HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-07-22, Page 3,
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5,a4
• • Dont propos,.• ' •
, , wonly 4043 propose.to ino! 1 realiy liko you se; -
'We omit each ether ehe.rnategly.at bali er, 'feast,
• $oeknOw. •
Wo ean'brighten for each othe,eheat tbo reifies
•,:carelessheuraid, • "
We can gather Ertan eaehether Still the moment*,
PaSsing' dowers;
• We over best can gladden Wel( river as it Sews -
.Through sunny beds and quiet -but 1 hope. youi
•'worf't propose. - . ' • .
No, voice suits raMe as well Aayeers in gay duet
• ..
-
or song, •
No other Srrn. can guide nui, safe through the,
polka's whirling throng. '
Pia:other lau0hi. re-echoes half so merrily to
mine. .
.• Noether hand so tastefully my houenet'Filiewers
•.• • . can twine
Nona save me half fitt, cleverly, from bores4ray
deadliest foes; , •' • • , „:
I cannot do without hope you weal
propose.. •
• Why will :you talk: of seetiment? You never
used totalk • • ,
Of Aught but Neer nonsense, in long 'quadrille.
or walk: • • • .. • _ •
Vhfavu(gilli; goubser ? 1u? really your :ringing
•:Why frown at me Or lingering With. another,)oy-,'
• ensguest?,
Why will yell talk of hopes and team?, Why
• hintat.friendship's- (dose?. ,- • • - - -
. Yea.never used to tease Me fie•-ehl I :hope., you
won't,propose."
•.For You.enew 1 would, refuse,. you -1 'mint' love
•What should we ae together when the' Summer
•. • , • one had fled? s •
And then we must bastrangerf-,mustiess each
.4 • " other by. ,
..,,, • With flushingcheeh and distant bow and cold
averted eye.,. •
Why doom our gay oompanioeship to 80401080? •
We like sack etIti much ; too Well'.4 ,hope you
won't ',repose.. •
Let us still be smiling when we • part, and happy.
h ;
Lotus together pluck the bloom of thedowerset:
feet.
Let tis lea,vo the deeper things 'alone, and laugh,
' • and sing, and dance; . , •
And flirt a little now and -then, to speed tbe
hour,. perchance, . • • .
sOh I theres a deal of pleasure in Runny links like
' those; ' '
Don't break t,he rosy ties just yot•L'ffear Charley,.
• den'A PrePose I • • • .
' LOVE TAUGHT.' pit.
John Bamsay Was working. On his fargl,
higoareless, loose. dress displaying to ad,
' vantage his tall, niuscular figure. :A broad
•-..s.strawhat shaded -his -handsome face: The
•. bends; that guided the plow were strong
• kinds; but white; and more delleate than
•.auchspuisuitsisually allow, ' •
titit Made With- Vaunt kin the
, Metal-4E4bl wen a
jaunty hat, Covered, With puffs of white
Muslin and bows of blue ribbon to instil
the spots upon her drawl. • .
. The face nuclei DaisY's hat. was 'gloomy,
. to say cross.' A . very pretty face, but
not pleasant, having apetted,-spoiled-child
frown,and a brooding discontent in' the
4arge lue eyes. ' '
• A. Presently the farmer ;Max her, and
taking off his hat fanned himself with.lt,
• stopped his horses while he leaned rade-
•' lentlyegainst the plow. , • • .° . •
".You • look deliciously coal: under this
'*reat title," he paid: A 0' And -hem 1 -7 -very
mragidtessed for .9 o'clock in' the morn-
• •
. ' "In 4,57penny calico 1, • she said; con
temrituotielyr•--"-It le too absurd for you to
be plowing and hoeing and cone
and doing.,the. work of laboring. man. I
thought when, you oanie'hesMe from college
you Boreething besides work on a.
, • And let the farm go to ruin?' That
•„Wotild be a poet Way to pay my debts.” •
• "Your 'OW !" -she said, looking .itstert;-..
