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The New Era, 1884-02-01, Page 9a February 11884, t- , litiiiii.ATIONS-011! THE BOUIOIN; Dentine said eiteisres-Witat Advice Net Foliewaretteeteitte-A. Deceptive Diestuate--trerribie isiatesest held by the Dottese end " Oaten= Illair" hr the Pehlke TO eudeavor to dress Well and teetotally , by the aidof fashien.touritate iti ecnnething like trying to learn the menders of geed, ecuelety from au etiquette book. Bob may 400 VD useful items of • advice, but i ss freme ethie or Calf the Very eetheis hf the niateer in and be gleened. It ie always daliget'oUe to act upon itiolated pieces of in- forniation,, and these who model their be- atavior itaid oostume Upon priuted imbrue - Hone are liable to produm tee seraeliY " ilkeot upou their acquaintancte. "The hair eprn high ou the head," says a fashion nal, aelchne, " and no cote in good society OS now eeen with the chavelsre dressed low on the neck." The effect of this annoueoci• amenteetretheeminds of mune' le-tailditke them GA 011001 regardless ot the haruiciaious or the becoming, drag everyhair in their head to the elevetion commended by the oraole, arid there didpose them litare melee - Haply Go the beat a oleic skill. The result is aoolimionally painful; and frequently ludiorous.• . A LADY WITH HARDLY ANY 088 will will appear in a coiffure euggestive of Potion ou Oesa piled The nose beconiee thereby so palpably diminished in aper. • anise as bearcely to be notimable. Cit, some one with a long neck reads thee "turned down 'collars et lece-and nouslin have replaced the upright Linea ealier," tted strueghtway the world is favored with a view cif "be colu!nu of her •throat," a revelation of the direst seragginess, The Los is that them vibe poseese en leucite mese of what is fitting experieuce the name settee of freedom and liberty in the midst of rulee and restriotions as ie felt in the matter of etiquette ,fiy those who have Int= bibed its rules from their earlieet yearea.nd to whom the customs a polite society hove • beocime a second nature. The woman who dressed beet hi she whe studies the eleeeigas of fashion only to find arriong theta, met • what suits herself, and who kriows how to ade • every shifting phase Of it to the Tina s an accomplishmewhich may be exi les of her appeatanee and her puree.nt partly a gitt of netureepartly due to culture. It may, on, the other hand, be wholly eatu- rat. It can neverhe 'entirely the result of training. A peasant girl my-aaften does - pees/omit ; *title woman who has spent her life in making dresses ie frequently wholly without it. Perhaps ' . • SOHE BLIGHT INGREDIENT or ow:lima ' may be neoeseary to its fullsetadevelop= meat ; but be this as it may, it . ie certain that a woman gifted with such perception will never wear an unbecomieg calor, and does not need to be told in whet folds her gowns should be arranged. If tall, she knows perfectly well that she mate flounce; herself to the waist with impunity: • ff Shirt, .she is 'thoroughly aware that a trained skirt gives her a dtgiiity of outline that she mightotherwise lack; If heir head be small in proportion with her body, she will manage by some means to "make her, lecke "wide dispread " and yet to avoid the unkempt look that. is ton often „Mita taken for pietureequeness. . The fathione of the present time are Bo infinite in variety and so readily adaptable to rations types of form and face that no one hat any . excuse for wearing what 'is unbehomiog. There are long and graoeful initiates ter the tall.; while neat little jeokets are . equally fashionable for the short. Flmineeeare permissible for tie se who loan wear them without intury to the figore, said skirts of severest plainness ' may be adopted by othera who feel they would. like to,.. • ADD AN APPARENT ELL UNTO THEIR STATURE: Persons who go into the siibtleties of the subject soon learn that plide textures • are suited for fleunces, while figured fabeice lend -themselves Mere readily to draperies. It is a pity, for instenoe, to fold inteepleate a brocho silk or velvet, for thus the. beauty of the design is in great measure concealed. A plain eaten or silk; on the Oceetraryaie at its best when reiterated kb or getheas, 'bring its richness into peominenoe by the.. play of light and shade upon it. They also very soon discover that a smell quantity of an extremely riCil material oan be Made; by the exercise of skill, to produce an effect equal -to -a -very lerge quantity ,on . which less skill has been expended. : Nor does it take them long to find •out that little gleaine and'glints of •color, if .: judi- .' oiously placed apart at ' wide intervals,' are' as a rule much more truly artistic • than broad patches of the same. • The:oue is .in effect as a canvas by a great artist wheu • computed with that covered by a seam painterm-Aadeese of bronze green. vieugna, for instal:toe, will phew a euggeetion °told. gold plush at the beck and wrists, as welt at where the drapery ehOWE kid under Buie . 