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Lucknow Sentinel, 1890-04-18, Page 7DOMINION PARLIA MENT. _nee— , s tsere.we, April, - the Speaker took the .ohair at 3 o'clook. Sir Adolphe Caron, in reply to Mr. Lister, acid that Gen. etiddleton's A.. D. 0. wee park of hie pereonal staff, and as such was eeleoted by the General. Lieut. Eitreat- •field, of the London Highlandere, who was ' recently appointed, was not a graduate of e . the linage 9_444 ,nteete_pieliegeetseetee,,, ,, , ifir=e'ee'etie-te&lifets utietieve sele-Wd a greediutte had he tarnaaen =a isceeekealIee who, wee dialed to the post um. Mr. Davin continued the disouseion on his resolution that it was expedient that a select commission of inquiry, having power to examine witnesses under oath, be ap- pointed to inquire into the management of • the Northwestelonoted Police, and into the neonduot of Cornmiesioner Herchmele horn , . the date of his appointmeet. Mr. Hanle. mer not only punished offences under the Police Act, but age.inet any other Act of the Dominion. In te ' Peted-eveetateneageme a o a , • commander of the British army. The fact was that nobody who lied observed the • career of the commissioner could fail to come to any conclusion excepting that he • was demented or that there were in him •ingraiped vices of charaoter, that the morasek he got power they began to mane lest eGemselvea. Ile charged him with being incompetent, and unable to put a troop through its faxing& He had it on good authority that during the visit of the Governor-General he gave direotione 'that no Frenoh-Canadiaii officer was to be allowed toeeke_anyeparteinethen proceed - bags. He farther charged him with forcing magistrates contrary to their duty to per- form Work. Sir John Macdonald said he had no • objection to the hon. member raising the question, but he thought s great injustice would-be done to the commissioner if the •-resolution were adopted. As to the charge of incompetency brought against the COMMiSeibil_0 Absolutely un- true, because the member for Assiniboia had borne ample testimony to tbe character of th men out there. The charge of in. i effioie tie; was also foundatientless, because the c missioner was appointed in °onset quence of being a strict disciplinarian, a man of a great deal o! determination. • The laxity in discipline whioh bad begun to manifest itself before his appointment had noweliseppeared. The charges preferred wernenerety-gettleored-ripe-ezed-tho-oviderace that had Wen adduced did not warrant snob an inquiry an WWI suggested. He could not concent to a commission of • inquiry. Whenever any charges were • e brought, they were fully inquired intO. , e Mr. Lender said that if these charge!' were true, they would go very far toward° impairing the efficiency of Col. Herohmer. When a member of Parliament made grave • charges against a public officer it could not be dismiesed lightly. In addition to this a mutation of the Northwest Council asked for an inquiry, and that should not be' ignored. He would not say that he could fatly support the resolution, but he thought st least Col. Herohmer'e conduot should be ineeastigateda -but-there weeene-neeeteeity e enquire into the management of the North- -west mounted police. - - - Mr. Maodowall, in seconding the motion, , t thought the charges should be investigated •.-.{r on the lines mentioned by the leader of the Opposition. Mr. Watson •said these charges were almost as severe as those bought against • Gen. Middleton, and there should also be an investigation here. He had heard repeated complaints against the action of • Col. Herohmer. He mov,ed in amendment that the charges against Commissioner Herehmer be investigated, , emitting an • 'inquiry into the management of the mounted police. Par. Daly had not the slightest hesitation • in saying that the bulk of the, chargee pre- ferred against the commissioner were mere rumor. Mr. McMullen moved the second reading of the measure to amend the Civil Service • Ace. He explained that the principle of the bill was that no one was eligible to Civil Service appointmente unless he had resided five years in the country. ' Sir John Macdonald mid that the im- . premien that there had been an undue •preference given to strangers, espeoially if • they. were from the Old Country, wee un- founded. He claimed that in the Civil Service, during the period he had anything o 'to do with publio affairs, Canada had °er- e thinly been kept for Canadians, and he challenged any one on this point. He wonld call the attention of inembera opposite to the effeet of • an ann newel:tient snob as this What ki would e, Bootoh, ieE eglish • and ' I' i eh people my it they had to remain in the country for five years before they were • eligible for the Civil Service ?: Such a measure as thia would tend to lowien the ties