of e 20-inch waist Venus. To the outline of this hour- -glsss shaped goddess they aspire. The normal waist is quite oval; the fashionable waist quite round. Women with miniature waists who maintain that such weists ere natural to them and ere independent‘of art, must have been born de- >£ormed. No person enters this world with e reedy -ms.de iashioneble waist. As re- serds_ health. the tspering' wsist is effected (London Pout.) A lootun on the present 33er of drama wu delivetod by Mr. Frederick Trev“ at Ken ' ton on 83mm. ,undor than-pica- tho _ ttioqd_Hos_l quioty. flfho loo: turer observed that thurimary objects of clothing to cover the y and maintain it at an equable temperature have little or no concern in some of the dresses of the period. In the low evening dress the arms, neck and upper part of the chest and back are bare. while about the lower extremities is accumulated a mass of raimeut that would garb adonen children. In the ordinary dress of woman little regard is bad for maintaining an equable temperature of the body. The covering of the upper part of the chest above the line of the corset is very thin. perhaps that of the dress only. The region of the corset is reasouab y covered, while about the in many layers of clothing‘are massed. ' has the bod may be divided geographically into afrigi , atom rate and a torrid zone.‘ As regards tight asing. Mr. Treves said if the most beautiful female outline is that of a young normal well-developed woman, then a narrow waist is hideous. A miniature waist isa deformity under any oiroumâ€" stances. and few deformities are pleasing. The waist is an inflexion of the body between the lowest rib and the hi bone. _No normal woman is ‘waistlese, though 'l‘l-ely Ont“. Aunt-u cor-cu. Pom. mu. 'I‘Icil loot- ud Twenty-Inno- Gloverâ€"A Ob-pler {or the Met. its eonspiououeneee depends 'eomewh'et on development. Children have no:- !nelly no waiet, 9nd edtmht-lgeed nigh! in 3 gross And pitiable deformity. The normclwciet hes a. circumference of ebont 28 or 29 inches; the “ elegant" veils should be 20 inches; the waist meumment of dressma‘kere‘ lay ï¬gures now vcriee from 21 inches to 25 inches. Those who wish to improve their figures by etcye heve before them 93° concepgion {11“ by a oompreaaion of the ï¬ve lower rips! one ribs being more movaqu than all the rest. There is a popular delusion} to the eflect that there is plenty of empty‘ mace inside the body, and into this space e displaced organs are pushed in tight lacing. Tight-lacing means a compression not of skin, muscle and bone. but of liver, stomach and lungs. Even a slight amount‘ of constriction aflects these organs, and: stays that are by no means tight lessen the ‘ capacity of the chest for air. Post-mortems} on tightJacers show the liver deeply in-j dented with the ribs. and more or less seriously displaced. The stomach is also commonly aï¬ected, as, too. are the lungs.‘ The diseases that commonly 'result are chronic dyspepsia, liver derangements, dis- ‘ turbanoes of nutrition, etc. Tight-lacing.‘ moreover. renders more or less useless the diaphragm or principal muscle of respira- tion. The breathing powars of the narrow- waisted are always seriously impaired, and hence follows possibly the languor, the ina- bility for exertion, the tendency to faint.etc. The circulation. moreover. is interfered with. and certain cases are reported of death from apople'xy in young women who have, tight-laced. Stays injuriously afl‘ect the muscles of the back. These muscles become wasted because their functionâ€"â€" that of supporting the spineâ€"is absorbed by the corset. and they exhibit the usual ohmgee o! muscles thst have been long disused. Thus the back is