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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1897-05-07, Page 2�..Ww.+,___ IMM, A OF EIT LIFE. A maiden eat x'ithin the door .And sang as many times before. A. Man to daily ton passed by, No love nor Illeesure lit his eye. klut when Ito heard the merry song .Ie whistled as he went along. A. woznan by the window wept For one wlut in the churchyard. slept, Bot when upon her heariee tot That tune she knew and levee fie Kell, The toed ef burning tears was staid, .And soon a €ong her lips essayed. Her neightor heard Cie tender strain .An<1 tnftiv lobed the tweet refrain. Thus sill clay lane that ono song boyo Ito ;oyausners from Sleep to door. -..'urn J. Denton. A GREAT RIVER. Marco .Polo's Report Concerning the GI, gentle Yang-tse-IUang. Noah Br iu1 s quotes the following: • from the great Veuetian traveler iu hit series of t: t. Nicholas papers, "Tie True Story cf Marco Polo:" .And I assure you this river flows Sc far and traverses so tunny countries ane cities that in stood south there pass tun repael on fte waters a great moldier o: vessels duel more 're wealth and meechau <Iise than all the rive=rs and all the sew of Christex:i.can put together. It ceema indeed x::c vc• like a sea than river. Mes. ser Marco 1'.L) said ilea 11e once beheld at that cite- 15,0e0 vessels at one time. .And you 1:1:,y judge if this city of ne great size Lee pitch a ntueber, how many must flare be altogether, considering that tee the hanks of this river there are more than 30 provinces £and more than 200 great cities, besides towns and vil- lager, all es esessing vessels. lilcestr Metro .Polo aforesaid tells us that he la ::rd from the officer employed to collect the great khan's duties on this river t]at.t there passed up stream. 200,- 000 vessels in the year, without count- ing those that passed down! Iudeed, as it has a course of such great length and receives so many other navigable rivers, it is no wonder that the merchandise which is borne on it is of vast amount and value, Aud the article in largest quantity of all is salt, which is carried by this river and its branches to all the cities on their banks and thence to the lather cities in the interior. The vessels which ply on this river ars decked. They have but one mast, but they are of great burthen, for I can assure you they carry, reckoning by our 'weight, from 4,000 to 12,000 cantars each. In going up stream. they have to be hauled, for the current is eo strong that they could not make head in any other manner: Now the towline, which is some 300 paces in length,, is made of nothing but cane. 'Tis in this way: They have those great canes of which I told you before that the: aro some 16paces in kx:gth. These ..they take and split freta cud to end into maneLlcucter strips, and then they tiviet these strips together so as to make a rcpe of t:,:y length they please. And the r k e, se made ere etre^ cr than if they v, ere made cf hemp.•t Flectric ryes. The freest adjunct that science gives to the surgical operator is an electric eye. Strictly speaking, it is not an eye • at a11, but rather a sort of searchlight, which is used to aid the human eye in delicate surgical operations. Oftentimes surgeons aro handicapped in their work by the fact that they can- not see distinctly the parts upon which they meet `operate. The formation of the htlnau body is such that in many instances no light can be put directly upon the particular part of the human anatrnxy that is to be operated upon. The rye can see to the extent of human eap£:Li]ity, bat in intricate operations, however strong the light in the operat- ing theater may be, the rays lack that penetration and power of concentration so ateceeetuy to delicate surgical opera- tions, Prefcssor Charles E. Quimby, of Bellevue hospital, New York, has pat- ented this new aid to surgery. From an ordinury electric light wire a connection is male with this device, which fits the face nitich in the manner of a pair of spectacles. The appliance in itself con. sists of two small incandescent lamps, which are fitted one above and the other below the eye of the operator. They are so s:djusteel that the rays focus at apoint suffc'itntiy tear the ordinary point of vision. to throw all the power of the electric rays Upon the point (&sired. It is; practically aportablesearehlight adap`.e d to the operating theater. The Ianips tee in the form of au annular glass glebe, with au illuminating con- ductor, An insulated backing, consist- ing c.: it petal leather lined band, which ,]asses around the head, prevents the heat i•( .'ti affecting the wearer, and at the x.:1:.0 tin holds the l ight in posit ion and 1r(ten . any possible effect that st Ere isE te electricity might have upon the wearer. The lights more near- ly I(s(n bre long glans tubes than acy- Ole (i (. Within these tubes are pieced the tan:I.:e,. which cart be adjusted to any desired Seale. When adirect downward ray ie dei:red, a small refteetor is filed aloe(' the light and the, rays thrown in She SR eired direction.