The Signal, 1897-9-30, Page 7THE SIGNAL : GODERICH ONTARIO.
RI TROUBLES
4URED av
KIDNEY PILLS
OIv ,2 THEIR DEAD.
THE ALPINE GLACIER* YIZLD ARK-
WRIGHT'S BOOT AFTER 31 YEARS.
V
vsmes
teen troubled for some
th urinary trouble. I
hold lily urine. Was
y broken of my rest, as
get up x or eight
ry night. - I tried doc-
nan re die
s without
y
ny relief tyltil one of
is advised me to try
.idney Pills. I felt re-
m the first box and six
rnpletely cured me. I
hank you enough for
lease of life and corn-
Dodd's Kidney Pills
Inc.
A. MCGREGORY,
Cornwall, Ont.
idney Pills
cure Urinary Troubles
TING MILL.
TAIILIINED 1166.
aus & Rhyiis
DOR and BLIND
Ian In all kinds of
LATH, SHINGLES
material of every dsaeriptsss
rnitnre a Specialty.
EXCELSIOR.
A Manufacture •f Weed That Mas Many
Uses.
The material knee% es excelsior hi
not refuse, nor le It made of shanties:
it is an article of regular manufacture.
Excelsior k of lsrNition, and It was first
,yi,U Laical tastaa« tate ldeatlaos- Mede is the Uelted States, says The
New York Sus. that:Pre or forty )itis
At
thea le maenad, OesupletsrUae
Iso, the preaset entre t gaivants tut us-
sha yua rhdtltas tat Meal tends of tuns enpaally, end the use of
. vivldlr It•eslted. it is all the time increasing.
ed•ra " ` Excelsior is made to many parts of
The mews has been received from
Geese, Switxerlaud, that the hoe:) of
t HewerArkwrisbt, buried under au
evils leucite, Oct. 18: 1800, has bee, re-
veres], ■i Is The Chicago lest. It
mss tuufl atwuat two mike beliifk he
eece where the attr94 d Mite main well
e
tad
was
t
he
his
lite,
the
preserved.
•into a It had
hurled
the glacier,
statuette
bad moved down the nyuwitaiu cede
with teat creeping giant of the Alps
sate it was restored at the meitnlg edge
of the ice. The feet and head are lust.
The) were doubtless gruuud away by
tee re einem. crushingtless Buttheurestt of the f the trbody
its ve Identification is complete.
The hlin. are ppreser1{Hight
i. ve� ed. The ht
land is remarkably lifelike and natural
in apeerance. Even the ret1 riot of
Neel is preserved in that mm►er.
r.at of
Ii the pocket of the gray is iago •was
the fashion of thirty yea.
ts fowl a blue bordered white hs.ndker-
chief quite as good as new. Capt. Ark-
yriylie s initiate are embroidered in the
old
the
lute" collar, There mud a largestud
stud in the
shirt trout with a small dremood tar
in the criers.. Among the triu.ets taken
froth the pockets was a silver cigaret'e
.see. The gold watch is entirely untie
jtue& teith the chain it was toaud near
the btnly. evidently having been dragged
away iu the slow movetneut of the
&Her. An inquest was at once held
by the justice of the peace, the Mayor, a
d0ttur. and the local seeder's/es. The
remains were buried at Ohumounix,
awaittte orders from England if any
of Cape. Arkwright's relatives or friends
can be found.
The story of Capt. Arkwrigbt's death
is one of the most trilling in the -au-
Ilals Of Mont Blanc adventure. He had
been an aide-de-camp to the Lord Lieu-
tenant of Ireland: was a scholar and
also a traveler. But haoA was quitek on
need to Alp climbing• owith
the morningof Oct. 18, 1803. be,
kis guide, ichel Sunned, two porters
named Francois asd Joseph Tournier.
and accompanied by 8llvaln Conttet of
fie 1'ierre Pointue and a servant—dieua
0-ewe-ewe appareutly being mese*i
sextons to a party already nu"
Tett the grand Malate for the ascent of
"!lout Blanc. Thy took the route of the
"sncient pa ,ge,� and had gone but
hide way, ptaUaW less than five miles.
ekes an avalanche descended upon
them. Such visitations have always
been peculiarly commies on this Croute.
and it is and always has been regarded
especially dangerous.
the eeuuatiy, almost always in mills that
are in close proximity to tin forests
trout which the supplier of wood are
taken. A considerable awuuut of 'ex-
celsior is made in coujunetion with other
manafactures; fur example, it is uut uu-
w nut to set up a fevtexceisior mucbinees
in a lumber mill. There is however, at
least one concern in the United States
, that wakes nothing but excelsior, and
has, at a number of different points,
mills devoted solely to the production of
these curling fibres of wood.
