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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1888-03-23, Page 71 •••- -low",-•••1$ $e; 4' 74 4.44 „ 4.4.3*, 4 •-• • ro a •• 4 "• •4 , •• BOY0011 DEFENDED. AN AltrUffrethlotintlf.- ".; %Mint for, It, A man with, his head in a iiege,and neck bent to the. right ittraoted considerable at.: 10.14.'4,444Y:i" 5 • PAuL xTs. Firt"sT ADVP,QATE. ,(1343T. DeYle. Of AfthOttown.Irelaed.) But is this 4 PeVZ P44144Ment illve4tea for evil doom in our dey ?. What does St. Paid Bay, I. Corinthians V. 11. "But now have written to yoe, not to keep company, • it any man that is named a brother;" be a or motor, or covetous, or a server ,at ser rai er, a drunkard, or an extortioner, with such 4 onenot go much as to eat," 13th • • verse -'Put away the, evil one from among ' '• yourselveu," What ,“„coveteits." man 18 80 • guilty as he who "covets and grabs hie neighbors'. lands to the utter ruin and ...destruction of himself and family ? Good #God what a curse and calamity the grab- • her and the evictor have been to their' . ative land-! I was -on the New Roes . 'Sion from SePtemher, 1846, to Feb- . rury, 1853, Three counties, ford, Kilkenny mild - Carlow, converge at that 'tow. Its '-union is one cif the ' largest, I. believe, in Ireland,. comprieing large portiohenf the' three, abine-naMed, nounties: The food of the people failed without any fault of their.% Then 'the 'grabber and the evictor" commenced their woeful work. The.poor people wereawent :from their- homee-with arlittle-totiiptinc. tion aayoe Wpuld tear .a burrow of:. rate. Having iso place to rest, they ewarmedinto the town. Besides -the main house, the guardians had to provide &Orel' of shops,, auxiliery workhouses, and Wards. Altthe shop, lanes and slums of the town were. • literally .tWtedlei01 the poor., The dread- -1"-d scoiiius fever in its Most virolent form eeized upon-. its victims: •It. • is quite impoeeible for one .Whodid not. sx;witness and pass through these scenes to .yealize'to himself the. unutterable misery . those years. 'Bat wretched as was the • Imaterial condition.: of, the. grabber i and landlords' vietim% their 'Moral ruin was- - even more heartrending. Imagine ororas of simple young country. girls peeked Hite: , the -low lodging -houses of a ;large sea- , port town,. where everything they saw • and heard might be the proximate occasion . of sin for e saint. Have I not known dreds of peasant girls Who!, when_they.were ------------------(Meted-from-their huisible bottles; were as . • ' • tention Saturdey at the Murray HillHotel• As be walked .he limped, painfully, In his shirt bosons he wore a large cluster dia. mond pin. He was Barney Baldwin, who thinks he hat been, more brokep up -than any living Plan- gis injuries ineltide a. broken neok two broken'legs a brolientrm, five,' broken, ribs ,atul a. broken collar hone. He tells this story : "I was born and brought in New York,"he said yeaterdityt M, 8.6„ years old, u my mother anti sister, who live thirteen blooks away from here, don't know whets fix I'm in. They think I'm in Ana. tralia,': I was yardmaster on theLonisville de Nashville Railroad, and. it, was •Mitren 19th last, in the yard at Birmingham, Alahaina, that ' the :throttle of an engine got but of order .and the engine rim wild. I was 012' a caboose wils cera attached. When the engine struck the section Was shaken off. In the fall I disliesated,•iny shoulder, broltq my.right arm it the elbow and my leg at the ankle. ' I threw my right leg over the foot board, of Ulf! engine and broke that leg in two &Cm The eshpan of the engine naming over Me broke five ribs and gni:lied six vertebras of my neck, .1 was tincoesei- out' for 36 heurs end wee totally blmd fOr 14 days.. I lay on a water mattress 129 days,_and•I was -five months • andoieventeeri days in bed. ' Since, that'tinse never, laid down, 'because the vertehres of 'iny neck are not knit together. yet,' and if I should try the vertebrai would Slip, • press on the spinal eord, and produce uncon- sciousness. For Jour nionthe after the injury I felt stupid; and ever - now and then-passettraffIrti o- a trance that lasted two and shalt hour% haVe. got 'so nOve. that reen:eleeithree hours a night in a sitting.posture, but.' can't lie 'down. My broken legs and ribs and. firBOB have Mended. It is the neck and, spine that give me the only trouble." • The physicians Who pulled him through were Drs. James B. Inickle and Copeland 0. Hanley; of Birmingham. • After giving along list of eminent physicians who had exaniined him and pronounced him a:earl- ositytoo dangerous eto, handle, he said that he asked them all:it he wonld ever be able to remove the mask and get anight's They .dould-give-hins no enlightenment. Then' Bald i • , _ eart of their native hills, to hive, amidst„,.... _ .0.1ind em,,,,,,,the oast 0•11TE .