"Do you one debts 2" • . •
- 1:Certaintyl .You and are both very•,
•heavily in debt; Daisy. .' I think when'Aunt,
• Mary :took ns' in, poor 'little orphans, her
' nephew, you her third cousin; allthe money
*. she Haired. in a life of bath work wits-arient
••Upori. our education. De you Imo* that
, • .sbe,luis nothing now lint the firm, and that
•
to take her hway, from . ' Would, probably
nhotten her lifo r •
....tut you could Bend' her ' money if You
vier° in the city in soma gentlemanly occu-
pation." ' • '
" Perhapp so, ten or twelve "..yeara from
now! .To-day..I propose*, Work thiefarni,
•, and see hon many bushels of. Corn :I can
• raise on it." • . . . • .• • •
' He took hold of the plough -handles natio
• spoke, stetted the horses, and left her, her
:eyes full of angry teats:
' "He might .aii well have said what he
meent;". springing down' and stetting •for
; 'the house. "Ho thinks ought to cook
• and make butter and .work like. a servant
..girl, when I have studied so hard and tried
to make' myself a,lady, that .might not
• be ashamed of, me." . • • •
' As she drew .near the brain) the • 'sting .of
• ohn",s, • words, penetrated 'inoteend-more
• rough the .crust the.hird • drawn over: lier
art, until a -fresh stab Met her at the.
°Ct. Looking in at the Open door .she paw
. :a white head. boned' .weeping, elight
• figure shaken by pope,, ,
.. Quickly through all the selfialineee Pell-
:: reproach struck at the girl's heart; and
,a, Montient tilie was on her knees .beside, the
IOW chair; her arms around 'the.' Weeping,
• vionain. :• ' '' •
"Oh," Aunt Mary,: What it'? Oh; please
don't cry so! Oh,Whitt has happened?"
Why, DaieYf dear''74hiough lobs .that
' Would not be 'checked at`a,trionient'll notice
• •• don't Mind Me. I'm only tired, (leerier
•railY • ' .1 .
Could She. have struck '.cleencit ••
:At 10 hrauieworkdOriabecohie. a Wearinegil I
At 70 it may mere as if one aught to teat,.
-While prang hands and itetiVe.teet lake up. h
4the burden; She was very tired; this .pa - --10
tient old woman who had given her T
• ' work for others,•first for her Patents, then .81
• Or an invalid brother 4 lastly for theerphini '
ohiliteb,' with such innumerable acts of
neighborly .kindnese as only the recording
angel of geed deedsknows. •
Well might she' tired It was new :to
110 to be caressed; to have tender bandit:
ead her to her tooth toa lociseOher rags;
a tender voice COSA her to lid dawn. '
" Now I will clAtken the window," Daisy
said, "end you are to Met. Sleeif you
MIN) dizinet titnay .
" you cannotmake the din.
" I will try," Watt Ale quick reply and
o•
and put on a, plain dreier and, large check
apron before the began to work, and ehe
was rather astonished as, bey kitehen
duties progressed to find bergelf happier
than she had been since she r-eturned.home.
When John came to dinner he Was
astonished to find Aunt Mary "quite.
drawled u13,1! as oho blUehh4glY ,In a
clean print dress and white apron, her dear,-
old face showing no,sign of heat or weari-
ness, •while Daisy, with added ihloom and
hare white was Parrying hi the
dinner. - • •
"The new girla your Bei -Ince she said,•
saucily„ as she pulled down her.,eleeves.
"Dinner is ready, sir." • •
But her lips quivered, as he bent over
her and whispered,: (led bless you, dear
Forgive Me if I was toe osty this morn.
big.' • °
• John said but little as the days wore on,
and still found •Daisy at her poet. It was'
not in the nature of thing's for Aunt Mary
to sit with folded hands, but it became
Daisy'estask to inaugurate daily naps'to
eec thatprily the light work crane to the
olderhands,,to nrakedaily work less of
toil and More pleasure.
And the young girl herself was 'surprised
to find how muottehe enjOyed, the Iife that
had seerifel to her a mere drudgery,
_John, bringing to his task the same will
and liming that had atirriedLhini_through
inaugurating & new order of
affairs on the farm and made the workpay
well. -
- Once more Came a June day, when Daisy
sat jn the fields and John stood, leaning,
against the fence beside her.
Fotif years of earnest, loving 'worts had
left traces upon both young faces, ennoblin
them, and yet leaving to theta all the; gla
content that rewards well -doing. ' , •
Many hours of ,self-denial both had. me
,bravely; niany deprivations both had born
well. ' Daisy Wore a black dress, and upo
the hat in John's hand Was a band of erePe
but through !redness of their voices ther
yet'rang a tone of happiness.
• 1.1 Youslove me, Daisy?" John hid -Said t
When 'have. I not loved you?", 'Ai
antiWerect • • : •
"And you will be my wife? barlin
g.
have long loved you, bub -after . Aunt Mary
4
was stricken &inn With paralysis I *out
not ask you to take up new duties. ..Now
she needs you. no lOnger,:candyouishalllea*
Whitten cahcimearpitUcitelia:11,„" ",..Attxem.•
• a,,iceattetlecfainel •ia.47114-203-17117,','"'.7., •
lea ,e,it1, thotight it was yours now.'
