HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1887-08-12, Page 7-Tr-t7-.14'wormrom
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RBE TOPICS,
CLEVELAND Leader : It s. a curious fact
• that very few women are victims of sun.
,atroke or heat apoplexy. Is itgr. question
of exposure to the sun, of long Snd short
• hair, of diet, including drinks, or „what does
melte the difference so marked
LORD PRASSEY, haying inade a preeent to
the town of Hastings of a building for an art
school and'pablio library, to cost $75,000,1t
has been suggested that the institution'be
oalled the De Breed Free Library, after the
imaginary ancestor- of the Breaseys. ' •
• FASHMN, like histery,repeate itself. Th.
resident jn Cileritte, and the fourth, 'MK
Herbert Gladstone, born in 1854, le 11,1e.
for a division of•Leeds and distinguished in
political life. The eldest daughter, Agnes,
Was married „ len to ',lir. V4101116;34
head ,master of Wellington College; the
second is marled to Rev. Henry Drew
the youngest, Helen, is Principal ,of the
College for Women at Newnhamr near
Cambridge. •
• ONE of. the leading candy manufacturers
tells a hIew York reporter that there is
more moneyin molasses candy at the
Ordinary selling price than in any other
kind. Close to „molasses candy °Onus
chocolate drops; caramels and other candies
• oxydised sliver chains and ornamentsthatin wherh sugar and chocolate or plain
.yere, in vogue during the. . palmy, days of: flavors are the ingredients. . The., candies
Herculaneum and Pompeii are now the -on- Whiblithere-iktlieTeaet profits Ln pro -
fad, for ladies' wear; and the pulled sleeves
that obtained " when George the, Fourth
was King" are ornamenting the arms of
the elite., , .•••• w • 1,
New YORK Sun 1.. enticing eirounistance
is before no now in the feat that the
- Supreme.' Court of the State is running
-concert saloon down in the Bewery. The
proprietor faired and a receiver has been
Appwited-by-the 'court. to runtheinaohine. elaborate Frerarhoonfectie
portion to the selling price are those which
sell high: The best confectioner's sugar
costs but little over six cents a pound, and
the best grades of molasses are not dear.
These and a little flavoring' make molasses
candy, and that is why there ill 'so much
profit in it.. When you come right down to
it; children and adults with "he sweet
tooth," care more for molasses and plain
eandies than they do for tire expensive and
. , to make money for the settleinent with the / • '
creditors. Tne common assertion that braes can-
,
Evesr year sees a revolt staited againil not--be---tempered--ie meta
by-- ---w • e
rit r n
black broadcloth -se -a basis•forrnen's even-
ing dress. This year no ' less a personage• .
than E. Berry Wall, known te, fame as the
King of the Dudes, is at the head of the
rebellien. He has appeared in a Saratoga
ball -room attired in a coat and trouser
of wine -colored' cloth, and a waistcoat of
white satin breoade. , ••
Cluariar Looms, a. llamas City, esloon-
keeper, has anchored a boat in the exact
centre of the Missouri River; where he sells
, whiskey without paying license. He claims
• that no •-one cam . ascertain under what
jariediotion he does Imeiness. Several
attenipts have been inade to, convict him
; under, the law, but Cad' time he eica.ped.on
the ground of non,jutiediotion. The Mis-
souti Prohibitioniste have made at least
one MD take water. .
PennAr's theincretestektion &hart Niegarti
Fall& writes a correspondent, is at the
ripper' sitspeesion . bridge Say there are
• four of you in a • carriage. The charge lie
Mechanical Progress with a statement cover-
inghis own experience daring a long period.
