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The Sentinel, 1883-08-31, Page 20 TELE LAMES, t Li ht 'Headuijc an►d Useful. 1,1, 11411., . AN•DTHE FASHIONS. fuse) - Fashionable Crazes`— How to Walk. *Preemie +i Hatae. [.home; sweet dreamQ ef.inomo- es, ail my heart, et dreams they,cdme, • and depart.. t dreams of home last night ; e appear, u that circle bright, y heart holds dear. dreaane; no vacant. chair ; d the hearth,. ds.were gathered there, th us on earth: me and,joined that band, ea to reioice : dreams I delved her hand o. her voice.. borne brought fresh to mind e and jo e my neck entwined, aid, " Mamma's boy."` right dreareavanished;. Jug comes at last, • light banished d the joy is past: ve of that fond mother now, not fragrant •a pears, ue bells wavering o'er her brow by many sad tears. Y. With hie smiling face, with the dreanms of home, maine of that Cad embrace, smiling and alone. s fond hopes will come,. hippy pant, , 6'that Mop dreams of home in heaven at lest•g ' ",� +,,Ep_ •tib»+,R ..w �w..� s.1Tub'ar,.,,.t". "."u f..,u6�i.!• 'thEviotithsr and the most porters of. the Mormon saber. the Gentile vote more e. ought to snggest'•to Cion - of an immediate repeal of shing female suffrage in that the recent election, when ere oast; the male Mormons f the. result " that'ahoy con - grained from voting in large ng the worixof nullifying the to the • women: , In 1880 voted almost solidfor the and in the election just held ave carried out the'ediot of one, even though every anti - territory had voted. Woman nprized privilege in States orded, is, the strongest bul- gradation of women in Utah. it was broken down. • •htdnubre Cranes. inll`es are charged upon the Men' of New York elty. The It is not rare •now to meet , : girl, , with a boy parrying blawok, roan -shaped • boxes y were lugged by professional Sheis on her way to or. lesson., . Pretty .soon she. fore•the guests in her papa'ii. e end of 'a fiddle tinder her o the company's ears while • eyes. However horrible reduced, she will;look' well ooesli ` of making it. 'The of fashion is. retire- . to -.pray on genuine from the east, 'mph as uses. They 'are usually four feet in size, and can be by,the'desigu,•:whioh always. e large figure atone end and. e .other.,. Plaoeu are indi bands:•sand' knees. .•Dev`out a the real .. things. from an Without;.‘ /acing Meooa, lands •,'on the floor, or shoes and stookinge, like the rophet still ' aotually do use • on':while: pg, They ra in g Tare eatcomfort.� . karlA±Sita_• ,fin• [Chicago (engaged silos, • lays, down the final prinoiples'in-the •art o walk upon the ball 'instead er f ooh. Nine out of ' every lk upo'ltw:the` heel: ' It` oom- r to'tne epine which is very placing the bell'of the:foot emoted. m, will. result in a fql ., rlw lk. ' The ,.,En . e the most graceful weiohre others., ive them prOperproper _they.areryoung.;:-v All=of the eh' characterize the A'meri- s are due to. thefaot , that em ' with' t he they h w nxare y are allowed to walk efore e' strong ;enough to support y are also aleft a great deal to The mothers should guide soh them to walk, and they so "knock-kneed and hew - New • ,>inJustry. Men have a happy way of erica and running off with and heiresses. ' Sir Charles just been married to Miss the lair aez. A lad® witness ,in a �Jtraehurg _ ;!=;'! '�rIP' °' -- :-.. : "� . n-n��- ter—, •—.:....,-..-,,, �..® -,.. 1 & yai um oua 't7hon ,rorlbfi ., , ;, a b • Q1;6 4 l dn€eadsbew ilea y twtm y o o ° ' " •Beauties el Stamboul. A Constantinople despatch says : The Turk always becomes more pious Burin the Bamazan. The mortification of the women,, ,resembles , them considerably, 1 flesh, as it were, reaots upon the spirit,• received a nest compliment the other day, producing a very Iauiadioed condition of - 1 e mind apt to bow itself in what are errone- when a.veritable Britain eye. g ass d her c p pe y9ystyleds of fanaticism. The Sha 1 well-dressed form from. a distance ' ousl :. ebullition 60 n " She is m oou tr. , inner . contemplation by whioh the true and remarked ,.. y .. n y ��: V. UM, idealized, beautified. believer seeks .to' whale away the long Among the sooiety women of London is fasting hours that are not given up to sleep an old lady, 83 years of age, whois quite a does not engender *hostile feeling toward. wondiy. She has a very youthful figure, the Christian, •but itnarrows the views of', and across a room would be taken for a ; the son of Othman: uiitil • he imagines that woman of. 30. Her complexian is enamel- ` in the departure frond ancient customs or led, end she always wears in the evening I the negleot of religious, ordinances is to be the `regulation de l e neck s found the real cause of all the misfortunes c® dei , and hurt sleeves, dressing in the height of, fashion and in youthful colors. She hi ant aeeom- plished equestrienne, sits ner° bores very gracefully,' and wears'a tall .beaver. when, riding. "lieseems to be in perfect health, being much better preserved than her bus band,`who looks old and feeble. She is a great favorite with young people and always hag a crowd of them about her, as she is a faeoinating talker. , Miss Clara Barton, President of ' the Amerioan National Association of ,the Red KCross,' whioh 18composed , of.over 1,000 of she was: the haply possessor of twice that number, was indicted for perjury. • A pretty Philadelphian at Cape May,. who, without positively aping the English, the best men in.the country, ham called in. her special field agent, •Dr. J. B. Hubbell, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa; who is a recent graduate of the Michigan University at Ann Arbor, andordered him to report to her at' Sherborn for orders. This aotiob of hers is influenced by the threatened danger of yellow fever at the South and Asiatic cholera anywhere, in whioh case her society will be called to .work instantly.. At the present time the .assooiationhas some; $15,000 depotited in Boston and Washington, which is to be used 'in any emergency great enough ,to oall for it. Since May let 'Miss Barton, as President,, has received: and disbursed over $30,000 in the work of relief...' .x,••v_'t`iuilii.c.his'"."M'rY'�`�,`""iifs••;�d�"��'nfi3c3tLs,.;�'%• • . Shot silks and satins will•rage in the fall. Polonaises are muoh .'worn ; So are stockings braded in .pearls. Puffed sleeves, Queen Mary's style, are seen upon new dreams, Waistcoats for women have been revived and are worn under cutaway jackets. In low -out shoes and slippers, a dark red is the prevailing color. Silk stockings are 'embroidered infront with colored steel, beads and silk chenille. Velvet is an exceedingly popular fabric at the resent time. The rage for black hosiery continues -Infants' socks are out in blaok silk. Large:• square neokerohiefs, folded .in a three -cornered, shape, are made, of silk muslin. • 6 , Belts are worn quite narrow. They are ;fastened,. with showy buckles of oxilized silver, out steel,: or stamped leather. Wide, ribbons are folded into soft belts and'tied at the back . in very largebowel, with short ends. • There is a tendency even in Paris •to weer lower and broader heels .ou'Walking el}oes. Many ladies have'.. adopted . the broad, low English heel.,•' • India ohuddah shawls of ' small sine; in ivory white , and cream .color,, also in pale blue tints,' are favorite .wraps . for the piazza summer evenings. Birds are in active demand among milliners. They are • ueed•:.for trimming aummer•hats, and promise to be a.poptilar garniture during the autumn. Redfern; the Princess: of Wales' tailor dressmaker, is trimming piain'skirts, with mohair braid; putting it' on in vertical as well as horizontal betide. Dressmakers are now employing padding justbelow the 'waist line in every dices.. This does away'• with the neoesaity of a bustle, and most • ladies find it more nom-. fortable as well as.more convenient. ' "Tel-el-Kebir''• is 'a knew .cloth/ for cos tnmea,• resembling albatross cloth, only. very much thicker. It comes in mono- chrome patterns, and also. in brocades, some of whioh are very gorgeous. • One of the most novel araangements ..Eos h3' ueok ss a.,plaitinn ' �,. • � '�•ss2 'en #tie fir i narrow' sand, reaching from throaty, to bust,: with a suooesaion-of--loops of "baby", satin ribbon,,or rows of_Tailvet down -the other, form ng a heading. Tie ,ihrperlsr Orarapontang , Now in , • London. The : orang-outang now ' lodged in, the. inseot house at, the •• Zoo, is certainly,- in point; bf condition and health, the finest' caged speoimen ever eeen. These 'ores -tures usually present a, forlorn pioture of extreme _melanoholy„andare generally only' too vieibly moping away before one's eyes ; thie•even when kept in confinement in the' congenial climate' of the tropics.. Our , friend exhibits noneof these traces of ill - health or 'sadness., but has full rounded limbs, hair free •from'a suspicion of mangi- nese, a bright eye and a.roilioking diaposi- tion,, which can only: be appeased by spells of tumbling. ',Apart from:the fact that this Simian comes. from Sumatra, where, although first disoovered there, the species' lifer moaner than in Borneo, it is remark- able that it, has shed its teeth, and has acquired a new seta This dental evolution has nev'pr before taken place with a large' ape in;Etirope..L.Londois.Wcrld. ornia, who its reputed to be ' j 'The mwit bumble of the civil funotlon- safes of the Ii`renoh •Republio are the naval oats. There are some hundreds of them,,. and their importance is duly recognized by the State, whioh supports them. The French naval oat enters, the service in his kittenhood, :and spends the • first year or two of hie 'active career on board a man•01- war, where he is berthed in the hold and permitted. to .devour whatever he'. can catch. 'Having thus' passed through ap- prenticeship, he is bent ashore and quar- tered at one of the live naval ports as a terror to the rats and mine that swarm in the victualling yards and • store sheds. He is then entitled to an allowance , of five centimes a day, and this sum is regularly paid on his behalf 10 the direotor of este, who lays it out in horseflesh for the .nee of his forces. • ' French women are in exhibiting. some strik- oostulnes.. at !the Sea . hre,-suoh as sow lH, embroidered and fit d over with cooksand partridges inllife siib slid natural eolore. • ,000 in her own right. Lord become engaged to Miss another, western, million- the nephew of the Earl of . 'Ernest Beckett 'Denisoli,. of the most beautiful -and of the South,, Mies Louise h'eriionaiia.., • se of Wales has roused the f the English milliners by the nest of her hate. s i working a •bookmark for hur; to reward him for reins n Sunday. ne L. Wolfe, the ” Amerioan dett•Cout a, is building ollar residence at. Newport • onderful age of invention it Peterson ; " I •see they are wire•olotheand I U have. some to put a'Sat irk__•:'obnny's. ootirrtS °remit over polite to that have overtaken. the empire. Believing se all Mohammedans do. fen the direct inter- vention the Almighty in mundane affairs, with ' awakened oonsoienoe the spiritual rulers of the Turks. see in the regent triumphs of. the ""Ghiaour " the Chastising an o. a or e ao s i mg, ut the past, and would fain deprecate the "� '-- .,. ,.i;>:i� uY .4' �a'JL3kl�liL• 1�'�R. ... _.� Divine wrath by a show of repentance.- Thus it is that as sure as. the Ramazan comes round, before it has dragged halt through its weary length there is certain to be an edict ieaued, by . imperial authority directed against some prevalent practice or the other thought to be incompatible with a, due observance of the Islamic faith. One year it is the nightly, visits to the "cafe. ohantants" of Pere in whioh the soul of Young Turkey takes such delight, against which the shafts of religion are directed by the secular authority, and the next iv is the. growing tendency of the 'Turkish ladies to ape the appearance of theirFrankish slaters whioh becomes the .mark for• such action. At the last Ralnazan,with admirable im= partiality reproof was delivered all round, and while the men were admonished for their -non-attendance at mosque during the day the women were informed that a long curl, straying, over - the;. shouldc" fLai?" C`> .