HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Advocate, 1887-08-04, Page 3CY1,7111EN11, TOPICS,
IN Wyoming, before an election, a woman
beat her husband in the nomination for a
local office, but the husband twit it very
good-naturedly because tbere was a chance
the office Would be in the family, anyway.
This story is told to illustrate the felicities
of woman suffrage.
AT the session of the Bible School at
Northfield, Maesachusetts, Mr. Moody was
asked whether a choir uhould be placed at
the front or back of the church. He
answered the question with the remark :
"You notice how our ears are put on." It
is not often that a great religious question
no so easily and effectually disposed of.
IN his cable letter to the New York
Tribune Edmund Yates corrects the current
r statement that Queen Victoria means to
• ask Parliament to appropriate $2,500,000
Ito cover the expenses of entertaining the
$royalties attending the Jubilee. The total
. expense, it appears, was Some 0275,000,
and it is to be defrayed from accumulated
surpluses of the civil list.
ANOTHER American girl jo about to be -
°come a European Princess. Miss Win-
naretta Singer, daughter of the late Mr.
Singer, of Singer sewing -machine notoriety,
is going to wed the Prince de Montfellard,
whose title dates from the times of the
Crusades. His future motherin-in-law,
now the Duchess de Camposelice, was the
daughter of an English confectioner.
NOTWITHSTANDING the probable fact that
. there is no " electrio fluid," Sayti the New
York Comniereial Advertiser, and the known
'fact that electricity does not "travel," but
iS merely molecular change, and that con-
sequently thunderbolts never hit anybody,
and lightning rods only "lower the poten-
tial," people are getting "struck by
lightning" and the " eleetrical fluid" is
running up and down steeples all over the
,country.
Tun Parsees of Bombay have long been
famous for their charitable munificence,
and the example of the late Sir Jamsetjee
jejeebhoy, known throughout the eivilized
world for his liberality, is being emulated
at the present day by another Parsee, Sir
Dinshaw Manockjeet-Petit, Sheriff of Bora-
hay, wlib has just offered the Government
.of Bombay one and one-half lakh ($75,000),
for the purpose of establishing a female
i
college n that city. •
THU purlieus of Naples are nearly as
crowded with seething humanity at this
season as the tenement houilea of New
York, yet the hot weather makes no such
massacre of the innocents as it does on
this continent. "The 'reason," said an
Italian lady, "is becanser poor Neapolitan
children are allowed to ' run about naked,
while American babies are swathed in
flannels till they die of weakness caused by
excessive perspiration."
ROSES are the fashionable flower of the
Ipresent season in London, the national
emblem being chosen in honor of the
Jubilee. Beds of shaded roses are arrayed
on dinner and supper tables, artistically
harmonized from the deepest damask red
down to pale sea roses. The rose was
Introduced into Britain at a very early
period and has always thriven there, yield-
ing to no other country except the blessed
valley at the foot of the Balkans, near
Adrianople.
°wine to the disturbed condition of Bul:
garia thh monument which the officers of
the Russian genet:Her regiment intended
to raise at Plevna in memory of the grena-
diers who fell there in 1877 will be erected
at Moscow. It will contain. five groups of
figures and four statues of saints, with the
following inscription, in the Russian, Bul-
garian, Roumanian and Servian languages :
"To their comrades who fell in the glonone
battle of Plevna, Nov. 28, 1877, by the
Raseian Grenadiers."
Dn. Crites EDSON, of Nev York, has been
investigating the manufacture of cheap ice
creams, and he reaches the conclusion that
during the heated tuna the milky prepara-
tion is apt to contain a fungus growth that
is injurious to health.Young girls who go
promenading with economical beaux may
expect to hear frequent admonitory
remarks about this lurking fungus growth.
The girls may suggest, however, that the
doctor's analysis relates only to cheap ice
cream, and that the high-priced article
may still be eaten with comparative safety.
