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The Sentinel, 1884-03-07, Page 7•-•-•4• Getowlr* or A TOBACCO...80X; NA:razzed* Trim Gas - Once Carried in the- Test Yoeitet,ittitin? . weeds a: Cub. ' IreiteisTel in.Oikeliajoirrien' ea a Leading ititsua—Tratho tor the Aged.. : (Syracuse, N, Conner) ." HoW. long. has; hebeen in. &laid * vies 2" - • "Before the Memory of the oldeitinh bi- tant." • And he has kept his name untarnished diningoil that period ?". - - " Absolutely !" .In 1718, says: the Pall Matt Gazette, a 4:certain Henry Monok, a* genial sotintOok home with him from Bk. -Bartholomew's fair a horn tobacco -boa, for which he had paid the humble sum -of 4 pence. This .00nok was one rot forty overseers df the - parish of lit. Margaret's, Westminster, and • it is net Ailliaiiit to -picture him a full- bodied; jovial, gbod fellow, fond of his pipe, and glass (in moderation'of course, for -v, ell in those days had not developed t propensities.for overdoing these tore m: tters whioh hairs recently inside some scandal in paroohial circles). -So the happy thought occurred to him to present it.tithis 39 colleagues, and -year after year it Wb EU. , ".H� is a than I shonld.like to meeW. The above conversation occurred!betWeen two gentlemen at bne f our leading hotels. The interrogator was . from Y abroad,' the other- a resident -of is city'. ,Tlief,'-000= -Irersation...had -drab/ lute,- point* and dtio-ed at their Weekly meetings, well filled nor" and qualities were_ • Hini Thoe. G.:Alvord as the man whose . with the choicestand moat fragrant leaves Tbeing .discuesed . ' -,;. Of the tobacco plant.' FortY overseers re- o trace the.T historylif .pnblio men ,' who - lazing, after business was over, each puffing-- hal" grown old in the sierVice is a -task both • from a long churchwarden must have be _ . iiteresting to the investigator and enter-. •a goodly sight, thoiigh . it does occur to bfie tialtin t those- h Iread his inveltiga- that thelobacco- box, which is about two the It Was with: thistruth in Mind' that it.utheaaquare,must have had 80.rae.otthe pro. the writer set out to loall upon :the man. :pettiest of the widow'a Cruse. . If ,the-ghoit about whom those -' pOlitioians wereso -.: of the genial-Monck ' ever walks they -earth, earnestly talking,: at bis speciouvesidence e . -and-looks in on the doniiviaLgatherings of :on Turtle street, - - t• ile brethren in the year- of our Lord 1884. . Kr. Alvord,- who h' _been • andiii,:.faMil- the custom, nois to produce the h9x isrly knoWn is " Old elk". owing to his ad twice& year—he would feel highly flattered, advvancseraY4 iouf ytheee,r8Baki, bt-etgeroenat. 6:4e6 011°Awdy1-W4ediel and. perhaps a little surprised, at the growth of seventy; He -, has long, white hair 44 , Of hisgif ' t- . For, to put it plainly, what a, snowy beard which give hirli An appear. ty -oo .Itonce be carried to. the meetink;in hisreeches pboket is now, a goodly htir-- ance-both- dignified and grand.- :His *oleo •den for. even is full - and blear and the Moment any a four -wheeled cab; and 'then, . it , is said, the' • driver, asks -stranger OOMEN3 intoYhili:Preetencehe _cannot 0 'for a double , fare. -- At . first . a but be impressed with Ithe inherent power of the man-. Indeed lie., was endowed by . modest silver rim, with MOnclee name in - scribed thereon, was pla,ced_ round the.. old- nature :with an unusually strong .drganiza- oustoin to record -on a silver plate or - silver ilialrti2b9e sthaidinenotfap4ttyb.laillo4 lifPe,hbYttenaleisYptalilit°h after year it became er boa; and year :- the .band the important event ' of the • year, of the AsseMbly and Lieutenant;.Goveria6ri - anuetimesnationsi, soinetimespurely local, idfalerimecle. _ . .._,. . _ _ for many years, t9 in- any sws4?" tin' : • sometimes an emblematioal . device, sonie.; times a portraitot the -hero- -of the hour. It was during the year 1881, while r. Then a dainty tobacco stopper of mother.of. iliOrd was a . metubet* the Assembly at pearl, attached by a Silver _ahem to the oz Albany, that. he first- *igen to feel most . , peouliar sensations. At that time he Was was added. - * . •Time rolled.. On.. vestrymen were born, n the midst of very important work, Which Vestrymen were laid_ quietly.in their graves, was seriously interfered -with by reason of ., .and=a velvet,linedsilver'oase was added, in the mysterious troubles which seemed to assail WM.