- .'*•.`-.7 '.,1`,-F7.1.t+,''K'_ �, x n �•., di•'l.- rtml'rc'v;s-nA'..�.�v-.":li :1 M^ y. • i E'`-' trei.'6I' Lu ilzer • , • )u �.iGi-L �,�6:`6.�:i4 i� �L'.J•� W lady. The polios were Strictly enjoinedto watch the conduct of the "faithful," to see ,in the one case that no neglect was shown to the " muezzin's" call, and in the other. that no exposure of charms took plane likely to attraot,the attention of man from the higher thoughts to whioh hie mind should be given. ' This year it is the style of dress whioh comes in for -condemnation: The " yash- mak " ie considered too diaphanous, the "feridjee '" insufficiently form -destroying in its out and, the feet coverings far too shapely. The'artioles'in question in their present style are 'looked upon as. se many snares set, to oatoh the. eyes of the unwary, and • the'" fair lights of the harem " are bidden to lay them'aside under the penalty: Of : incurring very disagreeable treatment at the hands.of the police.„ ' The imperial edicton the •subject was published yesterday. As herein stated,: it 1s issued, by the•Sultan,in his characterse caliph and protector .of the. ." Sheriat•"• (saored'law), of which the dress fashions in vogue' with the:, Turkish women of the preeant: day are Stated to be serious infrac- tions. Thick muslin folds are to ;be worn _ in plane' of the gauze ° veils withwhioh'" Safy-ghul" and "Fatima"have been in the habit oleo softening the contours of their faces as to dwell in' the memory of the wandering Ghiaour, dazzled . by -the lightning flashes from their . large, dark eyes, - "as, escaped houris " from the' Mohammedan paradise. The disfiguring " feridjee' is nolonger' to be gathered' in at the waist or out: low at the bosom to• show' the Parisian dress underneath; an d the neat French bottinea are to give place to the hideous looking ":yemenees,"the baggy boots of ^Yellow or red leather worn bythe women .in the Provinces where foreign fashions have not .yet made their way. No doubt this edict will be duly blazoned forth ;by the ;enemies of the Sultan as_an indication of -the reactionary principles by which his foreign and domestic policy„ ie alleged to be ruled.' There is, however, really nothing -in it, and, I •don't suppose for a moment it will have any perceptible effect in changing the dress of the women. The fair Sex ;generallyman goto,havetheirzownway, tlie`bek i in suoh subjection, .and . I still expect to, see _ ._ne'atly----shod-- feet and - _transparent veils whenever I find_myaelf.at, any of the favorite resorts> :of the Turkish ladies, It' is the wives and favorites .of the. wealthy Claes that have gone in to suoh an extent for drese "' a la • Franks," ,and with these ladies the police will not dare -to in- terfere. Not long ago,,the Turkish ladies were forbidden to appear in Perm, but the Striated that suburb are now more crowded than ever with their n carriages, espeeially on Friday,,,wbeni-a:biock.occasionallymedia . that' Would not disgrace ••a: fashionable promenade -in London or New York as 'far as duration is concerted.: The " Sweet Waters," the lovely valley of the " Golden Horn," wail aleinterdicted at one time, but the Turkish ladies goon managed to render the prohibition a dead letter,' and during the past spring the Mussulman women appeared• there . in greater force than ever, wandering about among the heterogeneous crowd of sightseers with the utmost freedom..• How Unglish Bishops Look. .Anirreverent torrospond ntdeeoribesthe English bishops as they, redently appeared in the House of Lords : " There sat some seventeenelderly personsin episoopal robes, their' puffed lawn sleeves suggesting in a rather curious way .than a feminine ale - meat, not youthful either, had . somehow found its :way into the House. 