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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1888-03-09, Page 7cm- - vv.r.vegiAviEL e REWARD;. " 1,104.oikir.. 01.** irAgE4104%: A,DAVOHTEJEt 817E8 FOE 195peocE . ,.--.:.-„-......1 t•-,-. • •. .A., Visit In the .Castle Wheramitebeth Slew Matraortlituury 'Amgen for Libel Against Or. the }Was Plot. .. a pinienn in ,lais. Sleep., , • Slanderous Pape. They Outdo a pretty couple as they too Whether Maeheth killed' Duncan, hieYesterday, before JUdge, BaYleY and a in the Ernadow of the vine -covered cottage eouilin, et .Invernese or at Ilotgoswane, Or jury, thecae° Of "Stokes vs. Stokes "game in that quaint old German town. A fair- at his paternal cliflitle of •Glainnlis, :Ws. leet on for hearing It was an action brought ' haired 01, with flaxen hair and violet eyes will, ever the readiest appeal to the imagin. by Mies Laura Stokes to recover from, her .and the sun -browned yohtb, in pictureseve titian as • the fit Beene Of the COO? 0. • •ChrOnit• father the sem of 25,000, no damages, for . . . , • . , ' garb,. at her side. . The, girl was saying,'es okra and antiquerielf '1314Y tPerefOre saY ltiliel and Blander. It appeared that. fhe, she smiled through her tears: "1 Wish I what they Pleaaa ; the romanCer will ever plaintiff lived with her father ,and r mother Were a man., Conrad. r would go with you associate Glartunie with the ghastly story. both in London and: Brighton; 'The libel ' to the ware. Whatwillyonr poor mother ...The owl 04* shrieked" was in the ivy Of consisted in dafeadaat_ writing lettere do in your absence ?" .. . the, cdammje. watch tower. .LadyApkeheth, em. onting ovit his daughter awe his - "1 'Shalt expect you, Zine; to 0011IfOrt with treMbling.assurance, steed enfainilier money and 'pawned his goo& to fhearnount her in my EtbseheV he eaid;,sadly. " See flooring when ehe 'whispered to herself: of from £30 to £40 per week. The, plain - these gold pieces'," -opening his. purse. 1'• I 1' He isabout it.'! Nearly S011 years have tiff denied that she . had ever stolen her " „ . shall lbave her with ,entiugh money for solne peeped singe Meoheth 'Wes king, and Glean- father's money or pavnie4 his goods, tillie time toaorne," , minqaetie WU Btandg• It lenot quite the had greatly Buffered through her father'sAs the time for parting. drew • neer and gloomy beetle-l*owed sort of pile one Would statements. Mrs. Stokes, the mother of they had '3'1°114140 a Wit embrace? .Zina wish it to be; but it ifi, suggestive enough said firmly.; the plaintiff, stated that she was security , . for minds in tench With the nietsPhyldeal• for her idaughter's • coats in this action. !E whatever haPPena to YO4 i will be YOU: walk for a. mile froM the • little Her hashand's statements shout. the e.. If. God wills it that you,fall in battle railway station Of (Hamm_ is (about twenty plaintiff had become a by-wOth in Brighton. 1. Shall live faithful to yotir memory as if miles. east Of Perth), of the- very The defendant had made those .statements Z. were your vildoW;" . : • • flattens' advertisement' Of patent .sheep before the workpeonle in ' Coventry street. SO they parted With heavy ;warts, he te, dip; upon' ite walla OaYa ecIdlY,la the The tronble between htrir and the defendant. the ware and she to the dull routine of her momory ; yon follow a highroad like any arose through witness geeing. himwith a 'daily life- ', - - . `. . other 'high road. .With a lahdeeaPe of : dr women, at the Inventions gzhibition. . The .. Zine was also beloved by another Village Copses ,and blue hill to the • right and the defendant was a , very wealthy meh., He youtio Heinrich Altman, and the news that Glammis 'woods of ash, oak; beech and wal- .. was now living with another woman. 