The Wingham Times, 1897-06-04, Page 2a+'
THIEVES
taken that demo inferior article us not
THIEL X Ela INSOCIETY they caught with them. Their position
in society is one of protection, and their
#r70R!l:t3 70t p RY NflNBEt lEVirRS IN. "victims are too timid or proud to trace
a clew, which too often leads right to
KLEPTOMANIA. the door of their best :friends or dome
wnmau who is aidiug materially iu
of belpiug thein al,lug in society."•--.11gil;,i•
Ilfashtenekte IlmtezrteAsters—IIurair IS
prat in itt place, and very rarely are
tight Flamers In the Drawling Booms
ebanaa:ee'Which Dues Be Collett ItolaherY.,
Old rkdes s /few Vow.
"'Oil, glare zt any zlarsle yea like--bor-
Towing other people's belongings and
#ailing over to Wawa these, mistaken
identity as to special peateevions or klept
toruanie,. but I call it_thieeingeestud
something ought to bo doe, about it."
This is what the blend 'irouval in the
`very Ixt;iart bonnet stticl to liar near.
teigbbor in blue, whereupon every eth
Woman near the tea table cut short h
conversatiola told belch her oup in naida
to bear what the discussion would brio
forth.
"That 1 e,o," ww'eut ma the blond ern
phaticaliy, "and I've been stolen fr
repeatedly. No, my dear, I won't talc
a weed of it batik, said I aril not epee
ing ht.stily. 'In every lastance it was
plalz. citso e8 theft, end I've not -up t
date recovered ct s:ugle belcnging. Wh
of coulee ii it had been a grimy flngere
sneak thief. era teo cliterprising hone
maid, I lint . t naturally would have gen
to the police and detectives for, prate
tion read aesistanee, but it is l;ot quit
so easy to lane an individual ST110 wears
the Les: French gloves, wvhese bonnets
cer`ae freru an expensive imparter and
who eel: s:tizzies asks you to share her
opera taws, receive at her teas or take a
lift beam in hes Lrcugham, arrested and
searched on suspicion."
"Well, I uoverl" remarked the wom-
an in bine.
"Oh, that's just because you are a
dear, unsophisticated little creature,
and out ie your western town they don't
do such things. The temptationsare not
so great, butI can assure you that here
in our big cities, at regular intervals,
polite kleptomania is simply rampant,
and hardly a big function breaks up
that half the wcmem don't come away
quite savage over the loss of some pretty
and especially prized belonging," Evi-
dently the blond was right, for all the
other worsen nodded assent, and the
hostess was apparently breathless to tell
of some personal grievance on this score,
when The first speaker broke in again:
"You see," she elaborated, "we used
to think it might have been the servants'
fault, or an honest error, when we found
etre posseesions exchanged for others
loss valuable or simply disappearing, un-
til two or throe tunes the offenders were
caught right is the act, and then came
the awfully dismal consciousness that
really no one could be trusted.
('My first experience was with a very
costly lace tam I oa:ried to n dinner. I
held CO 10 it meat affectionately through-
out the everting, until some half dozen
of us went zip to the hostess' bedroom
for our wrap. There I laid it, with my
vinaigrette and fan, on the dressing ta-
ble, and when I turned to get them
again the fag was gone. I protested, the
maid searched, but nothing cane of it,
and Ifrcken heartodly I went down, bo-
wailimg nap Ices to a sympathising fem-
inine co:npa,;ioa. We went out to our
resmetiee siuria»e tc,2otktr, bet ea the
butler cl.tned the hall door a puff of
'wind blew her lci g oloak wide, and
there I saw, seem in its pocket, my pres
cions fen. Well, tho next day I wrote
her w c:; fean.'.-im asking for its return,
suggc: •'~g, of, course, abo Wad taken it
by missia , and home it cause. But we
leave er :molten since.
