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The Sentinel, 1882-03-31, Page 7s a - saa-Sias Res cotatetnaliPTItsfeft .VOITTAtilegia startling Facia Abeiet the Dagease—ilow . to "Avoid_ Catchisig — In view of the. fact 'that consimantionis- 'the most destrootive of any ot the diseases to Which flesh is heir in Europe and- . America, classing from 15 to 20 per cents of ' the'deathsthat -ocaour, the question, f-Consamption ' Contagious 7" which Dr. Clapp, of the Boston University. &hoot of Mode -sine, :bap chosen for the title of a. volume in which he maintains the affirms- • tive with great, cogency- and Calmness, and with an array evidence that is very• impressive, its `one of _immediate . and startling. interest. Afterpremising that he uses the words phthisis and taherea••• .losia synonymously with coicattroptionrend. the word contagions in the broad_ sense - ;of ,c_omixtunictabIe, transmissible or catch- .' ing, Dr.Clapp gives 8. historical sketch . of the opinions that have prevailed on the • sOlect fromthe earliest thnestfrera irhieh- RAppearti that almost all the celebrated Medical writers from Hippocrates (400 Aristotie-t330. B.C.) and Galen: (A.D. .180)„down to 1780, shared the belief that consuraption is, toa certain extent at least, , contagious. But about a hundred years ago & reaction set in against this hitherto. • almost universal belief, though the old belief, Somewhat modified, never lost its t hold—the celehreted Drs. Cullen, of Eau, burgh, Reid Luta lIeberde_n, Of London, ROA, of Philadelphia, and Darwin, the author of "The pothole, Garden," and his, ecu Charles, among other eminent men, atiltadhering, to it. It is proper to say, 'however, that . later in: life, . Dr. • Rush announced that his views on the subject , had changed, and maintained that, except in rare eases, it* net proper to ascribe the causation, of consumption to contagion. Dur- :st‘g the early' part of the present centery. opinion was divided on the subject arn.ong the most eminent physicians, the majority, ' denying that consumption is contagious,' ..althouOh even those who held the negative Most firmly -quite generally admitted that . greater preoaution- Should be obseryed.thati was. Usually exercised by attendants upon ,.conaumptiae patients, especially by nurses, husbands and*vet ; that extrarae caution, should be observed in the use of garsnenta and Mattreeseswhich consumptives shad. used; and that the same bed, or even, the same sleeping apattinent, • should. not be occupied by two, persons, one of whom was known to Isher under pulmonary COLURILOP.; Within a tell' years, however, re- newed atteption has been , given to! the subject, * andas e. result of a . sterna ,of *Se. scientific'• investigations, °9n - ducted by Men of admitted high . qualifications, the, Medical profession, ns - eluding some of thesniest eminent patholo- • gists—notably Prof -mare Cohnheim, of Loipsio; Schuppel,'of Tubingen; Chauveau, of Lyons, and .Drs. Villemin, of Paris, and Merest and Andrew Clark, of Loudon—are largelyadoptingthe conclusion that costs aumption may be contracted from persona who have it by inhalation of the . germs of the virus, by swallowing them in food, by inoculation„ and by eating- the flesh or. drinking the . milk of animal's suffering " from phthisis or tuberculosis. Dr. Clapp 'supporta this ocsacinsiOn by ss number of reports of illustrative casco .furnished in this. Country and abroad, and by a sum- mary of the result's: of the experiments, of a.- number ' of eminent investigators. He stiaty titta An Interesting, chapter showing the possibility that, tuberculosis may be transmitted by means of the food beef Luld:. milk—we consume. The practical important results which a jedicious, agitation of the subject they eecnnearethefellowing: 1. Thatiao'person; particularly if young, should be. allowed to sleep in the, game bed, or even in the same. room-, with a, consumptive. '2. That no person should be allowed to remain for too - long a time in too dioae or too conatant attendanceon a consumptive. 