Basswood and poplar are the woods
used in the production. The logs are
sawed into lengths of eighteen inches,
which is the length of a fibre of excel-
sior. These blocks are split into halves
and the wood is properly seasoned. Ex-
ceisiqr is made of different degrees of
coaaenees and fineness of etre. In the
manfacture a series of knife points run
down the face of the block cutting into
the wood in parallel lines that are spaced
according to the width of the bine in be
made. A following knife slices off the
whole face of the block tits *cored.
The fibres curl and commingle as the
knife sets them free. 4n excelsior ma-
chlae maker IMO to 300 strokes a min-
ute, every stroke cutting off a etieleall
fibres across the face of the block. 'Ibe
usual commercial package of vege4sinr Ig
a bale weighing about . ) prelude At
wholesale excelsior sell* at 3111 to
a ton.
Excelsior is extensively used fie pack-
ing purpu•es._aud la the utanufncture
of bedding and various other uphii,lsiely
uses.- It is also largely mewl for filter-
ing purposes, end it has various other
uses. Excelsior is now manufactured
in Germany and France, whete it is call-
ed wool wood. The wood noel in the
manufacture in those countries is
brought front Norway and Sweden, and
the manufactured product t•dsts more
there than it does here.
flTIOtl.
tack is now complete and
t of the largest and best
,d outside the cities,
D SHELLS
iy quantity to suit the
user. Shells loaded with
:huge while you wait.
eve a fa Stock of
IHOT, SHELLS,
PRIMERS AND WADS.
IA GUS STOts or —
fign_
are sure fire but only kill
t end. •
SON & CO.
11T1 HARDWARE.
Cuhttet heard the rumbling and knew
1p an instant what was the matter.his
lie
gave the alarm, sad.
accorded jai setting away.eitherC pt- irk-
Wright sad his guides
se
they did not uoAerwtand or became con-
fused. turned in the wrong direction
sod were overwhelmed in a tremendousus
avalanche of rocks, ice and ono
w. Alpine Journ�agl. vol. 2, paje 38could 3, sap ahs
not a tracemoors. Sat this ie
plainly the aseor Vename Pa ott,
plainly an error, liar
writing in 1879, proves that the y of
Francois Tburnier was discovered by
Y. Couttet before be abandoned the
search. He found the crushed bodbS
among the blocks of loosened ice oo
Grand Plateau. Later, according toathe
author of "Oscillations des Qin
Grandee Glaciers," he discovered the
bodies of two the others aad gave
them burial, While be was still pur-
suing his search another avalanche de-
a•eoried and the last trace of the missing
Englishman was lost.
THE GERM OF CANCCR-
its Discovery the ureateai sadteal sea=
ashes of the CeaMeY►
What is pronuuocrd the greatest medi-
cal sensation tie the century le eppertel.
from France, where Dr. Lw. Neel has
discovered the cause of cancer. It es a
feet well kuuwa its wed.cui circles that
hitherto the primary cause of tsw►se
r W4/6
a mystery as deep as the origin t 1 lee.
Scientists and savants have utabel J
luny and deeply, and have rxpr
but with no tangible result. hue
For nearly twenty -lire years medic
has been at a prae tial stendstiil so tar
as cancer was coucrrued. The only ad-
vance was In the direction of its treat-
ment by surgery, and that was more au
Improvement in • surgical wetno+.l+. than
along the line of further knowledge of
one of the most fearful aui,c.l.wu-S to
which humanity as prose.
New totem the auuouucemeut fruit'
Dr. Noel that Se huts found the germ 01
the cancer in vegetation, such as trees
and underbrush. te'Crthetmure. he cleans
s with
the germ taken from tthe sau p of trues
and to have produced all the symptoms
op mincer.
' Dr• Nuel is a newcomer in the field of
medicine-aiu fact, he has unit ,jeceitly
obtained his diploma. The French law
compels every metecal student to write
a treatise on some utediwl subjt:ct,
which must puss the muster of the Gov-
ernment experts before be - can begin
metre practice. ser,
Dr. `Noel wrote a treatise op eau
detailing his dl veries in this direc-
tion, and IT onie attracted thcSe
Pon of the scientific wend, both -by the
novelty of his daunt' and because of the
forceful mud clear Wuguage in which
the treatise was written.
