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Lucknow Sentinel, 1888-11-23, Page 7" •• of.., • Flow lightly thineghthe denim ehe tripe I How tastefully she ,dresseal • What eYes, What Cheek's, what lips! • - What lovely golden tresges t Ah. surely. neer, o'er 'shoulders lair, • 1011(14 qt.1014'Weelt13 of golden hitt' In every dancing trees we road •Tbe. Oft -repeated story: That lovely woman's bair; indeed,. • Is lovely wall:lazes glory. • Love, lurks among the,tresses fair, . • Aid every ringlet ls a snare. Oh, rare and radiant maid, at tbee , . Flow-te any eyes are glancing" Around thy snowyneek tbey see The golden yipples_daecing And teen aredeemed an ang.1 bright? , • Dropped down tOgt040.9313 balL to -nigra. what raptnre, were that beauteeue„head- ... e; Itevery gleaming, golden thread•-. , vipon breast . Were rqund nay degera twinin g Whetever in the world I'd be. TIrnt would bc, joy enough for mo! • • ' But, graeloult what do..wo behold? , The damsel sweet to brying ; Her rippling locks of sbinnuering gold . upou theileor are lying ; And to r•ecover them she '01.!rings-- 'Tis noti3ing but a wig,,by )ings Carts ;Wile Itre In .Dernand. The girlathat are Wantedare good‘girls* ' Oda from, the, neart to theilpe : Byre aathelily is white 'and mire,' From its boort to its sweet leaf tip's. .Thegiris that &rev:ranted arabeme giris— Giris that are mother's right hand. That fathers and brothers cao trait. too, And the little. OtteS understand, Oitlathat aro fair .ou tine hearthstone,. And piempant.whoh nobody tees; Hind and !mast to thoir own Polite Heady anti/Anxious to please. • The giristbat are wantedate wise girls, : That know what to do and to say; .' Thatdrive with 0, smile and a sett word • rea wrath eif the household away. • . ' . • The girls that erewanted are girls of senses, • Whore fashioe ban pover eeesive ; • 'who can follow whatever is:prettyi ..• • And dare Nv,hat lsilly to leave. , • , • , ' .The eirlsthat ate.wante4 ore 'careful Arlo, • •,••• who count what a thaw will coat, ' Who MY with- a predeet.•generoue hand, But so that nothing is test.. ' •• The giria that aro wanted ore .girlswith hearts ; . They are wanted for mothOrs ane wives; • • Wanted to cradle in ieving•erms ----The strongest and frailest lives. • ' ,The clover, tho witty, thebehlient gide. • •. • There aro few who can understand; But, oh I for the wise,' losing heirs) girls There's a constant,' steady demand. • , ,0• • Japanese Hush...le-Bye Baby Song. "Nentarsitromori dokO ye itta ? , - Ano yeana •kooto a -sato ye itta. 0 -sae. no o-miyage noel moratta ?' , Donden, taiko, nisho DO fuye, • oki•agari keboshi, ni inu. hatiko; • - : Hoya wa il ko der Nome shi-na " • Tinasiation. Hush -a -bye, bye • Darling baby is so good, Hush -a -bye, 1"4.43 1 • . ere is nursie gone, whero•did she go ? Overmom:trains tar away to thetown. I t • What.' buys she for iseby dear, iu the • store Cymbal , erne*, euteS, and eh! plenty, w° paper doggrie' es, pretty tops, eCorYtbing foi . Darling baby is eo good, • Hush-a-bye,,byel • now., village P. tobtY 1•!,• a WoBE OE GOWN ALL biAtiON.• tits. •Oscar Wilde BAT/prima Her''.fieelety • !Aseeelateityie of the, Dress.. • .• It /*along been the cause of hissing and ..reptoaeh On the, Part ..of, . tedious and. dis- ' ..ersiveretormerte. that women • must rival ., the Athenians in their desire for new things wherewith to cleithe.themselVes and fituot _Within the raditiM of the mile•regard, • It a •. gown is a• 'good beComing,',034 a . beautiful gown -they ask: " WhyMnist a . female conSider it areaeon forstuiteSand sorrow that she must Wear it many times '• And then we . are told that in the &yea! onr:grandmothers it was . net -.thus that. --;goWnet hen weiehandedd0Wafroin nether •todaughtot, and a woman's best freek re;': . maned her beet • frock. for •a genera•tion, without 'batwing. her . n7. ping, • Thee•can • 'helievieench•tales wito..ehoo'se, but at all • '' 'events it is ,treie arta vouched fOr hyygraci4 one American's 'just now