--....;,,,p-A4,..4.4.irciiie ,doititslisiing &trilptetiener.44 • ''''''"'i''''''''"""1;13 • twitlehlUtliD&Iiiiiiiaffa- kotarmagatrksw 5, ,nrayairavgamwmplikt,osoir..„..,,_. ,..,„„ _.) thafarmisazewthazzAtilardemAltt liretikiTOMekandittlIN''' 91'ne.`gts'"""er` along tbis spinal 66Itifini, -forming ,it 'burro an the evictor will answer for. their souls. • Ain' to be told ram not, to Warn my above' the head, to the upper' end of which P'e. is attached aorossbar from which' depend , • . 'pie to avoid a . wretch who is the Prime leather gtraps to hold, his head up. WO ' . ' catiee of all those material and moral 'calamities 2 The teaching. of : St: an 'artificial backbone: One strap goes Paul under the chin and forme e, cup in which • ' obvious to any one acquainted' with ' the of Ankland, and De. Sartfield, Of San Fran-. . w n showed his sounds -first • are as the springs that gushed frOin the . the scars on his legs, then the right erre ' • quoted above is 'far raoroPie°iwk -mid (*m" the chin, reits. ' His purpose in eoming to • • ' prehensive than any denunaiation is,sued 7 by the National League, But is there not the city is to gee if Dr. Sayrecan straighten • dager of,inurder ?, St. Paul did not think his broken neck for him. It now .-inelinee. ....................But out- people are:" excitable." considerably -to the right. Baldwin: said • . a whitMOre BO than the Jew% as must be • • Nn't thetantenber of physic:finis were .already &redoes to buY hie body.. Dr, Clayborne, • • ..:•• , oharioteristioe of both nations, ,St. Peter :. : • „ and St Pani areevidentlytwoIrishmen who deco, he said, had beth offered him 810,000, ' • were accidentally bens in 'Aides: Boy- gum, • . . . , . but he had no fear of, dyingyet.--New York .' clotting ' "a terrible eisk of the orinie of_ mur... , . „ _ ' . _ . . _ . __ _..._•______ ------:- .--- def?"-QUitotherebiltrittyTterif the bilskiiiP; • . Eoinitnee of Wedded Life. • priests and peciple would : with 'one voice "James, dear,' will you firing' me up, 6 • .denounce the grabber, the monster would ' you would have nothing of the kind4o hunt w"" • immediately disappear like :the wolf i so ..:.h* cal::_s.:'f 'ecial,:frem th.e..ee, llarf° said 'It busy . • , or to kill. . But boycotting and. the 'Plan 'f That's% joat the -Why • with you," said • may be abused. Quite sci. Is there a gift ,a'am,__,_60, with a black fr°WP4 as. he Put down nis• wok and rose up from the loutige. "Just the 'way with me T.! ' of .God . or an inventicei of man that is not: , - frequently and fearfully abused? Have • not the ettributies of the soul \ and the . ' I . " Yee," he pnapped. "As soon :is you . • . fricaltiee of the body beeeme so debased see me` enjoying myself you have .some and degraded that it would iieem • as it all chore or other for me to do. Didn't you see.1 was absorbed in my ,reading ?": : ' flesh had corrupted its Way,..and that the immutable:God wonla 'again he. iioiry he' "'Well,. dear, I Wilt de it Myself." -• • had created man? 'As to the inventions of . "Yee,. and tell 'everybody, Your 'nether . • . , . man, take for the press ' .1"' 4$ "I' •• espeeially; that You have to carry*Your own , availed to pour a Very delugeor . ai3•Teni- i'a: peal tip from the cielliii. No, Ill do it. : Let . -. Woe ripen the world? Even the beautiful Me inarknae.plide."' : ' • ' . : , . : , SO he marked the ,place • in the book at .. and interesting art of the photographer • is .