According to Dr. Noel, cancer is due
to vegetable genus with which the hu-
man system becomes impregnated tudk
infected, either by teatime outstays
through inhalation or obsotpti
poison with food or wider.
His attention to the vegetable king -
dem as the origiof 'sauceraWe was first
dis-
covery
attracted throughprevalent that lancer was more pre
in districts where vegetation was dense,
than hi parts where it was sparse. Ac-
cording to French statistics. aineer .s
ncheenweee poevmlent in districts Mar- i
rounded by !meow -and Moog timet tasante
of rivers than its those parts
eed
are scarce, such as high plateaus.
This attracted the• doctor's attention,
and he began a careful investigation.
First of dl he haunted the woods
*Mow
T fnrx filar'home. Birch, elm
trees predominated. From thousands oT
these trees he took the sap and put it to
microscopical and analytical tests, with
the result that in a score of tens
be found Undoubted e a idem
tom-
orrow' gases inoculated a 0■g. mid
Witte these be
after a few days—bow long be does not
state—be saw every symptom of cantor.
The sore ptodneed l e the inoculation
Only Mau Livia( Who
• hurl. .1.
When a man has reached the ripe age
of 97 he bus a pardonable pride in mak-
ing a century run tine a laudable ambi-
tion to elle his days with an even record.
ape& geerrul hug. howevere_tthhe. wan
oe woman who trochee thieae 7e'wre has
lost both pride and embitiou which nuke
ate etilert at living on a possibility. This
is not the case with one reelected eunn-
genarian who lives in Dealon, Mich., and
whose age is coincidental with the year,
he- being been is►-18UU. Cayt._Fnetice,
Martin. U.S.N., has lived along easi y
without any thought of perpetuating hu
days beyond the areraes rec•ond of mein.
until, having passed the uintety-sevente
milestone. he looks not forward,
hut
bees its the present or bpaie. himself
wait ee--and Capt. Martin's
msmories are worth much' to their pet-
sespor. He is the only man now living
who was at Napoleon t.onaparte's funer-
aliehash sailledkinto nearly every aland of St. enavi-
gable port ou the face of the globe up
to the year 1fi3t1. He wits the trietsd
al ,&tabors. the famous ornithologist.
He fought pirates os the itligh eras in
1824 In 1R36 be took part m the Semi-
nole Indian war. In Il 1, Fier untie iug a record as a master .1 etching eruft
on Mar-
tin entered theth sides of a United he nStit apmarrine
service, receiving his Bret omm4awu
from--A7drew Jackson. In the follow-
ing year he was stationed at Charleston,
S.C. luring the exciting timea of uuh-
fcaion. He participated in the Mexican
war...�;i� cutter belong part cf the
blockadingTeta crid U eR i t Idesies e
ports.—Chicago Times-Rem:iId.
Kv heel Payott one of the porter*.
who was living last rear, was awarded
the "medaille d'boanear," mai a diploma
b) the Ministry of the Interior for his
n.nduct on the occasion. But every
bunk of travel gives "bad guiding" as
the cense of the lamentable accident
In In. '"Tramp Abroad.' Mark Twain
eves a serious account of the lossof
Capt Ark-weight—ens oftthe I serious
ppaam*grs in the beck. It may be women -
"'en. is ` Wee volume the
authortherelates bow. herniae that this ap-
patently eatiouary field of lee was reaRy
moving down to the valley of the Bhlae,
and desiring toAvbit • that valley, be
saw 0ap.,lraa
VARYING LAKE LEVELS.
seetaisem se to she Causes of the ee-
taateel Tidal Waves,
e psctiIlttr �hesapt►ua on the -ekes
whichThshe pestis . taut erroatonalr,
styled "tidal waver,;
mid tehave attracted at-
tention d cand' spec 1•tloi among
scientists and lapses. As .the recent
British Association weeding, Mr. P.
Napier Denison of the Toronto Univer-
sity read a paper on "The Great Lakes
as a Sensitive Barometer' in which an
attempt was made W explain the causes
of thew oscillations of lake surface.pp Mr.
Denioshallower observationsaoe Ontario,were en frothiug
Toroth
, ung
t Toronto, under conditions strongly re-
sewbling those at the Lake Brie ports
where the "tidal waves" hive been most
noticed. The records show that the
longitudinal and transverse "selene
movements are very smirked preceding
to 1
and during storms primarily due
dif-
ferences of atmospheric pressure over
the extremeties of the lake, but greatly
augmented when the gale strikes the
water surface. The mean aisle interval
of loorty-Dinel inutee; the " is transverse,
our hoary
and forty-nine nth
forty-five minutes. There is a marke
agreement between the time intervals of
the smaller lake undulations and those
found upon the corresponding sensitive
barograph traces, both showing a pre-
dominance
Mr. Denison explains the mustier lake
undulations as due to atmospheric
waves, which are set up along the
boundary sarietes of different air strata
whin traveling in opposite directions.'