returning tom the .season itt 'London. that Mrs. Oscar Wilde , • • .one-of-the-acknOwledged beauties Of 'this World's., capital, has Worn ARAI even- ing.,gown and ' 'one •' only, :.thrtibgh- out the entire 'three months 'which make the fsehioneble period of 'society there. •• The 'esthete. designed • it for her •1imself, and it is • eminently beceming,.:beine modo. ot pale pink China crape embraidereldwith • gold' and : in -the extreme' of ' :the di*ctoire pink -Crape il1 not waste). Itis almost • ne,edleee to suggest that at the end of three menthe it weuldluive probably changed. to desp grey, •but whihj the •material was constantly re- iiiWad the inodel remained the seine. Mrs. wilds hie a beautiftil;a perfect figme. She in tall; .and. while. well rounded is lithe and , 'demons, and there ienot an • angle about hei,:tberefore ehe at* afford to weer that: 'extrenee tvpo of direetoirafashione Which pitilessly display the•faulta of a woman's, outlines, and beeide, Whose reveleitioupthoge• • ofthe bathing dress are an Teething.. This • eccentricity on the • part . of the esthetio's -, wife toueed-Mlinite tolk. People cmildn't believe their eyes when :they met her 'night ••;•• ter night in the sante gem]. It Cable to . • each a:paes that when they knew eh° was .on tholist, of the invited the gnosis :always , watched for her and laid, bete, among them,. Lelia- a as to 'whetho she Would have tbe . : °outage, 6..weir the pink gown again. When eh e 'appeared -;-al ways in the pink geiveneti smile wonld. piss over the waiting audience ' and the, women would ;OM thetr:oyebroiva ' expressively ati. each either•New • York ' World. • • Weatheirl • '" And how. are •We tb,4clay; medatia 2" " Well, doctor, the cold 1 caught the day 'before yesterday is rather better, but the one 1 cat:10A On Monday,yweek is 'ever 110 flinal worstan4 I cen,ght brand new one lastnight I" . • 4 At the Seashore. 44 YQ9, 1 have teen the day when Mr:' the millionetire, did not hive et pair of shoes to cover his feet," • • , • 1 . • "And when was that; pray ?" "At the time he Was bathing." , It is to longer fashionable,"says' Atte Boaten_limreni., -4 tin Wear fit:Nitta in the Street, but it, is. considered, correct to terry two or three roses, a dilater of pMkel orbnuch of Violets in the hand.'" , . • . -How can )?on Say that amen col:Arm:Ito • deb* when he i Constantly expanding • th • r , AnnsvErvnitra--1-,i 'faiinage on OA Probable. Icperiences * 'Phase. wir get , TRE agxEms WILL AvinavE., :Now Tortp, reporter been: nekbag Yariene fairenge* plergynae,n for their viewe on.heaven , Reseal, by the eyeof faith.". Here is What Talmage Ott:Ike : iniagine that we shell do in heaven What we do on ' Orth in ,etir • Megt elevated moods. Thu 'eonetitution, of oisr minds will net elniege• and I imaginethat our tastep that are dominant now will he dominent then. One of tho. great eatiefeetiene„ of heaven is io the teat that a men caraplloW his tsetee there that be has posseosed here, kgreat many .pereone 'cannot' follow the tastes naturally. poasese sin this World bananso they have to encounter dit- Eignities• in getting. a • livelihood, A. ,mais may be lend of Medd, yet .hero he is obliged to heaveobel.: • Another bee a tine *sate for painting's,. but , on .earth lie pon afford 'nothing better thin. a .pisroran, worristeMay •have anexquisite taste for .ineoutiint flowers and can'appreCiate .fine scenery; but -she hardly ever:sees•anything outside of the city in tallish she IlYeP Or. the 41011 routine of her horde, Where all her tastes are suppteseed. In heaven her taptes will he gratificel. A Christian atittonorger .when he dies will enter ripen an enlarged sphere., Ile will nave a better observatory at his dispOtal,, a further 'reach of explore, time Inheetven the etetrononter will see these ether Worlds,. He Will' seeall that God has:created. • In other wordshe *going. .to be fareished Witkeeleatial-kapicl•transit. ;Ere will be able s. to visit. jitpiter-betere :breakfast and after tee go to Merobry, after having epent the day with a few friends in . Mars. • The bodily, limitations that confine .cO'Will all bo ghne; " The soul Will be re - :leased and enjoy a freedom which will be 'delightful • and expanding.. On earth we can have no teal or adequate conception of the human soul, no, more than we can the aspirationa of the • bird tve.,see Confined in its gage.