Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 April 1896 — Page 2
jtPTLON. Givon by a jcialist.
of the IVoplo Horoxi« Frictarcs of He Some Means ‘reveutlou.
STORMY PETRELS.
lOTHE,
OUTH
o«a wav rioKrrs am aoto 1 Cents a Mile - month oven Vnm
it.lb a nashvillb m. m. iU on the First Tuesday, and — n or more on the Third •onth, to nearly all id on special dates sold at a little the rourd trip, write to j. Agent, ClHm 111. ss. Agt., LonUTiiie, ly.
FREE. .• Map of the South to re named gentlemen, Pass Agent, in charge -Hiratiirg-nam, Ala.
Or. W illiam Murrell, a frlish siK'cialist, entitled lures ou tlie Prevention of on,” has just lier-n published ju and is attracting much ntthere on account of its being an tly practice': work, and because .tenlive measures which he proy. , have been thoroughly considered unci are readily applicable by every one. In this country, according to the latest statistics, more people die ft uu consumption than any other disease. In the eeu'nis year of IskO-’QO there were over 10^,000 deaths from litis disease. In Knglnnd anti Wales, Dr. Murrell says, from 50,000 to t.0,000 people die annually from consumption, and another 50,000 from other tuberenlous diseases. In the 33 years from 1848 to 18S0, the number of deaths registered as due to phthisis, or consumption of the lungs, was 1,703,027, the majority of patients being comparatively young adults. Dr. Murrell states that perhaps the first great need i* tliat the public should realize that consumption is an infectious disease. Th infectious nature of the malady is rccogniz '<1 by all doctors, but even the educe ted public are on the whole lamentably ignorant on the
subject.
If it were once realized that all forms of tuberculous disease art* due to the presence of a germ, the tubercle bacillus, and that the germ or its s[)ore8 may .pass from the tuberculous patient to the healthy and there set up similar mischief; and that it is possible to prevent the. passage of the living germ from the diseased to the healthy, a great advance would have lieen made on the attempt to prevent the spread of
The Young lUrCs I nil of OU unit tseil as
Lamps.
It is no wonder seafaring men all regard the storm petrel as a forerunner of disaster. Not only do the queer, low-llitting, dusky birds seem to love the tccinpeetuouH weather, but they come out in the greatest numbers just before and during the particularly violent hurricanes. When no other bird, large or small, is in sight these weird fowl, like so many imps, skim low across the white-caps and hover close by a ship until its superstitious crew are wellnigh frantic with dread. Many of the older jack tars, indeed, believe that the petrels, hustend of coining with the storms actually call them up or still them at pleasure. They weave many wild yarns about “"Mother Carey’s chickens,” and tell you how they never rest and never fly to the shore. The English channel islanders even contend that the eggs are. he’d under one wing until hatched and that the voting learn to fly the instant they emerge from their eggs. The real facts concerning the petrel’s life and ways an* full of interesteven if in accepting t hem we must rudely shatter the fondest traditions of the fo’castle. One reason why nothing of its nesting habits was known until about •10 years ago \\ as because it chooses only the remotest and most lonely strands for its home. On the deeply indented shores hf Nova Scotia thousands of them nest every year. Cape Sable and the Mud, Tusket, Shag. Ciannet, Johns and Negro islands swarm with their clumsy young in June. A cleft in the wave-washed rocks, a water-worn niche, the deserted burrow of a rabbit or a woodchuck or a muskrat, any sort of ti scooped place, is good enough for the ]ietrel. It is abundantly able to dig a suitable cavity for itself, however, if no lazier way out of the difficulty presents itself. Only 12 or 14 inches deep are those hollows, just deep enough to hold Mother Petrel and her babies and protect them from the gales that sweep the coast. The mother Jays but n single egg of a
the disease. Speaking of the dangers
of infection Dr. Murrell says on the dull, lusterless white, very large for tihe authority of Dr. Ilermajin We lie r: size of the bird. She. sits on it almost "The following is the history of 6S constantly for three weeks, while the persons, male or female, who, with a j mate brings her food from the sea more or hss pronounced consumptive Only at night does he feed her, and after taint, married healthy partners. The the young one is hatched it, too, only wives of 39 became infected, and the j receives nourishment after dark, husbands in more than one instance in-j All day long the birtls are winging fected more than one wife. Thun, nine ! over the sea, searching for something to
G. M. BLACK S m, Sale aa3 Fsafl Slat aklin St., near northe st corner public square Best Livery Rigs, armors’ Teams Fed. Horses Boarded. Call and see. tf 2
DR. 0. C. 8MYTHE.
