Lucknow Sentinel, 1887-06-03, Page 7. •
-31101:114,tel".„1",4
. burg -Aa Intimate, Trldexpiileredlet
• toe th.e Diewly.ineeorered ftemedy.
Within the laitt week or two, ,aaYs the
Ritto.burg CoMmerefai igueefeet,e,11 the otty
hospitals have adeptecl the new treatment
for cousin:110'On At the Mercy Hospital
Dr. Mayer has under treatment a yeung
• man, 21 year Of age, named John Baker,
whb. was brought to the hospital to be
treated for, pneumonia. Afterward, he was
; found to 'be in an 'advanced stage of con-
•; sumption. The new treatment was tried,
Ana after the first trial his symptoms
began to improve and his temperature
• became normal. His general •appearance
• is now beconiing'better each day and he
eleepe well at night. De: Mayer, resident
• Phymcian, Sari that while the treatment is
• as yet but an experiment,• it has given
great satisfaction and Wonderful results
- will be attained after , it • .13ecomes
biten,t9 improve; -She elept-beerli: gained - IDItOld-agliPS" ills,84.3.4.0.9X4,
•vr • ' El*/ .001.400 Oge.T1 41,Ill' 1
el*-514641111Wii.:44 .7hL4'4Laa.i17,71..4% .ii,.. ., lig,„: .-ff.4 - , let .
be up and around the house, •The improve ..___ ''' 11:01f tut?''Uce..,,..---- ••1. 5.,--- :-...•
meat in her ease 14f3.been gradual, and. We 1• Here are BoraWneteli- made by.a teacher,
hope permanent. The. easel; of., 'the other •Whehas kindly 'Placed, them in erir Windt!.
patients are not so well• defined .ati this. They show that instruction in the public
P• etiolate are 100te liable to he perinanently schoas must be made to Conform to corn -
mired if the lungs are notinjured?. InAhe •mOn Sense. Here are some of the ohildren'a
ease of Miss McOarthY" the treatnielit halt 'exereisee ;' - , _
'done Much good,. Some of the Patients " 16 Them were PO1310 VirgilS who, eoula tell
complallittfat the treatinentis un.Pleasant." whether any ene was going to die. Oee_ot
married. • It 'wee not right for vixgils
A Pretty Story. to marry, so they, put them in a basket on
Mies /4nWOQd had the privilege of copy- the Tiber, When they -grew Up they ball
ing any Pietnree;in the gallery in Belvoir Rome and resterea the throne to their
Castle, the Duke and, Duchess o • f 'Rutlana' grandfather, Alba Longa." '
• • ' Christ WWI crucified at Antioch, . in
being her kind and intimate nen s. it
must have been about 1825 or 1826 that ,Byna. •
'Christ wag crucified in the 19th year of
his age.
was. grucified nineteen years 13,C.
• Christ was born at Davi(' (Luke 11),
Christ was crucified in the reign of the
•Roman Emperor Pharaoh. . ' •
'He Oaths Cresery oncinernil 01'111e
known world -Thee was more known than
when Augustua ,reigned -Re crossed the
Ruble= to Alexandria. --He made a con -
aspire*. againet Rome, but was successful
-He came into. Spain and to Rome -At
the Senatethey pulled their cloaks around
hini and he Said, "• What Brutus 1 thou toe
Cave?" And in the year 27 B. C. in the
44th year of his reign and the 76th of his
continued Dr, Brumbaugh, whom am wood - bore witness, One day When Her The fable -0! the-"Tox- and -the Grapes!'