The action of these atmospheric waves
upon the surface of the water trills to
form minute
in amplitude pas u�J which to rease
bas,
move into bays,
where the water becomes :shallower,
until finally they assume the proportions
u recorded upon the instrument.
It was found that marked rapid end
large undulations often occur during the
antamo and winter months upon both
instruments, when theebarometer is ac-
tually rising and fine weather prevails
o'er -III the surrounding territory. The
explanation is that at such times an area
of slow pressure a cyclone, is situated
--fit' -• Mak +
ti on on the glacier, waited for to
deliver biro at the riverside• But lte
troth is an his tale indicates. The
glacier'. added to at the summit by per -
Penal mw
adeation and farming of the
vapors that rise from the valley. prem
downward with mnnntahsse weight.
Meta is no 'rapport beneath. -T'he foot
of the glacier Is In the warm valley, and
is perpetnally melting.
The pressure from above crowds down
the miles and mike of lee, in many
places hundreds of deet In thiehness, Let
it slides downward hopesceptilaY
surely. Here and there the inequalities
et the rocky treat over which iItm n
cease-. the glacier to bend a
break into crevasses. A n.mber of sin
venturous Alp climbers have been hurl-
ed Into these crevasses. to three eases
it was Impdasible to lied them, and lite
bodies have been delivered--oee after
twenty-five yearn -it the marital Paint
or the verge of the glacier beton.
'Rut none has ever rdssalned ecce+*Med
for melt a length se titre aa has this.
st
Almothirtyweyears
*ince Louie, s rrified to bars of
pommel
the ilryiWe - The news mine,
just at the Mao, the visit of the Prime
of Wales to Bihe whole cite sod
Action were weer the later
national heat. and 're
neem that
Me loss of one main a abs
el t tamers or
flf.levru• ztele ..
phred nu effect topes the the
de•nth of Ce} t 'tweaked
MAKB��.
and
rt Pipes
hem ha. es la Ime INS
It /raft PR? 0ha
BRIO PI
ID TiLAIOS •T. ■..
mx t RONTC
TOBA
... FLOUR
)S ,ilaWeOy0�1.�0t.
the Weeds mol, =nems-
s lade iron she cream at
a What sad is she kms
sa .roti esu. This rig is
for sale at
over the South or Southwestern States,
which usually moves over or near to the
lake region. In such cases the recorded
atmospheric waves are due to the lower,
denser air of the anti -cyclone moving to -
awards the southwestern cyclone, ulnas
whose empty boundary surface huge
waves, extending to the earth, are set
up by the rapidlyopposing upper pole -
ward current. e mean velocity of
this upper current in summer is sixty
miles per boor, and in winter 110 miles
per hour. On the other hand, dun
the approach of an anti -cyclone attend
by flue weather and westerly winds.
*.terse lake undulations become extreme!,
small 'the lower `�,
approximately the same direction as the
upper poleward current. In illustration
of the directiectiou of these air waves
upon the suttee of the lake Mr. Denison
notes that on Mexch 8 last, during**
pawn 9t several successive huge ate
mospherie "billose* -tie water
1-2 inches in ten minutes, then fell 101-2
Inches In fifteeninutes, followed by
the phenomenal ri& of 11 1-2 inches On
fifteen minute's.
The infortuution obtained from fisher-
men
shermen on Lakes Ontario, Erie ata moos
shows that a twenty -minute interval has
been frequently observed between the
two or more so-called -tidal waves" that
follow each other'
I TEILON' S
aM�.V se should sot aka
M 1
'Maar erlE
;ANTELON,
WIlle STREW.
ed anti bore in rations of being
ADIEU.
Child of my bear% salsa.
God keep thesis M ogre,
Repave this partlairligh—
Believe this parent; prayer
And do sot quite forget is* few
Bright hopes we ve keowu.
Adieu! Adieu 1
Resnamber vanished hours.
Lint memo' y softly dwell,
Oa one who thick• of thee,
With thoughts too deep to tell—
One whose love more steadfast grew,
'Mid clouds and teen.
Adieu! Adieu'
Let gentle dreams arise,
When thou art far from me,
Of all the e emote' sweat,"
Tbat I have ataatel with thee,
Think of me still, u when we tofu
o h
u.
