Lucknow Sentinel, 1888-11-02, Page 714•A
Whet it. Is to be rorty. °
'To discover a sprinkle et gray in your beard,
f1care4•
And hug to the re hen iyou, get home fro&
town,: ,
ab. there wbet it late be ferLY:
•
• To find that your shadow has portlier grown,.
.That your •vole° hag, a practical, businesslike
tone;
'
That your visien IS tricky., which oneeWasso
bright,
And a hint ef a wrinido is coming to light -
Ah, that's whet it is to be forts,- •
A sleigh ride, a party, a sanceor a dine;
Why, of course, ypiell be present, yea never de-
cline; •
But, alas l there's, no invite, yoe're no.." young
folk" you see;
You're no longer a peach, but a crab-appleAree-
ao, that's what it Is to be forty.
A daughter that grows like a lily, a queen, „
And that bloanas like a rese in a garden ot green,
• ,A2 dapper young clerk hish ice.cream saloon.
•• • Both a dude and a dunce, ISM carry off Soon; -
And a bey that is ten, and the pride of your eye,
t In caught Brooking vile cigarettes ph the sly,
• 4h, hat's what -it is tdrbe forty.
• At t ty a man dreams of power and fame;
. thfrty hia-firelms a soberer game;
At forty his drowns and vitii01138 are o'er,
And he knew find he feels as he ne'er dithefore•
. That a map is a fool till he's forty. -
. • Popular science itevelations:
, •
• •• The pollen of the plena- tree. is said. to
produce an influenza precisely. like hey
fey erand 'rose cold.
• Professor °set, of Vienne', has been ex-
, tioritnenting with " cendurange ',bark as a
• tonic, and thinks it worthy a place in
• enateria reedit* as a symptomatic remedy.
• Diogreeable moisture of the.hands May
be overcome by tubbing the hands several
• • times a day With the fellowing zniature
Tincture of belladonna, half an ounce ; eau
de Cologne, frier ounces.. . ••
French. physicians report great enceess
• with the internal use cif antieeptios •in
• typhoid fever. .Acording to thie _method
diejefeettiag Anterm.f•r negaAiZetien• •
the disease rime a shorter course.
• An English inventioe is the " centre-
oyale,".-7 having' four wheels .a foot in•
• eliameter•and a large wheel in the centre.
With it the rider is enabled to go up hill
as easily 'as' to . go forward on, level
• ground,• ,
. According to Professor Ewing earth-
•-. quake movement is not a ',hook at ell, but.
44. wobbling i't of the, ground in, All dim.
•, tions. A•movement of the 'earth,an 'inch
•and-thteeqnatters terthe -greatest -yet- ee-
t corded by the instruments in japan, while
the moyemente are usually measured . only,
• in hundredthenf an inch. "
OURAENT TO171613".1
wet convicted and Belitauced to two years'
•
imprisonment.
„
*4k, W/461.41 1..161.to
'
as, for loOtormo,. bitting; a target. 104 timee whioh ;will hA .operated by three different
out Of 120shote, t. 'A dietanee o %BOO
yardtz, or something more, the. a, mile and
a half.
PTATIMOS. lately Publlehed in, England
ehoWiliat the. weradhaei 700 Crcesusee worth
05,900,000. Or over, of wheel 200 :reside in
England, 100 in the United States, 100 in
Germitny, 75 in FrohOet 50 in Ennis, 5014'
India ond no in other mint/404-
Orzions414 reOentlY returned !rein. a
yacation,epept in the North of Scotland nye
the firmer nighte, are so ehort there that
there mhardly two hours of darkness. At
/lemmas he was able to read at 11 o'clock
at night without the aid of artificial :light.
: Mown. working newspaper haVe
13eenoommingling at almoet every hour of the
da' and night among the Macke!" yellow
fever. *tints at Jacksonville, ' only four
have been, BO fart Attapked, by the scourge,
and three of the'foer areillure of recovery.
• Tim netive Hawaiians are. Po14 to be
disappearing very rapidly, and it not
be long before the race extinet. Their
language is still quite generally spoken, but
as English.is the language of thenourt the
natiVe dialect:is betted to fall into Ae0a-
deuce.