13he Conrad had gone to the wars Ailed him with nut bounding the road On the Other side, had no vindictive' feeling against the do - now hope. He was the telegraph operator and at the, end Of the mile the woed, breaks fendant. The Blender whichhe had uttered • in town and through his hands • Passed all to embeeem the oastleledge and the cantle about the plaintiff wee known at Brighton ., tue.telegrame_frnnithe,neet, of war :for the gate.- Here the person Of sentiment maY gat as well as in London. morning paper. He brought Zino all the a pleasurable shook. The Glamniie entrance The defendant, Mr. Stokes; was called, , news: • . ' • ; . is as rbidding milt ought to be. Imagine and gave, a complete dental to the charge of One day he brought her the'copy of a a low, machicolated building/ somberly libel, He deposed that he hod, rreceiveddesPatch describing how Conrad had aeted Mossedatald weather -stained, rteieg. hi the •considerable Provocation front Mrs. Stokes' in a eowi.rillY manner. during an engage- n2iddie To a darkPertal astern; undecorated. and the plaintiff as from his other children. natant, Zino refused to believe a word of it stone., with, for a garnish upon either He was. being continually robbed. s He and told Heinrich to . leave the house at side, the figure of a naked man, life size, Charged his children4ith the robberies, but. standing before a stone lion, with an arm only in a fit of 4,nger. His wife had left As time passed -and no hewe came from outstretched toward the distant hills of him, taking the furniture with her, and he • Conrad., it was rumored - about town that Dtinsinanei From the fashion of their hair was scirved With .two writs. He settled it by . '` : Nie he was disgraced, and Zina's. mother hest the men .niaY' bealicient Gaels.' But, Whet- Making her an allbWance of £6 per week worried her daughter early and late to ever they Are, Glaninds lodge keeper's wife and £500 down. .' Then he, was assailed by , inarrY.Altmatiovlio. had come into money. dislikes :thera. " Otich•l• naked loons I " his son ' At last, nearly crazed by the :oonetant remarked theoldlady With a curl of the He peidiwho asked him for £25 down. him £125. }Di was aoked,to send ' attain Wm her mink •ifie...Made a,sudden lip at them. 'Nor had she sny.rncire respect : a letter of apology, whioh he did, and,not- resolve. : She Would leave home seeretlY .for the Gleiloinie ghost when 1 inquired withstanding this, he , was -served:with a and go and.offer herself aalt 'nurse for the about it "1 ditina belleYe, in theht;" she wounded eoldiere, and thue by relieving the said., Macbeth and Diploid ihe dismiesed writ: The letter of apology was read in sufferings • Of °there' Mitigate L'Or own peremytorily as idle, tides; excrescences that D T court. by Mr. Kemp, Q.C., who, with Mr, get foisted liPon the castle history, like the and stated lYthanSt°°•:-tunhea,eldtetnidheeetde!hennddalinte! lichen upon its donee. • Her -theory Of the recollection . of saying. that......Lattre (the origin 01 etiehlegendawas iaiiiiPle. In Olden plaintiff) had ribbed him, lint if he had.:he times men were both stronger and adeinnier would fully aliologiro. , ,The letter further than .now; .they•did deeds we would shrink stated: " GotI knOtrs that I have worked Had Conrail'imother een living, Zina would not have had the, Nut to go, for the lonely old woman had been dependent upon her for many kindly services. ' Rut about a week after,Conrad's departure she wasfonnd one morning apparently We deep skep, so tfithigkill Aida Watt iolAd•gZilfer? ' ,r...12414,11XeditOzglletrthkherOfhtintmatfd Great 'consternation' prevailed in the ° • household when Zinn was found to be 'big.' As often lieppens, when it was too .! late to change their course of itotiOn.Zina'S parents regrettei their harshness. -- Heinricih, too, felt the pangs of !sorrow And of unavailing remorse tiathe , saw hot:, useless his plotting had proved, and that it 2--had•brought military to the girl he hived. , He found, that a true heart Will be still • true, though the object of affection be faulty; that to hate the. sin , is net neces- sarily to hate the sinner., ' • As Zina started out shine