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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Advocate, 1887-07-28, Page 3.0,PTM,TM N;11 TQPIC S. EltnietATe donrielled in 100. In these days accomPliebed girls " twanged the light guitar " and accompanied themselves in the MOO Pentinleetal cd flings, They liked sitting dreaming in the moonlight alone, or en tete-d-tefr. They read unlimited novels and had noisenee oE humor, They never .awoke to the realities of life until 'they married and were their hair in bands. IE You put a girl in ringlets what °au you expect? Certainly nothing practical or energetic. It is well known that the slight- est exertion takes the ringlets out of curl. Let us hope that fate will never be so cruel as again to make them fashionable. Tun Empress of Austrin is very proud of the produce of her fine Schoolibrunn farm. She recently sent a fine ham, weighing twenty-two pounds, to her sister, addressed "To tho Countess of Trani at Baden, from her sister the Empress of Anstria," but the certificate of origin which should have accompanied it was forgotten, and the customs officers at Limbach detained the parcel, and sent to the Inspector of Markets at Vienna a printed form, which, filled up, read as follows: "A. parcel is lying at the oustonas addressed to the Countess de Trani. Please inform us if the sender, the Empress of Austria, resides at Vienna and is a pork butcher by trade." A satisfac- tory answer was returned. Tun biggest missionary enterprise on record has been accomplished by Rev. George Muller, founder of an orphanage at Bristol, who has just returned from a preaohing tour round the world. The indefatigable evangelist has been absent ten years, during which time he has travelled over 130,000 miles, extending through the United States, New Zealand, Australia, the Malayan Peninsula, China, Japan and the journey home through Europe. What makes the feat really extraordinary is that Mr. Muller is now 82 years of age, and is reported to have finished in splendid con- dition. His united congregations during the tour amount to over a million persons. A peculiarity of the veteran's methods of collecting money for his orphanage is that he never asks for it. Ile merely tells his story of how he has been sustained in the past, and the wealth comes rolling in. NEVER disappoint a woman. As Con- greve says, "Hell has no fury like a woman scorned." The other morning a woman in New York city committed sui- nide because her husband would not permit 'her to spend the dayin the country. He foolishly insisted that she should stay at home with him and assist him in his drink- ing saloon instead, and in her disappoint- ment she took her life. An even more striking instance of the inability of some women to endure the frustration of their plans is reported from Kansas City. Mrs. Jamieson, a wife and mother, had arranged to go on an excursion with her family, but a rainstorm interfered. The love of a devoted husband and the claims of three young children were not sufficient to stay the woman's imicidol hand, and she deliberately swo.11owed a fatal dose of chlor- oform. A more senseless and cruel act was never committed. Surely the nature of woman passeth all understanding. M. P. LECLERC has propounded a theory that odor is, like light and sound, a phe- nomenon of undulation. He cites in sup- port of his view that many substances, like sulphur and copper'do not emit odors until they are rubbed, and it is more reasonable to suppose that the rubbings cause undula- tions than that under that condition the substancee emit matter which cannot be detected except as a smell. Again, arsen- ious acid when thrown upon a burning coal gives thick gray fumes and an odor of ,garlio. In the solid state it has no smell, and no more in the vaporous state if no chemical change takes place in volatilizing it. But when it is thrown upon the hot coal a reduction takes place to arsenic, that is volatilized and then reoxidized on coin- ing in contact with the air, and we have a smell accompanying the 'chemical action the same as in many other cases we have light or heat in connection with it. M. Leclerc, continuing his experiments with a rather imperfect instrument, claims to have produced interference of odors analogous with the interference phenomena of light Baia people do not know how easily they can protect themselves and their children against the bites of gnats and other insects. Weak carbolic acid sponged on the skin and hair, and in some °hes the clothing, will drive away the whole tribe. A great many children and not a few adults are tormented throughout the whole summer by minute enemies. We know persons who are afraid of picnics and even of their own gardens on this account. Clothing is an imperfect protection, for we have seen a child whose foot and ankle had been stung through the stocking so serious- ly that for days she could not