•A mou-rnEssune hydrant system is being
introduced in England, where manufac-
turers and insurance people are taking
great interest in it. Where fire occurs the
ordinary pressure is insufficient at a little
elevation for effective work. The system
proposes the construction of steel tanks
charged with water, connecting with the
ordinary maine, which can be submitted to
any desired pressure up to 100 or 120
pounds to the square inch. This pressure
is maintained by a series of wrought -iron
cylinders filled with compressed air.
THE tincture of the chloride of iron is a
remedy,frequently dispensed by the oblig-
ing apothecary to those who consult him
and appear to need a tonic. It is generally
taken well diluted with water, and is often
drawn into the mouth through a glass tube
or straw "t� save the teeth." It has re-
cently been shown that a tooth immersed
in a solution of this tincture diluted with
eight parts of water has its enamel entirely
destroyed in one hour. The water increases
the destructive power of the iron, and, on
that account, it should not be moil in dilu-
tion, but syrup is advised instead.
AT Muirkirk, in Scotland, a monument
in memory of some Covenanters who
suffered in the cause of religion has for
some time been in course of construction.
It has just been inaugurated. The monu-
ment is a polished granite obelisk, and is
the gift of Mr. Charles Howatson, Glen -
buck. The names inecribed on it are
Richard Cameron, John Smith, William
Adams and John Brown of Priesthill,
The shaft of the montunenithas two drap,ed
figures -one pointing to the earth, where
lie bodies of the martyrs, the other point-
ing to the skies.
AN interesting phenomenon has for some
time past been observed on the eastern
coast of the Caspian Sea. The Kara Bobhas
is an estuary nearly separated from the
main body of the Elea by a bank through
whiph there ie an inlet. The evitporatient
from this gulf is so great that a current
continually seta in from the Caspian, and,
as there is no return current, the water of
the gulf hedonics more saliferous, and a de-
posit of salt is in course of forniation. The
natural result of this would appear to be
that this gulf will be cut off from the
Caspian, and being thus dried up, Will be-
come an exteneive salt be4.
GOLD will only melt at a comparativelY
high temPerature, as we all know, but
what is not generally known, The Jewellers'
,1ournal says, is that if two per cent. of
silica be added to the gold it can be melted
over the flame of a ccmrrion candle. From
the same SOUrCO the reader.may learn that
a pretty alloy, said to resemble gold
exactly, can he made with 16 parts copper,
1 of zinc and 7 of platinum. The copper
and platinum are covered first with borax
and then with powdered charcoal and
melted then the zinc added and the alloy
thus produced is exceedingly malleable and
can be drawn into the finest wire, while it
never tarnishes.
THROLIGII re,i1Way communication is to be
established across South America,from the
A.tlantie to the Pacific. Three years ago
the Argentine Government constructed a
line of road, standard gauge, from Buenos
Ayres to the city of Mendosea„ in the
Andes, on the boundary of Chili, within
160 miles of Santiago, the capital of the
latter country, which was already connected
with Valparaiso, the most important of the
Pacific ports. It is intended to extend thiS
road through the Andes, a chain of moan -
tains 20,000 feet high, and complete this
gap of 160 miles, thus connecting Buenos
Ayres and Valparaiso, and forming a line
from coast to coast.
THERE are two styles of complexions in
vogue this season, and to attain them
cosmetics are used reoklessly,eays a fashion
writer. One, for pallid people, is ivory
white, and is'supposed to be the accom-
paniment of soft, brown eyes and hair to
matoh. The style of cuticle that is most
popular, however, and which may go with
all shades of hair except black and dark
brown, is known as the " peachblow." It
is a rosy flush suffusing the entire face,
tinting the ears a deep rose, and scarcely
fading out beneath the chin or at the nape
of the neck. Women with this kind of skin
will wear pink gowns during the summer,
for the " peacliblow " is to take the lead in
attire as well as in complexion.
ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL, the Brantford
boy, whose telephones are ringing all over
the world, has gone to his summer home,
near Cape Breton, N. S. He went up
there for the first time last summer, rented
a house" for $100 for the season and liked
it so well that this spring he bought a small
island near by for $500, upon which he is
trying to keep cool, with more or less suc-
cess, these torrid days. He has an impro-
vised "cottage," made out of an old farm-
house, this year, but proposes to build a
handsome home by next year. It is rather
noteworthy that neither Bell nor his thrifty
father-in-law (Gardiner G. Hubbard), who
is the business manager of their fortunes,
has built a house since they came to be
millionaires. Both live in Washington in
houses built by other men, altered to suit
them after they had purchased them.
Mn. Gomm GRAY writes of the project of
telephone communication between this con-
tinent and Europe : " Telephoning through
a wire being only and simply a wave of re-
production, similar to an air wave or sound,
or I might say a wave of the ocean, is per-
fectly practicable for three million miles,and
in fact more so under water than aerial, for
disturbances atmespheric do not occur
under water, nor do disturbances occur at a
depth below a given sounding distance
below the surface of the water, asthe water
at that depth is at rest. The small steel
wire which I already have used for four
years under water is a perfect reproducer,
and will reproduce three million miles far
better than the one hundred miles now so
long in my service, and giving clear repro-
duction of conversation, and without any
induction whatever.".
HEMORRLIAGE from the lungs is a symptom
of consumption which excites the greatest
apprehension, not only in the patients, but
in friende. It should be remembered that
it is not only rarely fatal, but ale° that, it
invariably brings relief, in a measure, from
the cough and the distressing constricted
sensations .previously felt in the chest.
Many remedies are advised for this emer-
gency, but rest and opium are the Most
valuable. One grain of opium, or twenty-
five drops of laudanum, should be given at
once, and repeated in from four to six
hours. The patient raust be kept per-
fectly quiet, and not allowed to speak. His
fears are best subdued by the force of ex-
ample, and his friends must appreciate
this fact and conduot themselves accord-
ingly. Rest in bed should be enforced for
three or four days after thehomorrhage has
ceased..
' IN the tomb of an Egyptian mummy a
pair of stockings has been found which
proves that shoresooks were worn by the
Egyptians 2,000 years ago, and that the art
of knitting had then attained great perfec-
tion. These curious socks are made from
fine sheep's wool, at first probably white,
but now brown with age. The needles
with which the work was done are :supposed
to have been somewhat thicker than those
now in use, and the knitting is loose and
elastic. The work begins in the siinplest
manner, with a single thread, but grows
fanciful as progress is made. Instead of
ending, like the modern sock, with a round-
ing point, two branches of equal width run
out like the fingers of a glove. This was
made to suit the sandals, which had a strap
fastened at the middle and passing over the
sock when on the foot. The work shows a
very skilful hand.
IN the warmer months the diet should be
composed largely of vegetable food. These
should be chosen with care, for many of
them are extremely unwholesome if not
perfectly fresh and sound. Almost all of
them, except berries, are improved by
washing or soaking them some time in cold
water. This renders some of them, such
as are to be eaten without cooking, more
crisp and refreshing, while all are cleansed
from possible contamination. The sources
of impurity are so numerous that safety
can be secured only, by constant watchful-
ness. The ground m 6r upon which vege-
tables are grown, the hands employed in
meuring them and the localities in which
they are stored aro too apt to be =dean
and the sources of cliseadt:. The healthy
human° stoma& has a great capacity for
digesting and destroying disease germs ;
otherwise no One would live through one
summer in the city ; but when weakened
by toil or siokness it testae this resisting
capacity to a large degree, and the con-
sequences are seen in the increased mor-
tality list which. marks the advent of hot
Weather -
Tim library of the British Museum( new
containmore than 2,000,000 books, which
occupy three miles lineal of bookcases
eight feet high. The library has increased
to such an extent that the disposition of
the books has become a serioue difficulty to
the authoritiee. There is still so much
crowding that in a very short time the
etate of the library will necessitate the
building of a new wing nnless other means
are devised to obviate the difficulty. The
scheme which has now been considered by
the trustees and has received their sanc-
tion is one for the introduction a movable
presses into the library.