DR. W. W. TUCK SR
SMYTHE & TUCKER, Physicians and Surgeons Offio., Vin» itreet, betweer WMhinston and Walnut streets.
b'’. II. Liimmeivs, ’V\\\^%ycvvv\\ wvu\ Svvvaecm Ofpicb—In Central National Bank Building
l 1
W. <4. OVERSTREET 0. F. OVEKSTKEKT OVERSTREET & OVERSTREET
id musnc 1 1 a t e»
Special attention given to preserving the natural teeth. OSi.-e in V\ illlamron Block,
opposite First National Bank. oT 'w\ r*c3 d d
—Physician and Surgeon. Office, Roornu 2, 3, 4 and 5, Allen Block. East Washington street; reHidence. Walnut street, ’ast west of Commercial Hotel tf jiTANTED —Several trustworthy geflCi'emen f) or ladies to travel in Indiana lor established, reliable house. Salary $7H0 and expenses. Steady position. Enclose reference and self-addressed stamped envelope. The Dominion Company, Third Floor, Omaha Bldg., Chicago, 111. 16146
MAIL ft A V TIME-TABLE* BIG- FOUR.
..... 2:39 a in
9:13 a m
BAST.
No. 3d Daily i “ 4, Ev Sun 8, Dally . 4tl6 p m 8, Dally 5:21 p m
WBST.
•5, Daily. 12:32 a n, 9, Daily. 8:50 a m 'll, Daily 12:42 p m *' 5, Kx Sun 5:57 p m No. 38, Night Express, hauls through ears for Cincinnati, Neiv York and Boston. No. 2 connects with trains for Michigan divisions via Anderson and to Cincinnati. No. 4 cou>ects for Cincinnati, Springfield, O., and abash, Ind. No. 18. Knickerbocker, hauls r<'igh sleepers for WaHhlngton, D. C., via l).,dUid through sleepers for New York > N. Y. C. K. R.; also dining car. New ties illumiu&ted with gas on all trains. F. P. HUE8TI8, Agt. r AN DALI A LINE] •ct Keb 18.1898. Trains leave Qreencas-
h.
FOB TV]K WEST. , 9:0n a m, for 8L bony ... 1:35 pm, “ * 12:26 a m, •* am, P m,
m.
husbands lost, between them 18 wives in this way, one having lost four \% ives, one. losing three, four others two each, and three only one each. The hus-
bands who married consumptive wives Nearly six
suffered less, for of the husbonds of
29 wives only one was infected. f’Bergcret also records a remarkable
instance of tlu- oommunicability of consumption. He relates the ease of a soldier. healthy and without hereditary taint, who, suffering from a trivial ailment, was sent to a hospital. By chance he was placed in award between two consumptive patients. He speedily developed symptoms of the disease, and was sent home to his native place. Shortly after his mother, two brothers and a neighbor and his wife became
consumptive.”
As to the methods recommended for preventing tha disease, they may be gathered from a perusal of the conditions which are favorable to its spread, and from the observance of a few simple rules. Overcrowding, deficient ventilation, bad drainage, a damp climate, dusty occupations and insufficient sunlight all help to induce a condition of ill-health which renders the subjects of it easy victims to the in-
fection.