5 •
•
PEOPLE *ho Went to 1444 at; George,
Franole Train when he lectured in New
York the other night for the benefit of the
yellow fever sufferers felt the team porizing
into their eyes while be gave reminia'
'mimes �f the epidemic in New Orleane,
that carried off, his father, Mother and
three sisters. •
Pen -Mess Some, the young sister of the
terelart:4-Erapera4-,;.osed.-.4liee.iprenpentiVer
bade of Constantine, Duke ofSparta, the.
heir to the Greek throne, id not prettY,,but
attractive. She has a' round,. freeh• face;
ana 'looks a little like her grendmothee,
Queen Victoria, end a good deal like her
lete hither, Emperor Frederick. •
THE New York Titus days thitt "the
th
of
hi
hi
ti
a
pr
ti
ag
iz
a
Beli
•
cemPanies. H. A. ilowarde .of Chicago,
who has charge of- one end of the pine! line
recently laid from: Lima, 0., to Chicago,
says that it 'has not been officially deter-
mined to. extend the line to:Milwaukee., the
coneureption there not being great enough
to warrant it. There is so large a demand
for fuel oil in Northern Michigan and Wig.
consin mines that the company intend to
ran a line of tank etc/tonere to Duluth, Ash-
land and other lake ports. •
A. mere to the Valley of the Yosemite
jO Califorhia, says that one iniPortent fact
to be observed there, but which is -never
mentioned in the guidebooks arid seldom in.
ne.wspaper porreipondence, is that the
women visitors who explore the place' to
any extent do so ml horsebeolc and ride
astride. . The steeps, are BO abrupt that a
woman who. attempts, them perched nn.
eaturally One side of a beast is sure to
come to grief, and coming to grief on Moun-
tain traile where the precipices are a nine
high is a ;natter of life and death. Women
must either leave the glories of 'the ,Yose,
mite Zeeman or ,they must employ all .the
advantages which nature 'has given them.
And really,,when you come to think of
'why shouldn't Women ride a,etride
aa men ? Is there any ' reason against it
except conventional custozn ? If ,there is
any other reason, whatie it? Among the
'Plains Indians and other equestrian peoples,
women ride the same at men,' and never
think of riding any other way. ,
A.Oording to L'Indtistrie 1),frildetifie a
,le,endreman in the .vicinity of pare', hail
•discovered a Very ingenious :Method of
cleaning Heim without soap : He uses no,
• ,soap or lye, nor ehloriqe, but replactes these
•• :.ezihstances by boiled potatoes, With Which
be rubs the linen. :Ude curious process, it
:appears, is much eztperior to those hitherto
•• • ',employed, and • the worst soiled cotton
• -or silk, cleaned by this method, • are Made'.
. Whiter than they could be by the •nee of ete
,
•
:an Biectric storm: • •
While off the banke of • .Netifeendland;
the White Star . ;steamship Adriatic, tte
eently arrived in New York; 'eecountered
An eidotrie :Storm„_•__For three-:coattett of
— an hour-there:was:a verybeely_titne,Whinh'
. „.
was not fidly appreciated,..-hoviever, entil
the stored,' had passed' ther: There .had
been a heavy fogall the inorphig; with the
• wind from the south, and ler dome time bo -
lore the stpem it had been 'raining. • Sud-
denly the airtUrned warm; and for three,
quarters of an hour thete was a remarkable
display of lightning, with almost incessant
thunder; ,whialiwas pecttliarly terrifying tq
the paesengets. . What startled the seilete
meet, however, Wete the unwonted warmth.
It had been eaci and raw'all the morning,
but as soonlate the ship etre& the storne
• the aitiviao like a meggy day. in, Midi:am-
, mer. An °Meer OD ElittlirdayBaisa "that it
seemed as though it pail Of:. het water had
••, been daehed on the . deck, as the rain
'splashed up On his hands, Iiihe vessel itself
- was not affected bythe germ, but oven the
'• efficerel were apprehensive entil it. had
passed, ;
, .