—San. itraneiseo 1;xamin(r. A horse is more liable to scare with than withent blinders. Ile is seldom Afraid (; what lie can fairly see. Bread which is to be kept long should. 1* latx(:aked longer than that which 31t ' meant telly for tote:erreW's use. `V%.E ''..MES MAY 7, 1697„ Q1x, CHARACTERS. DISEASES OJf TRADES.• Qau r or the lt'eople who Scelc 1?*nur Through Vneonrmou Channels, "I think if all the cranks in this coun- t were corralled," remarked the clerk ixt the treasury departineet, "and put gilder a shed some -where it would re- quire one bigger than all the buildings at the World's fair. " "Would there really be anybody to do the corralling;?" inquired a pessimistic old party, 'who thinks there is none good -P0, net One. "As I was saying," continued the treasury clerk, "it would take the big- • gest shed on earth, and still there is t new kind. This time it ie a mein or wo- man who has been etualing in 10 cents at a time as a contribution to the eon- Ecience fund, with a mane signed in full, and there is no such name on the treasury books and never has bee». I suppose it 1' merely some crank who thinks lie or .she *will get that name in the papers and have that much fango out cf it." "That's silly enougb," chipped in a postofiice inspector, "but I henna of the cddcst chap on my last trip down south. You may not know, or, if you do, 'don't I'a,T much ate ntiea to the fact, that there i:; a fine of $10 for sending written matter through the snails under any rate except 2 cents all ounce. Very like- ly you have sent enough stuff w ritteu en .rapers, books and i:o On to bankrupt you if you had the Dees to pay, but Un- cle Sam is easy, and I don't know of e case -where anybody ever had to pay the flue. In this instance a num came into a certain ethee down south and gave the postmaster $500, being the amount of fines lie owed the government for viola- tion of postage laws as far as he could recall them. He was a young titan, and he stated that ho had violated the law while in love with a :girl to whom he sent papers and books occasionally, and, though he wrote to her every day, he couldn't let the others go without writ- ing something on them. The postmaster didn't know how to act in the premises, and just what he would have done final- ly nobody knows, but the next day the young man's father came to the post- master and told him that his son had been jilted by his sweetheart, and it had crazed him. This was an explanation which satisfied the official, and the mon- ey was returned." "Ugh!" g („ fi ru nted the pessimistic old party, in no wise affected by the pathos of the little story. "Only a crazy person or au idiot would ever think of settling square. with Uncle Sam for a little bun- ko game like that. ”—Washington Star. MARCH HAS ITS VIOLETS. And There Is es Bright and Cheerful Side • to FtivCrythins. . Edward W. Bok, under the title of "The Odor of Sprieg 'Violets," writes I most forcibly in The Ladies' Home i Journal on the theme that there is a 1 bright ., Ade to everything --even to i March, the most disagreeable month of the year, for it has its spring violets. "It is true," he writes, "that it is diff- 1 cult sometimes to see the bright side of i sorrow, sickness and death. And yet 1 there is distinctly a bright side. No sor- 1 tit row comes to us without a reason. We 1 never know our friends until sorrow or illness comes to us. We never know o what loving kindness and thoughtful- t ness mean until we stand in need of p them, and our hearts seem to beat 1 against the walls of a cold, merciless t world. We learn something from every grief and from each pain which comes to us. We learn to distinguish between m friends, and what more priceless posses- sion is there in the whole range of ! ru knowledge than this? What develops us 1 b more than trouble? Virtues of heart, i s which we never dreamed of as existing i within us, reveal themselves when wo p are sorely tried. That is why sorrow a and trials are given us—not to give ti pain, bet to develop us, to better equip ; 0 us for something unknown which lies in h the future, and which we could not meet or understand unless we had first gone through certain experiences. 