actually week- oned by the use of stays. and those women who msintnin that they cannot do without the support of stays nuke me of the argu- ment of the commenter who, after hsving 13y indulgence _developed a. caving for the drug. asserts that he cannot do without it. Un er no circumstances do young girls require stays. and to the bulk of young women elso the same remark applies. A mo- dinedoorsetmomposed merely of some stiï¬ meter-is]. end devoid of all bends end wlnlehones. etc.. may be used by those who incline to stoutness, or whose busts mprominent.snd by women who have been mothers. Such a corset or bodies would merely give that slight smount’of support required for comfort and sppenr- tnee. The lecturer next referred to shoes end boots, and denounced pointed toes end high heels. He thought the amount of clothing usnslly worn by women was too weekend that the number of pettioosts wu oiten excessive. These garments hove for their primary object the protection of the lower extremities. but‘ it sdditionel wermth is required for these parts, surely the use of an extra pettioost or so is not the most sensible way of susplying it. Not only do petticosts ed greatly to Athe_ weight _ of dress _to be “tried. but they throw a ver injurious bndon on the hips nound whi they no stashed. Seven! pumice“: smpended bye: by ‘hyor phony. the gain cannqt have other then en injurious effect upon health. ï¬nd the evil is especially obnoxious in young girls, in whom the hipe m nurow and on whom the garments cannot be pro- perly eupportod without a ooneidenhle mount 0! constriction of the waist. It theee germente must be worn. let them he attuhed to a bodice, or let them he ens. nded (tom the shoulder: by unmodiï¬ed orm of breoe. A for more eeneible wey of elothin the lower extrermtiee is pro~ vided y the eo-oelled " combinetion " garment, which in a meet vnlnnble nddi~ tion to reasonable and healthy dreee. Gloves. with n lebnlone number 0! buttons. that cover nearly the entire arm. and with eloeeneee of m. end with impermeebllity of etmetnre, Innet eerionely interfere with the notion of the skin of the upper extremitiee. There wee need of e dreee both eeneihle end pretty. end the evolution of eneh e dreee would eppeer to be et present some- whet hindered by the option of theee very none who oppoee Inhioneble ooetnme. e Greek dreee eomewhet reoentl intro- duced wee noi only extremely gteoe ul. hm i. wee nleo beenâ€. end mey. with some um. ingenuity. be edepted to ell me oh- onmehnoee of every-dey life. -â€"ln Pll’il the bride who is put her youth does not won pear] my or lsvondu. ohm hoot “longing to the widow who monies in)" I"! O? "[881". ianrioua Lady Harriet Monck. accom ied Mr. Bmythe. wee shot deed. the b _et ecetter- ing her brain ebout the cerri e. The petty were returning {rein church n a, cer- rielfemnd while driving up an Avenue eeverel vo eye were ï¬red at them,’ the bullets ectuelly riddling the curriege. one of the ï¬rst ehote etrnck Mrs. Bmythe. The coech- mnn hed e nerrow escape, one bullet pue- ing under hie urn. Mr. Smythe he: recently received» threetening ,lettere in consequence o! evictions on his estate. The murdered led raided et No. 33 Fits. williem Place. ublin. and had been merely on a. few de'ye' visit with Mre. Smythe. She left Dublin on Fridhy lent, end hed en engegement to dine next Sutur- dey week with, Mr._ Justice 'Morrieon. Further details state that the cerriege hed elmoet reached the meneion. end ,wee,pe.ee- ‘ing some thick ehrubhery. when four shots were ï¬red in quick eucoeeeion. shuttering the windows end the left side of the our- riege. _ The horeee took fright en_d deehgd A yenterdey'e Dublin oeblegrem aye: A terrible