.â- rvr* •^^^"^-^*^^ â- â- ^^*'^**' ' 'â- â- ' â- *â- *â- ' m 1 lUfi • ii I' •' 1 1 'â- • 'ii i' â- â- 1 .-it (« â- ' u I III mil' Am ESPECIALLTJOR LADIES ynuLt Can SHe D» T-An American Girlâ€" Xngllab Profesmonal B««ntl««â€" ChitCbat. Wliat ShaU tbe Girl So? In the "Girl's GosHp," in London Truth, the writer says Mr. Treble died suddenly, and everyone wat suppriaed to find thmt mere was little or no proTision for the widow and daughter. Theie is only the insurance on his life, whicii briogi in about £100 a year. Mabel is trying ve y hard to get samething to do, but that^s very difficult for a irl who has had only a "lashionab-'e educ»tion which seems to consist in putting a high polish on the txterior and neglecting every- thing that could pcsiibly turn out to be lu the least degree useful. We have had her stavinc witii us for a week, and have tried seve.al wa s of getting her som^emunera- tive occupation. She even thought of going on the stage, but a gentleman «hon. we consulted, and who hat the ^hole ot th.t matter at hi* finger-ends, advised her very earne«tly gainst adopting the stage as a profession. He said he would rather sec a «ister of his behind the counter in one of the smallest sweet-btuff shope in the Strand thnn i let her become an actress. In fact, he said that i f a girl was a respectable gentle- woman It was almost impossible for her to get on in that profession, and that the rewards fall as a rule, to those who are least particular about their conduct. Of course, there are rilliant exceptions, but poor Mabel could scarcely hope to be one of them. Besides, he told her that actresses have to assocute with persons who are quite beneath the social level of one's own maid, to dress in the same room with them, and listen to their conversation, which is occasionally en- livened by phrases ot a very forcible sort. So we gave up the idea. Then we tried the places where they sell ladies' work oa commission. Anything more hopeless you can baldly conceive. Piles of useless frip- pery are exposed for sale under or behind glas:;3 cases to keep the dust away. The •'dust of ages," I had nearly written, for things remained on h'and so long that they become almost fossilized. "Is there aret-dy sale for any kind of work," we asked, in despair â€" "for the beautiful embroidery now so lavishly used on dreases or the kind ap- plied upon plush " "Oh no These things come all ready worked from France, Ger- many, and Belgium. Foreign embroiderers and unbroideresses are reaping a golden harvest from the fashion." "But do not ladies who want to furnish their stills ai; bazaars cime here and purchase their poorfT sisters' work?" "'O no," we were told. "Everything at bazaars row is got from regular shops. It saves an immensity of •rouble b; cause the shopkeeper takes back the surplus stock." "But how do thty make it pay ' "Simply by charging a liuicy price lur everything sold, at tie bazaar, ana giving to the charity the difference be- tween tha: and ihe shopkeeper's charge." Vou see There was nothing to be done in tliat direction. Nobody will have the pcor gii 1 as a duily gjverne.ss, because she is not .-ertiiicited. She would become a telegraph clerk, ot;ly that she would have to stand al)cjut cijit hours a day, -and she is not str(;iig tnough to do tliat. n American Girl. MacbriJe Jones was, fays tlie Biook- r/'/.'e somewhat remarkable in many She was gifted with a subtle iinagina- »« gM«ii Profemoaal BtmnXLtm. The English professional beauties seem to bring bad Inck to their hnsbands, no mat- ter how many shekels they may stow away in thtir own purses. Everyone knows of the Btoiy of poor Mr. Langtry 5nd his ruined lortunea, and now comes another claimant for our sympathies. Mr. Mackm- tosh, the husband of one of »he P. B.'s, was anxiously expec»«d here, and many people, for many reaacms, wonld have rejoiced in and been comforted by his retar*. When lo the swift Cunarder arrives without him or his personally conducted troupe of joung noblemen, who, it seems, are deserted at the moment of sailing, having learnei that their amiable cicerone has many debts left in New York, which would be likely to in terfere with their pleasure pro^ramoie. But if Mr. Mackintosh^ creditors in New Yerfc must give up the hope of seeing him, they had the satisfaction of hearing from him. He has sent them his schedule in bankruptcy. Iv03e lyu 1: ways. „ tion, a quickness of magnanimity, which led her ii.to the danger of becoming too much given to fastidiousness. fehe often surveyed with complacence theinmost depths of her own soul, and it seemed to l:er that her Uiind evolved ideas more quickly than other minds. This could not be called egot- ism. I'-, was only the rehiilt of her associa- tions. Htr biain was full of unproportioned ideas, and, having no one about her to 6»y "This is coirect," or "This is absuiC," s-lie managed ta tw.si dtlusioks and the aoiiial mto aard knots. Coming into the midst of old-world s^citty, this young, deeultory- flime lik.i spirit tound much to amuse it, and in turn b.