'Look at their faces. The stamp of their profession is on them. Nobody would say that these are men of the world, or men of business, or men of affairs. The •pinched lips, the eyes mostly ' too near together, the akin. drawn firmly over cheek • and chin, the eloping corners of bitter mouths, the air of sanctimony, of . always .posing before the world—all this and much r more the most casual observer may see as he glances at this phalanx of spiritual legislators." Upon the ocoaaion, of a yachting part.S recently at, Brighton, England, Mies Chamberlain, the, graceful and',pretty American, 'Wore a costume oompied of wide, pan ls; of dark green,' h}3iitaman's` green, edged with several rows of red braid, fa ling evdr a skirt of red serge ; a green sailor blouse with a marine; Collar in red; Fashionable " At Home "-Charity, $ d1 Lfae-Hiatory of a •Once Bes►ntifid • Woinan Uuiued by a Had °romper. A, Batton despatch says An • aged woman, with haggard face: and shabby drape, threw herself into the Oharles Biver today, and wassaved from death only after.- * alepporato struggle., •She gave her name as Maria Lewis, and said That she was 51 years old. The woman's. bistory is a remarkable one. Tears ago eine 'was the acknowledged belle of a smaal'^tillage near Brunswick, 9Me>,• her father being a well- to-do farmer. When she was, 17 she was married to an' estimable young Mani, and for a .few years' their. wedded life was not an unhappy one. Both husband and wife, however, were afflicted by earnest ungovernable tempera, and after a ' • time their putes became so violent as to make their life together unbearable. Fifteen years ago they • separated, f.ve'ehildren having been born of their. union.. Of these'the two oldest stayed with their • father • at Bruns- wick, while the three youngest were brought by the mother • to lioston.,': Finding the little ones a burden to her after; a few months, the wife placed them in an orphan asylum, and their present whereabouts are unknown For the • neat ten, years the unhappy woman drifted from- „place to place,, homeless , and. friendless. Hee, has• band ,,some years .ago. came to Boston, 'ontained a divorce, and,was married again.. Her two oldest sons also came to this city, where they began a successful 'business career.. Neither they •nor their father knew where their mother was. About. a year ago she was taken with a desire to see her relatives again, and, as she •expressed it, " to die at home- and. amongst. her kind- red. A000rdiugly she journeyed. to Bruns- •wiok' and. made herself kn`bwn to her rela- tives. She met with such a cold reception, however, that she stayed but a .ahort time. 'Coming•back to Massachusetts, she went to the .tTewkebury _ almshouse; where she remained until within. month,m .,.. ; W:f� ti 7 c g.4 :':u�"-f�.,' w.a'p], „Iit: yh r'�' Rt'^^''�. Sb.q'—'kM A4•, °-v.CT -•b . ^t.^" �,µi.t�...6.k.€..3,. ^ K • �1,+- . •w2."•..:J.:S..:�;, ,uy'23''';:y-�•'•V.Xr '4tier desti'tute condition. Again' she was: coldly received, end -after a few days it was. intimated to her that. her weloome was worn out. Sorrowfully . she . returned : to Boston on the steamer whioh arrived here thismorning. ' The poor woman says that. on the trip she was several times on the :verge.,Of jumping overboard,': but " the, water looked_so cold " that she was afraid.. Arrived in Boston she; at once made her way to the Charles River, where she threw herself into the water,' determined to .end her existence. ;. An hour after her 'rescue from death her oldest soca was', informed of her'gondition in the hope that he might do something : for.- his . unfortunate mother. Although - in well-to-do: Circumstances, he sternly refused to do anything, even to see,: the poor woman, who will be sent to some institution .by the authorities. A WAR STORY. Stanton's Opinion of Lincoln, in which the •Latter Concurred. Among all the sturdy heroes of the war *who were mentioned, in speech and song at the late reunion of the, Grand 'Army, all..mention of • Edwin:M. Stanton, Lincoln's`' Secretary of War, was omitted ' by orators and, writers. As an evidence of the high esteem in whioh. he was held bythe President it is related that during the early part "of: the 'war the, western men, as they were then called, had