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Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-07-31, Page 7Popular Recipes. WIPP ROTEL OLERIG diamond, pin, a snowy shirt, A:boundless wealth of gall, A haughty air makes up the things That we hotel clerks call. lensaostign. A taste for wild sensatiens, A cynic's power to rail, Make up a modern preacher who -Is certain not to fail. THE STATESMAN. From an ordinary citizen The heartand conscience takeQive him , sonie boodle and a pull And-youll-aistatesman-maki17`," THE POET. A goodly share of laziness. A vagn sesthetic air Combin, make a poet if Yout 1/7 In lot�r 1.4:41r. WIIEN SHALL HE RAISE MIS IIAT s' Read This and the Question Will Never .1.V en he ,bows. to a lady or. an elderly , gentleman. 2.. When he is with a lady who bows to, any person, even if the other is a total stranger to him. 3. When he salutea a gentleman who is • in the company of ladies. 4. When he is in the company of s another gentleman who bowastos ft, rad V - y an mee s a gentleman whom he knows. 6. When he offers any civility to a lady who is a stranger to him. 7. When he parts with a lady, after • speaking to her, or after walking or driving with heg, etc. -Young Ladies' Fashion Bazar. They Like Ft Girls in Tunis. A Tunisian girl has no chance of marriage unless she tips the scales at 200 pounds, and to that end she commences to fatten when she is 15 years old. The takes aperients and eats a great deal of sweet stuff and leads • a sedentary life to hasten the process. Up to 15 she is very handsome, but at 420 what an immense, unwieldly mass of fat she be- comes. She waddles, or undulates, along the street. Her costume is very picturesque, especially if she be of the richer class. They are clothed in fine silk of resplendent hues of bright yellow or green, and wear a sort of conical -shaped head dress'from which de- pends a loose, white drapery. Turkish trousers and dainty ,slippers, the heels of which barely reach the middle of the foot, . complete costume. -Pittsburg- Dispatch. "*Womit ti Suffer -age" Was what a svi4 an called that period -ssottifestShinTal mi dle-aged pass through, and during which so many seem to think • they must suffer -that Nature intended it so. The same lady added : " If you don't believe in woman's suffer-age,',there is one ' ballot which will' effectually defeat it -Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription." This is true, not only at the period of middle life, but -at all-ages--when--women suffer from uterine diseases, painful irregularities, in- flammation, ulceration or prolapsus, the ".Favorite Prescription " so strengthens the weak or diseased organs and enriches the blood, that years of health and enjoyment •• are added to life. • An Equivocal Puff: Ifarper'sBazaar : Did you see the notice I gave you ?" said the editor to the grocer. Yes ; and I don't want another. The man who says I've got plenty ofsand, that • the milk I sell is of the first water, and that • my butter is the strongest in the market,, may mean well, but he is not the. man I want to flatter me a second time." Sir Gordon Not to the Cast. Puck:• Rockaway Bea,ch-We tried. to play baccawat at owah club the othah night, but couldn't manage it. newel]. Gibbon -Why not ? Rockaway Beach -All the fellahs wanted to be bankaw. The pwince was bankaw, you know. An Eye to Easiness. Epoch : Melancholy Stranger -You are sure this poison will kill a man ? Druggist --Yes, sir, I can guarantee it. By the way, if you are going to commit suicide, I wish you'd put one of our circu- .1ars in your pocket. It'll be abigadvertise- ment for us when your body is found. Preparing for the Seashore. Jewelers' Circular: Cholly Cholmonderly -Now we're all pwepared for our twip. But • I seem to forget something.. Valet -Have you ordered the engagement rings? Cholly C.-Aw, that's it. Go to Tim- ariany's and awder a dozen. A Vital Question. Pitek : The 'bosom friend -They tell me, Nell, that you are engaged. The victim -Dear me 1 Is it to anyone knovr ? Minnie Palmer will make her reappear. ante in London , in September and in the following mol will commence a tour of the provinces. «1 see now," said he sadly., after he had lost his money on the ball game, "why they say 'blind as a bat.' The bat didn't 1 . .aeem to see the ball once.' . s Gladstone is comparatively. a poor man, and the occasional literary work he does for magazines and periodicals is not the result of apy desire to add to his established fame sui a writer. Brown -Here is sonic tobacco, my poor ;man- You must feel the loss of a ' smoke after ' dinner. Tramp -No, sir. I feel the loss of my dinner before the smoke. All the women of the Vanberbilt family are notable for their good looks. Mrs. Cor- nelius Vanderbilt has a calm, lovely face which is sugg ve of the Madonna. Mrs. iv William K. V liderbilt has a fine figure which she carries with much stateliness her eyes are dark blue and her hair' is a ruddy bronze' brown. Mrs.