she had just finished her copy of a premous
landscape by a thipk) pQmsin when. a
friend of the Duke,4 a great connoisseur,
• visited. him and desired to see this picture
known s The .9ther resident PhYsielan, Dr. He came with the. Duke. to Niee Linwood's
rumbaugla, hae tfeci Cases id the hesepital house tor t eperPose,„ The landscape Was
on whom he is experimenting. When brought. into the room and carefal placed
spoken to he said s' When the new treat. in a good light. The erten:tie was delighted
ment was first brought,t� my notice I was and voluble in his admiration, but *berth°
very sceptical nbetit it. 1 did not think arose and aPProaChed for a nearer View
that
tutghhe .gthae° iiIiiptoenstiinneVanuclettihennwfi9uld Pnj158 way MtoisbseLinfercreadoeranedredpla‘Csethile botehsiedreptilacteurfiLl
. into the lunge, but after ouch authorities on one which was:, then -found to he her own
• chest diseases as Dr. 1$ruin and Ellslert of work, so Perfect' were her finitations• :
Philadelphia, had taken hold of it I took • The Dowager Dile/teas of .Eutland' had
_tame: interest hi it. , been a renowned beauty, as a most lovely
"One Of nay paients naeue-a---yar• aringie- engraved ..portrait she gave o is life he left a wife
••,
iiTiginclannorswir,
OdaiWbt' 47.0741;calcif.-4==r4.4r4t.0
-
Bevis)). Benjamin; of Canidentlq.if
made some obsereatimilt regarding 'On PO'
jeot. of the varying •temperature. Orj .op;
dWelling-rooMe which Will be found °A
mueth practical importance, sage the Phila.
delPhia Medical Record. Every One knows,
in a general -way, ,that the air of room* is
colder near the flaw and near the'Windowri,
but thevery exact differences of tempera-
ture as obtained. by Dr. Benjamin are very
striking. For example, in a room ten
feet high., twelve feet wide and twenty
feet long, with a' good stove and steady.
fire, the temperature in the centre
Neat! found be 78 0 F. ; 4 feet from
.4esseseemm":""e'"''''Wee,••.,:•••-",
„ .
444. NOKII. c9rar/a EMU. newly-married•p7,412.:-tr=is ehOrtlY t after, the' -
• tee. -oereesetims-z-1153reNsirorderectto
-Oa tut Weading.ilaYs-are:the'Vha€0;t4,,
• the window it was 700 ; 1, loot fron;t the
window 54 , and at the window 400
At the height • of the head the tem-
perature was 750, the floor 500 a dif-
lerence a 250.. At the ceiling the temper,
ature was 900 when the temperature at
the. height of,the_head waft 70 ° The ex"'
56 an weepinewilloW. -but Panetta days t•he .
Suggestive birch tree Is selected,'
:rear:seri."
• . _ treating For consumption has a very acute Grace's little granddaughter was with her was ,read, with the exception of the'moraL
• , abedess of the liver, and I thinnoi teal -let if-
, rshe,--stthking the pretty ,Yeripg _ cheek, The pupils were asked to write the story
. aidetipply the moral:- , . -- __:.
A horse pessing along saw somelueicions
grapes hanging.. He picked two thenthreW
them down and went away saying " The
grapes are sour." the moral is --he got the
grapes. . • ' • •. •
Cleopatra was, a very wicked woman. She
was persecuted by Antony and died -of the
. .
. the new' treatment will be successf
Another case is MaryKruder, who has been
• • • receiving treatment forconsumption by the
• • brought here about three weeks ,ago: She
• • -plc' remedies for over a year. She was
• • was very leir, her temperature high and
she was expected to die almost every night.
• After the first adniiiiistration otthe new
• treatment the, gas could be detected on her
• breath, p,nd after the third application, . her
temperature got ' lower, her appearance
• changed, her sleep at night was unbroken.
'and she had no :a:lore:night sweats."
At the Honaeopathic llospita, Dr. Wil-
. .
exclaimed with a sigh : •
Ath my
what woulkyou not give to be as beautiful
as I was." • •
• The young lady was equal to, the occa-
sion, and, raising the fair jeweled old hancl
to her' lips, replied : " just as 'much,
grandmamma, dear, as yon would to be as
young as I am,."--,Lonclon Qiieen. •
periments cited abpve Were -mad • e m the -
bight of an asp, or the prick of a poison-
.• , Tiues in Kansas. • . oup needle, and then she found she'had to
• ." About these titles, now,". said 'a new g° to It'Dme in °halm •
resident of Kangas to a native, "1 want to Moore's "Sound the loud tirabrel o'er
know something about them. There's Egypys:darkses'i was ready -and -the cause
colonel wooadmok, for. instance, how am of making explained, and the pupils were
' cox has secure:Ian apparatus and tried it he get his thief" "Don't know :but he requested .0 write the eubstance of 'the
Do you Teel dull. land, low4plrited, life-
less, and Aridesoribably miserable, both physt-.