11 "ave are far too apt to regard actual blessings as calamities, to look upon u the dark side of things. Some sorrow 0 comes to us, and we rebel. It never oc- V cars to us that perhaps we need the ex- b perience which sorrow alone can give. 0 Illness corns, and we fret. But we can- are not always be well. Ailments are very th often given to us to anako our apprecia- is tion of good health thekeener. God has g( an ailn, a direct Isnrpose, hi everything en he does. His blessings come In (liffezent Ix forms. Nor are these forms always such C( as 'we would choose'. Lessons can be snore effectively' taught in innumerable cases throilgh sorrow than through pleas- g 'are. We should never know what a d .ore beautiful c p , color is' white wo did, not al bloc}: to bring out the contrast. th '' o want only pleasure in our lives. al When escrow contest, we rebel and re- g. Theo to r( et:g;xtiz(: it for what it so -Often tic is' -•-a blf s sing in disgniee. We cannot ill always have it June. There must be an Malin. Yf t March has its spring vio- tat lets." vc rellotving rrsoetleat, r "I'm too pra(tirni to do as home do in books, lies :slight, MI I'll just ask you iluntly, will yon be nay wife ;-" "No, prank you, fir, °1'< re T eentlf 0.13 don't believe in those x.Ly, 1-c o ,,a 3:u- fl thew, mid as the Silly heroines lineup; say ye's why, I'll tell you bluntly, no, th sir, I won't." -..Philadelphia North tt Amoritcul. SE;SULTS OF CONTINUED OCCUPA- TION CCt1PA TION OF MEN WHO WORK. .it Appears That Fruit Kind of uniting. went leas Its Peealtar Aneseut---.Motif Fhyt#ca1 and Mental Workers Fall nn, der the Itule--rolitleiana Die Fairly.. It is well known tbat there are a number of dangerous trades widen give rise to serious diseases; but, as a matter of fact, almost every occupation has some ailment peculiar to itself. A, doe - tor eau always tell if his patient is a baker, for instance, by the state of bit teeth. The flour dust collects ou the teeth, becomes acid and gives rise to a special kind of decay, Bakers, owing tc their irregular life, sleeping in the day and working at night, and because of the hot air and dust, are great victims tc consuenptiou. Blacksmiths, strong as they are, very oaten suffer front paraly- sis of the whole right side from the con- tinuous short: of hammering, and then eyes become weak from the glare of the Arc. Athletes, strange to say, do not, ass rule, enjoy long life. Professional boxers, wrestlers, gymnasts, cyclists, are short lived and suffer from enlargement of tho heart and diseases of the lungs. Boilermakers get deaf front the'contin- nal loud noise. Brewers and brewers' drivers (.rink beer in such Iarge quanti- ties that they ruin their livers and gen- erally die young. 13ricklayexs and plus• terers aro very. healthy, and they are said to resemble asses in never dying. Butchers are very strong and healthy, but they suffer in health through eating; little pieces of raw meat. Cabmen art notal for "nipping," and they endure the natural cousequeuecs. The cold alsc affects their faces to such a degree thiti the muscles of the face become frequent ly paralyzed. Carpenters and cabinet makers arc afflicted with varicose veins in the legs, and tho aetiou of the shoulder in sawing and planing produces a diseased condi• tion of the large artery that runs from the heart to the arm, so that there is not a carpenter living, ft doctor says, in whom a ourions noise may not be heard by applying the ear to that blood ves- sel. Hardly a single china scourer lives to old age without becoming asthmatic. Clergyman's sore throat is of course well known. It is said by some to re- sult from having the mouth open so fre- ! qucntly, the air going iu that way and drying the throat. Others say it is caused by the clerical collar. And others stiE say it results from 'the fact that the clergyman preaches from a pulpit and has to bend his head downward—for barristers, who talk quite as much, dc. not suffer as much as clergyrcen, being on the same level as their hearers. Miners, from working in the dark, become veryi • •i I 1 table. Their ex c yes get weak, and their lungs become quite black—miners' lung. Cocks, particular- ly male cooks working in hotels, clubs and restaurants, get gout from comfit'. ually tasting rich • fcod, and both male and female cooks get varicose veins and flat feet from ]ung standing as• -yell as e well kuowu ache of the face from he