3. That ventilation, as perfect as possible, should, be secured... 4. That the Moat -rigid inspects tion of all the meat that comes into our markets,. partionlarlY at the slaughter- houses. and of all the COWS, which furnish milk, by competent and trustworthy ofl Mats, shouldbe insisted upon as essential to the public safety.--1,1airp-ceadouthly. * "7.1tra.mossiss' riddles. asnallr Acquired. • • —With a view to the fitness of things the St. Thomas City Council have selected "Mount Misery" as the site for ft pest house. . Ward. THE CANADIAN NORTHWEST. Not so Misch of a Marriage Boom After, All. CRIME IN WINNIPEGOTHER NEWS Sixtyinamigrants arritied at Montreal on Thursday en route to Manitiabit. — The Canada Methodists are building a third. church in Winnipeg. . • As rauch as 400 has been paid for lots three miles away from the business centre of Winnipeg. . The Kennedy 'family are expected in Winnipeg about the middle of April to per- form, for a week. • A. train left Montreal over he Great Western Railway on. Thursday 'morning for:Wirtnipeg. Some 150 persons' were on board, all front-- Quebec. During the late' storm the evil most dreaded in Winnipeg was fire. Fortunately no conflagration occurred.' Had lire broken oat- in the northern part of the city while the storm was raging it would almost cer- tainly have been swept out of existence: A gentleman who was 'purchasing horses in Toronto ca2a vioinityth ship toWinnipeg- received a letter a fe* days eince stating that there were 1,700 horses in the market there unsold. The majority of them were front Ontario. He will send his stook to the Western States. . , • . The salaries to be paid to the officers and men of the Northwest Mounted/Police force, under Sir John, Macdonald'e-Bill, are asfoflows Commissionerof Police, 2,60O,0 assistant do, 01,600; each superintendent, 01,400 ; eat* inspector, 1,000,0each sur - gam or assistant, 1,400,0each veterinary surgeon, S700; staff constables, 01.50 per day; other non-commissioned offibers, 01 per day ;•and constables 75S Per day.. Mr. Thomas Walters, who keeps a hotel in, Winnipeg, was in Toronto yesterday,. He says that at junction of the Assini- boine and Red Rivers a number of (moves hotels are -being erected. One on Argyle street will be capable of holding a thousand people. The.ordine.ry eanVaa hotel will be twenty by seventy feet, containing six hun- dred yards of duck. . • The crush at the Winnipeg Post -office continues without intermission. Sacks of mail matter lie unopened for several days, though every one in the office is working double time. The registry office is not rewih better. The press of, business in -so 'great that the clerks took bewildered and weary. The Registrar himself- kokeutterly fatigued with the load of work and wealth he is earning, in addition to the hailsatorm of fees that his showered upon him for the past ten months. He has been immeneely successful as a epecuIeter. , Thespeciat correspondent of the Dundee Advertiser sent to Manitoba_ this writes a Canada's in comparisonwiththe States, is eminently a religious country., The 8- cadlock bell lingua; in Winnipeg on the Sunday' morning reminded 'me of horde. At the same time, though there is a differ- ence between .the American and Canadian, there is ansainerioan tone about many a tlie people. I saw an advertisement in a shop window in Winnipeg to the -following effect: "'Boston egg soda; cool andrefresh- ing. It goes down your throat fizzing like- • a. firework. It will expand your lungs, throw out your chest, and coolyour weary brow.