Tim women of the country should give
more time to rest and relaxation and less
to routine housework. They should make
fewer pies and less cake and do more sit-
ting down in the rocking chair on the
porch. They•would be far more useful in
their families as the years go by. The
woman who stays at home every day but
when she " goes to meeting" on Sunday,
who is always "doing for the family," will
soon not only have no idea beyond the
family circle, but none there to its advan-
tage. She will be worn out physically and
mentally early in life, and her children will
begin to ignore her before they are gone.
An American engineer, who has made
the subject a special study on the spot, has
calculated that the Chinese Wall has a
contents of 18,000,000 cubic metres (6,350
million cubic feet). The cubic contents of
the Great Pyramid is only 241,000 metres.
The material used in the construction of
the Chinese Wall would be sufficient to build
a wall round the globe 1.8 metre (6 feet)
high, and 0.6 metre (2 feet) thick. The
same authority estimates the cost of the
Chinese Wall to be equal to the railway
mileage of the United States (128,000
miles). The stupendous work was con-
structed in the comparatively short period
of twenty years.
AMBERGRIS, which commands a high
price for perfumery and is prized in the
East as medicine and as a flavor in cookery,
was once absurdly guessed to be hardened
foam of the sea, or a fungoid growth in the
ocean, but is new known to be a secretion
of the liver of the spermaceti whale, and is
evidently a product of some disease in the
animal. It is a soft, fatty substance of
variegated gray or blackish color, and emits
an agreeable odor when rubbed or heated.
It is principally found floating on the sea of
warm climates, though it is also obtained
from the intestines of the whales. The
largest piece known weighed 182 pounds,
and was bought from the King of Tydo
by the Dutch East India Company. A
piece weighing 130 pounds was found in a
whale near the Windward Islands and sold
for 2500.
A porton justice in the city of New York
is an officer of serious responsibilities.
This year Police Justice Duffy, who has
served thirteen years, paesed sentence in
more than 16,000 cases. He says that the
most difficult of the duties of a police jus-
tice is to act according to the dictates of
his conscience. By long training he thinks
that he always knows when a prisoner is
lying. A guilty Prisoner's wisest course,
he declares, is to say "Judge, I am
guilty. I throw myself on the mercy of
the court." In a case of intoxication or
disorderly conduct this course is likely to
secure his discharge, if it is a first offence.
"When a woman weeps before me," de-
clares Judge Duffy, "1 remember that I
had a mother, a sister and niecee, and I
am apt to let her go. When a man weeps,
I think the worse of him. I haven't wept
myself since I was 16 years of age."
Acconnixe to Charles Frederick Holden,
in St. Nicholas, the white ant is the most
dreaded of insect invaders. In Africa their
houses aro dome-shaped mounds often 18
feet high. These insects erect pyramids
1,000 times higher than themselves. The
ants on their travels so conceal their ap-
proach that their presence is not suspected
until the damage is done. They usually
tunnel into any object which they attack,
often reducing it to a mere shell. In this
way they have been known to ascend
within the leg of a table, devour the con-
tents of a box upon it, and descend through
a tunnel bored in another leg, all in one
night. An officer of the English army
while calling upon some ladies in Ceylon
WAS startled by a rumbling sound. The
ladies started with affright, and the next
instant they stood with only the sky above
them. The roof had fallen in and lay all
about them, leaving them miraculously un-
harmed. The ants had made their way
up through the beams, hollowing them out
until a great part of the framework of the
house was ready to fall at the slightest
shock.
AN observer down South says an alliga-
tor's throat is an animated sewer. Every-
thing which lodges in his open mouth goes
down. He is a lazy dog, and instead of
hunting for something to eat, he lets his
victuals hunt for him. That is, he lies
with his great mouth open, apparently
dead, like the 'possum. Soon a bug crawls
into it, then a fly, then several gnats, and
a colony of mosquitoes. The alligator
doesn't close his mouth yet. He is waiting
for a whole drove of things. He does his
eating by wholesale. A little later a lizard
will cool himself under the shade of the
upper jaw. Then a few frogs will hop up
to catch the mosquitoes. Then more mos-
quitoes and gnats will light on the frog.