Result of Bast Travelling. • '
A . aorreepondent of . the • London.,Tiw.er,
writing •ontlae objeet of the daily rice
• between the two fist Englitih trains to the.
north;:. Bays • "There is' one point bf
yihich I , have seen n� notice taken -411e
. increased • wear and :tear: Mentally and
bodily of the • daver and stOket eh these
„ spout' trams: A friena Of' one---of*Ihie
•divers told. me, that ,he sew a Marked
.effect on hie apparent health, • The driver
• told kim his .anxiety was greatly Incre'afied• .,
()none cpcasion his stoker, Who had gone
• along the engine • to oil a valve, became
• paralyzedwith.• fear, .63 that he OM& not
Move forward or backwards. The driver
had to leave his plabe and follow'. hie
. stoker and adze his 'hand, and :so. they
regained their' standing • 'plaCe. Th0
distances rtin are eo great and the. Pace oo
• rapid that any oiling; etc., • hi 'done with
increeteedrisk. • The force of , the :wind is
• O great that when the stoker • credo along
the'foot plate alongeide -the engine, he has
AO hold by the rail like grim death, and
• has been.darrieid off his feet." ••
•
rm wife has been the ,drawer of water,
e hewer. of • Wood -tin actual fact, very
ten -and the Orvant of all, even of the
rea man ; to cook, niend. and wash for
m, to wait upon him and to do all this at
min for several of.them:" 13he hi indeed
treeieure, and cannot be too highly veined.
PEDFEBBOD•puEs, in Unveiling the linet of
ughMillerin the•Wallacie monument; et.
•
eased. the convictieM that, the aPprecia-
On of the ,grendeur ef :struggle
°lea .early hardships! Which\character-
ed hislife is. more and More .deepening,
tired, toO, . . regard to his . Word as 'A
tetary :nee, a' pdblieist and ,es Man of
mance. .•. •
cosznisines' Of the British Assboiation
. . . .
hieh has for Bente time past been dimities.
g the matterof the liquor 'traffic erelong
honativii Vireos hale sintouneed that'll:11885
°nand sent t� Afriest 1,099,146,gellons of
pirits and in 1886 the city of.Boston alone.
ent 737,650 &Ilene of 'rent. - Since • 1833.
aniburg. and Brannen hevesent hi *fries-
hitty ofnpiriteoits-liquors:. illustration.. of :Vestfitia. 'dial- Ind
De. EDWADD ,a celebrated English daring is found the fact that the receht,
eaoher og memory, hitee ftrrieecl- at ,Ne* onion ef,the ReinsatIMethediet Pretest/int•'
orh, Wheo he will enter' the field Against '0Oeferenee.vote held in' a Yilleige in whieb
there !wee 'bet one Methodiet, Protestant
faniily mid na cherch„of theirown, And yet
It was Well entertained. . .
• There is. a worthy ' office:bearer in St,
Andrew's 'Chetah, . Woolwich,. who is
determined to teach the • rising ;generation
how to give., Aele carries round the Col-
lectioit plate he supplies with pence the
°Oho. who IMO not wine prepared for
the eocaoiOn. ° ; •
' The vicarage of ;Halifax, Which is, inthe
gift Of the Crown, is now at the dispoeal of.
the GOvernment. The inconez of the .vicar
ettlzat femme'," Yorkshire 'town is..£2,000
per annum, atia he. has in his gift over
.1bittylivinge;_neetagipg_over •:e360.:.a-year.
. There:litre* in the Onairk that ;a bag,
Itempty; htiege lciosely he string, but
,themore there is put in it the pleser is the
'Mouth drawn . and the herder •.is; to get
anything out: • Se,„ often, as men have
inOte means tee.* it le more diffionit• to
Obtain money from them.7-7Christicin
•
• •
Wo -day's Church News.
• Mies Delphinelieker Is about to, estate
lish.a Christian newepaper in jerwralem.
• Mr. Philip Phillipe, "the singing
haze been, 'giving three- letzten& in,
Glaegow; entitled e Around the -Woad -in A
Chariot of Song."
A r
The novel speoteele of lady miesionariee
preaching in the vernacular among the
women was Witnessed at the Ruth Jattre,
at Mahesh and Bullubpote, India.