tragedy trill!) out of the nthmptwuemiueteelen lord occurred in canny Weetmeeth _oq _§u_n_r_ley sper- dsy night shut nn “amp: but been nude £0 murder William Bulow Smytho. of Bub: Villn Home, non Collinuown. He il 3 e Inndownor in the county. lbw-l outed It n lad was wounded. It now appear: from no: reports thy; Mu. Bmytho. hisrbrother‘n wife. who. dqng gijh COWAIDLY nylon]; or :- lush Lndy While Driving 1- u toward the house. When there Mr. Bmythe raised his sister-in-law. who had fallen forward when the shots were ï¬red. She was quite dead, a bullet having entered her head just behind the ear. It made a frightful wound, and death must have been instantaneous. - The " places‘ where the assassins had been'lying in ambush were distinctly traced in the shrubbery. also the way by which they had made their escape. Three persons, an evicted tenant named Bigg, his wife and son. have been arrested. It 1s a _remarkahle feet that assassinatio‘ng .ï¬â€˜oiv’ ’ufw’iyi in}; plans id aaylgght, the' police patrols at night making it very dapggrous qur guanine Vto_be_abr_ond. A desp Mach from Gort. Ireland, says the priest O‘Higgina. committed on a. charge of uniting to murder, was escorted to in! by cavalry. The use of zinc sheathings in the manu- facture of lemon squeezers is pronounced exceedingl . harmlul, it not dangerous, says the New ork Herald. A lady recently, after drinking-"some lemonade made with her own hands by means of one of these zinc-coated squeezere. experienced violent indispcsition, marked by intense pains in the stomach and head and intervals of dizziness. The symptoms were so singular and unusual that it was suggested that they must 'have a special‘ cause. The drinking of the lemonade was recalled, and it was questioned whether some deleterious element might not have entered into it in the process of its preparation. More lemOn juice was then expressed with the same instrument and analyzed. The result of a careful examination of the juice was exactly such ae- was foreseen. Considerable citrate of zinc was found in it. and. although the chemist omitted to make aquantitative analysis, he said that there was sufï¬cient of it to aï¬ect seriously the health of any one imbibing it. and that it might, in a feeble constitution, or if a great deal of the liquid were taken. cause death. An eminent physician states that zinc may certainly be injurio’us when jused in any culinary utensil. Contact ‘with air alone oxidizes it. Contact with a 1 juice containing citric acid forms citrate 01 izinc, which is poisonous. Inquiry of pro- minent hardware manufacturers and dealers reveal the fact that millions of the zinc-coated lemon sgueezers have been sold during the past few years and distributed over the country. POISONOUU LERION BQUEBZB BS. Danger from the Use at Zinc lie-Mm. Olive Logan writes from London to the Philede hie Tin-a thet the great eociel manic ere ie to have one’e hand photo. grephed: The hund poeeeeeee for phc. togrephyâ€" thi- great advantage over the face. thet it is immobile. endie not die- torted by fatigue. At the same time hende ere full of ohereeter. and give indication unmietekehly of eu‘eugth. delicacy. high breeding. coerce evocation,’ etc. My persona, both men and women, have moulds made of their hands, and these they leeve with the glover. who mekee oveeto ï¬t each pertieulnr hand, ea c tmekex' mukee boote for eve patron'- foot. The " etend" or mode of each patron's form towhich gumente ere ï¬tted, tonve the nuisance of "trying on†is becoming e universal poeeeeeion unong men end women 'of feehion. These dummiee live with the dreeemeke: end are e greet relief to An over-much new-dressed femininity. fllvsterleus Death of Three