‘Frederick W. Vanderbilt, however, is tho beauty of the house of Vanderbilt. Her figure is extremely graceful, her complexion lovely and' her hair has the glint and glimmer of golden sun- beams in them. ,,, The son of General Isidro Urtecho,•Com- wander-in-Chief of the Nicaraguan army, in the only foreign cadet at West Point. He is a young man of 20, tall and active, with swarthy skin a d lianhin 'black e 5147.73) The house which r Revelsto e was building previous to the. Baring' failure Lis now Baron Iliraoh's. , MstkRr_!..e.gl!Vqw•r••••.).... AN OBVIOUS DISTINCTION. The Christian Guardian_, in its leading article this week, reviews the contents of the London Quarterly. Review. We quote as fol- lows : An article on "The Unearned Increment" re- views Mr. William Harbutt Dawson's recent book on that subject, and criticises forcefully and keenly the central assumption Of the auti- poverty men, viz., that all increased values of land, which cannot be shown to result directly from the labors of the owner, should belong to the,sommunity, and. not to the, private owner. Amon the points made against this theory are reason to Willey tTiat under this system there, would he no such increase in the value of land as is seen under the present method. (2) That the. increased value of land, or anything else, is %lot the result of labor ; but. arises from the in- creased demFal. A thi,,g Indy have cost znuch labor and.be worth little, or it may have cost little labor and be worth much. (3) This prin- ciple of giving the increased value to the corn- intukity applies equally to the increase in the value of everything also. All p9perty is a -must be given up, and the great motive to- aetive industry would thus be destroyed. (0 The assumption that those who cause an in- crease in the value of anything have a right to share that increased valve leads to most absurd conclusions. Actions that in themselves are reprehensible may pause an increase in the value of land and other things. (5) The owner who sells his property at an increased price earns or deserves the increase„because he trans- fers to 1 I II 11 I • .L 11“ ".14.4.41 ursine to give all the members of a community indiscriminately an equal interest in the increased value of land. (7) if thq in- creased value should be employed to do away with taxes, then people would be advantaged in proportion to their wealth. (8) The scheme would be mischievous and impracticable. The argument turns upon section -3. C not the editor of the Guardian, with logical min.d, discern a difference betw land and the products of labor, which ma the former a monopoly in the sense in wl the latter are not ? Land becomes valua by reason of scarcity and the increa demand for it. Can any man increase supply of land, and thus ease the in opoly ? No, because land is a fixed qu tity, the creation of God and not the p duct of human labor. • Boots, or houses, jackknives, or sheep may. . be scarce a therefore their value is increased, but by act of man the supply can be augmented a the equilibrium between supply and dema restored. This essential difference has b overlooked by the writer who contends t the taking of the unearned increment land value by the community for public would justify the taking of the increas value of labor products and thus destroy t motive to active industry. John Stuart Mill dealt with this point follows : "tand;-it is said, is not the on article of property which rises in value fr the mere effect of the advance of nation wealth, independently of anything done the proprietor. Pictures by the old. masts ancient sculptures, rare curiosities of Sorts, have the same tendency. If it is n unjust to deprive the landlord of the u rued:increase-of-tire vah-re- ofshis land, the same rule the increase of Raphaels a Titians Might be taken from their fort nate ,possessors and appropriated by state. " Were this true in principle, it wou lead to no consequences in practice, sin he revenue which could •be obtained ven a very high tax on these rare an catered possessions 'would not be wor onsideration to a