The Sentinel, 1884-05-16, Page 3.„
••• "
TEM LAMPE; PC)1.172.01;
Novelties rn Di4E?SiE and. Household.
Decoration.
LOVELY NEVit : SUMidER _DRESSES.
Recipes tor the Boudoir and for the
Kitchen.
- 4'
(Aunt Hate's contributions.)
• -
. toiris Dinner Dress.
'e
The following is Paris pattern of a
diner dress, s, chef-L'oeuvre in its way. It
s, is Ottoraau silk, and: of the'color known.
se ds brown pink, perhaps the mostbecorcc-
ing of all carnation tints, inelining as it
does to the yellow tones of the complexion.
Rose leaves in the various shades of green
and reddish brown are embroidered upon
the pink ground, and with such result thitt
. the whole looklike ai•piece ol well pre-
served rnediteval needlework. The dress is
without train,the round skirt being trial-.
med with, flautaces of eeralece: The same -
lace bordere the somewhat ample -tunic,
which is draped high at. the sides and
arranged en, pouf ,bebin4, while a f,O. u of
• - lace gratiefully drapes the bodice open= en
cceur. .
• A Pretty Window -Draping. -
- •
One of tht.. newest arrangementst for
-- draping a window, and wondertully pretty,
effective and inexpensive it is; is made of
• de- , piirt-wine crimson, or olive green felt
• or 1 i9 cleth, in two stripe embroidered
- recirei ehades ; brown lightened, with
• pal green and greenish yellow, Mr- in.
stance, nasturtiums endeheit leaves, defin-
• __ ing the outline of the stripe, which should.
be edged on the lower end of one side with
oreeim-colored lace—the antique does
admirably. The .two strips which should
be -cut ',so that they fit to the size of the
window- vita an -inch beyond the frame,
should be lined with satinet or good cam"
brie of the same color. The strips depend
from a slender brass rod by means of a
- brass ring just fitting to :it ; a pretty end
border is made by. tassels of the silks and
• wools employed - in the embroidery, and
these are made to elip•over the -brass rings,
which are placed in alternating•spaces in a
• row of threeaastened to the cloth of the
drape -by strarids of the wool ahdeilk artis-
tically shaded. The lace border, of (=rile,
• only extends lip' the centre where the two
strips meet _and along the lower ends.
These ourtaine are appropriete only for
windows that do. not extend to the floor;
• and may; 11 preferred, have lace curtains
beneath. . e
• Feminine Fancies.
-
Fancy hair pins still rage. _
• The latest screens have a frieze of netted
cord withravelledends. . .
Dark bamboo tables, with unpaintedtops,
have brass rods now supporting the legs.
The arrow is the popular fancy ornament
Just new. . • .
The hair is 'now frequently seen in the
Josephine and Reaarnier -styles.
Steel. 'diadems for the hair have come in
.Belts„ necklaces and chatelaine pookete
for ball dresses are Made Of natural flowers
Pretty (minted gloves in suecle are very
stylish for the street. - - -
Mosquetaire gloves are still worn, though
not as much -wrinkled as formerly, and they
•are again drawu over the sleeve. •
Sliding doors are in all new houses to oh=
vista the necessity of uphill' giog them to
hang portieres.
A small painting of a young lady's head -
•plush is framed in „white kid, painted
with metallia colors.
Ladies are bdyingoottage furniture before
it is painted to cover with cretonne or- de- •
• °orate as theylancyt -
,
Butterflies and-hitt:Isere nOW embroidered
,
in Minion and cross stitch on Canton flan-
_
nel for bed spreads and shams.
Novel menuirare painted on brown glass,
lined with `satin, and bound with white silk
cord, like Christmes cards. '
A bunch of pond lilies on a large bow of
-light green China silk looks well on the
t- uner left coiner of ai silvered picture
frame.
Some screens are made- with the lower
half patted or embroidered, and the upper
ortiontwith* plush curtains, hung -with.
-s all rings on brass wires.. • ,-
.
0 of the prettiest hand -begs iitmad.e of
•
seal, a ll abode of crushed strawberry,
with a dis of Japanese metal. and a tiny.
turtle taste d in opposite °prints for
• .