- It is the boss drink, and that's -where the matter. Be- sure and not drink More than a gallon at a time." • A. correspondent believes 'Winnipeg is a very well behaved community, all things considered. . He says: With a floating population- estimated at 13,000, of alleges. and drown from all classes of society, away from home associations and free. from observation by the eye of society ; with a hundred saloons in full blast; an almost - entire absence of the refining influence of woman; a constant flow of speculation, ascending values, rapid -fortunes reeking and every temptationto license and foolish- ness-; ,with all these- provocations to die- order,there:is very little- drunkenness -on the streets, and the criminal record is exceedingly. small. Judge Dubuc com- mented forcibly on this point in his charge to the Grand Jury the other day: On the docket -were only three forgery oases and one of assault upon an officer in the die- -charge of hitecluty. These forgeries -abase from a wealthyyoung man "being on a spree and associating with tow characters: Intending purchasers of Cremona- fiddles - will do well to read and ponder the case of Hedges Its, o halacti tried- inLoadon-T the- • other day before -Mr. Jestid& Field. The plaintiff w ross clerk and &private dearer in 1fvig at Gateshead,.andthe de- fendentlI. well-known shop in Wardour street. Id Hodges called at the shop and was shown a violin, for ,Which the price _ asked was £150, but, which he finally bought for £55, the defendant-Tepresenting that it was made by Carlo Bergonzi, one . of the finest of the Cremonese makers of the: last - century. It turned out to be not ,a Carlo Beigonzi, though. it bore his label, but the Work of a. much later • manufacturer, probably Of the 'present cen- tury. The heatless of the 'defendant throughout the case was admirable. alas confessecithet he had bought_ the violin in Paris and •himself put the label into it. , The Judge,—" Where did you,getit-from? Defendant—a' Oh, we always have some about." "Why did - you do this?" "Because people will not buy is violin without a name on it." M. °hank after- ward, admitted that his father had been one of the/ founders of the school of "reproducers" of old violins, and that a , large manufactory of these antique instru- ments exists -at the present time at Meil- courts in Lorraine; The jury gave a verdict of £70 against Chanot. A HEROIC'AESOJE: •iirageous Aot of a Toronto Policeman, --..---= FdIO SAVES TWO CHIDDEN NM TEE FLAW. '• i Af report from Toronto this (Friday)' lsernoon • says: At 1.30. this morning P ail:semen McKee noticed a bright light in D niel O'Connell's one -storey frame house at 87 Jarvis street, opposite Lombard. The idirieking of children at the same time fell nien his ears, And he ran Overt° the 'place only to•find it in flames. . The officer 'ticked in the door, when e Oasis of fire buist out. Through the flames he saw two little chit. 4en running wildly about in their night. clothes and • Crying they knew not salaat. To dash through ' the fire, piok the little ones up in his Strong arms and rush out into the back 'Yard Was the worleof a minute' and McKee did it in less than that time.O'Connell and - his two other children had got out a few seconds lafore. The policeman re-entered the burning building, but finding no other pqrsorathere he ran down to the corner Of King and Jarvis streets and rang an abate, TO Court street firemen were on hand- in lees than three minutes, being quickly fel- ed by other sections of the brigade. The house being small and only one storey high it was not difficult to get at the flames, 'oh *ere speedily extinguished. The contents were more . or less 1 anred by fire and wateraand the'house Was pretty' well -damaged. O'Connell fetid a Wald reporter that the property was otwned by the Blairs and said he had no insurance. He was smoking a short clay ar"tpe and somewhat under the influence of lor. When questioned as to the origin Of t e fire he says the " thilder " min3t have csaisized the lamp, while he was asleep in bed. This is a very improbable story, as else little ones were undressed and looked as if they had just got out of bed, While O'Connell himself had all his °bathes on when -Officer McKee saw him in the back aid. Those who heard his story carne to t e conclusion that he was the " ander " ho upset the lamp. A gentleman living in Ottawa is having