• . employed as itis .atixiliary of the prose io which he had efeasectreeding, ' and When he , item .those who.. cannot read, and gunge went.'dOwn•to the Cellar, grunibling illthe them into ,it s thintithysi Of. ,pictorial way, she piokedhp the voluMe and fotalti • putreecenee, Ye the best and most ,. holy it, was :a love :Story and that, the passage '''. .: : things : can. he Used: : If, however,, the he had been absorbed in.. Wee- as follows.: "Mr darling when you are my wife I will . - •• priests' stand by thopeoPle as. they glit • , , , ,, • to, gold° and direct ;them, there is little or shield and protect. you feom every dare, no . danger. in . '" the . boycot" or :" The the winde of heaven shall not. Visit your - ':Plan." If the priest retires aneabindond .face. toe roughly, 'those pretty hands than' ' • ' • • the people, of course they will :stray 'like 'never be soiled by menial tasks, our Wish idiall be'iny law,. yetir.happinese "..-•,...,,,. .. . . . -.„sheep witholit experience:: , I . speak from , . ' the praetioel experience ot.yairs. . • Just ' °Let he reappeared, :. and, . dump, . . •. . • ,. • , . • • .• ingthe ho ;fp the floor, said : . 41- Theee's -0. • ....., itew, to nate. pie.* Etteds. • , your. darnedSiseal.. Give me my book" , . • ., • • • • " ' • Is life worth living ?-.13'ostori Carter. - . lE(ave ' a big bowl frill of hot water -when . . I'say hot I Mean:hot, I don't Mean tepid. . . ,. Gurious; Cures, intl;Cestem'S. ' put • . .. oth . hands and • Jaye . the face thin', ,g',13vviith this.hot water 'Until if is llev.•:Ii- A.- TWO, .of the. Rectory, Rook, , as red as the proveriallObstei:The hands Bewdley, Writee :to •us : The ,ftillewing . • are the proper things to Wash the face with, ." Care ,I! for , , whooping-tiough was used; to . , . ..,. .. ineattee they are iiothe• with inteiligeeoe my knowledge, in this pariah :, .: A live few • ' added to theni. Do 6;14 drythe fade, but is held to the open,nleuth of the 'child. ;• the : just as quickly as pessible, give. it another 'frog diem, and the •ohild •rtieOvere. ;. Another ., laving With very e„Old water: The warm 'clistoin was 'prevalent at one time inthe .. ... , , Water cleiniges • the akin, the, „bold water ' , parish. On Aeciension DAY raindrops Were •• gives vigor to it, makes the flesh firra and, carefully 'colleeted, bottled and used 'ail a prevents one ,froM ''. catching, 'cold. 'I' hope wire for sere eyes . 1 once was talltingt° n ` , • that you will spread. this news, and . that farmer on Aecethiien DaY'When.a few: drone . ' • ' there will ,be ' more clean -faced *Omen in of rain fell. .He said, "No* my Old' woman ' . : New York than ever before,* and ,they : cer- will get Emle 13°0 water.'" ' At my request ' : : • talisly will hive , geed. skin, and frighten he explainedthe use, ••and I found after- . oft the Wrinklee if they fellow the advice Of Wards that en old Woman.hitd. two or three - Ba • . rbara in biew'roik Star, . dozen Of." old bottled" : laid down in her , . , .,•, -.%.,.. 41„, . • • • .. ' cellar: . The Wife of . a ...publican in this . . . • - Gthislei Bireilie'irs.., , , , ' • parish makei3 a ,einall: lee! of bread every. • . . .. Yea.," said the Principal of the Young G.ndff.'"Ptiffn-Y"-aid l'c'ePs it .hung in the Ladies'. Sereinery: to the proud parent, kitchen till next , Good Friday. It neve • :' "yon e ' t to be very -happy, my deer sir, • 'goes mouldy or bad,. and ;le a certain Mire lik for English cholera Xantele Gazette.... • ' to be •th .father of so large a family, all ' :the rd 'here ef :which appear to be se . ' . , ' ' : • . cleveted to one another." 11 Largifamily 1 . • ' caught a Tarter., . . . Devoted ? " gasped ,, the old 'gentleman' in Thelemile Mayor of &verde', Ran., has • , aineeetnent. " What on :earth d� you made the men of the"toWn, Who, elected her .'--WhY, Yes, hadeisg.. -,felf•Atii.o. he, 0 '0 T r r Sh has' put a stop tit. their poker - mean,.," rati!an2.?„!!.. . feel that.. they .had_oitught • a . said the . Principal, intoning throngh her ,,,,,,, ea, m billiard playing and other. " funny glasses. "No lees than eleven of Guesie"s rZEiinees, » after ,0 10. In. There.,.hail Liiot. .• , .brothers have been fierathis winter to take her ea' eieigh-richng, and she tells me she ,hieen_. a .ee.‘i,hey jamboree 'It" A teal ea' joilifleatiOi1 with • shooting iron expects the tall one .with the pitio eyes again time . aticOmpaninients sitice she took her seat. to-inorrow."