3, •
= ornament.
inong the. so.
may be mentioned r
in black, white, pink; .
worn in the neck of dre
lied • novelties in dress
es oftlinitation lace
LIG, lilac, etc., to be
es of contrastipg
Z
color.
Jet of every kind is used for heir
ining, and for trimming in neral, of
. dresses and millinery. 'Jetted cse and
embroideries of elegant design are u • as
trimmings for the handsomest -black ks
tend satins. ,
- t
A. pretty novelty fot aummer dresses= -
lovely tot young girls—Is fine white batiste,
hand embroidered in delicate vine patterns
_ in very delicate -blue, green or china colors;
and.- trimnied-with Florentine lace, which is
an exquisite kind of Torohon. .
The new style of head-dress is several.
hundred years old. "Mme. &Egmont,
dutp.of Riolielieun daughter, ware on her
head a little diamond fortress, with moving
•sentinels, after her father had taken Poet.
Mahone, and the Duehess of, Orleans wore
-a little nursery, with cradle, baby and toys
-complete, after the:birth of her son." -
The bridal veil of tulle, must now be
:gathered i a•rosette on thettep of the head
and. fall krom thence in graceful folds;
Many lath, s; however; will still prefer - to
theta it . thrown over the head; falling over
the fiii. halo* the . waist : infront_ and
secured by silver •or jewelled pins to the
-coiffure, or a -half ' coronet or olnstet: of
flowers. Orange blossoms an no- longer
obligatory, anowdlops, azaleserlily-oftthet.
valley, white lilacs or roses bang quite as
- 'frequently chosen. ---` .- - • • .
' Squares a brocaded silk are seen on
any of the neweat patasobt. They : (wet-
alaiost the entire top, the corners- reaching:
to the vett, 'eerie Of, the _ entire': frame... A
twin-- Of Plain Bilk borders the . centre
square, from under Which falls a deep ruffle
of the same.. orof a lace. A handsome
parasol 01 white satin hi veiled undit a
square ltf rich bite* Escurial haat bordered
with a ruching of black and white silk and
edged- with a double ruffle r of bleak and
white lace.. The lining is of soft white silk
and the handle is of blackswood, beautifully
carved. Another new parasol, very odd in
effect, is bidden -under very full -ruffles with.
pinked edges of ecift silk, of changeable
hues. Rowsof fringe in various colors ttee
teen on other new styles-.
, Hints to Housekeeper.
. •
Coalshonld be sprinkled- at it is put into
the cellar, to avoid asmixch diet.ex, possible..
• ,
The wash boiler should always be• -care-
fully dried,and if there is the leesttindency
to•rust rub the inside with a little lard:
- Moth infested eitibletshould be saturated,
in naphtha Or benzine. It injured nothing,
and kills. the destroyer,
rt soothes and000le a feverish patierit to
bathe :him with Warm weter. in which a
littlesaleratus hat! leen-dissolved.
Tfamous lawyer used to _eey tthat
woman who could: boil potatoes and. melt
butter well was a pod- cook, and he never
required any other proof of her capabilities.
A Good Fever Driiik.—Put a large Orion.
.
ful of black:current „jelly.. into.. a tumbler
and fill it Aite - with boiling water. ' When.
cold it is ready to. drink; -- -
If 'a bedstead creeks at.each•nto-vement of
the sleeper,remove the slats and wrap the
end 'of each in, old newspaper. ;This
will prove a complete silencer.- -
Calisthenics exercises are --calculatedto
cure deformities of the fights, ()Specially Of
the chest, to invigorate the system.; and QM-
dube to elegant deportment and symmetry
of form. - - • • , - - • •
,Arrow Root Mane& lltanges-L•Ittalf a pint
:of milk one tablespoonful of arrow root,
speck of salt, one, Aableepoontul of _Huger;
.Cook as. for gruel- - - .
The best way ofietio,ting the stain of toe
cream from a peletblue silk dress it to
saturate itwith partway .pure
and to-ru-B the edges of the -
the water with Semite', so .that
leave a stain. •. • •
Arrow Root Grael:—One pint
cold -water,
tk rhade by
it does not.
f Milk, one
teaspoonful of arrow root, salt ° to taste.