7 , _ .. at the back. THE INFERENCE 0 THE UNINITIATED eye is that th ole garment is lined with the plush i estion. Were the ,latter to be laid • remises, the effect would be poor in comparison,. and probably five or six times as ruiloh of the timely material would have been used. A favorite Mode of introducing color iuto a. dress is sari follows : The elcirt will open to the knee at ope. side, and reveal what appears to be a portion of itaieptire underskirt of oardinal or orange s'allt. The overskirt is limed over this •bS' D e die of silk cord and teasels, The cardi- nal or orange is repeated in the Mato:let aucehinted at in the cuffs arid cellar. That seen in the skirt is, : of course, introduced episodically, though it suggests continuity. Teere hes the art of it-ao art that Only experience cian fully teach, • • , 15 18 in the matter of bonnets that tee most terable 'mistakes are Verpetra,ted, ' The custom, now so generally followed,' of showing the oostotner the ; fashionable form s of bead -gear on a lovety head .is, to say the lamb, ,nrielea,ding. A eynio wothi find in a boonet-shop rare opportiluities for indulging the bent of hie nature. He week] eee bonnet after. bonnet displayed on the heed of a pretty and graceful girl, while the iutending purchaser might be posseased of one of think+ a iciapessible " taees that a tasteful little chapeau imme- diately retelms absolutely grotesque. .The owner, however, aeleots the one that look!. best on the charming girl -Nom and attile off contentedly with what is really like one of those , a MAO' i , Reeks or ,ohn ranistria men, t. bringite to prominenee Iti 'het 'face all that she • ould have endeavored .to slur over. If a woman possetisee a mahogany - colored face, she is almost stied to select a mahoganynolored bonnet, instead of those ones of vivid oratoand brilliant Ilearlet, h toted over a dull greener bronze surface, ould bring out all the earl in her dom. subduing the Veltow. Thom Who seethe of what is fit, or the Opposite, tturally What attics theme as a bee honey.yielcline' flowers. The ids all pallid titits, ,though inds that a %Oahu ahead Of • her Wear liskin. If ealloW, she will shag green and beware�f bue, though among the toneof the hiker are oue or twolhat Amin the sa�qw T very rosy wilt choose Apip godusd Di whir& fashion now &Heigh. Brown, them, is °spookily valuable. So is bron and both of these are in great favor j now, A hat or bonnet nlaile of bre velvet and trimmed with II knot of yell ribbon must sensibly tone down the ro tints of the Most rollicking country ohee There is a further form of art which !scarcely to be commended, and that lea ita possessor to choose an ideal bonnet a then . mum use comemisiou UP to its lofty standard. This.ie reversing th usual order of things, but It is a prat)** DO means unknown iiMOOK•us. And there even a further height. The hair must dyed, to suit the bonnet and the fa) °okra of, the cheeks and lips. Le the days, when a" symps,thetio blush ". is so by the ounce, and sunny rays for gold hair" by the bottle, it is scarcely surprisi to find that a lady et fashion alters t color of her hair at will, and carriee b blushes in her pooket, together with one them: '''-oiruninralittle-pnWder:lIfifft-V American whioh are turned easila melds out, and when not in use pretend to be Mimeo little pin-oushions, guiltlees of evea pee. Ae a layer of powder, however carefully rubbed In, has a tendency tCl fil.katit to itself any dust Wet may. be in its neighborhood, a email pooket-mirror 'be- comes an indispensable accompaniment ot •theee whit may be described as " artists, and purses are often now Beets with & email looking -glass iniserted one of the flaps. It will thus be seen that the choice ot a bonnet isi a serious metter, inyolviug Tote a series of addends, cif more or lees impor- tance. ' • latteet altos Scotland. " he The 'Breobin round tower k the oldest nth Margate budding of stone and lime in for Scotland which min be &ppm:if:Gately dated. ze; The Senate of the University of Glam. net go, on, a report treat the Faculty of 7w" DTh..0":101'.' AbLvrareTolviretuttph ue degreegal da0o1. sY kietian,B D., miesionary of the Free Church ke. of Sootland atBonabay. de Mr. Moody! the Ameripan evangelist, is nd expected to Welt Edinburgh about the end • ot this month, and will preeide at the open. ingot the large hall in the new building M ,the .High street being erected for Parra). e berm' Close Mission. by At the Glasgow Circuit Court a few days bb ago, before Lard Deus, Alexander McIn- tyre an elderly man was charged with hav- e° ing caueed the deeth ot his wite at their SG id bowie