HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1888-03-16, Page 7-07
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allitRENTIr TtiPICIS. in atheism, and it is (late possible that the
Tux Gaeta (Octal, of Mexico, announce
that the Awn:mated Press a that city, a
its last meeting, initiated 'a -movement to
the abolition of bull fights, in the federa
district. No member of the prese wil
henceforth attend any eithht. of thi
kind or write' any notioeS in relation to
them. '
I •
PnoFicssou A. 13. EWING, a lecture In
New York, urged that the •common ex-
presbion, veins of coal " is incorrect, and
should never be need, " seamn of coti1l!
being the correct term. Ceal is, found not
running apron and through the bedding or
.stratifioations of the rooks,' but as a true
strata or bed itself. ,
iale maY eolne When/the real Isine•will be •
8 . an .at eist ; •the man
t who believes in, Gioa and order and freedo*n.
and rights of person and prOpe-itY on the
I (Me. Okla, and the • Man wboAisbelleves in
, alt these on the other Side: VVhenever that
time isomers the.Protestant and the Catho
RO . ,
stand awe ay WM)jp aornmon
defence of thoPe common beliefs WhiSb
have been their possession these many cern.
torten."
A. HozroAluk miner has been fo'Indin
Pennsylvania, says the Binghamton Leader.
who lives on two .cents al day: He MI6
brought over and put,. in the place of an
American miner by:a minensvner of Penn-
'04ksylvania, Who once in four yeare tells hie
,71‘• men that War taxes Must be maintained
mien American labor ie to he brought into
cOmpetitionmith the "pauper labor"of
Europe.. • •
. raiszor is to be made to the Prineees
of Wales on the obeasion of her eilver
jubilee. Upward of 015,000 ball akeaclY
been collected, and those who have the
personal ftiendshiof.Her._ Royal. -High-
ness, or the entree to Marlborough House,
will be the donbrs of the gift, wktioh will
takethe kiln of a necklace. The preeenta-
tion will takeplace on the 1.0th of lifer&
• at Marlborough House. - •
• s Paschal, Pomlen, the wonderful child
• revivalist. Of Indiana, Who is now only
11 years old, recently preached a eergual
•• in the Baptist Chureh at Williarnatowni
. • Ky., that astoniehed everybody who heard
h.., The pastor of the church says that he
has road sermons on the same subject de.
Nt, Rvered by the ablest preachers, but not One
,ra• of them °Mild (simper° in power or in
• elegance of .diction with the boy'e exhor-
tation:
' Tun Imperial crown of all the Resents is
• the finest ever worn by a aoyereign. It is
in the form of a Bishop's mitre.iindnarries•
• on its create cross composed of five of the
meet beautiful diamonds ever, Oat sunpOrt-,
ing the largest reby. in the *odd. Eleven
• _great diamonds in a foliated arch' rising
. from the front and back of the crown sup-
• port' this 'moss and ruby, and on either.
side is a hoop of thirty-eight pearls, than
,4.4vhioli.there rapine bandioureqinwn..----,
VP9-11W.-71ffi,,Bantiretr4P4Sbealie, ;se `•`(
leariteihnryr rrhodireil ,ra• (depute
tion. from the Coptic and Abyrisinian
' Churches. The Coptic and Abyssinian
• Churches are really not two, but one. The
•'Copts are the deseendants of the, ancient
Egyptians and the, Coptic ie the native
Christian Church of Egypt. The, Coptic
.Patriaroh, who tokenbie_tiUe-from
sodas, but who resides at Cairo and who
is regarded' no the suconsor of St. Mark,
is at the head of the Coptit and Abyssinian,
Christians.
f"c\,
..;
. ,
Tns extra expense of 'warming the outer
• pure - air in . cold . Weather, remarks the
Canada Wealth *name, fur it coons into
,ropms vrithmaoy people entoblita,ele. to
ventilation. But these reinie-people often
• think little of the extra Cost Of some of the
. higher priced foods With which to, gratify.
their palate, when oft po they would be bet-
ter With simpler, less eipensivn food.