prosperous country. B t is not true, even in principle. •" Objects of art, however rare or into arable, differ from land and its contents his essential particular, that they are pr ucts of labor. Objects' of high art are pr ucts not only of labor but of sacrifice. Th rospective rise in price of works of ' art y no means an unearned increase ; the be roductions of genius and skill obtain th onor while the increasing value of land discriminate." •' There is neither force nor keenness eneralizing from an exception. Whi ome things which have cost much labor a worth little, and other things which hav ost little labor are worth much, the gene le is that the value of a commodity is pr ortionate to/the labor bestowed upon i roduction. A man may find a big nugge f gold the day after he reaches the minin istrict, but on. the average there is as. mac refit in digging potatoes as in diggin old. We quote further from Mill to emphasis e distinction between land and othe roperty, by ignoring which Mr. Dawso as supplied himself with the foundation fo a argument: "When the sacredness o operty ' is talked of, it should always b membered that any such sacredness doe ot belong in the same 'degree to landed operty. No man made the land. It i e original inheritance of o the whol ecies. Its appropriation is wholly • eetion of general expediency. When ivate property in land is not expedient i unjust. It is no hardship to any one to excluded from what others have pro uced ; they were not bound to produce it r his use, and he loses nothing by no aring in what otherwise would not have isted at all. But' it is some hardship to born into the world and to find all ture's gifts previously engrossed, and no ace left for the new -comer. The claim of e landowners to the land is altogether bordinate to the general policy of the ate. To me it seems almost an tom that property in land should interpreted strictly, and that the balance all cases of doubt should incline against e proprietor. The reverse is the ease with operty in movables, and in all things the ocluct of labor ; over those, the owner's wer both of use and of exclusion should absolute, except where positive evil to tors would result from it ; but in the e of land, no exclusive right should be mitted in any individual which cannot shown to be productive of positive good. quantity of movable goods which a per - can acquire by his labor prevents others n acquiring the like by the same means ; from the very nature of the case, who - r owns land keeps others out of the en- ment of it. The pretension of two Dukes hut up a part of the Highlands,tq prevent turbance th wild animals, is anl abuse ; exceeds the legitimate bounds of the, it of landed property. The land is not than's creation; and for a person to ropriate to himself a mere gift of ure, not made to hitn in particular, but ch belonged as much to all others until took possession of it, is prima facie an istice to all the ?eat." ev. William, Thasakera,y, in his book (m- ho Land and the Community," presents historical proof that the land belongs the people. The logical free trader an - his een kes icJi able sed the on- an- TO - or nd the nd nd een hat of use ed he as ly om al by rs, all ot by nd nd he Id Id ce by d th ut • 111 - in 0- 0- e is st at is le e re al o- ts t g e r n r f e t c t d ,d 13 h in g a c Pu p 0 13 g th h hi pr re pr th sp qu pr is be d fo sh ex be na; pi th su at ax be in th pr pr be 0 otl • cas per be No son froi but eve joy to s dis it rigl of app nat whi he in, "T the to e at t arrives at the same end by tracing the effect of the gradual repeal of duties and taxes on goods. The editor of the Guardian might get there by considering that " the earth is the Lord's," and by studying the meaning and inten- tion of the year of jubile. There is littlesvalue in an argument which ignores an important part of the premises, namely, the essential difference detween a gift of God and a product of human labor, one of which is fixed in quantity while the other casi__be increased at will b shkessn exertion. - n the recognition t distinction, the great political problem of the day,, in all civilized countries, hinges. When the com- munity takes for public use only the value produced by the community, leaving for in- dividual use the value produced by the individual, population will ,be no longer differentiated into the too rich and the very poor. And when men do not have to spend ststai their bellies, bellies, the preachers will be able to awaken their interest regarding their