Let the inaik °cline t to it bell. _ retteevizig a
little cold to Mix with the arrow root: tint
into the boiling milk with the salt and cook
ten miniitest • * . ,
. 11 yo would -Preserveyour child from
urnonia, and a _ adore Of other
grave afteVaons, you should keep Ito arms
warm. A thick woe:ellen sleete, whilth ftts
the little dimpled term down to the hand;
is the true expedient.
_ Take a vessel that will hold exactly .140
pounds of pure water; and fill ittwith puts
milk Of -avgage quality, apd.the weight will
be found to be about 103 pounds,' -In other
words Milk is 3- per cent. 'heavier than
water. _ • -
To mike Aunt Pierce's sponge bake take
eaten -wett-beaten eggs, the, grated -rind of a,
lemon, two cups of •stgartone• oup et cold
water, three, cups of flour „entiTthreetea-
spoonfuls of Royal baking powder.
• • Tepid' water with a Iittle borax dissolved
init is 'good to wash colored table linen in.
Nice table-oloths and napkins s.bould'not
be allowed to bee -cent' really -much soiled,
so that they will require vigorous rubbing
With soap or in hotWater.
- Cranks. and Crooks.
-
A Wall street millionaire hat received:a
lteggtng letter asking for 325,000 to establish
a bolme, for " decayed'point-givers on the
financial situation , •
An ol&bachelor, died at Etitt Allman, Vt.
the other day, and 360;000. rn. bonds, hotes
and certificates- were fetnicf in the linings:0.
his Clothes. - ,
A riling man who was 'sent the Other day.
by the 'Roxbury, URAL, ii0litt to the:Hoinie
of- Correction for 'four Months:had-on his
person -a diary, .whiche iedietated that by
bagging be had geodred about $250. or $3 a
day, and that he had been in thethebit of
having a "good time." Nearly every
evening was marked as coetingtwenty,fite
write for adritissiozito a theatre, concert or
skating
• •
_
The Bombay- . Gazette- . 'states. that the
Mahonimedans a that Presidency do not
believe the Sodden pretender to be :the
" Iment Mandl," or true Mahal, ,yet regard
him as a ".Musjit," or spiritual guide. The
tree Mehdi, they believe, will not appear
till about the apse of the present iteetury
as -Witness to - the coming of Miihemet.
They also, it is saidtentettain the curious
belief that he is deitined. to experieoce_tio
fewer than 13 defeats befete Victory -finally
crown!' his arms:
s If the Mexican petiodidal, Lit Pairiat tita
representative of the religteus tooling -that
exists in that country, the missionaries who
are now trying to convert the --heathen
should -be recalled and shipped- to Mexico;
Where- they: will tfind a more -civilized
country in which to promulgate -their doe -
-
trines. A recent number of that periodical
.wattunretigions enough to contain several
humorous as well as profane Oaricatures,
'of the Lord, Histripostlee and His terment
tors. • -•• : - - . • 7
'Wyatt Hate, of Nelson, •Va. just _deed,
had some peculiarities, arnitiz. theta -this
e Be never bought a match. A fire,
ei • et _open or banked, wasicept up tiontintt-
ally the.hearth. In thishe trod i11. the
foottst • s of his father; and the fire upon
thakone • earth was a continuous fire for
more than 00 yeers.
Re
-
el 111 an Oath.:
Col. Erskine, th father of the'oelebrited
laviyer, and - the :g ndfather of Dr. John
Ertkine, of Toronto, less celebrated as
a:divine, Was quite A oh aoter in pis day.
He was of a very cholericliver. He had
an old servant of the trite c stet tOn• One
oceasien he had done semethin that very
-Muck displeased his !teeter. T • onfonelti
wrath - beosine tete uncontrolla e; his
- -
utterance beciam -choked, and - his untie-
_
-nano° became pale as deeth. --The He ant
grew somewhat unmet, and at lest sai
-"Eh, • sir! 'maybe an itith-: would reliev
you. . -
A -Bill will be introduced in the Quebec
Legislature this afternoon litititing the
-number of licenses for Montreal to 450; - -
,
3/9• .00b, Ga.„ 'a.city vitt?: a -population Of
23,000, has expended,13#)0,000inbiiiiding.