Mingled •we"ts thoughts.
Adieu! Adieu!
Think of the heart of love.
That ever sprang to meet
The slightest wish, sod deemed
No earthly joy so sweet,
As when oo spirit's wings it flew
To speak with thins. Adieu ! Adieu!
Think ot the heart of faith,
That watched with aaxtoes pain,
For tidings of thy love,
That sever, •ever came,
Think of the loving heart, sad true
That writhes with tears.
Adieu! Adieu!
Though dark with many • fault.
The alleles* heart else be.
It bath one spot unstained—
It erred to thee,
Thies are no idle words, nor new—
Thou knowest their truth.
Adieu ! Adieu!
TBIItis'AY, Sept. 90, 1897. 7
self. Be careful aid don't mar the seamed
as the frame andlete'ie ee hell bearings well
oiled. so they won't out lute theca's. The
tare is abeoletiely peaot: ess. au you weat l
hers to take a pamp
you. By tee time you have removed that
pals of sense I think you will netlike %de •
-enemy run : also the perepirarion You'd
better ranee In to dinner now."- leewvtlle
Bretae. ____
IO YEARS A.SUFFERER-
From Kidney t)isease—Gravel and Stricture
_-Au Absolute Cure Found in `South
American Kidney 4 ore—A Remedy
that Never Fails in the Most 'estrum -
mg Cases.
The solid ovudeioe of erperienue is ba-
bied South Americas 'Kidney Cure. Mr.
Waller Goff, ot Chippewa, Ont., as simply
one of hundreds who have spoken in equally
Krone terms. He mys : "After taking six
Cure I
bottles ot South American Kidney
em oompl•tely cured of stricture and gravel.
having suffered from these oomplaints for
over ten years. I found great relief altar
taking sue bottle, but oontdnued the remedy
until I was perfectly cured, and I am now
enjoying the best of health." Sold ty J. E.
Davis.
HELLO!
THE OLD
RELIABLE.
ALL KINDS OF
She wee Prepared.
A certain minister always feels it to be his '
duty to give each young couple a little
serious advice before he performed the
marriage ceremony, and for this purpose he
usually took them aside, one at a time, and
talked very soberly to each of them regard-
ing the great importance of the step they
were to take sad the new responsibilities
they were to sesame. One day he talked Is
his most earnest manner for several minutes
to • youae woman who had Dome to be mar-
ried so a bright looking young man.
•'Aad now," be cud in closing, I hope
you will fully realise the extreme import-
ance of We step you are taking and that you
are prepared for It."
"Prepared!" she'said'lnmroeatly. "Well,
if I ain't prepared I don't knew -who is. I've
got 4 commas quilts sad 2 area ones and 4
timed new feather beds, 10 shee's ted 12
pairs of phi ew slips, 4 all linen tabled
a dozen spears and a good six quart teakettle
If 1 sin's impared, no eirl in this saunter 1
Nis -we.." '•
cancer.
a cancer. Jlicr+•arylieal tnvestignttun �
showed that It was a Batten' beetled I The Evolution of Aartculture.
doubt. 1 A`rieulture, in the opinion of niauy,
Then the doctor tk. of w--siMesaatte I is considered to be a form of industry
search along the banks of the riven and more laborious and less attractive to
creeks in the vicinage. His dductlob- I natural man than hunting or herding,
are best toll In his min words, pub- and that it h codseeuently only under-
limbed In The Journal des Connaissance.; taken under constraint, this being gen-
Medicales: I erally due to pressure of population on
"I is remarkable flat this aMictlon In available means of subsistence. We
ludo ire en -
Throwing flies avid Slippers.
The dainty slipper has been traasfo.Tn•
ed into the old shoe of doubtful origin,
and "thrown with tone and accuracy,
musing no end of discomfort. And this
is what two pretty customs have de-
generated into. They have been vul-
garised. and!therefore, the sooner they
pass into disuse the better. The smiteost. Rice meatshoes are no longer omenof the customs has been s of good
lock. The moderrsthrower of them has
transformed them and mortify like bride-
groom.
to annoy ,.,ie have
The better class of people
already beguner of
hist e?e" 1 �.
beautiful idea is rapidly being followed.
