The Pickens sentinel. (Pickens, S.C.) 1871-1903, April 14, 1881, Image 4

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FLASHES IN FRENCH LITERATURE. TiE world is a masked ball.-Mery. Lova renders women discreet. Barthe. PRosPEarrY makes fewfriends.- Van venargues. PRuUDIcE is thereason of fools.- Vol taire. TEARS are the strength of woman. - Saint Evremond. DEATH is a panaceafor all evils.-Afon taigne. To laugh is characteristic of man. Rabelais. DEVOTION is the last love of woman. Saint Evremond. MAN, I tell you, is a vicious animal. Moliere. GOLD is the sovereign of sovereigns. Rivarol. GRATITUDE is the memory of the heart. -fassien. GOD created women only to tame them. -Voltaire. CoMMON sense is not a common thing. -Valaincourt. ANTIQUITY is the aristocracy of history. -Dumas, pere. SUPERSTITION---a foolish fear of the Deity.-La Bruitqere. THE breaking of a heart leaves no scars. - George Sand. THERE are few things that we know well. - Va uvcnargques. THE cleverest of all devils is opportun ity.- Vielaud. EVERY philosopher is cousin to an atheist.-A. de Musset. MAN laughs and weeps at the same thihgs.-Mtontaqne. A DELICATE thought is a flower of the mind.-Rollin. LET us respect white hair-especially our own.-Petit-Senn. HEAVEN made virtue; man the appear ance.- Voltaire. THE ruses of women multiply with their years.--Lam ennais. WISDOM is to the soul what health is to the body.-De Saint Real. FoRTUNE does not change men; it un Imnasks them.--MmeC. .Ncecer. . JEALOUSY is the homage that inferior ity pays to merit.---Mme. ( Puisiux. li who knows his incapacity knows something.-fargueriite de Valoin. Wi are never as happy nor as unhappy as we fancy.-La Reochfoucauld. WRINKLES disfigure a woman less than ill nature.--Dupuiy. MEN are women's playthings; wOWen are the devil's.- Victor Iujo. HE who tries to prove too much, proves nothing. -Ltena. GREAT vices like great virtues are ex ceptin n ankind.-Napoleon I. (hRIEF counts the seconds; happiness forgets the hours.-Do PIinod. BETTER a man wvitli p~aradoxes thian a mani with prejudices.--J. J. JlI.nscau. We like to give in the sunlight and to receive in the dark.-J. Petijt-Senn. MEN speak of what they know; women of what p)leases them.--J. J. J/ouperau. GOD created the coquette as soon as he had made the fool.-- Victor Jhngo. *WOMAN is the swveetost present that God has given to man.--G yrd . -'ROsPERITY unInasiks ttie vies; adver sity reveals the virtues.----Dider/. AN indiscreet mani is like an unsealed letter--every one can read it..---C1lmin fort. ExPERIENCE is the name men give to their follies or their sorrows----j de Mfasset. A nRUnRLxc is not founded on vru but on the ambition of its citizens. V olta ire. WHEN one has a good day in the year, one is not wholly unfortunate.--Marigue-~ rite deC Valoinq. THERE are people so sensitive that they afflict us with our own sorrows.-. (. Jordan. THERE are no oaths that make so many perjurers as the vows of lov.--I/oChe brune. HE who has neither friend norenm is without talents, pow~ers, or energy..-. Lav'ater. .STRONG thoughts are iron nails driven in the mind that nothing can draw out. -Diderot. To discuss an opinion with a fool is like carrying a lantern before a blind mian.-De Gaston. THERE are lpeople who are almost in love, almost famous, and a/most happy. .-MAme. de Kirudene'r. WE shall all be perfectly virtuous when there is no longer any flesh on our bones.