and unpin- tected - her tedious pilgrimage, often. ' times her heart throbbed with fear as she -met and passed' groups of, rough -looking mem But her, chosen garb of A -Sister• of Charity proved a most effectual safe ghard. The most rude and reiikletie • respected its sanctity and made no attempt to. gaze at the lace sheltered in its senibre When Omit three. days'. jotirney from home she came, upon a temporary hospital *hit% had been fitted up for the accomino- • dation of wounded soldiers. • Here she ,proffered her services, which were :gladly • accepted: . She Watataken at• Once into the ranks ' Of nurses, for the supply was fer short of the dethaiid.''For days she Worked.: • • faithfully among the ,poor fent**. of. one • wird, binding hp their *entitle slid lending' .' sympathizing ear. to their messages for, distant friends. . • • , • ;Then she was Ohanged. to Et,:' different . •ward. As :she 'entered it and glanced pity- ingly around, what was ,her surprise to 800 Conrad's face lying rialeariddisfigtirea Upon one of, the snowy '11 ' She gave an involuntary cry and started forward. Mingled With .her sorrow at sight, of a ghastly Wound which stretched • across ono cheek and extended to the tem- • Ple Was a surging tide of joy it the thought • that here was eVidenc,e: to prove that her confidence had not, been. misplaced. /41-O. Coward could carry a Math like that': He • had received' it. faee to face with his foe; . And, impicuouri from its bright -colored •. r*deeeration :lay upon his .breietr- • gine eedgnized it to he like the one warn • . by swaged veteran tit home, who had won' it by bravery which had Caused him to be ever after incapacitated from active duty; but Which. had made hiwthe one poison in , the place sought ,oui by visitors Of nota- - Often, had heft tiny fingers touched . the old man's precioesbedgereverently and adthiringly, and Gonna were one. „ . 'With the speed of light these . thoughts s. and conoinsione flashed through her mind as she stood beside ,his bed. Suddenly his eyes opened and turned toward her, Oh, Conrad!" .ehe mum:lured, :sinking ;upon her knees beside him, "I am here! •' Do you not know your ()vie Zina?" for a wild fear ,had darted into her mind NO she Met his indifferent, unniettning,stere. Had he- been bereft of reason by that terrible , *mind? But, no; he know the voice, and ' " put for* a Jiand to gropeeithlessly about until it Olosednpon Zina'S slender fingers. . Then he said: ' , . "Thank God that you have come,to nie I" can hear you speak oriee more •before.I die t" , • , Don't talk of dying. I cannot bear it. . I have conae,to take Dila care of 'you thet you will live," sobbed yI do net.wielite live. Do You seethat r am ?' It is bettertor Me to diethiin to. drag out a wretched, burdensome eXiat- •.• ewe." ' • , , The girl bent and covered his hand with passionate Wises: ' , • "Blind or not, it matters little to ad that you are alive: If yeti could only know how I havelenged see you:" • ' 'Froni the day that Zina found him Con- rad began to grow , better, and a few Weeks was able tirbe moved. To the joy of all his friends he rettithed kirne entirely ••crired, evert of his blindness. There was a • great •wedding in the ,chiirch, but Altinan was not therei:--tet ' did the happy couple him. ' Rev. Seth Small's wife died last vreen. et Mill thought netilleg "'Mt them' Glam" hard enough, and it'll; very hard that Laura, inis was not rit Whit .niore' de'servin of .a, 4ca, Atarito,vididiafttauttrat,cgairrotaibm thfinautt,Migalftaroa. .iih'Avf . kattioi,..effoaistAwrghetacmatupAgeic' tkr,a4aaff.44-gramant-AtazAts:Vialltr,tivkit..ttitlipiviaseiturtigi4O-tolotorequaftetfatc met?hran4hraytoirilltuPguY4400e woods'Mrs. `Stoles:, ',The. hitter.bad not aiwaye: . .. . toward the east e itself. .Thereo is no ehew beenliii wife, her real name formerlybeing . toad to Glen:mfg. : One winds tip and dawn Laura Reynolds: !Re had lived with her for .in the copses, frightening a fawn ore