wooden houses' constructed in Sections, of a size admitting their transportation en ordinary flat cars: These sections, which are to be built,in that city, areto be taken to Winnipeg- or other places in Manitoba, and erected there on slots, some of which are owned by the speculator, ,end others, which are to be rented. The project appears to be feasible enough,—and as lumber and labor are both much cheaper here than . in Manitoba, and :the cost of transport reasonable, there is int reason whythe -epee-illation should not prove a paying one. • The parts are to be substan- tially built, tuition arriving at their destines • tion a few hours' work will put them • together, and the oak pins with which the sections are joined, are easily driven. It is calculated that in one and a half days a dwelling 1820, with kitchen 12x14 attached, can be put In readiness for occupation. THE- telegraph Work of England has now been very largely confided to . women, and it is calculated that there cannot be less than 700 employed at the Central Office. The •staff of the Telegraph Clearing House • Check Branch,which super-Vaies the whole telegraphic work of the Kingdom and acts as a check upon all the clerks in the depart- ment, is exclusively compoeed of women, to whom is also intrusted the entire financrial business. Certain branches of the Savings Bank Department are also in their hands, as well as the ,Deed Letter Office. The ,numher who apply whenever a vacancy team is etto*motte:t? None of the mere • ImPortient OfreCee..illae yet been filled by women, who, it is thought, are better • officered by thoroughly. competent men. - ii Dangers of tmlewer Gas. jIt is strange that the sanitary condition f so many of the great houses in England Should be so defeotiye. Yet such isunfor- iUnately the fact. The sudden removal of he Duchess' of Connaught from Bagshot 'ark to Windsor was due to the presence Of symptoms of sewer -gas poisoning. For 4orne weeks offensive smells had been cle- ated about the mansion, and several of he inmates had . suffered from obscure forms of indisposition. Her Royal High- ness had madean excellent convaleacence for Inearly three Walsall after her confine- inent, when she developed symptoms Moll were thought to depend on blood - °laming. It was discovered on examina- tion that a careless workman had severed a Soil -pipe. which - then discharged itself Under the hall, and emitted a continuous Stream of sewer -gas into. the house. . • ' . Lord Byron, in reference to ti, beautiful ady, wrote to a friend: "Lady ,-- has been dangerously ill, but now she is danger - =gig welt again:" American belles, when: attacked by any of the ills that flesh is heir to may . be kept killing and avoid being * led by taking Dr. R. V. Pierce's "Favorite macription," Which banishes feminine weaknesses and restores the bloom of bealth. By all druggists. ---" The wise man," remarks the Chicago panne, " reakete no attempt to do the training aot - after marriage, but allows himself to be trained, submitting gracefully, tits he does to death. and the tax -gatherer. pinOwing that it is impossible to . work his wife up to a certain; model which is his oldest, he determines to let his wife do that !work for him, and however inconvenient it May be at times he is :the happier for it, appears better for - ib,passes muster in isomety and is held up as an exemplar for irefraotory husbanda who kick in the 'hear; Inns or have the 'temerity to . dispute . . lauthority." The liver maY well be called the scape- igoat of ignorance;sincemt of the that 1,flesh is heir haae ben attributed tb Rive complaint. Torpidity of this organ; jwith headaches,biliousness, constipation land irritation ethe kidneys and bladder -are only results of that protean disease, dyspepsia, and -Dn. Wiszersta's Compound Elixir of Phosphates and Calisaya ,ctire the most obdurate ,of. that elaas :of 'affections by invigorating the digestive apparatus The London TWorld speaks of a weeder iful preparation from the