between the Old Country and Meade. They expected s teeming population from the home country to,the Northwest. How did they expect the Government of that region could be carried on if they had to remain five years before they could be re- , „peeled _as eligible ft:m.0E0e ? Mr. Laurier said that the principle of the Bill wee inharmony with the principle of the Government.that Claude was for the Canadians. Mr. Chapleau amid that there were 30,000 candidatee waiting for employment in the Civil Seevice of Canada. . Mr. Milts said that there was no great differeficee httween the members on both sides of the House. Bir John Maodoneld asked that the Bill be withdrawn. Mr. McMullen said that with the emir- • sue of the Government that they would not give undue preference complained of, he would withdraw' the Bill. Tho Bill was withdrawn. . Mr. McNeil moved •that the evidence taken in the investigation of Gen. Middle- ton's conneotion with Bremner's furs be • printed for the use of members. Sir Richard Cartwright asked does the • 0-overnment intend to (muse the number of • persons actually present in the Dominion at the time of taking the census to be recorded aa well as those enumerated tinder the de jure aystem ? • Mreelearling-It •ia the intention of the Goverment to take the next census on the dejure system, and care will be taken to, have it acionrate. s Mr. Foster moved thee to morrow the Homer resolve limit into a comesittee consider the following resolution : " That bounty of $2 per ten be paid on all pig iron THE QIIIIIIII:S. YACIRE. _ Joan' MORLEY. manufaetureel in Canada from Canadian t • eresehoetteette OA f2403,t day 9f July, 11.39g,and The Map of iteeters, the Politician 14114 the Fentures of the Floating Palace in "Which 80th use' of Jetta, 1891, inclusive." /friend of Ireland. Efer Majesty Makes Cruises. Mr. Mitohell-What is the bounty paid ' now ? John Morley is one of the few men who The exquiaite oleanlinees of everything Mr. Foster -We now pay el a ton, and excel in both literature , and politics. ma strikes one forcibly on board the Vdotornt that continues in force till July 131, 1892. books and his spebohes sen political and Albert. The deck is laid with cork Sir Riohard Cartwright -This motion problems have won . renown for him floor cloth, over whioh, when the Queen ie throughout the English-speaking world. He seven years' period. That ia a, veg long, now .proposes to provide the bounty for a was born 51 years ago, and is now in the etas , ,, seeseseette etereet". on board, a carpet ie place* and every- thing clue that is to be seen is of tire tstee'eseeet'ki•Wia=4"IreCt-""1"-1111S early education. at Lincoln Colleges i Bement to tie.un the hand!' of ite enooeseore•, Oxford, where his abilities and attain ments drew round him an admiring band of students. An omnivorous reader, he paid more attention to modern writers than was consistent with an aspiration to classiest honors. Carlyle was his master in those days, gays a London correspondent .a the_NoweYork Sunr-and-lettatestannenn his thinking which later influences cannot efface. In the debating society be was a constant and effective epeaker. The range of his reading, the alertness of his intellect TolnignXiiinana. • A Sooteh Corporars-Fishy Yam. - ' The March number of the/Nineteenth Ceen"- tury, oontatne, .under the /title "A NMI, described from the ranks," a well-written and interesting description of Tel -e1.114$4. by Mr. Arthur V. Palmer, who took part in that engagement as ae, corporal in tine 7th i blander •eiTsWeNetii7-rettier carrying the fire • - s . .,-.6 ... i mountings,. There are very cainforteble. works, a general oheck was canoed by time trenobee were &needling, the ezeand line of little sitting rooms on the promenade deok shouts of "Retire, retire." The corperals also a dining room on the promenade deok and behind the paddle wings, and there is continuing, stye: " Those cries of ' Re- whioh has three big Windows and a eky. lire' had been treacherously raised by a light. It is farniehed in grime morocco couple of Glaegow-frishtereis, who had . . and the ceiling is painted in white and somehow evaded tha. precautions that gold. The state apartments below are were in force since the days of Fenian- e placed-o.nteitherseidesofethe they are furniehed with a very pretty -corridor-era - ienreeto- -prevent the' erilititinerit . of dr& loyal ' characterise, They had been proved. chintz. The Queen's Cabins are on the °award's, or sontething. woree on twe starboardnide, her sleepingepartraene con- occasions-, when the reginiente was befero tains.a.large and old fashioned 'but •yery coin- Nair Dewey, and in 'virtue of. in • 0 the effect of such a motion should not extend beyond the continuance of one Par- liament. The motion was carried. Mr. Landerkin said -A person has writ ten to me that he