-came the object of amuse, meut to those about it. There was some- thin? nbout the laree, well-ordered, oak- paneh d rooms of her uncle's house in St. James' street which struck her as being un- like the iuteriors of the residences of her own countrj The soft movinc servants and general ai- ot" quie; and restfulness impress- ed her as a new sensation and threw about her a charm of strangeness. She would sit for hours in the dark cool corners cf the large rooms and watch with intense interest all that was going on about her. She grew to love her uncle, and he, first a little bcred, soon came to appreciate her society. Like most Americin wom.en. Rose had been brought up to give vent to her opinions. Her ideas, though often crude, were always respected. She was fond of asking questions. In this she was almost not unlike other Americin women. Her uncle was fuU of patience, and answered Rose to the best of his ability. This bright, quickspea'iiing American girl pleased the oid gentleman. They would sit together in his study for whole afternoons talking dver the Britisr consti;ntion, the state of India, the justic, or the injustice of the invasion of the Crimea, the character of the aristocracy, and other subjects which are always sure to interest the American girl. "I like your type of an English gentle- man," said Rose. "Lord Fitz Hugh is so simple and ouUpoken. " " But I doubt if he is contented," said her uncle. "The laws of society here in Eng- land are so peculiar." ' " You mean that he has no scope for his ambition," said Rose, with gii lish simplicity. "He can only go into the army, the church, or politics." " Something worse than that," said her uncle, "I know him to be a radical. A man with land and a title should never be a radical, at least, not in England." "I think you are about right," said Rose. "I know I look at these things from the point of an Ameri;an, but I think you are about right." "Why don't yon trarry him " asked her uncle. "Yes, it would be a go»d thing for him, said Rose. " I have thought it over quite seriously." "Then yon could take him to America, where his title would not conflict with his politics." " I will do it," said Rose. CHIT-CHA.T. It ij generally understood thtt "No 1" was tempted to do what he did by Eve-nts. Womao is regarded by some men as a conundrum. They will rack their brains over her for a while and then give her up. T. H. Blythe, of San Francisco, the man with many wives, must have had a cup filled with Blythefull wives instead of bitter- ness. "Have you seen 'Olivette'"' asked a lady of her friend who had visited the opera the night previous. "No, my friend," replied the other, "not all-of-it I saw only one act. The dude in Kentucky: "Do_ you see that young man going along there " "Yes, what of it " "He's got girl on the brain." "Ah judging from his appearance the girl must have had a soft sit. •'The C»mpbollites are coming" was the signalling when President Garfield took his seat, but when Arthur succeeded him the cry was changed to "The women are coming," and they are there." " Are your domestic relations agreeable?" was the question put to an unhappy- looking specimen of humanity. "Oh, my domestic relations are all right," was the reply "it is my wife's relations that are causing the trouble." "Ma," said Vliss Purvenu, "Jennie Jones has been presented ac court in London. "That's nothing," replied ma "why I was in the court two whole weeks when my sister was getting her divorce. We are just as good as the Joneses." It is said that Boston mothers are en- deavoring to imitate some Chinese women by reducing the size of their daughters' feet to a reasonable circumference. What a blessing it will be to the boys who have oc, casion to dance with them, as it were. In a museum in New York a woman spends most of her time in an aquarium under water. When it is considered that sh? can not, of course, talk while submerged, her wad lot in life will draw a tear of sym- pathy from every female eye in America. " What play is that?" asked a sweetheart of her lover, as she saw the