eucalyptus plant, I which is said - to be Marvellously effective in casts of consumption and particular phases of lung disease It is the invention of the Hon. Wyndham Stanhope, who is at 'Present residing in Madeira for the benefit of his health. • . .ast a cough.carried me off, And then a coffin they carried me off in: 'This •11 not be your epitaph if you take your cough and Dr. 14 V. Pierce's " Golden Medea' Discovery" in timeit is spinal& for weak lungs, - spitting of blood, night- sweats and the early stages a consumption. By all druggists. - -= - ., = . Pilefidnii Likea T°14 "How did you sleep lest night, Michael 2'1 -44 Like et top, ,. surest „a That . was good for you." 44 Inclikle it wasn't, for I was turnin' around and ' around all the night from the cough I caught yesterday after- noon by stand' g up to my knees ip the snow and water." "1 can wire , ant for you easy eno h. Get a bottle.. of Dr., WilSOn'a Pis onary Cherry Balsam: It cures everyt ing like that." This is the way this 'remedy is. recommended. Dur- ing the unsettlelit..vi eather of the spring and fall it is especially needful to have it on hand. A bottle should always be on the shelf. A disease which in a:few months would result fatally by it will be oared at the very beginning, and endless expense and suffering saved, and, what is more important, perhaps a life. incidents of the Great Deluge. A Sikeston (Mo.) despatch says: Many moving incidents- by 'flood and field, especs jelly by. flood, are reported. On February 27th two houses containing a' -number of - hogs floated down stream. • One funeral by skiffs _took place, the procession moving down Main street to the high lands • on Judge Aiken's farm, the victim being a little daughter of Mrs. M. S. Stone At Point Pleasant below Mr., Bishops went down stairs into his dining room and found a large buffalo fish, which he captured and used for breakfast. • • A ComMou ./Icc1dent.1r="3== • Mi. Henry T: -Batett, Springfield, N gives an account .of. an accident= through jumping from a caTriage. This occurred some months • age, and the injury was so severe that mail -receintlyhe was laid up and unable to walk without a crutch. He ultimately was . cured by the use of two bottles of Dr. Dow's 'Sturgeon Oil Lini- ment. It would be interesting if it were possible , to trace out the • suffering and • the : loss occasioned , during. three Months that might have been pre- vented by the use of Dr. Dow's Liniment at the _ beginning of the improvement - insteadofattheend. Such oases as these' Show the Value of this really excellent remedy. A Winnipeg correspondent says:' . The youngiadyteschers at the recent Peoiinoial -Convention looked particularly smart, and I were se attractive that it failed me to account, tor their being unmarried. Talking about the marriage boom, as it is balled, there ia a good deal- of humbug talked. There axe plenty of nurcarried and mar- riageiblenien, and a plentiful absence of aligible partners,' but there As a - more plentiful absence still, and that 18 of house accommodation. Most marriageable men are content if they can double up with a Companion of their own sex, and the owners • of 700Ma, knowing that they'can secure al bigger rent frorn.twO men than fronia mar- ried couple, resolutely refuse to let their • spare apartments to any but single men. Se if there be any adventurous -mniaclene packing up their Saratogits preparatory to descent tipistithinitusbandspastire, they had better suspend operations unless their titinka bo.largeenough to locate as a resi- dence upon a vacant lot. The kitohen and hciusemaids.have a glorious time here, for they are praotically their owe mistresses, and easiiy command 025 ,a month with -^ • Mr. Spurgeon, while lately addressing his students on the second advent .of Christ,: said : "The best way td texture its speedy approach is to preach the gospel r adding "if ever I begin to prophesy upon the Sub- ject, I expect it will be about the year 2500; and, I• shall take Care to prophesy a couple of thousand years ahead—in case I ate wrong." ' Nesion.