Thus has been strikingly illustrated in England many times with soldiers in blirraeks and with the inmates of prisons. Tuberculosis also occurs in epidemic form among animals kept in confinement. One mode of spreading the disease, which is often the cause of Ur* Infection of children, is the practice of kissing on the. mouth. “This reprehensible procedure should be most earnestly discouraged,” says Dr. Murrell. Other means of prevention which the author says lu? cannot too strongly re -onnnend an*, the thorough disinfection of the rooms tuul clothing of consumptive patients, the isolation of pati mts in an advanced stage of the disuse, the inspection of cattle, the prevention of overcrowding, the condemnation of all Imck-to-back houses, the iejection as an article of food, of the intik from tuberculous cows, and the regulation of dusty occupations so as to minimize the dangers arising from them.—Chicago Tribune.
Stick farrieil Word Across Atlantic. In the records of the hydrographic office is preserved a very remarkable story, illustrating the eccentricity of the ocean currents which the bottle papers arc designed to trace. On the 2d ’“mber, 1892, the young ' niith bf Cunua, •eilp, was the ■*•1.
cat, oftc^i flying miles off shore. Carefully do the old birds watch over and feed the cottony, tumbling, weak little baby jietrel for four or five weeks.
months elapse ere the
youngster can shift for itself. The parents feed them with a rich oil which they secrete in their stomachs ami so thick and fine is this fluid that the savages of the far north use the poor birds as lamps. Killing them, they thrust a hempen wick down the throat, and, pushing it down as f ir as possible, light the loose end, which will burn for
hours with a clear, bright flame.
In reality, when the seamen fancy the poor waifs are following the ship to bring her bed luck, they are really looking for the things which the cook may throw away. Any sort of refuse is eagerly gathered up and taken home to the lonely baby. Silently they pursue the vessels for a whole day, waiting
in patience for a morsel.
Only at night do they cry, and a roost weird and plaintive note is theirs. Pitifully it rises above the low roar of the wind and the booming of the breakers on the shore. * “ve solitary lookout in the bow at nYj.it often draws his oilskin closer and w histles loud when he hears that fateful wail, lie shades his eyes with a big rough band and peers more anxiously into the blackness ahead, for it bodes his ship no good to be followed by Mother Carey's chick-
ens.—N. V. Joi.rnnJ.
MAGIC RAYS.
DIFFERENT FORMS OF SWORDS.
Woudorful Possibilities of Pxient gon Invention.
tho
It May Kecam-i of IiU'8tiuia , »!« Value In the itleilh at Frofea.iloo for the lie.toruMi/n of Sl^ht aiut Ueariaif.
Medical and s ientifle men generally have been studying more or let’s on the workings of the X rays, as presented to the world by Koenig .i. So far, the discovery has only been utilized in the art of photography, but : acre arc many who believe that it can be made of great value in the commercial and medical world. One of the most ardent believers in this idea is Dr. P. J. (ribbons, who has devoted so much of his time to the study of electrical questions. The other morning when u reporter called at his office he was engaged in preparing to make some ex-
periments.
Tn an interview with a reporter. Dr. Gibbons said: “I think that if there was more work cud less talking done in connection with this discovery it would be well for the scientific world. To Itoentgen belongs all the credit of bringing this before the public, but 1 believe that before many weeks have elapsed Nicola Tesla will startle the world with some of his discoveries
along the same Una.
“I believe the cathode rays are pure electricity, which has been abstracted from the air or space and driven through wires into a vacuum, and that they are making efforts to gain back
from the vacuum into nature's space, i . .i ,, • ... , , , , . , to the all-important matter.