flaming handbills cf "lolanthe" on the walls. "Oh," here- plied, indiCfereutly, " 'lolanthe,' of course." "Vou do?" inquisitively inquired his sweet- heart. "Well, what do you owe him for?" '•The top of the morniDgto ye, Misthress Jones." said Patrick. "Was that young lady I saw wid ye yisterday yer" sister " "Ye?, Patrick," replied Mr^. Jones, "that was my sister." Patrick "And was she married?" I don't know?" Mrs. Jones; 'She has been married, but she is a widow now." Patrick: "A widdy is it? and is her h.ooaband did?" The child of the widow sits upon the knees of her mother's suitor, when the fol- lowing conversation takes place Child â€" take out your teeth, Mr. Brown, and let me see them. Mr. Brown â€" I can't do that. Nature has fixed them too tightly there al- together. Child â€" You are not as smart as my mother. She takes hers out every night before she goes to bed. The result of this intei-view is that the match i» declared off, and that Mr. Brown, like Tony Welkr, 'earns to beware of the widows. How to Kill Rats. Marvelously courageoui are rats in recog- nizing devices for their capture. Toatted cheese and rank fish are among the baits commonly employed, since the far penetrat- ing odor of these lures them to the spot where the trap is set but in places where they are so plentiful that their resort may be counted upon, nothing is so likely to in- duce them to enter as a bit of fruit or let- tuce, of which they are ptstionately fond. Another very successful dodge for catching them in bulk is to strew the room liberally with some highly seasoned, thirst producing food â€" salt cheese, for instance, or pepper- corns and hempseed, and arrange a bucket of water in such a way, either by mems of a tilting board or greased rim, that when they go to drink tbey may tumble in and be unable to get out again. A friend of mine asserts that no bait is so attractive to them as simple paper (they certainly seem to be very fond of it), and sugs^ests that they wonld greedily devour blotting paper impregnated with some fluid poisoii disguis- ed with their favorite oil of anise. How this might be I do not know but I should doubt it, considering what acute analytical noses these little toxocologists have, but it is worth trying. Deer and such like animals are highly absorbent of paper. I knew a fellow who possessed a pet brocket that could do no wrong, until one day it went in- to his cabiu and ate a number of §5 notes sicce which he has looked upon the corvid® as a very inferior group, and genus cariacus LB distinctly immoral. Traps they will rarely enter, they are suspicious of poison, and if they are beguiled into taking it they get %irt,y behind bulkheads ana into other inacceesible places to die, and so breed a pestilence. Anythirg with a very strong admixture of arsenic will preserve th j bodies from corruption, unless they get wet but not one rat in a hundred will even sniff at Euch a compound, and its trial generally re- sults in the poisoning of every domesticated animal on board, and ends by its finding its way into ±he coffee one morning, or some thinssoftfcat sort. Occasionally, however rats will make a mistake, and it is no un- common thing to pick them up dead in the holds of ships which carry dried hides, in the prejpaiation of which a great deal of araemc u used.â€" 4 « tht Tear Jloutid. WHAT IY»AIIXI« CAK OO. The TerrlWeiroe *i^"»^i^!^;* A new peril now presents it«Jf a^inst whieh the legisla-.ure has launched an act of Jiliament, of which the urgency WM so ^tinctly felt that the biU was rnsW through both houses in a single night and received the royal assent ««» 4*y-- .^,^: fully violent and dangerous withm a bmited sphere and under certain conditions, nitro- glycerine yet fails to compass all the pur- poses which malice would desire. It is worth while to look calmly at this terrible toe to our present peace and tee what is the acual extent of the mischief it is calculated to mflict. A "Plot to blow up London" has been announced bat London is more difficult to blow up than to burn. A. couple of hundred weight of nitro-gly- cerinc is a fearful cargo and would cause tremendous damage. The noise and con- fusion would strike terror into thousands, and many buildings not actually launched into the air would be thrown into a heap of ruins. A box of gunpowder would be far less terrible in its effects, and yet a large proportion of the energy poesessed by the nitro-elycerine wonld be practically thrown away. That is to say, if all the force apper- taining to the nitro-glycerine were presented