hare thirty years. , His children and kits. Stokes from the taiddlatif tha path, and with '' the had insultedhim and annoyed him • for• Acing of linnetti and. thrushes, in the over. . ;lathing trees. . Lord Strathroore,mhen he year* .a4a if he had said ahythingagainst the plaintiff it : was .only „ in • anger. is here; lives in oblivion, untroubled hy Witnespei• from the household Of: the - the tramp of iturtisitive Iettriete. wood ' suddenly . falle and' The, defendant dePosed that they had heatathe . Olen* ends,' • a' defendant callthe plaintiff a , robber, but trout. brook :is (linseed, by. a bridge, and they; .Coneidered. they • were, only.. angry Glenimia castle is before us on a ,glade Of 'words. .Mr: 'Kemp, Q. C. signed that if Velvety Uhl, . aid .. the fir-clad,:'hillecks . a , verdict were 'given for - the plaintiff it: beyotid. it. • Andnow theearlier allusion should be With damages - Of, the timeliest maY„ Well revive.: The castle is old, though coin of ,the. realm. L-Alhe -learned' • counsel: not in . its strp.erirtruotura eef yer.oeld'.- said that the :defeniant's wife was keeping. •Douhtlese,-hewever, 'Maebeth4 foundations . Fp the action Merely for revenge, she 'haw 'are still Lord ' Strathraere's• foundations:, ing quarrelled with the defendant... • Mr. And the .ttie. . truncated • . guaidh°*16° Kemp characterized her .as e,...cruer, *faked Which- , rise a :kW.' feet from thelawn, end vindictive Woman: In the result the' with the ruins ' tenderly irieflt toile.. us. Jeri /mind.' a verdict far: °the plaintiff ; backed a Plunge sonie Ewen or eight can,. demagog, £250,—Lohatiii Daily - News. .: . hulas:. Modern GlamMis .is Of the Gothic • • . .. . so conitnon in Frendinhateaux. A. Multi. tilde. of: "extinguisher. thriets" 'sear at .cArler4tik,GP .4. 8011004.34'ADT. : . , different elevations' trona ' its 'like elate' -' • . • •:•7-,--- . . • : roofing slid at its loftiest part it is Otowned• 1,7; _he Diellenities,Altie , Fening Man Eipeti_ by a dainty cupola, like a rtistid temple Of s. .eaceds: in • Phiesieg ,,iffi Proposal in a Diana; With A, chiseled . balcony. of.. mtich• ; 'E!'"Par .• *a7r. ' • ': • • ' : ' * taste and beauty. The pink stone of ""Yes;" said the Yeutig 'Man as he threw -building is jewelled with Mope escutcheons,' himself at . the feet . of the pretty school - inscriptions and dates.,". One timer is, of 'teacher, :" I love you • and would go to the ,1606•; a florid window is merked.I646, andworld's endfor you," ' .' ' • a later water lob.. Here,one reeds how ' "You ,coold.,not.,:go to the end Of the "Patrick; Lord cilaintrils,..and.D. Anna," 'world . for. mei . James, The world; or the' his 'wife; Made alterations in (mob a year; earth, as it is called, is. round like a ball, and how their succeedor addedto them. slightly flattened at the Poles.': One of : the. One wonders what' Macbeth and hie wife :first lessons . in elementary geography 'is were to . these ‘good people:74W/ Mall' devoted' to the shape Ofthe ,globe: 'Yen Gazette. : ' ' , Meet have atuaied it whiin..juiu Were a •HoW "to Q...... fl......... Bali. ',.:." Of course ' . . . • "And it is no longer a theory. Circum.: , Never 'go to • bed with • `cold or damp navigators have established the fact." : feet,: . , ' • _ . "1 know, but What,I Meant was that Never lean with the back upon anything would. do " anything to please you: Ah! that is cold.. . •.: , ' • Minerva, if yon knew the aching void—" ' 'Never begin Et journey until the breakfast. There is no sue& 'thing, as a void, Janice., hasbeeft eaten: .` • 'Naturo abhors a . vacuum; but admitting : Never take Warm drinks and then briine. that there, could be such a thing, how could 'diately go out into cold. ' .• the void you speak of be a void itthere Was • After exercise of any 'kind hover ride in an ache in it ?'! ' • , • : an open cerriage or hear the window of a "I meant. to Say that my life Will be oar for -a inciment ;it is dangerous to health lonely without you; that •yog are my 'daily or even, life. • • • • .