-Marguerite de Vatois. Never Marry a (1rl of this Kind. The settlement of Lower Oregon is going on at an unp~recedlented rate. A German couple has re(cently arrived( with fourteen children, the mother being only twenty-five years of age. Th'ley were married in the fall of 1870, and)( the fol following summer their mnarriedl life was blessed with twins, both girls. Leass than two years later, the womn, who was then eighteen years old, gave birth to four children, three girls and a boy, the latter living only a few days. In the summer of 1874 three more girls regis tered at that humble hearth, andl in 1875 a boy arrivedl solitary and alone. Seven years after marriage the arrival of' an other cluster of four, this time two hoys| and two girls, was an event that c'reatedI some consternation, and two years ago two more little flaxen-haired girls camne to the fortunate couple. THE value of Erie Canal tonnage last year was P800,000,000. The wheat acre age of the West, which principally made this business, was more than two and a half millhon acres more thau in 1879, and a like increase of acreage is expected this year. Althovgh the paid tolls on the canal of $113,000 a year were abol ished, the toll receipts have leaped up nearly 6800,000. The cost of keeping ap the canal is $900,000, and the revenues last year were $1,200, 000, makIng a surplus of over 6800, 000. Before the State of Ne'w Yor~k disimited in favor of the canals their business had run down to 700,000 tons in twelve months; and since that liberalizing of rates, the canals do 2,00,000 tons more business, and there has been a consequent lowering of tolls on the railroads. LFmis short atmost and our duty is to pro long it. Use, thenrr Dr. Bull's Cough Syr up for Congh., Goads, Bronohitis, Hoarseness, etc. Sold everywhens Prios only 25 cent. The Remarkable Story Told About Hartz, the Conjurer. A singular story is told about Mr. Hartz, thle conljurer, which in nearly as strange as some of the tricks he per forms. According to the story, he was obliged to give up his business in May, 1877, having lost all power of action. His flesh became soft and flaky, and the least touch gave him exquisit pain. His sense of hearing became wonderfully acute, and in the room he occupied whioh was on the third floor rear of a house Il Brooklyn, he could distinctly hear what was being said in the front basement. He could bear no light, but his inemory became so retentive that lie could repent all the conversations he had heard in three years. A footstep seemed as loud , as the detonation of a cannon, and he waited with dread for hours beforehand for the report of the sunset and sunrise guns on Governor's Island. He was not able to swallow al ways, and he says lie frequently expected to die from that cause. Sometimes as many as sixteen days possed without his druing. He also ate very little, fasting on an average ten days at a time. His sense of taste was entirely gone, and he is only beginning to recover it. After had remained awake six months, it oc curred to him that it was strange he should live without sleep, and he wrote with a pencil an order to his attendant directing the latter to wake him when ever he appeared tosl eel). This occurred only a few times. His beard grew to a length of eighteen inches, and his hair reached to his shoulders. I-us recovery was more sudden than the attack. One morning recently strength caie to him to get up, and an hour later he was able to do feats of strength thathis attendant, a six footer, was nab1111le to perform. Hi.s skim is still tender, and his flesh resein bles putty or a bursted rubber ball, in that it retains for some time a depression after it has been pressed. The disease isi supposed to have been a disarraiigeneiit of the nervous system. Xvtv Ywnk Conanu rcitti Adielrisr. A New Vice. A number of persons more or less prominent in differeiit walks of life have died in this city withini a few Iimontlis from the direct ceilet, it is said, of h1Vpo dermic injections of morphine. 