wear a leather shoe. All this nen be averted ac- cording to our experience, and that we believe of many others, by carbolic acid judiciously used. The safest plan is to keep a saturated solution of the acid. The aolution cannot, contain more than 6 ot 7 per cent., and it may be added to water until the latter smells strongly. This may readily and with perfect safety be applied with a sponge. We have no doubt that horses and cattle could be protected in the same way from the flies, which sometimes nearly madden than, and it even seems possible that that terrible scourge, the African Tsetse fly, might be kept off in the same manner. was, the Pandora, which, having been geld to jamee Gordon Bennett, had ha; Paula changed to the Jeannette and carried De Long's ill.fated partY on its expedition and so.nk in the Aretio Ocean north of Siberia. Captain Young, in 1876, had Penareand of a vessel which parried a supply of provisions to the Arctic regions for the Alert and Dis- covery, under Sir George Nares, but which those vessels did not find, owing to., their failure to land at Littleten Island on their way home. A Wpr.rux wolnan PE Chicago holds that the girls of her city have not received jus- tice at the hands of novelists; and she offere to pay all the expenses ofpublishing a story which shall reveal the fair beings as they aro. What if the novelist should tell the whole triith ? THE hackmen of Victoria, British Col, umbia, subscribed 4100 towards the cele- bration of the Queen's Jubilee at that place, but the hack ordinance was pub- lished in the Oeionist, and they asserted that this, by apprising visitors of their rights, reduced the hackmen's profits, and they refused to pay the money subscribed. Tnntry-rivn hundred crates of tomatoes, from the steamer City of Augusta's cargo of 6,000 packages of Savannah "garden track," were sent outside of New York harbor on Wednesday and dumped into the sea. Meeting hot weather in rather ripe condition made them not worth the cost of freight. THE head of the famous lead pencil firm of A. W. Faber, Freiherr von Faber, recently celebrated his 70th birthday at Stein, near Nuremburg. Re has changed his native village into one of the finest in Germany, founded the famous Germanic Museum in Nuremburg and will be remem- bered for many other charitable bequests. Ex.Govannon ALGER of Michigan does not weary in well -doing. He now wants the Board of Regents of the State Univer- sity to establish at Harper Hospital, Detroit, a clinical school in connection with the university, and offers to give 410,000 to start the fund necessary therefor. This hospital, by the way, was originally the benefaction of a poor woman who sold fruit and vegetables in Central market. " THE fool," says the Philadelphia Press, "who rows a pleasure boat into the wake of a passing steamer in order to frighten his women companions received summary ptrnishment at Pittsburg Sunday, when ' Richard Lane, who insisted upon perpetrat- ing the deed, was drowned by the upsetting of his own boat. It is well for a joker who insists upon such fun to 'do his laughing before the boat capsizes." HARRIET BEECHER STOWE is failing rapidly. The brilliant intellect which conceived the immortal tale of " Uncle Tom's Cabin" is perceptibly shattered. The death of Prof. Stowe has added years to the appear- ance of his lonely wife, and she has lost entirely her vigor and enthusiasm. In her modest little house in Hartford she awaits listlessly the end of her busy life. Sadly she said a few days ago to a friend: " No ; I write no mere. I have done, I have done, I have done." THE Sandwich Islands are a prolific source of interesting news of late. Walter Murray Gibson, Premier of the Hawaiian Kingdom, is a meal over 70 years of age, but hale and vigorous. Miss Howard St. Clair, a handsome California book agent, claims that the Premier has failed to, keep a promise of marriage, and that the sum of $100,000 will just about quiet the throbbings of her more or less broken heart. An effort at a compromise is being made. THERE is a place in New York where the finest of wedding trousseaus, even down to the shoes, stockings and everything else, may be hired for a night. The owner of the place says that prominent society women get married in suits furnished for the night. When asked by friends after the marriage why they do not wear the dresses they tell them that' they intend never to wear them after the firfft night. Men are also rigged up in wedding finery for $2. The ladies pay from 47 to $40 for their outfits. Mas. Max Muss DODGE, the brilliant and popular editor of "St. Nicholas," was young widow before she ever entertained the idea of writing for publication. The first contribution she ever sent to a maga- zine was promptly accepted, and there was an instant demand for her sketches, but when she completed the manuscript of "Hans Brinker," her greatest work, she had much