Upward Of 52000 000 , of this stun was
expended tri a "tingle year, and most of it
for stores and. WarSbouses.
FiRENT TOPICS:
lizemaTtfAL and bodily aotitity are
- =dr
rant' torind M012.0? great age; but when
80 00222biped add to the chancel' of pro:
longed 73.to... Wittiest; three men who have
played tt, great and active part in the world
-andtwho combine these rare Otte of nature
and wilt; the Earl of Shaftesbury, the great'
humatitiaritin, Cardinal NeWillall and the
Enapeter
• -
,
• Uzi figRies of speeches Mit Gladstone has
deity:et, the .present session ittdee-
cribs& „-se equal to anything he has ever
lone& ett-ol- he once:more stands Out in bold,
and tint=pptoachable relief from his opl-
lerigtet as -the supreme 'oratorical mastefof
the Horse of Commons. There has been,
it. lit strange revival in him • of the
love bk 0ower He has peek -and never had,.
the ter:noted intention of droppieg intothe
-Rode et Peers. : • - • .
° Dits bUDGEON, the famous teptotopathist
phydetan of London,. recalls - the fact—
aerottee 00103 investigetion into the
I
nature oft the Cholera. germ—that Hahne-
mann, in 1831,ettggested that the contagious
malty a cholera consisted of-" excessively
minet0 i visible living. Oteatutestt and so.
cordittgly advisIirthe free use of :camphor;
Whittle,. he held to be -• ti potent eholerat
bacilecilde—to the effloacy of whioli. treat-
m-enttadds De. Dudgeon, -the statistics of
eyed bipidemtp inEurope testify. •
U- kOks aithoUgli there Were going to be
anothdt "Pike's Peak" -excitements.: In '
1808, the reported diedovery Of gold in that
region :coated an intense furore all over the .
eodratryt arid thousands of people migrated.
to that tiebtion; for the most part to meet
with die: ppointment, and many Ot-them to
fincltieetits, Now there IS another --report
of. gotatdiseovetiei in -the, vicinity of :that
fainotiet6nd-fetefel mountain, ' and • alltthe
Colotadotnining damps are ;ow:sited by the
news. - .Itis. to .be. hoped that this :will .not
Itting Els;:Teipatition-.01 the . former days of
• .taisfortitnes and disaster. .-•
-. t - : - . ,t : - • .. ..
. . .
- .: It. .icetay . be newt. in -.soinettliatthe re7
tigiedttObsetvitnce of 7 .451OCIdTriclitY,..IIOW so
gentitalttis -- not :the - continuit J. :Of an
.... . . • . - .. • . . .. .. .
anchenttoustem so much at a evivalt of
-- 4.t. tt .
,medetattarees.. : In the earlierpart of the
reigti- 62 Geo* III. many -church -going'
, .
folk ' toOk no notice of the day ;..and in his
tReett ate- , Sit Egerton Brydges .speaks
of the ttolamor, t uproar and regett With
whithAn order of Archbishop Cornwellici
..-".tit 'obeerte. . 'decently - Good Friday" was'
:rebated httpersenis- of a. different -way. Of-
thinkititg from- Hie. Grace; But • the ant-
'mositycf *bat Sir Egerton Brydgest cane
"thepteebyterian .newettapers. Bee= to
have Wen:chiefly directed -against Porteus,,
aftervisted Bishop :- Of - Lentlitn, ttitiO Was-
suppostid . to- have s been . the Princeton
advieettin thitmattee. - '
...Tim*
are .:a - hundred ,students in the
i:rish-' dellege of Paris, all •!°of *honk are
.
Irish by birth, and ' are tettelyingt for the
t ,
prieetheed in various - dioceees. intIreland.