„.•._ThesouLie.'embined up, . and has ' only a • couple of window p an inch or two . Square to look thkOtigb. Itt heaven the: • vision will,. 7be ' , ita movement swifter than thought. My. •icleas of ' heaven hair°. • greatly • changed., Whet, 1 firOt entered the Ministry Iliad imagined apeetickheayen.; now it has be- come to me a hente chide. ' Wo can do. there Whatever we please.; our nature is enlarged there; we will '-enjoy more free-. -dernTenigherlitette Of existence, and go on improving thrbigh all. eternity. We have 'en imperfect nature in this world, and here We cannot to as we • please. We are bound down; our 'beet moodshave no Scope, no freedom; we are tied' down in ..a great • Many instances to nneoogenial. 13tininits to which we have become 'devoted by egoident or the force of circumstances. In' heaven all 'this. • will be , 'changed: LoComOtiOn. Will: be ...rapid, and, : to Coe material Wei,* shall be able tOfly.like the bird- tbatis, if we • wint_teLgor-atiywhere-the. 41-ilfei7 wish, will accomplish it. This body : . ouraiathe Same itt outward form 'that. it was seven years Igo, yet it is another hadY.. .1(ere is A scar On my finger that I get when I was bay: It is not the eanie. scar, Or Our bodice • change every Seven years, yet ' it hi- •there.. • We 'lope this body ..at death,' and. tve are • promised another body at the. resurrection.- But •that • body will be a spirituel body. It will be .diaphanous, luminens, ethereal,. The soul will. have room for 'expein-• 'sion, there ,will be no droge • or corruption: My ideais that.in heaven • beir natures will be 'so enlarged,: beautified and enriched that Miety.delightful longing Of the petrified soul Will bp satisfied. • . Our higher ..aspireitions. Will be gratified, our"senaibiitic refined and soothed, our tastes for • the beintiful, the true; the noble have , fell ' and perfem: satisfaction. _ lieabort; heaven Will be a. state, neondition. of . happiness' theextent and fatness of wbicb rio .htiman Mitt& can comprehend or fulli-enderetand.. There Will • he no.„inateriaL_Iik::.there,..-!as•-the: Spirittialistahelievd;but an imietelleniably enlarged sphere of existence, • no tinip,•no space, no .hindrance. 'To wish Will bete do, a beatifie existent*, the:glory of which will ho iagtittl..tb.the,glory and. goodness Of God."; He Was Green. City Editor (to a new reporter)-.._" on say this Man was 'bleep tip by a can of nitroglycerine, but you don't say whether he itidead or alive". . • , New Reporter -e-" r waited around there four ot'five,houre hut couldn't learn it." City Eclitor-"?Why ,cetildn't you learn it ? " • New Reporter-" Because he •hadn't .scizne dein whenRe- publibait4 I • InY Ire Wen!. • "Ii Mr. Biondeylall?" PerSOntglY he ' "Personally ? " ' • Xes. Offieially he. is shcirt--$30,000 shorti That' why ho went to Montreal." ••13;aiper'8Barer, • • - Non7suited. tee,WyerL-That coat's too long, the 'waist; cOat toe Jong; in fact the whole suit is too long. ' , • Tailor -4 amvery sorry,eiir; but i always iiiipposed gentlemen of your profession pre,, terra long Suite; • . / • •The Charm or Truth. Angry ,farmer (to boy in tree) --,What are yon doing in ' my apple tree? ; Boy - .Stealing apple's, sir. Angry Fernier:(atter a second thought) -By gosh I Eat'ette, my bay. eat'eni.-7Life.• . -Thousands and thousende or people , who Were Once addicted to intemperance in drielting have Tilt for,gOod. The majority Of 'them are dead, however. , • ; Oh Woman, what can man te You deny; '.