call, • and mentally ;,. .experience. a sense, .4
fullness or bloating after eating. er of "gone-
nee.s," or emptiness of ,stomach in the mem-
ber:- tongue
,coated, bitter ot liad taste in
inouth•cirredular, appetite, .ffizziriess. frequeflts?
headagnes, blurred eyesight,lo floating rsoecks'e -•..
with a Warn? cellar,,,..It.„wasAnyther 0 , befustioore tbeirrieYasininter grufitepwrostraper. htiootn or helrez
served' that when' the three floor -a were na alternatingSensOor.. Pharrk
floor had a Mitch more . uniform tenipera- disturbed. rind unrefreshing eleeP., constant"
11)174 itor4suiriel= afteriimeerrdsse ' ia4r11:1 tins cod
nearlynearly as poseible evenly heated the second
ture than the first or third. Thefaot that indescribable 'feeling of drew), ,er of imPeild-‘
is widely explains, no. doubt, the .frerieneY of t ese Symptoms; you are sufterinzdifrom. •
three-story' brick house of twelve room%
• . . riu or any considerable illim1xx•
the temperature of •dwellipg-rooms ' varies Y.
Mats take cold in • the liou'rie A ohild Bilious Diseepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated
of 70 9 gets down and plays on the floor grim r the number and diversity of symp,
. e it hae reached,
-ine temperature of 10 c> or more lestver. tom& NO. matter w a
stanza • ' •
• on the only case of consumption. in the registered that way at, the hotel when he • •
Moore has beautifully pictured in verse
• hospital. ' -The patient -objected At the „first came, an we suppose It's all ',right."
hoW Jehovah and •his people escaped. from
second administration and the doCtor hact A.nd Captain Duster 7" 44 He's captain
with which young children. au even that most 00MMOU, of American es-
eittingeii-a: nurse% e. Wm. pernttire• ordrettrrAN tegohnle!rtreL•
Dr.•Piereete.Golded flie eal Dirseovery •
• ... • _
at a bioebon nine! as Theres.. Judge •Ferro by crOseing a -pea. 'Me' says 'ding'
• outside patients te try it on 1. anO of course Smiozeribarry 7" 41 He wee jnage,in a hog sound the loud tyrabal Jehovah has
to drop the experiment, -He lute 'had. no
-coulenot`serniuch-about' brit " froth gueesing mateh • ence.", " CommodOre eacaP5'a fmill the s arn25' Feir° bY
crossing the . sea thus 'separating them -
what lie has' heard he predicts greet resillts Sandbar " He rims a ferry lioat." " HoW
selves from: Perth and histarrey by the ima;
• from its adrainietration. . about Professor Bilk ?" " He's a,•Pugilist."
At, the West 'Penn . Hospital • the ' riper " Ana Senator. MoTtiff ?" it ph, he gets both men;horses andchanotsof Forte went
' •
or runs to the window, a change -Of will subdue it; if taken- 8000r
•
20 0 or'' 80 9 . The habit which ladies tions for a reasonable length or time. If not
' cured, complications . multiply and ConsumP-
tion of.the Lunge. Skin Diseases, Heart Disease,
Rheumatism, Kidney Disease. or other grave •
maladiesare quite ftble to set in and, soonew
or later, induce a fatal termination. •
ne. Pierce's Golden Medical Moo .
eovery ects powerfully upon the Liver, and
through that great blood -purifying organ,
cleanses the syklern of all blood -taints and
purities, l'rom whatever cause arising.
equally efficacious acting upon the
neKid
ys. and other excretory orsans. cleansing. .1
strengthening, and healing their ffismsea.
an . appetizing, restorative tonic, it promotes
•
digestion end nutrition,. tbereb , building up
both flesh' and strength. In•1 district&
•
this vronderfa mefficine has gained . great
celebrity in curing Fever and Ague, Chills and
Fever, Dumb Ague. and kinds diseases._
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dia.
have of wearing , slippers or light
shoes in the house, is the cause of many
troubles for these same reasons. Thetem-
perature of a recur,. should be about 70 °
F.