has purohased carload of corn for seed to bs delivered in a few (We. Under the new-tariff,will- this -be brought in free. Mr. Bowell-If 3omes under clause 254, which -els in full force,now, and io the hind of corn mentioned there, and is to bo used e - t Pear ‘t - Mr. Landeritin-How can you tell that the corn is to be used for no other purpose? Mr. Bowell-That is a matter for special departmental regulation. The Truth About Advertising. There's nothing on earth 03 mysteri • ouely funny as an advertisement. The prime, first, last and objeot of an advertisement ia to draw emetorn. It is not, was not and never will be designed for any other purpom. So the merchant waits till the busy season mimes, and bis etore is ao full of custom he canal gejeliie hit ofte-iiidtlien he rushes to his printer and goes in for eidvertising. When the dull season gets along and there is no trade, and he wants to sell his geode so bad he can't pay his rent, he dope advertising. That is, some of them do; but oussionally a level-headed merchant does more of it, and scoops in alt the business, while his neigh- bors are making mortgages to pay the gas hill. There are timeswhen you_couldn't atop peoj1e from buying everything in the store if yon planted a cannon behind the door, and that's the time the advertisement is sent out on its holy mission. It makes light work • for advertising, for a chalk eign on the sidewalk could do all that was needed. and have ai half holiday six days in a week ; but who wants to favor an advertisement? They are built to do hard work, and should be has to be knocked down with hard facts, and kicked insensible with benkrupt re. duotions, and dragged in with irresistible slaughter of prices before he will emend a cent. That's the aim and end of adver- tising, and if ever you open a eitore, don't try to get them to come when they are already sticking out of the windows, bat give them your advertisement right bet ween the eyes in the dull season, and you will wax rich, and own a fast horse, and per- haps ba able to smoke a cigar onca tivice a year. Write this down where you'll fall over it every day. The time to draw busi- ness is when you want businese, and not when you have marc than you oan tend to slrelidyn-The_Advertisers-Getidse A Point for Chronologists. "Do you notioe," queries a reader of the Breakfast Table, "how prevalent the idea is, even among newapaper men, that we are in the last decade of the century?" It is a common error to whioh the cor- respondent alludes, but a moment's thought cannot fail to set tine right. From the evening of the Christian era to the year 10 certainly formed the first decade of modern ohronology, and the second decade began with the year 11. The first century ended with the close of the year 100, and the 'second century began with the opening of the year 101. So the nineteenth oentnry began with January 1, 1801, and will close with December 31, 1900. The last decade of the nineteenth century will not begin, then, until January 1, 18e1. Nevertheless, people for the rest of this year will insist that we have entered upon the last decade of the' oentury.-Boston Advertiser. • Giving Shape to the Feet. Evert' one, but especially children, should wear properly -fitting shoes, no -matter how common their material. They should be neither too large nor too .emall, and ahould have low, flat heels that must be promptly " righted " as soon as they begin to wear to one sido. If the toes of the foot show a tendency to overlap they should be rubbed with the hands once or twice each day ; and if this care be given when the ourving commences, it will, as a rule, • prove sufficient to .correot any irregularities of this nature. If a nail is wayward in its growth, trim ft only lightly at the ailing corner, but fully at the opposite corner. • 11 both corners grow too deeply into the flesh, "blip them carefuily and lightly, and then scrape the centre of the nail from the tip to near the root until it is thin and flexible. This process seldom fails to correct refractory nails - provided, of course, they are- not neglected too len. What ktarted the Fight. Mra. Figg-You little wretch, you have been fighting again, I know you have. What was it all about? Tommy -It was just this way. Yoh see, Jimmy Brown and me put in our pennies together to buy apples, an' I was to have the corm of what was bought in the mOrh- ing Mid he wae,to have the cores of what was bought in the afternoon. Figg-I don't au any unfairness sliced that. Tommy -Yes; but in the afternoon he went and bought bananners. About Pearls. „ 1 4 -„or„,„•[ wi.zwatue_gretio „ .4` a • 0 O••.CcrwardgI4G2V4014011-1": pointed to him ae one destined make hie mark in politica. Bat literature was his and canopy, and next is the dressing room, missioned officers of the company an • which was formerly