Sisters-The , Doctors aniIMo A Philade‘lghin telegrem seys: Lest night Mrs. insmore. aged 58. henrd e noise in the room of her sister, Mrs. Wet. eon. 52 ysers old. Findin Mrs. Wetson in s dying condition. medics assistance was summoned. nnd Mrs. Smith, euother sister, wss sent for. Mrs. Watson expired in n few minutes. Almost immedintcly Mn. Winsmors fell to the floor in en unconscious etste, end in ten minutes died. Ten min- utes inter Mrs. Smith. the third sister, was s corpee. The physicians were nonpluseed sad the greats“ consternstion spread through the household. The only theory upon which the dseths ere accounted for is thet Mrs. Wetsou had 3 congestive chili, and died from spopiexy which ensued. and thst Mrs. Winsmore snd Mrs. 78mith died Rï¬â€"ï¬Ã©ï¬om prootntion. which caused “hob of but: diam. or apoploxy. There in no suspicion of foul plâ€. â€"Petereon. N.J.. ie enppoeed to pone- more oneeyed men then my other cit in the United States except. perhepe, t - burgh. Ninetenthe of thoee thee minted mworken in iron end eteei, end he†been _etnek in the eye with the metal The In!" laugh-cue: of London. AN ILL-FATE†FAMILY. Ii, Wutmuth on Bunduy uter- _ _hp_ zgport {9.031(1)th on Buy ._ ï¬lms!) with tho LIFE BLOOD or JOHN DILLON WHO 13 D1136 FOR YOU: And'that the chin]: of the vi]. money in you pocket. in the BATTLE of THE CHAINS 01" MICHAEL DAVITT For you BLAVING in PORTLAND PRISON. oxolawhst the hirelins London Time: r{our ndlleat to. 3nd Gunsmnn's won-b bod organ, says of you: “ The smeliontlon My visible in the auto of Ireland, alter A little more than throe months of savers and mm ud- minjgtngion of the Coercion Acts. words 110 om tor 3:0 oumlvos. REMEMBER that thobeg- ï¬uly “ ï¬lling. in the pound" you so: an Reduction: " m Tho lollowing is I. mpy of s lugo hoard, printod in very prominont typo.wh ch in in olrouhtion throughout Ireland: HOLD THE RENTS! Who m 517me 0! can. onwn-r 9mm. AND lacuna. mm? riot Inn Own-om: on anmumo Boon-nor. , But YOURBB‘LVEB.‘ IBIBEIEN I Who no water“ to look Ind accept putty MDUOTIONB, und to lot the men who won ï¬hom to: ouâ€"syo. And who will win much more St you wil but follow them tummy-â€" 301' AND mu m ‘nm'mm Duxalonsl I B I 8 E M E N I When the cowardly And the 30th ' ml you not to mind tho " Buapoou.".but to do the beat you own“: quawlvoanï¬ï¬‚flwï¬n the .bes- miniotntion or the Coercion Acts, words N0 GROUND for BEOEDING. but mm: for PERBEVEBING in the SAME COURSE. . . . . It would be monitomyloomh .to suspend co- ercive moo-uro- tho moment they are beginning PRODUCE THE DESIRED RESULTS!" (m â€mm or um.) IBISHMEN ANT)â€" IBISHWOHEN! Some of ion hove} woody Double'Lock'od the Dungeon Doorl on your ‘ BEST AND TRUEBT FRIENDS. WILL YOU LET common mow.- .51?pr ' SUCCESS? G o D F o n B I n I ’ ' ICE snovn. _ Exciting Scene on in: Ice Ned! Montreal. A Montreal despateh says: The ice bridge brokein front of the city yesterday afternoon. A- thrilling incident occurred, which was witnessed by a large number of people on the revetment wall. A farmer with a team of horses started from the city to cross over to St. Lambert's by-road. When near St. Lambert shore a above oc- curred, breaking up the ice and‘ leaving a yawning gap before him. Seeing his peril he started back for the city, but what was his horror to see, when about thirty yards irom the wharf. that the ice had broken up there, too, and left an open space between him and the wharf. The people on shore discerned the extreme danger the man was in and called the police. who advised him to abandon his team and make an eï¬â€˜ort to reach , the wharf. This he did. He scrambled across detached pieces of ice, and ï¬nally reached the shore safe. His team on a “ dump" in the river was carried down by the ice opposite to Longueuil Ferry. where the "dump " stopped drifting. and was held fast here. Two carter-s volun- teered for a consideration of $20 to cross over and bring the team to shore. and oh their efler being accepted they accomplished their dangerons ‘Iea_t successfully. an_d_the mm departed with his" team'iejoioing. The rive: at night was breaking up feet below; and all crossing has been stopped. When a man sleeps well it is said his conscience does not disturb him But a good conscience will not re establish a system which has been shattered by a con- ï¬rmed cough while Dr. Wilson' s Pulmonary Cherry Balsam will. Those who have taken 1 only a yslight cold and are unable to procure a good 11 ight’e reetare immediately relieved‘ by it. With it at hand no cough can make progress. no matter how predisposed the person may be to lung disepases. If fairly tried no disappointment will ever ensue; It seems specially designed to protect the healthy from disease and to securetothe weak and inï¬rm good health. Buy it. Try it. Beneï¬t by i.t Send it to your friends who need it. They will require no coaxing to buy a second bottle for thelm selves. , Du.) Ramona-n, of the Bradford Inï¬rm- ary. has' written to the Brim}: Medical Journal upon the quotation‘ " Has the dura- tion of human life in England increased during the last thirty yearn?" ' Hie eon- oluaione are: (1) That there has been an increase. which is entirely attributable to the better management and prevention of fevers; (2) that it the deaths from levers be deducted, the present rate of mortality in higher than it was thirty years ago; (3‘) that it the mortality among children an young persons has diminished, the mor- tality among males above 35 and temalee above 45 years of age has markedly increased; (4) that the main causes 0! the increased adult mortality are worry and anxiety. afl‘eoting _ehieï¬y thg__nervour eye; tom. heat and kidneys. The mortdity from disesses of the nervous system hes increased 25 per cent. in thircy em; thst from diseases of the circa]. on. 50 per cent; them from disease: of the kidneys, cent; this i 148 per cent. Alter heving need Dr. Wheeler's Com- pound Elixir of Phoephstoe end Cdiuye over two yemin daily preotioe I must give it my nnquulifled epprobetion. During a pmtioe of twenty em I have need meny scientiï¬c oomponn eprepered for the some indications u the Elixir. but none of them proved ea vtlueblo u this. To the medi- cal profession end to the public I would eepecielly recommend it u the beat remedy for the treatment of thet Inge and constantly inoreuing clue of cm- of over-worked, neryeixheneteg women; Numerous funny belle were given in Puri- es Ml-Ceréme. At one of thou belle ell the Indian were dreeeed ee peanuts. the men n ï¬shermen or rignerom. Mamet of theee lenivitiee wee celled e blue bull; every Indy wore on cure-colored dreee. every men eeky-blue knot on his left ehoulder. Another Indy lueieted on glvinguyellow bull. end every mun bed to veer e bouton‘ nine of crocueee. while every ludy'e dreee m deooreted with jonqulle. " F'norito Pnooriï¬tion."vn speciï¬c for “ fonds oompluntn." By drunk“. ' mgy behrouinod ‘37,- nip; Dr. Pin-cy- Bleeping an a Good Condo-cc. The “ Golde- lloon" at You. A-lm N. Wanna Bun. M. D. Mary Pluto“. Always write on both sides of the per; and when you hove ï¬lled both ei es of every page treil 3 line up end down every met-gin. and beokto the top of the flat pege. closing your article by writing the signature, just ebove the date. How We do love to get hold of utielee written in this style! And how we would like to get hold of the man who sends them. Just for ten minutes], Alone! in