a poor opinion of the ,:fighting qualities of the men of the east, and,headed by 'Owen Lovejoy, of Illinois, devised., a scheme whioh ;they thought wouldprove this theory and be at the same `time. of immense service to the:army in the. east. Armed with all the details of the plan a committee headed by Lavejoy proceeded to Washington, and, calling upon,' Presi- dent Lincoln, unfolded too him the wonder - 1111 scheme of . transferring 50,000 eastorn 'troops to the army of the west, . and sup- plying their plaoes with an equal number. of western men. Their eloquence and plausible arguments convinced the Presi- dent to the extent that he gave -them an order to Secretary Stanton to carry out the detailsof.the plann.raposed• Ou enter., engaged in writing, and .without looking -up he -desired -to know: t o objeot of, their' visit. Lovejoy• . explained the-acheme .as he-hed before done: to -they Presirdent,Tbut was met with a flat refusal by the Secretary. " But we have the President's -order, sir," said Lovejoy. " Did Lincoln give, you amorder of that kind 2" quoth Stanton:-=-- - " He did, sir." • "Then' he its a d—d fool," said the irate Secretary. -"Do you•moa i'to say the 'President is d -d fool ? "'asked. Lovejoy,• in•amazement. " Yes; sir ; if he gave you suoh' an order as that." • The bewildered Illinoisian: betook him ,self at ;once to the President and related the result of his conference. "Did Stanton say I was a d--4 fool ?." asked, Lincoln at the close of the recital. " He did, sir ; and repeated it." With that peculiar far -away, look • for wbich,the President was noted, he looked up after a moment's pause and said " If Stanton said I was a d ---4,d fool then I must be•one,'for he is nearly always right and generally says what he means. I will step over` and see him." • • , This he proceeded to ' do, \and,'Shan. •ton convinced • hint in' a fow mo- ments that ,the ,plan proposed would• be taken as an insult •by . the whole east. Her soldiers would' stop enlisting and her capitalists withhold the solid assistance they had been •previously furnishing the• north, thus adding largely to the confidence whioh the President had previously reposed in him.—DcnverNews. hirzr. IN Talo W'oscusntor.—To do good work. the ineciaanio must have' good health. If long hours of confinement in close rooms have en- feebled his hand or dimmed his sight let him at once, and before lime organic' trouble appears, take plenty of Hop Bitters. His 'system will be rejuvenated, his nerves strengthened, his eight become -clear, and the whole constitution be befit up to a higher working condition. Dr. H. F. Hamilton says ' that .ab. least' once a day girls should have • their halters taken off, the bars let down,'' and be turned loose like young Bolts. '" Callsthenios may be Very genteel, and romping veryungon' teel, ,but one is the „shadow,. the other the substance, of .healthful' exorcise." ,. O p g op � moaningtide-• om lainin married, po • Sow Tisessithilcso• ,e ct rain. the' Hearts of moving Pairs. It was 7.25 by the clock in the Tombstone 2epublicain Tombstone The buggy was at tine • door to take a Tombstone man to the train. His hand was on the knob. °' Good-bye, ' he called out. There came !rem some one • upstairs, through the :half -open door, a . feminine voice, 66 Good-bye." Thenhe bad - gone out into the glad spring air, odorous with the foretokens of coming hie and : musical with the Bongo, of then et•builders. But there was no song in his heart;. no ; sprang hope and light in his life aaahe took the reins of his groom's hands and spoke to.. his horsea•sharp " Get on!" And as he rode, through the royal avenue that led up to the, house this is what he thought ;. " If I had been a guest Martha would have been up dressed. She would have laid a spray of tresh flowers at My plate., She would have sat at the table and seen that . my coffee was good, and my, egg)) hotand my toast browned. And I should have at least a parting 'shake bf the hand, and a hope - expreseed that T. would .collie again, and, perhaps, a