in th. term of gunpowder, much prcater ruin would be wrought among surrounding buildings. Considerable excitement was created lo the summer of 1881 by the discovery ot sundry "infernal machines" concealed in the cargoes which arrived at Liverpool from America. Each machine was a metallic box fitted with a clock-work arraDgement, and containing about two pounds of dynamite. Col. Majendie aod- Major Ford, in their last annaal report under the explosives act of 1875, state that the experiments which they afterward conducted with one of these machines against a masonry structure showed that the machines were not nearly so destruc- tive as was popularly supposed. The ex- periments conducted by Col. Majendie and his colleague, as well as some of earlier date by the royal engineer committee, were con- sidered to prove that "the effect of small charges of dynamite and similar explosives upon masonry structures is essentially local." The results would necessarily vary according to the relation between the charge employed, the strength of the building at- tacked, the area presented by the structure, and the position selected for the charge. "But," it was added, "any general, or even partial destruction of a public building, or of a substantial dwelling house could not be ac- complished except by the use of very much larger charges ot dynamite and similar sub- stance, than could usually be brought to bear without attracting observation, and the effect of a 'single infernal machine,' contain- ing a few pouods of explosive, would be structurally insignificant." In the explosion at the offices of the local government board the local effect was intense, the stone work close at band being pulverized, while th- general structure of the building stood firm Sir Frederick A. Abel observes that the shattering and splitting effect of dynamite upon rock is much greater than that of gun- powder in quarrying, the rock is not generally thrown off by them to the same extent as by the less violent agent. Dyna- mite has sometimes been employed to fissure the rock, and afterwards large quantities of gunpowder have been poured into the crev- ices, by the explosion of which enormous masses of rock have been removed. In sub- marine demolitions it"has in like manner been found that when iron-built ships have to be destroyed, the lifting effect of large chai-ges of gunpowder is advantageous in clearing the framework ?.m\ other parts which have been shattered, but not actually removed, by the mere violent class of explosives. It is a curious fact that even gunpowder can be made to approximate in its character to the lutro- glycerine compounds, if it be fired by means f'f a powerful detonating fuse. If this plan be adopted it becomes no longer necessary for the gunpowder to be closely confined, but it shares with the dynamite class the property of displaying great force when placed merely in contact with the material to be destroyed. It is this quality of force, independent of confinement, which makes nitro-glycerine compounds so available for evil pui-poses. The clockwork arrangement is also dispensed with by the use of an acid which is set fres to leak its way through a few tliickncsses of paper, until it reaches a chemical compound which detonates, and starts the explosive in connection with it. Comparing dynamite and gun-cotton withgun-powder,we are told that "in military operations, where great displacing action is required, gunpowder has the undoubted advantage." This is really what the "dynamite party" woidd desire in carrying out their designs for the destruction of London. But as the conspira- tors are obliged to act furtively, they have resorted to a fiercer and lees cumbrous agent than gunpowder. It the nitro-glycerine seized by the police in Southampton street was intended to form the basis of one ex- plosion, and if it was arranged that similar quantities should be fired in Southwark, and elsewhere, the effect must needs have been tre- mendous, supposing the fiendish programme to have hcen successfully carried out. The deafening nature of the explosion would itself constitute a moral effect of a very intense description. The smashing of brickwork and masonry, the cras^i of falling buildings and the general uproar and confusion would create a scene of the most fearful nature, inevitably accompanied by an extensive sacrifice cf human life. Yet even 200 weight of nitro-glycerine, despite its terrible energy would fail to accomplish all the desoktion which writers have generally predicted con- cerning it. He Deserved Bis Reward. Another hoop-snake has been discovered but strange to say, the gentleman who saw' it did not adhere to the conventional form "And you say that the snake did not roll after you, said a man when the hoop-snake man had concluded his recital. "No, he did not roll after me." • "Youdidn't Jamp behind a tree, then, just as the snake struck at von '" "No, sir." ' â- J^^** *^f J-^I!" " *^* *^ "i'i QOt wither and die withm two hours " "No." n,„'?lfi,'"'"*:,'\*"**20 golf piece. -A man who can defy temptation as you have rd T" *° "'*^' "'°°" ^« mrbTSBXOITB. Tbe Alarmlnc Natnre •«_£"»^ â- •"-^ womaa •« Timid. ken and WomM •» .