difficulty in finding a publisher, chiefly because the scene of the story was laid in Holland. But morecopiee of "Hans Brinker" have been sold than of any other book for children from the pen of an Ame- rican author. A eAnin special to the Now York Post says: Sir Allen Young, and not Baron Nordenskjoeld, ne has been reported, will probably command the expedition to the south pole which Australia is preparing to send att." Sir Allen Yonng, then an un- titled captain in the mercantile marine, was the volunteer sailing master of the :expedition Of McClintock in the yaelit Fbx in 1857-1859, to the 'cost of which he was a contributor. This was the expedition which finally settled tho question of the fate of Sir John Franklin's party by finding ti record left by than on the Shore Of Xing Williona'is Land. In 1815 ho etomnia,nded an expedi. ken, fitted nut partly at his own expense and partly at that of Lady Vranldin, iti seareh Of further relics of Sir jolni'4arty, but Wati compelled by the ice t� turn back 'before reaching hi a destination. IllilVessel noying, Pince it will do much to prevent ehrinkage of Reel), and milk. Horses and mileh clove may be protected, in a great Meaeure,'hY wiping them all over with a sponge dipped in soapsade in which a little Parboil!? Old bee been mixed. 'F411 'Tne number of distinctions conferred on the ()cession Of the late Jubilee celebration were as fellows: peerages, 8, including Lord' Londesborough, Viseount Galway and Sir William Armstrong, of Armstrong gun fame. Privy Councillors, .2—Mr, John Foye r and Sir John Cowell. Baronetoies, 13. Knighthood (not of any Order), 33. The knights include the Lord Mayor of York, the Lord Provoyt of Edinburgh, and the Mayors ef Liverpool, Leeds, Sheffield, Bristol, Salford, Newcastle -on -Tyne, Portsmouth, Norwich and Windsor. Knight of the Garter,l—The Crown Prince of Austria. Knight Grand Cross of the Bath, 7, including the Khedive of Egypt, and ea foreign princes. Knights Com- manders of the Bath, 12. Companions of the Bath, 31. Knights Grand Cross of the Order of St. Michael and St. George, 2. Knights Commanders, 15; among them Dr. Grant, Ottawa. Companions8. A GOOD old friend of ours, says the Buf- falo Commercial, says that it is incompre- hensible to her how people can eat meat during this " heated terra." She clairns that the poor animals become overheated, that their flesh is full of impure matter, and that meat ought not to be eaten in warm weather anyway. For herself, she "eschews" meat, and when she wants something " stronger " than vegetables she eats " kidneys, sweetbreads, a little bacon, some liver new and then and occasionally tripe." She regards this diet as much more healthy than " flesh " of overheated animals: She says, however, that as a rule during the summer she le " strictly vege- tarian," and 4‘ live § almost entirely on milk and egg." AT this season of the year, says the Scientific American, the annoyance caused to animals by flies and rtiosqUitoes often amounts to positive ageriy, and at all times, in what is called good corn Weather, it it( sufficient to prevent the stock eating enough to keep thom in good condition, The animals will stand in the Water et pass the greater part of the day in the shade rather than expose themselves te the sunehine, gang out to oat only when driven by hunger, Thoy qUiekly lose floph, the floW of inilk shrinks and it load fir hiairted that cannot be easily made geed again. At all tiineS good feed of grain id beneficial to stock, knit it is especially So when flied aro very an - Latest Ladies' Fashion Notes. A new idea in jerseys is a low-necked and short -sleeved one embroidered with beeds. Another fabric very popular at the sea- side is a heavy quality of wrinkled cheese cloth in delicate evening ehades. They are trimmed with numerous rows of narrow watered ribbon, and produce good effects in draping. Point d'esprit is much used for summer evening gowns, not only in white but the new colored sorts that come in shades of green, heliotrope, porcelain blue and old pink. The narrow watered ribbons is a favorite trimming on these frocks also. For wearing to the beach for the morn- ing bath gowns easily put off and on are selected. A pretty one is of soft, light weight, cream colored flannel, simply draped and trimmed with wide Hercules braid. The bodice is a loose belted waist of flannel, with fine blue lines through it, made with a sailor collar opening over a shirt of white flannel. A novel design for cloak's for travelling or coaching is copied from the cloaks of the Irish peasant women and envelop the wearer from head to foot. They are made of six or seven breadths of twilled silk gathered to a velvet standing collar. They are without sleeves, but the front breadths are doubled from the foot up and the arms pass out between the doubled fronts; a ribbon belt attached to the two back seams forms them into the waist. These