:'• "And47Bit you have Made' it so' beantiful, a
we' as profitable! ; .0h; John, why mita
wenleave it ?"' ' ' '
" Only because . I thought it was
: • s. • ' •
",1$ wraildbmals My heart to. go away.
love my. home,"
• , And . John; taking the little, figure into
closeenibrace, *radiated if any city could
produce a :Sweeter, daintiet.littleiadOltan
he held in his atins. • • • ' ' • : •
es
I: lotting°11 some cool terraCeevertooking.the
a sea on the Campagna, while the intone of
their velvetylariguage keeps tune to the Soft
e splashing of the spa againsttheil7Ck shore,'
4•;010,-0
„A•s.r1,7"x'
•••,"' s: vez vets vnia nytte-nEthe. •
(Albany Joere al. •
9 it has been ' remarked that Mrs. Cleve-
land possesses excentionatirstrang wrists
an •IB consequently. able to endure the pro-
longed handshaking of ' Ohne receptions
T. without . over -fatigue. • Her strength' .of
mrawle is attributed to her Pertiistent use of
dunaWbells. She is said to be quitee gYni-
neat, arid rates much of her graceful car-
riage to, the thorough command of her body
•. -given by calisthenic eicercises. •
• ‘' •
• - TR:m*1'65'0N WOMEN IN TETAE..:". • .•
(1 .faoti, Tex', Inlet' Repehlica.) • ,
„ ,Mffirried, women at Ettothian are said to
frequently take:. in • the sights, itt:. male
attire. A young girl:, at Dallas was sent
home by the police .while Masquerading in
• mile attire.' A. Wit'OQ gisi Was photographed
in her :brother's-epting--euitfor-funi. and,
tbe picture has raised s pretty scandal.
Marion Biggs, a Carpi county farm boy, has:
turned out ' to.:, be a &tin' ',girl; Ethewore
tratisert for A year -before discovery; .
, wraith ETEETHeDY CATIONii:HAint 011 80.
• • (Tokio letter in Buffalo TImee.)
. •
:Like China; the ,principal ;produce of
:Japan is ohildren-a very greet variety in-
deed it does prednee;400. Their are of all
patterns, Very numerous and almost always
very 'really seems to a foreigner'
that every- boy and girl in Japan that. is big
enongh,to carry .babY hati-oneofs:thern
strapped on her or his back:, It is often
hard to which of the two is the younger
baby, the one being °furled or the one, Car -
tying, they are so mill. But the carrying
.of.these babiectiSirat to - the older
children entirely. . °Fully one-half, if not
more, of all. the women . seen about the
streets Or :hOuries' are also carrying \babies.
on thin'. back. They'ca.rry thenilhns in
the • street, in the ...temples; ,in the stores.
Everywhere you, are • confronted with a.
Cheerftilpair of One behind theother;
loitering7ahOut for thestnueement of both
• -often at work, too often 'visiting friends,
, But this ever-present baby is. like Per-,
ants., very quiet and Contented, now and
anon cooing and. dozing. .
rEatlE1411YrE gcCENTIgOinict!..
:women Wear Trouser', aml. Amok,
Tob*Otelk, efie,-01,0104fond petetor,
,R6r 4,TVI
THE:HEM:mum 'wet= OF ToliOA.
Sydney (Australia) News. • •
•
The women are beautiful in the extrerne
and as graceful as fawns, jgst dark enough
to be more, picturesque than white women.
They havea coquettish, fascinating man:
net which would do 'credit , to a Parisian
belle. And yet they are chaste
tion and enactment, /id' White stranger is
allowed to sleep on shore. The, men are,
marvels of symmetry, though they eat
little animal food. , They..are, however, in-
solent, overbearing and: in other ways ob-
jectionable.- -Tonga-taboo- Means the
tabooed or sacred laud. and " Tougu.
haio (4' I am a fongese") is as proud
boast as " Civis Renranum." Of old, To,
sprinkle' a. dirty'sula with .patchonli and
swell' himself out in the mission-110am is
the joy of the Tongese masher: The brain,
try is so fertile' that, they need work but
little', and the -hardeet labor imposed on
them is to pay the 'taxes of the King and
the contributions to the missionaries, 10'
whom they-are-or-were-riddenTin-copec-
oil, tortoise shell .or Coin. They ofttimes
put their horses, and 'Maps " in the plate,"
generally inremembranceof some -dead
grandmother.
