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Lcto. Mrs.
pM•vnz. fr th<.amb^tfcg*« «
Adflm* V. ELL8, R1CHA - AON & CO., Burlington,
My Poor Back!
That'S the exclamation of those suffering with rheumatism or kidney trouble*. In
common there will tonga no
either disease Paine’s Celery Compound will surely effect a cure, and no
cause to complain of “poor backs.” Hundreds of testimonials like the follow*
any grand old remedy, Paines’s Celery Compound:.
ing confirm our claims for that time night,
“ Two weeks ago I could not sleep v more than an hour at a any
constipated and kidneys did not act, /Jk. and had a good deal of pain In the
was WPS fw Compound the pain has left my back,
back. Since I took Paine’s Celery SL West Windsor, Vermont.
and I can sleep like a child.” Zcnas Sanders,. unable
it Ilavlhg been troubled with rheumatism M jWK| for five years, I was almost
around, and often con faS mt f fined to my bed for weeks at a time. I
to get was very |fp|? besides outside advices, but to no advan*
have used nearly all medicines imaginable, Eft pound advertised, I it trial. I have
tage. Having seen Paine’s Celery Com gave a
used only bottle and am perfectly cured. I can njw jump wound and feel
one Six for $j.oo.
lively as a boy.” Frirnk Caroli, Eureka, Nevada. Price, $i.oo. t
Sold by Druggists. Send for 8-pagk Testimonial Paper.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors.
BURLINGTON, VERMONT. ^
Possesses many other important prepared Advantages Foods. over
BABIES CRY FOR IT.
MAUDS RELISH IT.
Makes Plump, Loughlne, Healthy Babies,
Regulatea tho Stomach and Bowelo.
WELLS, wme 'mniSR'lsnS RICHARDSON S P ni' CO., IORURQTOII,1fL_
Baby Portraits,
A Portfolio of beautifttt baby photo portraits, printed sent
on flue plate paper by Baby patent bom within process,
free to Mother wants of any these pictures; send at a 01100. year.
Every Mother nakno and,
ago.
RICHARDSON & CO., Props., Burilngt on, Vt.
WARM WAVES'
Are rolling in. You can’t escape them; but you can escape the sleep,
less nights, loss of appetite^ and languid feeling that result from drain.
ing the nervous force by muscular or v mental exertion in sum.
mer’a torrid days, The * J ] use of Paine’s Celery r
Compound, that great >* \\ * nerve tonic, and will fortify at once it
strengthen the nervous vjF system, debility. This
against the attacks of summer
preparation is a medi jl cine—not a drink. It is a
ecientifie combination of tf I the best tonics, giving lasting
\ benefit to body and brain,Vs, It cures all nervous diseases,
and has brought new life k and health to thousands ,whose'
weakened nerves were ihel ' cause of their many ills. It is
especially valuable at this l \ season, when feeble persons are
so liable to sunstroke; » disease which is nearly always ]
fatal. Paine’s Celery \ ^Compound, by restoring perfect I
health, almost entirely re si moves the liability to this dread <
disease. If you feel the effects of summer’s heat, you can’t afford to j
delay another day before gaining the vitality only obtained by the ’< /
use of this great Scud for medicine. eight-page Sold by with DruggitU. testimonial*. fl.OQ. Six for $5,00 . 4, j
paper, many
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO. BURLINGTON, Vfi
Pm?* X
/
r'. &
ffi 2
wknftojtheHenma^S^S^t \the celebrated -nerve tonic."*
A healthy boy has as many as you, but he doesn’t know it. ■ That is
the difference between “sick” and “well.” , - -* fr ■
P--* : Why don’t yijiu cure yourself? It is easy,' 1 Don’t wait ? jPaine’s ^
Celery Compound will do it Pay your druggist a dollar, and enjoy
life once more. Thousands have. Why not ^ou?
WELLS, JUCHAmOH & CO., Proprietors, Burltiytonj m
- ----’r .ng 'rrr?' -~*
^PERFECT COMBINATION 11
' haiwMsrwgMiable remedlesthat will restoiwtnewfiole healthy eetten,
Of system to
to cure any disease for the diseal-i SmbinAtiON: that affects one Reafthe organ
J Compound is THIS PERFECT proofs
SWTTnusness and
aid able s i/elertM
; H,jt Stfil oh, how it help me f'lhrti “ much 3 —tin your „
MiW.J.J
, CELERY
'
■ a' ■M
h. SxkassA 3 , Letter Carrier, Jt.