"Simpler food and purer 'air" might well
be put 'up as a •Inotto on their wall. It
• 'thould be put up 'everywhere in the -Mind of
rnen..and.of women tee, in indelible letters,
that the very list essential of life' in which
• anyone should attempt to ' 'economize,
• .Phould be the.Outer pure air.' Expenses
• may be out down in every Other necessary
••
.muoh more safely, remember, and With Mee
• disadvantage than in thie one. ,• • •
Tnie is an age of stupendous scheinenand
the railway cornea in for its due shire
Prominent among these, in so far at least
` lathe featuree of daring • and magnitude
are.conoerned,:is• the •propolial to build a
• , line of railway to connect Minneapilia and
St, Paul with Pekin, 'China, and Irkutsk,
Russia,' via Victoria, B.C.„
and'Oape:Prince'
.'of Wales, Behring Strait, involving -among
other astonishing things the bridging of
. • Behring Strait, which atthepoint suggested
•, in this scheme ,is , only 'thirty-five. miles
• wide and from 20 to 25 fathomatieep.' The
dietanceltom Vietoria to Cape Prince of
Wale's is about 1,100`tniles: • It tenet -rotated
•
who the, moving spirits in ,this latunendous
enterprise are further than that :they: are
western Men, Which leaVis no doubt that
• in the matter of enterprise andi daring at
• east there will be nothinglickiog,' • • ••
I ,speech delivered neently• ha:el:Edon
ward White said in regard to men-
tal bondage': "We were ,the slaves Of
writings; inatitutions..and ancient 'Weida
' and phraties. ” • We heededfreedom,tO coo-
• ' stilt the divine : Ornoleti •,and revelations.
Stich freedom ..would endin the diminu-
•• tion ofthe authority ,of,priestri...and.Parlia
tient; but Would inereaee the individual
• . -freedom of then and tend to the greater
Very of the Christian
• contemporary asks who or what stands in
• Dr. White's way, And suggest°, that thie
•,Ory for liberty, when every man has it if
he Will Only . take. it, is, degenerating into,
mere.babble.' If a" nian cannot. thid the
liberty he Wants in one ;denomination he
can try another, If no cannot ':And it in
ani he can Stand alone. There is really
now no longer tinY 'intellectual 'religious
bondage except iitieh as is delf•elected,
• TRP.decayof Old religioua aninaisitieS
isin.lireated,' thinks the, Christian Union,
by OA modern Protestant attitudetoward
• the, Roman Catholic Churai.°' The Pope's
jubilee, with the numetouit expressions , of
• good wilt. from Protestant sources, is � sign;
• One mak hold •Protestantconviotione as
resolutely .as • his fathers 'held than; and
. may oppose the Catholio_propriganda.
Church and State with the greatest zeal
'• . and eatnestness, and dill preserve .toward
• -•-• thie Church that Attitude Of • Christian
courtesy which. ought to be, although 'it
. •
never yet herr been, the characteristiO of
Christian ;peoples, ' It is not impossible
.; that • ther time May Penny Vthen- the Old
• . antagonism ' of the Catholic' , and the:
•,Proteetant, may appear' ineiginficant, ,in
• `View of the deeper antagorinnite which shall
• ekethem' essentially,one. Th011ias Car..
• 1 le declared that the real Struggle in every
a e is between the believer and the unbw
• vet; and it has seethed ,at tiinett'of late
As ;if thiaphrase • Might s,00n deboribe the
i
praetical ,ssile of ertaih tenclonCies in
• tmOdern soolety, 1;4,or anarchien.i and Social
' disorder of the tadicalkind` halt their roote
e
Tie Persia Barb
• In. Persia the barber ie quite an
important. man.; his profession dine' net
etop at shaving chino and heath; but
includes both surgery and: dentistry; just,
as it used to do in England before, Queen
Elizabeth's thee. His shop ie a stall -like
Orace; with an openfrent and a briok floor.
In the.centre of the floor is a little tank of
water,' , orr,.porhops a miniature flower
garden. A breast -high recess in the thick
wall is the reeeptacle for the misCellaneous
tools and implementot the barber's triple
profeesion. The taZera are set. straight
and stiff in the handles like .table-ltnivee.