• WOMEN wHO.FLAT WITH THE wenn. .
. The French hausekeeper delights in her
afternoon cigarette: •• The senora of Barce-
lona loves in the evening to wrap her 'black
crepe around her head, and while gently
puffing her long. tam* cigarette oast
heart -thrilling • glances from' her balcony
above the walks at the wighte below: White
theGerman frau is fond df her cigarette, or
even cigar, and the Russian wife is not far
behind her in her enjoyment of the weed,:
and. even. the 'Japanese, Chinese, Tartar,
Dutch and Sciuditnese wives all like to let.
tobacco. smoke Curl from • their pretty
mouths toward the sky; the Ita,lian signers
is, perhaps, the most passionately fond of
the long, thin- cigar of the 'country called
the." Virginia:" • It is no uncommon sight
'of a summer evening to see a partyorladies
" • , Scotch New. ' •
Admiral John Elphinstone Erskine, late.
. .
M.P. for litirlingthire,'•died in London on
- the 23rd • ' " "
, Marblo. bust of the late Professor W.
E. •Aytotin has • been presented to the
IlidyetaityOf Edinburgh by his sisters. s'
On the .18th ult. Widen Aitken • died- at
Ecolesmaishani' aged SO years: For 'king
she had in receip „f parachial
and after her death * containing:486
iii.ribtea was lonnd.iii her Coil Cellar. . , •
: There' were epeeist serViCeii in the East
U. Church; Haddington, en', the 19th
ult. in celebration of the centenary:Of the:
death :Of John Brown, the author of the.
"„Seltinterpreting Bible." • • • •
In celebratiOnof the Queen's Jubilee
'Victoria' Institute it Menton, Dumbarton-
shire, Was °Pepe& on the 18tIrult.' by Mt.
:Alexander Wylie, of Cordate,. amid ranch
rejoicing on the,part of the inhabitants.
:, • At. Aberdeen Circuit. Court; on the 24th
- Alexander Finlayson, writer;, was
•sentenced ' to fifteen monthe'. imprieOrikeent
for forging a barer exchange and a letter.
Itt. the Mindy 'wife -murder Althi.
Stewart, tinker, pleaded guilty of culpable'
homicide and was i3entenced.: to twenty:
years' hard labor.' .• • • .
•• The ' strongest *Olunteer, regiment cin.
Britain is :the Queen's Edinburgh Riflo
Brigade, • 2,3,40 enrolled;: • neXt". is 2nd
Glamorgan (Wiles), 1;996 strong: 'next 1st
Lanark; 1,579"; ' then abOnt :half ' a dozen of
equal strength -4th Mandliester;1,205.1 2nd
Serinerset;.. 1,252 3rd Bait Lancashire,:
.1,251; :let Warwick, 1,219; and Jet Dum-
barton, 1,213,- • • • , _ ,
On 18th ult. the Mon:in:mint erected
Cemetery by Hawatecin, of;
Gle.nbilek, the memory Of •the Covenant-
ing martyrs of 1580,85.--.wils formally
handed overto the authorities. of the parish.
In the course • Of theceretnOny Mr. liewat-'
sou.alse Medea gift Of a 'fund Which Will
provide a birsaty. Of *27 a year : to aid'
talentedyoutig men belonging to the parish
incthtaining a-Univeriiity- education. ' • •
•- A CorreaponderkWritee that go Majesty
had, a : narrow eseape..the other day. She
waesketehing the' giuunduatsBalinotal.,..
When a rival:cnieen„'hotly 'tenoned, by her
Subjects, 'citified on the royal bOnliet.. The
Queen, with tutioh Presence of mind, quickly
removed, tlie ',too attractive millinery and
threw it from her. ' ,A gardener quickly in-
tervened: With a beehive, and succeeded in
inveigling the audacioits:inseets'into it. The
cotreiitionclent. always understood -that Her
aiestyPa royal grandfather had a bee in
is bonnet, but it 'wet!' evidently reserved
r Queen. Victoria, to -ant -do George the,
hird by having it whole swarm of ,bees out-
do heel:: ..• . •• '
.4.unt Mary.etihnlittect
be htlay, and Daisy sighingly put away
SOrild of her day dreams .Over her homely
tasks.
. • X cannot be it lady," she thought, and
John won't be it gdntleman; but I will try
..... to pay. my. Share,ef. .de
She had taken off her lielliiee,E1 to het
Washing the petatoeti, shelling peas', fry-
ing hem, making coffee', allalletved thought
A
He Ac cepted Elia Mother's'Version. '
. Mamma," said it young hopeful' on
Clintith avenue yesterday, " Whirrs a gone
sticker ?" - • -
• " A gonesucker,-my child," responded
the fond nicither; rather puzzled,"" is it very
bad' .