« I fear no evil that I can se.!" exclaimed NaiillZ and his act- proved the truth of bis philoBophy, ;^'In' «::;.«toe7"g^ter .than the IZxTd him. The wme principle seeuu. true arouna nim ^^^^_ VVe tear the unseen; we from that nioHnmiv He cou'd face danger lu r«fbi; the sunken road «£ Waterloo '"^^ !._r„ -reater than the armits »me principle seeuw 1 witrmost teople. We lear the unseen; we dread the unknown; we 8l""^. ^,, wS possesses the power to ham that which isliable to break at any moment. A volcemo is picturesque; but men do not build their homes upon its sides. In the midst of so much mystery and so mi^y unseen dangers, we naturally feel a S of awe. We wonder if some terrible cllam°ty iT^ay not be just beneath the surface ^f That is Varently, bright and serene. We -onder if some smaU portion of the hu- man machinery should get out «/ o^der what the result would be; and we fear disaater from powers we cannot comorehend. It la natural we should do so! ft is reasonable we should wonder what would become of us if the delicate mechanism of the brain should get broken. It is natural we should ask that the result would be if the million tis- sues of the lungs, liver or kidneys should become disordered. A slight excess; a care- less attention to the details of health ap- parently does no harm, but it none the less undermines the life. It is a draft upon vi- tality which must be honored in the future. The trite saying that such acts "drive nails in one's coffin" is as true as it is old. But our own neglect is by no means all the unseen injuries that come-to the human system. There are a thousand evil influ- ences all around us at war with our lives. They are inhaled into our lungs and poison the blood; they arc absorbed through the skin and foster diceasc; they are devoured with the food and corrode the most impor- tant organs of the body; they are transmit- ted by contact with vegetables and miner- als as well as mankind. Good health is a thing to be acquired; it will not come of its own accord. The man or woman who pos- sesses the power to counteract all these evil influecces and tendencies has obtained a secret of untold value. The constant strain and exertions above referred to, gradually weak'r'n some of the most important organs of the body and invite them to welcome the coming of broken health. The lungs, heart, liver aud kidneys can very easily become weakened; and how? By these very abuses and strains that are constantly brought to bear upon them. It is necessary to guard these organs and preserve their proper tone at all times. A prominent gentleman residing at the east lelt unusually tired one day, but sup- posing it to be caused 'oy over-exertion he gave it little attention. The next day he was not so languid, but his head p .ineil him. This he attributed to indigcstiou and took no further notice of it. Matters went alan^ this way for several weeks, the headaches aud languor iccreasing, rccompanied occa- sionally by certa'u dull pains in various parts of the body. He was not wholly in- sensible of these troubles; but being closely occupied, he heedlessly overlooked them. There finally came an intense pain in the small of the back; his ankles became swollen to twice their natural size, most violent nau- sea took possession of him, and life teemed one intense pain. A phyeiciau was called, who pronounced it Bright' disease of the kidneys, which he was able to relieve, but could not cure. Now, had any cue warned this genliiinan that the symptoms that had troubled him so long arose from the kidneys, he would have attended to them at once; but Ae did not knmv i( and many men and women to- day, in every part of America, are suffering, substantially, as did this gentleman, and from the same cause; aud it is high time they should know what it means. It means present discomfort, future unhappiness, and premature death, unless attended to prompt- ly and treated