in the Grallowgate,on the 19th or 20012 en November. He pleaded guilty to culpable ug hOraiOidef and -was sentenced to ten years' be penal aer vitude. er of or 11 H. TOwElf. - A rfilonnotent of Affection. /Seemed b • Lore Detiferia, • . • Hslf-wiey up Bettett Leigh, on the hig .ground to the leftayou tiller see a»remark .able landmark, This te Helen'sTower built by the patient Earl Of Dufferin as tribute of filial affection- to his Mother, the late Countess 61 Gifferd, and • formally named after her on attaining his majority.' Looking acmes from ,the gray, old Walle of elerriokfergusi it. :May be seen •orovining She highest hill tin the,Clendeboye estate. Clear out against- the. shy;: there it stands, lashed by the winds or touchedby the eun, ever firm and enduringa-alitting memorial of one of the best and noblest of. women. Lady Gifford was a aneriden, one to witom .wit and beauty Offing GS natural gifts, yet one Who dipped deeply into „ the font ot human knowledge, and by pure eympetliy With all that • was good and beautiful in iifa, exerted a lasting ilifluence •cin all thotie whose privilege it was to' know •bee. A short drive from Bangor, ,or, still better, a pleaterit two mile stretth !totem the turf from Clendeboye ;House -will bring riot° the !foot of the 'Here, glimmering amid ferns, fledges, larches and firs, Very. calm and peonetul on a goidin autumn dity, 'Helen's Tower .reflected on iSa taoeis quiet lake.: .Then a eritart Climbthrough a lir wood,. and the Towera-wveritable 'flootch tower, .„ with " herbie stairs " and jutting theeets ocenplete-le, before you. At She basement lives the old keeper with 'his wife ; and here, after ineoritang your name on the visitor's bOok, you follow "him tip the etone steps. The aleeping .• chamber. firet, A cosy: little reonea• remarkable for the fine emeenmen of Freneh embroidery Which decorates the , tiedetead,with the quaint inkoription on the tester : ' • I nightly pitch my moving 'tents • • . A dare march nearer home, . Prime here you are .--takerrata-shealor • Deseendieg. Nein, ..we. "Etter. the priecipal ohano ber ootaeop ale oak -panelled . with grantee point ed ceiling. and stained -glees *iodates. .0earthe firliplea00 is aniche toe a stilt:aria*); and flanking the west win- dow are.two poetical ineeriptiposthat on the lefa.preeted in gold and having refer: ;ghee te the lainp, is. • by Lord Dufferin'e mother.; had that on the .righb, printed' in bold black type, is:hy, the poet laureate. Mr. Teunyson ,having made public ..the lines whith he wrote, at Lord, Ditfferinte remeeet, for Helen's Tower," areated hye him' to the memory of his late mother, the Qountees of Giffatil; on *.the Clandeboye estate, Mr..13.roweieg has oonsented to the peblioatithe of his veram on' the same .6o- catiena end written : at the like, request, Made th htm efteritehad beep. made toilir Tennyson. ' . Mr. PrOwniiig'e tribute to the late. Lad y etiffard was no. mere ocimplitnent, • lie alt who.know her Will bear witness. We owe the copy 50r. Fund, VIA. 11 i . : • Who 'beard of:Helen's- ToWer'May dreani per• • chanee, • • : - • 7 b. a. How the Brook Beauty from the SeLean Gate Giried On old -friends unanimous in vete, Dee,th-doomed because et her fair countenance • Hearts tv01.141 leap otherwise at thy advance, • , Lady. to whom-thiaTwer is consecrate I •Like hers, thy face once made all oyes elate, Yet, unlike hers, was blessed' by every -glance.... •• • .aoe Tower of Hate is Outworn, far and strange. - a transitory shame of long ago,. . 13Wtthine, Love's rock -built Tower, shall fear no It diea into this -sand from which it sprang; chano; . • God's self, laid 'stable eafth's foundations so, 'When all the morning stars together sang.• . ROBERT BROWNING.• • April 26, 1810. • • lei Never Toe Late to Mamie. Attiring most people the erroneous idea exists thee youth is the only ,ifeatort when • skating can be edvantiegeously lammed. Many a ,irlais would "Motease health', and: botie ietetiiiify and prolong life, if he could pereuetclea-hiteeelf to tiequirethie alumna= plishnient, abtwithstanding the tumbles • and the irreverent jeeriegafroni his janiore whiola he would be sure to meet with. ,For skating is to walking what swimmiog bate. bathing,' It exercises the whole system ina imore-energetio manner than mere pedes- • trianism does', and by the energetic ire breathing and out -breathing which. it .in- duces rapidly purifies the bleed. That it them seldom acquired when the person ignortott of it has passed boyhood -or girl- hood, for we meet include female skaters,- stgues nothing againet the potentiality of the adult ;who Bets his ambition( in that direction. ' , • 70116 DIfinyennu 111 " Tbat was tight nice io Harry Archer's labdlord presenting him on Christmas with a receipt foe to tnotithe' tent." . Is that tie? Hew did Harry feel over . • it ?" , "Ho oould soarcely:eturn thanks in Words; he *as • alrnost moved to tears through gratitude," • • ' "4. neighbor of mine was inuoh m�kO moved than that by hie landlord." • "Indeed! Maw wad that?" «De was moved out of 'the house." •-It is reported that Signor Edreondo Almelo, the accomplished Italian author, is miming to Anieriee, not Only to write a book, but to give a oourse ef lectures. " ^ A probationer was officiatingin the per, ith church of Einglassie, with a view 50 his becoming assistant to the incumbent, " May I ask 'your name, sir ?" said tha beadle to him at the close Of the servicie. 