Braes, he aseerts, not hard by mixture,
but by compression,- either rolling, ham-
mering, wire drawing, or any other pro-
cess which compresses the particles of
Metal; can be and, is • tempered regularly;
just as easily and in the same manner as
in tempering an equal piece of hardened
steel, namely, by heat; that is, by placing
a small piece of polished steel on the braes
object to be tempered, and applying the
heat so as to affect 'equally the brassancl
steel, the temper of the brass will be made
known by the color of the stool, and, 'con-
sequently, brass may by this process be
tempered in exact proportion to every Chede
of color of the steel. • ' •
Gaziens WOLBELET holds4thpoet eg
r 4 ,
44Intent,Genered of the .Dfito
an annual ' salary of 418,500:: Marshal Von Von Moltke„ who pe
gameduties in the German e,
08,000 is ptdd, end the Adjutant-
Wind forethadote the nature' • the Multi
attainable,, The oubio hulk 1MA that
will henceforth, be req for marine
steam engines Will be reduced by 70 per
cent., giviag a gain to the extent indicated
:by that proportion to the stowage space
for cargein ocean, goieg.steamshipe. Tbe
time for raising 'steam will be diminished
in all steam boilers, stationary or marine;
by at least two-thirds. The cost ef fuel
consumption will be redue,ed by. rnore than
one-half, and the production of smoke Will
be absolutely annihilated.. The process
has been maole the enbject of actual expert,
mental demonstration. Every test- has
been applied. The results We have given
above are the under -stated consequencee of
experiments made under circumstances the
reverse .of favorable to the invention._
IT was in 1868 that the Moabite stone
•
was discovered. It was found at Dibau, in
Moab. The supposition has been formed
that it was erected by Mesh& King of
Moab, mentioned in II. Kings vii. The in-
scriptions have always been understcrod to
refer to his wars with Israel in the tenth
century B.C. The stone, which exists only
in fragments having 'been broken by the
contending Arab claimants, is preserved in
the Louvre. IreY:lar:Lowry,13ecretary-of_
the Anglo -Jewish Association, in an article
in the last number of the Scottish Review,
prod:Cairn; the text�finsoriptien-tebo
&fabrication. Accordieg to this writer,
who has carefully, exammed the stone, , and
who furnishes, an illustration, "the
'dressed surface is ancient, whereas in-
scription is modern." Tho 'surface is pitted
and indented, in consequence of thousands
of years of exposure. Not se the inscrip-
tions. The text is given•in Hebrew, With a
translation. The writer pronounces the
text to be "egregiously un-Sebraio," and
arrives at the conclusionthatnotwithetand-
ing its world-wide, glorificationthe Moabite
stone isa "atone of stumlrling," and must
be consigned to the limbo of marvellone, im-
• HERE is an exceedingly good story from
the Boston Herald and are a good
many poople who ought to paste it on their
n ,Firrefe; A prominent newspaper publisher
,Ofhis-oity,-who-has-gained-fame- also in
Viiiiriirjr world, cmtold' me that he
dared it an affront ter any One to say
Now, don't print this in your
"hi the otrnreapef .anY. conversation
dalsoomb*csextnefeea,
. tin reu entiroly
to, no Matter jilrateireicid,•:%k
, but . a newspaper man
res private affairs and . personal
fee in just as 'Muirli • as any one
else, /if he is a man of principle. To
be thought differently of always reminds
me of the story.,of the musician and an
eminent surgeon whir met one evening at a
sooial entertainment. The surgeon said to
the musical genius: ".0f course you have
brought your violin." "No, I have not,"
said the musician. "But . are- .you not
lity involved', in a' Volunteer d. going to play or do something to add to the
''...7x.a5sergazaischic254,erfWfor4hatemor.serid Iheerrouthcgmyaccelyvgets 1000.
(85' Sfitiellipiffille4ftentiers---Wasftillla
- , ,tlatt- is caarroW API lad othatgiquis TiktUkfti*ICK0':oi the
Vehiclee cannot pass on it. If that bridge' commanders .the 'world' has ever
trorporeticin. has a Foul an improved .teles- was getting less than 60 per bent. of Lord
"eope will have to be built to discover it. ' Wolseley's pay for directing the staff' of an,
• Tire citizens of Buffalo haVe. resolved array fifteen guitar as large as the British
• once incre to chain Niagara Falls for menu- force, I was necessary for the mutual
• .