the woods, with a cannon in our'hip pogk’etl _ ‘ . __ . Ad rice to Correspondent. The Burlington Hominy: up: Never write with pen sud ink. It in nltogothor too plnin. nnd doesn't hold the mind- or the editors nnd printon closely onough to their work. Don't puncture. We proter to punctuate n11 mnnusori t sent to no. And don't nu capitals. on we on punctunto nnd onpitnllno to suit ourulvos; and your truiolo. when you m it in print. will agonigh even it lg doo- no} p19“: you. Don't try to write too plainly. Poor writ- ing is en indication of genius. It’e ebout the only indioetion o! geniue thet e greet many men poeeeee. Borewl your urtiole with your eyes shut, md meke every word es illegible so you can. We get the sum price for it from the reg-men as though it were covered w_i_h copperipletepentenoea. Avoid ell peiie'ukihg with proper nemee. We know the full neme of every man, women'end child in the United Bum. sad the more» hint ht the nun'e in enm- oient. For instenee, i! you write a cher- eober something like ~e. drunken ï¬gure “ 8," end then drew a. wavy line, we will know at once thee you mean “ Samuel Morrison.†even though you may think you mean " Lemnel Messenger." Couse,hrown wrapping paper is the best for writing your â€holes on. If you on: tear down an old circus ter. and write on the pasty side 0! it wi a pen stick, it will do still better. ‘ When your Article is ï¬nished, erunoh your paper in your pocket and carry it ï¬ve or three days before sending it. This rubs off the superfluous pencil marks und makes is lighter to hendle._ It you think of it, lose one page out of the middle of your article. We can easily Supply whet is missing, and we love to do it. We hove nothing else to do. Time tries all things.wd few are the customs, habits or adjuncts of life thut are nbt pwe‘pj aw_sy hgforq its_rognorseleu mereh. Remedy after remedy for corn: hes been introduced. tested end found wanting. Putnam‘s Painleu Corn Extractor elone holde' undisturbed sway, dgathering new strength as yenre roll on, an holding it with the power thet merit alone con give. Take no substitute. Putnam's Pain- lees Corn Extractor never fails to make a complete cure. Sold everywhere. Pro-Idem Arthur Hung and Burnt In Elm in Gallium.- SA: Francisco, April 5.â€"â€"0n reoeption of the news of the veto of the Chinese Bill crowds gathered on the streets and around the bulletin boards. Expressions of indig- nation. disgust and discouragement were universal, men of all shades of political opinion‘ uniting in the sentiment. Despatohes are pouring in from all parts of the interior expressing a uniform feeling 'of anger and despon- dency occasioned by the action of the President. Some of them note movement-3‘ for the formation 0! Chinese leagues to take legal steps‘to drive the Chinese from the vicinity. Others report tannin meetings calléd,’ end in some cases e President was hung andhurnt in eï¬gya Wm. .H. Wnrei'ng. E|q., Asst. Genenl Supt, Third Division mixing sud Distri- buting Dept. New -York Poetâ€"Omos. in {writing conning Be. Jsoohs Oil. says: yTho reports from the seven] superintend- ent} nod olerks who hove used the Oil agree in proteins it highly. It hos been found efï¬cacious in cuts, burns. soreness end stifl- nsss of the joints snd muscles, and sflords a. ready relief for ‘rhsumotio com hints. Hon. T. L.Jsmes, now Postmaster- nets] of the U. 8.. concurred in the foregoing. While New Englnnd jonrnele ere landed with longmind’ed eflotte to tell where and how women on enjoy the independence for w ‘ioh she is supposed to long, e Weat- em e itor hue solved the problem by eng- geeting the kitchen. If any one donbte the correctness 0! thin view let him invede his