The hot furnace,heated, houses of our cities
ce,use a vast deal of nervous and respira-
tory troulile. The thermometer should. be
hung at about the height ,of the person's
head, and, of course, 3aot. near the window
or the stove. • -• •
Dr. Benjaniin adds': " Seine years age; I
devised OP contrivance to protect children
a down. :When the tempest sounded sever
the sea the ,People cried Jehovah is free;
"Miss —, cannot understand the
letilleen." , '
"What is the matter" - • • •
I have looked out the word c-e'd-i-b-a-c-y
in the dictionary, and I don't understand.
the lesson. It says the.monks made a vow
bflcelibacy-that Weans they musn't get
married -but I don't see how that could
be,lor it says they were of great value to
the lend for (reading from thebook) they
raised ninseries,and became excellent hus-
bandreen. "-Harper's Weekly.,
• treatment foe consumptionwas conam ,mad and wants to fight if we don't call him
• tour clayEi ago on eleven atients, whooare that.", "And the Hon. McBride "HO
• for the Legislature once." "And
General-Carpetbag•?"-"--Welly-yoifsee
a leading oitiken, and WO. lira 0' give it th
him in recognition of dervices.
Oh t we came by our titles honestly. They
call rue captain because I have lived,in the
State twenty-five years, and „if you'll juet
walk around sort of straight and ;give it
out that you're -major it ill be all right:"
_-,in_various. stages., of .t. e rea .
• Several of them are also " suffering -limn -a,
toniplication of A:other maladies.. August
• Iliestroin, a'patient 'who entered tliii hos-
pital March 17th, 1887, was at that . time
' very low with consumption, and has as yet
shown no, signe of improVernent. • James
• Joint, also a conSfiraptive, ilia' Old soldier;
• who entered Dee, 23rd, 1885; showe it
• decided:, iniprovement • and insists that
'. - the trearnent is beneficial. -. Mr. '• joint
has. sal, . up each morning and &nee -
•...noon . shied the ,' treatment began, and
on Sunday night last he eoughed. less
than he he'd dime for 'a year Pest. Henry
• . Andersina, consumptive, entered last Feb-
- ruary:, A.decided improvement is notiee-
..•.: able inlis -ease since the new treatment,
and' the patient haa. bee n iahle-to sit up
• during part' of the Morning and afternoon.
Lewis, Boenovitz entered last month suf-
fering from censimption .and some other.
. affection.: He °lain:isle) is much Unproved
• and able to sleep better. the physicians,
however, See but / little improvernent
• in the • consumptive , disease, and think
• the apparent benefit ii! Oeriyed from an
improvement of :the other disease under ite
own treatment.. Samuel Stokes entered
- last -December •A 'very slight change fOr.
. . the better in his. syMptorns is neticeable.
•
' ,Sanauel Williams entered last April: Mk.
- Willianis claims tht :he is •inuch better
0.ince_tio. iihnn_ew tre_i_tiiient, ,but no decrease
in, con rig- bee 'been noticed; by the,phy*,
i.. . . ,
•
How to Get Bich.
• A land speculation : "'But," said the
would -he purchaser; "they tell me that 'the
land is covered by a swamp." ,
• "Swamp ?why,. of, Course. It's the richest
land in the world:"
lint how am to get rid of the water?"
"Pump it Off." ,
• jardes King, 'consumptive o entered
lea month; is very low, and shows no
im
prevenient Whatever. . Nicholas Greer, who
enteredin January, is ciiiffering With tipinal
troubles in addition to consumption". The
new treatmentliarprodticeitarrehange for
• the/ better:An 'his eerie. John Wily;
entered June 7th, 1886. His condition
, ',remains unchanged. japes • Graham
- entered Aptiri2th; 1883: Hie trotible_is
asthma and chronic bronchitis. Mr. Gra-
. limn' had himself ' v,reighed when the treat.'
and• declares pesitive y that the new treat -
Intent lase gained him five poun.deinweight
already.' • On George Eountzler; a : con-
- numptive, who entered July,•1884; the itew
treatment was only commenced yesterday,
and no change in conditiori is apparent.
4,‘ ja almost tog soon t� look for re-
sulte,"' said the stiperliatendent of.the hos-
• pital, " but we are giving the ; treatment a
.fair trial, for we know it will , not liarm,
•even thongh it should fail to hopefit. •The
patiente; though, • are greatly encouraged
about theniselvee, and the majority are; in
high spirits. • How MuCh' iinagination or
thie beautiful weather his to do with it vie
" No ;• -we are not treating any female
" Yost but then it ivill be on some" Other
• man's land." • •
"' That's ell right. ' •Let him pump it; off
on to senieone elee'e land:. My clear sir,
you eliould never, be bothereO by What ie.on
some Other man' it land," • .