souls. Let the editor of the Guardian think of this, pray over it, study it, before he again throws the influence of the Methodist organ on the side of monopoly and of privilege: -Hamilton Times. Now that the reign of the summer girl is at hand, these are a few . of the things to count on the beads of her rosary of- her remembrance : The girl the boys like best to take rowing doesn't trail her hands in the water, even if they are pretty and her rings handsome, for it gets the boat out' of trim. She doesn't act frisky or kittenish in the boat or playfully spring out of it at the shore, only to fall back very unplayfully into the stream and dip the skiff half full of water. She doesn't pretend to steer if she doesn't know how, just because the bright cords of the rudder are effective against her dress. She doesn't put up her sunshade when the wind is dead against you, even if its lining is becoming to her complexion. She doesn't get a headache and have to go home just when the fish are beginning to bite ; and she doesn't squeal if you happen, inadvertently, to land a gamy catch in her lap.- The Eye. Roth Saint and Sinner. It troubles the sinner and troubles the saint., It's a troublesome, trying and nasty complaint, Don't think it incurable; I tell you it ain t. Excuse the grammer ; it's the truth I'm after, whether grammatically or ungram- matically told. The truth is that Catarrh can he cured. The proprietors_of-Dr-Sage's Catarrh Remedy offer $500 for an incurable case of Catarrh in the Head. • Tits Svsaisroats or CATARRH. -Headache, obstruction of the nose, discharges falling into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody, putrid and offensive ; eyes weak, ringing in the ears, deafness ; o eissfrissive-breiith, smell and taste impaired, and general .debility—Onlysasfew- of -these symptoms- to be present at once. Dr. Sage's Remedy cures the worst cases. Only 50 cents. Sold by druggists, everywhere. Large Coins. ., • The largest gold coin note in circulation is said to be the gold ingot, or " loof," of Anam, a F.rench colony in Eastern Asia. It, is a flat, round gold piece, and on it is written in Indian Ink its value, which is about $220. The next sized coin to this valuable but extremely awkward ono is the " obang " of Japan, which is worth about $55 ; and the next comes the " benda " of 4shantee, which represents a value of about $49. The California $50 gold piece is worth about the same as the " benda." The heaviest silver coin in'the world also belerigs to Anam, where the silver ingot is worth about $15. Laudable Solicitude. Mrs. Brown-John'I hear you took that horrid typewriter girlof yours to the theatre last night Mr. Brown -Well, surely, my dear, it wouldn't be right to let her go alone. - Peoria Herald. • One of the Mysteries. Chicago Tribune: Maud -What do you think of Irene? Laura -I detest her. And she hates me like poison. "Then why do you and she always kiss when you meet ? " " Heaven only knows." Potter Did. Puck: Miss MePadd-Palmistry is all the rage now. Do you understand it, Mrs. Potter? - - Mrs. Potter -No ; but I think Jack does. Last night I heard him cry in his sleep: !4Sliew your hands, boys !" Johnny All Right. , • Ashland Press : " I'm afraid, Johnny," said the Sunday school teacher severely, " that I will never meet you in • heaven.' Johnny -Why, what have you been doin' now ? The remains of, Dora Shaw, the old time actress, who died at the Forrest home last week, were cremated. According to an eminent German statistician the world has had 2,550 kings or emperors who have reigned over ,74 peoples. Of these 300 were, overthrown, 64 were forced to abdicate, 28 committed suicide, 23 became mad or imbecile, 100 were killed in battle, 123 were :captured • by the enemy, 2,5 were tortured to death, 134 were assassinated and 108 were. exe- cuted. Charles K Locke_ is re -organizing' the Emma Juch opera company. If persistence counts for anything Locke is bound to win in the end. • Kalisas is a, large state in some respects. It has been discovered by a statistican that 'she could take in seven countries the size' of Belgium and still have 400;000 acres to dis- PoBseo.oltfo.? Courier : Tartly -Doctor, what do you really think is the matter with my wife? Dr. 13ias-I an sorry to say, sir, that I fear that she is losing her reason. Tartly -I thought as much when they told me she had sent for you. Tho societies for the protection of animals in Sweden, Norway and , Denmark 'have petitioned the Queen of Italy to exert her influence in protecting the northern birds which migrate to Italy in winter. 