-- He felt uuaccountable -nausea ,--c. which reposed the Original, now a corusea-' • , almost . constantly, accompanied by mos - lion of silver ornaments, richly chased and. Edema violent ,retching4. - History recounts embossed; then another . and another. :that. -Napoleon the Great, - while in . And now this singular trophy consists of midst of his- public) carder, was freqiien : seven distinel parts, eabli 'fitting into the. other, like the pieces of a Japanese puzzle.. - Of these one is -horn,- four are silver, and -,, two are oak. -•Tlie last one, it is estimated, -.p.- will. cover, a period of 80 or 90 years. i , The earlier plates and various" inioriptioni .. are, most exquisitely engraved; in latter days the art meths to have been lost-. In the seconcroise the fan:ions Wilkes—who, * . oddly enough, wits a churchwarden of St. • , Margarersin 1759 -:-squints Up at one from the bottom... or the box ; then we have: a' • medallion of George III., an altar piece, an . ' engraving of the pirerseers administering relief to the poor, Westminster Abbey, an engraving,executed by Hogarth, battle.- • elclis and _naial engagements, Buell as Waterloo and Trafalgar, the trial of Queen - Garonne, portraits of George IV., of Pitt, - Pox _ and other famous statesmen. The. Queen and the members of her family figure: prominently in tater days, and one. of the - last plates is an, engraving of Mr: Belt's. statue of -Loyd Beaconsfield.' . But in: the 'mien:space at our dispbsal it would be fin.- potisibbe to giveeven a :catalogue. of :the. , curious records here to be found. - As we have said,it ioptoduced tviiee &Year to the body Of assembled overseers, and during.his Office one of them is responsible for its safe custody. "'This box," - so: runs the charge, "end severalcasesare the property of the .. . _ -Past Overseers? Society; and delivered into your custody endear% upon -condition that they are produced at all parochial enter- tainments which- you shall be invited to; and shaliaontain three pipes of tobacca at least, under- the tioniatY.- of six bottles of wine.' Claret is the tipple prescribed; but - no instance is -recorded of .Ei. failure to obey the Draconian kw; Once or twice, indeed, the relic . has been in jeopardy—once in its youthful days from a thiel„ a second time from .a recaloitrant and angry vestryman.. Intrinsiotilly, it 'would not melt down for Much,- As a °trios*, it is to be cherished and oared for With veneration. --‘. -- - he ly attacked. by anenemy greater than any he had ever faced, whieh °mein the same insidious yet violent manner as the terrible troubles" that overtook ktr..Alvorclu and are to -day mensoing so -Many thousands - of others.. In speaking onthis Subject to the . writer, Mr..-Alvord-said: • This same bitter -experience mope to me again - in 1882 while I Was a manlier of the Assembly, -- with syneptomsidentical t with those I had felt the .year before.;0. believe it was largelyIcaused- by niy_.* .. vanoed years, for r had,a 'worn out' feel- ingthat was` terrible. Thigconclusion is evidently the correct one, for•I was again , attacked laid summer- while away from all cares and recreating at my Wand in the -Bt. Lawrence River, - I:experienced a' pain- ful sense of fullness 1. the lower -portion of - the body; accompanied- by sensations. of feverish heat ouhiling shudders. All efforts' to move my limb's or body were followed bit... intense Wear/noss* or exhaustion. Those ' who have reached my years can appreciate my sensations." ,-; -. : -1 '' • - : , , t,- - "And did 'neither. yourself nor •Ibe phY- signal's understand the cause -or net* of these troubles ? " - .