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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Advocate, 1887-08-11, Page 7ca.mR.NT TOPICS. CLEVELAND Leader: It is a ORTiOII8 fact ithat very few wemee are victims of sun - 'stroke or heat apoplexy. Is it a question of exposure to the sun; of ion and thort hair, of diet, including drinks, or tvliat does make the difference so marked? LOAD BRASSEY, having made e present to vthe town of Hastings of a buildingfor an art school and 'Public: library, to cost $75,000, it has been suggested that the institution be called the De l3resci Free Library, after the Iimaginary ancestor of the Braseeys. Rumex, like history, repeats itself. The ..oxydized silver chains and ornaments that were in vogue during thepalmy days of Heronlaneum and Pompeii are now the -fad for ladies' wear; and the pulled sleeves ethat obtained "when George the Fourth was King " are ornamenting the arms of the elite. NEW Yonx Sun: A curious circumstance is before us now in the fact that the 'Supreme Court of 'the State is running a • concert saloon down in the Bowery. The -,proprietor failed and a receiver has been appointed by the court to run the machine Id make money for the settlement with the creditors. EVERY year sees a revolt started against 'black broadcloth as a basis for men's even- ing dress. This year no less a personage than E. Berry Wall, known to fame as the King of the Dudes, is at the head of the rebellion., He has appeared in a Saratoga ball -room attired in a coat and trousers not wine -colored cloth, and a waistcoat of white satin brocade. CHARLEY LOOMIS, a Kansas City saloon. 'keeper, has anchored a boat in the exact , centre of the Missouri River, where he Bells whiskey without paying license. He claims that no one MR ascertain under what jjurisdiction he does business. Several ,attempts have been made to convict him 'under the law, but each time he escaped on the ground of non -jurisdiction. The Mis- souri Prohibitionists have made at least •one man take water. PmulArs the most extortion about Niagara 1Falle, writes a correspondent, is at the rapper suspension bridge. Say there are /our of you in a carriage. The charge is 25 cents each, 26 cents for the driver and :10 cents for the horses and vehicle -41.35 to MRS a bridge that is so narrow that vehicles cannot pass on it. If that !fridge corporation has a soul an improved teles- esope will have to be built to discover it. THE citizens of Buffalo have resolved once more to chain Niagara Falls for nsanu. facturing purposes, says the Springfield Republican. A fund is being raised to seoure engineering estimates. But why spend money in prospecting for plans? A citizen of New York State once drew up plans for a huge wheel at the falls with a shaft running through to Albany to which all the belting of the State could be attached. The inventor died in an insane asylum, but his idea remains. • But seriously, the trans- mission of power by electricity is likely to work out problems as big as this. A LONDON correspondent reports that Emily Faithful has come up from Man. chester to London'at the Queen's com. mand, to present Her Majesty with the address which she moved in the Queen's honor. It is a gorgeous affair, bound in a foot -square of ivory, exquisitely painted by Miss Charlotte Robinson (Miss Faithful's present companion), with superb Gloire de Dijon roses, which the Queen decrees shall henceforth be called " Jubilee roses." Miss Faithful looks extremely well, and she says she is unusually happy. The smiles of the Queen seem to be as vivifying as sunlight. Tue prevalence of measles in some parts of the world, and its fatality, have aroused health authorities to such an appreciation of the necessity of restricting the spread of this disease that official steps are being ilaken for the attainment of this end. A. „Weent occurrence at Portsmouth, England, makes the necessity for this work more c emphatic. H.M.S. Crocodile arrived at that place with forty persons flick with measles on board, who were permitted to land. From these individuals the disease has spread to an epidemic, and at last reports the number of deaths was 197. THE discovery has been made, it is sa4 of a great swindle in railroad ties, of which the Missouri Pacific: system of roads is the chief victim. The operators in it have, it is alleged,. taken $1,000,000 out of the treasury of the roads more than the legiti- mate value of the ties. The chief contrac- tors for the ties sublet their contrsots in such a way that they got about 10 cents a tie more than they paid at first hand. Ties which were worth from 21 to 23 cents they sold to the roads for 30 cents. The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy and the Rock Island roads are believed to be also great losers. Mae. ORD, widow of the late general of that name, has recently sold for 11,000 the able upon which Grant and Lee signed the papers providing for the surrender of the rebel armies. The Turchaser is a Mr. Gunther, of Chicago." General Ord seoured possession