That 'night,' When the clothing of the
little fellow,had • been removed and he was
engaged in his usual' supplication to the
Throne he • . :
" And oh, Lord, bless papa; merCina and
me, for you know, Lord; -I'm it one
stelter.".-Brook/yn. Standnrd.
,
'Eminent Scient&et--ii The,,plariettly Intt '
dications give asailtenee that there Will .13:1
no rain for the' nekt throe days." Man
, with a litinion, •- with lofty
Superiority) -7" There will be rain, air, in,
Ws than twelve And there was,
loatewlitiacon •
• Mamie's. Cablegrein.
, A Hartford man whose wife was going,
abroad,. asked ber to telegraph him a vvord
or to lotting him know of her safe arrival
in' New York, In a fen hours he received
the following niessage,.44 collect ' : ,
" poitit Gzoncra,-Arrived here Safely; at
fifteen minuted after 6. The train was due
at 6, but we were delayed fifteen miniites
while en rbute. Had it perfectly lovely trip.
Donworry about' me, I'll get, along. all
right. And take good : care of yourself,:
Be BO careful -about taking cold this damp
weather. ReEnnaber.that you are to keep
on your fiannele until the 15th Of June.
Be sure and have the braise '44 and aired •
he often as once it week. Reinember What
I told you about .your Socks and shirts.
Don't forget to keep the ,binielnent .door
locked.. Write every day. • I'm sure V11
have a lovely time. So good in you to let
me go. You must Wino oveF Hker ine in
Atigust. FDENT
Forever and ever yours. E. d
.A.ti hour later •Mamie was pained to,
receive the follciwing to het " word or two " :
" Don't cable anythings:from. Liverpool.
I'M a ruined me.n.if,you do. GrOnOn."
-
Senator Boyi's Cat
• Senator Boyd Caught aTattat yesterday
in the person of little Miss Clarke, it nraiden
Of 7 yeah or thereabouts, in Miss Adain's.
departnient of the Victoria School. Sonic
black -board drawings of animals were being
examined,. and the .t3eriater, turning to this
little' Miss; Challenged her to draw it Cat
andniakd it, cry. She :tempted the Walter
on the spot and in a few seconds produced
it fine cat with green eyes, it ribbon on its
,
neck, it .scroll from its mouth with ." mew "
inscribed, and underneath Written " Mr,
ney,a's John, N. ,B., Sun. '• ,
Ateording to. it 'statement issued by the
Depnty Minister Of Tinanoe, 'the net:debt
of the Dominfen at.3•une 80th was $225;026,•
762. The total reVenne for the 'past fiseal
Year *ass $33,:;O,14,leakinga„surplus oVer
okponditure'o(.'02,456,43$.- .
• • ,
. • A DESPERATE: ellOffN4T, •
1.1-11 -71-1/
-ton of D! 3.7 ergan,Ithe
Jfilgan Murderer.
A6B1mky Morgan, one of 124 four m
arrested for the murder of Detective
Hul-
ligan near _Cleveland, who was supposed to
be in the woods near .Frankfort; was sen-
tenced at Torontato serve five years in the
Kingston Penitentiary for shooting' at' a
policeman, . He made a boast that no per.:
son could hold him, and the bout was, not
an idle one, because heescapedefter serv-
ing it year with the avowed purpose of kill-
ing the policeman in clu0Sticult After the
murder at Cleveland, it was heard that Mor-
gan
was at the hOuse. Of a rich friend named
Williams. . The -officers then stirrounded
the residence, and as 'Sheriff
Lynch quietly sascended the steps Mot..
gen was • seen through ' the screen
.dom. reclining - in an." easy chair.
Little children were ' the room and he
was examining bouquets that they carried
in their hands.. Rushing upon him without"
moment's warning,. Sheriff Lynch tried
In Pinion his • arms, but ciniok as a flash
Morgan slipped one hand ,into his pocket,
and without reingstirig it fired, three idiots
before -his - hand7couldbecaughtby the
-
ethers, who Were upon them. lie struggled
desperately, and but for the ricittiohnoln_ot
James Connor, aperfect-Hercules, whoas.
sisted the sheriff; undoubtedlYs there. would
have been more than one death before he
was ac . we self.cocking revolvers,
of 44 calibre,. were taken from his pocket,
One smoking. • Sheriff. Lynch was shot in
the fleshy part of the thigh; the bullet 'parol-
ing through and making a very Painful And
serious wound. ,The other 'bullets 'grazed
the. hand of Connor; one of them. drawing
the bleed.' That some one wasn't killed by
them is a pure piece of good' luck.: • . It is
altogether Probable thut. Morgan and his .
pals Will dance with ropes around their
necks before they are much older.