6 6 ugust lower" Perhaps you do not believe these statements concerning_Green"sAu gust Plower. Well, we can't make you. We can't force conviction in- to your head or med- iCiue inio your th roat . We don't Thomas, want to. The money is yours, and the willing to believe, and spend the one for the relief of the other, they will stay so. John H. Poster, 1122 Brown Street, Philadelphia, says:, " My wife is a. little Scotch woman, thirty years of age and ofa- naturally delicate dis • osition. For five .. . -suIennerring froth Dyspepsia. She became so bad at last that she could not sit down to a meal but she had to vomit it as soon as she had eaten it. Two bottles of your August Plower have cured her, after many doctors failed. She can now eat anything, and enjoy it; and as for Dyspepsia, she does not know that she ever had it." Gib Doubting Vomit Every Meal. A TALE OF CRUELTY. Shipwrecked Sailors Shamefully Treated • by an Island Governor. . A London Cable says: Forty of the crew of the wrecked British ship NewYork have arrived at LiverpooL They weresia,nded at Plymouth last night .18 a shocking plight. The New York sailed from Swansea, on Feb. 6th last, coal -laden, for San Francisco. She was wrecked at New Year's Island in the Pacific on April 20th, when one of the crew was drowned. The Governor of Itooroon or Staten Island, to whom the shipwrecked men went for assistance, was unmerciful. He refused to give-them:clothes and -com- pelled them while barefooted to drag lumber over the snow. They escaped atter five weeks, during which they fared shamefully, to Oahooa, whence they escaped in five days to Sandy Point. The men are in a miserable condition. The British Consul sent them home. " A-sirdsatsisakeTifQ1.--- Wheuin the dark, on -thy -soft hand. I hung, And heard the tempting syren of thy tongue - What flames -what darts -what anguish j,en- • dured, But when the candle entered -I was cured!" Such complexions as so many of our young ladies possess --dull, pimply, and covered with sores and blackheads, is enough to cacti the ardor of the warmest lover. To such young ladies we would say, that you can never have a soft, fair, smooth, attractive, kissable coniplexion, unless your blood is healthy and pure, for the condition of the blood decides the complex- ion. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will purify your blood, tone up your system,. and drive away those distressing headaches and backache, from 'which you suffer, periodically, and give you a complexion a lily or rose -leaf might envy., Shot a Poileenian. CHATTAN009A, Tenn., July 9. -Officer James Looney, of the police force, was shot and killed here last° evening by Zech Munsey, ex -deputy sheriffsa,nd ex -constable.. Ill -feeling had existed between them for several `days. A Double Cyclone. SUMMIT, Miss., July 9. -This vicinity was visited by two cyclones Monday. They were about eight miles apart. Many houses were destroyed, and a number of persons injured and one child was killed. " Dr. Konrad Brunner of the University of Zurich has proved by a series of experiments that micro-organisms are discharged through the perspiration as well as through the blood. The bacteria can be seen in the drops of perspiration by means of a miero- scope. Baron de Gondoriz, the Brazilian india- rubber merchant who is trying to corner the entire rubber output of. the Amazon region, is an energetic man of Portuguese birth, 41 years old. He is of short and very portly figure, with light complexion and red hair. Leopold II., Ring of the Belgians, prides himself on.being a workman. He rises at 6 and 'does two hours' work before breakfast. The most relnarkable Waterloo survivor the London World believes to be Monsieur Philip George d'Epinois, who was born in 1794, and still discharges the duties of bur- gomaster in his native village of Epinoisles The Chevalier d'Epinois was one of the civic guardsssirho welcomed Leopold I. to Belgium 60 years ago. The memorial cross has been prepared at the expense of the national leprosy fund in England, to be erected over the grave of Fr. Damien at Molokai, is now finished, and will be sent soon to its destination. It is of red granite, polished and unpolished, and cost $1,000. • BOANDING410i2111 Ottf[lardwareStock Why a Pessimist Wes -Force 1.3 bead( qtLan ever. Ye.: Good QuartersT he trouble all arose over oi are putting up rear !louse. It y be that they knew he ha plies, which are expensive, and barns and want sup Atha