• : - • • . ' ' - It mem not entirely, ' for the phyrii- Walls failed to relieve me and. I'kept grow-- ing wore(); : I suffered intensely and the only relief I could poet ly obtain was ' by lying upon my twit and this was only t in-.. porary."* .. .,.. - -- _ . - . .• • "But you are looking- Well and strong now, Mr. Alvord. Howcrid.you bring about, the'ehange '1" - . . , - - - . • . ."„By using a remedyivhichia-roVety popu- lar and which I have i found Wonderfully effioiente=Warrier's .Safe. Cure. -Indeed-,it has proven remarkahle in its _power over -me.- I believe in it: -therefore reconi! Mend it t� others, espeoielly to those who are',e\dvanced in lite; Who, feels 'breaking - down hen there is no necetsity,strid Whose -lost vi ty and manhood remind them: of li their increasing years."' -The .intetview the* drifted to other --. Odd Facto and Eaticiee.- tOpieti; 'Mit as.: the - reporter ‘gazed at the The largest oultivated public park in the. man whose experience- I is so ripe, and Who worldia the Prater, at'Vienna, containing has seen so Much of tliodifferent phases of - , _ . 5,120- acres. ' - 1- • - - life, he could not but ' wish that -those who are suffering from the various forme of physical ailment, and .eapeeially these.p r - sons who are advent:164'in. years, _might see and converse with the . veteran whose experience and knowledge have been io. rich and who is so aim a believer in the efficacyof the remedy -that cured him. - There is no exatise for shortening life, astio manyhave done and are -. doing. Thereis no necessity for "breaking down"- early in years-. Premature decay and depth ate -a disgrace to oat modern ;Iivilizaticin. They are wholly needless„, and Men or Women, who Permit them when they Oalk.'tbei i so &telly avoided -should Maine none-obut ,. themselves, . • • Eve OF iiirefirkew goatee and 17 3lgbt. treed isitiMlitriaentek - - Ail - • In the-anote.,-it Egyptian belief. the _hearts Of all the dee 4were weighed:before:Osiris , in the . Ea . :ilof-. Perfect/Justioei and a PaPYrns repr flouting/the ritual for = the dead, presuhi .in- the British -Museum, pictures the dilmmony ofthe weighing "tor good or evil,' tand incidentelly affords an excellent vie c -' f/ ihe scales of early Egypt. In these seal q the beam is neither suapended by he 'centre, as in the,Modern form; .nor,at 1 'the form of the , steelyard, but it is erre ;),ed with- :a: shifting fttiortim, the. adjust:''At of whioh shows, - the difference .1 'Mien the Weights of two objects.- Th weights .used were Of Metal in the form o ling% and it may be Goldin general that ;is was the prevailing type of all early vreigtis. -These scales, . it will be observed, areiLy no means of the sin2plest form, or that.ihioh would naturally first suggest itself to inankind, and this ,fact argues the. i employment and gradual improvement, '-of . weighing apparatus long anted to ' the ' date . of. , this papyrus (135 3. C4 C.1. - We have .no - know - 1 -ledge of their larliest invention or fermis: The discoye of their neer has been attributed to any geniuses and doubtless with soniethi ‘ of truth in !the_ individual oases. Pliny •dits them to Phidon:of Ar- gos, Gelhus s ;'sthatPalarnedes: invented them and a Btof writers -following in their wake, e h crowns his own particular, inventor Wit • tilie honor. Among others . Juno pours` o the urn, and ' vtdcan- claims - . The acales. a .1. e justproduct of hie flame. ' But oert it is that they have been known and . "': d from time immemorial, Their nowi e'xistence,-- however, dates back very far -%nd pute to the blush fic- titious °Aging Uttibuted to - them: When in 1860, B. Q f A.braham ;weighed out 400 shekels of sit .