• With charms and hoimUes that tuake.reortals daft? • Fair as :the river that reelects the, say, Deep as the !leer and asofull.ef craft. Mu. Ifuntphrey Ward, author:of "Robert Elsmere," le writing another novel. - 'Upward of 1,000 ehildren atereported to have died from tneasies itt Santiago, Chili, in lees than two Menthe. A. toadstool will: lift 840 pin& of solid Weight while growing„ and a cornrnon cab- hage head Will hetet staves as thick as • those need in pork barrels. • • - TWO GROW SWCIBIES Was it a )31:ea* A rinse -telegram releles, .that Stephen Pearl Andrews and courtratigt,Pahner had an agreement that the one dying first shOuld within one year after depth send to the survivor a certain message. • 0.'he exact words Of the mewing!) were fixed upon, and, as neither the meaning nor worcliegof 'the messam, was known except to . these two, the receipt of it by the survivor would go a geed ways towards proving life beyond the grave. Andrews, the noted Spiritualist, • died first, but although in the flaih familiar with moat lead ingutediume of this country, his.disembodied spirit found no means to. send the -Significant words fixed. linen to Palmer; the matetialitit, and the latter went tohis grave unconvinced of the life of tl3e pont after the death of the body. . Tile writer can tell of a similar compact, having a dissimilar but hardly mciresatisfactory ending.: Eighteen years ago a dieciple of some- unusual medicalism hang out- his shingle in a =snotty in the State of New York.," A leak of patients: rapidly taup,ht hiin theneed of patience, and ere many monthshe was confronted • by grim' neceesity,• the mother of invention. His office was on the second floor, and nearly: all the front .Wall Of the building between the sill of his Windows and the tops of the windowsbelow was occupied by the sign of a Wholesale lionor dealer, who did businese on the first iloor. • With the doctor's family occupying ' a• petition -rse companion and, friend of the wife and in some measure governess for the children was a young lady whoge.mental 'brightness was outof all proportion to her worldly fortune.... She urged - upon -the -dootor-the- neoeseity of some announcement of his principles which should attract first atten- tion and then businese. Accepting her views he had painted a long, narrow sign to hang jest under the window, and above the eign of the liquor dealer. The sign was 'hung one morning; and the doctor stepping into the street was startled byan effect the young lady had foreseen from the first. He.read : . ... • . . .. . . Pinta° deals MitPoison deals Out Death. ; . . .•Irrtsee . • John Baxter; Wholesaleplealer in Liquors. • • • ' Within twenty-four hours' the doctor was. famons, in the city;and, thank.; to the pens of , the ..reporterst--within-fortYgeight boors his name bad -gone all over the State.: Etia leek Ot. patients ended,: Tho young lady alluded t6,..ssbile a • member in, good standing Of the. Methodist Church, was a, fearleep freethinker, She . Woe- not 4' spiritualist,, but an. honest .iotittirer as to the future. !;..She had marvellous :Mastery Of .planchette, but -explained' it without allowing spiritnal interterenne: liotveyer, she, believed that it thind ;Ha :not exist beyeinclepattget there should be some way af ,making it known to 'the. living, as 'she "firinly'lreld7iiitle-mi-cal of • ittied over the body on earth., 'While diagnosing these and like topics, anagreeinent. was entere.d into betviten this 'lady . and the Writer to, the effeet. that the one, .dying first„ if stilt set all the doubts the ,survivor at met: retaining spiritual life, ahould Mitten and. Years pealed away, the writer..hoq been for long:ttnie a 'resident of Minnesota, and the compactwas a thing , scarcely over thought of,.. when it was recalled by the reception, of a inevrapeper, then two weeks roldiWhielt go,ntained an atnanunt. of the loot illoeci ;and death of the , lady, :.a isketch .of her life,' • and: „a •• full report of a funeral sermon not. itt harmony With the, views she held while living. ho- ther cognizant of thee:sermon, she gave'.339 • sign so fat as r know.; : ,NO Meseage relative Ice