" Yes, •but won't he Pump the waterliaiak
On my land:7 • ••
" The very thing you best
crepe in • the World are raised. 'that way.
Pumping from' first one. . field' to another
brings about a Mutual systena of irrigation.
I get rich that: way.--Arkansato Traveller.
•Itapidly Mastering English.' *
.• •
The TiOiitoii alady-inthat
city who is much interested in the spiritual
•welfare 'of ,Chinamen. Among the Celestials
id.one 'whose progress has not been' such as
to greatly encourage histeacher. 'Therefore,
when she &flied upon him. the other day at
hie laundry „andinquired how he was getting
lOng,_she_wae:Ye_ry much pleased with the.
prompt reply,-'4,-Pletty good.", Happening
to notice the abeence•from the shop of ene
„whem she was 6COtietorned to meet on pre-
vioni there,dhe: asked vihat had „be-
come of him; Whereupon her protege dumb,
from the death -dealing windows in cold
weather, which ha; given me, SB well •as
parent% much satisfaction. It is simply a
Tender of metal -also media of wood--about-
three feet high, and extending out from the
window' fifteen • or twenty inches. In
some families .where I have had these
screens arranged to the windows for One or
two years I have reduced: the inedical at-
tendance very greatly, as my books will
• , ment began, and 'weighed agaireyesterday,
'T,Ines.Tor lid Wife,
(Scene_--Sighlandinen's Cross, Brownie,
law: • Dramatis .person in .: 'Donald and
Dupl.) Donald -IB it pe possible? IS sat
yen, Tegalt 7. •Man its a lang. langt time
inn I'll didne..earycpefore;--
aye, TOnalt,lad„. Man, did: yell ken I've
got - merit? Donald-Ma:it! Dugala-
Aye, maxit,•and what for no?
That's goot. Thigald-4Ta ; not se...goot
neithets. Donald -Aye; whey's '' sat 7
Dngeld--Oh, ehe's got: a deeiil Of &temper.
Donald -Aye; that's pad., Dilgald-Ne;
na ea padimithers. DonaldAye Whey's
sail Dugald-Man, she has fellers and
we poucht a hoose: DOnald0i3h, aye
man ; that's godt: Dugald-Na ; not.' so
gootneithers.. 'Donald-4*e'; whey's eat
Dugald-The hoOse wis' burnt. .Defiald-
Och; man, that's ped, ppd. Drigald-7•Na;
dot so:pad neithers.•Donal&-Wney'e ?,
Dugald--Man, the;wife vris &int. wis it,
iihe'll gala() inaurance-sillard to her
nainsell, forpy.Seottish-Anre - •
°
'• -A-113loody• Affray :
fth1hexi3stilt-obra-•-blood-m-in-a-
family or community, but nowhere is bad
blood more destructive of happiness and
health than human system. When
the life aurrent is fotil and auggish with
impurities, and is slowly -distributing its
poisons to every pert of the body, tile peril
to health, and life even, is •iniminent.
EarIy symptoms are 'dull ancldrowsy.feel-
ings, severe- headaches, coated tongue, poor
appetite, indigestion anil general lassitirde.
Delay treatinent may entail the Moat
serious consequences. Don'tlet 'disease get
a strong bola on sour constitution,. eut treat
youisel f by using pr. Piercys Gelatin
Medical Discovery, and be restored to the
blessings of health. •All druggists. •
• 'A. man has 13een sentenced to ten days'.•
canncit say, butone and all hope for S1100013S.
• , patients with the new Method." '
••' At the Allegheny General, Hospital the
• .:••new cure has beeri.experimentted with for
• ; two Menthe. Dr. Williamson, under whose
• ,• • directiontheliire; if; used, -said : .4". I can
scarcely' give an mower now as to ' Perrna-
• tent resultd. We. hare had no :patients
_ under treatment long exiou0a to give .defis,
15( „nitdopiniona, but I. baud say, theth has
• beep a merked ' iinprovenient wherever, it
bee heee Used. 'We have three or fotir
eaees under. our direct •charge and ,some
elk' or seven frem the ,outeide. " We --Can,-
net claim a positive cure ;yet, though', ae
said,: there have 'been ' :most beneficial
• ' • results. •' • ' ,
• : "There is one Ortfte yhich has been under.
treatinent for tho last two.ramiths. the
• name of the patient le .:McCarthy.