Blaed ‘rafi i,atik. .
, Them is no questicr* about' it -4194111111
,tell --especially if it be an impure blood. ..
.,Blotches, fisreVtfona, pimples and 'bone Are
all symptoms of an impure bleed,' die to .
the improper action of the Jiver,. When,
this important organ fella to properly_per._
form its function of purifying and cleant .
ing the blood, imirarities are carried tfi' Mt
parts of, the systera, and ,. the syniptems,
aboie referred td are merely evidences of
the struggle, of Nature to thtow off the
pOisonotur germs." Ilniese her warning:be
:heeded hi time serious results are artata
to follow, culminating, in. liver_orlidne*
disorders, or even,- in 'coneuniptibn. Dr..
Pierce a Golden Medical Discovery will pre- "
vent and cure these - .diseases by restoring-- ,-
the liver toe! healthy condition.. •
I .
•
Mr. Girouard; M. P.,. is likely to be the .
...0
Judge of the Court of plelms; and Judge
Clark elevated to the Supreme Court.
'
samennier,....
• • .
• One of Herrnuinn's Trisha.
• Of ' the elder, Herrmann, the conjurer;
who died recently, the London Times says:
"Tall and thin, with a mustacheend bhin
tuft,hke Napoleon .III„„lierrmann ',could I
by a contraction of 'his facial Muscles so
alter his features as to be unrecognizable.'
But, his most surprising performanc,es were
with leteigrain and his' fondness for
ci.l.rrottcg "ng-0;cao,attimalelight, mx-4
•lifttdtkpretvessdulidhlici iffeees.Fnhere Alte •
wain vat !known, -•-iku l'eataeritnt theweelit'
ask waiter •:for broad and when the
waiter :arrived • With 'a , plateful of tolls'
Herrmann would Mildly reprove him for,
absentreindednees. in • having 71iriatiglit74-
plateful of walnuts.. How the • tolls had
been transfctmed into: • walnuts was the
0,enjarer's secret.'.'
, •
•
Jubilee Jugs.. ,/
° d"
The Prince of. Walla origi e the idea
of the Jubilee juga, whioh, • to the number
of 65,000, were distributed to: the children
in. Hyde Park last week: His Ito al
Highness was nifich struck by the distribu:
lion of rough brown cups bearing ,the
Imperial cipher' in relief, with which the •
Czar commemorated the marriage of the
Czarovitch ;. and the productions Of Messrs:
•Datiltoil,' Which Cost nese .sfifience • each*
are great improvements on the original:
The ground as of polished cream -colored
earthenware, and the two Portraits of the
-Queen. (1837 to 1867): are . artistically
executed in neutral tints.. •
• .s
: To dream of a ponderous whale, /
Arcot on the tip ef his tail, ,
•
Is the sign Of a storm
at the weather is• wartni, • .
- Unless it should happen to jail. •
Praline don't amount to Medi, e4h6.1.11'.:
Some signs, herivever, ereinfallibla : If yen
are constipated; With no appetite, • tortured
-with sick headache 'bilious' symptoms,
these signs . indicate' that you . need 'Dr.
•Pietce's Pleasant Purgative :Pellets,.. They.
will Mire you. ' All druggists. . ' •
, .
. '.. ..--,7".---
: Mr. Changan. expects to leave for Parie
'On. the. 23rd • inst. to Undergo • another .
opeketiOn shinier to that' .pentoi-ineds two
yeare ego. He Mates that no decision has
peen made yet regarding the Qtraheo. griber.4.
natorial chair, f ' •
j.. : Everybody:: -7.- 'Hi; ' 6
, Ife•!• . Tf_, . : •
. Reed this carefully: If yen or any friend
q.rie, suffering from any kind of pain, internal
kcal, or externi.il, „try. Polson'e.Nervffine;
the sure pop pain cure. Nervihne •is one,
of -the 'thoit ' elegant iiorribinations ever'
offered to the public for the -relief of pain.,
.rleaterat to take, powerful in effect; sure in,
results, and cheap beetling, tlie • strongest,
purest, and 'Most certain Pain' remedy. in
the world:: You can test this greet remedy
by going to it drug store , and buying a 10
gent sample bettle. Try it at once:
„ \ ,
"Isn't there anything you, would Tattler
have than a dishkifice cream ?" he Asked,
is they emerged, °in the theatre,. "Yes,
George ;,tWO dishes f iceomeam,"„she Mut"
Muted softly.77grark igron Critic. • 1, '.