cloaks are shown in brown, gray or navy blue silk, striped with hair lines of ecru or red, and are shirred into the velvet collar. Thin silks made waterproof are made up in this design for rain or dust cloaks. Other travelling cloaks of gray camel's hair or serge are made up with a much closer shape and are trimmed with three rows of dull silver galloon. Dark, cross -barred homespuns in shades of ecru and brown are made up as ulster and travelling cap for use in ocean voyaging. The tailors are making coats for use in yachting and coaching of soft, loosely woven woollens with herring -bone stripes like ohuddah. These have loose fronts held by a band or girdle fastened with a silver clasp, while the back is adjusted in long pleats, beginning at the collar. A cape or hood is worn with these garments ; they are made up in fawn color with heliotrope silk facing, or in gray blue with dark navy blue silk. They reach to the heel and wholly protect their garments underneath. Travelling dresses for summer journeys by rail or steamer are made of lustrous mohairs, dither in shades of French gray or gray and white stripes, stripes of fawn and white, blue and white, or solid dark blue. Some of these dresses are braided with picot braid in flower patterns, while others have only stitehing. Some of these mohair travelling gowns, made for June brides, have been trimmed with the many rows of narrow moire ribbon so popular just now. With them are worn little, close bonnets of gray straw, trimmed with Rus- sian tulle and clusters of red carnations, forget-me-nots or bluettes. That cobwebby Indian silk fabric that used to be known years ago as "pineapple gauze " is re -introduced under the name of " sunshiny " and comes with the edge lined with five or six rows more closely woven than the rest. This is torn off in lengthwise stripes and serves'un- hemmed, for the flounces. A pretty black dress of this gauze had a full, plain skirt with the stripes runnitiglengthwise about it. Another full skirt over it was draped a little, and in the back was a sash of the palest pink moire, the ribbon sixteen inches in width. The waist was laced up the back, and pointed both back and front, was half low in the neck and lined with folds of pale pink crepe Esse ; the sleeves were un- lined and were filled at the arm -hold, held in at the elbow with five rows of narrow pink moire ribbon. ' The English girls are wearing frocks of white organdy and sheer mull, made with voluminous draperies and all the edges hem -stitched. These frock e have big bishops' sleeves, which come down full nearly to the waist and held there by a band of ribbon, a full frill falling about the waist. The neck is cut half low, with a wide frill of lace gathered on the edge and falling downward, after the fashion of our mothers' berthas." Around the throat English girls wear with those dresses a tight necklace of amber or gold beads or imitation pearls immediately beneath the chin. This, however, is only becoming to those who have very round, full throate that are not too long. A Connecticut postinaster has received (from wine enemy of his doubtless) a lett& addressed Please hand to the most beautiful and intelligent young lady in New Haven, frail 18 to 24 Vats old, and Who movea in the best Eleciety,. unopened." He nieeta the emergency by prOclairding that the owner dati have it Upon application, "Lanka," said Mrs. Parvenu, On the hotel pieZZEt, to her. daughter f " Laura, go and ask the leader Of them otcheatiati to play that Sympathy haft Meddlejeliti' (Mat again, It's Snell an awful .favoritd of Mille and, your father's foo." f WhOG it ceite1 to /thepirig 061 an (Wen kettior is bettor than a ten Of • Tux= IvAling WAS WADDELL. A SO4nge Meeting 91. TWO Brothers Who 40 Newer Seen Each 4:other. 4 PortlyI ProsPerous-loOking gentleman eat in a Sixth &Venue elevated car on Mon- day evenhig. The condneter had just shouted " limteenth Or* " and banged the gate. Another portly gentleman came ill and eat down. There was re- markable resemblance between the two men. • A journalist nudged portly party number one and said; Beg pardon, sir. Do Yoll see you; connter,part sitting opposite 7" " By.Godfrey, lie's the image of ne." Then leaning over he tapped the image on the imee with the Evening Sun; " xeuse me, sir. You are my double. Will you oblige me with your card ?" The image looked up, seemed bewildered for an instant. "I haven't a card with me, sir, but my name is Waddell, of Murray, Idaho." " Waddell eh a Where is your native place?" "Manchester, England, sir," "Your father's name James?" "Yes, sir. ()bilge me with your name, sir." "Certainly, Jimmy. You don't know me, do you ?" "You look like a Waddell. Are you my brother Smallwood?" "That's what I am." Thetwo brothers shook hands for about a minute, exchanging inquiries. An explanation revealed the fact that the elder brother, Smallwood, had left England two years before James was born. He had been in Peru thirty-two years and had not heard from home in twenty years. James was in business in Murray, Idaho. They climbed down the Twenty-third street stairs arm in arm and a moment later were celebrating their meeting with a bottle of Roederer.