•
Mr. pheridtin Knowlea bite bequeathed
$5,000 to Mr. f3purgeon's college, the Ono
slim to his orphanage, . and $500 to Aidbeg
Chapel, Bothsay. , •' ,•,
A letter has been rowed froth Dr. J.F.
Smith, Queen's; College. missionary to
Chine, telling of his safe arrival at Oho -Foo,
North China. •. •••• •
itishop.$13aldwin, "of Huron, sails from
tiverpool for Canada on the •25th instant,
Dam Beldviin'ehealth having been restored'
during her stay in Germany. '••
The.Oban rimea :Oates that Mr. Mac-
pherson: the minister of Inverary, is a
strong advocate of lee& nationalization as
the ,ofily .;effectiee solution of .11361. land
AXIAKAL IVITUOVT xrEAB.
• --- .
Ifightning, .Cyclone and t?to. Iron florae
into 00,9 nrrow 0.1,104i;never eoerii;
It i� Peeeary-the :FEttvitiheh• Ot the
ItEDIABIKABLE LoNeeevicey,„
. •
ffeettlY bat.1CP13301044', Zellesee, TiAte
'Merieenes' the DieetYles TOInat" a ?Cm'
logistic, Bravery le a ridable attribute of
man; and it was diseovered in birds; beasts
end fishes. I don't cleim the quality . for
thebecite I am about to desonee, says a
correspendent of the Detroit Free Fres*. I
believe bravery cannot be said to exist in
senses devoid of fear. I conceive that an
appreciation of danger is a PecesearY
Menstrum tothenobler courage. It is not
the rime of dogged indiffereece I admirer;
it ie the man wb,o refzieee to fly when duty
Inds him stand and flierigh he fear death,
fore dishonor More. New,: the peccary
has no particle of fear. o ,n, account of any
show of odds, ancleppeara to live only for
the purpose of madly dying when 'Oeportn.
nity (Mere. The game gook 'fights with
heroic valor, but one sees in his swimming
eyes when gaffed and blending in the pit
glances of regret and namelese fear. The
• pachyderm' of the Texas. forest dies in 6' a
metterof course" manner, as if he was
meant to end that way and was glad of it.
He looks up in the free where the man eits
who shot biro (few /30n -Of ereerienoe ever
shoot them from any other standpoint)
and anon he heads uP his cloven foot and
glances.af it. lithe peccary regrets any-
thing in the hour of dissolution it is that
he was net made like a squirrel to olitali;'
Texas and Pacific, and Fort Worth and
Denver city loOmetive engineers' Often
encounter droves of 1,w:caries, as sup-
pose do all engineers who operate on the
Western Texas railroads. No Whistle is
sounded to frighten them, .The engipeere
know that ,pecoariee' cannot be frightened.
The engine rashes into the midst 'of toe
drove, and those not' killed outright die
madly °Urging, and. biting at the whe,ele
,--•-,-George-0._11apies,Lthe_evangelliet, has.
recently° decided , that Jehovah 'never
intended the human race should make feed
og .the animal_ kingdom • and. has . begun a
crusade against beef paters.
Rev. 'Walter '
Laidlaw President,- of the
Albany County Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Children at West Troy, N:Y.,
is nephew of Rev; Dr. Laidlaw, of this
remarkeble case of longevity ih connect -iota
with the 1:f. E. Loyalist: family of Hover, of ,
that township. A gentlpraan favors' US
with another case even mere remarkable.
The netelops referred to below ere alee of
U. E. Loyalierstook, being, descepdants
-thelateLewie and Mirktre PitY1/3, Sidney,
who lived abtont' two iniles from the city ot
FiVe of their ,ohildren OW sur-
vive, yiz.: Cornelius Davis, born, April eth.t.
1800; John DaVifl, %Februaq 9th, ;
Bere. Dprland la:teary 10th, 1806;
Mrs. Hester Morden January 10th, 1800;'
and James pavia, December the 14th, 1810., .
The age •o Cornelius Davis is, therefore, gia
yeers, months and 22 dare, John' Davis.
86 yearn( 7 mnnthei 19 days; Mrs. Dorian&
Clapp, 82 yeare, 8 menthe, 18 days; Palti.