that or:'• any other ideas er,experterige8. after -death came back • at that time. Some • months after a weather Of p etieret 0010, to 'which 1,,..,beltinged; died.. .He was • not an intimate friend, prese of -busineeekept•me from the funeral and there was nothing to teepreee-Iton-nnytricidAtirellecothongiti connect itwith my compact With. the dead . Another year went by. Then One morn- ing, after flied been senile time 'awake and as I was iaziiy semnioningteeolittien to get out•of bed; a singularthing happened. The will of. the romp, oPposite . the bed, and directly iii frontof my eyes, beea,me a stone wall: . That thitt"chonge- canoed mo inn kip, prise "wits' the only experience , making thip esteem like ,a Ordain. ' 'Piercing.: the atone wall was an arch about eight': feet high and into• • • , • • , openinga passageway whiolt:1 knew to .136 of. interminable length: Intothies arch, way frotn. the.long passage approached the .dead member of the secret. Order already alleded to, • He was fully clothed in .uni, form he had no right to wear except • in :transecting bueiness for the • society; . under 'orders:, tie •bore orders in the Man- ner cuetonietY in„ : the society. Ife gayd. me: 'the • salute, thee from him teem', holding 'the. • pogition. • I had attained since his death.; Re epokeclearly, plainly. perfeotly - naturaily, and with °fablet gravity instructs no tell yen' ,thet 'there is n life beyond the grave. ,Her duties.. are suoh. as to , render it. impossible to: return herself to give you any information." He Banned again-, and disappeared, the arch and wall .were gone, and I, now the onintit astonishedman on the face of the 'earth, Was staring at the familiar featiires Unity mem. There was no ccineOiOnsinesa • of on awakening, no obligation Of having slept eines early dawn, but .greater wonder and an exeitement. momentarily increasing, which made it difficult to dress- So far as r know theie. had Ineen'tothing to iny, mind. or !surround, Inge' for **eke pratiously likely tin call, up etch a *Woe. I do not :explain the affair, nine° regard it as significant, It lotp • roo Only confident that I was not sleeping at the time „ Whatever. illesion or delusion may hate deceived Me, • it Nee not, in my. opinion, a dream, .." • Recently f teed of the ' ctor att, 6 greet teeth r in some mind Or faith. cure: Motet, ment in Chicago. Just how it differs trent the rest I. 'never Oink the trouble to And • ont, but as his,, medieelfinn...is different; from Orthedetignifin faith diffirg from • Other•feiithe or hie cerise front ether' (nave.. In interviews given to preed• teptesenta- tives; • he is ' today teaching -althea 'identically thetheorteabeld.. by :the ledy, but , which he edbeited While °he was Member of his family. rerhape sho has Converted hit* by posthnentstai • argument, The foregoing is emceed:of. hit:tented settled • 1 STANDARD OF Lavi,041[NEfifi•• flonnotbing About the Belles of Different Vaii06.51 BaTO the 741.40n Stamford') are • the Opinions held, by. a wide diversity of races regarding their beagtiee,, thosigh it is often cli_flioult for people bred under another sky to shei'e their. enthusiasm. The Oir- oasisianWoinen, who have a sort of ognyefi. tional reputation tor loveliness,. are affirmed by thoee who know them best to be far from worthy of their celebrity, ' Shortkgs, gthleartretgeirrehdeahdaatetmeeetso•eboalvoenogeeen:legTeror:ewa betWeal. two *Artie and flattened, name put of ptoportion to tbe rest of the features, and complexion of A dell lead -like hue, scarcely constitute beauty according to our etandetd. The Moores and the Tunisian Jews regard corpulence as absolutely tieeen. tial to beauty, and the, inmate's righ ,men's harems are gtnifed with nutri..., tion food; •like Strasbourg ' geese for the, market. The Chinese, poets mink, of deformed feet as "golden lilies,' and the ranking of their women in attempt,. iog to walk as the " waving of • a willbw." other races have equally odd ideas of whit constittite loyeelinese",, or they " iinproye their •persons by flatteeingetheit foreheads; tattooing their skins, elltting off their fingers, filing their teeth or dyeing them them black, 'Atte or tartan, painting their. bediee,, slitting their .