•
fsoturfug purposes, says 'the spongfiat admiration society , that exists in •the
Republican. A fund is being raised to secure British War Office to break the force of the
estimates. But why. spend inevitable odious comparison. 'Colonel
'engineering
of New York State once drew- up Plans for dinates, justified the large salary paid to
Kmix, Me of Lord woisnleY's. :staff' subor-
money in procipecting, for plank? A citizen
a huge wheel it the falls.' with a theft his chief on the ground that the latter was
running through to, Albany to which all burdened with" the enormous responeibi-
the belting of the State could be attached.
• The inventor died in. an insane asylum, but
his idea remain& But seriously, the tran
Mission of power by,. electricity is likely to
work Out problems as big as this. •
A Lormint correspondent reports that
Emily' Faithful has come up from Man-
chester. to London, at the Queen's "cora:
mend; to present Her. Majesty with the
address which she ninvecd in the Qteren'e
honor. 'It is a gorgeous affair, bound in, a
foot -square 01 ivory, exquisitely painted by,
Miss Charlotte Robinson (Miss Faithful's
present companion), with superb GlOire de
• , Dijon roses, which the Q.uecin decrees sball
henceforth he called " Jubilee roses." Miss
Faithful looks extremely well; and she says
she is amen:tally happy. • The miles of the
Queen seem to be as vivifying. as sunlight.
1 .
Tits prevalence of :meaoleti in some parte
of the world, and its fatality, have moped
health ' authorities to such an affirmation
..,of the necessity of reetricting the !Tread of
this disease that official steps are being
, taken for. the attainnient of thio end. A
repent (recurrence at Portsmouth, England,
makes the necessity for this work more
emphatic: . H.M.S. Crocodile arrived at
that place with forty persons crick- with
mesales, on board, who were permitted to
land. From these individuals thedisease
: has spread to • an epidemic, and at lest
• reports the panther of 'deaths wee' 19/.
THE discovery has been mads, it is said,
of a great eivindle in railroad ties, of which
-the Mielouri Pacifie system of roads is the
Chief yictim.--:-Thesiperators_in_it_have,A,
is alleged, taken 31,000,000 out of the
, treaeurpof the roads more than the legiti-
•mate value of thelies. .Thechiof oontrac,
• tors for the ties etiblet their. contracts in
A such a way that they got about 10 cents a
tie more than they paid at first hand. Ties
which were worth from 21 to 28 center they
sold to the roads for 30 cents. The Chicago,
Burlington rt Quincy and the RockIsland
roads are believed to be also great losers.
, 'MRS. ORD; widow of the late genera 0
, •
that name, he.s recently sold for 81,400 the
, able upon which Grant and Lee signed the
papers providing for the surrender Of the
% rebel armies. The purchaser is, cr. Mr.
•Gunther, of Chicago. General Ord secured
poeireeirion of thetablii'at the of • the
' surrender and his widow obtained a letter
• from General Grant attesting its genuine-
ness which, we simpose, goes ' with the
table. and inCreaciesits value. The sum of
03;000 was asked • for the . table until re2,
cently. It is, a Coirimen enough piece of
'furniture in itself but valuable on. account
otitit historic associations. r .
A reerry young Worcian'e.. sleeping' •car
experieece is related in that department of
the 'American Magazine where only true
stories are placed:: I always lie with my
head very for front and My feet neat . the
wall. One night I was awakened by some
orie 'stepping on my nose as k It lay on the
pillow. You can imagine 'my wrath. I
never field a word, but gave the foot , the
most spiteful plinth, that sent,it after
ite Owner with an exclamation point. ,The
, next day, hea, Yeti dapper young rutin—',.
Set Opposite Me all day, and, actually; the
• mean thing never moved without limping
Aad it couldn't have hurt 'him that bad,
could it 1" ' • _
Mn. GLADSTONE has four eons and three
• -
daughters: . The eldest eon, Mr. William.
'Henry Gladstone, was ban in 1840 ; he is
' :married, to a daughter of Lord Blantyre,.
