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The Advocate, 1887-09-08, Page 7Yaer Pre!erece. Ile was handsome and tall! The envy of all ,The men as he walked by tier aide, ‘; While slowly the light Of clay changed to night And merrily rippled the tide. • She, ProttY and BW4344 Entrancing and neat, Demurely beside him was walking, While softly the air Caressed her fair hair .And listened the while to their talking. ,t you'll please pardon me "-- He glanced pl ay/oily- -" If really my question should tire. Do you care for men tall Or those who are small— What kind of inen de you admire? " Fier lashes quick fell And veiled her eyes well. " No pardon for such a request; I like mannind ell, Both little and tall, But then I like Hymen the beet." A LOAD OF APPLES. Kitty and I had just come in from milk- ing the cows, and were eating our suppers in the great farm kitchen, We were tired from our day's work, for ever since father had the last stroke of paralysis we had been compelled to do much of the form- work ourselves. "Do you know," said Kitty, laying down her bowl of milk suddenly, " that the in- terest on the mortgage is due to -morrow? That is $35, and we have only $15 toward it. 'Can't you get Willis Avery to wait ?" "1 don't choose to ask him to wait," said 1. Now it happened that Willis Avery, who held the mortgage on our homestead, was the son of a neighbor and an old play- fellow and boy -beau of my own, who had gone to the prosperous young city a few miles north of us and commenced business ,on bis own account, and I had a particular .aversion to asking aid or help of him in Any way. I might be poor, but I was Always proud, and Kitty was quite sympa- thetic enough to understand me. "But, then, what are we to do ?" asked Kitty. I eat down on the hearth -rug, with my chin in my hands, andstared earnestly at the big, crackling back -log. "Look here, Kitty," I said, suddenly. "Those russet apples we have left." "Well ?" "We can sell them. There are eight barrels at the least. Eight barrels at $2.50 a barrel. I will take them to Mapleton and sell them." "You will, Addy ?" "And why not? Squire Dyson would charge at least 20 per cent. commission, and make a favor of it at that. I can't afford either the price or the patronage. Don't say anything about it to father. He would only fret and raise objections." "But, Addy, how? All this seems so perfectly wild and visionary to me," "Well, it needn't ; for, believe me, it's the most practical thing in the world. All we have to do is to sort the apples out in barrels, nice and sound—I can easily do it by lantern -light to-night—and to -morrow morning we'll rise early, harness old Dob- bin to the lumber waggon—" • "And what shall we tell papa ?" "Oh, he'll think I've gone to singing - school with the Dyson girls, and I don't think it's a Christian's duty to undeceive him,"•answered I. But notwithstanding the brave face I put upon affairs my heart quivered a little the next day as I drove off toward Mapleton • with the scarlet stain of sunrise dyeing all the east and my own cheeks flushed with the keen morning air. Mr. Holloway, of the firm of Holloway Brothers, produce and commission mer- chants, didn't want any apples, 1 speedily learned. "lust bought a ship -load from Albany," he said, as carelessly as if ship -loads 'of apples were as common a purchase as 10 cents' worth of tape. And I drove on, be- ginning to feel infinitesimally small. t Mr. Lovejoy could give me $1 a barrel. "Apples wasn't worth no more at this season of the year 1" And I whipped old Dobbin up, determined to carry them home again sooner than sell them at that price. At the next place I stopped a pleasant - looking, middle-aged man came out, and critically examined iny apples. "How much 2" he asked. "Two dollars and a half a barrel." He reflected. "It's a good price," said he, aa if he were talking to hia own vest -buttons; " but then they look like good apples, and we've a tol. erably large western order to fill. I'll see what my partner thinks." He went back into the gloomy depths of his store, and I, happening to glance up, saw the words painted in black letters over the door: "Hull dz Avery." My first impulse was to drive �n and leave the chance of a bargain behind me; my next to sit still and await my fate as Trovidence dealt it out to me. And pre- sently out came Willis Avery himself. "1 think we will take your load if— why 1" breaking , off short, it's Addy Walters 1" I colored scarlet. • "Yes," said I, as composedlyas possible. -" Good morning, Mr. Avery. I shall be obliged if you will examine the fruit as • speedily as possible, as I am in a hurry." Mr. Hull bought the load of apples, and amid that if I had any more at the same price—and of the same quality, he cauti- ously added—he would be happy to take them. Willis Avery touched his hat and I • drove away as loftily as Queen Boadicea in ,her chariot of old. • * * * * * * • "lust $35, counting in the raelode on money," cried Kitty, gleefully. " And now Mr. Avery may come as soon as he , likes." She had scarcely spoken the words before there came a knock at the door and in walked no less a personage than Mi. Willie Avery himself. I receiVed him with the air • Of an empress. "Your money is ready, Mr. Avery." 