--:Peek. . . , . . , ;, , ----. Everybody in bed by haltpast 0, and the ' . "".. ' . ' ' ' sports are skipping the town: *Thai° 0 A Singular death Of 4. Valuable bulideg, that. caused her eleCtien Will "not be re- . owned hy William' HoWell, Of Biteine,Witi., • ' ' • is reacirdect. The dog' was standing 'peak -the. Leactri if, "1.7.: t:'lle.ts . 811'...V..i•v°,. :h, 6g: tnr, in, . Uf latga.and rapidlyLrevorving flytwheel of an 77 , ,.... . ,. ,, , .. . ' electrie light:et:gibe higisudaerilyettempted i . • • .., A 0:droll:try. . •• . 'tr.'. jitinp thrOegh, it. ' Before he :tioUld be ' wife (towns. up from her tee.k),.......yon : reseeed the deg Viits grotiad to pieciep,' ,, , 1 ittlow a great many thiroJ i, aoh4. liovii,,, alletie Modal -03Y; has been Made, one Of what do yet thiek ishoiild be dens in 4 Cake , he deputy speakere ;of Parliereent Under of drowning ? Efilsbarid.-:Have ',it fiineraf,, . zar. olayes, Mop,: for :finsdeolois lay, Mr.. Chainberlitineitiled troin .New Ye* .t,teSnicve:; rele:4, Of pr.e,,e,eloUo,,, ...1 .: .7 ''...' I.., . , 4.1 'onto,. 0.7 p.o,e,to,te. ,a,Otti.iet, ..1., ; . : ..,•,..,,,' ''Seriotoly" .iir, . - . • , • ' , 'tor raverpooi on Saturday on: the 'Umbria: . , „. . . . - • : • - - ' ' THE flo,OOK. ''''S. EiFST FRIENP:. ' . .,„ . • . . . . . . . . . • , .. • . , . . . ,...,....••••,0,..„ ,. ,, , n , , , . . . . . th*Wftreh- re*17thwe "friVaiorr.0, . Spring ,and Summer Wear. ' Gregn premises t� be the fashionable as well as , the' appropriate. color ,for early. spring., Bright apple green is the .caprine of the moment with Frenchwomen, and is shown here in velvets, nets, flowers \and other rich goods . for trimming,•but i not. effective in simple roaterials.• Pale green add the grayish green ,resedit or mignonette are stylish shades ; also the yellowish tilleul or linden, green, and piper,. dark "cedar, myrtle and ivy leaf: tints' ;- hunter's green is a bright hue, and the mops ited, olive ilhades are :all -repeated. Creeen end wheat colors are shown in a variety of tints running into golden brown,. 'Parade" 'bra radiant sheik of -yellow,' so, called from the yellow tint in the bird of paradise plumage. • This is a new color, and. Will prove an excellent one to brighten dark. Shades and bring out their purity of tone -a foil for other ciders. It is also dull enough to 'be as becoming, Worn next the akin ae yellow lace, softening the flesh tints. The intense yellows are straw, maize and beaten gold. ,Anticine gold is a dull golden color, with. ,outrany of the `greenish tint. of old gold. One of the brilliant copper (mien; is. vaned' Nubian, Indian and' Siam reds are needs great deal, and come rightfully under, the head of copper. . The bright, poppy and scarlet are tided as shadings for all colorS. Brown shades are always to the front in the interm-ediate seasons, ani •now reap- pear as tobacco, suede, beige, caster and reany,drab tints, with more gniy than the yellow browns. The new gray 'Shade, is a mouse color, and steel and silver grays. are also continuedin favor. Gobelin blues are imeorted, again,. brit thetendencyls toward older blue _shaden_witimit-mixture- o other tint% Bleck pronsiees to' remain popular see. trimming 'for bright colors, such as green, scarlet and suede, where it in lined in laces, beads, ribbons andfeathers. Heliotrope has quite gone by,. and,. un- fortunately, its unpopularity affects the lovelYlavenders end violets Ind other kin- dred phades. ' London, having secured a' signal, from The principalnovelty in straw homier and hats are the ombri or shaded braids; these may bp used as entire be -jihad # for earlY eprhig; or as .berders to bonnets with niade crowns of silk, velvet or gauge. Col- ored straws are shown of various nds .4,444,4 "4.7. rer,o, nreeterw1e55!...,45:51•1 444 . . ,,...................."........ 47 covii,riation ,netweeo roon0•11,:v,.a....i.r,-0. --big--cod.-h-..ea-rth.i.f-t,nnEwrin--;,-,t.-h-e- reguift- .--.:---;.-0;40:7.47...r.