The cathode rays travel m a straight' . ,• , ,
, “‘Did you feci any peculiar mental
line, instead of waves, as other light,I , . ,' .... “ or emotional sens.itions last evening’
and makes acute changes in its course j ( j
similar to those pursued by lightning :^ blushed violl , Ilt , v U nd I was sure t has a gravity which is heavier tha su |. je( . ti , ,,' )I)0sal haa llit
than oxygen and n tendency to fall j ‘
the same as lightning. It ‘''■•■now dl( i voll know anything about to prove what I advanced morej u? . Bhe 8omw .hat
WOOED IN THE SPIRIT. I’.y hl<’ Phenomenon Which l.eil to the
Marrlai;e of a Dotiple.
“Four or live years ago," said a bachelor ia conversation vv ith a reporter, “I had a sweetheart that I was deeply in love with and wanted to marry, but 1 was afraid to ask Icr. At that time I was making a study of psychic phenomena and that sort cf thing and it occurred to me to make a psychical proposal by projecting my subjective mind around th- corner to where the gir! lived and fixing it up all ready for me when 1 should take my objective mind around to have the affair ratified. 1 went to see her one evening and I felt sure that if I asked her I would get her, notwithstanding she was alsiut equally interested in a friend of mine, whom 1 shall call George. Hav mg doubts as to my courage, 1 determined to make a test next evening, instead of going to see her, so I retired early that is, about nin" o’clock and, according to formula, I exerted my mental faculties to their utmost and directed all my mental energies upon the girl and willed with all my (lower that she accept me. For half an hour, fully, I shut out every thought but this important one anil went to sleep, or into a trance, under the mental strain. 1 awoke an hour or two later and felt that my efforts hod been a success and that it would be all right next day wh-n 1 called. 1 felt sc encouraged that I went hi sleep an 1 dreamed beautiful dreams of her until morning. At three o’clock next afternoon 1 called to make my real proposal. I talked to her on some trivial subject or other for half an lioiirand then came
than a year ago, that electricity has, . .
1 believe that if we make " ,,,,
The Kupior, Cutlns, Saber, YataKhnn, Scimiter and I'laymorr. The rapier was in general use on the continent some years before it made its appearance in England, where, it must be said, it was received with scorn and ridicule, as being much too effeminate a weapon for any se!f-rcs[>ecting son of Mars to trifle with. The cavaliers of France, Spain and Italy, however, were adepts in t he intricate science of sword play, and used it. with a fatal subtlety. The cutlass, which we read about in (’apt. Marryat’s stirring tales, and in the thrilling stories of the exploits of pirates on the Spanish main, was short and rather broad and flat in the blade, which had an exceedingly sharp double edge. The yataghan and scimiter licnr the evidence of their oriental origin in their curved blades and suggest the ancestry of the saber. The saber is the most important cutting implement of modern armies. It is distinguished from the sword proper by the. singleedged blade, which attains its greatest thickness at the back, and is grimly suggestive of thedirc effeetsof a swinging cavalry charge. The sehinvone—a notable sword of the Italian soldiery— 'rried a conspicuous guard, extending •un the quillona to the pommel, formg a In.tftiee-work of metal bands that ubjied the plaiting of osiers in a This basket-hilled sword, as ’ailed, was so closely allied to ore of the Scotch Highlanders ’ v e frequently been misother.—Mary Stuart
•holas.
val, Brained. of veal prepared iiy be made of ions, bread ami covered baking s, onions, celery lot with bits of .unrt of water or ly, basting occaurs. Dish up on ''ed and seasoned * ’•'-it o£ brown vt.
gravity, and
the vacuum of Crookes tubes out of j lead Instead of glass that we can retain I electricity or X rays in the vacuum I ami then we have a tube of pure electricity or X rays. I think that if this vacuum is of a large size that it will increase its weight to a slight degree, showing that it has specific gravity. “I have been experimenting not so much on photography Wirough the human body us to make the discovery useful for optical vision. I have for many years in my practice thrown lights into different, parts of the head for the purpose of discovering foreign substances. In this l have used largely a small incandescent light. If you hold your hand close t(«nn ordinary incandescent light and hold between the light and your hand an opaque body, ns a spoon, or a knife, you will see t he shadow of the metnl object through
your fingers.