The SO orient -of the institutions are also
Irish:- by birth; but they t profess little syni-
.pathyltith the present- mitten:cent . beaded
by Mat; i Petal:Al.- : . The '.alunini, hovietert
are all Parnellitee.: , Its President, - Ds
-MtioNatiate, -is - Of, the -.seine echoes.' of
polittekas Lord O'Hagan and Mr. - Erring.
-t-on, . The '• seminary Of St. :-- S.ulitice den-
tate!' itteevetal hundred , students, the
majority Of - whom . ° are .of - trienoh-
nationality ;St but Ireland it ..repreicented
there stett by - an •Itish Professor, Father
Heged,tend a number of youpg czeolesiest
tacit, who.Aie•-all of .advanced Web viette..
, , . 'T t • • ' . ,
:A.: c*Oxi; trick...was . recently perpotrate.d
• . . . _ . . . ..
with:great idocess On ' the inhabitants .of
,= . . -
Pad ati& its:. neighborhood. t 'The entire
issue of the Memorial. -clef :Pyrenee-s for the
- . .. -• ..i
litof Apra- was devoted. by i;its : ficetiettili
editor to a anutiistantial accotint of- the
-_-. • - . - -
.allegeattestoration.. of.. the monarchy . in
.Frettee,by a tote of the National Assembly,
on the.01.st Ult., whose - ttrodeedinge .1 -in .-the
. oileettiore were reported in eatenSo; together
with tlie Proolentation.oftheCodntotratis
..ae. -Philip VIIt. , -The leading Article; general
nett it. talOnaY article,. fugitive items: and. all
Wen gitiiii- up t to the elaboration of. this
home, -W,ts 710 46 vent abort postscrip, unob.
served:4v meet readers,- expleined that the
*hole -Wait was einiply a poiston. d'.4vrilo
Thetneystification.tvas rendered more 'coin -
pieta' by .n odettin the:preeosed coronation
- of the -gew King of Frei* et ttheinit, signed
"-Viotot _Hugo." t • ' - -.. -
.
tti-tit_pkitate oonvetsicsiion.with a member.
• of - thi! G.ognien Perliaineitt;Bismeirok re-,
ciently•! eiplained his reitriona . for T with.
drawilig • from the direction - of Prussian
tiffaro _64 I- .am.:70 . years' ;tads --Mynerves.
are .; bad; And - I - hetet'. not time It" be
nnottitillitt How . can I .tthirik of ruffled
. ,..
fee4inoS and small' partititiloriattealonsies
when - obliged: to watt* tiv.ents going on
evetyWhere ? ''°Telegraphy fearfully multi
plies tity duties at the -chanciellerie . Ger-
•mettY. -is interested - in *what --happens at
Rome' •Xsidtidt, Vienne; Peg*, St:- Peters.
burg, !Retie, tendon, New Washing-
ton, Etto, • Tentatievet Melbourne, Sydney,
'Cairo itrid -Khartoum. : I. must regard:the
- world ' -Ne.-- i - :ehesabOarili -. and , see hew an
.-evettt. -kprtening, nomatterwhere; min, be.
made ti directly.: or directly to -affect Ger-
-, • - -
rhin*. N.teresta.,1 Formerly a. Chant:calor
• just needed to be familiar with the dominant
-,pereenottn...the courts ofEuropett. He must
now ritatteestend airwell parties, . wirepuller*
financitetet .and (entente of public feeling,
and set tepidly On.inforniation telegrephed
• to thiet : in haste. .TotgeneraliZe rapidly,.
his ',eyes should -, be . everywhere and his
knowle4e. Most eictensite anit,exact.-1 The-
Chancellotthip .tii rici sinecure. .1 s :duties-
stIttret did notfullY support ine. 1 -ceeld,
El
ni•ight overtax, a tyeunger Man. It- 'the
gektbronglithem:' - - •• -
Cann Knox Little recently preached in
St. Pan!', London, and his peculiarly -TO-
vii7dist Ettee was much oriticised -before a
high ecoleeiastio. "Vox et printers& nibil,"
Saidoi1c of•the party. 4' Oh, no," replied
the mho'? affecting tithe shocked, "Knox
/et pottage& Little." s
-
LATE lettaTILWEeite NFWitt.