Several of - these, passive, combs and a
little hand -mirror complete his barbering
.tools; but aide by side with them are
fleeing and lancets for blood-letting, brand-
ing-irozie for actual cautery, and a pair of
rude iron pincers- for pulling teeth. The
Persian barber's costomere sit °roes -legged
on the floor; or more often, in fine weather,
onteide the shop, in the street. T6 get
shaved, with a Persian, is to have, not
merely ••the face' shaved, hut the: entire,
head, se.ve for it little tuft on top or one on
each aide. Not every .Persian shaves his
beard, but he always gets his head shaved.
In the case of boys the tuft • on top of their
head ie allowed to grow long, the idea being
that in oase of death` Mahonomed will have
something to lift them into paradise by.
Cid men with flowing beards think 'their
,Whiskers provide this needful hand -hold
and so have their scalps quite clean,- Young
men and bean; have a little tuft,, termed
the ryulf, or love -lock, lett on each. • side to
grow long and dangle behind the ear.
, • Beefsteair anaflhitek Eyes.
war ,d-wi e superstition that
as scion as arnan- gets a black OO mut
use Co application for hours, and that the
beet cold ,applioation possible is raw beef.
' call it a superstition becauee it is Without
reason and against reason. Everybody
hirowipthataethat•alaltstalfiatdirrrotion4f
Noetskitay,*ibraleatalroTtopgdeticti-414:14,
put Ware' blood that Oanabt getaway
again, so that it decomposes and changes
its., color; and everybody might to 'knew
that the way to prevent such a result is to
facilitate and stimulate , the circulation in
the bruised part. • A Cold application re-
tards the circulation, and the beat thing is
'to stimulate it byhotapplitatiOne.- Twice
in My life I was threatened with a block
eye, On -the• firit ocoosion ' I applied taw
beef and Other cold appliaatione; and, siiC-
ceeded in producing the blackest eye you,
ever saw. On. the 'second occasion I got
• some hot water right away and bathed the
eye for about • half an hOur in it. "The
:result was that there was not -the slight*
discoloration at any time.-Chisage Journal'
• •An Arali's Reply.
• While exploring 'the ruins of Nineveh
Layard wrote to a Turkish cadi; 0 oadi
Carryon inform' me what is the size of the
village ; how many are its people,. and by
what industries do they live?"- The Turk
answered: "0 effendi 1 - Joy -of my liver 1
The thing you want to know difficult to
find out and useless. I have never °Wanted
the houses •nor numbered the Men, and as
to What this man loads on his cainel or
t4io than hides in Ids' tent is no concern of
mine. , Oh my .soul light 1 Joy of my
liVer...1.„.Sha1lmelaiiiEbe1io1d this star-spin-
neth about that star ?" Let it s in , 0
shall we say, to, •thiit star with a 'tail
cometh and goeth in so many days? Let
it go!, Amen." -St. Louis. Globe -Democrat.
,
The Secret 'of His Success:
;Burl. was '12 \•years old.. He came home
from Sunday Sohootone day and said he
had taught a 'class of little boys. • •
"What "posSeased ,you to do snob' a
thing?" asked his mother. •. •
Oh, I got along first-rate.' They began
to giggle and I told them if they didn't
quit it I would lick eVerylast One of them
when Sunday Scheel was ,rnit, • The Su-
perintendent said it was the stillest close
there was. -Detroit Free Press.
lffndress, Piety.
Dr: Chasuble (to only Member pre.
sent) --I'm thankful that elle Member of
the church -hi -not afraid to come otit•-na rain
as well as in sunshine: • •• •
• Mrs. Pray -Well, if it ` hadn't have
Stormed have come, lot my new
bonnet len t ree y,
Life Laid Deere for georkia.
I was Winchester, Va.. last •sunimer,
anal 'came :upon 'a magnificent granite
shaft in the Confederate Cemetery, bearing
the following inscription: . .
" Stringer, go tell it in 'Georgia that,
1,900 Georgians licihere in Obedience to her
lawa."-Atianta Journal.
A Tough Lease. .
gentlenian had taken a house on 'Erni,
versity street, and 'went up xesterday.to
sign the lease, but, to' his' 'astomaliment, he
found that clause 020 been inserted for-
bidding him' to, plq the piano, to play
cards or Coop te windows on. Sunday. -
Montreal Gazette.