-.......: _ and san. irranefsee,, . ment of the bowele. end perfect „action ot ,One ef the 'marvels of telegraphy wee' ntheeittreLiv, to..e mTevheesefrooringa;ithsearaeysteinititenaar bully.; * . fullY• aemenstrated 'last StinditYmorning, purities. If you are constipated, you, offer. when operators in the Western Unionoffioe a "Standing invitation" to a whole family . • in this oity carried on an interesting con- of 'disee,ses. and irregularities which mg y•ersetion over hill and dale, over :menu- slimly be" accepted," and you will, have tains capped withsnow, through: valleys of: guests unwelcome _and determined. Ali..... . perennial,green, tinder the Atlantic ocean these unhappy coeditions maybe &Versed with its unexplored secrets, over the vine by the timely use Of Dr, Pierce's, Pleaaant clad regions. of Euispe and under the Purgative Pellet% Powerful for the effect- Mediterranean, with Cairo, in the land. of • tti the Pharealle. The time was 3 o'clock in es:albrleisguhinlagtioanheoeflthtilyeaelTioWneno3f atnhde Lieriva the morning,: iust „after it'lleaVy night's 'wonderful 'organism with which we are work, "good night" having' been received' created. On the last Fres.? deseatall, The dramatis • personas were three operators; andthe Way Accounted Wm'. • ° • the affair came alieut was as followe : «A Brooklyn lady has seen her husband . ChiefAll clear. MVO you a •oigar . only twice,in th' t five years." It is not 1319Bhel- *You bat, but rii keep it.' . • mitaarahehtohwa Phnegr'shhtleibhaall bieseGn rabnlidndp;b0114" , . . 'Cliief=,•You will? Who are you werking Deputy of about a dozen different secret wgoiinTthng'n7t_olulrineagoen."*. •threve.004e 1,00iffilice,rea.14. cijieb,ys: ineotgoghieettsii.enlistainelipi;43,, onfot ocef riseWari4vfeorYrmagy 411; ,the Mortal Froet ill speak with Ve,lentia ,.. . ----•-• • , ' , ' 4 • '.'7 • ' . * . or tad. * "Co, Co, Co, Co." •rettlea off iToimitt PILES. the gionnds ' and "-1. I I CO " came in • . . • taho,tr reirr.44,7 01. • ' • 4 response.- , • ':here is the cable office'," &,aid the Chictige, operator, "�t for him; old fel- 11. which often bleed and ulcerate becoming. _ N ops • please --Toe Bay.. • . itphing and bleedingr'heale ulceration, • London-=:11ers is 'sun--pran., in manYries removes the turnors. It ia • • oinco, Oa., who wants to speak with you. eguallY effieaeions in• curing all Skin • 10*.! • To, Valentia-Let no have London new • Srairroms-711fejeture ; intense itching and /.4.• tinging;, meat at night; worse by scratch , ng. If. allowed to continue tutnore form, • , very ebre. t the ' Tor Bay, is doing the bahle transactions. . Diseases. Dg. swAYNE de SON; Proprie- . • . • London to Ban Prinoieco--Delighted to tmet •PhAiladelPhia• SwAnTE's'/Osurtazwr ,meet you by yvire, ' It is just etrildng noon can he obtauedof driiggiatellent by mail " 1:7,St. Paul's dock, and very foggy • asusua . . • i, for 50 cents ' 4 : . , ' How"'This ni wonderinl," rasp:meted...am TheLaormane renentiy_attempted .ii, ...... is the weather there'? ' • ' •..,------••"',--- ' • - ' rancisco. "It is 4.30 o'cilock, s time, her, and not Yet 'daylight:. #We re Metz " miner Mobilization " experiment near Metz. _ The , railroad .station -master -re:. ' ceive ManY cables from London, but never .oeived: at ...1 o'clock an order to prepare had the pleasure of meeting you before. °toffee for 2,806 Men at 4,,. and a dinner fir AnY ' Ansericans there? It is raining the seine number,. at, 6.30. At 1 °Weak slightly. e in, had their coffee and ' on the hills, and the boys ' will be selling Thereare plenty O'f mushrooms 2,800 men awn took the train for another station, and at violeta on the 'street corners to -day." 680 the next 2;800 promptly appeared, . • dined and. went to the next station, where they hitcl coffee,and both parties returned; to their quarters the next morning. -The attempt Was 'highly successful. : airo, wrote: ", San Francisco, Cal., is on hero and sends greeting. They want to cOnneot the:wonderland of' the ,new world. with prehistorie Egypt." ' ' ' Cairo--Sayto San Francisco that it is a pleasure:, es span half the.glehe to,epeak tom the plain Milan . to faney_hrafele -ef,- -with-thetiii•-•--- narrow rows like fine straw gimp, , while "The pleasure is mutual," signalled Toin °there are in open lace designs, ' to he from the Western Union operating room made up over colored net 'frames, and show The Pacific ,sveakiegzeiththeMe;th Ithmeolor well ithrerugh , , Minna. 'Chips of aareatgartki,70,54.7ksotagimm, Inattaii10,' IitaosavreatisozOinaterzrntt .z1 ' lariTAI:01 , rfisw:2‘war ...thecarmedlovis,-ean&Akthe-AtIttrilNeepo gun iprimoutee capi; ' •::-:-., .7. 