• • thoUght and my nightly dream. I would go • :Never omit regular bathing, for, unless anywhere to be With. you, If you were in the skin is in regular condition, the bold Australia or At thenorth pole I would flito will dose the pores and favor Congestion or yoti,, ' . other' diseasee. • ' • oFjyt, It will be another century before • When 'hoarse, iipesklittle pOti8010 men an fly. 'Even when the laWs of gravi::' Until the hoardenees is recovered from, else tation are • successfully overcome; there the voice may he permanently lest; or diffi.' will remain, says, a late scientific authority,. finlike of the throat be produced. '7 the difficulty of maintaining a balance" Merely, went the beck , by the Bre, and "Well,. at all. events," eirclehned ' the hotter oernitinuci keeping the beek exposed youth, "I've got a pretty fair balance in the to the heat after it has become comfortably' savings bank and. 1 *ant you to be My Warm. TO de otherwise is debilitating. wife. • There . • . , ' Never stand still in cold Weather, especi-f Well, Jairtee, Since you put it in that ally after having taken a plight . degree' of light, i—" . -;) ' •• • • exercise, andalways' avoid standing On ice • ,Let:the certain .fall:-:Bosion Courier. or 'snow,where the person is exposed to the ' cold wind. ' • •• . V.Illieiflizahe from a. warm athiesphete into a cooler one keep , the. mouth .almoet closed, se that the air May he 'tianned by its passage through the hose ere it, reaches the' lungs. , • Keep' the back, especially between '-the shoulder blades, yell covered; also the chest well protected.' In sleeping in a otda room establish Oak., habit Of breathing. through the norie,"and never with the -open rnouth,—Alliericao:Ana '1,9st ' ' • " ' ' No Ear but a Wenn Heart. A bit of intaiicel aneodote WAS, tOld • ine the other day. On the .flret appearance of a famous 'pianist in beaten. Mr. A. found himself, seated in front of his neighbor, Mr. B., whom :he •had always' supposed ent rely devoid of nitteicat taste, but who proved especially - aenionstintive in his applause. In the intermission Mft, A. turned to his seat and observed to the Other : " lam glad you are enjoying the: concert se much. didn't know you cared for muffle to • stroll a degree." " Oh, I. dozeti" Mf.'B. responded wit') 'great frank. need ;•• 14itter all Greek to -me, but I- think one ought to welcome a etranger."—Aosion Letter to MC -Providence Journal. • . r . RessEa's Great Population. • , Adcording„ to the latest report of the Russian Statistical Committee for 1885 the gross population of ,the empire was at the close .of that year 108 787,235. The total urban population ie given it „13,769,000, resident in 1,274 towns. The village's •and perishes contain a population of 77,5440271. There , are only fotit cities in the'empire containing more than 200,000inhabitant5— St. Petersburg, • •Moseinv,'" Warsaw and Odessa, Nine towns have a population varying hetWeeo 100,000 and 200,000, and twenty,4hree towns . between , 50,090 and 100,000. The number of sobolastio institu- tions is 41,492; with a male attendance of 1,850;964, •and of 'females 638,070: Of schools of agriculture and forestry there are only sixteen in the Whole -enipire; with an attendance of 2,156 pupils, or,say, one stich echool, to every 5,861 of. the • popula. tion.—Pall Mall Ga -u,'. , • Ile nest kelieve the Strain. • Little Bobby ,(tired of the service and Whispering to his Mother)—Ma. ' —Mother,=Sh! 