of the table at the time of the eurrender and his widow obtained a letter from General Grant attesting its genuine. ROSS which, we suppose, goes with the table and increases its value. The am of $3,000 was asked for the table until re- cently. It is a common enough piece of furniture in itself but valuable on account of its historic associations. A PRETTY young woman's sleeping oar experience is related in that department of the American Magazine where onlyi true stories are placed : "1 always lie with my bead very far front and my feet near the wall. One night I Watt awakened by some one stepping on mynose. as it lay on the pillow. You can imagine zny wrath. I never said a word, but gave the foot the most spiteful pinch, that sent it up after its owner with an exclamation point. The next day, he—a very dapper young man— AM opposite me all day, and, actually, the miear thing never moved without limping And it couldn't have hurt him that bad, could it ?" Mn. biLADSTONE has four sons and three daughters. The eldest son, Mr. William Henry Gladstone, was born in 1840; he le married to a daughter of Lord Blantyre. The second is the Vicar of Hawarden, Stephen Edward Gladstone, who Waft last year Married to a Liverpool lady. The third, Me. Henry Teville Gladstone, is resident in Calcutta, a:ad the fourth, Mr. Herbert Gladstone, born in 1854, is M.P. for a division of Leeds and distinguished in political life. The eldept. daughter, Agnes', was married in 1873 to Mr, Wickham, head master of Wellington College; the second is married to Rev. Henry Drew; the youngest, Helen, is Principal of the College for Women at Newnham, near Cambridge. ONE of the leading candy manufacturers tells a New York reporter that there is more money in molasses candy cit the ordinary selling price than in any other kind. Close to molasses candy comes chocolate drops, caramels and other candiee in which sugar and chocolate or plain flavors are the ingredients. The candies on which there is the least profits in pro- portion to the selling price are those which sell high. The best confectioner's sugar costs but little over six cents a pound, and the beet grades of molasses are not dear. These and a little flavoring make molassee candy, and that is why there is so much profit in it. When you come right down to it, children and adults with "the sweet tooth" care more for molasses and plain candies than they do for the expeneive and elaborate French confectionery. Tun common assertion that braes can- not be tempered is met by a writer in Mechanical Progress with a statement cover- ing his own experience during a long period. Brass, he asserts, not hard by mixture, but by compression, either rolling, ham- mering, wire drawing, or any other pro- cess whioh compresses the particles of metal, can be and is tempered regularly, just as easily and in the same rnanner as in tempering an equal piece of hardened steel, namely, by heat; that is, by placing a small piece of polished steel on the brass object to be tempered, and applying the heat so as to affect equally the braes and steel, the temper of the brass will be made known by the color of the steel, and, con- sequently, brass may by this process be tempered in exact proportion to every shade of color of the steel. GENERAL WOLSELEY holds the post of Adjutant -General of the British army on an annual salary of $13,500. To Field Marshal Von Moltke, who performs the same duties in the German army, only 38,000 is paid, and the Adjutant -General of the French army only gets $4,000. When British public attention was called to the fact that a Von Moltke, one of the greatest commanders the world has ever known, was getting less than 60 per cent. of Lord Wolseley's pay for directing the staff of an army fifteen times as large as the British force, it was necessary for the mutual admiration society that exists in the British War Office to break the force of the inevitable odious comparison. Colonel Knox, one of Lord Wolseley's staff subor- dinates, justified the large salary paid to his chief on the ground that tue latter was burdened with " the enormous responsibi- lity involved in a volunteer army," and apparently this amiable quibble was acceptable to the Army Investigation Com- mittee. Tux cholera in Sicily and Calabria is of a more virulent type apparently than Italy has known since 1884. Thus far only sporadic, incomplete reports are obtain- able, but, as the spread of the infected area is incessant, we are likely soon to bear a good deal of it. The strongest phase of the thing is that it ehould reappear for the third consecutive year, practically on the same territory, which hitherto has been unheard of. Physicians in London are getting nervous about the possibility of the plague getting a foothold in the metropolis, owing to the unprecedentedly favorable conditions. During the heated term of the past six weeks the weekly deaths from diarrhoea in,the London district have gone up from 9 to 312-01 this latter number 265 being infants under 1 year of age. The Lancet points