A little- 4- year -Old; just• learning ' to alien'
words of three letters; was • sitting at hie
deSk looking' at a book, the 'Words of 'which
were. beyond his capainty. ' After trying in
vain Id make them out he looked •up:: and
13!tia mamma, if I had glasses I guesii
could read all these.words.", His 'mother ,
laughed and said, ".Only old fOlickneed
glasses." The little fellow's face beam:tie
very serious (mho said ".Why, mamrda
do you think yin too new ?"---New York
World,
Quite a Oars, bits been created at the
Chicago Bridewell, where 950 Orb:loners are
smallpox esterday. The victim is a man
ornifined,t er a discotery of a ase of
who cam beke from the East alew days
ago and Was Sent out tor vagrancy.. He
wadproimptly rein:wed to the 06(44201i*
and on Saturday 600 of the, Prisoners Were
• Vaccinated, ` The reniainder will be treated
to•day " • .
74,t4h
LATEST, z4811101t NOUS
Noveltlei for ,Spring -and Sampan'
1 ' Wear.
Alt the young debutante blondes e
•
bonnetso poppy-redtulle for calling and
afternoon teas
• Some of' the elahOrate French gloves ire
embroidered. on. the hacks with gold or
iillVek thread in designs of tithe -de -lie and
tometimes with the monogram of the
wearer.
On the new bonfiete all thertrilnirn' inge
are lowered, though they are by no . means
flat. But the, towering pointed betvii of last
year have given place to soft, wide loops,
put on to give a broader effect. Very thick
aigrettes. will. be used again, and, these au
high me ever, but too fine and light to be. ob
jectionable.
For evening wear in the way of 'Wimps
theplush long coat is giving place to one of
red cloth, or preferably of poppy -colored
cashmere. If of the latter it 18 made with
a ritimber of little tUc8 both back, and
front; whieli descend to the woiat and there
open to form part of the fulness in the very
full ekirts. They are lined throughout with
sioilienneof the same shade and have
sleeves Opening very wide at the Wrist;
A pretty,walking dress is mode of bright
golden brown ladies' cloth, with& very high
finish. The skirt is edged, with a. little
cording of sealikin above it Jiang • inguiv
folds of the material in pinned islailePs-
The'long curtain draperies are corded with
theeealakin, as are the edges of the vett,_
whick4s composed of rows Of the pinked
materials. 4 pretty little cloth and, seal-
skin toque and a sealskin cape complete the
costume. , -
Corsages with full' fronts are in great
favor for dresses of various materials,
from heavy , Silks to the thinnest gauzee.
The amateur dressmaker will, find that
this fulness is easily added, and that it
will imP'yove the simplest:bodice. • For cot-
ton fabrics and also for silks it is only
neaessary to add two or three inches of
greater_breadth, to the fronts, gathering
this fulness at the throat rindnt the Waist
line. In wash ,dresses the darts are not
the
ming; in silks, however, the darts are
sewed in both. . •
Double-breasted corsages unbecoming
too, ..long .for alender a4gliree es.e they
Xali.*=tharrAttept.-,ikrzlguallingagAblaint
ADINW-izAbleee4eclir ;r the
,regiflar-katrara:gentent37.yea preferred for
doable -breasted bodiCes; such as lapping
the right side nearly to the left arm -hole,
then turning over the top :to forni a trian-
gular reverse and sloping the' space below
back to tbe middle of the waist ' line.
Anotherlancy has the doubled parte only
below the darts, while -the upper part has a
gathered plastron of, pint or lace edged by
a collar Of Moir iir ielvet,Whiclialsocreasee
with the lower part. to the left aide, where
it is buttoned. •
taken up,ori the ,-outside, but onl -in -
For waists that are too Short biome 'or
:brPtelles of ribbon are uied to give an ap-
pearance 61 greater length.---TWo- inch
ribbons ate' folded narrowly to' a point kid
beside the buttons, and are ,giadually
widened until they reach to that:miler, or
else the shoulder -seams next the collar,
when they again pass down the back, form-
ing a point at the waist line. Narrow,
long vests and Blenderrevers are also be
coming to. those short waists. Diamond
-
shooed revers rolled over next a narrow
vest are in great fever at present; each
revers represents half an elongated dia-
mond, and may •be made of velvet, while
the vest is of moire, Or Maybe covered with
gilt beading .or 'galloon or with lace, and
the revere be made of moire.