“One of the most useful places that I believe the X rays can be used is in the medical profession in the restoring of sight and hearing. As you are aware, persons often lose their sight either because the eyeball is destroyed or when the eyeball is perfect, because the optic nerves liecome diseased and are destroyed. It is the same way with the ear. We lose hearing because of the destroying of the ear proper, or, where the ear i.s (icrfert, by the loss of the nerve of hearing. If the optic nerve or the fierce of hearing is not destroyed, but the eyeball or the ear proper should lie destroyed, 1 believe that we will be able in the near future to make an artificial eye or an Instrument to take the place of the ear, by which we can utilize the X rays in such a manner that it will convey to the nerves of sight or hearing the same impression that the normal organ does at
present.
"The eye is a camera, and it is through the action of the X rays in the air that wo are able to have impressions carried to the retina. When the sight is destroyed we must lx* able to discover something to take its place. The blind, bocause of the X rays in the air, can distinguish light from darkness, and if a powerful light is placed in front of them they can easily tell it, because tho X rays penetrate the optic nerve or center of sight in the brain. 1 believe that if we can ar.ake an artificial eye v. bicb will Is’ composed mostly of chemical substances which have the same effect on the optic nerves with the aid of t’.ie X rays that sight in such cases will be restored. “I am convinced that in the commercial world in a very short time vve will be able to speak on the telephone and see tin* person at thoothorond that vve are talking to. because of the reproduction of the forms through Crookes tubes by means of X rays.”— Syracuse (X. V.) Herald. roe't Munnsrrlptvs. It is the irony of fate again that the man who lives in poverty should have written lines which to-day bring large sums. An offer of $500 for the original manuscript of "The Kaven," has been refused by the owner. The manuscript of “The Kells" sold at auetion-not long ago for $275, and five-line notes have brought from $35 !♦> $50. The first edit ion of Poe’s poems, printed in ! 827,isnovv very rare, only three copies being extant, so far as is know n. For GO years only one copy was known to exist, and this was kept in the locked room of the British museum. In 1392 another copy was found, and, although its intrinsic value was not more than ten cents, it sold fit auction for $LS75, and the purchaser sent it to Paris to be bound in mosaic at an additional cost of $300. The third copy was discovered recently i ml no doubt will be sold for a large sum.—N Y. Journal.
‘Oh, that’s all right,’ I smiled, triumphantly. ‘What time did it oc-
cur?’
j “ ‘Kenlly, I don’t know, but it must , have 1h*oii about half-past nine. 1 remember that. 1 thought, it odd that tin- | clock should strike just as it happened.’
“ ‘Wasn’t it remarkable?*
“1 was coming to it by degrees ami
wanted to see just where 1 was.
“*Xa. I don’t think it was,’ she answered, indignantly. ‘George has always loved me and his proposal last night was quite what I expected. We are to be married in June.* ”—Washing-
ton Star.
WOMAN'S WEAKEST POINT.
Wliy Stic Can't Always Compete Stu-a-ees-
fully with Men.
The man with weight on his le can’t hope to win 1 the race. A ma with a weight on hihealth can’t expec to compete in life! and business with those who arc not h a n d i c a p p e tl. A m-iu who spends two-thirds of his 8^ time in business, nnd (Rone third of his time sljg taj//being sick, cannot r'-* be expected to ac»<* cotnphsli more than two-thirds as much as tin man who attends to business all the time. If his brain is heavy, and his blood sluggish, because of constipation. he will not succeed in doing any.'""f. v v r y rnstipation is the; cause ot tiim- tenths of all siekn -s It isn't considered sickness by most people,"but it t- just the same. It is scri ms irkness, because it causes almost all of the ill health of mankind. Symptoms of it are sallowness, listlessness, poor appetite, r-wir' bad taste in the mouth, diz'“•Vinesa, biliousness, and lassitude. Constipation cun lx- cured easily and certainly by the Use of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They are perfectly sim pie —perfectly saf ■ They are not at all violent in their action, and yet they are more certain than many medicines which are so strong thal they- put the system all out of order. Che great advantage of the “Pleasant Pellets’’ is that they cure permanently. You don’t have to keep on taking them. You don’t acquire a “pellet habit.” Take them regularly for a while, and you are cured permanently. After that, take them only when you find your-; self suffering from indigestion. There are | many medicines offered for the same purpose on which druggists make a bigger profit For this reason, some druggists j Would rather 11 th- other things If your own health is of more importance to you than the druggist’s prosperity, you will. sist on having what you ask tor. In Japan the wealthy cUsses regard It bad form to ride a horse faater than a v* •■ The reason a dog can look so knov because he cau’t say anything t<;,
effect.