We might have pfeserved the old ens -
toms, but we hare not. Henceforth,
promiscuous rice throwing and the cast-
ing of old shoes at weddings will be lift
Into
t a the boors of our modern 'society,
whose bands these acts have fallen, and
who seem happiest when they can con-
vert toms
olden times
int practical 7 keeraceful n Ladies' Hoarse Jour-
nal -
a
s;asular ehordla 1lsgadb witty. It
wss ' in the very belga d the eta of
Alpine climbing, aad the 'first aaeeete
et menet* peaks were the beet eng
ing Incidents eminent the orris Shu the
anciet . The gloomy ree7wra
- Grand Passage ed le the kenos et
th.upevent sad ale iwsii 9111111.4.Is the
midst of .its festivity to moue,.
(N course, the ae liteet 'caused n"
cls king Sit flap etlsbeles. Mostltain
'Inhere ses�sned te be social lkire 1*.
and the Tagr rentinm af"ettilI there were
Ise more dant/erntse summits to ante
without
i
elnee
fed
the human being occurs more often in
such places of habtb tion se ace in or
mar wooded districts. Furthermore.
the percentage of deaths due directly
isfar greater among that
cannot atecmt this cone n in
on
work.as place resumeust wthat eirttnts uve
work. Let us P
man was first of all a hunter and noth-
ing else. He would first have to adopt
to cancer
wits of persons who have much to do himself to climatic conditions, for any
with touching or handling vvttetaties ',himself
tater that alters these con�reionseelt rs
w or
t out i used. abundance of rein, with suitable
vegetable struggle for existence a vic-
tory
ie
tory for trees over grasa, and the hun-
ter's place would then be the forest-
But
orest
But it in the vegetable struggle grams
survived, he would be placed on the
plain steppe, and this and of herbivorous
be-
comes the feeding gro
animals.
Whether in the forest or on the stepee,
natural man lived in the early stage of
his exleteiueeby huntin3 both carnivor-
ous and herbivorous animals, especially
the latter. We are thus unable to ac-
cept
s
cept the views held that primitive man.
when placed in forests, gave himself tis
of animals, but when
the...L�si
placed In gram'i'te�Ii�'eetv�d-bimssht'
to their domestication. Primitive na-
tural man, wherever found, , was a bun-
ter of animals, and at the same time a
gatherer of fruits, seeds, nutsand
Lnddroot*.
The hunter also first began
By various arts and • de-
visee animals.
> a ould entrap his gamma
In preserving hie apotU, for futfre ase
he would first create a art or science
of domestication For
fimt�h hunted
know that wilt honer
for food alone. and when large numbers
were entrapped they were safety
as a souses of fool supply. Fol wing
on contact with the seitnalm came the
reengmitlon of court's milk as another
source of food supply. and last of all
came then• utilizntdtn as an aid to the
hunter in waking for and chasinghis
mune. si-veu to our own era elephants
that have been tented are employed to
entice, chase nod retch' other elephants
roaming will in their natural habitat. —
Wtstmtnater Review.
nod those who are employed in vegetation at once. If there
con -
di
A pew Parts Shoot furl r.
About three-quarters of the rlie used
in this country is imported from Italy.
It comes In hampery revitalising about
U0 0 pounds each. Garlic is raised in
scattered sections of this roti itrv. All
garlic. both imported and Canadian. is
put up In bunches in which onionhes, s ns we something
seclike t hi this country, but
once commonly sold
mach e`er. red or by the
Garlic is sold by the pea
single bulb, which is sold ter a penny.
It. its commercial form, whole aid afy,
garlic does not yield the strong .mei'
tee which it is famous. In a wh leeale
where garlic wan
Wicked up In quantiuce dsh. there was no
�qt�t�a!de odor from it. But it oar of
thi e•veral amatierabulbs fi h wide! culled
root is competed, bream �. sad ed
sieves ed garlic, the powerful odor be-
comes
e-
cowDenitee,
a The aggregate consumption of garlic
in this country Is on the inereise.
dg At
rienvone teMI�reta tarhe rise n"-
tkYwbete been thebt tett
leaf his lite, d
tate NOME
A tunic win.*
ttielelli= with beet," mite
era,
5
rales where w ■
It is an authentheated fact that in tious of soil, there would he in the
England tax eolectors and assessors,
who have often to pass through lothg
utretchee of woodland, are more pone
to the disease than the average Itis
also establlahed that aar'.cuetrvsl
labor-
ers are prone to the disease.