'btliiab`arehitiae up in plain' rows, and also ' • . inlace.patterne. of fioVvere. and web-like; ' • ''.' • ' - ' deSigna. •Fine Milani; will undoubtedly be . ' . • i A Human le,lectric Light. the most desirable 'straw this Season; but . Some weeks ago Charles Baldwin; one of millinere say that ohip hats are gradually the best known men of Lexington, Ky.; was doming into favor, that more Will be spited:with a ' sudden and peculiar illness • used this Reason than ever ' ,' lasting several gays- Physicians afforded . . . , . no relief, and he recovered as eriddenly its • chi, ldren's. Punishinenz in Itngland ' he *Rine:ill.' • Diihis , recovery he noticed The punishments that fond parentk one eveningthat. his body. in the dirligave deVised for their beloved' offePring off a steady light, visible 100 yards The Many and curio*. Mont of the*, light is so strong that nide quite proper, are corporal. ,Boys are an ordinary newspaper can be read by the ped, caned and birched, and both the light' from hie body , ata distance of six feet. their sisters are slapped en various. He is perfectly well and id not conecions. of of:their.bodies, 'shaken by_thencrefte hie...pewee. Phyeiciancsay-helathawon.-- ‘neoltor sh-otildefirMAdetoiStand on o der .of the age.--Pitteburg Piepateh.'::. . bed inthe middle of the. daywhen the play- Itilious„Dyspepsia, or 'Torpid Livm associated • d of coingloatee Your disease has become, Abe- - give. r the number and • diversity .of spiv- " .! : tem_ ' No matter what' stage it has reached. I ' .' • Dr..pierctes•Golden Medical Discovery , wersubdue it, if taken acoording to dime: • - . ' , tions for a reasonable length of time: • If not ". eared; complications multiply and Consump, - e iri. tion of the Lang's, Skin Diseases, Heart Disease:. • • . ' Rheumatisra; Sicily 'Disease, or other grave : . - . .. a. Do you feel dull. languie,,low-spiiited, life- less, and indescribably miserable. both physi- 'eally and mentally; experience a sense of fullness or bloating after. eating. or of "gone-" . , . • • ness," or emptiness of stonmen in the morn - ,have lug. 'tongue coated. bitter or bad taste in ' are mouth, irregular appetite. dizziness. frequent . headaclies, blurredoyesight, " floating specks" as is before the eyes, nervous prostration or ex.: haustion. irritability of temper. hot Rushes, • . , • 44;44.4. - t7•11,*17, ' ystraptinc 'alternating with chilly sensation% biting, transient Pains here and therel.3betA • : : • • ' • ' parts. feet, drowsinese afternreiilsfet#1ness, or betels iditidteeUrerbiebditbanie-lbelinrAng-frefee-hdreaingdi-:81erPo'f- -cvii:Penstand•-• ,----H '- sins . • olnfg. tealtuthese 'istYY11:140-.: 'mgt. 'You .ere :Buff. eri. ng from. : ' . . .' . . zit to •If you haven% or any cOnsiderablis Mnribei . • • ' ' . lifone*-moon . . that 'mist. common. cif • American maiadiea- ' • " .Say,•Perkins, 'Old hey, .why• don't -we .. '.see you at -the elnb ;ink More ? Ilits, your Snother-inlaW• shut, doyen on you ?'' , • "No, Brown; the filet Of.the matter xs,my home is so,haPPy'no'w. that there le lio in ducement forme to leave it.: You look in- credulous,: but it's a poisitiVe fact., You se% my wife Used to 'Buffer se.mrich froth fun°. tione,I detangementa common to •laer: set. that .her.spts indher temper Weregreitly n'by..affeoted. It was not her fault,'. of course; , De. lAteiceks • G01401.; Medital Dili"' .; , ' Meg eoVery acts powerfully uptin the Liver, and' • • ' 'of a: biititniade home iinpleasent alt the same. through that. great blooct-purifyllig organ, . • . , , . • But now, Ohm she had begun ,t,c, take Dr cleanses the system of all blood-tabits end im- : , • :: • • - nt is . ; • Pierce's Favorite Preicritition, sliehasbeen .pulities. from whatever angle aisint • It ie . • dia. eur:honey.moon a 1,over e,gain., , ,,. , ,* stre.ngtheieng, end healing their s. , . •. , ,. e `.. • --...-4--- ' • ' • • . . en aPpetbang, restoratiVe tonic, it.' prOinotes ..-; • tale ,...._.7.-11 . n a orn a. ... . : y o.. • - eidth, i .c. •lif i , ' digestion and nutrition, thereby building up • '' both flesh. and 'strength.; 'In Malarial distriete. ' • ...," boX, • 0.0h, . .4.....it is. •so healthyhere" , Writes a settler .cethleiebriWini0dereftlerilu...gmedireveeinreanhdas.4".gaiue,nche$10.'greitan4t .. , , . , ,. Fever, umb Ague, and kindred; diseases. 