. She was brought into the hospital over a
,year ago. She Was expected to die within
• .5 few weeks: fee had not. this been the
i„ cello .would not he,Ve, taken her: She
had. a very troubleeome .cough, large cavi-
ties in • beth hings, was very 'Onanciateat
' Weighed but seventy-nine pound?, suffered
great pain; and was troubled With heavy
•"qxpenoiationie ,She Was only able to be out
,of -bed for a day ,at a time. WO kept her
alive by the osaiii :Metliods until the Aunt
••cure svae tried.
• " a feyr day e' after . its .firat• 144 she
founded her and Still further emphasized
his oivn progreim in the mastery of English,
by his response, ." Elicited tied blucket."-
New York' Tribune.
• A Slight Mbnindeirfstanding.
coveey • ' .
.. • • ,
•'CURIES ',ALL 1HIUMORS
. . • •
from a 'conarnon. Blotch. or Eruption, to the .
worst Scrofula: salt -rheum, "Fever -sore'
Scaly . or Rough. Skin, in short, all diseases ,
caused by bad blood • are conquered by this °
powerful, purifying,and invigorating medi-
cine. Great Eating -ulcers rapidly heal under •
its benign influence. • E.specially has it mant-
fested its potency in crueng Tetter, Ecze '
uBfgus.sipeoloasres, Baeniisd, gawrebiudincgises, Siopre4 0Einytes„DiSsceroasfe.,.
it-Whita-SwellingsX_Goitre, or • Thick Neck;
and, Enlarged Glands. Senff7terr-centeArk• •
stamps for a :large • Treatise, with colored
plates. on Skin Diseases, or the dune amount
for a' Treatise on Scrofulous Affections: •'
‘4•IFOR.THIIE* BLOOlDlIS THE LIFE.P"-
•
Golden • edical• geoveryt and good
digestion a fair skin, ,burryant spirits,'•; vital
strength land bodily health will. be established:. •
• CONSIJIVIPIrION'
which is Scrofula of the 14unpe9.113 arrested
and ,Cured hy _this remedy.; if -taken in, the •
earlier stagell of the disease. From. its mar -
veldt's power over this terribly fatal disease.
when first offering this now.world-famed rem-. •
edy•to the public, Dr. Fierce thought serioudy
Of ,caLling it his " Cotrsurarriois but • '
Abandoned • that name •as too restrictive for
a medicine which, from its wonderful com-,`•
bination of tont% or strengthening, alterative: • ,
or blood -cleansing anti...bus:, pectoral, and ."..
nutritive properties, is Unequaled,. not. only . •
as a remedy for .Consumption,, ;but for an,
ChroniC•Disesteem of the . • •
Tough (in apothecary's shop),--- y,
youngfeller,ginoule ten grams o strye -
ninet right ansay,.in a bigliurry, and don't, half a mile frith' 'Wetter ;" CleO bless our
you forgetlt. • . • honae. We're gone East to get• a fresh
A Constitutional Ailment.
"You ought t� be ashamed of yourielfy a
great big man like you, to bee, beggar • and
a tramp. You oughtn't to he •afraid .of
-"Ilinow um,but I -can't -help it.
You see, My nurse frightened nie once in. a
dark room.when I wee a haby; and I have
been timid over einoe.1":-.N. Y. 314il land
.
Exirresa.