Mr. Royal; M. P., ban arrived home.
Alarm neat Moreitwas reoen y sold for
$19 per acre..: -
Montana miners are arriving at Galt
gamy. . . .
Archbishop noble was presented with
in address on the eve of St. Alexander's
daythis patron mint. .,. t • .
The Bank of * Montreal baying seoured
two lots on Stephen airtime,. Calgary, 'will
put up a substantial building for a branch,
office about the 1st of Junemext4
On Wednesday last a six year old son of
Mr. Rowland 'Hill, :of Moosetaw,- was so-
oidentally poisoned bycarbolic acid. Thet
poison •• was given . by , a lady friend in
mistake for medioine.
• The High Bluff • Branoh of the North,
=
west reamers' ;Union haveameised a reso-
lution favoring aeoession from'thet Do-
• -
Mr Beaupre, kormerly Deputy Minister
of Public .Works_ for Manitoba, has been
arrested at Calgary for having Pond's
Extract in his .possession. He.- was re.
inanded. - • --
Attorney -General Miller left for Ottawa
on Wodnesday, and Premier lierquay:and
Speaker Murray-, the other members of the
delegation, will follow on Tuesday. They
go toseekbetter terms. "
• The total value of Winnipeg iniportatiOns
for the year ending April 30th1883, was
51,762,420; for the yeartending April 30th.
-1684, it amounts to 4738,648,..e failing off
of $1,023,772., The duties collected in
April, 1883, were 5202,567; in April, 1884;
542,592; fallingoff, $159,975.
The weather is fine -throughout Manitoba.
• The wife Of Hon. (t. P. -Brown died at
Winnipeg on Thursday after a sliorb illness.
Mr. Wilson, M. P. P. for North Dufferin,
Was sworn in as Provincial Secretary of
Manitoba on Wednesday, thght.; •
• The City Council • have. adopted high
licenses. Saloon licenses with Provincial
and (city license will be $660, hotels- 0400.
groceries 5350, ' •
The Portage- la. Prairie Retifeto says :
"Lot 260, Saskatchewan avenue, • was
offered by T. Abutter On Wednesday and
knocked down for 390.'. The let 'sold for ,
$7,000 during the boom."
• Flowers'in the Arctic Region.•'
. At,the United States- observation station
in the Antic Sea, flowers bloom among the
almost perpetual snows. - One of lthe.party
*tithe t -The old-fashioned dandelion was
found here in ;abundance, About. thegame
In -cites and asetiong in growth :as in the
Eastern -States. - Several ppebies of the
taxefrage growlik that region, and the little
butteraup is it common thing. - The latter
has.been fOnnd in blcioni in early Spring, the.
plant being in some favored- place where
the sun reached it and where a projection
Of inowprotected it from the cold *Md. A
bluebell- similar to our , own -;grows - On the
ilbrwe floaut thewhilme oisetyperraol-meipneecnietisofof wphOioprises,
stamen yellow variety; This t peppy -
bios-
soms and fades., quickly, and .While the-
flowei is passing away a small,. yellow
butterfly frequents the bloom and feeds
thereon.- The Indians believe-, the • poppy
changes into the butterfly, and *hence both
are - celled -"Lucky-tucky-jaiiksons" -A.
small Arctic WilloWtrows underthe surface
-
of the miser and one shtub- will sometimes
rioter an area of several rode. NO grass can
beIouhdtexcept along the seashOret. Where
e small; coarse; 'wiry 'Species is found.. . _
tit/attest...it
•lt* (t. * *
* t * *• .*
*- •
**
et.
• 11
*le
* •
•
4 it'
*
INKHAIVII131
0041.30UND*
* * •4k
For au- of 'round Complaints find
* .* Weakness*a.so common to our best * *
* * POPITLATO.N.,* *
- ,
\,••
/T WILL Cum14,/nEur THE 'WORST FO.111.1. OF
MALE CONPLAIN„ z:ALL OVARIAN TROUBLES,
PLAMMATION OERATION. FALLING AND
PLACEMENTS, A2C. i CONSEQUENT SPINAL WEAK
NM, • AIM 18 tAl..M4ICULARLY ADAPTED' TO
CHANGE or Int * * '* * "Ar*
IT WILL DISSOL!,!;-''AND EIPEL TUMORS leR031
UTERUS IN A1 EAV.,-1.5T AGE OD DEVELOPMENT.