Finally a whole village of insects and rep-
tiles settle down for an afternoon picnic.
Then all at once there is an earthquake.
The big jaw falls, the alligator blinks one
eye, gulps down the entire menagerie, and
opens his great front door again for more
visitors.
A. Queen in Scarlet.
The Queen of Portugal wore a scarlet
satin dress, trimmed with lace of a combi-
nation of °ream and gold. Her train had
on each side down a border of gold and
scarlet silk brocade ; her neck and arms
were covered with diamonds, and sapphires
of enormous size, like gems, were pendant
from her ears. On her head she wore an
aigrette of scarlet feathera, with diamond
stare among the heir, which was gathered
very high up. -Paris 1?egister.
Wednesday, Angust 3rd, is Brantford's
civic holiday'.
THE IfilEC4NNPIQ 94" THINGS*
When °WWI! MaPa, Fells and QtkorPoP1-
14r Wore ?felv•
The lint eoining of peepey is, attributed
to Pheidon, King of Arges, in 695 B.C.
Coined money was firet, used in London
twenty,five years before the Christian era,
but gold was not coined here till the
eleventh century, and money was not given
the round forra to which we are accustomed
until the lapse of another hundred years
or so.
Thefirst geographical map of :England
was made in the year 1520.
Handkerchiefs were first manufactured
at Paisley in 1743.
Post -offices were first known in England
as early as ;581, and exactly one hundred
years later a penny post was introduced for
London and its suburbs by an upholsterer
named Murray,
Pens were first used in the seventh cen-
tury. They were, of course, quills, and
steel pens did not come into use unti11820,
when the first gross of them was sold whole-
sale for 27 48. The quality of these pens
was greatly inferior to that of those for
which we now pay sixpence a gross.
The first navigable canal in England was
made ing1134, when Henry I. joined the
Trent to the Witham.
Spectacles were first used in the latter
part of the ,thirteenth century. There is
no certainty as to who was the inventor of
them, but the distinction is generally
claimed for Alessandra di, ;Spina, who is
said to have made some about 1285.
Woollen cloth was first made in England
in 1331, though its making is one of the
most ancient arts. It was not dyed or
dressed by Englishmen until 1667.
Cricket was first played about the year
1300. It was then and for a long time
afterwards known as "club ball."
The first voyage around the world was
made in the Vittoria, a ship ,whioh formed
part of the expedition that sailed under
Magellans in 1519.
The first London directory was printed
in 1677, and contained sixty-four pages,
with the names of 1,790 persons or firms.
-London Exchange.
Bartholdi,s Great Work.
The statue of Liberty enlightening the
world, which stands on Bedloe's Island, in
the harbor of New York is one of the most
sublime artistic conceptions of modern
times. The torch of the goddess lights
the nations of the earth to peace, prosperity
and progress, through Liberty. But
"liberty " is an empty word to the thous-
ands of poor women enslaved by physical
ailments a hundredfold more tyrannical
than any Nero. To such sufferers Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription hold forth
the promise of a speedy cure. It ist
specific in all those derangements, irregu-
larities and weaknesses which make life a
burden to so many women. The only
medicine sold by druggists, under a posi-
tive guarantee from the manufacturers,
that it will give satisfaction in every case,
or money will be refunded. See guarantee
printed on wrapper enclosing bottle.
Lord Brassey, having made a present to
the town of Hastings of a building for an
art school and public library, to cost
$75,000, it has been suggested that the in-
stitution be called De Breed Free Library,
after the imaginary ancestor of the Bras -
Berl. •
The th*ree R's brought Regret, Reproach
and Remorse to a great political party in
1884. The three P's, when signifying Dr.
Pierce's Purgative Pellets, bring Peace to
the mind. Preservation and Perfection of
health to the body,
Worse Than Fall Dress.