Prince Albert's cabin, pointed a sergeant and a. corporal to watch flret love. After graduating he qualified at and it remains as he left it, his little writ- tho conduct of these two men in the battik. the bar, but never practiced law. Like ing table end wardrobe never having been ey were charged louse their own disore- many other clever young men of a literary moved. Large maps hang upon the was. _lion, and if thee step became necessary to. turn of mind Morley drifted into journal- The cabins ()coupled by Princess Beatrice Fit them summarily to death. When the ism: His earliest contributions appeared in treacherous doge raised their shout of• (or any princess who happens to be travel - Retire the non-commit:taloned dams. aproined to watch them promptly did' their duty. I saw the sergeant kill one ofe, them with a thrust of hie sword -bayonet and also saw the corporal. fire at the other. but whether he was killed by the corporal's bullet or one from the enemy I oannot un- -dertekelo saye-The rept Viiiiiiiiiiiimotar, that both richly deemed t3 die, in which conviction every hottest soldier will concur." the Leader, the organ of the echool of philo- ling with the Queen) are all of Her sophical Radioale, headed by George Msjesty's quarters, and on the other side of Henry Lama.- These articles led to an the corridor are the cabins of the prinoeee appointment on the staff of the Saturday and a large bath room. The breakfast Review, then in the full flash of its power. room is in the after part of the vessel, and John Stuart Mill was so attracted by some is hung with all the portraits of all the of the ideas enunoiated by the young writer officers who have commanded the royal ehata•hee sought- 'him- -out-and-offere-d- riliT -Yacht. -The . drawing-room•iseforwardeone friendship. Needle:lea to add the offer wee' the port sido and is furnished in bird's-eye gladly accepted. Morley came under the maple, with a piano and several beautifully spell of the magnetic philosopher, and cell- carved side tables. 11 18 hung with pori tinned hie ardent disciple until death broke traits of members of the royal family, and the oonneotion. Morley rose quickly from in this room is a small library. The the contributor's desk to the editor's chair. yacht ie now lighted with eleotrioity, ex - The control of the Fortnightly Review a cept in the Queen's own osbins.-Londort .magazine devoted to the exposition of the • Truth. views of cultured radicals, was placed in hfs hands. The limited' emcees of tne After -Bina the 'Zood. venture must be credited to leek of Byrn- During the delivery of his reoent great pathy with its subject on the part of the speech. in the House of Commons, Glad. periodical -reading publio rather than to stone brought tears to the eyes of one of any lack of ability on the part of the pro- the leading legal members, and at the close inciters. In 1880 Mr. Morley gave up the a member of the Government, a pro - editorship of a monthly to undertake that nonnced Tory, said : " That is the greatest of a daily. For three rare be guided the speech we shall hear in our day." The destinies of the Pall Mall Gazette to the Grand Old Man is the Issfand the greatest extent of writing its leading articles and representative of his sohool of oratory. lendin it the authority of hie mune An When he dies there will be ne Eegli e i or in a or inary journalistic sense of statesman to pronounce Ruth a eulogy over the word he was not, nor could he be. He hint as he delivered em,the occasion of John had not the necessary breadth Of view or Bright's death. The modern parliament. sympathetio touch with the news of the tary style, the main oharacteristio of which day. One idea possessed him, and ex• is to speak in a business kind of 'way with pressed itself in his editorial articles over both bands in your trouser pockets, loud and over again -the idea that now domin• enough to be heard ata distil:lee of eight or ten feet, due well enough for the discus- ates his political epee:thee-justice to Ire. don of a cow by-lew, but it in a failure on land. Men liked in those days to read the articles for their literary form and tare great oocasiont and tor groat purposes. finish, but they paid no heed to their mete Gladstone is the last of a school of perlia- sage. Morley did not, however, losa heart. mentary orators that has given lustre to the Eeglish name, and when he pames He kept pegging away at his favorite topic, until the time came when he received an away we shall have nothing but a genera. attentive hearing. „ • tion of mere talkers. -Canada Presbyterian. Morley is more a matt dr letters in the ,• old-fashioned sense of the term than a • A Cargo of Cats. journalist. It was only the force of cir- atThhLiverpool, oast arrived from Alexandria ouinstances that drove him into the whirl by ehe steamer Pharos, a con - of newspaper life. His beat and endpring eignment of nearly tweuty tone of oats, work has been done in the quiet of the numbering some 180,000, taken oat of an ill:leery. The books he wrote on Voltaire, • ancient subterranean 'nee cemetery discov Rousseau and Diderot are masterly ered. about 100 miles from Cairo- by an sketches of man and events in an intensely Egyptian fetish, who accidentally felt interesting and critical period. 