, When all . so-called remedial. fail;. Dr:
Sage's catarrh R2ne.,colyres.
! s . ., • ' . . .. -
Thetiberal AriSociation, f New -Bruns- •
\
wick has Passed it teeolotion, cordially syin..
pathizing with Mr. Gladstone i'in his effOTtif
to bind together in closer unie . the sn:bjeets.
of Her Majesty„'' .. • . - \
4 \
•
In this age of imitations the pu 'anent '
something real on which they can depend.
Niunbers of people Offer to make ; a datit
that they .were positively cured Of th ma -
flan by taking MeC_olloml.s 'Alien -atie
AeljOlafit. " • , • • • ' \
. \
' Two More miraculous cures are reporte
from St. Anne,9ue. A young woman named
Monse was Completely cured of aparalyZed.,
leg. The -other was a young girl nerd d'
almost gene; she is now e0n1R.1etely qured.
e\
aunthier, 13 'Years of age,. whose sight' we
. 'Tbo,Post-office DePartMenf et Ottawa.
htrile unggestedto the `United States Post -
office that_adtantage shOuldbe taken of the
Sunday in Beryl:C(3 between Montreal and
Now. York* for the • despatch of European•
. ,
Mails 'arriving, • On Saturday 'evening and
Sunday.
.Tlite Mei*
14,07CCeS I eery.. le
'E•t
to- LIVER
12)% 3,151 . PILLS.
•
, .
_13AWARB OP IMITATIG1V8.;,....41.pWAYS_ =
AA& NOR ing. 13:1ERCE'S PEZZEZY, OR •
.izrrts suct.A.A•co4.TED
Being .entlrel vOgetalille, 0IN-
erate without distur woe to thetem, diet, .
or occupation. Put up in glass, hermeti- .
cally sealed. Always fresh, and, reliable. Aa
a lnzative,,attere.ttice,,vu piargastee,
these little Pellets. gem tlice most perfect
satisfaction. .
•
S1101( HEA0Ael
. • .
HIlIou Ileadasebni,.
Dizziness,. consitpar, •
gnat eietiore,,.
Hhliouu Attac
derangements of tbd:.sboni,„
tich and bowel, are prompt-
ly relieved and pernutnent4r.
cured, by the use, Of ' •
Pierce'. Wileasant Nu lee Pellets: ,
In explanation of the•rein power of these •&•
Pelleteover so. greet a variety of diseases. it
may truthfully basidat that ttbeiraetion upon '
the system' is .universaVnet a gland or tissue
escaping -their Aanatdive-influence;--Sold^-by-7-„
druggists, 05'henta,a,wfal. ,Mantifeetured at the
Chemical Laboratory of WOnan't-Diseeftsater •
MiteicAr., AssoMATtorr. Rugato,N. Y.
II offered hy:the minufacturi-
. era of 1)r. Sage's 'catarrh
Inemeey, for a case of
• Chronic Nasal' C.atarrh
, they eantioVeure. • •• ' '
,
SYMPTOMS' OP • CAT•kutilliiL-Dirl.
' heavy 'headache. Obstruction of_ the nasal
discharges.. falling. from the head
to he throat. sometimes profuse, watery., '• '
,
,•
•
,
• '
;
'Lamar'
and 'acrid, at tithers..thloki tenaeions,.nniceus;
,perulent, bloody and the eyea are
!weak. Watery, andinflamed.; there is ringing
in the ears„ dealness..hacking or coughing to
Clear the..threat; .expectoration Of offensive
'matter; together with KOSfront.eleers;. the
voice is °halite& and has it nasal twang; the
breath is offensive; smell ..and taste..are im-
paired.; there Is a sensation Of dizziness..witb
mental .depretadon, a haekiegcough and gen-
eral debility. Only, a few of the abOve-riaMed.
symptoms are likery.to be :present In any,one
case. Thousands 01 cases annually. without
nianifeeting hall of the 'above symptoms, 're -
Suit in 'consumption, and end drt the. grave.
NO diseaffe is. so cowmen, more deceptive and
clangercue. Or less understood by phk
ysigian;
Byits inild, seething, and healing propertiee.
Dr. Sage's catarrh ltemedY cure% the Worst
'case! of' Untarrhi "cold in .the
: CoryZat and Cattterhal Headache.