own kitchen and ettempt to assert enthority. He mey be e tyrent in the pulor end e nn'isenoe in the dining-room. but in the kitchen women reign eupreme, no metter whether she is e feeble wife or e brewny meat. A' subscriber writes thet he uroheeed e bottle of Dr. Dow’s Sturgeon O 1 Liniment end need it, end it eve him more relief in o revere one of r eumetiem of ve long etending then mything he previoue y bed tried. They are such oomperieoneee these thet meke oomperieone odious to thoee menufectnrere of remedies, eo oelledmhere euooeee deï¬nde entirely on edvertieing and pufï¬ng. e differenoee between theee remediee end the oleee so fltly represented by Dr. Dow’e Sturgeon Oil Liniment is. thet the former gein their sole solely by the edvertieemente. while to the letter the edvertieement is but 3 letter of introduc- tion. and when the ï¬enuinely good ertxole thue becomee known t eoon ie looked upon ee a necessity. Then is no mth in the “Moment in the Telegram am Mr. Buckinghum, of Scrot- ford, :- to moaned Hr. Longmnir. Mr. B. in going to Honitobo. There no lots of plioantn for the position. which will be fl ed in a few dnyl. 0U. P-Oafllllo A. “can we quickly Abundoned with the completion of "mods. no the hugo.dmuo, oathutlc pun, com of man md bulky medicines, m nio ly unnamed with the innodnotion 0 Dr. Piano's " Plenum; fl? tin Polloh,†bhioh m “gamut! .na ml. Inger man mum“! goods, but oompoood of y annotated vegetable «mu. By Iguana. 'rnn CHINESE BILL VITO. Wounn‘l prén 0! Independence. iï¬oï¬ York Pout-once. g; It Sund- the Tell 0! Time 1 “I’m-on- are Odlon. A Philsdelphis despetoh ssys: Miss Mollie Boyer. seed 1']. with hsndsom s es, {sir complexion. snd s weslth o! h tremsmss drenched with vitriol on 8stur- ds evenin ss she wss entering her Is er's deuce, 1.910 Mex-vine street. Miss Mollie was blinded by the shower. snd tell with s cry of sgony into the sum 0! her sister. who hsd come to the doorto sdmit her. The 'rl wss taken into the house. sad the vi 01 so quickly as possible was wiped from her lsoe. One 0! her eyes wss dreodtully burned, snd . rtion of her hair was burned from er hesd. Her cheeks were blistered, end her shoulders were hsdly burned. .Her sister esosped injury. but s new silk dress which she wss wearing for the ï¬rst time was oompletely ruined. The motive {or the ssssult is s mystery. Mr. John E. Keys end his wife snd 4-yesr-old son mug the house from which the vitriol wss rown. Some 0! the victim's friends, who sew the-vitriol thrown, ssy thst they A Ion-MI GM I’ll-[Ind VIII VMI. saw on old lady ,who, it is sup . ws's Mrs. Ke ys. leen out of the storey window, from which the vitriol osme. as though watching the eï¬eot of the deadly shower. The two families ere no. soqueinted. and no trouble of any kind has occurred between them. A werrsnt for Mrs. Key 5 arrest Wee sworn out. The general glint 1s thst she is crazy. -â€"An old treveller having told nnother that when he won in Guinea it we: so he‘ he bed to orewl into his trunk to get e breath 01 fresh air. the second one aid thet in Sen egnl. when the thermometer was st 212 m asthe shale, ï¬hey bed to keep 1 â€"Rev. Dr. F. W. Emu says thot the ‘ e of the word "Christ" from» the eaignation of an oï¬oe to the nuns of n , person is determined by the great lendmuk of the resurrection from the dead, And that the lsndmnrk. obliterated by the suthorized rsion, is restored by the revisers. who speak of “ the Christ.