4, I was not thinking of the money, Addy," he said, reproatihfully. 44 Do you think one's mind runs always on money 2" "Mine does, a good deal," I said, laugh- ing. _ _ "But I had no idea you were reduced to this—I did not know—" "Mr. Avery, this is scarcely btuiiness- .1ike," I interposed. _ "Addy," said he, abruptly, "I tadmired ,your spirit and coinage to -day. I always •diked you as a girl, but now—" ‘k Well?" for he hesitated. • "I Weald do something Mora ,if YOU would,let ine-tt 4 -would lave you 1," I did' net insWer. In truth and in fact could not. "Dear Addy, will you let me sign back the old place to your father on pur wedding flay ?" he asked. earnestly. And somehow e, had got hold .,of my 4841d, and senlellPW, before 1 knew it, tce were engaged t LONDON HOSPITAL SCENES foPerationo Performed By the Greatest Surgeon in the World. (London Late; iu the Baltimore Sun.) VI I spent'all of this afternoon in one of the great public hospitals of this city,that of Ring's College. In the rote of a student of Surgery, and in the company of men of that profession from Europe and America, Seine of them of middle age, vilio have come here to get the benefit of London hospital prac- tice, I was an observer of two surgical operations performed by Sir Joseph Lister, said to be one of the greatest, if not the greatest, surgeon in the world. The Lon- don hospitals have a wider field than those in any part of the globe to draw practice grid experience from. London is a city both richer and poorer than any other in the world. Gaunt poverty stalks in the highways and byways, where hundreds of thousands of wretched creatures who are said to bear the imprint of God dwell. I venture to say tlfat more abject penury and more degradation exists to -day in London alone than in all Ireland. The public hos- pitals, extensive and numerous as they are, have seldom an empty cot. The poor and the lowly, who are to a very large extent the recipients of their benefits seem in some unaccountable way to be afflicted with an infinite variety of diseases and to be subject to horrible tumors and abscesses, more terrible and complicated fractures of the bones, and more abnormal conditions of the organic functions than those who are better off so far as this world is concerned. At least, this is the case in London, and it is for this reason that those who are ambi- tious to excel in surgery come here for a knowledge very difficult or impossible to obtain elsewhere. It is for this reason that such eminent men as Sir Joseph Lister perform operations in the charity hospitals withoutecharge. I make no doubt that had the twopatients upon whom Sir Joseph operated this afternoon been rich or distin- guished he would have pocketed at least five or six hundred guineas for his two hours' work. One of the operations, al- though somewhat novel, was not very dangerous or difficult. The patient, a boy of 18, had fractured the bone at the elbow which we 'lay people know very well as the crazy bone, but the technical name of which I really forget. The bone had begun to decay in consequence. It was laid bare, the decayed portions chiseled off, wires run through to make it reunite, and the flesh then sewed up again. The other operation, the removal of calcareous deposits from the kidney, was of a much more important nature. A deep incision was made in the abdomen extending around the side, and after probing, the hand of the operator was inserted so deepthatit was not visible. I cannot, of course, deacribe this as a pro- fessional, but in due time no less than six stones were removed, three of Which were with -sharp and jagged ends, and which had given the patient so much pain that for weeks he had been unable to attain a comfortable position either lying or sitting. Sir Joseph said it was a most beautiful case. After the conclusion of his opera- tions he discoursed upon their nature in a style eqhally as entertaining and in- structive. I am told that not only he but :any of the other eminent surgeons of Lon- don will at any time go to the hospitals and cheerfully perform an operation which the regillar surgeons may hesitate to under- take: ' EXTRADITED FOR BIGAMY. He Says that ne Married Wife No. 2 it was When he was Drunk. Dr. Frank Vernon Cooke was brought from New Jersey to Brooklyn late on Wed- nesday and lodged in the First Precinct