=. r. as the consideration for the first real ate transfer of which history .mahes mend ,, he used them, and -they are frequently re- red to in the Bible, in •Zachaziali, .1,fivitieus, etO. The • earliest scales weretemporary, simply it -beam balance in a Iirrup, the weights being arbitrary an varied, though, as above stated, usual in the form of metal rings. In ancient Ept they were strictly under the superinte denim Of the priesthood, and so continued 4iitil that people _came under the Roman su y. They were kept in the public merke ki as was also the practice in Greece andtr,f,iodern Egypt. The Urger scales were ciple of the addition of a pended from ropes or alai the quality o possible ineq the highest d been the perf knife edges an finer scales ti look" that _ * * . ' Buti Thou would be rob e.1 of its terror. TheEnglish mint is said rpossess a scale which -turns at a 1-9,000,0- 0 of the weighing oapaoity. the - bas ieptpace _witli.tlitcAmPr9ve* ,i -In'all ages tlii scales have been the em- blems of just % , and it is to lie hoped- that latter nients-orits e% blem. truoted on the same prin. Aro and stirrup, with the „.!aot- board or platform sus.' h end of the beam by four In all scales accuracy and urning under the slightest • "ty in balancing weights are ideratum, and so great has ion. obtained by means .of agate planes in some of the it the declaration to "Shy- * . 'If the Sotile turn, - eestimatiOn of a hair,: There are said to have been .500,000 Christians in the world at the mid of tie first ,.: 4 nry, 10,000.000 in the time of . °listen *- „ 30,000,000 in the eighth •tury, II ',,1 I ',O00 at the time of the Refer - 'motion, and. 450,000,000 in ligia. - Philadelphia wants it understood that ---the recent exploit of - some burglars in i 1Hnngary who carried a safe ' away whole t... instead of -breaking it open was not an -original conception; the !lame thing was ' -done in that city years ago, -. . -• ' There are 348 theatre's in Great Britain. =, Of this_ number thirty-seven'are in London, • eleven in LiVerpool, five in Edinburgh, and • our each in Glasgow, Blaokburn, Black- _ pool, Ramsgate and gtOokton-on-Tees.. In I _ . • Ireland there are only ten, including mllSie the Pope's Noble Guard. . 1 halls. . - .. A Rome despatch. says.: The Pope u The 'Town of. Atiatin, away - out-- in issued orders for reorditing, more Noble Nevada, actually has an ordinance provid- Guards. - Enlisted men- mUBt be natives of ing that noy gilder 16- shall be allowed the old Pontifical States and minibus of f. . in the stree or hi - any ptiblio place mac- families whose nobility 'runs back at least coMPanied _ parent or guardian after 8- sixty years. They maid be six feet in o'clock in. the evening during the .winter,or height, of sound health; and have an , in - .8.30 inthe- summer. •_ cornii-- of about 0200 Aiyear. • From the - •fifteenth century tip to the time that Bona- parte made Pius VII. a Prisoner the, Noble Guards served as light oavalrY. They were wiped from existence when Pins VII. was captured, Feb. 20th,.17,98.- -Pius reorgan- ized them in 1801, charging them with the pleating dut4y of carrying Pditifioal : de - stitches t� new Cardinals.- At an ordinary audience iu the VatiCaii EiE of the Noble titian% :with air ExeMpt and a Cadet, are on duty, with Other effioials, in the ante. chamber. ' Ifiraiosette- Italie. • .• - Some curious experiments have been made on the rats' laid between Marseilles -and Rognacc of the Chemin de Fer Paris. •- Lyon-Mecliterranee.- It has been ascert tabled that all the rails that have been laid -some time have been transformed, BEI - to their two extremities!, into powerful map - nate, capable -o attracklike_i'd boldingirori i .keys and even heavier aitieles... If therrails ;- :are raised, they keep their magnetism for i 'some time, but gradually lose it. The poles- . are formed at the Corresponding ends- of • two rails of opposite sign. The production :of magnetism in the rails in use is to be explained by the friction resultitiarom the , running ofeers 4Sillier‘liat4e ,-- '--..i ,o0net of the wealthiest Irmo: in the State 4 -Veins siepo of two brothers' of 'Aitigtititkrvihogitil al capital was 85,000, .which their sister recovered ina breach of we omise suit, ' Proai Er* here. . . _ If any invalid or sick rsort has the leant • doubt of the politer and e i °soy of Hop Bitters to cure them, they can d cases 'exactly like their won, in their own4.neighborhood, with protit positive .thropiky can he easily arst,ter-- rnititently 'recta * ei7riflirtg dtitggilit o phy " - " ask your .