fact that every man, woman or it may be that their talk is s but. 17on cattl o.ve smile of in the boarding-house, with the. thiexpense by coming to of the rank pesSimist, hail been to the day before, says the Chick!o obuuldzng an rate coffee po in the one hand and the cream pitcher in the other, and began pouring Tritrunt. z. Yeur At w •,. from both at the same time, he was moved to ask, without a suspicion of danger, what sh6 ttne duiug. "Making a.double play Bnassisted," was her prompt response. He looked pained, but said nothing. A moment later when a codfish -ball was sisted n fair neighbor, lOrar-494pasrillPti:3tF1410 his,-arlaSti-rr dry goods clerk on the other side of the table cried out : " Passed ball! ,s4 The pessimist fingered his knife nervously as he glared at the clerk, and had hardly recovered his composure when the waitress kicked the cat through the doorway and the ut out 1". And the young lawyer added : " Safe hit 1" ' He hardly had time to shift his reproach- ful glance frqm the pretty typewriter to the young lawyer when the old maid began tell- ing.what a brute the man next door was, and the real estate agent sang out : " Score one !" For sympathy he turned to the landlady's pretty daughter, who sat next to him and who had thus far said nothing. But as he declined the last muffin on the plate and she took it, she looked him straight in the eye, and with her most captivating smile said:'`Asacrifice 1" Then he got up and stalked out, and there is a room to rent in that boarding- house. -a a -- New York Weekly: CityEditor-The street is all excitement. An electric Jight wire -has blocked traffic, and no one knows whether it is a live wire or not.' Editor -Detail two reporters to go to the wire immediately -- one to feel of it, and the other to write up the result. staus,ummframsrassomosswes..w.•,.:......sassrassmm D. C. N. L. 31. Si. VERA-CURA —170R— DVSPEPSIA AND ALL STOMACH TROUBLES. At Druggists and Dealers, os —f en t by ont•eceiptof Meta (5 boxes, 1.00) in stamps. • Canadian Depot, 44 and 46 Lombard St,, Toronto, Ontk 41COB5,011 • CR radifEjAEAY 3PC:prit., 7E3.49,,XN: Cures RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, ilACKACHE, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, SORB THROAT FROST -BITES, SPRAIN'S, BRUISES, BURNS, QC. Sold 1,y Druggists and Dealers Everywhere. Fifty eta. a bottle. Di ns hill Language% Canadian DOM 44 and 46 Lnlnpl St., T113110,ont. ° YOUR 0 ? °- DREAMS 41 7f • ut-ciassing all OL 6111 for hom *PREECRIPTIO Ithaseitra- treatment is our secific remedy called the CREATit PICILISH ordinary success in curing flermatorrhea, N4/11 Losses, Nervousness, Weak Pa n. The results dr in- discretion. It will invigorate and cure you. Wyman" • success a guarantee. All druggists sell it. $1.00 per box. Oan mail it sealed. Write for sealed letter to Eureka Chemical Co., Detroit, Mich.. t,‘It"uRste,. REMEDIES. NO. (POSITIVE MENIAL RENON • cures Nervous Weakness from what. s'A „, ever cause arising. A 110.2 P_EISITIVE HERBAL !RENEW • cures urinary Discharges. either recent or otherwise, in a few dal! 110. 3 POSITIVE HERBAL RENE infallible in Riood diseases, taint, Price each Remedy Two ,Dollars. In 5111 form. Sent in plain, sealed pae.k. mre with Rules. Enormous sale. GUARANTEED CURES. 9I -Sealed pamphlet hes DR. JOHN PEROT.BOX 503.WINDSOR.ONS Piso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the Beat. Easiest to thse and Cheapest. Bold by druggists or sent by mni1,50o. P T. ...rzeitine, Warren, Pa., U. U.S.A. HAINiithiNS sinnou. Beware of Imitations. NOTICE' ow AUTOGRAPH or H E GEIZINS ii/Itij,,i1CTI DJ ;1 ons * CUR T0 TEEM EDITOR i -Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy f ASove named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently I anal, be glad to send two -bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your readers who hav remetlou ff they will send me their Lizpress and Post Office Address. Respectfally, T.�lQ offit West Adelaide et.. TORONTO. ONTARIO. I CUREFITS! civP111517111.21' merely tc stop them for a time. and QOM *teat rettim strata, RICAN A RA D I CAI CURE., have tnade the disease of Melicetty or Fatting Meknes's a 'Efo,Ioug sthdy. I warrant my remedy to Worst thcause often bare failed is no reason for not now receiving scnr, sista for a treAtito *-d s Free nottle of my Infallible Remedy.; wars Vmsi Mike. It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will euro jou. Addressi-OL M. *of. ga,40 , 844,4 Is''z4 Mkt Weer ‘DSLAIDIL $TRIET., VORONTO4 a 1", 2 •