"a. teul;ht,me to look for higher
'offeum : ,t than maids in dressing rooms,
who usually accused of snaking way
'with e�, i wraps, umbrellas, overshoes
:and w,•'•:;s, act that may bo missing."
".AJ that is not nlytrouble,"chimed
in a r ante across the tea table. "The
lave:,.. ,•••,u is now to exchange bad
fort (c :i thus, 1 air growing almost
philc,:c.;.:,ical over the deplorable shab-
biznei: of my wardrobe from this con-
stant s,: tapping. Last week, on coming
up let'' to the dror'sin,.�, room from a
dams..i found in place of my brand
new t 'tau suede carriage overshoes two
overi:.:;c, badly worn ones of rusty
black w: Ivet and my lace head scarf eg-
Cina, ,; far a frayed one of sailed white
Chiffc::•. :naturally Groes and sleepy, I
fell et: t..:; tired plait/, who wept and
deme r., 1 at looked as if she could tell a
tale.
"0: ` • to reale a test case of it I rolled
my sn ' I"roilell galachee in my inarkin-
tosi., : .!l u:y caret on tcp and put them
in a r- . t earner of the dressier; room of
a lief,;,• • whore I went to iumcheon the
other c esti. But it was of no avail. The
galoci.t>v laid been lzie:tazznorphosed into
a pair r »' muddy rubbers with holes be
the:: • ?son I went back, and I didn't
gruzi),ir:, ranee my pretty umbrella was
left. ri Le work of the spoiler gran on in
tho els tahroonns when big weeding re-
ceptione, teas, musicales and private
halls
tire in progress.
"At elle of the big dance of the tea -
ton the hrstess simply ordered her maid
to issue checks for eatery' woman's wrap,
and, chaz'nairrg to relate, not so much as
a hairpin was hast, for altherdatihter's
Wedding roreption, only a reek before,
three moils get Meetly aomehowv without
their rightiai o•sanore, arid. tho possessor
Of a aced enable band' armer found a
ecrubly' old testea,khes one hi its piece•.
"That it tie fsethior,:tble klep-
tonlaxri.ioatt.sp , t',lit onnaciences by an
hatl;f aa,, rids fete eitietantii anything
cent Arrowpoint in Chicago Record.
Sandals were nacre feel: tenable among
the Egyptians than among the Hebrews.
Thep were worn by women of the high-
est rank, for we read of the sandals
with loner, turn up points which a beau-
tiful queen habitually wore when she
was at house.
ltebbita That Climb..
A carrespaudent writes to the London
t -1 1E E W IN till.. M. TIMES eILINE 4, tN17,
ittatOteHP
16.
•9 ,
There la na newer o1: welt or lea,
leo .April,tower, ea fair es alai,.
Q erhttq anemones who hast
Tho aind'a wild grace,
Know tier a couefa, of thy race,
Into whosgv ace i
A presence like tho wind's hath pawed, !i
There is no ncesior of wood or lea, 1
N ltilne.tioirer, as fair as she.
O blue4,ell, tender with the blue
Of 1tnpld'aisias,
Thy 1tnenge hath kindred ties
In her whole eyes
The hasV'ns' own qunlitietl imbue,
'!'here Is no flower of wood or Iea,
No Jnneday flower, as fair as she.
llose,�oderous with beauty of
Life%, ithae awl be: t,
Behold thy dieter here confessed,
Whose maIuen breast
Is fragrant with the (^.reams of lave, •
-Biadiso., Cawoin in New York Ledger. .
est Yield that while he was hunting rabbits LONDON IN 1772.
er
with ferrets in ,Tauuary ho found rabbits
er j u three occasions in willow treed which
it overhung the water of a mill stream.
g The miller said that it was not an un-
- usnesl circumstance. Same mouths ego
The Field told of other rabbits which
°m had been shot, like raccoons or epos -
y sums, out of trees in England. In re -
aa cent years macs of rabbits in trees have
a been re parted with Worming frequency.
o Front Australia has cone the moat re -
Yet ' markable story of rabbits as climbers.