• ears, compressing their, waists, putting stones, bone . or metal through their lips, cheeks or ears, and in. a dozen other ways trying to enhance the poor 'prentice work ot nature. A Felatah lady Oyes her han'dii and feet with hermith, ete,ies her teeth alternately blue, yellow and purpleronehere-:and-theirlseingleftitif natural. color, pencils ,..her• eyelids with enlphuret of antiffionf dyed her locks • with indigo,' The .11vdah woman inserts a plug of wood or ivory through her lower lip until it presents the hideous appearance of a fleshy Audi over her chin. A. , 'Chinese Or a Siamese lady cultivates long nails.. -A, Hottentot belle 'cannot get her noseflat enough, or•ii, Pereiaxi beauty hers high enough; On the nOrthWaBt coast Of America no reProackis' more bitter than for one Indian . girl to tell another that "'Your mother was too !env to flattereyour- heed." Tattooing is almost universal among half -civilized or savage races; ire New Zealand the klaori wonien before. they began to imbibe European prejudices, even tattoed their. lips, lest they should have the reproach of . being red. Some races , slit their ears until they ,hang in' loops on their_shoulderie,- Others insert huge rings and other Ornaments 'Through, the cartilage of their noses. The Logioiade Islander's regard thelid of a suedioe box a's a particularly neat piece. of • jewelry; and even -European women have not yet ceased to suspend bite of stone -and rnetede through the lobes of.theirears. There ' is, in truth,' no possibility of arriterig at any standard Of beauty. • teientiotiro Alernst ' -A-Witrespreadiltaitiluistakext. Betler7Hest, •: , - 'felt. the Brain. • :There is a widespread superstition, eherished by . a great majority of - the people, that ,to sleep. immediately,.after 'they have taken .feed is to.ende.nger health, to favor : the Onset of apoplexy, 'superstition based• on the assumption that daring !deep the brain • is tiOrnially.• don. gaited,. There ie,7no, doubt, snob 'a thing as congested .bot • during normal sleep the biotin ankeinio: • When a ',preen has • taken a fairly abundant lunch Or, dinner the stomach demands a special influx et' blood, wherewith andottiplieh its work of digestion; nd organ can •: nnore easily mutely with that denaand than the brain, which,' when in hill activity, .ie suffused with ainaiiiiin Mount of, the , ital fluid. But a derivat' of blOod, from . e brain to the Stoniach• °can Only take plebe, except 'exceptionally ftill.blooda and the persons;-- the .• condition that t Cerebral ft:metiers! be meanwhile Otitis*, op 'wholly :suspended:. ' Hence 'in-any-pebtale—tifteriaking disposed for mental action, and net a few hong for eleeiiIhe already partially amain* brain would fain yield up to the stoinach etill further stipkv of blood and yield itself np" to refreeihingelgep, Doing: se it.gaine new strength ritatinWhile digestion . pro- ceeds energetically, And anon body and mind aro again eguipited,to continue in ftell fate the ;battle kit life., •:\aarehtlei4iiiiiiie the child of ignorance, intervenes; declares that eleep. during • digestion is dengemtie, admoniehee 'the. would-be • bleepers to struggle against their perilous inclination, and,. though telling them' : that -after dinner they May sit awhile, assures therO,Of the adage; "after supper walk etude." The miliione of its' Tietime continue,. therefore, the strife to which it condenens them, and ignere the auggestione effered, to them by the lisiver. animale, who always prao:- tided the lessons of sound physiology by sleeping after 'feeding whenever they are allowed to do so. lio'ncc. the henian brain. a dhurgan stoinach of 'nigh victime don, tend with. each Qther duringtheeigestive precede the brain, inipelled , by eupereti. Lien, strives to work and dentande