ALL 0 vrmm Jr v
h«umat!»m,Pafalysb »yTroubt«,Femal# C j*, m
ad all
(Ceivy ri
r
' Tm bill ►
WITH o ri
D«DtB'
Superior;
Strength,
Fastness,,
Beauty, AND
f /(if «!-■<>
i Simplicity.
// f | I.
Warranted to color more goods than any other
dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and
durable colors. Ask for the Diamond, and take
Mother. 36colors; to cents each.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Vt.
For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, U 3 E
DIAMOND PAINTS.
Oold. Silver. Bronte, Copper. Only .&# to Cents.
sequenceof her busffira^ n f ^“ n
real reason why he theoontmo\ andhwV
sidcd so much on allow her
tho queen's refusal to of
donee at the drawing rooms member XL
sovereign German family, from a Ge
mall point of view she wus just what as
“high and mighty” as no matter
Mecklenburg-Hesse valid or Saxe excuse Coburg. for the
There was no inexplicable,
refusal, which seems the
when it is remembered how mor
ganatio son of a younger Hessian
princelet is being foisted people. as high roy- Her
alty on the British believed the
maiesty could not have the
story current ftt Mmnhcim about
Princess Mario of Baden (Duchess of
Hamilton),beingasupposititiouschild, substituted fora prince with
and denoting the
malformed head, timo appeared in
from time to Napoleon’s
grand ducal (or before had
Margravine) family. If there
been substitution a boy would have
been slipped into tho place of theal
leged idiot. Tho Mauheimers, Stcpli
whose city the Grand Duchess
anio used to reside, had some
explanation to gfVe for tho substitution
of a girl—or at any rate, one that
satisfied them.
The “true heir” was never a went, com
plainant. He was, the story
found one day-full grown, helpless, and
undressed, liairy as an Orson un
able Grand to quit a Ducal crouching park. posture—near Altogether
the animal than
he was more like an the a
human being. How ho got to
place where ho was discovered vocabulary nobody
could ever guess. His
contained but two Hauser” words. "Caspar the
Hauser.” “Caspar to question, was
unvarying timo answer it supposed every that he
For some of was theorists who
was tho victim somo philosophy
wanted to prove Locke’s
by experiment, and who had kept him
without any sort of experience other
limn that of a hole in which he was
brought up in solitude. Those who
found him put him in human train
in<? {Jo brightened up, took, in his
Sunday clotlics, a distinguished air,
was mild, tractable and showed gleams
of memory extending far back to a
few oases in his desert life.
Speech was coming to him as he
was assassinated. This murder caused
a stir along striking the Rhine. resomblanco Caspar to Hau- past
ser had a This, perhaps,
Margraves of Baden. of substi
was "the reason why an.d the believed. tale How
tution was told of Hamilton’s
ever, tho late Duchess poisoned by the
early married lifo was
queen’s refusal to treat her as a p«n
cess of Baden, The terrible misfortune
of the rest of her life was a terror of
internal cancer. Sho and fancied believed Jbessetf she
liablo to this disease, its by
was preserved from ravages through her an
doctor, who, practice.—Cor.
J/ni<p* pat^^iage, fcStaudard. won a great
I Ml** *««'»*'«’
JOEXi Severn! tribes
leci according as tno
wttfro scattered over a territory. In
this respect it resembled the iaiiguage the
of Great Britain and Germany in
time when there was little communi¬
cation (distance between persons living at some
from each other. The lan¬
guage of no.Indiari been tribe represented was a jargon, to be.
as it has often in verbs and grammati¬
It was rich expressive,
cal forms. It waij very Ip
clear and learned comprehensive, mid easily understood. was
The readily language of the Algonquin
under- group
stood was the prevailing most parts one of the was continent.
on
tained As e poken about by 10.000 the words, Ojibways it has it been con¬
called tlio poast language of tho In
dlaus, for the reason that some of the
most advanced of nearly .every tribe
could speak it. In some cases this boys lan¬
were sent to a tribe that spoke
guage in order to learn it. It was like
the French diplomacy. touguo in Europe, The Sioux the lan¬ lan¬
guage of
guage was acquire, mor# .complex but and more and
diflttcult to stronger
more One copious. understood
portion language of the was continent. Iiim- on
every p'resaed tho of vision and not
that of‘jb<K}riiig. organ It not expressed
was
by sounds! ft was the language By of
signs. It was «mry expressive.
cated means of far it ideas the could popid ,be communi¬ reach.