The only way in which rabbits could be
e- kept out cif certain tracts of land in
e Australia was by the building of wire
c- fences about them, the fences having
meshes so small that the beasts could
not crawl through and bcirg so high
that they could east jump over. The rab-
bits have clawed at the wires until their
nails gradually have become hooked.
Some of the rabbits learned to scale the
fences, and then great additional ex -
pease was accessary, for the top of the
fence had to be bent over like a J up-
side down, with the hook out, so that
the rodents could not get over thte top.
Arstrell:ea rabbits are said to be learn-
ing to climb trees for the leaves.
Ie Bad Fallen OI •
Patrick was a new man in the lig
horse regiment, but his cheerfulness an
witty replies had already establish
him, as a favorite. Ho had one dra
buck, however, and that was his aw
wardness when on a horse's back. Na
malty his position required the opposit
of this, and Patrick worked hard at
fitit,hfelly to acquire the ease and natu
minces of his comrades when riding,
congratulated himself that this was a
last accomplished. .But one day whe parade his horse shied and threw 11i
with considerable force. When he re
gained consciousness, he found that hi
arm had been broken with the fall. Wi
his usual characteristic good humor tll
poor fellow smiled in his pain as he said
"Well, well, it's too bad. I though
I had improved in my riding a gr ea
deal, but inatead I have faileu off."—
Laariser's Round Table.
It w.v'as Considered a Joke to Turn Cattle
Into a Ballroom.
Can any cne tell nee anything of the
city assombly rooms and the assembly
rooms on the Surrey side—i, e., South
weark—about tho year 1772? The social
side of the city about that time is curi-
ously dii%celt to get at satisfactorily.
:Tor instance, when Catherine Helton
went to London in 1788, being thea 27
years of age, she went with a certain
'(7i
Mr. J: oodhouse and his mother. They
called for her at 7:30 in the evening,
the gentleman being dressed in a suit
of pale blue French silk, spotted with
pink and green, the coat lined with
pink silk, Ills hair in a bag, a white
feather in his hat, a sword by his side
and iris ruf;3e and frill of fine point lace.
This seems very splendid. At the as-
sembly the men were chiefly in "dress
coats"—meaning• probably of blue or
pink silk, like that of Mr. Woodhouse.
Those who were not wore `.'cloth coats,
m
trimed with narrow gold lace, with
waistcoats of sliver tissue," and the
hair "in a cue, with purls flying out
I on each side of the head,"
The other ladies were covered with
diamonds. The subscription to the city
ht ` assembly is 8 guineas. There are 200
d subscribers and late nights. The sub -
ed scribers are the fist people in the city.
w_ The rooms are Iighted with wax. The
,_ branches for the candles, the urns' for
t_ the tea and coffee and the baskets for
the cakes and macaroons are of silver. Ihis
want to know more about tassent-
_ bly.
He ; .As regards the Surrey assembly, sell I
can tell you about it is that the room
en was ou the ground floor, and that on a
certain night—the opening night of the
season of 1772 (?)t -while the dancing
s ; was at its height some wag threw open
Wit•the front door and gave admission to a
drove of oxen, which began to run about
• in a most terrifying manner. Some of
the men drew their swords valiantly,
others tumbled down. The ladies faint-
ed and fell over the Wren. Caps, hoops,
tiplicta, besalkerchiefe, were lying *la
about the floor, and the oxen bellowed
and ran about, threatening with their
horns. What would have happened one
e knows not. But "the sprightly !!sirs. '
Hanniver"..._presumably a lady con-
nected with the supper department ---
"coming from the Lactsrium with bub
for the geutlemen"_ ."bub" is defined
by Webster as a strong malt drink --
snatched front the =eater of the cere-
monies hie rnopstiek•—twirl the M. C. on
the Surrey eide carry a Iuopstiek as a
wand of office?—and, with so eaucla
spirit belabored the horny tribe that
they Peal incontinent.