To make a pretty V-shaped Opening in
ess •lugh on the shoulders,the-straight,
edges of the fronts of the dress goods are
carried back to the shoulder Bettina and the
fulness is gathered along these seams.
Pretty lapped corsages have thefulnessoar-
ried still further book on the shoulder,
seams, and a fabric -of -contrasting color
(such as surah, talenr Brussels net) partly
fills in the pointed, throat, passing around
the neck and being carried in folds down
the front, lapping to the left side at the
waist line and finished there with a rosette
or flowing bow of ribbon. • LFor in'stance, a
dress of suede -colored beogaline has pale
blue Chine, crape fails in- the neck; and
another of gray ,veiling striped with poppy.
red has bright red burial folds with inside
olds of red tulle next the open 'throat.
•'411 the shop windows are now filled with
the 'spring goods. A pretty satine is of a
light shade of old blue, with polka dots of
a darker shade and irregular sizes strewn
over it in such a Manner. as.ta OM the
effect of stripes. Pale Oar blue Aieilings
• are shown in 'combination with heavy
cream White canvos, with eidely.separated
dOuble stripes of the blue grey to ,bourette.
All shades of green are popular in.the new'
eatines and Summer silks; the, figures are
rather large, and are: pooled from natural
objeete, such an leaves, flowers• and fruit,
rather thanthe conventional , designs that
were in favor last seaaon. •'Nearly all the
veilings and cashmeres, &sillies and • ben-
galines are mode'in combinations, most of
them having skirt • and, waietdoat of dull
white, striped with the color from Which
the draperies and bodice are made.
A 'white Robin.
. On Thursday "Morning Mr. H. W. Bar-
ret, telegraph operator at Maiden'A 'Adven-
ture, Va., was sitting in his (ate, and; to
his astonishment, he saw a white robin
perch itself, on a tree. near by. • He called
-the ..attention of several liarties to it, but
they, said it could not be a robin.. Mr.
Hicks, who Was present, shot the bird; and
it proved to' be robin, entirely white,
with the exception Of a sniall brick -dust
spot under the breast.-Kichniorid (Va.,
$teite.. • .
• A 'Tarantula's .Savage •Attack.
Zulus City despatch sore • Mrs.
Johnson; who keeps a small fritiC ,store on
Independence avenue, was moving a bunch
of 'bananas this morning when a, large
tarantula jninped out ,and made a savage
attaelt upOn her, but inflicted no wound.
It then -juniped t� the floor, ;where wool
attacked it and received o bite, from whieli
it soon died. • The ineect'd hotly was bver
an inch in diameter:
The Grand 0141. Min and Vire. Gladstone
will celebrate their golden wedding (D. V.)
in July next.. • „
tit:-••*•
SHUT YOUR
The °r*iii ef 41r4ePiseYaseCsh.ellt. an, Throat.
• &line of us who,hayeattained to the dig-
nity ,of middle age May remember the time
when George Catlin, the famous American
traveller, startled nervous p3ople by so!,
emnly warning them of the, dangers of
opensing their menthe. Carlyle, whose
month by the 'way, when be hedanyody to,
listen to him, Was certainly. " open" te a
very consiterable extent, had' emphatically
uttered U-similarn warning ; but, whereae
his words had'reference only to the flow of
talk, Mr. Catlin was exclusively concerned
with the inhalation of breath, which he
firmly maintained ought as far as possible
to -be performed by the nostrils. The mem-
ory Of the eccentric little book, With its odd
pictorialdevices, entitled "The Breath of
Life," wherein these views were propounded,
is lust now revived by Dr." Abbott in a
new monthly rnagazioe devoted to 'the sub.jeet of health. Dr.,Abbotts WAS a personal
friend of Catlin, aLd, niereover, assisted
him in writing the little book referred to.