'Dr, leree's Golden Medical, Dis ' ' , • • . , . , . by the hour; or, Worse than all, are, de is shining and•their conipamons are int under, the bed400in • window, Stevenson,. in his " Garlan Versee," 'pathetically, etas : • Now doeli it not seeto. bard 'to you . When. all theaky is clear and blue, . And I should like so much to play, • To have to go to bed by day ? • Many ' children . hate felt • the. Rani eller maladies are quite able to set. in. and, sooner qr later induce. a fatal. termination. • : Similar oases. It is, We suppose; pac to poor people* to punish •their ohildre making them sit on cold doorsteps. -Not °anise more ludicrous than the eight 'Mr. with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion.' The more.. little wretch wriggling about on, it slid) of 80 bt and so happy that we are having equally efficacious in acting upon t e , -- Ug •neis, and other excretory organs, sgtearsinia stone in „front of the. cottage door, ludicrous:as it is tame; the punishme brutal and.danger.eue, and doctoil and triet visitors should lose tie opportunit putting it down. While they are-abo the former might say a ,word : to both and -poor about the hateful practice of in a southern califorma town, "that the ing boys Zan and caning their hands. It only physician in the; place will . go two bee been well remarked that nature . has blocks out of his way rather than meet an provided children with 4 , place eepecially undertaker, Whose- sad; reproachful ,gitZe .fitted for bodily chastikeinent, and it haiiiite him like the memory of a day spent never intended that the delicate Mechanism. in reading Orie of TieWell'IS . novels.": of thellumari ear and.hand should.. be silly:. Chicago Tribune. . • . , , • iected to:the. Violence :of pedagogues who; • '• ' . . ".---"*--- ' In their ignorance or reeklese: 'brutality, ' \ IP° the Year 1888 ' . ' shower-theiri,bjowe upon them:. • So ranch, Ne..better:, resolution .ce,,n be made than to then, for the .infliction of bodily:punish: resist. buying -any of the snhstitutes offered resent, of which it only 'remains to be said , as . just as geed, ' as the . great ' only sure. that it is nearly always the beet if -temper- P.°p. corn. eure--Patnant's Painless. Corn etely administered, being-110On over, but -Eat nester. It never 'faili to give zeatisfac- not easily *forgotten:, • Dr. Johnson/8 tion.. Reware, •of poisonous . flesh. eating opinion on is point is :we nown.--..• ''' • th' • ' • t ' . 11 1 subiititutes. . , . . ' .• ; , . , , London Globe. ; . - .-' • . . -'----7.' ' ' . , „ . , , . , • ,Queen Victoria's New Wrari. ! , , Wrist Watchesi , , ' ' Among the Queen's Jubilee gine. there I was not surprised to see that nearly al • oane' from the :Cali& a. cloak of Ostridli the fafr,serwere wearing the wrist watches fathers, Whose •like is 'not to he' had fer which ate no se entire!y the f: h' • love or money; as it is Made of the finest Louden,: bet which, I believe, are Very little. and glosii. ieet feathers, • Stritiped lengthwise worn, as vet, in America. Made' in ,every from the .stem and sewn talon in r iv form oin' he plain leather strap to . the upon net, makings 'mass, black, soft and. . . l;Agnin'eent:aeeI,3134ithe face 0t ievaltasir°Pi4d" rklesEhlihe.g'artentvohis•ero1cld4:;: estones, theyiSlnedthrenghentwithffnesChlaeksrah. are both ornamental ,and convenient., , and reaches almost to the feet: , , NOvelties are even beingintroduced in the , shape of purses, pocketbooks, sticks and • ', Northwest,Wisdoin , .• . . umbrellas containing 'direinutive time - you: canner judge editorials as you would - keepers, and one jeweller, more daring than Linibergereheese.-HRegina joiernal. .. . the rest;bas manefactured sone rings re-. , seinbling signet -rings, .but having instead, ' Use the etirestremecli for eitt.arrh, -Dr of 4 orest'a tiny watch. Itis scarcely likely,: : . .. . however, that.these will ever become • • fashionable, as. they must • be , extremely ". Treinmen on the Denver Pacific. :110.a.4 bulky and ponderous for Wearing 'en • the are puzzled by the 'appeararice.of ' an un finger. --Philadelphia Telegraplee London canny spectre, which haunts their trains Lettcr. • , .: . at night. , ItelevOrite prank is to -perch 1 4 itself on a freight ear brhe ake wel, where. ...' :. • DisaPeninted. .' '. • it