41: dinne.' speir t for ony ottreesity it' my alo, but for. the justification 0' the people." eorge Duebar, a Waterloo veteran, die at Garmouth the ether ..hayeelai _was -i therequare atIatiferloo, where the Duke Wellington and, his staff had to take lihelte three times from the fierce charges of tie Frenoh cavalry. On that day he wounded three times, but was able to tak part in the last charge while the Guard drove back the oelebratea Old Gruerd ,o Napoleon. • o 4 peouliar mole has been before th courts in Scotland. Rey. Dr. Bain, paris minister of Duthil, sued Augus Stewar booksellereGra,uton, for .212 'damages fo Bleeder.• The slander consisted of a state ment that the plaintiff had defrauded th Highland Railway Company by causing t be gent ordinary luggage from Strom Ferry to Dingwall the remaine of his lat father. , Is was shown that the occurrent, took plum eight years piece, and th remains had been then buried nine year said were merely dieinterreatand shipped fo reintermeht. The ouriouspart of the eas re. eW,41B4 -.a of , As early as the 6th century exteneive r m matiteries were found in Ireland, in whit% e religion and learning were. zealously cold- wa /4411(eag -frosts lirellnistdo. Wm, Roily,. es -Mayor 4:if Waterford, has been appointed High Sheriff, there. Pat Moylan vise ithet dead 4on Deeentbar lath at Oaboolan, seven mike from GalwaY. Rev. Peter Galligan, Rillenkere, died recently after a few day' Skew, ;Tamest Hamilton, once e wine a:lambent in Dublin, died recently at his residence, Eden, Ardare. Mr, Joh m Parke, for many ayears post- master at titre:Whin, Sligo, is dead. On Deoember lath Mary Murray, said to be over 100 years 014. dropped dead in Castle street, Athlone, amidst the noise and c onfueion of the market. At robertstown, on December David Conner, while wider the influence, of drink, attaoked his wife with a hatchet and killed her on the spot. A horrible murder was committed in 'Auburn, County • A.ntrina, on December rjoh. James Doherty, while in an insane condition, shot his ateter-in-law dead and a weed. Front these establiehrnents mission - aries weresent forthacerryiug the doctrines s of Christianity to Sootlaud, Englaod, and f• all parte of Europe. - In a letter to the London journals, Lord e .Waveney bearstrongtribute to thebeauty h and suitability a Irish pophu for wall 5, decoration, for which it is now being used r by the Queen and in the best English 4 Ileums: He also proves that it is economi- e • nal, which is the moat impoetant item in o the question. In 1844 fne had the drawireg- e room of his London house hung with Irish e tabaret, yellow, with white stripes. •" The a color and brilliancy," he says, "renisin un - a • diminished in 'intensity after near forty s Years' wear in. Louden. A, ruby tabaret r has lasted equally well.". lathe demaion that a railwey could net refuse to carry a corpse at the ordinary rete, A., te6o,000 When they obarge more it is becausin agreement. Judgment was given for the clergyman: • .• , At the pleading diet Of a Jury Court at kilmarnook Sarah Boyle Pleaded guilty to a charge of bigamy, aggravated by previous convioticin: The citounietances are of a rather curious nature. ". In 1875 Rio .married a miner named John Reddook• He only lived 'with her a mouth, and then enliated as a soldier. After. , lengthened • interval, believing him to be dead, his Wife married another man named John Smith in 1880.• Reclaim:1r, however, turned up last ' year and his: wife suffered two months' imprisonment for bigamy. "neApril last Smith died; 'and' in Noventber she married a laborer named William Agnew, her law, fur hutiband, being still alive, . Is appears the Waa under the itopreesion that, having. suffered • for her second merriage, her pitrener in"this illegal compact being dead, and :her-husbend not wishing to have any. thing toile with her, ah p waf, quite at liberty toamar4keegaine. The Sheriff, taking a lenient view ot the case, iefitoted the same peniehment as Indere, two _menthe' ink, pritionmeet. ‘, • , •' "'"• • TIRE ICOUGliNt001 • • . • Arisiocrade Died eneeeirei Duette- ' ttiih American : • • • • f One Of the Deans that make coal 80 Ex- --- ' .. . pe,nadye. A. coal -dealer said in a Cleveland inter'. view : The abundance of coal in • the United States ought to render it cheap, but mine operators claim that it cannot be prodnoed any cheaper, and point to the feat that a ton of ooal 'in England, which hes been wrestling so long with the coal 'problem, coatis about 9,1t mu'oh as in America. "Tek, for instance, the Hooking male' said a railroad nicht to -day. e The miners /Merge 80. cents a too for mining it. (In Rio Massillon region they . charge 95 cents, while the Brier Hill men have beau getting only. 65.) The.elead work costs 60 °ante a San (down -in the Maasillort region where they have to pump out their tutees it to 50 cents a ton), the freight will amount to 11 40, and it will omit e0 oents te *load and Unload it. net ewells the cost to62 60 a ton. The freight cannot be lowered much., It =Quote now to but 4 of a oenti pet ton a mile." . Few of the mail ohegatorii have gotten rich. Down An the Brier Hill region.. theY pay as high as 50 Omits a ton , to tamers Whose land they have homed Inc mining, purposes, while in the Massilloo mien from 15 50 .20 cents a• ton is given. Theia there are lioeselacka. Hortie-bethe are rook projections *heath are met in a 'mine 'where they rise up and. shut off the coal. It is ,en expensive task to remove them. Pride, the Pittsburg miner, once struitk a bOrsiabaok vibiah cost hinover: 660.600, home& .tlaize_eigheaekgekeegi koadawkeecia. oapitalists are more patient than we, they :eon a ;Ong shaft from the Mouth to the far her end of * sidehill .miee and begin \ froth the rear and work tot -Ward: %Here the opt, rater; 'Diable to wait. so long•for a return • Omer, his tdieney, begins at once to take out theamal, openiog rooms each side of the . central theft and lita'ying"gteat pia ,of of coal to support the roof of the neon he pillars, whicei are very large, conteia • till y tons of.coal, which are not available mine has been :exhausted, when. they out and therod allowed to .2 An Other laird Corea.. Mr. John L Meckeniie.writes tha te the Sao • • The melte° 'is shoal bird, elle singe as she es, Sb brings us good ti 5ngs and tells es no lies. thereadees the °ticker) lay her; egg'? Satei is the query niadein the JaernoZ of date Sinewy 3rd, but answered smite. 'fitotorily. When a lad in m of _Kincardine, •itose.thire, Ito opportunities as a herd -boy op my farm of Ardolirohie to study the ways birds, My constant amuisepeent: Was' t searol; for the nests of birds andtoteke a WRP/I1 interest in their echistruotiOnathe number of eggs each kind of bird laid, and Rio nurthre of the yOung broods. I wattled them like a loving potent, and (hem har- tied a hest. I heaped that the ouokoo, " heti:linger Of seamier," wasmach 'followed by the yellow yight Ailing we call this bird), nos. lighting the ducked, aa small birthe fonow the havek, but seemiegly in friendly attendance. Wittehiegethus,. I found sevaral Yellow yightie netts (usually in benches of heather an the ground), with four or Ave small Spotted eggs, and One • larger .egg ofit dull; white.brown• color. -The tatching-wasaioneby the yellow yight, :when four or five mall dewily birds and • one large flabbY creature were prodimed,The make° wes.neVer Been near' the_nest during the hatohing time, and the young Were fed•by the yellow eyiehts. Itt course of time 1 foetid the flabby: big bird filling the neat, and the • pier littlo yellow yights plished-outistWand dead with the cold. I •have taken the young aristocrat away, and fed and reared it iiite a full-grown ouckoo. exbeedingli greedy » and tame bird it turned out to. be ; but itelied as Soon as win-. ter sat In: Therees a small_ birdie Scotland, th ei titmouse, that build!' its not in shal- tow holes in trees, and it would • lodquite possiole for so unnatural a mother as the memo ia, on a close oil, te drop her egg in am% a nest; but that she oould 'carry her egg to 0; nest is noneense, My opireon is thethe melee° lays an egg in More than .00e 'neat, for P have emu thousand -tree - cuckoos, gathered together at the edge of the ocean preparatory tils Migrating to a • warmer clime, just as I have Retie th Arnatioan robins clumped hi large numbers in my garden, tasting their pinionseuatil,by sigoal from the beed-oerare off they went into space, 'We have the jouiikoo in Ante= ries, MI exact similitude, minus the "ono koo,"a very, shy and witty bird, exceedingly emotive; but 'whether it infringee on the donieatio privitay of other birds,. like the Eneoperia protatiVe; I am not aware. A Oki *setts Looking Attei, tive perish ceilent er's • .