heat duel dirt. Ccopers have a lunar on the knee, which is realty a Iittle bap f fluid put there by nature to protect he knee from the injurious effects of ressing it against the barrel, Divers' .carts become distended from holeling heir breath. Domestic servants are remarkable foe suffering from typhoid fever, House. aids are frequently afflicted with pov- erty of blood from drinking; tea and ening up stairs. Dressmakers' long ours and confinement result in coo-. umption very often, but more often in ndigestion, poverty of blood and hn. aired eyesight. The fumes of nitric cid make goldsmiths' eyes sore, and ley get cramps in their fingers front :aching small screws. Nearly all the uman beings who suffer from thal awful disease, glanders, are grooms, India rubber workers have very bad eadaches and great inmate depression. Painters are, poisoned by the load they 80 so much, and all their ruuselee, but specially their wrist muscles, become ery weak. Photographers get poisoned y cyanide of potassium. The dust that nters the lungs of potters when they sifting clay interferes so much with Sir breathing that "potter's asthma" a well known disease. Compositors 't cracks and fissures it the lips and fall tumors in their months front the alaft of putting type in the mquth, end :xlsunlpfion attacks them frequently eauso of the stooping poster. and the confine(:, sedentary life. Politicians are ate:et sufferers of all, the constant ram drinking giving them indigestion, aulul' fce and n.' • .., nervous (li:;.a�( S, killit]g cm at an earlier age than inoul e'x:s of ly title r 17refc55iee. bti.lore, very sin. nllarly, anter greatly front coest]xnp- sn, owing to the cc'ld and flu»np and o irsui air of the forceastle. Saierinen d sales, ent< 31 in phops do a lot of ancling;, whith gives them varicose ins; and paint: in the feet, Cloth scour- rs, 'who ieh,:'.r• l e •t. ins end tut'peetilne, sttfx( r irons he aciaaehe, la:;'itude and itervousn(•:e:;, ,Shoemakers get their chest pre't.'(1 in by the last, lase their appetite (Lal sttc matt, and Isavebetides-in S. ttilit- tt(Is' oyes are c,ftcn injured by the 3' f g Stone,, 'tea tasters, although they only take e tea into tate mouth and do not swal- W,it. bim0me sea es rnottS tine fag is sent follow their employment for only it pe- riod of eight to ten years. The sedentary :ife of lawyers, artists, students told literary ,nen gives rise to gout, wllieh to said to kill more wise melt than fools dyspepsia, winch made Oarlyle's life 811('11 a' torture, and apoplexy, ethical 08551(5 :ti;: hosts of great mexl.---Pall Mull Gazette. Net News, "We heard 5(1110 of the strangest, most outlandish things last night," be- gan the woman, who gossips. "Yes," replied. the woman who doesn't, "so a friend who attended your musicale was telling Ino. "—l+;achallg'e. THE MANIAC IN THE CAR. A Drama 'LF#th a SatisfactarY Ending r'os All bat the Nervous Woman, It was perfectly obvious that the /eau i31 the corner was crazy. At least it was perfectly obvious to the nervous looking woman wile sat just Opposite flim 111 the cable car. It was not so much the mystical series of wigwag signals which he was ranking with bis handkerchief as the amatzing contortions of his face. In the intervals of those coutortioes he etar''d intently in the directiou of his nerv,,us vis -avis, but at nothing in the world, so vt:gue was his look. Then he would tap the bridge of his 1tosq with his finger, grimace and screw up his fe111uxe5 into horrible expressions Of .10nm:ea madness, , Tito poor woman didn't know what to do, 1«r alarm was so apparent that all the others in the ear noticed it, even the n:tui himself in one of his lucid in- tervals, 813(1 thereafter his peefarinttnOes became More violent than ever. Every physician knows that inanittes delight in playing upon the terrors of those who exhibit fear of theist. Perhaps the wom- an herself knew it. At any rate her feelings finally reached an intensity such that when the mall half rose from his seat 8110 shrank into her corner with a stifled squeak, which brought from him a glance of triumph, or perhaps it was surprise. But he only sank back again, with an expression of disappoint- ment, as if his time had not yet come, which indeed it hadn't. Thereafter she held herself gathered close, with every muscle strained, ready to spriug and -flee. She didn't have long to wait. - The man looked toward her with that terrible, unseeing glare. Bis fists clinch- ed. The handkerchief clinched in one of . then jerked in short, sharp oscilla- tions. His eyes began