—Each bottle of 3.5rigg's.Electric Itss, Oil will hereafter be accompanied , by a 2 aorliscrevi .as it is important that the cork oe :should be _pasta's -red and the bade well corked when not in use, to retain the strength of the goods. It cares theumatieni, neuralgia, liver and -kidney `ComPlainte, or of the, urinary organs; iiures complaints arising from colds; snob. as 'tore throat, bronchitis, diphtheria, cough and difficult breathing; ' Land Sales at Prince Arthur's Landing. The Manitoba Free Press has the follow- ing : "Bowerman Ss. Co. sold to P. S. Nugent, Toronto, part of Lots 3 and 4, Arthur street, with itore, Prince Arthur's Landing, for 03,100. The same firm sold to Mr Nugent Lot A, Arthur street, Prince Arthur's Landing, for 0500. R. J. Sproule bought from the -same firm 320 acres in township 14, range 20 west, for 01,600: The Same firm also sold lot a, !meth side, Arthur street, Prince Arthur's Landing, for 02,500. J. S. Deacon bought from same firm lot 2, •North Water street, Prince Arthar's Land- ing, for 04,000." A New* Piluciple. The principle upon which Putnam's Painless - Corn Extractor acts is entirely new. It does net sink deep into the flesh, thereby producing soreness, but acts directly upon the external covering of the corn, separates it from the Under layer, removes the direct pressure from the part, and at once effects a, radical cure, without any pain or discomfort. Let that) who are•suffering from corns, -yet sceptical of treatnaena try it, and by the completeness of the cure they will be ready to recom- mend Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor to others.; • The Story of a Terrible Crime. , despatch from A.Imapee, Wis., says : Jacob Kozins, who formerly worked on the farm of John Goettinger, neer here, states that in 1878 Goettinger, his Wife and Mrs. Biala*, his daughter, quarrelled in a hay- field. Mrs. Blalinck stuck a pitchfork in laina,.and Mrs. Goettinger struck hiin with fork -on the head. They then held. bun down and Covered him with hey. - That night Blalinck and wife took the body .to the house, threw it in and burned the house. Blaliiack threatened to kill Kozens -if he said anything about the _affair, and Kozens swore to:a lie attbeinquest. Throat, Bronchial and ',nag Diseases 1 _ - a specialty. Send two stamps for large treatise ' giving self -treatment. Address World's Diapensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N.L. An English 'teturn just brought down reveals the surprising feet that in 1852 the rent of all the farms, gardens and nurseries in Great Britain was £46,571,889, while in 1877 it was L59;300,285—an increase of '27.3 per cent., which has by no means distap7 peered during the tete depreasiOn. Count Von Moltke, Chief ;Marshal of the German Empire; will shortly go on a fur- lough to Switherland.. This is considered an important sign that there are no fears of peace being broken. Dr. Witson's, Anti -bilious and Preserving Pills are the ?host effective remedy for indigestion, and 'Allots-- and liver com- plaints. For elderly persons, and these who are prone to be costive, no safer 'Ind better regulator ban be found. Brownson—='Well, I always make ata rule to tell my wife everything thist hap pens" Smithkins—" Ob, my dear fellow, that's nothing:, I tell my wife lots of things that never happened at all." • MACK'S imokemisTic MEIflCINE • wallas the painter, who is an enthusias- , tissportramen, has just taken' the fishings and shootings of the estate.of, Sir Douglass Stewart, in Perthshire, at a rent of 03,500a year. • ., There was a young man so well bred That the hair would not stay on his head, But the Carboline oil, Put new hair on *lista% And now with an heiress he's wed. • - And all points in. Iowa, NebraskaiMissouri,Kan- sas, New Mexico, Arizona, Mon- tana and Texas.