When the company gathered thele-'
selves together and picked up what they
could, l ei::r horribly nit 1:ew gilled, amid
the geu= ra 1 wreck—heels gone, wigs
pulled to pieces, headgear destroyed,
dresses tori:—they ey prcceeded, 1 suspect,
to refresh themselves with the sprightly
Mrs. Haunivcr's stimulating bub. If
any cee will tell rhe more about this
assembly, I shall be grateful. --Nie Wal-
ter Eeae:rht in Queee.
THE PLAYFUL SEAL,
Lots of Fun In• Juggling Things In th
Water With Its Whiskers.
Seals have on either side of the nos
a little scattering bunch of whiskers
bristles ea/teething like a cat's whiskers
The bristles of the llairreal—the specie the e aquarium at akettery park—az
uc,t pro loanse chose of ti', fur seal, bu
they are three or four niches in length
and they are white and eleneior and Be
ible. The odder of the aquarium seals,
which has been there about 21/�, years,
gets a lot of fun out cf its whiskers. It
juggles thing's in the water with them
for hours at a time.
There may be fleeting in the pool a
fragment of fish skin, fcr instance, left
Lana L the last feeding. The seal will
swain under this and raise item the tips
of its slender tending whiskers. The
fragment floats away or dcdees off with
the agitation of the watera massed by the
teaI's motions, and the seal swings its
bead under it rued raises it again on its
whisker tips. If it elitismdown a wave
that the seai bas raised, tho seal swims
after it, The seal is a very rapid and
graceful swimmer.Sonnetirtic•:s this seal
when it has tossed up the fragnnent of
fish skin in this way will turn over in
the water with a swift spiralmoven: nt
rend catch the fish skin on its bristles
etc;aiu when it conies up. It is sorno-
tLang like a man tossing, things up in
the air and then turtling round and back
in time to catch them when they come
down.
ror hours at a time, as a kitten plays
with a ball, the seal jungles this free -
remit floating in the water: --New Yoek
bun,
Legal Equality.The wvcmnen ate again moving in the
chain of Illinois in the iuterest of equal -
fly before the Jaw. God bless them( emit
Gcd speed thernsin their righteous quest t
The shame is that it is left for the womeiq
to 1eud. Let the men inaugttratte ilte
zxovclnei;t that will matte for justice. '
This e1"uee has lost its znowneCs. It has
had Repay fall price for the crudities
and extravn gences that gather around
every reform, bet at the core the de-
mand is a irighteeus one, and it must be,
beard, and ultilnatoly it moist trittniliia.
Lot no ono lose heart; and let Ile one -de-
lay any lt'p;iflttreft* n?i'ert, 'l7j
Colorado, Mara sna rdeAta loess fa
enfrerithitted their wro•(rlxsea. to
the Ater of$Y;rit�) enrluita itSt
A Cahn Thief.
There was a brief but engrossing in-
cident in a woman's life the other day,
and she has not re: hitt/ yet the fall de-
tails of e. cituaticn evaded] stnnued len'
completely far the few minutes it /aster/.
She had 1;eras: itto one of the big depart-
ment etcre:: au town and was standing
at a co•cnter waiting fcr tho girl to at-
tend to her. Then she felt a woman's
hand in her pcelket. Involuntarily she
seized her s=hirt end was forttusato
enough to catch tbe women's hand. This
happened in a second, and none of the
Women about her had noticed the inci-
dent. The pickpocket struggled to free
her hand, while the other Wornan chteg
to her wrist not with any desire to ar-
rest her er evon to retain tier, betrnerely
With the fceliag that she was doing
something, Neither l'aad spoken a word.
The Out to act was the pic :pocket. Her
band waCetill held, and, with a pretense
of grasping the other woman's hand, elle
cried out:
"This woman is trying to rob nae."