to bulge out. His face became hippie. Beneath his curl- ing lips cbuld be seen Lis teeth, bare to the gums. Flo leaned forward toward the horror struck woman, Ins face pro- truding almost into hers. His sharp, hot breath was on her cheek, and just as his grins trent up to clutch she made one bound from her seat that took her half way down the can Two more leaps landed he r on the platform. Thence, with a mad yell, she launched horrelf forth, despite the re- sh'ainingg ratspof the alarm edconductor, and was fortunately caught by £L police- man, who escorted her to the sidewalk, where she went. From behind she heard a inad, gasping roar of baffled rage, but tho maniac did not follow. He didn't want to. He sank back in his seat again and wiped his tearful eyes. Then be tock oat a newspaper and began to road. It had been ahard strug- g;le, but it had ended in victory-. He had got that sneeze out.—New York Sun. IN A LONDON THEATER. A First Night as Seen by the Artist C. 5) Gibson. A London audience is brilliant. Ev- ery one is iu evening dress, and the au- dience is often More entertaining than the play. This is especially true on a first night. At such times the pit is watched most anxiously by the manage- ment, as tho success of the piece gener- ally depends ou its verdict. It has of- ten occurred to me, when I have seen people On a stormy night forming a line on the pavemelit outside the pit en- trance, taking it all seriously enough to stand theca for hgalrs before the doors were opened, that by Ietting them in- side, the manageineut might improve their spirits and they in their turn might be more gentle. And it has also occurred to Me when I have seen a stout man standing in the aisle fumbling for a sispeuee or a. shill- ing in pockets that probably only con- tain a bank note and a goldpiece that the management might further improve the spirits of its audience by doing away with wc•ntcll ushers, and l:y evil - mg the programme at the elute time it sells the seat, for it is hardly fair to the first net of a play to inako it over- come rti' 1 ulll<.. s caused by dunes in g attendants before it eau hope to amuse. But the secoui1 act is sure to have 11 fair start, and if the play' isgecd teen] three on it will have ne) totem to ee reel tin of the uuciience.•--•-C. 11. faib:;t,nin bcrib- ner's. Jellied the Devil. .A. burglar recently met with his de- serts in 0 dratnatie teenier. In the iteigrhleehcnd cf It place called Huxits- butrg, weir Oldenburg, two little boys, aged reepettively 8 turd 12, were left by their mother at lions to take rare of the house. A .tan with blaekcn(d faro and in black attire suddenly entered and announced hinls01± to the leered little mitts as his satanic majesty. "I toil tl(e devil. Where no you kcepyour anoncv f'r 1 CEYLON TEA THE PERFECT TEA FOR YOU AND M6 Lead packages only, ae, 3o, so, ea and Goa. per lb. Sold by all grocers. The Davidson &i Hay, Ltd., Wholesale Agents, 'Toronto. 213cy Instantly pointed toward the massive trunk vihexo the modest wealth of the parents wee treasared up, While, bowever, er, the murky looking impostor was mewling the chest, the younger of the two boys whispered to his broth- er, "(4o and fetch the gee and shoot the devil dead," The brother jumped at the idea, fetch- ed the leaded weal:On, crept up to the unsuspecting thief 1111(1 lodged the whole charge in .lis back. He fell back dead. --Louden Telegraph. Ztucnlled For Indignity. v:1;ot I call an insult to the whole 1lttn (111 race." "What is?" T1:0 first speaker i;cinted to a North Side l:uteher's window, where, under au arrey of calves' livers, hung this ''(et Your Brants 11('re. "----0111- cago Tril:ut'e, The n:lajCiiiy ef grown people, as well as the (1111(5(11, in wicket Rome rarely Relied 0 curdle mikes 1 (lawn. The bedtime in Bente, Atilt -lie, Egypt and other 1.larts cf the 1)1c clliterraneau shore was Lot^•ecll 7 ancl 0 o'clock in the evening, acet:re:leg to the season. Englislnrce \vier have resided in Guernsey for a year and 0 day are Com - polled to serve in the ikeel 3r•i'itis, sentea ea a Licking. The btatelacr's boy who had called to deliver 1t parcel had -thoughtlessly left the garden gate open, and the 7 -year-old ruler of the house called after him: "Here! Cc:ne back and shut titatgate!" The butcher's boy stopped, but show- ed no inelin:atfen to obey the come Saud. "I don't have to!" he shouted elcfint'tly, "Yes, vent do," irciatl.d the 7-ycee- old. "You come right back.aud Whet it now, or soin(body's going to get the worst licking he ever had. " The butcher's boy (8mo running back-, full of filet. • "He ia, eh?" he said. "Sell, who's going to'lick 'fan, eh?" "Mother as," calmly renterkecl the youngster, "If you leave that gate open, Ilile. e' certain to go out hate thq street. Motber'II see Lie, and I'll get licked. Shut it tight, please, so I can' tget out. " And the butcher's boy did. --Chicago Times -Herald gee renes Joke. King ef the Fi ji1:—;Jay, Arabella, I've disccvrrc d a flue len- eirli for our bill of fare. .Arabella-11w do you make"it? Ting of the Fijis—We put a Chicago man and a Best( 21 man i31 the pot to- gethc•r. Aral,clla—Chat (:o you call that? King <.f i15. li'ijis--Why, perk and beans of conree.