out that one of the surest precureors of cholera in agiven district is the tendency to diarrhossio fatality, and urges the utmost vigilance. Eire PETER'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH at North Greenfield is probably the only religious edifice in Wisconsin which depends upon olianspagne,Vottles for its drainage. When the church was built funds were very scarce, and many small economies were practiced. The congregation on first occupying their place of worehip found that it was uncomfortably damp. The fact was mentioned to the late George Stevens, who said "I'll tell you how to remedy that. Go into my cellar and you will find enough champagne bottles to build a drain with. They are often used for that purpose in England, and when once laid will last forever, if not allowed to choke up." The bottles were secured, the bottoms deftly knocked off, and the necks abbreviated in length. Then, by placing the neck of one bottle in the bottom of another, and so on, a drain was constructed which has kept the little church extra dry" ever since. Mum diversity of opinion exists as to the utility of iron shutters. It is unquestion- ably true that they are not only undeeirable but positively dangerous under certain cir- oumstatioes. Many fires have been concealed by them until they have attained great headway, and then the shutters have kept the firemen out for some time longer. At the same time, for *keeping fire out of a building when a neighboring one is burn- ing, they are positively invaluable. Almost every one has witnessed fires where the firemen have had a fierce etruggle to get inside the building, and has wished the iron shutters were not there to prevent the easy handling of the blaze. But certainly weary one, too, has seen cases of buildings with inflammable goods piled up near the windows, which would have gone down in a fire destroying some buildings close by, if the shutters had not presented a non - burnable surface to the flames. As a mat- ter of faet, there is no good reason why one shutter, at least, on each story of a build- ing above the first, should not always be left unfastened, to afford entry to the fire- men in ease of need, as is largely the pre°. tice in sonic large oitiee. An English paper says " We are in a position to state that the county of Durham will shortly produce a startling economic improvement in the matter of fuel com- bustion and the heating of steam boilers. Protection hag been obtained for the invention, and in the course of a short time we eltall be in a position to lay before I our readers the practiced details. In tho meantime, we can only in the Most general terms foreshadow the nature of the results attainable. The cubic bulk of fuel that will heneeferth be required for marine steam g ievjr in ra! g 101? the er e 1)nY4111::47 lay that prOportien to the etowage Space for cargo in -ocean going steamships. The time for raising steam will be diminished in all steam boilers, stationary or maeine, by at least two -third?. The Cost of fuel CODSIIIIII*011 will be reduced by more than one -halt, and the production of smoke will • be absolutely annihilated. The process has been made the subject of actual experi- mental demonstration. Every test has been applied. The results we have given above are tie under•stated consequences of experiments made under circumstances the reverse of favorable to the invention. . Ix was in 1868 that the Moabite stone was discovered. It was found at Dibau, in Moab. The supposition has been formed that it was erected by Mesha, King of Moab, mentioned in II. Kings vii. The in- scriptions have always been understood to refer to his wars with Israel in the tenth century B.C. The stone, which exists only in fragments, having been broken by the contending Arab claimants, is preserved in the Louvre. Rev. Dlr. Lowry, Secretary of the Anglo -Jewish Association, in an article in the last number of the 'Scottish Review, proclaims the text of the inscription to be a fabrication. A.ocording to this writer, who has carefully examined the stone, and who furnishes an illustration, " the dressed surface is sncient, whereas the in- scription is modern." The surface is pitted and indented, in consequence of thousands of years of exposure. Not so the inserip- tions. The text is given in Hebrew, with a translation. The writer pronounces the text to be "egregiously un-Hettraio," and arrives at the conclasionthatnotwithetand- ing its world-wide grorification,the Moabite stone,ie a 1' stone of stumbling," and must be consigned to the limbo of marvellous im- positions. Hem is an exceedingly good story from the Boston Herald and there are a good many people who ought to paste it on their mirrors: A prominent newspaper publisher in this city, who has gained fame also in the literary world, once told me that he considered it an affront for any one to say to him: "Now, don't print this in your paper," in the course of any conversation held in his presence. I feel like echoing the same opinion. Certain newsis entirely legitimate, no