Catlin it vitui who said: "If. were to en.
deavor • . to bequeath to posterity the
most important Motto which the human
language can convey, it would be in three
words -Shut your Mouth." Since then
this advice has become one of the common-
places of popular physiology. Catlin spent
great part of his life atnong the North
American Indians, sojourned with•
there.
mull 4...mutt° In WV*
until he become as one of themselves. He
went among them in the hope of improving
his health by travel,, for be was suffering
from e,onsumption. Hating: observed that
thia ineidiods disease and indeed all cheat
and throat affections. -were very'ritre with
the Indian' tribes he inquired into the
(*nee, got a useful " wrinkle," as folk say,
profited by it and ,was trbubled with weak
lungs no mote. •So eareful, we are told,
are the Indians in this respect that the
Women are very particular in inculcating
among their children from" infancy. the
baba of keeping the mouth shut. How
many a civilized white father would at
tinies be glad to ," inculcate "--"in the same
direction 1 A.f ter lowering the baby from
the hresettliey Carefully press its lips toge,-
Vier beforeit fells asleep, and we are told
that the habit it thud early acquired he.,
comeepernianent. One , Of the most wpm-
ent of the popular expounder e of scientific
.F.ea-titratltataTxcatiatilit•-a.Rihaih",iai/gC
the - nipnth -Weis a 'fool when
he does so." Dr.' AbbOtts attributes to our
ignorance and neglect of this truth a great
proportion .of our cases • of. sore throat,
cough, bronchitis and chest disease. Caries
of the teeth is also one of the evil canoe-
quencee, while the injury doneto.--the
habitual expression of the features is suf-
ficiently recognized by,our contemptuous
term, " a gaping tdiot," and the French,
glebe thouche ,or "fly swallower."There
seernalittle reason to doubt, says.the Lon- •
don New, that chest and thrpat diseases,
which often spring from the inhalation of
irritating dust, air well as 'from damn and
cold, would be much ,less frequent were
Oath:ea advice universally acted upon, and
Civilized mankind learned to breathe
'through the nostrils alone. • • '
' «A Word to the Wise is Sufficient."
Catarrhis not simply an inconvenience,
unpleasant to the sufferer and disgusting, to
Others -it is an advanced outpost of ap-
proaching diseases of worst type. DO not
neglect its warning; it brings deadly,•evile
in its train. Before it is to � late, use Dr.
.Sage's, . Catarrh Remedy. It reaches
the seat of the ailment, and ie the, only,
thing that will. You may dose yourself b
with quaok medieines till it is too late -'til
the streanilet becomeen-resistless-torrent,-
Iris the matured invention of a 'scientific
physician " A. word to the wise is suffici- ti
A." Rat &PA CiaL"'
ThiS hi a funny phratte to The uninitiated.
lint all the broker"; understand it- The,'
llas WIlea a person gives. orrtain Per
cent. for the. option of buying or selling
stock on a fixed day, at a Prioe stated oa
the day the option is given, It is often a •
serious operation to the dealers but there ist
more "put and oall; " tban, this :
when you are, " put "t6 bed with a severe
cold and yotir friends " call " a physician.
Avoid all this by .keeping in the, house Dr..,
Pierce's fjolden Medical Discovery. The
great cure for puhnonary and blood diseases.
Its actionis marvellous. It cures the wont
cough, whether acute, lingering or chronic,
For Weak Lunge, Spitting of Blood, Short
Breath, Consumption, Nightleweats and -
kindrefd affections; it siirpasses OM other
medicines. t •
Tonsorial item. ,
• • Barber -I think I, have out yOur hair'
evenly. Your head leeks' perfectly round.
Customer -It dpn't make artY diffeteaset
if 'my head aio't round; I'm not going 10
roll ninepins vrith it, anyhow; •
• , . . . ,.
The treatmOnt.Of. Many thonsomds:of .easeer .
of those chronic ,Urealtneeses and distressing. •
ailinents peculiar 'Me females, at the Invalide -
Hotel. and Surgical Institute, Buffalo,.N. Y.,
has afforded•a vast experience in nicely adapt-,
lentigre.nnordwtohmetorOnnlia. Arirartinolg-orratadl.ea for. the:
Dr. Pierce's .Fa.vorite Prescription •
is the outgrowth, .*Or result, ef ;this great and
.valnable experience. .Thousande of testima-
nials.receivedfrom patients and from physt-
• clans who. bare 'tested It In the more '
matect,and.obstinateteettscit,,sthich.liad,:int ed
Ak-rern.1416:17P.st%Pi?1:12411.ritteihrlflf742igt :a! c,
gurtir46-27,••Vgiat, rr,,rst ifecri:r sp11111'14 s .
wOrnad's .peenhar aliments.