as ns its eye could tell much
G.uo skilled in time. use lie could call
in a very short a
person to him who was far beyond tho
round i;is voice. If he could catch
tho could cyo,<V' commiffijeate fbo jiCrson secrets ho wanted to him, be
w hile those around him would be in
entL c ignorance of ibem. IIo could
give warning to a friend without at¬
tracting Jh« notice of others. A con
vorsation «s»a!d Iw carried o,» in
Sign JangwegfeT between two couhl jieredBS not lx? so
far apart timtit^rvoices fep^uaw could could be be
CW.-. rrki Tho * 6|TH It not
tnttsf in lore or wtg. v.us of
io gestures Efery or part potions of tho
the the jfduwon.
.tions. vassions, Jov^ hato,
asi ivell as lau^tblo the sign -ttn&ps. Ku^ago.; ex
ES, iSrdwetl by A —^
cv <m»*K
tbo it
fires were .■ for
atices. An
i S
ui
of
they wci^iscotere^ by tli^LurOK
human alphabet.-- CTcaUiess^s ThdAmer American In
ftU by Elijah M. Hames.
aian.” CREMATION.
» WOMAN ON
_--
ne i leTC9 „ Higher civilisation wm
V i0 lards.
Abolish Grave
, ias ])( . cn t fc 0 custom conservatism
io \men a sentimental
reg*^ burialtr refonns ^ j i retarded, n our methodsof hitherto,
the o9 iaa of cremation, *
Their p antlt V en t in favor claimed, is not
based upon\ igm , it is
entcrOLy’fty i iyf rionic or economic dis
views Interfere them, but to
inclination■ with usage,
Custom is tho which tho masses
of hig, women undoubteev are w £th accusation worship
and the
is true of the order otV. mCn w } 10 are
(swayed by emotion anv^hose j u <lg
bent has not been tranfu by e duca
tion and cnlarged tliejugher opportuiVpg. typo Many
women of Hw given
the subject no thought ;«theraw. rc tly
approve it, but keep silence «V u gh
dread of shocking the prejudice. 0 f
those about them. foomo Ameiiovn
women—from subject—are dispassionate earnest conteitv acl
plation of the
vocates of cremation as a necessity mjuryto of
the age, made manifest through by the
the public health over
crow ding of grave yalds adjacent to
largo cities,
Justice
b6 the factor which will lead the mar
jority to accept tho conclusions of tho
minority regarding cremation. But
tight ideas will not prevail umver
sally until the costly show grounds— to
bp now held in veneration—are proven inllu
fences pest will places. Then the sanitary sentimental
overpower which continues the coloniz
(ng ignorance of in graveyards which are
already corpses within tho limits of cities,
our
A higher civilization than ours will bo
tishatned manifested of the vulgar in the and ostentatious of the
display helpless dead. Cremation, name by increas
ing our respect for our feilow beings,
will mitigate this evil, and it will cor
rect to another monopoly—that of which Americans of traveb seem
.Ing enjoy a the country to
corpses over
I liseomfort and humiliation of tho liv-
5 ng. Surely it is debasing to our ideas
{of such this honors, immortality, do of tho to lifeless spirit to flesh, pay
as wo
'even though it be clothed tor a brier
fepace in the likeness of a loved one,
Could we bo. Induced to reflect how
‘brief a space it is in which the body
remains as wo put it away, most as
mmlly we should prefer its Wm* speedy
dissolution human body by is no longer animated , by
tlio-lifo giving principle that individu
alized it, is it not merciful purifying to swiftly ele
resolve it to dust by the
inont of fire] 8o 'claim many who
considcr.dtir burial .customs hoalhw
j s h and utterly inconsistent with our
ethical, Spiritual and sanitary views.
go think‘tho women who herein as
gether sumo the in responsibility the interests of pf enlightened uniting fe
S(ion!-S„,aC.'ilSr Airadp. y K”
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f^nioueind . Bill j , experience tweparation fp^ppea&’W c,t in more tbo
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The Sd?MUi« of enoh . notice every petente.
as&USspBmm *11 patentees end title four of »w*rrmvouM«np«o months for
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work done with toot and intelligence e-~
5 co n considerable comnaiaaiOEBin ineome. Agent* aeinglei:.
buudrod dallars in
•od Incus na ^^rspnpmace personsl respoasifciUty. Enqu 3
at ths nearest and lean that
la the best known (fiymtimpiii tmd .
scent and conveying for jdaUna to advwtlsjri tte
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