• c11, Feb. 11, 168,0., -Hop Bitter OSiBs,.4 wa.agiv�nup by the doctors to die of scrofula consumption. Two bottles of your Bitters cured Me; - • - LEROY .Bpilwza. _....„ . Emperor risusiera_ ERifh Birthdays It is state 1 that King Etumbert and hie consort :will ny. all -probability visit this capital som here about the birthday of the EMpera - which falls. on the 22nd of March. It expected also that this day will be dist guished by the laying of the foundation - .A. ne of the . •new Imperial Parliament li tre,,for whioh the ground is now being ' 'vely prepared:. • _Standing just Outside -t Brandenburg gate, opposite the Offices o he Grand General Stott and the Column. f Victoryon the Konigplati, the building 1 give.an-additional grace to the finest •n 'space in the capital.-. It was thought vonderful that theXmpercir had been piterved to unveil the national •thonument i If, he Niederwalei but it would be a marvel 4deed if he lived, not only to lay- the -foun eon of, butalso t� open the new ImperialIs House of Parliament. And yet there a muiehmore unlikely things. ;The '.ease WIi Which His Majesty has got _ overhis- his lat illness argues his possession still of unwipted vigor and =recuperative point. • n . I few weeks the Emperor will have entnered his 88th year, but he by no -meats only survivor in Prussia of •.the Waro iberation.—Berlin despatch to. the Lon. i. . . . Mr. -I3 arto dealer, says were shipped: New York, o one died on t cost of the (itven in elephant land was $2,775. The lAbest price paid was $325 for a female elep.icant, Hebe, which gave 'birth o to a young Y iikee over here. Rajah and Pd 'andrie, mo , ied,. cost 0300 each. On their -arrival at the i „ t oak Barnum offered $20,000 a lusiion and e enare. t each for theszi, which was refused. - He agrees with riof. Lankester and the, other experts in p elaouncing the white elephant a mockery, treet Car Chat. • lephant Market. rindrod, the great elephant I in 1871 eleven elephants 41 the Nehemiah Gibson for hom ten arrived -safely and passage to New York. The. : Itwas a st toer. How is • ut neWteology?"- salad One passenger of aother. • "Bad I T weather doesn't improve it any," was th leipondent reply. - • "Talking oliettreology,".said a' Man in the coiner to f!- e one .nexthim; lean tell byname:when 1'4e -weather ia going to change. It's as good:a i barometer,' , • _ •" I • never •a,,neutalgy but pica, and then I neatl led," r Said another -pester"- ger. Isn't it -ehrenge how Many different . ways, there: ai of pronouncing that Word?" remarked.ahyto her friend. Yea.;•iiii. have even heard it, called neuralgia," saii the -friend. ' - "1 dare. aai We getout ere." • 0;- • • • • In the yd 1883_ there was no Retinal .,oreation-anie the ,Britiih: Peers, and only. one, promoti 4that Lot. Iscord4Phenzellot. • Selbourne tO: in XarJdoins• Amo the. aroneti th9, were elght oreati_ons, puke= RotiPettsive in'Atistralia; Wella,JesiOn Clark, Howe Ferrar,-Bownian, arndLis- ter. The orde of the 'Royal, Red CMS,' of which 35 lad" have been recipient'', Was founded test 'eari • • BATTLE' WETS DA*, Al.t.LIGATD*. ' - - - Trappei 0=14We Illtrassle.for ;age an Alabama River. • "- • . . Ignbert. Cairtilli- a. tripper and ibunter, While trapping tor (Mete on WestChoc- taWpatthie Rivet, Algibema,lied a terrible fight with analligator., week. Seeing the water agitated. U a hole neiththe river,and supposing -that otters :were fishing therein), he mounted a pole on a tussock Ant 'abate the Water's edge. His steel traps were in a sitar Sittepeuded from his . neck. His only weaponwas', :his' hatchet.