'The effect of morphine under the skiii is de scribed as peculiarly and wonderfily agreeal)le. A delic(iis aiiguor stv.ails over the friimne, the wei,;*s are wrapped as in a voluptuos'; waki'g dream, and i most joyouis consi1uns of perfect vet fascinating repose softly overflows tle inind. Even strong men nuid woienlu have freq uiently found it hard to resist. its allurements, and have not been able to re'sist its beatitudes without a roulsintr all their will. Oin this I(ecout solo p Ahyicians will not adum iister or pre scribue miorphine uder any circum stance, fearing the coiiseqjuences to their pautienlts. Not a fewv woiein of the finier typ)e have been wrecked by the habit, and many mcen, proufessional and comn mnercial, are steadily ruinin~g themcuselves b~y its indulgence. It was hailed as a great blessing once, and so it is, properly regulated; but, like so many blessings, it may readily be converted into a curse. -New York Times. [lDes Moin es Iowa State Register.] WVe notice the following in an ex change: Mr. G. B. H-averer, Foreman N. X. & N. H. S. B. Co., suffered for eight (lays with terrible pain in the back, almost to distractioni, until lie heard of and used St. .Jacobs Oil, one bottle of which cured him comp jletely. Two Women W~eddedl. The Boston Her~a/d prinits the follow. ing strange story from a correspondent at Dover, N. H., and it is given for wvhat it is wvorth. The wvriter vouches for its truthfulness: Ten years ago two persons were united in marriage b~y a Congregational clergyman of this Statte. The ceremony w'as performed in a small town not mnuy miles from this city. They lived togethier as husband and wi'fe for more than nine years, having resided mn several d1ifferen~t p~laces, a part of the time in this place. A fewv months ago the wife petitioned for a dlivorce on the ground that her husband wvas a woman. On examinat ion it was found to be as she had said. That she diressed in female ap~parel when she first became acquainted with her, but told her she was a man. It was proved that she was the divorced wife of a merchant of Newv York, and had one child.___ [Springfietld (Mass.) Republican ] Edgar T., Page, Esq., Druggist, writes us from Chicopee Falls, that Mr. Albert Guenther, under Wilds Hotel hasi used that remarkable remnedy, St. Jacobs Oil, for a severe case of rheumatism andl it cured him as if by magic. He also used it with great success among his horses,' in cases of sprains, sores, etc., and it cures every time. An Undergraduate's Excuse. An undergraduate was summoned be fore one of the Dons for not attendin~ the 7 o'clock mom ning chapel. " SirO said the Don, "let me hear what you have to say in excuse of your persistent absence from morning prayers." '"Sir" replied the delinquent, " the service 'is ,too late for me, to be present." " Too late, sir I How can 7 in the morning be considered a late hour ?" " Well," re p lied the ingenious offender " wer'e the hour 4 or 5, or even 6, I might manage to be present.j but to expect anman to sit up till 7 o clock in the morning in order to go to church is more than hu man nature will endur -Uhambern' /ournaL_____ Profit, $1,200. "To sum it up, six long years of bed ridden sickness, costinig $200 per year, total $1,200-all of this expense was stopped by three bottles of Hop Bitters, taken by my wife. She has done her' own housework for a year since, without the loss of a day, andlI want everybody to know it, for their benefit."