- The -snonsass, QUICKEST and BEST - line to St Joseph, Atchison, Topeka, Derii• - son, Dallas, GErl- vest in, _ -.3EX x C iu:::::::::)_trequ,-jassppec.,...ass;Min_iseisolls andh.St. P .1.. ly conceded to --`41 "all claSses of traVel. Railroad in the World *for ---44. • . Tots Route has no superior for Alb4rt • Natio,bnally re. iiputed as- _ eing .t e Great . to Line _ T rough ar , KANSAS lat VW A‘k•-. V All connectiena In Union Depots. Through Tickets -Via thia,..7,- Celebrated:M*4o sale at all offices in Ella U. S. and Canada.' - •information about Bates of _ Fare, Sleeping Cars, --ete,..*-cheerfaily_given_byL made Try it. and you will find. -trayel lug- a luxhry,-Instad :°• a dis- comiort. 3t 1 ;eprPOesTftElo. enn-manatierP. ER, CGEeVnA. L40s.WAL81-. • Chicago, Ill. • Chieat.o, 111. SIMPSON, Agent., 18 Front Street East, Toronto, Ont. ,. CAN BE ,CURED. n. L D.:_mcmicnett.,6311stiagara St.Buffalo,N 4*, Y., has a positive and zebra -m/24 - etre for C an c e kwe id it 1 icoi nu et BtheutiLs ce oEf Rt hse iTnuff me ooCaustic- Eating an - all -SCROFULOUS- DISEASES -,succesefillly , treated: SifirdlOr•Oircular giVing full particidats" FOR 'ag.ro"g%) TRADC MARK. _ AFTER. - It is a- sure prompt and Effeetual remedy_ for ai Nervousness in taits stages, Weak Memory LOSS of Brain Power, Sexual Prostration, Night Sweats,•Sperniatorrhosa, Seminal Weakness and General '•Ikas_.of Power.. It repairs Nervous Waste, Rejuvenates the Jaded Intellett, Strength ens the -Enfeebled- Brain and -..,Restores " Sur prising Tone and Vigor to the Exhausted Generative_ organs. The experience, of thou sands .proves it an Invaluable Remedy. The medicine is pleasant to the taste, and each box, contains sufficient for two Weeks' medication' and is the cheapest and best;,. - _ _ Full particulars in °Ur paniPhle whith - desire to Mail free.to any address. - niaignetto .Medicine le sold druggists 10'50 eta. per box, or 12 boxes for ea, or will be 'nailed free of postage on renip t the Money, by addressing Illack's Magnetic Medicine Co., Windsor, Ont., Canada Sold by all druggists everywhere, - We offer for sale it a GREAT BAROMN, A WHARfDALE POSTER PR ONLY IN USE A FEW YEARS, SS, And Well adapted for painting newspapers or posters in a country °face. , The bed ef Press is 33 x 46 inches. There are three rollers over form and four distributing rollers with Press. The Tress cost $1,200 when new For particulars address TIMES PRINTING CO., HAMILTON ONT. HUM MIME MD ASSOCIATIE OF. cAPiAiii, FOR, .1UNIMAKRIED PIERS INCORPORATED NOVEMBER 1881. Head office, Hamilton,_ Ont. Pays to itsmembere . on event of marriage, froin.$230 to $5,000: _ Reliable agents wanted 1itt tniepresented:. - districts. Send for circulars and information toL wALTR IVEBBIEJE{,k . Secretary, Hamilton lit. A Skirt. of Beauty is a Joy Forever. DR. L FELIX GOERIEWS I ORIENTAL CREAM OR MAGICAL -BEAUTIFIER Pulite as well as -Beautifies the Skin. - ' :Remove ipelse,s,m1Foretehk: patches and every blem- ish on bean- ty,aidefies detection. It has stood the test of pirty Ysoaarsharml.' ticiess wo taletest to be sure the 11• I. is adper,,Ibp Ae rley. preparation cept no conn terfeit of similar name. The distinguished Dr - L. A. Sayre said to a lady of the haut tonl(apa tient):"As yoU ladies will use them, / recant - mend Gourcurs Cream' as the least harm ful 07 all the Skin preparations." One bottle Will last six months, using it every Iday. Also Poudre - Subtile nemoves superfluous' hair without injury to the skin. ' MmisiM. BT. COURA1JD, Sole Prop: 48 Bond St., N , For sale by all Druggists and Fancy I Goods Dealers throughout the U. S., Canada and En- , ,rope. tae. Beware of base imitations. $1,000 •Tteward for arrest and proofof any 0118 sening ' sas same • _ c. .0.0impt,ainsi:87:OuNsinf.ERS..TABZ6-4:i'll,;01)4{1:8iNrro 4B"9,0_47;:iiic:raixtink.:147.11ed7aRtseTiyEreu-ey-e'd, ArdismiThe WITS -DEBILITY, Jtheitinasatm: NER 'iraralY618-.411 d • rma d then neetir_Otred- by these BB AND'UISI3rBd Consiltatiori FREE; • Circulars an vofinaeiswituis.at.a.n„ 1:1,:y!eftwwapittiontothltarnanzdT:roble.lgra.anroulie*T7., UN. (4 - address en.tine, . ,