•
• Didn't Wait to" Grow'
This has 13een lofted en the wall' of a
deserted shanty in. the' heart of Dakota:
"Fore miles grum a naber ; sixteen miles
fruna a postoffis ; twenty-five Miles frum a
leroad • a htuaredandatey frum gibber ;
imprisonnient for kissing the fat girl at a
circus. , This °Ada a new .peril • to Circus
going,
• .• Jenks' iiream. .• •
Jenks had a queer drearn.the other, mg' lit,
Be thought he. saw. a. Prize-fighters' ring,
and,'• in the middle . of it stood adonghty
little champion who met and deliberately
blocked Over,' onenby one, a score or more
of big, hurly-lookin' g ' fellOws, as '.they
advanced to the Attack. Giants .as , they
Were in size.the 'valiant pignay proved mere
than , a match for them. . • It wana,11
funny that Jenks woke up-laughing-L.:He
'accounts for -the dream -,by the -fact that he
•hiul just come to the ' conclusion,' after try-
ing nearly every lig, drastic pill on the
market, that Pierce's' tiny I:hirgative
• Pellets, easily :"„khooked out," and beat all
the rest hollow! , "
L:--Hbv-i-to raise young tainhs is a qiiestion
.for-Oiscuseion ata fanners' meetieg.'. Olir
way vreulabeeWes' ,
• •
Thoroughlicleanse itai using Dr.'1Plerces
Clerk--:-Ratd ? • start."•
Tough -NOW, .-7-,•Nofv, look a -here, I don't want L
. •
any o, your slang, or I'll jump , over there, .0, shop on any Of the main
and spoil that dude collar yours in 'boat thoroughfarea, Of London can afford to
foiar seconds., ; . • cheat every customer, because the crowd.
He wise v,reited on immediately.-Hayper'd of strangerd passing the door will continu•
er
Bcu' • • to • furnish new ViOtiMI3 year after yeer. „;
• • ••• • They Speak_ for Themselves. ,
„ Prq017, Feb. 17. -This is to' certify that
I have used PolsOn'a,Nerviline for rheuma-
tism, and have found it. a valuable 'remedy
fer all internal pain and would, greatly
yecommend it to 'the publise.-N.
KINGSLEY. •
. .
,. -The 'Short veils worn by : the ladies
reaching just below the eyes, May protect
gentlenien frem their daziling gle.rices, but
they make the ladies' foreheads loOkdirty.
: ehelyourd Keep. -
ItOung men (to sexton' iit ' a aural deer)
r4sn't the sereaon nearly done? - •
• Sextoni-About an hour yet. He is, only
on big " Lastly.". „ ;
' Young man -Will it, take him an hour to
get through his Lastly,"?
Seaton -So ;„but there's the "Otto wOrd.
more and I are done,” and the "
and the "itt conclusion " to come yet.
Don't get impatient, young man. Your
girl wort soil 1
' '
'iv' A. ern' of Art. '
• • Young Lady . (hi the country) --And aid
yoo really paint tlie.bo.rn yourself f i 'Uncle
Janice' ? • . • • ..,. -
t. .
•
111114e jareee-Tee. ws's• „ ., , , '
''', ;Young Lecly-,,L-By handl ;
Unale James-Sartin.•s, •. 's
' Yoting Lady(fetellingherbreeth)--Thiek
�f it, Oland -painted bare 1 ' • ..' ,
• A. San. Francisco man is s,uieg Actor
Booth. and his' managere fer 610,0,07,50,
damages. Several weeks ego he baid 67.6a
'for three SCEttfj at ono Oil:teeth's perform,.
eneee,.ana: wheti he went te" the thealtrehe
faint' their wore portable Chairs, and in
differeet pans 6f, the house: The next cley'
lie began the Suit.• ••
A talking canary has been discovered at
Loweetoft, England.. It belongs to a lady
Who, bite taught it id -repeat' iieferfil words
and phrases, and to imitate successfully the
notes of other caged, birds: '
• -stextie Siftings : "Among the' Zuliti
young people tight and get married. Here
• hey geman
t married d fight." • --
. ,
LEEDS .01;j11TIC, /nil.' 9. --We arenot 'in
the habit of puffing patent medicine, hut
we cannot withold-our-testimony as to the
greet Value of -1•Terviline as -a, remedy TO
pain, • We have pleasitre in. ,regommending
it as ft never -failing remedy. Rain H. J.
ALLEN; BENS: ttn•LON, and many others.
P. A. Churchill states': • There Seems to
be no end to the' success Of Nerviline. I
gelid rift a few testithoniald„and ,can; send
you plenty:more if of !lee tolyoui ,•
Bold everywhere.:,.. •
, •
Liver Bloat' and Lungs.
5
.For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Short -
new of Breath, Mronic Nasal Catarrb, Brea- ,
affections, it is an efficient remedy. s.•
chitis. .A.sthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred '
for- 5.00.