matter where heard or obtained, but a4newspaper man respects private affairs and personal feeling just as much as any one else, if he is a man of principle. To be thought differently of always reminds me of the story of the musician and an eminent surgeon who met one evening at a social entertainment. The surgeon said to the musical genius: "01 course you have brought your violin." e No, I have not," said the musician "But are you not going to play or do something to add to the entertainment of Mrs. Blank's guests ?" asked the physician. "1 had not thought of it," said the violinist, "but if you will out off leg. I will play something.' That musician was a wise znan. I wish he might set an example to a good many others; it would save some people a good deal of annoyance. a , THE question, oan an individual shoot himself through the head and afterward through the heart, or through the heall0 first and afterward through the brain, has recently given rise to much discussion among physicians. It is universally agreed that such a thing is possible. It is popu- larly supposed that wounds of the heart produce mstant death. Such isnot always the case. One instance is recorded where a man stabbed another in the heart, and the injured man chased his assailant 150 feet, struck him, nearly killed him, fell and died in an instant. In another instance a man standing behind the counter of his store was shot in the heart. He ran around the counter, a distance of 20 feet, hit the man who had shot him on the bead with a hammer and killed him by a blow. Still another case is on record in which a bullet passed through the heart, and the subject, a boy, lived three years and some months afterward. As a rule, serious injury to the brain is followed by immediate loss of consciousness, but that is not invariably the case. It is told of a man who, after shooting his wife, shot himself through the head, but never became unconscious, and apparently recovered. He was sent to the penitentiary:, and a year later died of ab- scess of the brain. A physician in St. LOUD; who reports this case also describes another—that of a boy of 8 or 9 years of age, who put a pistol to his heed and fired. It was demonstrated by probing that the bullethad lodged in the brain, and yet this boy never lost consciousness, but recovered, and seven months after was reported as perfectly well. Many cases similar to these are on record. They have an important medico -legal bearing. If a man is found dead, shot through the head and heart, one would naturally assume that he had been murdered, and yet, as will appear from the foregoing, a suicide may inflict both wounds upon himself. A Great Wonder in Heaven. There lived near Alexiodria, in Virginia an old colored man and woman, whom their acquaintances called Daddy and Mammy Williams. He had had educational advan- tages, and could read in & feshion peculiarly his own; but his wife, although lacking as regards erudition, possessed great force of character, which she often displayed in a manner that was very irritating to her husband: When she became particularly fractions Daddy would take the Bible and open to that chapter in Revelation begin- ning, "And there appeared a groat wonder in heaven, a woman clothed with the sun, and the mood under her feet," etc. With impressive Boleirinity ho wouldread as follows: " An' dere 'peered a groat won- der in heben, a woman!" Slowly closing the book, he Would gaze sternly at his now subdued wife, for the passage never failed to produce the desired effeot.—Editor's Drawer in Harpers. Another of Those Old Laws. Married men are warned that the law of 1741 prohibits the kissing of theft' wives on Sundays under penalty of fine and impri- sonment. Pevv married Wen are guilty of the offence, but it won't do any harm to Call attention to the A.ct.—Pitisbney Times The Governors of Idaho and NeVada are brothers. HE SLEPT IN A BATH TUB. A IrIpatana Editor's Thrilling Night in stSt. pant Hotel. 44 Inow a good joke on an editor from Helena, M. T.," said a conductor On the St. Peed, ",and I guess I'll have to tell it. He's a colonel, but I shan't give you his last name. Last week be came into S. Raul' on business, and, after registering at the best hotel in town, started out to see the eighty. It was about 2 o'clock in the morn- ing when he returned, a little the worse for wear. It happened that the night porter who showed him to his room was only about half awake, and without knowing what he was doing, ushered the colonelinto the bath room attached to his apartment assigned to hie use, muttered 'G'night, sir,' and disappeared. Next morning at the breakfaer table the Montana journalist met an acquaintance, ana said to him: "'Fine hotel, this.' " ' Yes, one of the best in the country.' "'Do you like their new-fangled beds ?' " ' Their beds are all right, though I didn't know there was anything new about them.' "Well, they've got the darndest bed in my room you ever set eyes on. It's more like a coffin, and there wasn't a blamed bit of cover on it. I was cold all night. We true that when a feller gets thirsty in the night he don't have to get out of the bad for a drink, but the worst of it was in my case that it was just my *riled luck to leave the thingrunnin' a little the het time I took a drink out of it, an' when I woke up again I was nigh drowned in cold water. Never spent such a miserable night in my life."