'What ielt;detier-7-1 " When we get home can 1 go out in th book ard and holier just once ?" ' • IrliK DOCTOR'S BIX.WEISIIA • • . orleioas Troubles That Beset the Fend; , BUdicel Men. The individual, no matter what his pro feseion may be, who imagiaes that he i going' to give satisfaction, to the genera Public in anything he may undertake i certainly the victim Of a delusion. It i impossible to please everybody. The man be his statioh, life what it may, wh comes hp to the expectation of the multi thde, has not yet been born. The editor in, particular, soon makes this discovery The clergyman also knowEi that there at people in his congregation who are neve eatiefied with what he does or leaves un don. The dootor another ,professiona man who has a hard row to hoe. If doctor dresses well and , wears as high hat people say that he is, a medical dude. If on the other hand, he pays little or n attention to his toilet, then he Remised 0 lack of dignity. If he goes into society attende balls and parties, then the impres- sion is that he is fiettiog for popularity. I ho does not he is accused of putting on airs It the physician patientawhile they are in good health, he is accused o foieting himself "upon them. He , cornea to the house in order to he invited to dinner If, on the other hand,' he never comet unless he is called, the inference is that the only -use hehas for- his patients is t make Money out of them when they are o skit. If the doctor attends church, o course he is a hypocrite who is trying t work on the religious feelings. of . the corn inanity. If he does not attend church nothing can be plainer than that he i8. an infidel or Et socialist. If the doctor's wife does• Rot return the calls • that ,other ladies make on her; then she is stack up, turning up' her nose at her bitters, etc. If ehe does return the calls,. then Ehe 'fa flueli ing patients for her husband to shoot at. If the doctor's horse is fat, that is sure sign that he has not: get much to do. If the animal is. emaciated, he ia a brute for not taking Vetter care of his horse, If he drives fast,,lie is trying to, create the Mee impression that he has been called to the bedside of some important patient. If he drives slowly he does not care a cent n whetherr-nothis7patreht-ii die before'le gets to them. If the patient redraws his health, he is indebted to a,kind Providence or astroog constitution, or to the care that was taken a him during•hie illness; -In no cassis:the* 0 1 a • s o Anotorgutaidrektozegkgraivittearze-443ft5 tulte.alvaelst.fitm,4.11,0-1.571uPtturaqtbtft .44'vzikuilhWilblisikIgiffign•garhaliiiedio 1 naan_iiraociable and talkativei-the-people- say, " we don't want a doctor who tells everything he knovis.” It he is a silent man, then they say a doctor should encourage his patients to be conininnica- Srierons7-3fOistUre ; intense itching 1441 . B#Uging; Pre* at night; w900 by scratch ing. If allowed- to continue tumors, form!, which often bleed and tileefate,. becoming very sere. SWAYNR'S OINTIaa stops the . itching and bleeding, heals ulceration, and in many cages removes the turnote. It is feq0:145011Y0e.nteeta. caci°:fi''in cni.ing all' Skin Diseases; DP- BWAYNEW SON. ProPrie, tore, Philadelphia. ,Swertin's, 0nTMui can be obtanedbf druggists.Sentby . " Row many lodges .did Yon say your •hilsballa belonged to ?!' she suddenly . asked. Fifteen." "Mercy on me! But think of a rain being oat 'fifteen nights a, week! I am, really glad that I'm e widow!" An Extended ..Experience, • • - Writes a WeltrktIOw4 Obeinict perinits mo to say that ,;• Putnam!s Painless ' Cant NxtractcilneVer fella. It • makes. no nom • spots in the ,tleidt, and consequently is pejo, ' less. Dorn you forget to get Putnam's. Corn Extractor, now for sale by medicine. dealere everywhere. .1' • Enough as e Feast. ,• Gagley—Won't you have some refresh- ment, Miss Wiggle? . Miss Wiggle—Thanne, no. :I'm suffi- ciently refreshed now, ' Mise Howler has stepped singing. . , Imvies The Original Pala 'wet.at‘ve LIVER eueAps PILLS. 3.treagra-ritraga o 13 111, lib a s daNIVIL LITTL • AVIreiniff OF .01.1ti.A.irGIVS. ALWAYS Aszc FOR DR. Pi.g.n'e :vs PELLETS, 011 .L.trIER SO-GAR,COATZli • " . , . 'Being - v entirely eg'etab/09 they • erate without disturbance to the system, diet, • or occupation. . Put up in glass view, hermett- cally sealed. : Always fresh and reliable. ! • As 'a laxative,_.1tIterattve or purgative, these little Pellets give the tamit 'per -tea Satisfaction. . ••‘ Si HE101011Ell Dinette Headache,: Dizziness, Constipa. on, Indigestion, • 'Bilious Attackslandell derangements of the atom- aeh and bowels, are prompt 4yoreiteaDitaraigeLINNIlie .