TENDENCYTO CAN•!;orrs Higtious THERE'S CHECKED
VERY SPEEDILY ITS USE. * * * * *
* IT REMOVES L<!,,VNESS, FLATULENCY,. DESTROYS
ALL CRAVING ron.:,_-‘1;rAVTLANTS, AND RELIEVES Wr.pc
NESS Ole THE STotih4I, IT quays BLOATING, r
• ACHE, -NERVOUS hy./LETRATION, GENERAL DERILITNI,
DEPRESSION ANDez1SDIGESTIoN. -* '* *
* THAT FEELING0' BEARING DOWN, CAUSING FAIN°
WEIGHT AND B.A...q40113,,I8 ALWAYS IfERmAz.TENTIA
CURED BY ITS {lett -,0 4to * * * *, 4.4
ttit wite../er-1.14t ..0,;Es 'AND UNDER ALL aractirri
• STANCES ACT IN W Innorrz WITH THE LAWS THAT!
• GOVERN THE F.Etz* SYSTEM. * *
*-411rITS 1,1E SOLELY FOR THELEGITIVINlit
HEALING OF DISEAE AND THE RELIEF OF PAIN, ANTI/
THAT IT DOES Ati: IT CLAIMS TO DO, THOUSANDEOP,
LADIES CAN GLAbl y • TESTIFY. "VO ; * * is.*4
* Fon THE- 0-',7"-'S OF SIDNEY COMPLAINTS MCI
'EITHER BEN THO:i .ttEMEDY IS UNSURPASSED. ***4
le-mrDIA E. 11/101,:iim VEGETABLE COMPOUND
• wormed at LYnrt, •a.. Price el., Six bottles for $5,.!
Bold by ca druggists,, :Spat by mail, postage paid, In forra
of Pills Or Locenge on receipt of price as above. )1rw..
Pinkhata's .-"GuidO gealth'twiil be mailed free to -any
Lady sending 140; !..,.(,:letters confidentially answered:*
• Vovfamil_y_ _should be"' without LYDIA E: Miami=
LIVER PILLS, Thl-yrore. Constipation, Biliousnessaad.
Torfddity of the Llwav. 25 cents per box. * • 4
06.:1. • :L. 20. 84t
t. I
Painless and Prompt.•
. r PUTEAX'S -RAINLESS. CORN.. EXTRACTOR, the
great remedy for corns, is absolutely safe
and painless;.doei its Work promptly,t. WI,
.out in the' least interfering_ with the -- orit-
.foet of putiente,and is absolutely alone as
a 'eget painless reinedy for corner- Do: -not
be imposed-tipeit by dangerous °diluter efts:.
tree only. Ptitnam's: Corn :Etttrtietot. Be -
Ware of base substitutes. : Sold everywhere
-by druggists and dealers intmedieine. Take
'only Putnam's-Painless' Extractor.. --N. .0
Polson ct- Co:, proprietors, Kingston.
. . . :
_ - -
- .It is said that Dr. Hammond has the
•finest Mica roine near Athens that -can be
found -in --Georgia. Nearly all , of it will
square 6 -inches and from that to 10 inches.
Dr. Hammond -will commence work on it
soon. •
It_Saved My Wile's Life.
• Thiele the report - of a Princess street
gentleman .Who lad the opportunity a fete- -
nights elude of testing Poison's - Newnan -
the great pain euro. Be prepared for any •
emergency by having a bottle of Nerviline
34-harid. It only -costs 10 cents tit test it,
as you can buy teat bottles ataildruggists.
• Get a 10 or 25 cent bottle to -day. Sure in
rheumatism; neuralgia, cramps, oolio, head-
aches'. Nerviline, the sure pop pain Cure.
At all druggists, 25 cents a bottle. .