• • • The great heiress of E °gland at ,present is Miss Hamilton, whom mother, Ledy Nisbett Hamilton, has jtiat died. The • large estates M Hedeingtonshire and • Lincolnshire, the annual ineotrie of whiob is eatimultpd at620,O00 have been for some years, owing to th q lu.dfs incapacity, under •the .management of the Scottish Courts, and an immense sum has accrued. Miss Hamiltait's father, Whose • original name was Dundee, had the agreeable fortune to adopt no fewer lahan three additional family names -Christopher, Nisbett end finany -each change bringing a large nuiree,se of teethed. Her mother, Just deceased, had been first married to the Earl of Elgin, father of the Earl of Cana - than memory, and Frederick Brucie• Minieter at Washington, hitt was divorced from hiin. • A Sianday afternoon clam for Italians Was held for the first time Sunday at Shaftes. bury Hall, Toronto There was an atten- dance of about thirty. The history of the World teache no lesson witlitnOre impretisivii soleninitY than this. • That the eply safe guide to a great intellect is a pure twat ; that evil no sooner 59.508 pos11'6681011 �f the heart than folly oentnieneee the tainqiiest of the mind. C. 1 I all. • . ' Y CREo WASTING DIS- . eases is nnderstood, those old lingering complaints 'so protracted. in their course an• d debilitating in. their effeet upon the health, which ordinarily depend upon hereditary influ- ences, as in consulalption and serottrikor are' the reault of depraved nutrition,„ from imperfect assimilation of .food and impoverished blood. 'finless the digestive process is complete. mater- ial is not prapared for nouriahing the tissues and repairing the waste resulting frommelital and physical exertion; diminution of constitu- tional vigor ie 'soon apparent, and the vital Organs, partaking of the general debility, speedily •manefest syttiptoms of derangement, It is in this class of cases that Dn. WItarmnit's tiOtiyOUSe ELIXIR OF PHOSPHATES AND CALTSAYA demone- trates its extraordinary nutritive properties, .being at once a chemical fooci and raedieament of the highest vain°. • That (lotion is best that pmeures the greatest-happinede for.theeeeeittest /mem- bers.• *Both Lydia E. Pinkliatn'S Vegetable Com- pound and Blood Puriller_are prepared at 233 and gss Western Aventia,-LVfin, Mass. Priee oteither, 51. Six bottles for 535. Sent by mail in tlae•forai of pills, or of losengee, 'on receipt of price, 51 per box for either. Airs. Pialcho.m freely auswere all letterset inquiry. Enclose 90. stamp, Sendtor "Guide to Health and Nerve Strain." There wasiqiientrit Shop of Mr: Ocaniey, butoliet, Helfer* a ide of a carcase of a heifer oareyieg an extraOrdinaret • kidney, which weighed upwards of 100 lbs. ' , • • "Better beet present evils than fly to thol3e unknown." Betterstill, use Kiduey•Wort and . make Your present ovilw-ily--to parte unknown. If you dud yourTself getting bilious, head heavy, loath teal, eyes yellow', kidneys disordered, symptoms of piles tormenting . you; take at Once a few doses of .1fidney-Wert. • Bo it as an wlvanee guard -either in dry et liquid fok'00r»it iS efficient • • The Invernees Town Council have ,re- solved to oppose.the Great North of soot. land Railway Ceitipa,ny in their applieMir for powers to conetruet a branch line from. Grantown„to Inverness. ' • On December i2nd,. John Crowley, painter, Cork, wits arrested by a detective' on a the% rge of hceetOg_ threatened to hheot the Hon..Ottpthiiiriu-nkett, , If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have sallow Color of skin,' or yellotvith brown spots on &toe or boeY, 'frequent beadathe or dizzinees, bad taste in mouth, internal . heat or ohills alternated with hot 'fluebes., • low spirits aed gloothy forebodings, irregu- lar appetite, and 'Magee rioted, you are suffering from" torpid livee.". or bilious - nese." in Many COO ot "liver complaint" Only part of these syneptones are experieno- ed •lis a remedy for, all auth Oases Dr, Pierce's " Golden Medical Disciovery "ha no equal, ae it effeets perfect and radioal ilaree, At all drug stores. The inveterate woman -praiser is quite akin to the man that rims a sheep farm. The latter is a sheep•raiser,. and it the forme r isn't a sheepraltier, what Is he ? Bad temper often peociteds 'frith those palate' disorders to whith women are sub. jeot. In female oomplaints D. A. V. Pieroe's Favorite Pritectriptieti " is a cer- tain One& By all druggiats. 21011220.2411Y0 .12ATITIATINTle ••••••m•••• • A $rhisk Volloesiabliais, Saireatolle4 Our • ifauu Termer. An incident mimed in the big canon of PAteer River last Week Of a nature so ter- rifying that it makes the blood `Of the nes. rater run cold while be writes. A. young Victorian who had been engaged on the railway tine, befog mustered out of ureic*, etarted for Viotoria. Al a point where 18 proposed to throw a railway suspension bridge across the Vraser there is stretched. ar Cable from whioh depends a sort of eage • or orate such as is used to pack fruit or oabbageri in on steamers, Passengere desk- ing to crows the river enter this cionveyancle. 