-N. E. Farmer. A Contented Mind. .Lady-"They tell me your cow never b~ves any milk, Betty." Old Betty "No, mum, she don't give hardly any. But, bless 'er 'eart, she'll eat as much as two o' them good milkers!" How many pecks of corn are required for a hen's breakfast? How many hen pecks make a bushel ? .I Could Never EHave Dose my household duties had I not been strength ened and sustained by Warnor's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. Ma. C. V. CAuz4,me w vork Fuishlonable Dogs. "The fashion in dogs," said Mr. Dan Foster, the fancier, to a Now York Sun reporter, "changes from year to year the sane as in women's dresses. I shouid name us the most fashionable dogs at this titme the rough-coated St. Bernard and the English pug. The St. Bernard dogs are rare, but there is a demand for them reaching as far as Colorado. The pups are worth from $50 to $1,000. The English pug is a dog that went and came. He has undergone vicissitudes, he has. Near a hundred years ago there wasn't a fashionable lady's coach in England that didn't have his singularly ugly muzzle poking out of it. He had been brought over by a sailor from Japan. The first strain imported was very black, and went to Lord Willoughby; the second, lighter, was brought over by the same sailor, and went to Mr. Morrison. By these names the two stinins of pugs are still known. Ten years ago they were almost unknown here; now, fat and sleek, they may be seen by the score waddling vith ladies in Broadway and looking out of curtained windows in Fifth avenue. They cost from $25 to $200 each. Col. Sellers bought one, a male, at the bench show some years ago and made the mistake of calling it Clytemnestra. The pug has no voice. He is worthy on account of his ugliness and affection. "Then, for a scarce and fashionable dog, I should name next the King Charles spaniel. He first came to Eng land as a present to Charles II. from King Charles of Spain. I preteud to have a supply of dogs, but I own only a single pair of these, which I keep for breeding purposes. The niale weighs five pounds and the female seven pounds. The animal is black and tan in color, and is worth from $100 to $200. "Then comes the small black and tan, a common lady's pet, with a bark so big that it shakes him all over; ho is worth from $25 to $125, according to his size and marking. Tlhe niall bnll and terrier is a pet of fashionalle men. He is pure white, and is Worth from $50 to $250. And the Japanese pug is a remarkably fashionale dog. He rides in carriages that have coats of arms on their panels. le is rough coated, and is black and white or yellow and white, and he costs $150 and 200. "Did you ever," continued the fancier, relaipsing into the region of soul, "5see it s iot h cOlly? He is as soff and beauti fuil as I drHm. He's got eves like a imaiden Im love. le is very rare in America. Mr. Joe Jefferson, the actor, had one, and I preslune has hin now, that waILS a bieauty. A colly would cost from $*50 to a300. Then, I shall name, to close the list, the Italian greyhound, which is worth from $25 to 'I1 " None receive so much benefit, andl none are so p~rofoumndly grrateful and show such an interest in recommending H~op Bitters as women. It is the only remedly pecu liarly adapted to the many ills the sex is almost universally subject to. Chills and fever, indigestion or deranged liver, constant or periodical sick headaches, weakness in the back or kidneys, pain in the shoulders andl different parts of the body, a feeling of lassitude and despond ency, are all readily removed by these Bitters.--Courant. M rswas sent on an errand to the house of a friend who shows much taste in the arrangement of her roomns. When M. returned, she said; '"Mamma, I think Mrs. A. 