Here I sent $3 to this man for an
ble remedy for any red nose, and he writes
me tego on drinking untittt turns pimple
Toper. 5t. •
The t Medical profession are slow (and
rightly so) to anionic 'every :new, medicinq.
that is advertised and sold; but honest
Merit convinces -the fair-minded- after a-,
reasonable time. Physicians in good stand.'
lug erten- preecribet-Mrs. :Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound for the ' ottre of_female
weaknesses. . ••
. The Parisians will soon - heave; an . oppor.
tunity Of Witnessing a bull fight itte-cherity
:fete to be at the Hippedkonite., Fres-
euelo, the .world-renowned •toreador, him-
-Self, will take part in it. He refused at
. neat, the promoters of the festival -having
refueed to permio- the usual tragic denoue-
Went., Ftaseuelo, though- against : his
_principles; finally waived the points- If the.
bull, hoWevertis flery, he will-prObably for-
get this •
'44 suppose it just means 'that be hired
-'ern out,' was the reply. of a Sunday School
Child wbertasked whattwas twilit by the
expression, And the king renthis clothes."
Tallow 'dips . long reigned supreme in
Winnipeg, and the first ooal oil was sold at
from 141. to 16s. Per gallon.
• A correspondent asks with : a sigh
Are there any kind of pants thitt wil
last a lifetime 7" • Certainly—the Ottall•
• , DO rill -
-wttelt3L; litLetaile
Has StOO ie test for FIFTY-THREE
irEARS, abAl 41;!RS proved itself the best
remedy Ywn for the cure of
;AWN Coughs,
ooping CoLigh
ng Diseasesin
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
$1.00 .
WKS' ELIXIR
Cons0
Colds,_
and'al
yOUllg OT
CO
RO-VOTIAIC BELT'and •ott117.R.2-1.141t' Eltcraie
BEFOUL%) ,
..APFLIANct 4:re sent on 80 Days' Trial TO .
MEN ONLY, '.c ENG OR OLD, who are stiffer-
' tag from 14,44pis DEnnarrt LOST VrrAurr,
ASTING WEAr.,,,-;.0Es. and all those diseases of a .
rEBSONAL NA7-4,1,,,t; resulting" from Autrsas and .:
OTHER,' CAUSES, h,Speedy • relief and complete
restoration 1,,,e1)71,.. 7i:elan, VIGOR and MANHOOD*
• GUARANTEED. d at - once • for Illustrated
_ Pamphlet- free., ddress•,
-'11-61talo Bh1 oft, Marshall, Nicht
-
ETE, FR AND THROAT,
R. G. RSONi-L. R. 0:P. &
5.-E.,Lect,44:t on the Eye, Bar and, Throat
Tri:3ity lledietr"qoliege, Toronto. Ocullit and •
A rho to the'tact-tido General Hospital, late
Oiinical Asaistr4,PBoyal London OphthaliideffO8'
Throatandnigrk.11,.zeldt:isipitaltIn.4. 31C7elerahurIch.11°8trentin
Toronto. .
' ESTAttaIttifiED -1809.
:allE3.3E1? GrA.141.40W
. •
Au _kinds Of • olgiorsdnets kindled, Mao
Butter, Chasea; Peteltry, Tallow
-etc. Pat. Egg tiarrierk supplied. Consign -
Meats soli te4.-!:93 Colborne street' b•rOronto
. . .
Ti
nave a positive: andy for the'above disease;
use lbatsands of of the worst kind and of
etandinghave been „'Ir -ed. Indeed, so strong is my/
In its efficacy; that:It:41i send TWO BOTTLES PR_ ER, to -
with a Irel.Poll.14.3 TREATISE on -this mass" te .
seituer2_ Gin/glees and P. O. address:
D
pa: _ I 181 Pearl at., NewYerla
.
vninin sivz.r1 learn steam engineering
'VI/11U W;t.'Aef and earn Vito per gionth
Bend tour nanie titet tetitsmos te AWri
•
tro.seettre a But-linta •
adulation. or Eipon
:Atatuiltt at we 111B
-74.N 8 1311 =MI
trail
a
_ • •