Everybody turned to look at the two,
end in her astclrhishreaeut the welnen lett
go the thief's hand. Tlae thief drew her
hand 'suddenly out of the pocket, and
while t'hone about theta there gaping at
tho il:uecent wxeneaaa eke darted throctglt
Ahad eseeped. The other w+:osnuan's head
mem, r,nd •tlhee° was a sleek ralactattaw in
front ai her eyes iter A ,seooaid, But the
wesnea *beat icer itemised tale flees taint
closest he a n eshent, and gneiss eauent itlsy
wale all ter Ater. they Leaned Jeer tk1 re-
am* Mee semaggisate ernal, Bat Irak* tan
*pot as, seshaso ass wiitrate,. ear Yak
WIND JAMMING,DAYS.
AN OLD MARINER'S TALES OF DRAY.,
ERY IN WRECK;
"On Iffy Manor ash Sailor, I Won't Zerire
Fou," eatd the Canteriz to a Swede Sailor.
13ruvery tinct Fathom 'In. the Oen Business
of the Ohl Bats.
"Bahl" he said. "Yon /lave a lot to
learn, young man, Yon have as much
sentiment in your construction as this
stick I carry.
"The idea of a youth like you trying
to tell me that there is as mails bravery
fend pathos attached to seafaring now as
there was when I was plaster of a wine
jamnierl You probably believe that you
are correct in your statement; but, man
alive, you are making a fool of yourself.
Here in these days you have lifeboats
big and stout enough to carry au army
of men. You have steam to manipulate
the falls, patent davits to awing clear.
No lowering away by hands and no get-
ting them back over the side with every
pound of flesh a -pulling. New fan„ led
guns for throe -leg a life line, rafts that
won't go to pi.. ea in the first chop of a
sea, cork jackets that need no instruction
cards, but which go on like a Iran's
vest; pumps that are rusty for want of
use, seamless plates and dozens of other
inventions in these days. Where were
they in the old times?
"Let me tell you something. I don't
say but that there are many brave and
gallant mariners in the business now.
But the old shipwreck meant ,more in
the matter of life taking than the ship-
wreck of today does. Did you overhear
tell of a sailer of the old school trying
to get into a boat before the passengers
were out of clanger? You needn't ray
you have, because you have not. Why,
the only ones who ever attempt any-
thing of that kind are stokers and fire-
men and rowdies who Inane the impu-
dence to call t•hentteives sailors.
"I reniernbee the ease of a shore loafer
named Holmes, rho tried a shenanigan
like that. Ile was afterward tried in the
United States circuit court at Philadel-
phia and was convicted of mansiaughfer•.
He was one of 30 shipwrecked persons
who took to the long boat, which was
greatly• overloaded and constantly in
danger of sinking. Well, this beach rat
Hoimes and some more of Abrahzm's
men threw overboard 16 passengers, two
of whom were women, to lighten the
boat. The court held that a sailor is
bound by law, if necessary, to sacrifice
his life to save the life of passengers.
Furthermore the cosset held that while
two sailors might struggle with each
other far the possession of the' same
plank which could save but one, if a
passenger were en the plank even the
law of necessity would not justify the
sailers in taking it from him. You clo
not think= ninth of that law? Well, it is
the law of God. It is also the law of.
duty.
"Did yon ever hear of the ease of
Captain Neiman of the ship Aider?
was a goad sailor and a gallant mast
and no natter what many may thin
it is possible to bo both. His ship fou
derad, but he refused to be taken c
Do you knew why he reamed to l e take
of? Tile re wits an injured luau on boar
and while the old timbers were goin
to piecce t:_c'.:.e kat: very feet he kne
down i .d said to the peen:
e t 'I won't loi ve yon, lad. On Ill
honor as a miler I acme%.'