:The second is the Vicar Of aawarden,
Stephen Edward Gladstone, Who WAS last
Year Married to a Liverpool lady. The
third, Mr, Ifenry Neville Gladstone, nreantinte We can only in the brook general ' brothers,
army„ an , .. • .
appereatly this . annalrle quibble wart
eoceptable to the Army Investigation Com-
mittee. - 1: • . ' ' . _..L. .. - -
'Tim cholera in Sicily • and . Calabria is Pf
a More virulent type apparently than Italy
has • known. sines 1884:- Thus far only
sporadic, ineotaplete reports are obtein?
able, but, as the rimed of the1afeoted area
is incessant, we are likely scam . to. hear a
good deed of it., . Tho strongest phase of the
thieg ie that - it Iihoild reappear for the (4,
'third.. tioneecutive •yeti.rf practietilly on the - •
'r'through the. heart, or . through the heart
,.-. rat and afterward through the brain, has
dently given' rise to . ninth diecussion
Same territorV; which, hitherto. been•-,4itioeg physicians.: It is universally agreed
unheard 'Of. ' PhYsiciana in . Londtm. aro. that such a thing iti possible. ' It is popii-
getting nervous about tho. poesibilitY: of the: lolly kipper:4ml that .wounds of , the :heart
plague getting a foothold in the metropolis, --Oa
pr um instent death. -Such' id not always
owing to the unprecedentedly favorable . inc case. ' One. ihOSIICEI ia recorded' wero
conditions, Daring. the heated term of the , &man stabbed another, in, the. heart„ and
PILO. rex :Weeks the Weekly deaths frora , the injured Men &Agee Ilia assailant 150
diarrhces in the Londen district have gone brat; 'struck him, nearly killed.hirn, fell and
tin frOm 9 to,312-7.of this latter nutriber.265 died'in an irritant: In airtither3nritance a
being infants :tinder 7 1- year of. age. ,The. . man stendine_beltifid,IfetiorIntier of his -
'Pincer -points that one of the ' Surest store Wire Shot. in the heart. ile:ran emend
precursors a cholera in a en 'district is .the,counter,. a distance of 20 feet, hit the
the tendency to diarrhoraie . fatality, 'Itnq..ri Man .who had shot him. On the hektd viith A
urges the utmost vigilance: ' . hammer and killed bin:I by a blow: . Still,
.- Sr. PnrErt's Entice* Oilmen. :at North ' e,nother case, is.on record in Which a ballet.
'Greenfield is probably the ofillleirg154-tirssed-theough-therheirrand the. subjeot„
'edified) in • Wieoonsin. which .• depends upon. kboy; Hied three years and ',some menthe
olierimagne bottles for its 'drainage. When afterward.' As . a . rale: serious - injury
the: ' ober& was built funds. were . very to the brain is followed by immediate logs'
tioarce,.. and Many 'smell economies . were 0f• consciousness, but that 41 not invariably
practiced.,. The . Congregation on :first the case. It '•is told of e Man who, after
occupying . their . place ,of wotelrip found.:sheeting his wife; shot himself through the
that it • was ..unconifertably damp. Tho:! head, but never becarne• Ime,cinecieue, and
fact Was mentioned to the late George ,apparently recovered, He Was crentto the
'Stevens,. who said: •"'" I'll tell you hew tee, penitentiary, and nyeerlater died of ab-
reniedy that.. GO into ray 'Cellar and yon, ROSEI of the brain.. 'A .physician . in St.
will find' 'enough' .. champegne. bottler' to Leiria who reports this,ease 6106' describer;
ballet a drain. with. '.' They are . often. need, another—that of . a boy of 8. or 9 years Of
:for that ' Puri:wee 1n. England; and when age, Who put a pistol to:his head,and fired.
once laid *finest !forever, if not allowed it waederminettated by probing that ,the
to choke up." . The bottles were seciured, bullethad lodged in the brain*,- and yet' this
the bottoms deftly knocked, off, and the bay never lost e,on:sciemenessdnit recovered,
.neoks abbreviated in :length, Then; :by and seven ' menthe after was • reported as
, piecing 'the neck Of one bottle: in the. perfectly well. Many cases similar to these
bottom of ' another, and 'semi, a -drain was are on record:. They have an. ini.portant
tett-which hair kept the little church medico -legal hearing. If a man re found
" extra dry " ever since.- . ' ' deakehot throe ir the head and heart, One
entertainment of Mrs. Blank's guests?'