11 10 under. into this otits' cemetery, which he found stood in literary circles that these, are but completely filled with oats, every one of preliminary studies, clearing the way for which had been separately embalmed and what the author hopes to be his greet, dressed in cloth after the manner of Egyp• aohievement-a history of the French rovo- Lien mummies, and all laid out in rows. intim. Two of his English biographies, The oargo was sold- at aastion, perfect his " Life of Cobden " and his " Edmand specimens fetohing 3 to 5 shillings apiece. Burke," stand in the front rank of that de- 1 he l ulk, however, went at aboat £6 a ton, partment of literature. and will be used as fertilizers. Many of those who followed Mori -eyes career with interest thought he made a Migrations of Big Maine G911310. mistake when he turned his baok on letters Some of the Maine hunters report that and took to politics; but they have had the caribou are fast leaving the Maine time to ohangetheip opinion. Daring tho forests and are going north into Nova flve•years of his Parliamentary life he had Scotia- John Darling informs,. us that achieved a name and position unique John Frauds, or the Vont Brook region, among his fellows. Careful study of the and Capt. Barker. of the Rengely lakes, problems of the day, power to clothe- his two ,well-knewn hentera, report that the arguments in strong and exact language, caribou ,hare bean healing their localities and the transcendent ability obsraoter- for the. past five years, and now only a istio of the man united in placing him stray one is found in the woods. The deer almost at a single leap in the front rank on the centrary, are growing more plenty in of members of the House of Commons. in these parts and are feet leaving the His honesty , and consistency go nu. elacbias and the Union river region. The challenged even by bitter partisans. huntere are enable to assign any reason for An se, enthusiast, • with a strong these movements of game. -Bangor Com- truE0 in human nature, heseeks to promote mercial. Way the Cat is jumping. the welfare of the sons. and daughters of • toil. He has told us that that he" counts Mrs. Longhed Baokstreet-Didn't your that day basely passed in which no thought brother Henry's second wife have a cousin is given to the hard lot of garret and hovel, to forlorn children and trampled women." whose Mater-in:law lives in Chicago? , Mr. Longhed Bakstreet -I think so. Thi a sympathy with the poor found strik- ing expression in a recent speeoh addressed Why? to a radical emulation in the east end of • Mra. Longlied Bakstreet-Well, it drilla' London, in Which hnettid : me 'twould Ws good plan to find out where "We shall not make the world over again. ebe lives, and invite her to spend a week • with us. Then, after the fair opens, we We shall not turn this London purgatory into a paradise, perhapte it -your lifetime or oan take all the children and go to Chicago in mine; but we oan go L;i1 ,trah the work for a good long visit. See ? by making beginnings and by trying expera Mies Panncefote, the eldest daughter • ments in now directions. We want to give of the British Minister at Washington, is to those who plow the ground, and who, in said -to be the best walker among the 'adieu the sweat of their brow, sow the seed, a of that city, where walking exercise is now rather handsomer share in tho sheaves , the fashion. when they are reaped. Wo want that these who weave the garments shall not them- "There are two very important things selves go cold. We want some means by in housekeeping which are frequently over - which, when a Man has toiled hard all his lootzed," says a -housekeeper. " One is, pay life, has been prudent, thrifty and self -de- a8 yon go for proviaions ; the other, seeing nying,-we want, when old age comes, that the meat you order oat, trimmed and his last days shall not he a race bet weeuhie weighed, the groceries you bey weighed or life and his savings, and he shall not be measured." oppressed by the dreadful and eruct anxiety blue and black is a fashionable °om- itted hie life may last longer than his little ' • savings." The political career gob rned by such idealsand enstained b en ability cannot fail of brightnes and h r. Editors lust be Cautious. Pearls are • carefully taken out by the A subsoriber. sent the ten command &here, sold to wholesale merobante in Month to 'a New Jeremy editor with the re - Bombay, who wrap them carefully in silk quad' that he publish them' in • bis papers and ship them to their agents all over the He wrote baok : " Under the circumstances world. Tho difference in the price paid to we mutt dooline to do it. It is true the the original pearl fieher and that paid by commandeleets were written several thou. an American lady to her jeweller on sand yearn ago, but if we wore to publish Broadway or the Rue de la Paix amounts them some person would be aura to think to about 50 per oent.