"On hie heeler as a sailor he w oua
not leave him. 1 me yen ever• heard
anytlrieg r>cre tc.ucbiligly hcnest? Cap
t'w'in 1�7ntrar::_I t t dowrh with his ship
but rams:mod ie Laid orf to his meal au
to get to the lettlein cf en upturne
boat, frena which they were aftcrwar
rescued. It wee a month or so after iiia
wvlren a tow',•::::: • as asked Captain Nut
man what tee nnuao of the rescued, pian
s.
" 'Why, I never inquired,' he saiC..
'He jest rattled articles iu the regain:.
way. I niny have heard it then, lint I
do not keep' it new. He was a Swede
that's all I know of hint.' '
"The friend shook itis head in aston-
ishment as he inquired:
, t e\f h. t! .A tin•, cde? Take ail that
chance for a nevede?'
f' Why, yes, even; for a Swede. I didn't
care whether he was a Swede er
Laplatider, 11c teas a good sailor and
would have doze the same for me lied
things been rev<• tied."
Nor is that all, yonme Iran. There
was a shipwreck about 1646, but the
name of the graft has escaped my mem-
ory. The rem took to one boat, which
was ovet'crowvcl d. .A, noble Newfoulncl
land, the pet uwf the r*lnidl, swans alon;-
side the boat. All. the men turned their
eyes sadly upon him, but they knew
there was no eaten for hint in that icata
The eaptein loved that dog /tetter
he loved his li€e, read he stood up in the,
boat as Ito took off his coat and said:
" cI eaaset tee hint die like thin.
Give him my place in the boat. I cant
hold On to the plank, said he cannot.'
"Theta was a chor.•tie of dissent, and
one of the sailors .state k the brceto ova
the head with the blade of an oar, while
another pulled hie Fthtaath knife.
„'Don't hart Minn,' said the •oaptnin
kiadiy, 'bat timely,
"'Cede him away, Heel/,' grtvadc,ti
covered, o!' the amen. "ale will ewezmh to
sill.'
file ' lwseittated a ninate.
Vaasa, 1,»3e Aknl in tate ear and mit':.
`ii t. 11" a ,tacd' Alai! iiaiyl4I 1 /lamed
Ile
er
k,
n -
1l
c1,
t
c
d
d
•d
wa
CEYLON TEA
Qtitg. tj;
d4 4 4 A= l , t:i 4,1ti tle{
Jul
Lead packages only, ee, 3o, 4.o, ;o i.', 1 1 . , ' : ' • r.:1
The Davidson &'• ifuy, 1 „'Wholesale. is ,,.sits, xv Univ.
•
swam back iii the i.ireetion•�-in which
the vesrcl hnct oir:.pl,eaxecl beneath the
surfeits. �Y 1':c rc to) e ea Mid such pathos
in the srtl h,mii,c ati now? (rive Inc tat.
old sailor every time," •
And he hobbled ale 13eaver street as
the young nnuril..er aiivcd into William
street.--Newv York Mail and Express.
All ESV .t (,ked,
"And de you wally want to,be my
son?" asked the widow Mullins of young
Speckle, •t, ho bad asked for her daereh-
ter'r
"1 eciu't say that x do," replied the
truthful suitor. "1 want to be Helen's
.husband, "
ONE OF THE OLDE;iT CHIPS,
tln Ainerior'n •a.z,k I; ui:t .ir_ i5 StEl
o ,ii& ut;ty.
:The Lrrlc True L•;'r<, bra in T'hile-
clelphia in 17e4, less .beeit found upon
searcli to be yet egoist in the capacity of
a coal hula. cermet t.1 in' active trade.