asked the physician. "1 had not thought
nf it," said the violinist, "but if you -will
out off a leg, rwill play emnething. * That
musician was a wise man: I wish he might
cret an example to a good 'many others; it
would save some people a good deal of
Tan question; 00,11 an individual shoot
himself through the hied and afterward
mo. on diversity . of. op' bijou' exists as to would naturally aseume t a he had been
. . - murdered, and yet, as will appear from the
the utility of iron shutters..Itis napiestion-
foregoing • a suicide may inflict both
ably tette that they are not only undesirable wounds upon himself.
but positively dangerous under certain dr- ; - .
ounrstancem- Many fires have been concealed •- . A rest Wonder. in Heaven.
by them until they have attained .great There Hired near Alexandria, in Virginia
headway, and then the shutters have, kept an old colored man and Wonien,vehom their
the firemen out for some .time longer, At acquaintances celled •Daddy -and Mammy
thesaine • tinie, for keeping fire out of a.. Williams. He had had educational advert-
building,when a - neighboring one is burn, taps, andcould read in a fashion Peculiarly
ing, they are positively Invaluable. Almost , his even ; but his wife, although lacking as
every eine has ' witnessed fires where tb° regardk erudition, possessed great force of
firemen have had a fierce struggle to get character, which she often diaplayed in -a
ineide the' building,. and has wished tiM, manner that ' waiii• very irritating to her
iron shutters were not there to preventthe husband. When etre became particularly
easy handling of the blaze. But ceTtartY-fractione Daddy Would take the Bible and
e"erY one, toe; has Been ca.€638 of buildings Open to that Chapter in BeYeletion, begin -
with inflammable_.goodeAnlect „IIP near the ,fling, "And there apPeo.red a great wonder
Windows, which would '11°A.'°' Pa° down m 'in heaven, a woman clothed with the sun,
a lire, destroying flour buildings elm° by, and the Moon, under her feet," etc. :
if the abetters had not presented a non.:1 With impressive solemnity he would read
-burnable surface to the flames. -ABA !DSC. as follows: "An' de're 'peered agreat Worr-
ier of fad,' there IS no flood re'as°71 ,wbr 9°0 der, in beben, a woman !" Slowly closing
shutter, et least, on each story, of a build- the book, -ho would gaze sternly at his now
ing above.thefiret, should not always be subdued wife, for the paeolage neve' failed
left tiefasterred,A9' afford, entry to the fire- to produce the --desired effect::—.8diterfsa.
men in case of neecr,--iii-lelargely the prao Drawer in Halves. . •
•
titre in, Bogie large cities. . , , ,
, ‘ AX English • paper eaya,i "Wo are in a * • 4Another of Those Ol11 taws.
position to state that the county of Durham ?denied men are warned that thelaW of
Will shortly ptoduce a atertling ecOnotnic 1741 prohibits the kissing of their wivee On
lt f fi d In '
' mo SLEET 'nfPA:EATIETV1INwoo '
&Montilla.* Editor's Thrilling Eight in, niiti
rant Eotelo •
knew a good joke on an editor ,,frOM
/lelena, M. T„". said a conductcrrmi the St.
Paul, "and I guess I'lihave to tell it. He's
a colonel, but •„I shan't give you his last
name; Last week he came into St; Paul
on business, and, after k•egistering at the
-best hotel in town,started out to see the
eights.' It was about 2 o'clock in themorn,
ing when he returned, a little the worse for
wear, It happened that the. night porter
who showed him to his room was only
about half Awake, and withoet knowing
what he was doing, ushered the colonel into
the bath room attached to his apartment
armigned.te_hie use, muttered _ _Genight..
'air, and disappeared. Next morning at
the breakftret table the Montana journalist
met an acquaintance, eta said to :
Fine hotel, this.' •
"'Yes, one of the best in the country.'
• " ' Do you like their new•fangled. beds?'
" Their -beds a
didn'klinow there,
there.'