, Sold by. dreggiaM everywhere;. 50 -cents.
. .
, .
, • , „ . .
stiftiteld Isietty ;front Catarlrei.r, .
iProf. W. Ifi.Ositen; the ,fameue meAteerist.
'of Ithaca, •N.. E, Writee.: 4‘ Some ten y,eure age.
1'eutTei9d untold agony from chronic nasal
catarrh.My fitfully physician gen Inc up *tub
incurable,sed :said Inust die.;.,..Ny casewail
such bad one, that every day,. towards euit:';' :
;Bet. my voice would beeoMeso. hoame 1 could
•barely,apeak !MeV() a whisper. In the morning
'my:coughing arid clearing of my throat wept&
filmofit straggle ,me„. "By the use of -Dr. Sage's
Catarrh, ItemedY, inthree months, I Was awell
inati,. and. the cure bus heee,permanent."...
• ,"Cosi.lantIy Hawking rind Onto:One,
..err1oriAs43. Ifusittee„.:Esq,..1$02 Pine Streif,.
St. Louts, weett great sufferer
.frcint estarehter, three Years.. 'At times 1 could.
hardly breathe; and Was constantly .hawking
and spitting, and , for the bat eight: months
could net brefithelthrtitigh the nostrils. I
thought nothing Could be‘.datie forme. '
, I Was advised.„ to try Dr, .• Sage's 'Catarrh
Remedy. and I Sm now a well men. I believo.
It to be the Only sure, remedy for catarrh now
nittnufactlited, and one hes Only to •givolt
.fair triatte experience: 680mi:ding' reaulteuncl
eperManent. eine." .• . •
• • .
• .'
. •
Three Settlers 'Cure Catarrh.
EM. Beeler/a, Runtlan P. 0., Cidninbia CO..
'Pa.,' Salm "My• daughter bed catarrh 'when
she was 11Ve years old,. Very badly. 1 sav(Dr.
•sees; Catarrh Remedy adverthied, and , pre-
• tined ft. bottle for her. and Soon SaW thatic.,
;helped: her.; ..a third,bottle effected, "
nent cure. She Is now eighteen years old and .
,ouiid and hearty.'" . .• • • r• • ,
,
DeNL. 29 87.'" •
/In CASES OFIC,ONSUMETION.
ti Mt/ CURED WIT H our A PAILITRE
Address W. L. MILLER, AL D, 18 East ilth Eit , •
• I hiiii•OA plisitivereisiecl; for titeiboee disease ; bytts neti •..
,thonsendi of easei agile Worst kind Owl Of lonot,standing
belie been Ennui. Iiideetl, %eat ationit :le. My faith. In Ite
efficaoypinat I Will peed TWO, BoTTLES, FREE,. telf•thet
With' a VALAIABLE TREATISE On this (pietas 1110
stifferer. Oleo expreiel a.i.I P. o. *admin. ,
Branch Office 37 Ytmge Tctode
THE)(141.fitt'q Ills.rcrr rPichtp. .
\ . . . , , ,
, ,.... .: : . rot,•
e, t po'cuto I uot mean merely to•stop them for a
s‘i1,,,a
,.nmeTdi then hate • hent return aOatp. I ineatt a radical •
\ enre. haw) roaao the. iseasti•of•PITS;EPILEPSY'orPALto . —......-,.
MO 8 CKNB99 A Ilfenit Minty. ,I wArrnnt mrremedy ' •
'to certi`tie worst einieS. 'fiellenee othereli %e failed le 60
Nikon fo not now, reee log a curt,' SO II it n t, ogee for se%
treatise ii (I A Free Sall l'inq hleaerai, remedy... Ole*
i•Ii3
Exprose an Peet Oillne, eat s ,yoli lioth in e (Of 6 trlid.
end I will. e. re fpo.. ;AAA 6 vit.. it. o. Ito(Yr, .'..
Billlell Mil' ; ... . . . ...
.0 St, Taranto.,
. . .
. • ,•••,,
:1A.ZI.X.03t1k37 , Mai 4a I 1 tie ,•Rifle. •
.Por IMO er 4f:if pito, ,o) stiA. Tlio htotgot oi.oang tt6 rnnd4. rwect,
• seenracy, keeeiniteed, eni tho only abeelnieli Safti Me 04,04' peripf.,'" .. •
' sratrivo.ANo mime tr..e.tvtrA, *604 tone...end, .•end etif :
.pattital ottgogoo.; -atapiltim plitn Aittnai, VO., New .1140...e0, Cobh;
• •
T 144 THE
WORLD!
•••