wave of the handkerchief from. the ,balcony. And I should have carried,, away with me that -smile that is brighter than the sunshine as the last gift Of .her gracious hospitality: It is'a chance if she would not even have proposed• to ride to the, T station with me to see me. off. For she knows, if ever woman did, how to weloome the- ooming•and speed the. parting guest. But I am only her husband and I can eat my breakfast alone, as if I. • were a bachelor, and: get my coffee muddy or clear, hot or cold, as Bridget happens. to make it, and take eggs hard or soft and toast burnt or soggy, as it chances to' come, frdtn'f'a careless cook.. And nobody cares. And when I go " Good- eye " is flung after me like a dry bone after an ill -oared -for• our. Heigho•! What's the use of being mar- ried, anyway ? " And this ia what ahe..thought rr e,ta t — L +::ae"�`.m.,r'.•` r4.1,.. r -",fin uv'a'•i.c" %•••.",,- back from her eyes before she went down to Hee that the fainily breakfast was ready : "I wonder if Hugh really cares anything for me any more. •When we• were. first-, married he never would have gone off in - this . way, and with a careless ' good-bye tossed upstairs ashe might toss a well - cleaned bonefto a: hungry dog. He, would have found time •to run up and kis)) me ; good-bye and tell methat he missed me at " ' • breakfast avid ask was I sick. He is gracious ta hie friends, a perfect gentleman te every one but his wife, 1 believe he is tired of me. 'I wish 1 dould ,'let him go. It; would be 'bard on me, but it "would be . better .for him 1 Well 1 I mustn't think ,. Such . things as ` these.•: Perhaps r , he does ' love me , after all. But •- but -- it is coming to be hard to believe it."• And so with a: happy heart she went to her work.: And the sun . laughed in atthe open•windows, and the birds chirped cheer. to, her all day, and -the flowers:waved . their most graceful beckoning to her in -vain, all • for want of that farewell kiss., . ' ' Oh 1•'husbands and wives, will you never learn that love diesof slightest wounds, and -that the husband owes no such thoughtful courtesy to any other person as he owes. his wife ; that the wife owes rib • 'such , • • attentive consideration to any guest as she • •owesto' her husband, and that ofttimes a : little neglect 'le a harder burden for love to bear than an; open and flagrant wrong. .. —The Ontario Parliannent buildings are being renovated. The Egyptian census has just been coin pleted. The total.' population fa given ' as . 6,798,230,. of whom 3,393,918 are males'and 3,404,312 females. Caird'h&s 368,108 inhabi- tants; Alexandria; with its 'suburbs, 208, . 5 ; Port Said,: 16,560 ; .Suez, 10,913; Tan - tali; •33,725 ,' Damietta; 34,046' . Rosetta 16,671; Mansurah, 26,784 ; Zagazig, 19,046,. To rule one's singer is. well ; to prevent it ,.: is better, r .FOR THE KIDNEYS • LIYER ' AND URINARY ORGANS THE BEST BLOOD PrTKIFIEIi. ' There is Only one.wap by`which any disease a be cured, and that is `by removing the cause= whatever it may be. The great medical' author - idea of the day declare that nearly every; disease is caused by deranged kidneys or liver. To restore • thea hereforeis the only way by which health can be secured. Here is where Warner's Sole< Cure has achieved its great reputatio p It .acts • directly upon the kidneys and liver and by play • them in a healthy condition drives disease and pain from the system. For all kidney, Liver and Urinary troubles, for the distressing die - orders of women, for Malaria and physical troubles generally, this great remedy has no uoncoo equal: tionTieswaresaid •to o1be imjust postorass;goodim.atiitons ''and For Diabetes ,ask for Wii,ruier'a' Safe me. beteg (3urc.. For sale by all dessere. • . , 'IL H. WARNER & CO., i Toronto, Ont. . och stcr, N. V. ; London Bing. THE GUELPH Opera House Compaq, Tr USG. p p r � 100,000 'Shares. •$2.00 per Share,. Tan Bear IlkivBBTM8NT OI+'reneD To Taff "• • Callen/ex I'vnnntl, Bend card for proapeotus, ohs., to J". 1.. eticirPi[Y.' . • giielph, Ont., Canada • 6 ,.