—Chicago Herald. A Toronto Shop -lifter's Big Haul. Maud Hutchinson, a rather nice -looking and neatly -dressed English • girl, was arrested by Deteotive Black in Toronto yesterday for shop -lifting. Two large packages of goods, embracing everything from a fine tooth comb to a baby's lace bonnet, were described at police head- quarters as the proceeds of her work Tues- day in stores on Yonge and Queen streets. In the parcels there were babies' shoes, a package of silver-plated forks, a red linen tablecloth, a pair of scissors, a whisk, a cake of toilet soap, and a score of other small things. Part of the stuff was found on her when she was arrested, part of it was recovered at her mother's house, 152 King street. "How long has this been going on?" was asked Inspector Stark. "1 don't exactly know," he answered. " This is merely yesterday's haul." The girl has only been out from England a short while. Why Laura Lost lier Bean. Laura once had an affluent beau, Who called twice a fortnight, or so, Now sho sits, Sunday eve, All lonely to grieve, Oh, where is her recreant beau. And why did he leave Laura so? Why, he saw that Laura was a languish- ing, delicate girl, subject to sick headaches, sensitive nerves and uncertain temper; and knowing what a life-long trial is a fretful, sickly wife, he transferred his attentions to her cheerful, healthy cousin, Ellen. The secret is that Laura's health and strength are sapped by chronic; weakness, peculiar to her sex, which Ellen averts and avoids by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pie- scription. This is the only remedy, for woolen's peculiar weaknesses and ailments, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfaction in every case or money will be refunded. See guarantee on bottle wrapper. —A total eclipse of the sun will take place on the 13th of next month, but will only be visible in Europe and Asia. It will last four minutes, and great preparations have been made by the European astrono- mers who observe it at its totality, which will be in Japan. To Cure is Corn. There isno lack of so-oalled cures for the common ailment known as corns. The vegetable, animal, and mineral kingdoms have been ransacked for cures. It is a simple matter to remove corns without pain, for if you will go to any druggist or medicine dealer and buy a bottle of Put- nam's Painless Corn Extractor and apply it as directed the thing is done. Get "Put- nam's," and no other. Forty-five years ago Elam Brown pur- chased a ranch from a Spaniard in Contra Costa county, California, and he has lived on it ever since. Reis 90 years old. A Flat Contradiction. Some one has told you that your catarrh is incurable. It is not so. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy will cure it. It is pleas- ant to use and it always 'does its work thoroughly. We have yet to hear of a case in which it did not accomplish a cum when faithfully used. Catarrh is is disease which it is dangerous to neglect. A certain remedy is at your command. Avail your- self of it before the complaint assumes a more serious form. All druggists. The Latest Idea in Dress Coats. At the Newport Casino dance on Friday night (July 15th) several gentlemen ap. peered ha the latest style of dress coat, just brought over from England—a short, round coat in place of tho conventional swallow- tail.—New York Herald. He ato green cucumbers; They madd him quite sick; Ent ho took a few 'Pellets" That cured him right quick. An easier physic You never will find Than Pierce's small "Pellets," The Purgative kind. Small but precious. 25 cents per vial. Objects to Full Dress. One of the strong points of P. C. Chap - man's evidence against Bessie McAllister for keeping a disorderly house at 69 Agnes street was that thedefendant was seen with bare arms and shoulders. Counsel for the defence asked the witness if he kad ever been at a full drees party. From his answer it appears that he had not been at one. It was proven that the house bore a bed repu- tation. A fine of $25 and costs or 40 days was inflieted.—Toronto Mail. A shark redently captured in San Fran- cisco Bay contained is pock of young lobsters. *dr. !teacher aud. the Hen. (Bridgeport (Conn.) Standard.) Speaking of clever things," once said Mr. Beecher, "did you ever hear that witty poem written twenty years ago on my Dame? Here, me, [he always called Mrs. Beecher ma] you read it to .Perkins; I've forgotten the words." Mrs. Beecher smilingly put on her glasses, went to is drawer, took out a bit ot ,paper and laughl ingly read: Said a great Congregational preaoher To a hen : You're a, beautiful preiture." The hen just for that Laid three eggs in his hat. And thus did the hen reward Beecher. ••••=11111i pat TSt The Original tvtotai tLITTLE 6. Vir%tikal.