will sit for an hoiir at. a ti nie if limo. An• 'English lord who visited sAmerioit jested.. When a trainmen p itiokii- up enough - was at a dinner given in his honor. A lit- courage to approaoh the unwelcome ht d disappears visitOr tle daughter dt his host, who Wei toe well, it jumps out into space an , • • • . , . . ,. , . bred to stare, but wise eyed nim dovertly as The average Rusehiti is said to drink the oecaelori,preseisted itself, ' finally yen. from . tee to twelve etudes of tea a English lord'?day. tured to reinark :- 1f, And are you really and '" . Yein" e Mi Every Rtissien nierChant has, a tint-tirn in truly art -- d °nting:room, and 'the , I aWyee or me. TWoul answered, pleasantly, 11 really " yh%and :trul" hiohmic goes out to his cafe for tee.. BS, often et heve Often thought : d, like • to See lot an Eteisti or ,she went on, " ittiol.7-and for wine. , At,the cafes at air hours of the ad the' Gerinan beer or the Feeiaislameti '--"' • "Awl now•Yoit are satisfied al last ?" day eininight pile ean, site ciroWde of people': he pet in laughingly. iiN-o," replied the „;„,„;,,,, trilthful little girl; "I'M net satiseed ; rul "./.141.781.ie' saici; to be ; ;tit; work on a gtiOd deal disappointed.“ , :' " • A"--- Haggard , • the proiniSed seqttel to "She.' ,, • VtAIRES . ALL. HUMORS •fr-v.,, a coin:non Deitch, or Eruption, to the . • " vit, scrofula: :•salt -rheum. "Fever -sore," '.. Sqiily • or Rough. Skin,. in :short,- all 'diseases, caused by -bad, blood are conquered \by this. ,- • Powerful, purifying, and invigorating inedi- ,. • . ' -• eine; Gr.eat Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under ' . its benign .inliiietice. Especially had. irinang• • , . - (. „ fcsted ,ite'potency ih• Curirig • Tetter, Eczeitia, . . Erysipela.s,,.Boile,.CarbUncies, Sore Eyeii, Scrof!: ,,, • . ' . ulona Sores and Swellings, Hie -joint Disease.' • "White Sivellings," Goitre, or Thick '.Neek, . ' - and' Enlarged Glailds. Stind. ' ten cents in. . • . • .. . , stanipsfor a large Treatise, with colored : , • ' . . • • • "'- plates, on Skin Diseaseseor the Bogie amount for ii Treatise on Scrofulous Affections •• . . .. . • .. . . . " irOR THE BLOOD I! THE‘LIFIE..'" i ,' • ' . , • 'horolighiveleause. it by using Dr. pleree9s' •• ; . Golden lmodleal..•DisCOvery, and. ,goOdi• • ., • digestfoni ',4' fair Skin, buoyant spirits:, vital . . strength and bociilelieeltb Will biestablineed. ` .. CONSUMPTION, 'Whiali is Scrofula of.flie Likugat'lgarrested and .bilred ' by thie .remedy,, if taken ill'the: . • . • ' " earlier stages Of the, disease. From it:s mar- . .• velouti power. over this terribly fatal diecaSe..: . .. . . • when iiret offering thia.nOW world -famed reni... . • , • • : • edy to the public, pr. Melte thought seriOuidY, ' ..,... ., of- calling it 'his ."COlirstritrtioN.,Cons," • but' ', ' .• . ; . ' • ; ,abandoned that name' as toe restrictive for • *N• * * * a Medieine Which.. from Rs' wonderful coin, \'.. • bination of tonie, or strengthening., alterative, ' \ .' or bloodeleansing, anti -bilious, 'pectoral. Wad • ., \,•• • nutritive' propertieS, is /unequaled; net 'owe. . c • as 4, itinedy for Coristiinption, but for. gilt. : '', •••• • Clarollic Moonset; Of.the . "• „ . ' • •\' Liver Blood,and Lungs. 9 • For: Neale , Lunge. Seidler; of Blood, Short- 4. , . ,• . . .•. . ,. nees. of Breath, Chronic.Nasal Catarrh,. Bron.- .• _. - '.` •-, .•••• , ,, \ . L ' chitia, Asthma, Severe 'Coughs, and• hindred; ' . ..., ' ' •• affeetiOn13, 15 10 an efficient remedy.: . . .\ - • 80)4 by pruggiate.lit-$1.0%; or SIX Ilettlea •' :'":7 \ '•:.'• • • for tte,0'0. ' ...-4 , . • , . • i '5W.- oTielld ten cente in statnpsforDr. Pierce's . • 73°0X consumption. .,Aderese,.. . ., , .. • ,• - Sild. S Dispensary ModiSti Association . _ 663 DIalin St..: RITIFiFAtO. N. Y.- - ,• .. r; ti 141 I.. 12 .mit - • . . • - - 5 . .1 '5e • ' 4 , r ' , 11 1/5 5 t $ .' . • • • . • • .• . • • .. . . . • , . , 7;"L"."'" 7"•'• : - 4.0" ".•-• • '••" r ' ; • ":".' • *A".44404teeraerferrirti-trare*t.irri&-....:..4,1.4,....-...-r....eiri$erri-,.4.4.44444,:, ‘.4.44ftteitte01416,..ra-bers. rorret..4.00.44444.44,..44,44444"'•'*444'444°'4444* , • • •41 • ',••• • t 1 1' I • • • ' ' . ' • ' • • . ,• • , *50,1.` • . +. • • r. • • '•• • • . . • • •' ' 7 • • e 4 •