"' Well, they've got t
my roorayeu ever set eyes
likes -coffin, and there wasn't
of cover on it: : I wee colci all
truethat...whena feller gets
night he don't.have to get out oft
a drink, but the.worstOf it was inmy
that it was just my darned luck to leave
the thing rtinnin' a_little, the • last timetook a drink out of it, an' when woke up
again I was nigh drowned in cold water.
-Never spent each a miserable night in my
"—Chicago Herald. "
, ell right, though I
ything new about
trdest bed in
' It's more
lamed bit
t. It's
'•An_ the
bed for
J'"" -------
improvement in. the wetter of fuel coni: Sundays under plea .y o tie an. prx-
header-tend theheating ,Ofirteani, boilers. Soninent. • Few reamed Men are guilty of
Protection has been obtainer for 'the -the offence, but it won't de any harm to
invention, and in the eourse of a short...Cali trttentionto the Ant.—Pittsburg raid.
tiro° we shaltbe in a position to lay before ",
our readers -the petictical detail& 16 the The Governors of Idaho and Nevada are
A Toronto Sbop-lifter's Big Haul.
Maud Mitchinson; , a rather nice -looking
and neatly -dressed English girl, was
arrested by Detective Black in Toronto
yesterday for shoplifting. Two largo
packages. of goods, embracing everything
from a; ftne tooth ocimb to baby's lace
bonnet, were described at police head-
quarters'ae the proceeds of her work Tues-
day in stores on yeinge and Queezietteetri.
In the parcels there 'were babies'', !hoes, a
package silver;plated- forks,...a., red linen
tablecloth, a pair of Masora, a whisk, cr,
cake of toilet soap, and a kora of other
small things. ',Art. of the stuff Warr1ound
on her whed she was arrested,' 'part of it
was recovered at her inothees bellee,A9
King street. ' • •"
cts.47.,
EMolgjadlig:4WilitifkazaklijigWVICAP
asked InspeciterStark:
"1 don't exactly ,know," he answered.
" This is Merely yesterday's haul." '
.. The girl has only beenbut from England
a short while.
Why Laura Lost lier' Beau.
Laura once had an affluent bean,
Who called twice a fortnight; or 60,
Now she sits, Sunday eve,
All lonely to grieve, ,
- Oh, where is her, recrersnt bean.
And why did he leave Laura se? •
Why, he saw that Laura was a languish-
ing, delicate girl, subject to sick headaches,
sensitive nerves and uneerteintemper; and
knowing what a life-long trial is a fretful,
sickly wife, he transferred his attentions to
her cheerful,beiathy cousin Ellen. • The
reacret is that Leer/err health' and strength
are sapped by chronic ,weakness, peauliar
to her sex, which Ellen averts and avoids
by: the use of. Dr: Pierce's Favorite Pre-
scription. . This is the only remedy, for
wonian'e peculiar weaknearres arid ailments,
sold by druggists, under . positive
guarantee from the manufacturers, that it
will give satisfaction in every MSS • or
money will be refunded. See guarantee on
bottle,wrapper. •
• •
. —A tOtal., ecliptics of the sun will take
place on the 13th of next month, but will
only be visible in Europe and Atria. It Will
last four minutes, and great preparations
have been made by the European astrono-
mers who observeit at its. totality, which
will be in Japan,.:
To .".cure a7" -Corn. •
There is no lack Of so-called cures fOrthe
common ailment known is. corns: The
vegetable, animal, and mineral kingdoms'
have been ransacked for cares. It, is a
simile matter to remove corns • without
pain, for if you will go to any druggist or
medicine dealer and buy a bottle of Pat-
nam'a Painless Corn Extractor and apply
It asdirectedthe thing is done. Get "Put-
Illira So". and no Other. ;
Forty-fiVe years age. Elam Brown pur-
chased a, ranch from Spaniard in Contra
Costa con*, California, and he has lived
on it crier since.-. lie is 90 years old. .
t 0Ontradietion.
•Sorne on• told you that your catarrh
is inourab 1*. is not • so. Dr. Sago's
Catarrh l'tererelly will cure it. It is pleas-
ant to use and it always does its work
thoroughly. We have yet to hear of 'a• case
in which it did not accomplish a Cura,when
faithfully peed: Catarrh lea disco:60**MA*
it is dangerous to neglect. ,A certain
reniedy is at your command: Avail your-
self of it before the complaint assumes a
more serious form. All druggists.