(torefltdiriolzuseode If he talks • politics, they say:. that 'A doctor elitaikl-havalno -Politica; and it he demi not. talk polities;' then ' he. la a alibi* and a time server who either has no, politics or is afraid to own', up what his polities ,really are. If he does not send in his bill, his object is to ' prevent the patient from engaging another doctor: • If he does send in his is In a fearful- hurry for his money, and so on to the end Of the chapter. A Woman ,Worth Two Men. Mrs. PhilliPti, a white lady, Botha 30 years old,' made last year , thirty odd bales of cotton and plenty of • corn, peas pota- toes Capt..G• O. Riley's place, in Great G. Barnwell County, 13. 0. She ploughed an ox and: did all the work of preparing, planting, cultivating andgather- ing. This year she has bought a mule and is all ready to plant.-Satturnah ;stem _ A Illednoan at iLarge • • ^ He ie a well-known citizen, and his nearest and dearest friends do not , suspect his insanity. How do we happen to•know about it ? Listen ; :his. appetite ' is gone, he is low-spirited, he don't sleep *ell, .,h0 has • night sweats, he is annoyed by a-hack- ing:cough' These symptoms are the fore:: runners of consumption e,nd,,death, and yet he neglects them. .Is it any •wonder we call him Amedrnan ? If you aro hiefriend tell him to get a,: bottle of Dr. :Pierce's Golden MedioO1 Discovery *Motif delay. It will Ohre him if he takeiit'lft time.- It will not miraculously create' new lunge when the old ones are nearly gone,. but. it will restore diseased ones to a' healthy Con- dition; • Telt him about it, •and warn ,him that in his 'case delaymeani.death. „ Premier ,Mercier, of Quebec, • has been appointed' a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor by President Carnet.. • 'Use the great specific for "cold in the' head "11n4 'catarrh—Dr... Sage's Catarrh •Remedy.• ' While a herd of cattle were being driven through a piece of woodland in Maine three beats Were encountered sitting in the road: way as if, waiting ' for them. . Without moment's hesitation the oxen in the herd charged ahead and drove the bears 'before them until they were lest in the forest. One ox pursued a' bear for nearly a mile and tossed the animal with likehorns 'a nurciber of ' . , Wonderful popularity. The feet that the sale of Dr. Pierce's P.leasant Purgative Pellets exceed that of any other pill loth° Market; be it great or SM844:0' on accoUnt Of the fad that they are tiny; little, sitar -coated granules,' and that in most eases one. little " saficient for a dose; that they are purely vegetable and Perfectly harral;es and . for constipation, biliousnerie,.. sick headache, and all diseases arisingrfrom derangement of the liver, stoinaoh or bowels, they are absolutely a•speciffe. A. gentle laxative or: ;active catharie, according to '64e of dose. A London society journal published the following story of a certain British peer who suffers from kleptomania," and whose name, as well as his distressing malady is keptoarefully-covered up. The other day His Lordship purloined his Countess', false teeth and hid thein in his boot. His valet, who empties - the Wet every night and restores stolen property, thought the teeth belonged to another lady and sent them to her with a politely worded note which, lie has always used for similar emergencies. It *as ,tiot till the Couptese bildiMintredi for her teeth and the met:winger was kicked by the:other lady's husband that things were put right.. • * ' itnin'Aikinetioncdtithecr alliotv,er odtkrizese :- Pellets 'over so r great a _variety of diseases, it • May truthfully be said that their action upon • tlie 'system is universal, not a gland or tissue -eseapiOg • their 'sanative influence. Sold by druggists, 25 emits a vial.. Manufactured at the • Chemical Laboratory of WORLD'S DiSi.IINSARN. MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, ,Butralo N. Y. • • REWARD - is offered Jy the 'mannfaeturi. ,eitraeollif.