Police Station, on a requisition from Gov- ernor Hill. He was arraigned before Jug- tice Walsh on a charge of bigamy, in having married Mary E. Hambel, of No. 80 South Eighth street, while he had a lawful wife living. His first wife has since got judg- ment of divorce, based on her husband's intimacy with Miss Ha.mbel. "1 am a physician and surgeon, a mem- ber of the College of Physicians and Sur- geons of Boston," Dr. Cooke said to a Herald reporter. "I studied with my cousin, Dr. L. L. Bryant, of Cambridge, Mass., and in Boston, and have my diploma. I married Miss Watson in Everett, Mass.'and had a fine practice, when my, mother-in-law caused trouble and my wife refused to live with me. Then I took to drinking and lost my practice. If I was ever married to Miss Harnbel it was when I was drunk, for I know nothing about it. "Myself and a friend, Dr. Munozy rn Raorata„: i of Montevideo, a student n New York, met Miss Hambel and Ella Harvey on the street, and were in their company for over ten days. I was so drunk that a waiter at Heiss Hotel had to put me in a carriage. I want Dr. Munoz and the viaiter as witnesses. I expect my friends here, and will employ counsel. Miss Hambel 'mid she was friendly with a colonel in New York, and once remarked, 'What would the old man say if he gamine with yeti ? "' Dr g Cooke's examination was set down for Monday next.—N. Y. Herald. • Mrs. Cleveland is a fairly good swimmer but does not care much for diving. She likes to wade out until the water is about up to her neck and then swim Ghoreward with a slow and graceful stroke. Her mother does not swim, but is very fond of salt -water bathing. Together they have taken a great deal of pleasure in this sport at Marron, and nothing but unfavorable weather has interfered with their daily bath. The remarkable story comes from San Francisco of a boy who was Vaceinated and upon his arm has come the picture of a cow's head. It is about the size of a stan- dard dollar. It is an exact representation of a covet( head, en eilhoutte. The nose, jaw and horns are perfect. There fa even a speolc of white flesh visible where the eye is supposed to be located. LATEST MThK N•94.THWE8T Telegraphic report from sixty different points respecting harvesting operations are, with One exception, of amostsatsfaotory nature, .and PorrOgrata PretiQue egoonnte of the tiph harvest in store for Manitoba this year. At. tbelgWeateetinutte the wheat yield will he from pp foAo bushels per acre and other' i cereals n proportion. This indicates that the amount for export Will be at least 7,000,000 burtbels. Harvesting is nearly pompleted, train load Of fish passed through the pity yesterday froth the British Columbia salmon canneries to the Eastern ,Provinces. It was composed of seventeen cats, con- taining 3,200 cases. Two Indians have been Pilot by William Thomson a settler near Calgary. The redskins were attempting to steal his nettle and attacked Thomson, who shot in self- defence. Robert 5, Refine, a cowboy, was found dead recently near Calgary. It is supposed that he tumbled from his horse, A private letter from Banff says Hon. Mr. Mackenzie is much improved in health, The Canadian Pacific magnates went on a trip over the southwestern branch to -day. Mr. VanHorne informed a contractor last night that his company had decided to ex- tend the Southwestern 75 miles beyond Deloraine this season, operations to be com- menced immediately. A pamphlet just issued by the Winnipeg & Hudson Bay Railway Company states that 100 miles will be completed and in operation this fall. A nuinber of small contractors employed on the Bed River Valley have completed their work and returned to the city. They are trusting that work will soon be com- menced on the connection with Portage la Prairie, Letters have been received from Messrs. Colin Frazier and Charles Stewart, dated Fort Chippewaya.n, July 5th. They were thirty days getting there from the Landing, about three times as long as they should have heen, owing to lack of knowledge of the river, but by being careful they had no mishaps. They,report that the fires were terrific; the country around Chippewayan is rook, sometimes covered with moss or timber. There have been lively times at, Portage Is Prairieover the action of one Blythe; a liquor informer", A!mob Was organized yes- terday to assault him, but although he escaped a beating he did not get entirely clear of a shower of rotten eggs. Several hOtel-keepers through his efforts were fined $50 each. * It is reported that an arrangement has been made with American capitalists to take the million dollar Provincial loan. The Northwest Council has been sum- moned to meet at Regina on October 4th. A. Banff despatchof yesterday says Hon. Mr. Mackenzie and his wife are ex- pected to leave there in the