Victoria, B. C., Times: An undress
rehearsal of the ladies and gentlemen
taking part in the paper carnival will take
place at 8 o'clock this evening in the skating
rink, Yates street.
•
The Five Sisters.
There were five fair sisters and eaoh had an aim -
Flora would fain be a fashionable dome;
Scholarly Susan's selection was books; •
Coquettish Cora cared more for good looks;
Anna, ambitious, aspired after wealth;
Sensible Sarah sought first for good health,
So she took Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery and grew healthy and blooming.
Cora's beauty quickly faded ; Susan's eye-
sight failed from over -study; Flora became
nervous and fretful in striving after fashion,
and a sickly family kept Anna's husband
poor. But sensible Sarah grew daily more;
healthy, charming and intelligent, -and she
married rich. •
In India and Africa certain tribes con-
sider the monkey to be either sacred or
equal to a human being. A slave once
said: "If I had held My tongue like the'
monkey I should never have been put to
work.'
Demonstrated.
Soraetimes it c---..---ostsIbundreds of dollars to
convince a man; very often less is required,
but in the case of Poison's NERVILINE, that
sovereign remedy for pain, 10 cents foots
the bill, and supplies enough Nerviline to
convince every purchaser that it is the best,
most prompt and certainjaim remedy in
the world.Nerviline is gala for ,h11 hindtt.
of pain,'pleaslintIo take, and sure to cure
cramps and all.internal pains. It is also
nice to rub outside, for it has an agreeable
smell, quite unlike so many other prepara-
tions, which are positively disagreeable to
use. Try it now. Go to a drug store and.
buy a 10 cent or 25 cent bottle. Poison's
Nerviline. Take no other.
His Trade to Go.
Opposed to Commercial Union, eh?
And why are you against it?" a citizen
asked a tough -looking mariner at Yonge
street wharf yesterday.
It will interfere with vested rights."
"Whose vested rights?"
"Mine. Commoroial Tinion will de rive
me of iny legitimate calling.
"What are yeti?"
"A sinuggler."-Toronto
Get There d'aat t suite -
Pesten girl entered Manville'e store Yea-
terdoy, end stepping pp to Ed. Manville.
said:
wetild like to pinion's a diminutive
feline intestine peepared exprhesly for a
bonjoseph."
'She got a fiddle string at once."-
117hitehall Times.
Last Week4r, Leeeer, hotel keeper at
Roseneath, was fined $650 for selling fire-
water to twenty •Indians. This is the
heavieet fine ever imposed on one man in
the United Counties of Northumberland.
and Durham for violation of the liquor lavr
HAT
AIL
YOU?
Do you feel dull, languid, low-splrited, life-
less, and indeseribidoly miserable,,both physi-
cally and mentally; experience a sense of
fullness or bloating after eating; or of "gone-
ness," or emptiness of stomach in tho morn-
ing, tongue coated, titter or bad taste in
mouth, irregular appetite, dizzinesa, frequent
headaches, blurred eyesight," floating specks"
before the eyes, nervous prostration or ex-
haustion, irritability of temper. hot Bushell,
alternating with chilly sensations, sharp,
biting, transient pains here and there, cold
feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or
disturbed and unrefreshing sleep, constant.
indescribable feeling of dread, or of impend-
ing calamity?