Hester Morden,.80 years, 8 months, 18 days;
and jameoz-Davis, 78, years, 9 months, 14
days. Their total age amount to 417 year*,
4 niontheegiving an average of 88 years, 5
months and 18 days Cornelius Dame lives
in, the front of Sidney; to Miles from.
Bellealle;;John Davis in the 2n4 ocemeseion
of. Theriot, ; Mrs. Dorland Clapp, in the
4th concession of Thurlow ; Mrs. Hester
Mordent had lived in Belleville all her life -
until Verylately,,,bnt now Keep with her
son -in -lave Mr. Themes .Dieleens,of Nap-
anee. She is, at preeent viditing het 'son,
Mr. George Morden.. Deseronte, and is
hale and actiee. Jame° Davis resides in
the State Of Iowa.. It is, indeed, very Bel.
dem that we find so many members of one
family reaching such an advanced
Deferent° 'Tribune.
•Wili Surely: Find It.
"Bridget," 'maid' the head of the house,;',
arrayed in evening dress. 4' I ani . =ex-
peotedly palled Out for the evening, and
want you to see that your ,mistrese gets
thm note .. as. oportns.e)h&comesJo,w4thout
tht,t,crush, the:3u.. A. Peocar55-18' Inn' all; • • • - -
'respects a hog. Ile lopke, amelis, tastes- sorr,„ responded. Bridget,. , ,4-ra-
like a hog -and is a hog, but for a thing of
lave it In the pooket of the trousers ye vs
• indomitable courage of the lower type, for•
just taken off." .• • .
•a hater of littenchless fury, ane a fighter to • •
the last,throb of hie heart, coinmencl me to
the fierce Dicotyles Torqueture the indi
genetic, Tease hog, a brute that Would,- if
he °odd, while riding in the midst of e,
oycilone, bite at the zig.zag flashes of the
death -dealing lightning.
rof. Loieette. Dr. Pick !Jaye that the way
o remeriber anything ill to have It im.'
rem the mind strongly itia pleasantly at
rat We hay° Our doubts about 'this:
Many a man/forgets an appointment to
.me with, a friend, but no man even yet
ergot the -date set for • hislianging,
Ross ,Wiss, :a young' giel of Meriden,
Miss., had 5 cents given her ass, joke for a
irthday present. She. bought a yard • of
alio With it and made a sunbonnet, Which
he Sold for 40, cents.. This she invaded in
nore calico, made it AI, sold the- garments
itrnd reinyeeted thecipitaluntil she had $10.
With this she bought 'notate:tee; planted
leziefetid-forthe cultivation of hoe lirne;
or gatheringand carting to town, :and
read° 660 clean prOfit, ••
Renew gARRETT; the Mee envied heir to
he Baltimore tit•Ohio Railroad; is dying Of
oftening of the brAin. • Hie death is • net
ar off, as the dinette is making swift pro.
grem • Size poWerfril • atteedente Are re-
quired to hold hire when his *lent attaoke
oonie, and then hie blood.curdling shrieks
frighten alinoit the whole village of Ring -
Wood, j.•• It is now well understoodthat
the peouliae financial freeke by whieh he
attracted the attention of the- country a
year Or :ea age Were; the operations of a,
diseased Mind. • ••• . •:
COVFEEiB a handy andharmlese disinfee-
•
e
. • Vindicating Bilinear.
"1• hear you are "going td marry again,
.S.reith?'''' "'Yes; the faCt lei feel that I
• meet; merely self-vindieettion.. Ever
since I married my firet,Wife, I havebeen.
• known as Mts. Smith's husband; but if I
Marry again,. you know, my new Wifewill
• be forced to take a ettberdinate place in
'the family, and everybody Will speak of
* • liet'ai•Mrs. Smith'e hesbande.wife: SO?"
• •
•'.,80,d9!earraillprirt • ,
d.
Suggestive Skplanatiola. •
" What's the Matter, johnhy Praiked ohe
• Ci the neighbor's boys, as his companion
• vitae out of the alley gate; " ain't finiehed
your dine,* e'ready, have ye ?" e, flop."