- He sat on -the pole, with a Masa of vines' at his back.' He held bisweaponready to strike .an otter: oallOuld one arise. Soon he saw ix young alligator nearbim,. He caught it up and it littered a ory. In an instant there was aterrible eplashof,Water, and gi-huge alligator, with distended.mouth and glittering teeth, rushed for him; With little hopeotescape he fell back upon the vines, ad as he did ski kicked the pole troll% under his feet. . The terrible jaws dosed on the pole and Ousbed it. Carroll tried to interpose the traps, but a vine had caught them and .partly. held him down. Seizing his ,hatchet he struck into the open mouth of his assailant, It -closed on the weapon, andwith -great diffioulty he awed the lititchet. Getting free from his traps; 'he dealt the &Bator a fatal blow on the skull as it made- the next . charge. .He secured the skin and such- teeth as had not been destroyed in the fight. The length of the tilli'gator was about nine and a half -feet. The hole was its den.. Alliga- tors rarelyattackhuman beings.. . Our -Next Great Competitor. Bir Samuel Baker tells the Pall Mall .Gazette that the Soudan '8 the granary of the _ world. He has ridden • through did? Wats wherethe corn grew high enough to cover elephant. "When this region," he says, " passes into eivilized . hands it will bethe richest on the whole continent." "12," says Sir SaMuelBaker, " the Sou- dan were in English hands, in a very few years you would be entirely independent ofthe United States both 'for cotton and corn." • • , An Austrian artist, 4o1ph itoenigeber- ger, has just exeouted a striking likeness of the Emperor -Frauds abeeph in cliaraoters, forming no fewer than 8,000 words, the whole resembling a copper engrgiving. • ; • 11 HE GREAT RIANREMI xesc)itz x R E Rheumatisin,C Reuralgia,: ,Sciatica, Lumbago, 'Backache, Headache, Toothache,. Sore Throat, Swellings, Sprains,Bruises. • Scolds, Frost Bites, • 'AND ALL ,irrinte BODILY rAiNs AND AMPS. nom by-Dramins and Dealers; everywhere. Fifty Camas bout.. -• - DireotiOns in 11 1.angusiges. • THE CHARLES A. •VORELER CO. ,.. Olueeemors to A. voesizse CO.). Daltinnire, ML,U.IL A. ; ifb. lb. 10i 84. Vital -Questions , . Ask the most eminent physician Of any-sehool, what is the! best • thing_ in the world for quieting and allaying all, irritation of the nerves and outing all forms of nervous com- plaints, giving natural, childlike refreshing sleep always? • - And they •Will tell you unhesitatingly - "Some form Of Hops •- • cimpTsit,1. Ask any or all of the moat eminent physicians, "What is the best and only remedy that can be relied on to cure all diseases of the kidneyil and urinary organs; such as Bright's disease, diabetes, retention or inability to retain, -nen ,e and•all the diseases and. ailments peCtiliaX to Women "— • I : " And -they Will tell you t explicitly and em plastically 'Machu.' " Ask the same physicians "What isthemost ,rellable and surest ante -for all livor diseases- or dyspepsia, constipation indigestion, biliousness, malarial fever, ague etc., and they will tell you: '• • Mandrake! or Dandelion Ir. Hence, when these remedies are combined. with others equally Valuable • • • - • - And compounded into Hop Bitters, such a • (Concluded net week.) FOr several years 'we • halm furnished the Dairymen 'of America with. an excellent arti- ficial colOr, forbutter; so rueritorious that it met sc With great success evet7w ere receiving the highest and only prizes at both International • farBut; by patient and title cheinicia ' re - swath We havoimproved in aye* -win* and now offer this new color as the best in theword. It -Wilt Not C0100_ the-IlLitterwillk. - It Will Not:Turn Rancid. It Is the; . Strongest,: •Eirighteat"and. - • Cheapeet Color Made, farAnd; while_prepared taut!, 19 80 compound. edthat it is im-mssible for it to become 'rancid. 113rBEVVAIIE of all Imitations, and of ail other oil' colorsifor they are liable to becom rancid and. spoil the butter. I - tarn you cannot 1rWhe "improved" .write us to - know where and Ww to get it without extra expense; -• - (46) - WELLS, 'RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Tt. ' KIDNEY WO • A SUR CURE for . all diseases of the Kidneye and • LI VER . • It has specific Sotion.,mt this moat important organ, enabling it to Om* off Sorpidityand inaction, sthatilating thWhealthy MoriatiOnof .the Bile. and .bykeeping the bowels in free condition, affeating itaiegalardiScharge. •, I I:Martial rin1 aregu"sWitig*"2 :malaria, have the billinus;*sreiiii(goloonstipatediVisbier, Irircilhvaillrtfo-reAeVeand qutoktv num. • - the one should take a thorough course of it.t: 11- SOLD BY DRUOCIET8.