7 by Dr•uggiets, at $9.0% or. Six Bottles
. 13end ten eents in stamps for Dr. F'leraa -
:bee* on Consumption., .Address, • •
World'; Dispensary Medical Asseciatiee •
, 663 'Blain Sf,. Bl7.1.E.NALO, N.
Xo * •
AND il)01, TABLE
F°13' BALE.L-.11' COMBINATION
•The Maros 'River in Trandylvania has
overflowed its banks, Seeding • the town of
Earbburg .and interrupting the railroad
traffic: Rain .is still falling. Trodpenre
engaged in reselling property in the Moiled.
territorY, , • ,
It's an a*ful' thing, force of habit.'
accountable for a great deal of misery and a
greit'deal.of happiness. • Most things are
done from', force of habit. ,B*earing, drink-
ing; loving, hating all beconie habite, and
can't be got over. A fellow goes Courting,
and it's • awfully pleasant. • At first it's
novelty: and fun, then it becomes habit, and
they think it is love. The irl geed away
for a month, ' He pines for" a week; and
When she comes back she's .got;olit of the
habit,,andhes got into the habit of courting,
another girl, and it's (all up:, '
. • . ,
• In the 1`renela Aoadeth 1 Belonged a
paper was read,the other day on annbsolute
unity of tirne. An eleetrical. apparatus Was
'described which gives result's more occur.;
ately than those. of the best -constructed
elock-- It has alsothe advan-
tage of indidating; xecording and•antornitti-
°ally correcting Ltd own variations of
velocity: • .
•
McCollum' s Rheumatic Repellant is recbg."
nised. by leading druggists as as the standard
yernedy for rheumatic affections. It is. for
internal use only, has-been tested thoroughly
for many years and is known to be reliabl
The Railway Commissien opened ' its
. . •
Pool Table with full equirents, only two •
years in.use: And in good con tion. Apply '
ROBERT JAHN,.:corner John a,nd MairifiVreet,eiv
,Hamilton, °titan°. '. • • •
REFt-TS I
Wheal say cure 1,16 uoi mean unirdly to' step them Or.f
Brooded thew have them return again. • 1 titean radical,
cure. I have Made the disease of FITti. El'IMSPIIT YAM-,
INO SIONNOIS a lifwtorig itudy. 1 warrant my remedy
to cure the worst Climes. Because, °Warfeli va failed Is no , '
• Dimon fOr- notDOW rece1vinta euro. Omni et once for* '
treatise and. a Free Bottle of illy Infallliae remedy..
,Buprsse arittYost Ofncti..' It MW f
Oee ti °thin r fore trial
„and I triii CUT° YOU: !Mitre', no It, G. BOOT,
BFancli 014811'1 •Youzg St!, Torogo,
meeting in London on BaturdaYi
•er_neaameneeeek,-)reeaseeeineeemiseeesememet
.4.
;cm
.THE.000..1C,:lt.E$T;ERIM
.'fhe Mechem is a vabiabio fruit, and ht a reliable. •
fruit to grow in the Northern States, where the.moret ,
tender varieties .winter. kills. It Is perfectly hard!. '
will stand 40 degrees below 'zero without showing any •
Injury to the most reader buds. Print. ripens in •thie
latitude about the first of July. Color, a bluish-bTabiG
when; fully ripened. Thellavor is equal to. the rasp.,• •
berry, a very !Mid, rich sub -acid, pronounced by Most'
peopio,dolioloits. The fruit ia excellent for piest or -
canned for "winter Use. It ,grows very stocky; the
shining dark -green leaves and the blue fruit make*
pleasing contrast. It seems to flourish in all soils and •
16 a•pr011flo Utterer. ,Cno dOxen plants by mall, dare- '
fully peal- in oii paper, CO ets.•. two dOzen by WO, •
0.00' 100115 express, te.601_1,000,_815.00. •
• dd 1.4D. STAPLuS, Portland, midi- •
. ,
.CONSUMpPTLIO
ostom
ve reedy tor the above di_ _am ; by its use '
thousanda of deeds of the worst kind and of king Otanding
have been cured. Indoodi eo strong id my fatth lb its-
'enleacY, that I will send TWO BOTTLES reset togetber
With d VALIThilt.8 TREatten bn tide. disease to shy .•
fil00,37 ongeSt..T. °rola
sufferer, 0 ive'exprOde tnd O., addresil. •
lozob,0a
,