rightly. The only discovery which has ever been made in the scientific or medical worlds that is a certain remedy for all such troubles, is Warner's Safe Cure. Made from a tropical leaf whose properties, like Peruvian bark, are known and invalu- able, it acts at once and naturally upon the organs which produce these distressing troubles, carrying health to the entire sys- tem aud banishing pain. While the most serious evils which can afflict n-au or womankind are those which *rise from disordered kidneys, they are dis- eases which can be controlled if taken in time. The trouble is, that they are "unseen evils," and the primary danger arises from the fact that the symptoms they manifest are not re- cognized, but are attributable to some minor disorder, which, by being considered slight, is permitted to fasten itself upon the system. That one half of physical dis- orders arise from imperfect kidneys is a new but settled truth; and that these disorders might be prevented by using Warner's Sale Cure is equally true. Thousands of people, including prominent physicians, scientists and divine.^ who have known of its wonderful powers, indorse and recommend it. It acts upon both liver and kidneys in a direct and certain manner, and invariably relieves and strengthens both. It puts tliem in a healthy condition, when otherwise, they would become inflamed' It gives a pleasing tonic to the entire system, and harmonizes all the parU. Druggists throughout the world sell it; and the op- portunity for thus obtaining its benefits are brought near to every one. It will solve the mystery of good health, and keep back the day on which com es "the preat mystery." Of i«ii'""i?""V** "***" Thousands 1 '^fllar^'iave been spent in advertising the celebrated Burdock Blood Bitters, but this fact accounts only in part for its enormous 1 !\i °'"'-* ^^ â„¢^^« i* ^I'at it is-the best blood medicine ever devised by man. (13) " I am going to turn over a new leaf," as th3 caerpiller remarked when he had suc- cessfully rumed the one he was on ed^in^t^o^C^'^-^^^®?' '""«' ^ere cover- withoutit; '""*® ^»r "«m a drugstore Should music be sold by the chord Dmm music might be sold by%he pound iS bad music often given away by the choir --5^«"^« Powersrt hes«^, ^d re- Kttmmtsr dysentry. onunt is past, and Dr. Pierce' ..7** Discovery" will not ralg. tv^^' cure you if your lun^g ' ^: consumption. Itisho ""' both as a pectoral and aWl-^NJ cure obstinate and 8eve« ,H^ throat and lung,. co5,"fNJ affections. Bv virtue ' ' W alterative properties it cW ' »* the blood, cures pimpu'S »»i* eruption8,and caus.s evenL7^\ to heal. ^reateati. The mill owner who turn i â- upon some of his di.orderlv "^J plained his conduct by sj- '"P^l washing his hands. "^SlietpiiJ Get the Origtaa! Dr. Pierce's "Pellet," "Little Liver Pills " (su„,r "i' «i sick and bihous headache ?*'«" tacks. By druggists. ' " What is the difference bpf» I ing of a fuU-dressed-lady aS?" H edgrub? Oneisaflutfer-trH is a butterfly. "" 'ya=dti,;3 Dr. Pierce's • ' Favorite P all those weaknesses peculiar^^""""""' an unequalled remedy Dig. ""' achand " bearing-down" s"'^! its strength-giving properties V' gists. "f li " The Jack's trumped," said tb player as the train jolted „„ ' •' And the track'« juried "2"^h ner, as the train rolled into thediu 1 VEGETINE.-It extends its inaa^j every part of the humaa o-gani!, mencing with its foundation- nL^i eased action, and reitorin^ vital '!l â- creating a healthy formatio"n and .1 tion of the blood, dri^m7 out diser! leaving Nature to perform itsaUotwi " Love for the dead should nolc J duty to the living," remarked tlie" astic angler as he sU dowi; to aâ„¢ trout, the result of his own process V ;etiiil Superior to any Family J cine. Purifies tlie Blood Renoâ„¢ and IiivijioraU's the Wh«il !Sy.«(tcin. Its Mod;c;iixt Propertis* a-c .tlte Tcnlc, Solvent, and Dluretlt," Vcgctine is made c.MliisivcIvfromiJ of carefully-.^electoil barks, roi!sai.'.i and so strongly concentrated that i;V| fectually eradicate from thesystemev-f of Scroliila, 8critnlous Humor, Tq Cancer, Cancerous Humors. Krjsiii Rbeuni, !«.vphllitic IHieascs, iaiitfr,* ncss at the Stomacb. and all duasBl arise from impure bloo i. lirlatirVlila tory and Chronic KiiriimntiMu. \ni^ iiont and Spinal Coiiipl.nints. cano0i fectually cured throuprh the blond. Fori and Ernplivc Di.Konsrs of the Sklo.Pid Plnples, Blufrlips. Koi!'., TcUer, mH and aingwurm Vcgctine hasieverLtj effect a permanent cure. For pains lu Ihe Bark, Kidr.cTroift Dropsy, Female Weaknes.