"Statistics in the hospitals of Lyons
prove that all CAWS of cancer of the Ity
and month come from the country dis-
tricts surrounding the city. Not one case
came from the cit, Itself. As is known.
external injuries, such as blows or
scratches, often develop into csucetons
growths.
la connection with this tt must be
.iirmind•thee tilt en chards
like growths found trey
and ordinary trees are infectious. That
this is so is evident frown the fact that
these vegetable boas are often found
throe or more in'a row on the same limb,
evidently oommtiuicated form one spot
to another. It Is in this way the cancer
germs are spread. large wasps,
Insects, and especially
are the medium of communicating sad
trantpiitting .be genies from tree to
tree. aad eves from twee to the human
bens. The gsestiou, therefotee, is:
4e the human being capable of re-
ee3vtnss and develogdug a canter germ
the introduced into his menacme Will
the sting of a wasp, bearjnp sneb Prole
ane.
develop Into a cancerous
ablyl Aad it Is also mettle t water
in a g`ood_ medium for the p�rotypaag�atkm
and Ltrfbatioa of cermet Aetentdiag to
the method by which the tense are 1*,
troduced isle the ayetean-atthec by
means_ of gamma! eovnmunleation or
through the internal organs. the disease
devetopa
"If Intrndn sed by the fingers. the
growth is apt to show in the mouth or
noes, If taken with food or water the
etamsacli and Intestines are likely is be
afflicted."
COAL.
ALWAYS ON HAND
THE BEST
Scrailtofi Bard Coal
IN THE MARKET
at $5.75 per ton, Cash.
All Coal weighed for • ten.Markel Scales.
here you get '.n000u
WM. LEE.
Orders left at $.$Pin k LEE'S `Store
promisee etyoded to.
sIiver
LADY. [rem RfdneIpiating-.
elYe yes, you epn argue.~ " ti'be
Vet little man is Ma comae;
eal-
forteue. tioa twang' e, t Jres.s" �By
tY1* TMfeler. ,
Dalai ,-• tostr.-wtse.
'tee WVthle* le terribly afraid of
Don teewkaaw The.
sen whoa eke sou Iilla*T'
Honest
Swede.
pavan a la rasime . To hamIA StHedoea a e event,�
• ty of the race, is Metals Asian.Bsooty is
In tills
ed almd oSciall created upon how a tal
regard the 8hct� le Aiwa"theta sepon
admit sale si ass 'sad etymon
muslin di sees. let the theatres� and
some u _ these see het
concert ass
ii
✓ ooms. he a sit dl the per-
• r� tAe each ow itsoto kis
fo see of heveris effects. ,a- D sethbent
steers. Tbr inhabt is Ire ac -
toe oirtgi=etrlN es tt
la the et the istom els in Stott -
bp'oni:eters have bees (RSL
ahis tea one ?a.1at tbe
teed of
AN AGED
Mrs. Eooleston's Sufferings
Dooms Cwrediby Dodd's Kidney Pills
—A Medicine that Produces Good
Results for batt Old and Young
Sr. Camel -Nail. 69,$i wed knownt. niesidest
i:ool«tow, aged
d this oily, has for some time been afflicted
with kidney domes, the symptoms of which
were severe pains in the small of her back.
She is now perfectly oared. This happy re -
salt is due to the use of Dodd's Kidney
Pills, the famous and infallible remedy for
all Warty disorders. Mrs. Ecclestone
says the pates have never returned since her
recovery, and her happiness over her restor-
ation to sound health Ir indescribable.
le
, It
a. Wanted a Wheel.
"Well, my sou,' said the editor to his
ties, who wanted a wheel, "you'll find nos
Wild front end of that wheelbarrow, and
there M a big pile of coal ashes back of the
hones that will have to be moved. The
handle berg are of white ash and areadjost
able, me you am get any stile of hump on
oe put on.
largely by the load y Th M ger
the lead, the morey
that suits your fancy. t te regulated
• g
ou have to hump your -
PRiCE LIST.
Spoons per dot
Knives "
Forks
Table Cruet, each
Pi:kle "
Butter Knife "
Candle Sticks " 42o
Sed Irons 10o
Scissors, per pair ........10 and Ibo
We can Plate anything
in Brass, Iron, Copper,
or Steel. Call and see
samples of our work.
HENDERSON BICYCLE CO.
1 Limited, Goderloh.
75o
$1.50
75e
T. 75e�
50o
1bc
0 0 TO
why Seem Are iHM,er.wt Is Osten
The celery of the different races tie -
pend wee the pigniestt is the ey_iriennis.
esp elahy In its dsepe' strata. M. lirt•ul,
e ~eat 1 g authority, ands, se
cordate to "Re *nee," that the coloring -
matter is in the interior of the epithelial
eras. "white ayes it the Merle the inter-
cellular
nt
cellular meted are white. The pigment
itself may be quite Mask Itor of anyy
shade up to a see 'pulls►•
tosaited , �.s¢he # eatesd over
the a ell. .{..q on shows
GAL It is over thee
skln,bfbw Osseo lug color -
lea.
lor-
This let �t � pat .hblack
taus, tt�qoo�■t�in
re
•ttass•feh�tiesthr.asd mei not ho discerns le
unless tt11 skis Is stretched. This die -
tetter** le that eolbeing-matter ise,the
east* 100 all rwees, sad its setae! summit
Isr ltebt same. the difference in
hoe sig ista m the darker
of
STURDY BROS.