%11S° PLIZELS1111. DZWARIff 07 17,11TA7AON.44 Aticirs ASK POR zat. PIERCE', . I'lff1t.011, Oil .L.127.EE 81JGAR-004T.ED PILLS. Being entirely vegetable, they op- erate without disturbance to the system; diet, or occupation. Put up in glass vials, hermeti- cally sealed. Always f'resh end reliable, ' As a laxative,_alterative, or purgative, those little Fellete give the most perfect satisfaction. SICK HEADACHE, Bilious Headache, ,Dizzinese, Vonstipu.. along • Indigestion, Bit lone Altacliostand au derangements of the stom- ach and bowels, are prompt - le relieVed and permanently cured by the use of 'Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. In explanation of the remedial power of these Pellets over so (goat a variety of diseases, it may truthfully be add that their action upon the .system is universal, not a gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence. Sold by druggists,25 cents is vial. Manufactured at the Chemical Laboratory of WORLD'S DISMOUNT MLDICAL, ASSOCIATION, BuffalO, N.Y. 4 $500 REWARD is offered by the manueactur- . m ere of Dr. Sage's Catarrh la Remedy, for is mule of Chronic Nasal Catarrh which they cannot cure. WirlIIIPTONES OF OATARRIL—Dull. heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at other& thick, tenacious, raucous, purulent, bloody had putrid,* the eyes are weak, watery, and inflamed; there is ringing In the eara. deafness, hacking or coughing to. clear 'the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together with scabs from 'ulcers; the voice is changed and has a mewl twang; the breath is offensive; smell and taste are im- paired; there is a sensation eff dizziness, with mental depression, a hacking cough and gen- eral debility. Only a few of the above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any one ease. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, re- sult in consumption, and end in the grave. No disewse is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, oriole understood by physicians., By its mild, soothing, and healing properties, Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures this worst caaes of Catarrh, " cold In the head,” Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache. Sold by druggists everywhere; 50 cents. "Untold. Agopy !rota Catarrh." Prof. W. Hmssarzo, thefamous mesmerist, , of Ithaca. N.Y., writes: 'Some ten years ago I suffered untold agony froall chronic nasal catarrh. My family physiciatOgave me up as incurable, and said I must die. My ease W81 suoh a bad one, that every day, towards sun- set, my voice would become so hoarse I could barely speak above a whisper. In the morning my coughing and clearing of ray throat vrould almost strangle rae. By tho use of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a well man, and the cure has been permanent." "Constantly Hawking and SpIttin8.9, Tnomes J. RUSHING, Esq., 1983 Pi716 Etna, St. Louis, Mo., writes: "I was a great Buffeter from catarrh for three years. At times I could hardly breathe, and was constantly hawking and spitting, and for the ltu3t eight months could not breathe through the nostrils. I thought nothing could be done for me. Luck- ily, I. was advised to try Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and I am now a well man. I believe it to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now manufactured, and one has only to give it a fair trial to experience astounding results and a permanent curer Threellottles Care Catarrh, ELI ROBBINS. Runyan P. 0., Columbia Co., Pa.. says: "My daughter had catarrh when she was five years old, very badly. I saw Dr. Sage's Catarrb Remedy advertised, and pro. cured a bottle for her, and soon saw that it helped her; a third bottle effected is perma- nent cure. She is now eighteen years old and sound End hearty." D 0 N L. 32 87. Merchants, Butchers AND TRADERS GENERALLY, We wants GOOD bus in your locality to pick up CALFSKINS For mi. Cash furnished on satisfactory guaranty. Address 0.8. PAGE, Hyde Park, Vermont, U. 8 ONSUMPTION. I have a positive remedy for the above di seise ; by its use thougands of cages of the wont kind and Orions standing hays been cured. Indeed, so strong ts my fain In In efficacy, thst I will mend TWO BOTTLES PRUE, together with aVALUABLE TREATISE on thts disease to any "aseerer. 01ve express and 5.0. address. DR, T. A. SLOCUM, BranchOffice,37 TongeSt.,Tcitigo DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND I CURE FITS! ...When I esi core / do hot meet% in to stop thent for, Brno and then have them return again. I mean a radfcal tam 151,, Made the Meuse of PITS, EPILEPSY or PALL.' ISO SICKNESS a llte-Ions !Andy. I warrent my remedy to core the trona eases. Became others he ve foned le no Name for net now reCeiving n Cure. SOnti ni Once for. trestles and a Pres 501110 01 my infallible remedy, Glee Express and PostOMes. _ It tests yon nAthine for a trlat Imd I will sure on. Addrese BR. 11. 0. Ron; Branch 0 Cot 37 T011ge St., Toronto.