—New York Evening Sun. Late Scottish News. On the 25th ult. a man with only one leg swam across the Clyde between Kim and the Cloch, a distance of 2i- miles. The Bishop of Argyll was recently arrested in Algiers as a supposed spy, and detained for a few days. A. long continued draught has caused great scarcity of water in various towna and villages in Scotland. The Cnlblean and Kinnord sections of the Marquis of Huntly's Aboyne estate 9,300 acres, have been sold to Mr. C. H. frilsone M. P. for Hull, for 245,000. At the Glasgow Circuit Court, on the 28th ult., the young man Hugh Abernethy, who attempted to murder a young woman with whom he had been keeping company, was—some mitigating circumstances having been allowed—sentenced to imprisonment for twelve months. Kinblethmont House, five miles from Arbroath, the residence of Lindsay Car- negie, was totally destroyed by fire on the 26th ult. Most of the furniture and the plate were got out of the burning mansion, although not without suffering injury, but, notwithstanding, the loss is estimated at £15,000. In the Circuit Court, at Aberdeen on the lst instant, Alexander Stewart, who was charged with the murder of a woman near Huntly, put in a plea of guilty of cul- pable homicide, and this being accepted lie was sent to penal servitude for twenty years. An Aberdeen solicitor named Fin- layson was sentenced to fifteen months' imprisonment for forgery. On the 27th ult. a bronze tablet, bearing the inscription " Here dwelt Man Galt at his death, llth April, 1839," was affixed to the wall of the building at the northwest corner of Blackhall street and West Burn street, in Greenock. The idea of this memorial was suggested a few years ago on the visit to Scotland from Canada of Sir A. T. Galt, son of the novelist, and carried out after some delay by some ad: mirers of Gait's works. The tablet was executed by John C. Wilson & Co., Glas- gow. 'For the Babies It is not necessary to buy corn cures. Men and women should remember that Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor is the only safe, sure and painless corn remover extant. It does its work quickly and with certainty. See that the signature N. C. Polson & Co. appears on each bottle. Be- ware of poisonous imitations. A Western paper tells about "a sensa- tional lynching." This was to distinguish it from the ordinary quiet and unobtrusive kind. Don't llawk, Spit, Cough, suffer dizziness, indigestion, inflammation of the eyes, headache, lassitude, inithility to perform mental work and indisposition for bodily labor, and annoy and disgust your friends and acquaintances with your nasal twang and offensive breath and con- stant efforts to clean your nose and throat, when Dr. Sage's " Catarrh.Remedy " will promptly relieve you of discomfort and suffering, and your friends of the disgust- ing and needless inflictions of your loathe. some disease? The Experience of Mrs. Peters. Mrs. Peters had ilia, Mrs. Peters had chills, Mrs. Peters was sure she was going to Ole; They dosed her with pills, ' With powders and squills, With remedies wet and with remedies dry. Many medicines lured her, But none of them cured her, Their manes and thoir number nobody could toll; And she seen might have died, But some ' Pellets " were tried, That acted like magic, and then she got well, The magic "Pellets" were Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellet(the original Little Liver Pills). They Cured Mrs. Peters, and now she wouldn't be without hem. Who are to be blessed? Surely the man who minds his own business will, be aniong the number. If best treatinent you calla got failed to cure rheumatism do not be discouraged, but take McCollom's Rheumatic Repellant, the best remedy known. Sold by wholeSale druggists of Toronto, Hamilton, London, Winnipeg andby retail druggist a generally. Hereafter tavetn, thop and ether signs in Alsace-Lorraine must bear inseriptions in Gordian only. A 3 -year-old negro boy in AugnStino Pia., Was hanaeuffed and dent to Stealing fourplum5 from a garden: • Poliotarn Sto4ou'ont by 111CarPOSIT. 4° For years 1 hayp had eitest trouble amonnting to nothing shoi,t consumptiOn. saw how others in like oendltion had 13044 eqrc4 by the up9 pf Dr. Pierce' 41 Gala= Medical Discovery, and resolved to teat #44 =Plitt' in my 4WO1 PagetEbc reeelte are SO' plane asard1y to require a 004 0Or any anger,Ment m favor fli! this Orate .reined3r- 11 .49PS nal it claims! ij bgad4 !IP t440 system, s'Upports and et.rengthens where other e He cult : 44 My iecovery, which is now on a Sure fOundgeiP11, hingei eptireiy on the compass of this wonderful Restorative, having tried other remedies without a bit of relief." You can get more wind out of a ten cell fan than you can from a $500 one.' It's the same way with, a ten cent mem—Yonkers Statesman. 