'Wire e or stays extend from the orate -to wheel or pully on the cable and by means of a line to which a horse is attached the orate is drawn from side to Ride of the river. The cage bangs about 100 feet above the !dream, which boils and motes beneath in a fnanner that terrifies any person of weak nerves who may entrust himself to the con. veyanoe, Ten days ago the orate, while making the arcades. turned-upeide down, and 10,000 &Median oigars and a quantity of other light goods • dropped in the Fraser and were lot,.i This ncident was still fresh in the mind of the young Viotorianabovereferred to when he entered the orate ' and web drawn towards the other . side:" His equanimity was not metered When, 'having accomplished about onelait the passage, he saw the ferryman leisurely unhitch his 'berm and drive off. The day was biting odd. A sharp wind blew down the river and whistling through, the bare of the orate made the solitary paesenger's teeth rattle and his flesh creep. The Boeotian 'was alarming. The frail bark swayed to and fro, threatening with every blast that struck it to oapsize and send the voyager into the depths of the riVer. No one responded to hie Oalls for mere then an hour. Thin the ferrymen having finished hie noonday meal, returned with the horse, madelest to the line anti drew the half-dead young man ashore. The situation of a person seated in'the oage is one of danger under the most favorable • circumstances, but under the circumstance in which our young friend ()reseed it. wale' positively alarming. The ferrymantit is supposed, desired to play a practical joke ; Ibut it will strike most persons as befog art. exceedingly ill.timed 'one. --Victoria, B. C., Ccilotaist. • Young or middle aged men suffering from nerveue debility, lose of memory, premature old age, as; the result of bad "habits, should, send three stamps for Part VII. ef Dime Seriee pariophlets. Address WORLD'S DISPENSARY DIEDIOAL. ASSOODTIoN, Buffelo, N.Y. • • • "There's many e, slip 'twist the oup and She *hp," bus there are many more slips •after theaup has 'been emptied. , • No -family dyes were ever so popular,as the Diamond Dies. They never fail. The black is far superior to logwood. The other colors are elegant. . • „Would you say that a carpenter is like a barber because he oen't gat along without ha,vings? —•• • • • • "*Ocoee ON COUdishea" Ask for "Bough on Coughs," for tionAhs, Cohle Sore Throat, Hoareeness. Troolles,15e. Liquid, 50 Minty a woman who does not khow even Rio multiplies:time • table on " figure "in society, , • •_10111,5BLINE OF AAA. • Nervous Weakness, • Eyseepsia, Impotence,. Sexual Debility,' cured by ' Wells' Health Re- newer." $1. . •5 w-2-"katthew Arneld; on his -return to Eng-. land, will be Secretary of the Education De oartneent, ata salary of 610,000 a year. ' I?IoI'Hooit, pciiVAN'S WO trig EvrtuP ' Infallible, tasteless, harmless, cathartic ; for fe'veriehtless reetlesenest worms •constipa- tion,. 25c. • .The •gradoetes 'of Toronto UniversitY give a banquet Feb. 155h. . , • . • . • • . , .Jfa,vtrrc 0.alo,, Feb. 11, 1880. t am very glad to say I have tried Hap Bitters, and never took anything that did me Ss much 0.od. I only teok two bottles, and I would not Lake ewe for the•good they did me. I recommend them th my patients, and get the best results from their use. B. Helton* KID. . A hi est Galina. " I'll take whiskey; what will you have, Feed," said a man in a New York aaloon. "/ don't feel like drinkiogal said Fred. ,The brio speaker poured out a generous glass of whiskey, drank half of it, and handed •the rest 50 hie friend, remarking," with • rt wry_ face: " Thema sernitthing the matter with that stuff. ' Try eit."• Fred finiiitted" the liquor., The first speaker laid ten mute upon the bar,and they walked Out. That's a new game," remarked the bartender to a •New York Sun Man. • Oim distinguished mark of man's eteacly advance/4mA is the inoreasing yigor of his .warfare against evil,, ' '•. e Jokaig about her nose, a young lady. said, "1 heel nothing to do with shaping it.. It was a birthday preitent.". " Professor Wolcott Gibbs,of Harvard Uni- versity, is the first Amerioan who has ever been made a member of the 'German Cherphial Soeiety of Berlin, HAS t.3EE:hv pRo4rED • actr)TritiegrREICSAggAiESi g B • oes slam beak or disOrdered urine indi- eatotliat you aro a victim P THEN MO NOT HESITATE; use ICidigy-Wort at owse, (dreg- aa's giste recoinnlend Maud it will Speedily:Over: conns the diseade and renter° healthractien. e Ladies.tr;ror2,,Ite_Lrlar, affclweriktMeses:Kidney-Wort As unsurpassed, col it will act promptly and safely. • Dither Sox. Incontinence,rotention Aff urine, MICK dust or ropy doposits,Strici dUll &forging pains, all speedily yield to its ourative power. P. 48 SOLID NY ALL DRUGGISTS, Price 81. he 5O" -4a„ 