' " Ditlh't ye &t. any ?" Yep; but I
:didn't stay to finish it.'" . 'What made
• ye leave reo scion ?" .Well, said. soine.
thing et the table; and °everybody but pa
•- - • • ' e
- mended. „ the • hole . in y,out
trofisets. pocket. last eight after you had
gone to bed, John Jeer. Nowam not a
thoughtful little wile? • Husband, debi-
• WeilTet-ye-ee;" yott: are thoughtfu
enough, my dear, but bow' the tractable! did
-yen dieoever that, there Waif holo my• . .
tronoero peeket •.
•
4 ,4
tint. Hapeilinents have • been: made in
,
Paris to prove 'Mild. A quantityof meat
Wag hung up in a closed room lintil dowel-,
posed, end then a chafipg.dish was . intr0.
deiced and 000 geinlene of cOffee thrown
on the Are. 14 a tnw minutes the 'room'
was completelY. disinfected. In another
room sulphuretted hydrogensed ammonia
were developed, 'an& nbietY grammes of
eoffee destroyed the smell in . about half a
minute. It io also stated that coffee des-
troys the sinell of meek, casteerum, ' •and.
reise.fcietide. • .• •
' juire 1884 that the' eturViVora
• Ir was in .. , , ,
of the, Greely Arctic exPedition were rescued
and onlyoW has Congreed Voted to those
resoued men Money-conlinutettion ',tit "feel
and quarters And extra -duty' pay, Lieut.
Ci•reely wears. the FAO of .6 Brigadier, and
ergt. Brainard doe's Oredit 40 the =cleat
houldet-straps of et Second Lieutenant,
uf the recent paseage of the „relief bill ill
the` first reennitiOn that any of their corn-
tadee have had. Republics arena always
negrateful, btif they are often exasperat-,
ihgly slow , ' • • ,'..•:
, A. CABLE Correspondent teporte that
••-elefeilitine OrNtarreago, ---
an ideal state' , when all •the people
were locinorible, .the „marriage • Contract
might perhaps be: safely abandoned, .an
?"unions of a.andection." substituted for it:
But, as things are, the. outcome of ,the
proposed change would probably he one
from which every person of pure mind
would .slitink in. abhorrence. If thid battle
hes really gee to he fought, it. le well that
all who'have regerd for , the sanctity sof
home life should take up their position
Without loss of time; and folloW cap.
man in deolarieg that the 'State cahnot
afford, by giving too great facilities for
'divorde, to relieve the few who make un-
happy Marna& at the • expense of the
majority:who Make hippy :oneS. at may
well, however institute) such refornis of the
marriage tie as she points out. In the
matters of. the guardianship of childrep,
and of the conditions under which divorce
id now granted, reason end, common oeinie
dictate that the woman ehould be giVen the
same. rights' as the .tain.• Matriageti- for
money..should be regarded *as ' 48 relies ef
savagery," • Children of ,both emcee should
a
be brought up together, efuller oppor'•
tupities given 'for . young people to know,
,one enotherbefore betrothal. •And in the
religious service .the woman's • Ocitiality
,
with rather than her submission' to, the
mansbouid be distinctly recognized.-'
Christian World. • . •
,
•' • The Itosy'Catls of Norway. •
Thet.kitchen istheiivingro�m ina well-
tredo farm bode& 1 have walked into these
frequently, and • generally found the
mothers putting the • finishing toubine to
the Pot, when preparing a meal and ' I
could never tell which were the 'daughteru.
of the house and which the servants. By
tee way,. the latter are not ashamed of
their • calling,. and •When I have asked a
pretty (Abe 'if ...ahe were the daughter :she
says " Ohomin„ram.a servant."..Meny of
the women in the mOanteins and -upper'
valleYeare-very-coitiely=-not-beautiesi-but
ruddy, rosy, plump and healthy epecimens.