Thio, (nein-stay wv;as made throegh a cae-
unh(v rcoed(::i'fl in t>!:`:,taritilne laze bar::e
as folic,, : True .1 ave, barge, r, as .tn
calliricu 't it•lz ,.c' c t ucr Gravesend of
London, c Grate t•.cr d, :'r d hese/ pert
quarto: de:art cd tot ;.cit en extent that
it Was foetal ncec•sr.'nh•;' to tow her into
Rochester, and she e:i'rieeci et that /kite
Cu
hew - cf the tug Cozen:raee. The
true Lew.' l:as act culy cuilivcd her
Nuel .tis tact their sec: cc::s crs but has
also eallivcd every emit tc .t eras built
in her t:::. rand fee an ny yf:tr after-
ward, end tabs 2,:ct, coupled with the
report that the. histc::c erten is Mill en-
gaged in edit 'c p::..::.itr place.: Pala
-
cleat hit et the ver: t• it I:ctels he a eliip-
In:17;4,c..isti, this f;ttua:s old 'ref
was lit eLe d on the: bnsl.:, of the .. lea
ware, although her length was but 96
feet 8 ih.chett, Fhe tees then the largest
vessel of cemuierec taint the Dela;ti ere
had ever floated. Contrast this with the
dimeneicns cf the huge E•ambsrg-Ar Amer -
lean Packet conipe y's steal: rsi,ip Penn-
sylvtr ., ,.. e,,., t. rt, tad {'tic` ri
cue v. i..� Le am.: = r.: t `
of tic aacdcrn icit p cf -c (:.+;nc ree. - The
True L:,- • rrc F,- - ^Led,
Linn/ l;•: itie�"'4t if. a:. _et Itisiris e0
tbia ,.:,y tell] neg. -.. v,.' r.n at
the age cf 100 ;years. Flip t'V e,; inn; reef
frcl:i Iv'ig tilt•, Geeenii,n:, w'. i th a ("Arm:
of kz'yclite in epi« eesa. ttf Ceuta:
Themtie _"'heists:,I, •cn'ign tl tc 2.
Crete icy Fate ea ' L'c: e t=.L u
same mei t • .r' n.:'C a r' ..a
Octote•i, it;. ;;•, I,1:t' F:1iitt1''r:z" y,, r:t :cr
to ret ram a: f_"Nin. 1-ri.tdc .i:.i't.::air't[lF1'h"t-
1r tzV uYd iS.i d.:. • 'Ln C'a,; hoe
Tbc:' afzret. Sisals' of t :' ti:^'^:`gj',1- . '
LON G .'t.,✓,• teeth, Sit; at et. �; i i.»h
aws
lie .... _.; �t, i,? t-... i.
17 net. Sheh;aeate.i , :!b; a:es i --i:io
er,d, like ell cad onto c:crricd very lits
tie mere ciamto. „
The ease:me (het there was stili
foatnu `ea� i it e c:phia au7.t vessel of.bttc:i
as c Iltsed much comment tea
tie beers el the i,arilin:e Exelme:;;e,
and Genie f•:1 Aping ri:ort em of ilrc c,I la-
ica that this old craft eliouicl, if eesti-
1::; , be purclnafed as a relic. Records
show that the True Loco wasaor a time
enteed in Hull, Enghtnd, by G Dahl
previous to her purchase by John S.
Ward of LOnclou, and emirs that time
she was engaged in the Laitio trade.--
Philadelphia Press.
Shaping Shoulders.
And now, says a New York faelhicn
writer, acmes the disagreeable news
that in foreign fashion centers cslcping
saoulders are to reign. We have it
on undoubted authority that•tho loops
and cannot change ,bis spots nor pial/
add one cubit to his saltine, yet will
the modern exponent of fashion ex-
ercise her ingenuity in the alteration cf
the anatomy above the shoulders. ror
rosily years we have worn our shoulders
• up to our -ears, so to speak. Now all is
to he ehanged, and the fashionable
woman must assume the virtue of slop-
; ing shoulders, though she have It or
.tot. Seattle from nook to shoulder point
'aro to be lengthened, and all fullness
that remains in the top of the sleeve
Will tend in adownwvarddirection. The
shoulders proper will remain where they
are, but will look as if they had received
i1 direct impetus toward the elbow.