evening for the East on their way home. A Calgary special says it is reported that the settlers on the Cochrane lease have formed a protective committee and threaten to burn the grass and run off the stock if molested by the company. Trouble is expected. Roweind, who was guarding the property for Browning near Morris, to prevent the Red River Road from crossing, was ex- amined before the court to.day. He said he received his instructions from the Cana- dian Pacific officials, thus establishing the fact that the company is behind the whole railway trouble. Saved His Car Fare. As the Arounder came down Main street yesterday morning, says the Buffalo Courier, a car overtook him and bowled on. At the same time he noticed a boy over the way;apparently racing with a horse car. When the car•stopped to take on a passen- ger the boy would slow up and walk to recover his breath. But as soon as the car came up with him he would start on again, "Indian trot," as the boys term it. The Arounder boarded the car to watch the out- come of the race. The boy kept it up, and when he reached Eagle street was a length or two ahead. Here he stopped, and the Arounder, alighting, accostedhim. "What were you racing with the carfor?" "'Cause, so's to get 5 cents. Mother wanted me to come down to the sewing machine place for a needle and a bottle of oil. She gave me money to ride both ways. So I ran down just as fast as the car, and kept the Scents; and I'm going to =wall the way back, but I won't have to run so fast 'cause it's up hill. That'll make it 10 cents. That's fair, ain't it When you are given 10 cents so's to ride and hurry back, it don't matter how you go when you get there just the same, does it, eh? I've been sent down twice this week already. If she only sends me once more I can go to the ball game Satur- day and have a glass of chocolate besides. Don't you like chocolate? Oh, it's bully!" and the boy went away on his errand. Japanese Footgear. In Japan children's shoes are made of blocks of wood secured with cords. The stocking resembles a mitten, having a separate place for the great toe. As these shoes are lifted only by the toes, the heels make a rattling sound as their owners walk, which is quite stunning in a crowd. They are not worn in the house, as they would injure the, soft straw mats on the floor. You leave' your shoes at the door. Every house is built with reference to the number of mats required for the floors, each room havingfrom eight to sixteen, and in taking lodging you pay so much for a mat. They think it extravagant in us to require a whole room to ourselves. The Japanese shoe gives perfect freedom to the foot. The beauty of the human foot is only aeen in the Japanese. They have no corns, no ingrowing nails, no distorted joints. Our toes are cramped until they are deformed, and are in danger of extinc- tion, They have the full UN of their toes, and to them they are almost like fingers. Nearly every mechanic makes use of his toea for holding his work. Every toe is fully developed. Their shoes cost ld. and last six months Farmer, he careful how you let any machine oil or lubricator come in contact with a but or Scratch �n your hand or arm. In the 'manufacture of genie of those mitehime oils fat frona diseased and decom- posed animals is used. All phyaioians know how poisonous such Matter is. The Only safeguard is not to let any spot where the skin is broken be touched by any machine oil or lubricator. 491.WIP ,P9X4HAT-OPPN,P. 4V?,494tt Xdttle 4.1Mudotes a' ending to Show, OMP, Some PeoPIO Do Not Pet Xxelte4-, ,0")11r neighbors ,aorOSS the' 'obant113,1''are fond of 'relating humorous littleincidents cyf mg-froid in which an Englishro,a,nusually abte the r9le chief obaraCter, says (-74erfl- pere Journa/. AS for instance : A man entered a furniture shop and " Haire YOU any CO furniture ?' " No, eir ::bat we can make you some 1" This reminds is of the Englishman in a restaurant who called for stale bread. "We have none, iny lord." "Make some, then; I will wait," was the cairn reply. Instances of remarkable cool- ness and assurances among adventurers "out west" are only to be expected. To begin with a small (example: A boy who comes of a chronically borrowing family went to a neighbor's for a cup of sour milk. "1 haven't got anything but sweet milk," said.the Woman pettishly. " wait till it mire," said the obliging youth sinking into a chair - But in many of the cases now under consideration foreigners of several nation- alities will be found to have figured con- spicuously in the matter of taking things coolly. It is related that a lady and gentleman came to a ferry, and the boatman deputed. his grandson to row them across. "Why do you not manage your boat yourself,' asked the lady, " instead of letting this child do it ?" "Oh, don't