of femininity, • If I ehould write Verses I
Would ncit rate them to" •the girl with the
raven leeks " nor to'" the red. -haired , girl,"
but -jest now would Write a sonnet to " the
meet girl of the towhead." The womendo
theiefull share of the Work Of the land, •but
wehave toned the heavy,lahar is dime by
the Mee. • Them:keen reen and bind grain
iidVIkeitisd .rnow.hay. .--Correspondest-or
the Chicage. Mail. "• . . •• ••
•••
• itquitI,to ititiropein Cheer*
• The New York Tonrite/ 'ej .0ommerce of
iast week (ander heading of dairy teporte)
says : Mr. Valenoey E. Fuller, Of •Oaklandff
Dairy, Hamilton; Ontario, has jetzt sent 40
thio city Aline samples of Carlin:lei:Elbert
cheese; froniage; de • Brio and Other soft
&Melee, whioh experta dedlaii3 to be equal
to those -made in Europe. They were made
tram. Me. Fuller's' celebrated herd of Jer-
seys e Of Which„ Mary Anne of St. Lainbert
is al'pieminent 'member. • Mr. A..E:Vity-
lank:. of'Thurber, ' W.hylesid & Co.,wns a
bull f rom the herd (St. Andrews ofbratige).
which is one of the finest spechoenci Of the
breed itt the -United • States; having, taken,
-firet-prize-atthe-Necebureh-fair-lest-yearr
, • .
.•• Hero to stay.
• • • EashionableWife (tiiggirig at string)
1,i31pnotisre had, for the (test owe become Mrs. Cleveland, may etioceed in doing
an inetrument, in the heeds of • 'Frenohaway with the 'bustle, but there lo one
juattoe; A shoemaker named Piehereen, thing that has come to key: • ,
living in-Me:taw& of-Pedeilientit'lled Ter:- -,-/Icieband (looking -around his
sietently denied a robbery of 2001., 'of whit% shaving) -Whet is that?
he was sooneed, The judge .before whom, Wifo-The corset, ,.
be was tried Went at once ton professional
hypnotieet, Who had the man's eyes blind- A prominent woman lawyet of Ohio is
fol tea, Mach twit_ he Wee ,giving a publie Mies Florence crooiee; of Tiffin. She his
performance; and at loot discovered the been in active practice for -fifteen. _years,
stolen money 'elder en old done Wan. and has peottred:o oompetence ana it large
Thankster the) hypnotiter...thC eshoemaker Imat. Q_ _
• My love was like a lily fair, •
Lowdrooping in the sup air,
My heart was rent with ef and care.
• .I loved het wel . '
'•.
•But 101 The wonder' grows andgrows;
My love's now like a, blooming rose.
How bright her face with beauty glows,'
' I dare i2ot tell. •
- The wandering bee wbuld stop to sip
Tbe nectar of her perfect lip. .
• 'Twas Dr. Pierce's .S'avorite Prescrip- '
Tion wrought the ePeu '
•.• Significant,
gi Mamnia, the quandary has • COMO;
Billings has proposed, • and Topzle too."
"What Shall you do?" "1 em'at, a lose.
Tooae writes that he would
entromid me With ey,ery luxery and znalsi
his whole existence one sweet thraldom for '
a Melia, fram me." And •Billiegs ?" Ha •
seys he's' very poor and has ' been '.working
all -hie life andbarelieeernederenbeietence."
e Accept Biflings, my Child. Don't delay .
another, inetant, • A. man mist'. be pretty
Well off before' he has the courage to pror
claim his poverty:" "
. • •
• The. Electro I.lgbt
413 a matter of emelt importance compare
twhiitieenottetste. prpolliBlent?ir ostfvetrirolectaiceinitya. deStoy,
penetratrto the mourremote nerve -every' ,
bene, muscle and ligament 'is made to feel '
its beneficial power. • Nerviline is a wonder- '•
frit remedy, ..pleasant to take, even by -the
youngest child? yet BO powerfully far-ireaoh. '
ing in its work thett the most agonizing •
internal or -external. pain yields as if by
inagia, Negleat no longet to try Nerviliree-r•
Buy to -day A 40 Ont.:trial bottle and bei •
relieved'frem all.pain. -J. Wilt*, druggist,
Goderioh, 'watt*: " Nerviline wires .good .
•eatisfactlon;" sou. by driggiots and
country deelere everywhere:.