Kick stomach means sick man I Why not bo well? I Kic k stomach conies from poor ' nourishment; means poor health, fort. Shaker Digestive Cordial me]
and a well stomach.
If we could examine our stomach \ understand why it is that so little w]
out of order.
But, unless we are doctors, we our stomach We only feel it. W e wl it less if we took Shaker Digestive < r Khaker Digestive fordid makesyov
Iieh digest all the nourishing food Jt
relieves all tho symptoms of iudi
wets as a tonic Slid soon makes you \ \
strong again.
The more you take, the less vou wifi
your stomach
At druggists. Trial bottle 10 cents It behooves every citizen in city, towi country to keep posted on the stirrlnger that will oce r in this country nnd in tht World within the next nine months Th suits will affect all, personally-direc tly o directly. This nation is on flu- eve of
most exciting presidential campaign in history, European politics are in a very c
I am not^eontvtit to merely make | fhe C D t dUcovJ,%.^ n o l many lines thst wIPr,
woman of progres-j duce startlingly new things, id study constant!v ! -_Tj ,vi . th ".’e world
in addition to
one bho
the local or coui
money, for I am a
sive tendencies, and study con»tantly |
in order to perfect myself in every de- 1 paper, a live metropolitan niwspper, sue' tail of my proton, for <>'6. -lental ^I'^rt^steurn^^fn t^Dnll art has made vast strides durmfi’ the States, and in each issue it gives the lat last few t ears, writes Dr. Carrie Wolfs- P 0 . 1U ! caI "*‘ w ? ofal1 Parties in the field,
latest general news of the world and m;
aluahle
HU I’leasnre Was Modified. , “1 shan’t wear bloomers any let.jfer,| said Mrs. Bickers, decidedly. “I’m tflnd of that,” replied Mr. Bickers, who detested the garment. “No; the next pair I get wfii be ‘’•ree inches shorter.’’—N. Y. Herald.
last few years, writes Dr. Carrie Wolfs-
bruck, an eminent dentist. valuable special features besides, fids mo, 1 have no desire or intention to be- "ewspHiM-r >* delivered twice-a-week by ma
. r “ ro nly *1 a year, or less than one cent
little my own sex—far from it—for 1 copy. . believe that they can compete success-1.. 1 he price of the Daily and Sunday Reni , t ’ - M » .1 , • lie has recently been reduced to only t i fully in almost all of the professions I year by mail. \
hitherto usurped by men. There are,
Rheumatism Cured in a Da’
therefore, certain limitfitions, physical rather than intellectual, which are to lie considered. A woman should
“ Mystic (’lire” for Rheumatism ancl ralgia radically cures in 1 to 3 days action upon the system is remurkuh'
, , , . . ,. .. | mysterious. It removes atone* A,"ca/ fitted by temperament-, inclination and- the disease immediately disappearphysical adaptability for the work, oi dose greatly hi-netits, 76 cents,
she is likely to be a failure. Dentistry
Christian Science,
Coupled with Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup PiV to relieve the stomach and bowels anfi
digestion, will almost,
sure you get Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin i, and then your faith in Christian Helen
mav be unlimited.
is a profession, not. u trade, and there is always something to lx* learned. I must lay peculiar stress ou tlie incapacity of women for enduring fatigue, for that is the weakest point in
.. „ , . niav be unlimited. Sold the armor of our sex. With hygienic I boit es, at W. W. Jones.
living, aided by physical training, tlie next generation will probably be equal to all emergencies, and will be capacitated physically as well as mentally to compete sidt- by side with their male coin|H*titors in whatever calling they
elect to enter.