's rooms are ver'y picturesque." Then she paused a moment, as if in doubt, and asked, '"Is that the word, or should it be 'catastrophe?'" Cosm, ye disconsolate, who suffer with coughs, colds or disease of the throat and lungs. You can find relief in Cons Hens' Ihoney of Tar, the best cough mnedicine in the world. We mean just what we say. Price 50c. For sale by all druggists. WllEN the intoxienttion of love has passed we laughi at then perfctions it had discovered. -.Nmnon de Nuclos. INDIGESTION, dygppes, nervous prostration and all forms of generl debility relieved by taking MEk4SILAN'S 'EPTONIZED BEEF TONIo, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious properties. It contains blood-miak ing, force-generating and life-sustaining prop erties; is invaluable in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhauistion, nervous pros tration, overwork, or acute disease, particularly if resultimg from pulmonary complaints, Cas well, Hazard & o., proprietors, New York. PIANOS & ORGANS. STIENWAY PIANOS. .DECKER BROS. PIANOS. HAINES BROS. PIANOS Estey the Creat Organ. Shoiinger Bell Organ. For less money and on better termi than any other house. Sand for price lists and catalogues. D. H. BAL.DWIN & 0., Lo~CnT isvRUO ~KICNilly 40*cuean ae fPFV* *" a ANDna A-in No qninire or amneni ed. waa ranted tcure or ony ref'i~aded. send One Dollar for receipt to 0. 8. RoIIBIN, Drugget, Neola, Iowa. $5 to $20 per a at or,-. wo ~1&tJ fr'e. ddress F.s WAIN & o.,uuta,. a ekin rour own town. Term and si ontce fe. Address IH. HA.Rnrr& Co.. Portlanti. AMn UPRICMP' mT -Sample. auut termn' .. L .free foxnur.v .N. 'ox. Warren . a 19PUNand all other UkIn leae afl .Met quick ly cuired. Recipe nu led on tecipt, of 5( cc . h~'pu rcd t iy d uu uI~.. dd~~ I Erskine's Wit. Lord Erskine was a wit and the most Bloquent advocate of his day. His wit, however, was never venomous, but ut Lered with such good-natured courtesy as to disarm those whom it pierced. An old lawyer, by the name of Lamb, was constitutionally timid, and on one occasion remarked that he felt himself growing more and more timid as he grew older. "No wonder," replied Erskine, good-naturally; "every one knows that the older a lamb grows, the more slicepish he becomes." The Duke of Queensberry laid before Erskine a case as to whether he, the Duke, could sue a tradesman for breach of contract about the painting of his house. As the evidence was insufficient to support the case, Erskino replied as follows: "I am of opinion that this action will not lie, unless the witnesses do." The London residence of a distin guished London lawyer was subsequent ly occupied by a hardware merchant. On learning the fact, Erskine wrote the following epigram: " This house, where once a lawyer dwelt, Is now a inth's; alas I How rapidly the iron age Succceds the age of brass." It Often Occurs. A Newtown young woman went with her father to the railway station to meet a female friend she had invited to visit her, and to come by a certain train. The expected visitor did not arrive, greatly to the disappointment of the young woman, and very much to the surprise of the father, notwithstanding his daughter's letter of invitation was in his pocket at the time.-Danburj/ News. GnImooLY, who was in a restaurant freezing over a cup of coffee, spoke up and said to the waiter: "Look here! If you can't put fire in the stove you might keep the stove-door closed. There is an awful cold draft coming out of it." -Gale.ston Ncws. A GOOD FIRDY! STRICTLY PURE (This engraving represents the Leags ia a heeat st.ej What The Doctors Bam! ~ . IO ONa, efLeS. la m. Ii sied wenadeo %~aumfe Ur of "Alin'. u Ui,*naa."A ...a0....iT...i....l.' Al AN EXPE010RANT IT HAS NO EQUAL ITYCSNTAINS NO OPIUM iM*R AFREa J. N. H ARR IS ? 