If you have all, or any•considerable number
of that° symptoms, you are suffering frosa
that most common of American maladies -
Bilious Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated
yfith Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The more
complicated your disease has become, the
greater the number and diversity ot symp-
toms. No matter what stage it has reached.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
will subdue it, if taken according to direc-
tions for a reasonable length of time. If not
cured, complications' multiply and Consump-
tion of the Lungs. Skin Diseases, Heart Disease,
Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, or other grave
maladies are quite liable to set in and, sooner
or later. induce a fatal termination.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
cover), acts powerfully upon the Liver, and
through that great blood -purifying organ.
cleanses the system of all blood -taints and im-
purities, from whatever cause arising. It is
equally efficacious in acting upon the Kid-
neys, and other excretory organs, cleansing,
strengthening, and healing their diseases. As
an appetizing, restorative tonic, ft promotes
digestion and nutrition, thereby building up
both flesh and strength. In malarial districts.
this wonderful medicine has gained great
Fever, Dumb Ague; and kindred diseasce. M
eceolelviorrityin curing Fever and Ague, Chills and
Dr. Pierce's Goldenedical Das.
y
CURES ALL HUMORS,
from a common Blotch. or Eruption, to the
'worst Scrofula. Salt -rheum, "Fever -sores,"
Scaly or Rough Skin. in Short, all diseases
caused by bad blood are conquered by this
powerful, purifying. and invigorating medi-
cine. .Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under
its benign influence. Especially has it mani-
fested .its potency in, curing Totter, Eczema,
Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles. Sore Eyes. Scrof-
ulous Sores and Swellings, Hip -joint Disease.
"White Swellings," Goitre, or Thick Neck.
and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents in
stamps for a large Treatise, with colored
plates, on Skin Diseases, or the Name amount
for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections.
"FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE."
Thoroughly cleanse it by using Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery, and good
digestion, 'a fair skin, buoyant spirits. vital
strength and bodily health will be established.
CONSUMPTION,
which is Scrofula of the Lungs, is arrested
and cured by this remedy, if taken in the
earlier stages of the disease. From its mar-
velous power over this terribly fatal disease.
when first offering.this now world -famed rem-
edy to the public, Dr. Pierce thought seriously
of calling it his " Cossularriois Coax," but
abandoned that name as too restrictive for
a medicine which, from ita wonderful com-
bination of tonic, or strengthening, alterative,
or blood -cleansing, anti -bilious, pectoral, and
nutritive properties, is unequaled, not mils'
as a remedy for Consumption, but for nil
Chronic Diseases of the
Liver,. Blood, and Lungs.
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Short-
ness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Bron-
chitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred
affections, it is an efficient remedy.
for
Sly by Druggists, at $1.00, or Six Bottleff
Sendjen cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce's
'book on Consumption. Address,
World's Dispensary Medical bsociation,'
663 33scin St., 111UPPALO, N. ir.
• DONI..3187.
1 ZAIRE. FITS!
When I say cure I do noi moan merely le atop Chamfer for.
time and then 11110e them return aceisi I mean a radical
Aura. Ihnvo made the disease of VITA, EPILEPSY or FALL-
ING !BUENOS,* Ilfe-long lowly. I wairalit my remedy
to cure the worst cook Deco.° othe l.vo felled le no
reaeonIor not now receiving a cure. Send 01 0040 tor.
treatise and a Free Bottle ol toq Infant -JO remedy. aStiwr,
Ewes! and Poet Wilco It coats you nothing for A trial,
and I will cure you. Addreee DE. IL 0. ROOT,
,
;Branch Office, 37 Togo St,, Toronto.
N'S
BAKING
POWDER
THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND
'CONSUMPTION.
. / hove peititi ye remedy tor th e above di name ;I:if its Nilo
thousand/I of reties of the worst kInd end of long 'tending
have Leen en ,l, Indee , eo strong le my faith tn ita
efficleay, that Peed TWO BOTTLES FEEE, together
wI100 VALUABLE TREATISE an Ode dimes to any
.ouffeier. Glee °spree, and P. 0. eddrete.
. . DR. 0. RI.00UM, ,
Stanch Offida,37 Twig° St., Toraito
' BEST IN THE
WORLD!
noi.X.R.r..wil\T Magazine Rifle. 411.1?ilitto
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nectirhey goarAntera, and tho only shaeluiely safe tido 00 tho market
DALLAitn onilitive, SPORTING AND 1,Attesr RIFLES, world renowned. Send for
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