blood to work with, while the efinnach,„ stinnilitted by its contents, striees to Carry on its Mat- vellotis -,e4hennistty, and demands an aniple. Supply of blood. for the purpose. -The 'result of tbe !struggle is that 'neither is 'Able to-do its• work well; Ana the brant is enfeebled by being denied its natural' •rest duriee the digestive precise, and the healthy function: Of the Steen eeh degenerates intedyspepeitt.' -il"estaanstet Review. . • . , . • Wiles Mrs.. Cleveland received the Per- sian Mieister the other day she wore a rich brown faille .draped, otter. a• white. cloth petticOet, with a border at the foot 'braided in gold, Persian in colors tioa .aeiigi2:: A white cloth vest . with 'pin:filar braiding Was inserted in the ,batique,. and, she. looked 'very handsome. •A torso Syritatse lady has become to addicted' tin theme of Cloves that !her health is becinning broken andber physician sips that unless she abeindon`e the habit she will pay theiiiimilty'. with her life 'She has been known to 'et:Mourne a "nuerter of 4 petal& of clotte . in a day. " As. a betWeen, theact operator; Oho *Mild he an expensive 1311.tdeetia7Dridiek,:, thele• In' owl he7r. au. ty, is its white se a pond lily. 4. • There 'Tea, perhapg, no Mot'o infallible sign of vulgarity than' the mistaking of fashuin.for good breeding, and yet there: is perhaps:no error More eeniMolf. experiencee-St. And Pioneer tress. • .* •• Q•:(mhii.aw, Mee. 41,4u1er„Boec11ee, fikowx. bee made .the most remarliable ree0Yeil ber pbysie .eiate,haVzverwi tg.eSedWhen she bit - Sag larbgitwAs:tiev4142oppida not' !lye, to reagh Hartford., New, hOWeyer,. he is is better than she hes been for some years and is able to walk. . goermouroo. to Nees/ewer Rentedo Antes ' a statement by le.BrazeihitePhyeimen to the.. effect that ilies are; as we listely suggested, 1' meet Active agents itt tile eropegetion Of, yellow fever*. ageney itt Spreadieg. ploy the flame pert, spreading cholera. and Koch is of the opinion that, they may pelmon e,ey n01181.11alptiOn j.13 Iln(ine010Tiab.lat: rntkenkif3 reemeehor and 610ther-14.47r • 46 riot eeene topull well together. The; • Marchioness le now . stayieg, at Inverary: • Castle on a cleft to the Duke and Duchess, • of Argyll, and .Lora Lorne is also them.; - More than ten years have elepeed since the Princess was litet atincerery, and her. 'stayvvill be brief; as eheto: to open knew , College of Oohing°. at NeWeitetleron,Tyne 04 Meinclf0 next. ••• .„,,T • • J. Q. A. Wien, of.' Nrf.W. Y�rk, is engaged Fopori a state°. of Honey Ward Beecher for ]Prospect Park in that cite., 'Iti Will be of• ler010. 'size and will show the subject dressea in his charaoterhitio, 'fliannee. The granite pedestal, to be designed by E. 111,,•Efunt, will be nine feet high. At either "side Of . the pedestal will be bronze fignres. At the. left a Young negrees will be •Been laying ft paim-leaf at Mr,..Beecheen. feet. At the - Tight will be figures of two white children. - Mr, Ward is also' engaged upon a 'Stattie of, Herace•Oreeley for the Tribune building. • • Of tho eccentricities of the baby, ,hing of ',,Spain.',00ntinue to annum Europe. •• The contiftelit„le lanebing at his .1404 eiseapade; which came neef to involving his' - country in eerious troubhe. A newly.ap. pointed minister to Spain from an influen- tial European cinutitry reached Madrid and • 'after a time Was prealinted to theriteng . , potentate. The pitnieter is bald-headed, but wearer a' king, noting •beard.-' mother," exclaimed pone% when he; . 