Young girls frequently come to me for advice. I give them the benefit of my experience, and, while I do not discourage them, I dislike to advise the taking up of a profession which, while it may prove lucrative, is exacting in the extreme, taxing the mental and
work miracles. J
ill 10c, .50c
it nd
Smftl
An Editor,
Of Clarence, town, M r. Clark, writes! “Hin*»i \ the agency of your Caldwell’s Hyrua Pepsin f was establish, d here 1 have been « user of what I can call 'that excellent medicine.' Fur a year or more I ban- been troubled with constipation, indigestion, dyspepsia, etc., and I find that this remedy is just what I have needed.” Sold by W. \V. J ones. 3m51.
When Baby was sk-k, we ;-aVe her Cn torta. tVhen she was a Child, sho cried for Cant/iris. j When sho became Miss, rha clung to C. is torts.
physical capacity to the utmost limit whanab.had ChBdroo.ahefiavetbom Castorta.
of endurance.—Godey’s Magazine.
FOR THE BABY.
It is safer to live near a powder mill , than to have a temper beyond c<j I<V
trol.
Five hundred trading vessels leav, the Thames daily for all parts of the '
world.
Every sermon ought to have something in it that the devil would try to
answer.
Milton was quiet and ’eserved in conversation, but thoroughly refined
and well-bred.
1.1st of OifiH Which Are Always Accept-
able.
Baby's pusher is u little table appointment in the line of neatness and good manners, and is very pretty withal. Its delicate handle, flower-deco-tated, i.s readily clasped by the little hand to aid in putting tlie food on fork or spoon, thus saving the use of the fingers, which in turn would soil bib and mask. The modern baby is not
without perquisites.
The bib clasp is either in gold or silver, in design a Hov er, butterfly or
lu by face, ami in method of service A good man is kinder to his sn much like the ordinary stocking sup-:'.I* “ a , I n ? 1 ei ' l4re to their friend, porter- an ornamental center connect- .* , ,, ing by links two clasps. j ]j B(1 mpn a | wayH h at e the l - * ’ The latest Teaspoon, also used ns ajgood men would enforce,
nursery gift, is very beautiful and unique in .shape, the bowl in grooves like a mandolin, the handle beaded in
tin arabesque design.
The sterling silter porringer is a favorite bestowal of godparents from the fact that it can be kept and handed down through many generations. Plain silver is now the fancy, and especially noticeable in the porringer, which is with heavy, smooth bow), and short ornamental side handles. The bowl and plate for actual service is also with smooth, highly polished surface, and richly bended edges. Thtl silver cup, if up to date, is an exact reproduction jf the common tin kitchen cup, except in price! Its convenience of shape to drink from, the polished surface easily kept bright and iXt
• tleftxV
Tho greatest truths are simplest; po*
are the greatest men.
The man who would be strong in
mind must food on facts.
appearance have mad*-- it popular a» lahy nppo-’tnent, Chicajj^ Ji^ -^ lr
It*/ ■vS
Ocean.
I
them.”
“ Foi years 1 had siiffcrcil from falling of die womb, intlanunation of
the stomach, and weakness of the
female organs.
“ 1 used Lj/iiia E. I’inkhavi’t Vegetable Com-
pound, and
found a perfect cure In ilj for these troubles.’’ , „ Mbs. Lizz.ir j J DbCmne, ‘224
Grand Street,
Jeriey City, Ne i.u Jersey. v