FINE GROCERES!
Vessel Supplies a Specialty.
STURDY BROS.
FAMILY GROCERS—THELSQUARE.
nom. Tire Hints.
A ponetttrr has been successfully seal-
ed by a pa.etegae stamp and tire over a
n.
Chewing gum, carefully spread
puncture anti ha'hl fast by tire tape, has
saved imey a weary t
he
eteestrand "atickkeut' irevalve is tehtaever
ond l
•tler
mode.
The best remedy for a side rut alone
the rim is a walk to the nearest raileey
station.
Dent try to mend a Na 10 pow ante
with a No. 2 Mpg. It's time and p.etl-
enee thrown away.
Instances are onrecord wherein a
ble re
enlist
hinout ae tireother withawateeer, air'
thus
Ndthse; broken toothpicks nor matehe
make, s.ecea*fel piongs. Don't bt•h.•v
theelliaus also told yon be meml. d a
p1vh14p hi that manner.
A, that insteps the rim can hr kept
y �grtrn ashen rider ha• a ' crsn".t,
b7 1{ tcghily alyd tainting It atter
tba.
it tt sIoeL1 poetsdho live 1, states where
the Oise fees grow, and who do not
chew tin sr carry pnytage stamps,
soups reels from the thea and me;td
theneturee with that.
tiny of Mut Greeted dvehtteet. piaster, assisted by the tape,
TheB y�r ached at DOW has late- for a tie a oort ver
g a encture.
gni4
sot}erlllt*d two ethpti ria _ sou So... Int seed Trill quire many
h tai Mildas as thles a
n og est a pwtsp top: t `deme.
y beite$te l This � 1�y date tags, usese•►f Dere
argots o! t Ilii past tea. sin j+l� ire, a+ts
ipNri eat worklog kgllii. �tes'polep i of sight eE a enu,ah sleep.
ti /�rW em est► tie�ably get tester end sad or
.It we ;f>ri sin t!k way.
so clic eerie lK tihdee•
bis a-s*a,EVat S!t ii .s_.
THE BEST IS
BESIS
THE BESTT IS
THE BE8ll IS
THE BEST IS
TttE BESTISIS
THE BEST
T SE
THE BEST
THE BEST
THE RST
THE BEST
THE BEST
THE HEST
THE MEW
THE EST
THE BEST
TH4 'd11ET
THE
THE
THE
TE sairr
'1'HE 1lET
T7 HEST
THE
IBI MT
THE
TTHE
THE
THE
THE
Tu;
a
Ill sow la ail MllrMt•s"'i�e
tA
A Ti•avett
lite deeesiptise et
Imes he ' follows:
eh
Mort Wu• h•.sr.
ythe got ttgvee, at kat•
q'—Qf�itialti VialaDelllow
HE
THE CHEAPEST AND THE SIGNAL
THE CHEAPEST AND THE SIGN*.
THE CHEAPEST AND THE SIGNAL
THE CHEAPEST AND THE SIGNAL
THE CHEAPEST AND THE SIGNAL
THE CHEAPEST AND THE - SIGNAL
THE .SIGNAL
IS THE BEST
IS THE BEST
I8 THE BEST
IS THE BELT
IS THE BELT
IS THE BEAD
THE BEST
THE BUT
THE BEST
THE BEST
THE BEST
THE BEST
TBEST
T BEST
T BEST
THE BEST
THETHE
THE FEST
THE BEST
THE BEST
THE BEST
THE BEST
THE ills?
THE HIST
E
BEST
B
T
A Y EA.R
IN ADVANCE
El
IS
1S
TRE OHIAPEIIT
TAE 0 HE APEST
THE
OHBAGEE
iFiz FEST
THE
THETHE
a
THE
THE •
THE
IFIE
THE
A
B
AND THE SIGNAL IS TVI
AND TUE ?ZONALIS THE
AND TEE �L Ian ,
AND THE L IS TTHH
AND THE- SEES AL El Two BEST
, . ...!11!"4,4, r
76,1 'Art
r e"r