'Au a Powerful, invigor_t_ngtonic,
1. i
It imparts strength to the . *hole system. .
and. to the %,wOmb and .• its .. appendages in
particular: For overworked, •-" worn-out,,' ,
”.run-down,'.! debilitated teachers, milliner%
dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop -girls," bousek. ._ •
keepers,,nursing--,mothers, laut.'feehle-*0012030- "-- '-
generally; Dr. •Pierce's Favorite Prescription'
is the greatest earthly boon, being unetpialed .
as an appetizing cordial' and restorative tonic.
As a so?thing and streaggeeiting. •
nerriue, 'Favorite Prescription' is une. •
•qualed and is. invaluable in allaying and, eu13.- '
duing nervous excitability; Irritability; ex-
haustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and
other , distressing, nervous • aymptoms: corn -
Mealy attendant•upon functional -and organic
disease of the womb: It inducea refreshing •
sleep and relieves ' mei:din anxiety and Au,
BP.B-°nrd.ePncie.ra-e's FaV:oritalPreecription
is a legitimate medicine, cure
compounded: by an. experienced- and skiIlful
PhYsielan; and adapted to !romans' delicate
organization. It is. purely vegetable . in its' '
composition. and • perfectly harmless in its "
effects in any Condition of the aysteni. ...For.'
Morning; 'sickness, or nausea,' froth whatever
cause arising, weak stomach,. indigeetion, dys-
pepsia and kindred' syniptonis; house, in small ...
doses; will prove very beneficial. .
,6,6Fav,orite Proscription 9/ is a post."
live curb for the 'most compliCated and ob. -
stinat,e cases of leucorrhea, excesatre floWing, .
painful menstruation, unnatural suppression%
prolapsus, orfalling of the womb, weak back. i
"female _weakness," •anteversion, retroversion,
earing-nown sensations, chronic conetion,
nfianiination and illee.ration of the womb, in.
'A..•
animation.-paid•-ant4enderness m- yeah*
cdompanied with "internal beat." "•
As a regulator and Promoter or fune-
one! action, -at that critical period of Change
from girlhood to womanhood. "Favorite Pre-..
cription " is a perfectlysafe remedial agent. :
nd Cali • pioductj only good results. It.' is .
'equally •eilicaefous . and valuable. in ;its, effects
hen taken for those disorders and derange- '
%de incident to that skiter_and_most-criticed •
ehilglii known 88 "The Change or. Life."
vorite *r_eseription,?2,1vben takes
Connection, With . the use, of Dr. Pieroeli.
olden Medical Discovery.., and Small lairativs:.
Igeetl. citails))r.. P1•13..reeZei FurtirneeyPaenlIgslaidttili: ,
eases.. Thelre'scoarned • use also removes
lood• taints, .pad. abolishes, canoerdius and . .
(.01100 ,Inimors..
from the tthleoillgeims 'the only
positive g. narante 9 from. the
"Ictiv ?fir).".)hPie tri Ell '
e e r w_ n..._.... •druggiata,,2 umandneu7r •
'
has been printed on the bottle-wrapem.
ttIT
eturers, that it Will eve satisfaction in every •
e, or money will be renmdech This' guaranty. '
_
'Row Monkeys Eat Oysters. ,
Alfred'Carnenter, of the Marine Survey
Office, 'Bonibay,, has obeerVed .Macticus'
monkeys ott the island 'off Sonth. Burnish
opening Oysters,with a stone. • They bring In
the stones fibre' high .Vraterroark , down to atI
low water, selecting each StOneeas they can L
easily grasp. They effect in 'opening by dis
striking the base of the Upper valve nett' it. -.,b„
dislocates -and breaks up, Then they ex-
tract the oyster with the finger and thunib;'
occasionally pottingthe Mouth straight ,to 4,11
the broken shell.. Tlie ,way they have. '48
chosen is the nasiest tO OPezi the shell.- tee
d faithfully carried out for Amy y '
Philadelph• ia EveningTelegrapk.— an
• Mani men of many minds • ,
• ---- - --
Many pills of various kinds. •
But for a mild, effective, vegetable par:
gative, 'you . had better get Dr. P.ierco's
Pleasant Purgative -Pellets. They: cure sick
headache, .bilions headache, dizziness, con-
stipation, indigestion and bilious attack;
25 -cents a vial, by druggists. • • "
Maiden Irie7fperienee.