4 A company of Frenchmen are breeding Arabian horses in Dakota. I fit mbe treatment of many thousands of cases of those chronio weaknesses and distressing ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.. has afforded a vast experience in nicely adapt- ing and thoroughly testing remedies for the cure of woman's peculiar maladies. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescriptioft Is the outgrowth, or result, of this great and valuable experience. Thousands .ot, testimo- nials, received from patients and from physi- cians who have tested it in the more aggra- vated and obstinate cases which bad bafded their skill, prove it to be the most wonderful remedy ever devised for the relief and cure ot suffering women. itis not recommended as a "cure-all," but as a most perfect specific for woman's peculiar ailments. As a powerful, invigorating tonle, it imparts strength to the whole system. and to the womb and its appendages 111 particular. For overworked, worn-out," "run-down," debilitated teachers, milliner dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop -girls," house- keepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generaDY, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic. As a soothing and strengthening nervine, "Favorite Prescription" is une- qualed and is invaluable in allaying and sub- duing nervous excitability, irritability, ex- haustion., prostration, hysteria, spasms and other distressing, nervous symptoms com- monly attendant upon functional and organie s pm° nrcl. epn ciye. r c 0 disease of the wOmb. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and de- s Favorite Prescription is a legitimate medicine, carefully compounded by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate organization. It is purely vegetable in ita composition and perfectly harmless in ita effects in any condition of the system. For morningsickness, or nausea, from whatever cause arising, weak stomach, indigestion, dys- pepsia and kindred • symptoms, its use, in small doses, will prove very beneficial. _ "Favorite proscription 92 is a posi.. live cure for the most complicated and ob- stinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions, prolapsus, or falling of the womb, weak back. 'female weakness," anteversion, retroversiorr, bearing-downsensations, chronic congestion. inflammation and ulceration of tho womb, in- flammation, pain and tenderness in ovariea. accompanied with "internal heat." As a regulator and promoter of func- tional action, at that critical period of change from girlhood to womanhood, "Favorite Pr scription " is a perfectly safe remedial agent. and can produce only good results. It is equally efficacious and valuable in its effects when taken for those disorders and derange- ments incident to that later and most critical period, known as "The Change of Lite." 66 Favorite Prescription'', when takers In connection with the use of Dr. Piercell Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxative doses of Dr. Pierce's Purgative Pellets (Little Liver Pills), cures Liver. Kidney and Bladder diseases. Their combined use also removea blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and scrofulous humors from the system. 66 Favorite Prescription,15±10 only medicine for women, sold by druggists, under a pomitive guarantee, from the manu- facturers, that it will give satisfaction in every case, or money will be refunded. This guaran- tee has been printed on the bottle -wrapper. and faithfully tarried out for many years. 13 Large ottl s 0.00 doses) $1.00, or six bottles for $ .00. For large, illustrated Treatise on Diseases Of Women (160 pages, paper -covered), send tea bents in stamps. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Associatiok 663 Plain St., BEFFALO, N. D 0 N L. 30 87. 1 CUR When 1 ney c Iro 1 do ot moon meroly to atop them for Wm:land th n Imve the 0 return oentn. 1 00OI 0 radical cum. I 1,00 ,0 de the di moor FITS, EPTIASMIY or FALL. 1NG SIOKNESSa study. 1 seturent rny reined, to euro the worst caseo tocaueo others hove failed le no nation for not now receiving a cure, Send at oncefor a treatlea ando Preo Dott e of thy infallible remedy. Give Express and Poet °Mao. It coats you nothing for a tea; lend I will cure you. Aachen!! DR. II. G. HOOT; Branch Otiloo, 37 Yonge St., Toronto • DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND X .1 have alio/1E1re roinctly for thoolioVoilteeriso; ht Its rues thous/tittle of ensea of the vioret kind fillet of long standing have boon cured. Indeed; efrong tkiiiy faith in its' that Will poivt NWO BOTTLES Vita% together with a. VALGAGTA TRRATISH On thie dinette to goy sufferer, '08400piken4 61.1.1'. 0. addices. Dtt. 'r. A. SLOCUM, Yong t., Torait6