1Eli 1869. . Gapil Ait.,z,crw All .1tifids di rodietirkanaled. ilea • B hre • X Poultry Tallow • etc. Pat. d't;;rriels" lactate Solleueo' esolgoruPne street Toronto •ss-ss=7,, • Ittsligeikto seerte a•Rnainefie Pineatio& Stieisierian Pen hianabl_actscitEsse,,f3poggs free . retro - Melt YOUIIG team -steam engineering sistemis regarded as a preventive measure -send.y • 004!Eirn .100 per mouth agalnat botkpoverty• liug Britgtiamt."" P8 50 P° EnOrzt / - • ." • - •