*. k«t»iil arising from internal ulceration, ani 2^ diseases and Ocncral Ccbillt.v, |\"e?eil directly upon the causes of the compiiEsI invigorates and strengthens the whole acts upon the secretive organs, i " mations, cures ulcerations and re.iilsiii| bowels. For Catarrh, D.vspoinila. HibllnilM ness. Palpitation of ifac Hrarl, la Flle«, Sfcrvonsness, and .cncr;ilPn of the Xcrvons eiystrni, no medicine kiij given such perfect satisfaction as the Vsi It purifies the blood, cleanses all of tita and possesses a controlling powerorea vons system. The reinarkab'.c cures effected bj ' have induced many iihysiiiansj ies whom we know, lo prescribe andal their own families. L In fact, Vc.ijetinc i,s the best remedv jeI covered for tte above diseases, aiidiitlef reliable BlttOW I'l KIIIEKyetplac«: J the public. Yegetine is theBest Spring lej There is talk tliat Sirah Remiarsl tends leaving her husband. If sae s do so life will inuced be f r \m « " desert. Eeadacbc. Headache is one of those aisiAi'iiJ plaints, that depends upon nervoasr.» bad circulation, or a aisorderedstitfJJ stomach, liver, bowels, tt;. 1-^' and proprietor of the Canaik ""n was cured after two years of "^f^A headache, and now testi!ic5_to tbc't^ Burdock Blood Bitters. Mrs. Spriggins was bMst;:i.:« ^^ house. The windows, slie s.iiJ, 'f'" "That's too bad; ht;t won't tarp- benzine wash it clT:'" as-kod t.v £»- Oldboy. People wishing tlnir Teeth to W^f Use '"TK.MiKiiUV â- daily-2t "â- .I--! night; --..^m It sweetens the Kxath and r.^.- i gums, ,]{â- Enhances the beauty of daugatcBj^ wk ^^7m ® 1 ^m3 i 1 ^£1 w, A Farmer Spe^ Qjti Mr. Austin Jay, Openh^gJ'^^J be was so afflicted with wv'w ^^ m he was about to give up ^° ^^ (jjS gist at Aylmer induced ^^..^ «*1 ^th such good results t^at w ,.^i« .bottles he was able toref "^jt jo*^ Stays he got reUef from tte ^^^ WLBatisfied there " °°i,dly »""'^l tiemedy in existence. ^« to uic his name. 1' J« hBB D«*" rlJ'testify at a pnvai r President of th l*"f waited upon Ca ICVdinal warmly ei F/^adelpbtaConve •^ latireCounciLFreden S the Government bi] i of a popular vote inoftheLegislativ rLg Eugenie has ren fSTchateau presente I the Emperor Napol few will p»y*"'°°"" nsvlvania Senate has ,^81.7 attempt to pers 1 eing recoi-nized a *or New Testament in Knual Civic election, l%f Bent was re-ele r.ritv of three over C fioT McLeod wa Uposiiion. Lemment receipts for Lere over five millons si forresponding period c tpU ior April wore ci flhose for April last ye Ibanqnet of ^bo Natic 1 Wednesday nigbt, Mi Government had met I nnseen agency -f sec Uy. ry Lincoln's refusal t ,0 the Catholics to ere Lre on the miUtary re tciBCO has given great tterized.as an ungrac of a Cabinet Minister JH. the Princess Louis i |tty morceaux to polka Vt stay in Bermuda, ^preparing the product [the " Calabash Polka, orchestra. 1 Hanlon, one of the pri L has finally been accep He will confirm the ev reys against thirteen gaol charged wit ier. overmnent of New \c ;eiiate the names of Dorsheimer, J. Har Jrew H. Green, New " trson, Rochester, and JBuffalo, as commissi Ltiou of the scenery of ke bill recently parsed. Prince of Wales, receivi brd, on the openicg c )e, said manitestation Lore acceptable whe tt world was shocked pie and cowardly out I are most unprecedeni isterial crisis is short' .. There is much disc Temment failed to ftilf Inaidered likely that S pntof the Chamber of led upon to form a nc'v I chiefly of Monarc'.ii Embers of the dynastic ferlin correspondent s: W Gazette has reprou Mi's report on the po phat its attack on Mi I on an incorrect trut t also published what lliaracterizes a weak a pt as an excuse for an He says the general I the apology is humb ly inadequate, since of gross misrepresent Klegram from Guysb( 8 the death of Hon. f member of the Nova oincil, at the advance fears. A few years ag( ' his house, and since "i to bed. Mr Cutler for Guysboro froi "1 House was diasolvi nted a member of I ttd hold a seat in I of 18S1, when. " |and ill health," he »Eeichstag, Herr Hi ' declaring against orders in milit: Bumarcs protested •peror against the ass -Wn be required iv rmmendation froi »hter then altered â- were addressed to -.of to the militarj •""ter of War deck li*d a direct invasi tparor. R^JCnister of Forei^ 5» Senate, on Tuesd P«ttcDeBrcf?Uereg3 ^wOvernment as to t 'believed in the llSTw" of the Italian !«• ttungarian Premie r*°a against France "•J^'jaation of the tr J^^the alliance wou wo relaticns of France must b« country wh ' and condemned t 7*«»5emu8tnotl lBtt«;5?*^ *o jealoui fij^ly of the Minister i L, *»ovemment cicle 2Mis;^::..ii^X.