"He most live's who thinks the moist,
• .• Acts the noblest, feels the best, •
• And be whose heart beats qttickest
• Lives the longest, lives in one hour
Moro than in years do some whose
• Pat. bioner sleeps as it dipkni
ng their
Thee° lines' ,dederibe that 'condition of
veriest health which men and women
wish to enjoy. To be able ,to think clearly;
-to-inclinato.dnimbIty...aots,leilieleng.a Oa
joYonely, we must be free froMthe domina-
tion' Of. disease. By taking Dr, Pierce's
'Golden • Medical „DiscoVery we may, by,
purifying the, blood, escape consumption,
general debility, and weak/less,• and a4
blood and skin diseases, and verify the
truth of poetry,ita, well as fact. '
,•
• In Great Trouble. .; •
"Why, whittle the matter?" asked*
laed6tymotfiaqafriii.end whotze eyes w
bere ted fore .
Oh, I'm -booboo -4n such trouble!" •
Whit' lute . happened? •Something
dreadfol,t am dere.",
' Yee.; 'it Was something a-dreedful." •
What it it'' Has your husbana; betie
drinking hard'er thee esuall?' •,
, "No, that's net it.. ,'He hag Signed the
pledge,. aud he 18 80 disagreeable When he
el Ember:"
0
• tiorIectly obvinun. •.•
. The Idea that people can be enriched by
.heavy.. and :'uneeceeeare taxation,that n
man's condition:can be imptovedbtieing
him,on all he wears, on all • his wife. and •
meets Of .industry.i. is an, Obviono abour.dity.
--Thurman's Aeceptance.•• •• . •
• Thenitly reliable are for caterrhis itr;
Sage's Pittarrh• Remedy., • •;. •
' •
• deiniums Ten Feet:High-
• G. C. Clark, ae-Nevi 'Haven, has in his
front yard a couple of rette ;geraniums: 10
feet high. 'These planta were raisedfrom
.slips in 'two years. He recently set 'them
ontdoote, Se,they, had grown too tall for
the rooms in the house.. The rose .;geran,
inna is the largest and fasteet ' growing
variety of the .plant, but 10 feet is a remark.
able height even for;thet epeciee.•. '
• Douineet• Compliment. •
Guest -I wish I had come hate &Week
ego.' Proprieibt-Ah; that's .very fletter-
ing to my hotel. I don't know about
tbate. What I Mean is that I would have
preferred to have eaten this lib theiein-
stead tif now." t. „.,
• nestion o,f Schools. •
,
Egretreother---The sChoof around the
corner is a most excelleet One. My boy
does learn so fast, ••
Seeiond mother -Ob, you're mistaken, •
utterly mists,hen'. It's 4 miserable echool. •
THE noom s REST FR1ENrt
,
111. bl Igar.n a thifig'
'•Only a Shake.
• .
NO,
my:man, I haven't •anything for
you," said a . gentlereen te, a tramp eith ,
outstretched hand. ••, '0-- • ed •
.
-•'"-Wire-askell-for-anythingreplitbo
tatterdemalion. ."Don's you see I'm a po/e
Weise ? All X wantedwas to shake."
The Ottawa Literary • and.. Scientific
Society yesterday presented the Governer -
General with an- Address and secured hia
conseht to act as patron of the Society.' :
• Mr. and Mrs: Jason • Were.. engaged • in
their usteil evening debate. gaid he, for '
clincher, "Well, thereat no • use arguing '
with.a wanton or altickase." " I • Wish
had known that at the start aila elived my
breath," Held she.
•
•
DISCOVERY. •
• , Wholly unlike artificial eyatetinW,
.• • (hire of Mind wandering.' •
" Any book leapped Lis one reading.
• Olasseeof t,084 at Dal titnore, 1,005 at Detro
1,500 at Philadelphia, 1,1 13 at Washington
1,210 at Boated, lartpi classes el ColumbiaCit
etudenirij at Vale, Wellesley. Oberlin, University
of Penh,, Michigau 'University. c haute, eget., eta:
etc. Endorsed by Itron,kno enooros, the Sawn
Usti, lidos. W. nr esron; Jirrh.th P. liakJAAMI
Judge GIBBON, r. WN E. H. Doha, eriu. N.'if
State Normal college, etc.. Taught by corms
,pondenee. Prospectus rbin knau fromr •
PR0F.•LOISETTR;.257 Fifth Ate.,*Nilf.
11 11... 43' ea,
4, 3
re.
4
A