you be afraid, ma'am," answered the ferryman; "the lad can swim." Equally indifferent to the fate of others was one of the sufferers by a late railway accident. He was seen rushing anxiously about, when some one asked if he was hurt. " No ; but I can't find my umbrella." About a year ago, when the upper part of an hotel was on fire, one of the servant girls was directed to awaken two gentlemen who were asleep in an up -stairs room, She knocked at the door, and, with the greeted simplicity, said: I beg pardon, gentlemen, for disturbing you, but the house is on fire." This case of what may be called ludicrous politeness brings to mind another: "Hi 1 you dropped a brick up there!" shouted a pedestrian on whose shoulders one of those articles had fallen froin a three-story scaf- fold. "All right," cheerfully responded the bricklayer; "you needn't take the trouble to bring it up." "What's the matter?" asked a lawyer of his coachman. " The horses are running away, sir." "Can't you pull them up 2" "•I am afraid not." " Then," said the lawyer, after judicial delay, "run into something cheap." "Ah me l" sighed Potts, "I'm tired of living, The world is hollow, ambition's vain," " Come now I" said his chum "1 know the sym - toms; It's all your liver—that's very plain. You need not suffer, for help is easy; Pierce`e Pellets go right to the place. 'A friend to the bilious,' I well might call them— There'a nothing better ; they'll suit your case." Potts ceased his sighing and bought the" Pellets." No more he naourneth his hapless lot I His face is cheerful, his heart is lightsome, His melancholy is quite forgot!: It is reported the nut crop this season promises to be the heaviest known for years. Walnuts and butternuts are of prodigious size, and the limbs of trees are bending under the weight of the fruit. Hickory nuts also promise to be plentiful, whilst the chestnut will be fully anaverage. 111 Temper Is more rapidly improved by relief from physical suffering than in any other way. Step on your friend's corn and the impulse to strike is strongest. Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor, by quickly and painlessly removing them, insures good nature. Fifty imitations prove its value. Beware of substitutes. "Putnam's," sure, safe, pain- less. From all accounts business was never so dull on the stock exchange as now. A seat in that body was sold a few days ago for $20,000, whereas a few years ago it would have brought $35,000. There are altogether too many rotten stocks on the active list to make it inviting for people of sense to come in, and most of this generation of lambs have been sheared to the hide.— Rochester Ileraid. Popular Education. We sympathize with the feelings which often leads citizens to boast that no child born in this country need grow up in ignorance,,and yet it is a fact that many people wo have learned to read and write have never taught themselves to think. A man who suffered from catarrh, consump- tion, bronchitis, scrofula, or "liver com- plaint," might read till his eyes dropped out how these and many other diseases have been cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, but if he did not take the lesson to himself and test the virtues of this great medicine, his time would be thrown away. Advertising is one of the powers of this world. It is an encyclopedia upon the wail; it knows all, or at least talks about everything with equal self-possession— history, science, finance, strategy, com- merce. It meddles with every subject. every other so-called remedy fails. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remed3i cures when You have all heard of the hen that got buried under a pile of hay and lived from two weeks to three months, according to the ability of the man telling the story, and then came out somewhat thin in fleeh, but nevertheless in first.class health' and all right mentally. Well, a Dakota hen recently had a WOrS0 time than that. She accidentally got shut in the store of a man who doesn't advertise and remained there four weeks. When she was rescued she Was a Mere wreolt, having eaten a peck of dried apples and then drank three or four quarts of kerosene, During her enforced confinement the owner of the store was making a little trip in the country stia painting the fences and bridges with: By Yor. PRuNs: .36 Etc ax. Fossit enocry A case of poisoning hy nutmeg is re- corded in the I3Pitish Madical genital; in which one nutmeg, had been eaten by a patient as a cure for cliarrhcea. It caused him to lieconie giddy, stupid and very drowsy all next day. The narcotio pro- perthia of these seeds i as of others of the same natural ordert- de not appear to be Igenerally Iniocan and seem worthy el inves- tigation. '99,r^1141!1!',;• Carrie—" Where .40tYP you 1313LOR ?" Clara -9 I've been 'to the 4110040to, get ,e4nag Paeclieinet" ' Carie-" What did yen get 2" pip,re—of We1, 1 got. Borne gum drops,, awl a Poltnd of inarP4PIP•11-0W-Paake, end pot of Tqgge, ad two o4p44to pf flypaper, and a glass of vanilla cream soda, and 14,. Paobet." Carsie--" gi)Og '7R4 Must beVe good deal pf sickness at your house."