Kittie-Oh, Fannie, Joe Proposed to me
list night. Minnie -No; you don't ..eity,?
Did he do' it nicely? Eittie-Yes-L•no--I We
don't know. I'm .no expert,-Taghingtoon
(D.p.) ethic,
• Fo
'Fair Evidence for Everybody. . Ad
NO
Merchants,' - Butchers
•
•
,AND TRADERS GENERALLY,
Want a GOOD MAN JR your looaiity to pick
• CALFSKIN&
r no. Clash furnished on satisfaetery guaranty
dram 0. S. PAGE, Hyde Park, Veririont, U
one Can donbt the
Large bottles 1100 'defies) $1.00, or oft -
bottles for $5.00:
• Forlarge, illustmted,Treatise on Dismissed'.
Women (160 pages, paPer-eovered), send tea
cents in stamps. . • Address; .• . •
• World's' Dispoirsarl Medical Association;
663 Main Si., BIMETAL°. Nelt
gre at merit of Pel -
son's Nervihne, forit , has been placed in
the market in 10 cent bottles; just to give
you the opportunity of testing its wonder-
ful power over all kinde of pain. This is
the best evidence of its efficiency; for every
person • Can try for themselves. Poison's
Nerviline,is a positive (it cannot fait) care.
for cramps, headache, colds, neuralgia and
the host of pains .that flesh, is heir, t�.
Good tblake ;' good to rub on. Onto' any
drug store and buy a 10 pent sample bottle.
Large bottles 25 cents. • •
lie Meant Well.
A. man, Whose wife is away on a visit,
wrote to her the other day and added this
stanza,which he Wrote in good Opirit, hut
I
which s likely to raise a row '
• absence Malice the heart grow fondiSr;
And distance makes the dear more dear,
!pray thee; do hot cease to wander,
And stay awny at least a year.
• , Cause for singing. •
Brown= -That Jones is in insufferable
nobinson—Row do you make that out ?
B.-Ilear him singirtg I've.got *1in
mv inside pboket."
11, -Why not? jove, if X laad.816 in
iny inside pocket I would sing to,
11) .
When 4 say eurp, 4 de..not nsuoi tokiely Cii MUIP,i1113}13 1.0i •
time add then have then, nun -NI again, I 1110IiII Mt radical
cum. 1 hAVe Mello thodletale 511t ITS, Iii.11.k.:1% Y or PALL- • .
• INC SICKNMS11 Ilfe.lonn et..,.y. I wareInt my reidedy
• to enro the w, tit 'owe.' ;SCOW& other, t,'i, -railed to no
• reaeon for not taw recemog* .!tkra. Send at oat( Iona
treatise And a Pree.Dottle et. tnY Infinade remedy. Glen •-,
"totems add Poat,001oe. It costa you imthtnir tar , triak '
„and 1 will cure you.' Address' DR: 11. O., ROOT, , - • •
n
Brach Meas. 37 TonaSt,s. Toronto.
, .
, . • ..
U N'N'S
•
OWDE
,.
TtLIFTyfure:,4p:RFR.T.FRIENA.
ONSUMPTIO t.
L,Ii have a poiltive remedy teethe above disease 4.51' Its ass
thoititands °teases ot the 10brit kind ani or long atinun
hate been cured, indeed. e0„Ineenn ; '‘,e,,tatthin its •
as
Matey; that !wilt WO TIVO BOTTLES ., 4•9ethet-
Notth 111' VSLDAIDIR TRRATISIt on thii ftill11,,. RO il'1311,
'utterer, Olve:etriremi MI I, D ad44 ' .c
Bhlia Ofe''',./ 6.7,7sorlgatt...Ttirtlitti
. • ., . PR i, ol-INTNI. . •
— .
. .
.4•
cr. 7::•-•
4••.