-pot more. they were alined et him and ' come in ned ees siok of my profession. It you only knew Dootor-Tell you the truth,I1 tnholtrtilY has to be • atop his paper. Camden Post: • about such things:- e e ..s, . e.ORSivistTtoti ublisher of a paper e • how many fools dome to me for advice— ameasimar • Amotattemartzriammatope CU RED Frankleigh-I never thought of that before, Tho Soottiah eovoste are to entertain t it 0300 relent f991.111Jao.t.-- .the Lord Mayor of London tobanquetTO .TuF EDITOR ta Moore inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for 04 a on above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured, n the haloyon &Lye Of yore the mar- tho oemesion of hie offioial visit to Edit- I shall be gjad to send two bottles' of my remedY ',nee to sny of your readers who have eon ' ge took entice ; now the nuptiala mow. fitt‘rgh_E_xhibition, ., sumption if they. will send me their Sicpress and PoStOfficeAddress, Respectfully, T. A. 81.00101% . — — --- - --- ' ' --• - - '" -"- --"—"--------r--- esfitteeieletereratineaseitildie testeeeteittOerree ettiet•Aniete - e ' ' --" — - et : ' e - - - - -------'ees-- , .e. . • • ea Alas, how changed! The rosy cheek is pallid. ag the dead, Andfrom the eyes that were so bright arolhalair light hasfted. Life EMS no joy for her to-cliiy; grown old beferev her prime, She waits in hopeless suffering for Aljek_swittr._. • comet te-- hen death shall set her free From poor, sink wonian's misery. • Bali! she knew what wondeital our- es Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription bait effected in worse oases than hers, she would clutch at the chance of recovering lost health as drowning men mesh al strawy, and she might be saved. A Sign of Spring. elrateioung y- • etas March and April. • Second Young Lady-What'S the mats ter " It's too early to expeot to be asked to, take ioe-cream after the theatre." " Good gracious! What's the matter with. fried oysters ? They are in season until tbe. 191 of May." 'When 1 Was a Bay !" is an expression every lad has heard hia father use as a basis for bombastic! self- ° adulation. Bat the boy of the last quarter of tho. nineteenth century may retort. " when yon were a boy, and had an attack of _greena I nenantonetene,eten nee ge___ Take ce/ome and islap, but I am treated tie Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets, sugar-coated, and just as nioe as oh000lata caramels; no blue mess and omen oil for me -I'd rather fight it out with the pain r Mr. Carnegie's Fortune. Mr. Carnegie is 55 years of age. He had less than $100 twenty-six years ago, but since that time he has made $56,000,0001, of which he now holds shoat $30,000,009 in his own right. resides at 5 55th street, New York, and is ethe largest iron end steel manufacturer in the world. - Baltimore Sun. - If you don't want to disgust everybody with your offensive breath, care your catarrh neon whioh it depends. 1e501 re- ward is offered by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy for a oase of Catarrh which they osnnot care. It sold by druggists; 50 cents. • The Hatter with Then. -" Some gymnasts are too freeh," remarked Arnold'. aa he looked at an exhibition of tumbling; " Yee," added Constable, " and somersault. D. C. N. L. 16. 90. ........................,0v.................. -....-,..4................, 7 ' ULSION: • Of Pure Cod Liver Oil and HYPOPHOSPHITES .of_Linie. and • Soda Scoff's Emulsion txdrZere ilioaact wonde,izclneflor'tescho, pwsdunoerrap., TItlisOZ Scrofula, Etronchitis,Wasting Die- • u IS:10:e'rR. oases, Chronic - Coughs and Colds. PAIL.A.TACBILE AS MILK. EinAlvilOitlisl itliytniliotnunPorills:balernti7tunteio°n17.. • Sold by n1I'Druggists a t .50c. and $1.00. The Doehees of Fife has a reputation' • , saver e BOWNE, Belleville. for making butter. , 'I.44 V AR When I say Cure 1 do net mean have them return again. 1 MEAN A1RADICALCURE. I have made the disease of Fano merely to str,p them for a time, and then , Epilepsy or Falling' Slickness a life-long study. 1 warrant my remedy to AiCiAre the worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at Post Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and It will cure yon. Addrets •--41. la, SOOT) THOUSANDS Of BOTTLES WVEN AWAY YEARLY, .1141.1,M•In 14,9N19$1190A9 isee „