The Latest Idea in Dress Coate. '
At the Newport Caren() dance on Friday
night (July ,15th) ,several 7gentlemen ap-
peared in ,the latest style of 'dress coat, just_
brought over,from England—a short, round'
Coat in place' ,of the' conventional' mallow-
rork Herald.
•
life•7440•01,k'sid, theaola•
(Bridgeport ((lollop) Standard.)
' " Braking of clever things," ontle gala *
Mr. threeher, "did you ever hear that
'Witty , •writtlux twenty years ago on
my name? Here, ma he • AlWaY8 called
Mrs. Beecher ma] you read ft to Perkins;
I've forgotten the words." Mrs. Mrs. lateechar
smilingly' put on her ,glasses, went to a.
drawer, took out a bit of paper and laugh,
ingly read: • . ••'
Said a great Congregational preacher. •
TO, a hon: " You're a beautiful createre."4.
, ' -The lien ;est for that - '
Laid three eggs in his hat,
Anil thus did the hen reward Beecher. •
O
Origha
.1.0V;COS •
Awe wik.‘11 o, tavER.
tb .p.uLLO.
pkyranp: LH/ TA TIbNa, .4.BW.01.11r
441If .70R nit. .p.r.th;Orips pEzmcrilf
.zzrizE tirN.Ait-coitzgr, PILLS. 4
ilelng :entirely vegetable, they '43/4
„gra0. 471,102ClUt 'disturbattee to the system, diet,
or occuPtition. Pitt up In "glebe bermetl
eally sealed. Always fresh and reliable. As .
a-laxati*e_:,alt:crative,or_prirgati_W
these little -pellets' *give , the most *al
satisgsetion, • , ' •
MK HEADACHE.
_
Hiltons Iffeadaeitre
Conatipa.
along ......Iiadigestion_,
Bilious Attaclusgand all
derangements of the Stom-
ach and bowels, are prompt-
ly relieved and permanently
'cured by the use of Dr.
IPlerce7s Pleasant.Pargative Pellets.
In explanation Of the remedial power of these
Pellets over so .great 'variety of diseases, it
may truthfully besaid that their action upon'
the sYetem Is universal. not a gland or tissue.
erreagaiir‘their-;.-eanative-Innuence, Sold by
&a 15 cents ' Manufactured at the
Che cal Laboratory of WORLD'S DismalAIIT.
MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Buffalo, N. Y.
0 REWARD
,Isiatisred by the manufactums
-enief-Dr..,SageN_Csatarrit
RtilNiedt, for a case Of
Obrotdo "Nasal Catarrh which
iannot cure. •
STIIIP7C010 Olt CATAIIIVIC-
heavy headache, oblitruction of .tho' nasid
essages,, ,disebutzet gouing-trom the lieag
tukthe Otbroat,(4=ialmosvairense.Twatoryck;
,and=rideaVtthersitlikk.tenttiousiZajW.011uk.r""*--,
cpurniont, bloody rand.,-Vatatth; ,4.44the,seyes 44ara
weak, watery, and infiained; there is ringing ,
in the ears. deafueris, hacking or coughing to
clear ;the ' throat, ex ration. of offengdve
matter, together wit
voice is changed' and hat
breath, is' offensive; ,sme
paired; there is a sensati
mental depression, a bac
eral debility. Only a few
symptoms are likely' to
case. Thciusands of cas
4•7"4""
' ".4 Be ate green Cucumbers
They' made him quite sick;
But he took a few" Pellets ?
That cured him right quielc:'
An easier physie
You never will find
Thats,Pierce's small "Pellets,"
Tho Purgative kind.
,
Small but precious. • 25 cents per 'vial.
Objects to Pull press.
One of the.strongpoints of P. C. Chap -
man's evidence against Bessie MeAllister
for keeping tt disorderly house at 69 Agnes
atreefwas that the defendant Was awl' with
here 'Irma and shoulders. ,Couneel for the
defence asked the witness if he had ever
been at a full dress party: From his answer
ii appears that he had not been at one. it
was proven that the house bore a bad repu-
tation. A fate Of $26 and costs or 40 dayri
wag ifiilieted.—rabete Maii. "
•,'A shark recently captured in San Vran,
lobsteta...
