Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 November 1886 — Flirtation in the Woods. [ARTICLE]
Flirtation in the Woods.
Flirtation in the woods is always a more serious and impressive thing than in town. You’ll see a couple come gradually together in a camp or at a hotel by the seaside. As much as two or three days will elapse before any special affinity develops itself. Then youhl see the little attentions of a delicate nature; they segregate from parties flrst, not too obviously; then they take to kind of devoting themselves to each other; then they get taking strolls alone, and the seriousness becomes imposing. The other campers or outers are very respectful; a compact seems to exist that flirtation shall be respected. But the demure air they both put on is awfully funny.— San Franc sco ClironicU k It has been claimed by some writers that hundreds of years before the time of Columbus, navigators from countries in the east snd north of the Mediteranean Sea sailed to the Atlantic Ocean, and they were driven by tempest across the ocean to the continent of America. The Northmen made settlements in Greenland, as they had previously done in Ice 1 and; but these, after a period of more than a hundred years, perished, and when Columbus set sail on liis eventful voyage they were forgotten. Mrs. F. W. Ingham, 472 West Madison street, Chicago, 111., recommends Rei Star Cough Cure, a few doses of which gave her entire relief from a violent cold. Price, 25 cents. t . A physician wrote to the Medical Itecord that he had found in a swallow’s nest a young bird with one of its legs thoroughly bound with horse hairs. Bemoving the hairs he found that the leg was broken, 'llie bird was then let alone. The mother bird bandaged the leg again in the same way, and the broken leg made a good recovery. —Hr. Foote’s Health Monthly. For dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of spirits, and general debility in their various forms; also as a preventive against fever and ague and other intermittent fevers, the “Fer-ro-Pliospliorated Elixir of Cabsava,” made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic, and for patients recovering from fever and other sickness it has no equal. Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses of Piso’s Cure for Consumption.