†Every you we hear of more frequent sudden deaths from s plexy. Thee. an up generelly preceded y listleeaneee. dim. nm of eight, headache Ind obetmofaed 130145;". A tim’elynuee of Dr. Wilson'- 4 , _A ‘ _. “31'- _:II Anti -l§ilious end Preserving Pills will quickly relieve these symptoms And prevent so lstsl a result. {iffy}; Varuin 7351611770159: 'they' wanted to b3 The only natural hut renown: in On boline. a. doodoriz'oq extinct of petroleum. prepared without distillation or rectilin- tion with" acid: or slimline, oontdnjtfnï¬o minerals or other poisons, deligh y perfumed end as cleu and pure as spring wster. â€"Sey s the London Truth: Princess Bectrice has just hui a very pretty tire-c mode for her. The meter“? is soft. fawn- colored vicnna cloth, trimmed with striped moire and a new hcnd-woven gold bmchc braid, with buttons to match Al this dress was made with s hcbit bodice we 1_na.y infer the motioned popularity of this _.._.__u 1 have uullï¬ï¬in; bottles Had an wonderfully relieved. I Am now able to ride out.â€" Emumnn Tnomrrou. Montongo, Ark. Dr. R. V. Pusanâ€"Dear Sinâ€"Dost}: won hourly expound by myself and friends. My physicians pronounced my disease con- sumption sud said I must die. I faking your _“ D_isoo_vaty â€_And “ Pell‘sts_.â€__I forin; -â€"A Utioo clergyman had occasion to refer in a sermon tothe prophet Jonah, end the report aye that he delicately .gpoke o_f pin: on. heviog "peered tl_1ree ,spoke of him a huving " passed throo dsys 9nd three nights in the Wilde'sâ€"them â€"§ooiety." â€"â€"A bkby in Damn. England. has been christened Jumbo, dter the human eloâ€" phunt. â€" -â€"The spring lunb is now huving hi- horns sawed, of! end being otherwise drepued to meet the coming green pen. -â€"Mosee Ones, the Toronto wenther prqphét, says the ensuing summer will b. CONSUMPTION CUBEâ€. Mr. Jeremiah Toadvine, of the run! district, bro t a letter of introduc- tion to the nited Stem Sign-.1 om. cer, end by the letter gentlemen was shown the handful scientiï¬c instru- ments for mesmringend determining the various charge. end conditions ofthe weether. Pointing to the land- erd thermometer he expleined to Hr. T. the mo! the heat on where- u n MLT. enxiously inqu if he " adn‘t nuther an to mereâ€"niche nice merchine to not the weether in hayin' and herveet time." His inspec- tionofthe Ierometeror wtndrnetnuer evoked the ex reunion: “Wound: she be the rec et to run the wind mm with." The hemmeter we: lone too meny for Toedvine, endJook- ling quggrly at the anew, gag}: _ -n _‘__-.| .â€" were utter! non tad unl- mptofwo 3a! :"I-‘rlend man ever hue the mantis ’ e ubm cue-of the union In the 0 car. whore l “Nb-never." “Wh:t"-â€"- Ev dent y recollect! himself. Mr.'l‘.stop on the eds» of the th bcre remark. and and: "torn! wanted to know. for If this In: (p0 mm; to me barometer) show-t egood In bndwearhcr tram it’s “me. it would be :bully (up for Me with reumttfs: “my coald An it every time. Up my country when folks bu It. the use 51'. Juan OIL. an' lt’npowerm urgymem in “math-It's the u r dorg In! e um every time." “h “nah for ihonncx cted Informatiomthc cm‘ ciul pol tely turned? .‘ll’.‘T<2m}'-‘;_' o3 auv u- Inf" turmoil )ii’.1‘cml.{ a overo othe n-hermshnwhhn tc-v' e street arnghflp hmlgjkipg om n. A \o.‘ Brunt-I. “uuv luv. lV‘IIll'. vu- . . . mt. rmrl: "Mrs. T. A. Gist, so. “1km: street. Mailldelphla. Pm. wrlum I had lnnzmmator)‘ rheuma- mmx'orybmlly. lnonc fmlnndankle lnccmmmlug-92.1w" hold wmnbo delctmlnaum to my. and the mom- ‘mg 1 ol.mr-_m 5- n. Juana On. I £001an pm n} r u: down to the floor. cwn {‘9 m im'nnt. I and fl muevmlm L»: :1; Hzxulme.md the nu: mrlrnivg {or the mud um. and that Arummn pm my foot down for levcrnl xinnmu. 0n the Band. following I could "and up and VII a few steps. 0n Tuadl could walk about mynmnmrl won dmmn by holdl on to the Mitten}. Nov 1 m h I can val 1am well and vet, lmlept n left. Jun thlnkl on. bottle And a M". and 1 un mm. 00an BB. Weather Signal 011100. THE COUNTRY!“