„Dry,. efogresaaCeawio tarrhr • 'Chronic,' Na$aI whihb • cum. •••• • they eanno heavy headaches obstructjbn 'of the maid passages, discharges faliluk from the head PAO, rINi throat, sometime e profuse,- watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenaelOusrmucoul. "purulent, bloody and putrid; Me eyes are • Weak, watery, and •inflamed; there is zinging . in the ears., deafness, hacking or coughing to . clear: the throat, lexpectoration of., offensive matter, together with ecid3s from ulcers; the Voice is, changed and has a' nasal,twang.; the, breath' is offensive; smell and •taste are inz=' pairedy'there.is a sensation Of diziinesseeith • mental depression, a hacking cough and gen- ' -eral debility: Only a few of the above-named • symptoms are •Iikely to be present in any one , (*Se. Thousand e Of • cases Annually, without • 'manifesting. halt ,of the atioVe Symptoms. na-' • ' suit in consumption,' and end in the grave. ' No disease is so Common., morsdeeeptivosnd dangerous, or :43143 understoodby phySiciane., Wits mild, Soothing, and healing propattice, Dr. Sage's 'Catarrh ltemedy, cures the worst . cases of tatarilk, .44' cold in the ,head,n! Coryza, and CatniThal Headache, 'sold by drUggisteeverYwhere; se cents. . . 661tTutold Agony from entnrrh.r prof. -W. itArysitan, the_ fatuous rnestneriet„ of _Ithaca. IV'. Y., writes: " cinici ten yearn sufferecLuntold agony from .chronic nasal catarrlit.. My family -physician gave me up• , incurable, and:said I must die. My case was ' ' su'eh :a had one, that every day, towards Sun- set; my voice would become so hoarse I could barely speak alioVe a whisper.. In the niotning my coughing and ',clearing Of tny throat would almost strangle me. By the Arise of Dr. Sage's * Catarrh Remedy, in three, months, I Wasa-well man, And the curd his been permanent," • "Constantly Hawking and giliditing0 Tnom•AS J. RUSHING; BO:, MS. Pins 'Street, St, Louis, Mo was zi great sUiterer from catarrh:for:three years. At tinteeI toad hardly breathe, and was .constantly.hiiWking and :spitting., and for the last eight months could not •breathe throught-the nostrils. I thought nothing could be done for me. Luck- ily, I was .advised to try Dr. Sage's Cnrrb Remedy. ' and I, ion now a.well men. I bellbvo it to be the only sine remedy tor, catarrh now rrianUfactured, and one has only to give it a fair trial to experience astoundinirreeults and .a,perriiThazierontocuirtroeditgies. er4a' ' Cure ELI ROBBINS, .lianyalt Columbia. CO,, Pa., says: "My daughterhad catarrh ',When . • she waaiive years old, very badly. I saw Dr.. Sage's, Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pro-• cideda bottle for her, and soon saw that 15' helped her; n'thitd bottle effected a perma- nent outer. She is , zpi! eighteen years old ti and • Sound and hearty.' • • ,t ,r. •••• • *hen I my cure f do not mein Merely to Bina Diem Mr 14/ iiI310 and then hava theni return eXoln, m I enga radkal care. 11111,. niade the disease of FiTS,EPILAPSY or FALLt, ING 9IGKNEE8 life-long sti.,tY.,' I warrant my remedy to core the worst cases} Eekause others li-ve failed fe no 'amen for not now' receiving a utird.,• Send at once fOr n. . treaties and a Peealiettle of my infallfbia fontedy., Mao Express and ,Posi °Moe; It costa you nothing. for. tried, . • and I„ will curprot..,..,Addres•DR.,11, 0. ROOT, ' • • Branch..01lice 31'Yollge Ailoroiltar TIIF g.REST:FOrEIND PTIO . Ii.hitve A pesitiveteMody for the abo.yedittease I. by its time , thousands organs Mille t•roiat kind Kw,'o long •have been cured. Indeed; se, flirt:fig efficacy, 'thitt,IVII gelid VW01101711,1% • teSether with a VALTIAllf.13 TGEATifiii on Gila 4400 o any sufferer. Give &Uproar Ind I*. 0, •• DE, 33rittioltOffica, 37."Zdige St., TOrtiato . . , ;