•
from nleers; the •
• twang; the
laste-are-im---
eas. with
h and, gen- ,
ve-named •
bin any one
nallY without
manifesting half of the "0 syMptotiae,.re-
suit in consumption. and end in the -Owe.
No disease is so common, more deceptive and
dangerous. or less understood by pity ChM&
By its mild, soothing, and healing proeit
Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures 4the wo
eases of Catarrh, 66 cold fit the bead,"Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache.
Sold by druggista everywhere; BO cents.
•
411Untold'Agour from Catarrh.”,
Prof. W. '11Aurnota, the famous mesmerist. .
'of Ithaca, N. Y., writes: "Some•ten years ean
I suffered untold agony from chronic nasal
catarrh. My family physician gave me up as
incurable, and said I must die. My case was
such a bad one, that every day. towards sun-
set, my' voice would become so hoarse I could "
barely speak above a whisper. In the morning
my ceUghing and clearing of my throatwould
almost stoingle me. By the 1180 of Dr.'Sage's
Catarrh Remedy, in three months. I was,a well
man, and the cure has been permanent.'
if Conitantly Ilawking and Spitting."
THOMAS J. RUSHING, Esq., 2908 Pins Street,
St. Louts. Mo.. writes: "I was a great sufferer
from catarrh for three years. At times I could
hardly 'breathe, and was constantly hawking
and spitting, and for the last eight months
could notb. reathe through the nostrils I
thought nothing could be done for me. Luck-
ily, I was advised to try Dr. Sage's Catarrh
'Remedy. and I am now a well man. I believe
It to be the only sure reniedy for catarrh now
manufactured, and one has only to give it a
fair trial to experience astoundg results and
a permanent cure." .
•Three Bottles Cure Catarrh.
Rom!nte, Runuan P. 0., Columbia Co..
Pa., says: 'My daughter had catarrh when
she was five years old, very badly. I saw Dr.
'Sage's Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pro -
Cured a bottle for her, and soon saw that it
helped her; a third bottle effected a perma.:.
nent cure. She is now eighteen years old and
sound and hearty." •
D 0 N L. 824 87.
Merchants •
Butchers
..... ,
AND ./IBADERS'GBrili14.'LLY,
We Want a GOOD 4.1iN in your locality to Pick up '
. .
. •
'), • :' • CALPSKINS
For tut. Cash furnished oix satisfactory guaranty!
Address C. S. PAG, Hyde Perk, Vermont, U. S
eisco Bak obntaiire •ppck of young
1
'hives positive relnody tor the above Bs to5.
thousands of codes Of the, Worst glad ell of long,itandIng •
Miro been Cored. Indeed, se strong te my filth In.tto
.Macy,tbat I will send TWO BOITLFD FREE, together
With"a VALUABLE TREATISE oh this Wiesen to nit, .
.serer. Olve expecer mid V,. O. Address:
13ranoh Office, 37 Tonga Tavato.
DB. ALOOIrtd,
1044%,
THE COOICP,PTFP1FNI,
II'
! tide& I mitt titre I do net meld' morel, to ei,03 them W.&
tittle *14 theirhadiS thein rettirn Again. t metal A fedtetat , ..
ewe: I hitito Wade the 'Meanie of PITS, ErILEPST OPALS..
tea, SICKNESS & Itfe.hing study. LWarthitt inY remedy
lontire thit itotet Oefee. Peeiitte&OtliOte S.oto 1i1,444 4. 00
resubn for tiot.rooi feed On& II core. deed At once tor to
treatleo and it Pree Bottle ot mY thrall Ode. rernedY. Of,*
Expteet awl 'I'fist Catch, . It:taste 14;11,1'1000ot tor 4 l'14
t,
114d I will elite YOU. -'Addr it LEI II, G. BOOT,
Btalictqfflpe, 31, ..otte St41 Teollo.,..,
,