—. ew York Journal. Food and newt; Coesaur,ee in a Lifetime, The average luau takes Ste pounds of food exel i;Iink each day, ttuaountfng to a ton ce :.•olid and Iiquid lseulishmcnt annually. In 70 years he cats and drinks- 1,000 rinks1,000 times his own weight. --Ladies' Houle Journal, Safety In Beauty. A. worldly father, after the style of Lord Chesterfield, was giving good ad- vice to his son, who was about to make his entrance into society, "And, above all, avoid flirtations; but, if you must flirt or fall in love, sir, bo sure it is with a pretty woman. It is always safer." "Why?" asked the young man. "Because some other fellow will be sure to be attracted and out you out be- fore any burnt has been done. ".-London Telegraph. Arcturus is not less than 70 and is probably more than 100 light years dis- tant from us, This star certainly sur- passes the sun in volume many thousand times. The British government still employs foreign mercenaries in its army, %the Gurkhas, fine soldiers of Nepal, are on. played in British India Thpt Iianaltee'e Wsil, There is considerable discussion in the English papers about the wail of the banshee which was said to have been heard in East Kerry before the fa- tal bog moved. A correspondent writes that the late Arelldeneon'Whatcly, the celebrated archbishop's son, told him of a certain inst1u1(0 of the banshee's cry. Tho archdeacon said that he clistinotly heard the wail 5vhfle in leu Irish conn. try parish a(hnn(isterif7g the holy corra- lnunion to a dying man. It was the belief of Livingstone that nearly all lions 'ts ('rc ' • left handed." Ile Watched them closely, and wl]en they desired to str'ke a fl(ree blow they al. ways used the left paw. r Q, : o m is it �(�+rr.. ggp it a OUT i!1 'u ':�A a ['t.t'O. 71« Its Purity. 2. Its TL:.)t-t,,tadS of Cures, 3. Its Economy. le. a dose, Regulates the Stomach Liver and Bowels, unlocks the Secretions, Purifies the Blood and removes all the impurities from a common Fisnpie to the worst Scrofulous Sore, and , CSIMEWEESS :DYSPEPSIA, BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, HEADACHE, • SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA, HEARTBURN, SOUR STOMACH, DIZZINESS, DROPSY, • RkIEUMATISNS, SKIN DIEASES. a 1 re c Li ubiic Baker? 4:1414 /:i rt'WW1f' If so yon cannot find anywhere a preparation to equal LR. CHASE'S SYRUP OF LJNSEEO ANO TURPENTINE for the throat and respiratory or - gats. 'We have hundreds of testimonials front public speakers, singers, ministers and others. t c O.:e Yee, gentletttall saes : " i never think of entering my pulpit without Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine at myside." Such in - dominions from the ministry should give con- fidence in Dr, Chase's Medicine. If you are troubled v'ith that tickling sore throat, so common among speakers and ;ringers, you will find DR, CHASE'S SYRUP OF LINSEED AND TURPE:'tTi0E a positive and per- ` maneut cure. Teaspoonful dose, price us cents. : Edmanson, Bates & Co., sole manufacturers for Canada, qD Lombard street, Toronto. 1 ea. N fid NERVE PILE: FOrt WEAN PEOPLE. 1 1 At all Druggists. Price So cants per Bar, or 3 }or $z,So. Sent by Mail on receipt of price. T. MILBURN & CO., Toronto. Caveats and Trade.frfukks obtained, and all patent fsinets conducted for H0DEii'TjS NRIM. My (ace it in theirnmedfatc vicinity of the Patent OlSced sad myfedi ities for securing patents ere unsurpes,e ."•.md model, sketch or photograph of Invention mea dc.cription and statemt,,t as toadvauti}*es claimed. 4.r'.No chart/0 is made foe ars opinto rite ' x,•.tenteallito and ply fee for prosecuting the aiicatten real aria 3s palled for until *be ).'Nene i allowed. "I,,vn.- Toss Gums,," co,t- 1:..nmq inei i•.forntati, r. scatiree. ,t1I Cal33Dtukt. : r .era issittetwd tSs IiYrICt% i .+axiIIel ,S ,� 1 .H' HOUGH�, ve.".,�; tawatozr.7,.(x. CURE BILIOUSNESS CDNSTIP Tl9N SICK Al.t. LiVt#1 'MOUES