- Price. $ • DN EY- WO Rt 13 gohn-Aionionii Tertolaiid,- Me., i sup- ported by th�oitypanper, was found to be the owner pf logs. , - NOTED B17T mem • WOMAX• Mssara.ditora— Y, • The above is agood • of Mrs. !Aydin, E. Nib ham, of Lynn, Masa,whoMOreall other Juneau:being' 1110130 truthfellY calle461111)ear Friend of Woman? co pone or her correspoRliekts loVe 6.011 her. She seat6--s1y devoted to he kovhich is the outooma :or a ma -attain and-4.1iged., to keep six hilly neststants; to help her ..ithe large corresliondesaa - whitei day Pouriin up.o 5 each bearing its epode bard* of •suffering, or •'at release from it Hey • Vegetttle-Compotind is git for good and Etie - 0,11 MMoses.- 1 have ttAnally invesaitatedit sad am Satisfied Of the titapads. Casio:cunt ,:erlta It is recominendets - end preserthed by ;Owens in the country. One soya "It winks " Charm end aaves ackai POni. It *firma ck_tir01.1 _20worst form of :falling • of the uterus, . Lendeltkl.6;,-; •Irregular and psis= Menstruation, all OveriaAinbles, Infinzmatita sad Ulceration, Flooclir.*s_lic,' lacenier:ftend the cusp 15 espedaby- adapted to • - ..14 the ,ers-e=, anitahroa new lifea.nd vigor. It r es' rsatut44..5askieecy, - destroys akerevits for 4,1itstats,e4rAteves weak- ness of the stoma. ' It • ..X,tigia.agee • • Vaqnent sydnal we—aknks, the -Change of Life." • -It permeates every portg, ' Nervous Prostrat. &on, , 004, DOMres% -Depression and Indigesti Tba :1 downolatudng pen, Weig d italwarl • permallert,19 cM,ed biitqt44, It .,tif/1 times, en1 - under all circuinstanees; barmony with the law that governs the female ej.?..Vil• : It ctStS only 81. per Wet*. Six for $5., and is sold by -druggists, Any advice riktedas to special cases, and the manes of many who • been restored to perfee* health by the use of the obtained by addressing their Ri**dnay14.01::ruunplaindan21%.stt unsurpassed "gra.Pitiftfis- Ity t1zobet n the world r* Eflionsness and Torpidif PtuilleiWorks wonders toecpteithe'VcmPcund# .031/146lifttiladeittominEtnbphia.ie:Peethaptodoaood,9 table Compound, can be •., with Stamp for reply, -51h.er sex this compoundis ' onials show. says one writer, e cure of Constipation, ce, the liver. Her. Blood special line and bids fair popularity. 4nsel Ilezczyct_c::=Ole !i. era • k FOR THE PER1ENT CURE OF • ONST TION. ,_ NO other diaime # F,bbrevalent this Cowl- 112 I- try as Ccaistipation, no remedy has ever 2 equalled the -ctle Sidney -Wort as a cure: Whatever the‘.4„s,.,_ e; however obstinate Ci the ease, this - "will overcome it. • complicated. witlioo strengtb.ens the we cures all kinds of Pil and medicines have 42- 1WIf youhave: PRICE lb I. a. distressing cam' r, opytroi sfailw. vhede;pabzrept too: —14. Won: Sidney -Wort t, parts and quickly of these frolfbles rirliggists• Sol 1 couJ DO omit ao VIM 11. if). 11- vrinT iszisaixt: _ • • Has stood the • YFIARs, and has' remedy known Consum0 Colds,Wh andall 1.0 yOung or old. Price 9.5Pla.00 per 13ottle. LOWLJXR opr FIFTY -TIMER F. ed itself the best r the cure of Coughs,_ ing Cough iseases EYERYiVIIERE; rTi • I have s positive remed use thousanda of cases standing have been cured 112 its efficacy, that I will gether with a VALITABL ally Slifferer. OlveExpre DE: 6) nifdtAewteeir ssazs:too.ot irtnterntodhdnIsti seandei Is 8 ea lieeRm°E;yfbEfil:a°t. -Initthel • J. Pis. 0. adardirtItss....Newyotia, WA, A. NY LADIES XI,: who -are out of country, distance no o workat their homes all sent by mail; any one no canvassing. Address UNION Washington street, : — ED: YOUNG MEN loyment, in city or tion, can have Steady e year. round. Work do it; good salary ' . 7pAOTITHING CO, 76 Mas to atmtme Busineen - d n or 13pancerien Pen rasurAzbo at the BP/MOTOR TAN :031,N1§138, clorazzon etro Mich YOU NG MEN steam engineering cam $100 per montb. Send your name and A stamps to F. BEEP,/ Bngineer, Bridgeport, le; ' 4i• • Er 1