In 14rr 1 a .Fa eeich berm offered a
p lo„age et 10 Ian take tf silver that a copy
Of Avicenna, Valois Ise lleclieatl to
read, wooii4 11e arctit►rned, Sand aurins with
this seourlty, equal ire amt waeacgr to
over $40, kis se utast vas •s lam,
3 ct� ti 41: Pf
R
tE7
Ms
• z,ngtw ' B. 6v<
. )t
2. Itsq'Economy. t;nos�J o� f��Ouress
,LAS its Ecoi.LW'm . lct, Mit, dose.
•.7 173.
Retests tea dat Stomach, Liver and Bowers,
.t="'ceke t e Secretions, Purifies the Blood and
re..:iovee all the impteities front a common
Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Sore, and.
iitYSPI:PSIA, BILIOUSNESS,
CONSTIPATION. IiEADACHE,
SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA,
I?,EArtanuRN, SOUR STOMACH,
DIZZINESS, DROPSY,
R 1EUIMIATISM, SKIN DISEASES.
BE It F);7
•
ktee, 1 • h .
4.
Ge.4 • eJ
ti
Se !,''C• ..r
Em,.a enctg t• tr:te -' HOW
...t.
miiny a hurtaz. Ili^ i stalks:;,,"•.s_
.sa r'aiy ur'�+
atone ate ninny r..;,:aa- J:, the r.rzrket for
1 the cure of cc:::�- '• • ; ,:,, i ut u,n: a: „taints, once
it re,,,:hes,, cc:ti..ihstage, r; tr.r.•, vu cured. In
pee:.asiug, theletn' . t•R,'t,v is 1• •,,o:ri;tie,
tt:c: runt dies tiro•. cS : a :us ,r'cs t� . e .,.inp'Y
Co.lstutnitic•a is .. rrc!w,uk1tdr.'r„';the
tier; • of ti:.: h, ks. ,,inet• .r'- . u n:...•.itte can
repo::etb.,t sir. c. G: c,i arc .
the eaten; ease ^r1 ;..
a.:'-::gasthe ut';rt',•;:. t. Loth
, are ...t :eked.p.
:'cel.
r...• iY _. tr,., t..,
t e,: s to this
d.+ .. ,. ... .+'is affer,t•Ards
to e' ci.: it. it ;e 1. •. 2.,. ;e 1' '
e:..... ;, Pc:.>....... .,... i.•:1n,•attoethis
at''' s'vC'. c.:.. ' „a.tual ic.:'rru:,•rep., A
t ns-r,aa 1;(.,uc
1 alar:arferit.t:t• ••.: .'•I V at•. It is,
vriUu,::i tioe1u, the :.eti a:e,,:,ti,,e for the
purls. a t,: i.o• 1,,
•
•
tes:R-:t•i:L' .a w
EFO
it
At a/ Druggists. PiLe co mete per Box.
er 3 for $t.so. want a,y /rims an• rec^.Ipt of
price. C. 144.1.B1.3•01£. GO., ijo;pr,;a.�V�
Caveats and Trade-Itearkl obtained, and all patent
nt
busi„ess conducted for bIODERATit FEES, Mr
dice" it in the immediate vicinity of the Patent Office,
and my facilities for securing patents are unsurpasse:
Seed model, sketch or photograph of invention, wit%
description And statement as to advantages claimed,
.t'.r3`Xii charge is made for an op;ntoti� as to.
ot11 a aaiilii , and my fee for prosecuting the;
co watt tso4 be called liar until the
paten. l rtreecrt con..
tabling information sCfAll eominta Icatio s Considered as Strictly Confidential.
F4'iANKA.IN H. HOUGH
t32"- 1' Ss "oats VltlisIEING TON.I [l.
cutii
BILIOUSNESS
CONSTIPATION
SICK HEADACHE
. At.i LIVER TROUBLES