41) (oak. MANDRAKE' 11$ -Tor cor THE ONLY - VEGETABLE Q:CTEtE FOR 1,11LISI3MEIVISIX.41.0 . Loss of Appetite, .Indigestion, Soo Stomach, • Habitual Costiveness, . Sick Headache -and Biliousness. P150, OSper bottle. Sold by all Druggists. .10L ACK 16 secove a nusinetio Education or Speneerian run. mans/lip at the SPENCER IAN BUSINESS COLLEGE ro Mesh (headers free • MOTU sidemen. Hama Feb. 1, VOL Gentfemen- tattered. with etteeke 14 Wok beadaehe." Nemaigia, female troubles, for years In the most terrible and excruciating manner. No medicine or doctor could give me relief or 0=0 me nmit used Hop Bitters, a The fire& bottle Nearly mired me; The moond made me u well d strong at 3,v1,24s1 • ' arid I bay° been 00 50 this day," My busbantl was an invalid for went' 3'esr: with a oeriona *Kidney, liver and urinary itomplaint, "Pronounced by Boetona best pinyiacians- °Incurable!" Seven bottles of your tattere 0404 taxa and know of the "Lives of eight persona" In my neighborhood that have been elWed your bitters, •. And Many more are tieing them with wrest benefit. 44They almost Do miracles? " ilkw10, 0. I/ a. lb. 5, hd, KIDN W.0 0THE -GREAT CURE iron _0 he it le tor all the painful diseases of the KIDNEYS,LIVER AND 130WEILS. 0 It Cleanses the system of the aorid pole= ID that causes the dreadful suffering which o onlY•the victims otitheuniatism can realize. THOUSANDS OF OASES or the Worst forms of t•hie terrible disease .11 nave beeaPeaFkliCreTliLeYveGUaaRdEiDa hvr"ivie b PRICE, .531. LIQUID 011 DRY, SOLD BY miecenses. et• it- Dry can be gat by mall. WELLS, BIL:n3ABDSON rlington Vt. raeta,'-eetl`p?4„:: re • WOMAKCAN \\, IlEetTh OF WOMA , $114A71112E WITH it. Ilia HO Pr Dr • WOMAN. RACE , LYDIA E. PIN.KHAM'S • VEGETABLE Compourra A Sure eieee for • nit:FEMALE WEAtia • ?JENSEN; IneladIng Leneorthcen, .regaiar and Painful menstruation, . Intilhin• Vemoamtib°94 Faltdogirlinegeorni°EtR011-ot:'. 0 1.A,PSIIS UTERI, &e. • ' "." laPPleasent to the taste, ildlic-acious Auld immediate Hilts effect: It is a great help in. pregnancy, and re- lieves pain during labor and at regular periods,. 'PHYSICIANS USE IT -AND PRESCRIBE .IT FREELT. • ihrFOR Wrinxitessts' of the generative organs • .of either' Sex, it is second toho remedy:that heal eves , Moen before the"publip, and for all disennes of the Enema Itis the Greatest Benwati Pt the Work!. •• xte0atRe iVIPrefINinTiStso .tuiet.her Sex • •:' . • LYDIA.E. JkINE111Alit$ BLOOD rtritarrEu will eradicate e ory voitige• of •Humers• from the Blood, at the same time will eye tone and strength to . • the system. As marvellous in results Rath° Compound, tgo-Both the Compoinid and Blood Purifier. are pre, • 'pared at and 215 Western, AvezufS), .Lynn, Masi; • • Price of either, SI. Sixtottleb for sA7T1S Coinpeund iseent brine& lfl tilkforin of pills, or 'of Iorenges on • ` receipt of pilee, 51 per Mix foi either. Mrs. Pinkh. ' -freely answers all letters of inquiry. EnVIO•se cent— stamp. Send for paniphlet. .afention thie Paper. OrLYtea, E. PINICl/Alt PILLS our) Coneitilia- '771;ina , Lion. Biliousness and Torpidity of the Liver. 25 cent. ' , .0ErSold by all'Ernifffbana`C4•• .•.(3) A NEW DISCOVERY. earFor several years we havelurnished the Dairymen of 'Meade& 'with an excellent arti- ficial color forbutter; someritorious that it Met with great nuCcuSS everywhere recoiyieg the highest and °WY prizes at both International ICU'llut by patient and sclenti'fle chemical re- search we havohnpreved in several points, and now offer this new color as the best in the world': It Will Not Color the Buttermilk, It • WIII NOt Turn Flanold. It Is the ' • • Strongest, Brightest and •Cheapat Color Made, earAnd, while prepared In oil, is so compound ed that 45 1, impossible [dr it to become rancid. •Mr CI VEINAint 01 014 eratations, and of all other oil colAws, for they aro 11510 50 become rancid anff spoil the butter. rrlf you:cannot get no ,write us to lanow where and how to get It• atthouce‘t, a • .(14) OVELY,S, meliAnesosf.e 6.. earettlat:15. Ao•-•Aesa..caraaaarsavkax,ra..1/44.*naarttaa • 1 CUR_n E :,IFI S! whe. 1 nay car_ UO 'nOt inerOlyta a11147 15051101 • 514015 and then I48e6 them return IntrAM I Moan a ME. Oal eure, 1 havo,mado 00 disease of PM, nriLnPSY • or FALLING SICKNESS a life long study. I warrant my . Minedy tO cure the Worst e PS, EnCalulo atbars have fI4Lc1IsOrOa,on for ir'•••• no nwhivIng a cum. Send at onto for d treatise an 1, 40 1105410 of my Infallible toMedy. Glve Express and „Mat 041100. It Sots yen nothingibt atrial, And I will rum yon, , - Address Er. -I. ROO'r Pearl St.; Now York. . • • . COVIIICILLORI 1111111 TNIPORTAlit BOOR FOR 11111s1D J.. CHI'AL eounolllore and officers, eontains in brief arid familiar style the rtiontomel lawd of ontorio w‘th forms. 200 pages; bound in cloth P110000AdTomilltbr.avtliAddorvesps blieh.00, strabio,th