00., Proprietere, ceZerATar,.. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. $OSTET1E CELEBRATED Shooting Chills Down the Back, Dull pain in the limbs, nausea, bliouIses, are sym ptoms of approaching f'-'ver and ague Use without dela~ 1lostetter's Stomach Blit ters, which substitutes for the chilly sensa tion a genial warmth, regulates the stomach, and~ 'nparts tone to the liver. The bowels, the stomach and the biliary glftnd being re itored to a healthy condition, the disease is sonquered at the outset. For sale by al Dr uggists ine Donpe ra ener ly. A B0 BOOKS.32 paes ofamus- SEN'I U ab2outdo"wera"an-d r'd?FRE wt funnytin do II AC.,altimore, Md. LOUISVILLE IYDRAULIC CEMENT, wsed for Construction of Cisterns, ewers and Foundations. Address, VESTERN CEMENT ASSOCIATION, zouisville, Ky. ___ 1.lu Pictoria okad Bile.Puiea redcd pee ink. National Publishing 0.., Atlanta, Ga. - L_7 7 170-re. Adres rown ;doesNOTsTAINthe RISTADfRl' - Iti tard-epatm ~ nd a(avre o eer well PAGENT~S~WANT ED FOR THE ICTOI ..L HISTORY o'THE WAR ryof the 4reaL i av i V r~ pot IaI , iaaad in nar Ea ni pbereona aivet. lii-, t hril ling ia.cien~vts, daring GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR REUMATISM, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, -BACKACHE, G-O "ETT, SORENESS OF TuS CHEST, SORE THROAT, HDflh QUINSY, f SWELLINGS AND SPRAINS, FROSTED FEET AND EARS, AND General Bodily Pain TOOTH, EAR AND HEADACHE, AND All.DDMl PAIMS 17 No Freparation on carth equals Sr. JAcOBS OIL as a SAF, suax, SIMrLE and curar External Itemedy. A trial entails but the comparatively trifling outlay of 50 CrNTS. and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positivo proof of its claims' DIRECTIONS IN ELEVEN LANGUAGES. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A. VOGELER & CO. frt imore. Mid., U. S. A. MUSTANC S vivalof te Fittest. A FAMILY MIDICINK THAT VAS HEALED MILLIbNS DURING 35 YEARS! A BALM FOR EVERY WOUND OF MAN AND BEAST ! THE OLDESTA BESTULNIMENT EVER MADE IN AMIERICA. SALTES LARGER THAN EVER. The Mexican Mustang Lincnt has~ been known for moro thatli thirty-flve years as thle bofst of all Liniments, for fJan an d Beast. Jts Bales to-daly are larger th an ever. It c ur es when all others fail, and penetrates akin, tendon and muscle, to the eybgneSl everywhere. f yu ae a k- fyo r oned by the str ain of rtll{ovri( stin ulantsaand use trbai *'ead Hop Bitters. w~,"oHp3 dI tonare oun and sfeigro ayI poorheaait or an ds n onabdosi nless, rely ou ap o p er whecr you fee uiyf'031010 needa cleansin, to-ssae na~gf wlthout ntarcatiq g, atmlyue take Hop Hpltr mantoferst toreebainouwveyan pepsl, wadste, Ie HoC. thoeun orferrvren cure Ir nu son aa bedofick HopBBiterr. Ifyuaenua lly f racug ply eak andI l s. e lr n iowspIrite tr NEVE pUriter. aved yu dys-strN.Y l .Ylie at cl ach ~ I It.iV I ) t ',iacon I e la, blooin a d i Iir,~ , 1 a Is& ~,d Rereeing th hl t elote haT ortor adsirntedstryo.Sl NEVE tcircular. Jeweyer.y od byr BP HFBOPTIrCAl I IO CO. 18. Matenha ne. 'F'O CO., S AWFUR-~~ I a nI t SLzian e i : tacoon Rep~oresnctingi n ,r the 1 ch Ice selt~v ed Tros shal andAmb.Iii h i h est h ansoe and stronges kn w.taBo~l yt iciansan 508 AM ONlH.Aeant wae pie free. JABRONON. Detroit, Mich (OUNG MEN earn T"2 ,'y an $too 'iOn mes.. Address VALENTINE BROS., Janeaville, Wis 0 'S Cu j R Eo arsmptgone -sa Ou rsee SlAddreat home easily made. Costly ETROLEUM, Usmed and approved by the leadini CIARS of EUROPE and AXEPRTCA The most Valuable FaiRmdy SEI DIurASEI CAT ARtE, EUOSROI) ..Cewghs, Colds, Smr Throat,Croup a Prythem. 