'caught eight of the diPleniat, " he'e cOixtbal • his hair, the wrong way." • The relations. between Spain Spaintindthe-minieter's country are somewhat 'etritaned at -preeent, :but a he eotpt 13.1 eanni oe ,t • • f the: mis,timd,.Crst".r. • TEI4' • 13Phdfin.ebrrestneindent .of the.Man- :cheater dawdling, writes.: Per the ..first ' • time in the innate of the .London Unit/ere - etty College,,Alody ieep,ut0i1P._.afi. candidata: for a professional 'elmir: The Chair of Aral:geology, vacant • by the retirement of:: , Bir Charles Newani;• will be contested by • Miss '•lane Harrison, whose.: 'entire's. on ' • 'Greek art, have wan :for • her a high place among the lecturer* ' of the: day. . This. • f• 'lady , A ,,gradnate• of, lIeCtlibititi College, is • . :recognized by scholareas bolding gieslinost, unique place among them for her know- ledge, • especially • of the popular :for* , Greek art ext.:treated on ,ifiee .paintinda...Bhe," • • has been. several times in •Greece, Where everygort--fithent been paid to her by..: the King, by professorsi.finci,by,offipiale ." Ilcierarrits,„ the .bitters men died in New York .eity the other day. Hewes a Pennsylvanian by birth whO'went • to, California in 1850, crossing he !Ohms of Panalna uPOn auntie end:going thence• • to San Francisco in Oorepany , With Coin, .inpdore Gorgon and Reileton,Ithe future banker. • He kept a grocery • attire .:in San :• l'inneledo for three month(' and was then-. burned' Md. In '1853 he began the . mann, . &Owe at Pittsbnig Of his bittersfrom a' ' formula suptilia by bis father, an ' edu- cated physician, and, it is *aid,peddled, his • goodsthiongh the street in a wheelbarrow. , He originated Pittsburg's.natured gite en- terprise, having in 1875 taken the gait in ••• tubber bagitto that...City for analysis., . He, °..ita.,i;:ettere:eiffi'411se;mex:tedpi:0;ttirb.yoani;1,•ceet .he:e146' i,Gloireenart 'tint 1:3e.li,k6eAvozier...,:, 0300,000.. • • ' . plOrers,, shows that for. 600 miles: it is in - British territory. 'This includes200 =ilea •• Ofthegold=miningiegieimewhere Tthe' iiikler"7-' • mining camps are ;situated; .T,he river is .2,800; Miles long, Of Which 2,900 ate ' navigable without a„ single rapid or portage : • te'haryeoardatgheetiateeor itittigefvoetinr;milileivesit. empty.PkAsd ing into the takenare brooder than She Hudson at New York,' Little of tegion,. • traversed is • lit •: for Agrietiltinal. Prirpoitew, althonghthere•ArevallOPtenitable for stock .• raising. • 'Potatoes and Other 'vegetables equal to the beet produced in Ontario are, raised at the further northern. posts of the „Hndeen •BitY ,.• Company. • The • ottEugry abounds With minerals and the *nitersare not more severely felt than these of central • Ix 1l2, whon' Pierce (Den:to:Oat) and • • SOU (Whig) Wire' tlik cendidatea for Pied; deet of tbe UnitedStates, the New VOA Democrats Wantedto carry Pennsyletuila • by sending & large ' 'sum of • Meneyto nil... delphia tea help the boo "pay; expenses." „ 'Theyere so closely watched by the Whigs that there Wad ba littlechance ofeeffeding thSgeheine secretly?, ' lohn•Bkmighttin. the greet 0Oniedian, Of the. day,: Was n strong • Democrat, and undertook ; the ' job. . He . Made a wagetOf that he would. play , at the Bowery Theatre, New York, !laid' an Philadelphia iliestione gight. . The *eget created the greatestexcitement: Brougham got through his piece\at the Bowery by lb &chick; arrangements having been made to telOs his company by, the wagons Of •Adainal.• express to the Jorooy,city*pOL Every. thing was toady; • The police Cleated the • streets on the -line of route lorthe ratio gainst time, and away !lose the explain. . aginis to the fertylioat,till Brat lWay being n.an uproar. The special train WatitiOethefl'.4C. - nd flew With lightning speed, reftehing hiladelphia itt nee eetirse, When thentint retie bore i of silver and . gold Were, sefeho • tetd, which aeconirtnied the' qtheitrictil. eggs& 10 • Jelin litimghittir: playecl'hin ie4e,' *finishing after midnight, Wen hiee agetv, and "tarried Penneylvaniei for the: enniorats I. • That's theogray, they did /the . ing9" bet& de wit,'t ' • ;• 4. No Nisei' or Worry,, ,I)anq (at lable)-2-My green:tail You are Spilling that gravy on the carpet. New Waltman (cheerfnlly)-There'eplinty' more in the. *When, mein. • • . Itt Sootland in October the WeatherWas untetually genial,. ndthis enabled farmers: o overtake the laWitork of the lettveete • ttdei °reit-1401:411Y favorable eirennt- etiaiceP. ' • ff,H . , . !).1