— ToWn •=e0/40s. The treatment a many thousands a cases . of those chronic weaknesses and distressing - ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute; Buffalo, N. Y., has afforded a ytuit .experience in nicely adapt- ing and thoroughly testing remedies for the• cure of woman's peculiar maladies. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription.. Is the outgrowth, or result, of this great and. valuable experience. Thousands of testimo-• nials, received from patients and from physi- cians who have tested it in the more aggra- vated and obstinate cases,whicli had baffied! their skill, prove it to be •the most wonderful; remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of• suffering women. It is not recommended as at "cure-all," but as a most perfect 3pecific for woman's peculiar ailments. As a powerful, invigorating tonic', it imparts strength to the whole system., and t,o the womb and its appendages in, particular. For overworked, worn-out," "run-down," debilitated teachers, millinerai. dressmakers, searnstreeses, "shop -girls," house- keepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescriptiont is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled: as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic., As a soothing and strengthening' nervine P'avorite 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 organic disease of the wornb. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and de- . t spondency. Dr. Pierce's, Fay °rite 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 its effects in anrc*ondition of the system. For morning sickness, or nausea, from whatever cause arising, weak stomach; indigestioni.dys- pepsia and kindred symptoms, its use, imamall doses, will prove very beneficial. "Favorite Prescription 95 is a,posi. tive cure for the most complicated aud ob- stinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions, prolapsus, or falling of the womb, wealc back. "female weakness," anteversion, retromersion, bearing -down sensations, chrome congestion. inflammation and ulceration of the womb, In- flammation, pain and tenderness In, ovaries, accompanied with "internal heat!' As a regulator and promoter of tune- tional action, at 'that critical perhadof change from girlhood to womanhood, " Favorite Pre- scription " is a perfeetly safe reinedial agent, and oan produce only good results. It is equally efficacious and valuablein, its effects when taken for those disorders and derange- ments incident to that later and most critical period, known as "The Change of Life." 66Favorite Prescription,Is when taken in connection with the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxative doses of Dr. Pierce's Purgative Pellets (Little Liver Pills). cures Liver, 1Cidney and Bladder diseases. Their combined' use also removes blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and scrofulous humors from the system. "Favorite Prescription 2, is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists, under a positive 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 carried out for many years. Large bottles am doses) .1.00, or Nix bottles for $5.00. For large. illustrated Treatise on Diseases of Women MO pages, paper -covered), Send ten cents in stamps. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, 669 Blain Si., BUFFALO. N. V. D C N L. 36 87. Merchants Butchers, AND TRADERS GENERALLY, We want a GOOD IVAN in your locality to pick up CALFSKINS For us. Cash furnished on satisfactory guaranty. Address C. S. PAGE, Hyde Park, Vermont, U. 6 :U t1:29 When 1110 Oleo 1 lin sun Inean Inere.y to etnn thmn Tor thno and then have them ret ern again. I 111.if a radical mere. 1)0,0,, mode the (lineage 61 L.Le 180 afalumssh mots., 1 Manila tny retoed7 to cure ihe v�r9t caee. satmod oilmen b ve felted fa no reaeon for not nova receIvIta care, Send at (Mee for a treatIse and a Free Bottle °Fink luhilliWe remedy, Give Express and Foot Office. it Oasts you nothing (000 trial, and X will cure 8015 ,51* 08 0. G. ROOT, . ,prauch Office, 37 Tone St.I.Torotto. N*S KING INDER THE COOK'S:BEST FRIEND IIINSU PTION. 1 hove a polite ve roMody for tho above al ieese ; by Ite toes thous/m(1e of vines of the viOret kind awl of long it.nding hero been eared. Indeed, No 'Arens is my faith in If. effIreey, Mat I lost Rebel TWO ROTTLRS vacs, together with a VALZABLR TREATISIt 6n nu disealo to any entrateri Glee expreer and F. 0, Achilles. DIS.^. A. GLOM:111i &Loeb:Moo, 67 Tone tt., Tomsk)