35 and D0 went sise o WIAND MEDAL AT TH E PRILADELPMI e. 5ELY mmas. AT. TUBen 14W ... . POND'S EXTRACT. (u ntfole all Hnm rhajs, Acute Chronio. Venous and Atucous. INVALUABLE FOA Catarrh, Iarsein Risensuatlesas, Neu. ralgia, Asthma, JEladaelsQ, 0at. Throat, Tootlache, tbrmees, Ulees, Old xores, *e., a., *0. RTPOND'S CATRREXTRACT No remedy so rapidly and effeeluai'lly arr-ts the liritt tion and disobarges iroin Catarralod Affections as POND'S EXTRACT. COUGEIN, COLDM in the 1 EA 11. NAM -%L and TRIlO.6T InSlUA 11: EN, 1NFLANDI-1 TIONS and At'CU1UL VTi'NM i lithe LUNJAS, EYES, EA IRN and TiEEtti tT. witJEUNaETIyI. NEURALGIA, &c., cannot be tired so easily by :my other medicine. For sinsitive o.nd s vere eaes of 'A - TARNIMK use our C 6TAIR E311 C:URE (7-".) In %I' cases use our NANAL *YItN4JE (2>.-) Will be sent in lots of $2 worth, on receipt of price. xw OUR NKw rAI'AulEwT WITH IlIsTORY OF OUR Par'.rA RATIONS, SCNT FNE ON Arrr.TCATION To POND'S EXTRACT CO., 14 W'est Fouart1eenat Street. New York, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. EIGHT REASONS Why we NEVER sell POND'S EXTRACT in BULK, but adhere to the rule of selling ONLY in OUR own BOT TLES, enclosed in BUFF WRAPPER, on which is printed our landscape Trade - Mark. 1.-It insures the purchaser obtaining the genuine 2.-It ploteets the eonstilloer in) htying Pos's Ex. irstra t not weaketed with iter, ic we founld wal.s toinl a fwv veitr ago, wh' w wIe hititeed to turiisi deales witi the golintine article in bulk. 3 ---It protects the consumer fron ulnsq'rnpulous p'ties selln crutle, eth' -ap ,Cec14 tion to him a l'. ii's tract fkt lany person call toll the :eintlin e from the bnttle ani wrapler. -1.-It protects the consmeir, for it Ia not safo to use I y oither :i the'14 1 d,! 1-) li t014- ,et:on1s givten inl our boo)k, wvnivh stt(~jjI io tels ,j ieh b tt lu of'Pondls Extract. 5.-it prtteets the coni i- r, for it is not a!g(re'enl - to be det-i vol n'i ;iit perl p- iire-d ly using oth''r aticles 6. - No othir:irlich.-, w inan f-tar or imil:0kin has (tho etfi t clhaimitut ftr ail alw:tv pit bit ed by ll'i's Extract. 7.-It is pt ejiiciial to thie iveputaition of Pond's Extraet to hl.l vo p (pl0 " w .1 '% n bliivin. it to.he the itnuine, 1'r they will e ly be di pitp nt t if i t injured by its e 1t 11 t. .-JuA ie to ne of 114, 11te ll ill m yin in the Worl, ani01. th i l V. t Vl th u inth '11i ;t, ti-h a la every lilte itIionlt aga I ie hit .h te ini i ninh r itlu pret a--ye tio 1'nes I m i ri' aid th es n io . 'Tl -x anacy way 0 thie e~ihLLt he ll SOrpisl s t o el hcresse.pt.pi 1a n ita EnS- i- i n ostrown host1C,21Les( , cImplet a i thl Wl-cli; 1 . iituntl LI.I bhotsi', ii ain when t Iit t:4tt o diiltieri wC ih w.tratlw e tob u- l u tv i th 14 h Vs, i Founr eeth Streb.: etw, rprewc~ ,,irkp. Toven u t l.-g.rn xte~~~rru aarh- by poriin. lit ti be , u pe ti i ' ii'il' l.:xt rlyt hoe .u 13. eViuli a11(11, Io in -rottiml l eit h- inl th~einIt rhap iE ieu'o iO ier--p m1 t Irt fr 'ircpeienc e ittin Punps Exractinat e t p et, :ully' contains preparations'sertsses, knnwapoplication.t ert4 We't. Ftoiatn t tre, NeYnt N iwst.1t Yrt. ReCni &i, hmirgoMi'' o.:chiti anyo he arou plnon trIoubles C Qthaty ioten Trubti h0nsumtion ? e . . " ilbr Pu ; C l-ine r o e ," a Co. fri and Denuor, Cho-t, uico.Ah!~ by all' dru nge * Halt fore CireLa Johnster, C'ilt. Mclnt urray..... &, Cf o.n. B R U S H E O. tirtiaJ. lE!1)~ hinobnragain p st cal Ther Peses the cusome Oto u .~reo~le ared o ahow !eflany other Dedet SA~ lekY rsi known toIbe hoyon balo wth91 t GeQheradt empt tinnn. il