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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1901-7-25, Page 3Child's Suffering. oaEB ritAltED SHE WaULD NOT REGAIN HER lac Wei '14lirst Attacked With Ithoiuiiafsn and Then With St. tritus' Dance—She was Unable to Help Herself and Had to Ine Cared f or Almost Like an fant, (From the Orangeville Sun.) Among the much respected resi- alerils of Orarigeville is l'avrs. Mar - hall, who lives in a. pretty little xottage on First street, Por some years her twelve -year-old daughter, ;Mamie has been a surferer from rheu- I ' ' iniatism combined with that other ter- ndhle afiliction—St. Vitua' dance. In Itorivaraation recently with a reporter.. of the Sun Mrs. Marshall told the 101- (1owing story of he daughter's suf- fering and subsequent restoration to health—.t the age of eight," says Mrs. Marshall, "Mamie was attacked with rheumatism from which she euf- feted very much, and although she was treated by a clever doctor her heaith did not improve, rlio make hei• condition worse she was attacked with St. Vitus' dance, and I really ghve up hope of ever seeing her en- joy good health again. lier arms and limbs woulct twitch and juk spasmodically and she could seer-- cely hold a dish in her hand, and had to be looked after almost- like an in- fant. While Mamie was in this con- dition a neighbor who had used Dr. , Williams' Pink Pills with beneficial results* in her own family advised me to try them in liTainie's case. I had 1-ny'self often heard these pills highly spoken of, but it had not occurred to me before that they might cure my little girl, hut now I decided to give them to her. Before she had com- pleted the second box I could see a marked change for the better, and by the time she had taken five boxes all trace of both the rheumatism and St. Vitus' dance had vanished, and she is now as bright, active and healthy as any child. of her age. Some tine has elapsed since she discontinued the use of the pills, but not the slightest trace of the trouble has since made itself manifest. I think therefore, that I am safe in saying that I be- lieve Dr. Williams' Pink Pills not only restored my child to health, but have worked a permanent cure." Rherunatisni, St. Vitus' dance and all kindred diseases of the blood and 'nerves, speedily yield to Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills and the cures thus effected are permanent, because this medicine makes rich, red blood, 'strengthans the nerves, and thus reaches the rootof the trouble. These pills are sold by all dealers in medicine or will ,be sent pe-st paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by addressing the Dr, Williams Zedieirte Co., Brockville, Ont. IcrEW WIRELESS TELE G-RA- PE.Y. Lt is Very Much Superior to Mar - cord's System. An exposition of the new system of wii7Oleas telegraph' was given the ;.other day, with great success, at Le .Vesinet, a suburban hamlet on the .St. Germain-en-La,ye road. Paris. The inventors or discoverers of this system are Colonel Pilow,ski an engineer officer in the Russian army, and M. Victor Popp, a well-known electrical engineer, whose /lame has been attached to several useful and ;valuable inventions. Within the nar- row limits imposed for the experi- ments on this occasion, they were a 'eouiplete success. Although the electrical ihstallation at Le Visinet is of the most. primi- tive a.ird temporary chsexacter, it number of mesSages were despatched ,by the transmitting instrument in a !villa in the Rue Pasteur and received ;in another villa situated about six !hundred metres distant, without the .slig,dateet hitch. One striking feature about, Mr. Popp's system is its extreme sim- plicity. No tall masts are required, as is necessary with the: Marconi metlied. It is terrestrial rather than aerial; that is to say, the elec- tric waves follow the surface of the sarth. There is, coasequen tly, noth- ing spectacular in the apparatus. It consists simply of TWO ELECTRODES eparated vy a distance that varies ..61CCOrding to the distance of the" • place with which it is desired tO'l ommunicate. The negative is plap- ed on a sheet of glass aS isolator -ion t[the eurface, The positive is buried, the earth at a depth of from ;three and a half to ' four metres, These two electrodes are connected to the transmitting apparatus. ' i The same arrangement is followed at the receiving station.. This is all that is necessary for the despatch and registration. of messages, as was conclusively' proved. by M. Popp. I. The most • astounding -claim made by M. Popp forshis system is that . its radins of astion is virtually un - w ire less 'telegraphy with 'Americas for ,example, being merely a Matter of' detail, such as the dis- tance separating the' electrodes and the energy di the transporting appa- ratus. In addition, M. Popp has de- vised a sort of reflector that allows of the electric waves being compelled to travel in a given direction. IThe posSibilities contained in M, In the first place, the apparatus is diScovery aro incalculable. f30 shnple that it is not liable to get out of order. It is so transportable that four men can establish a tele- graph statioa in thorough working order within an imur anywhere. This, in the case of a city like Paris, Is a desideratatm not to be despised. Furthermore, the absence di the tell - ,talo poleS, necessary with the Marconi system, is an inYalita,ble ed- vance, as they evotild infallibly be- tray o tfl etanny the faiot that a V"..1:.'eless telegraph station, Vas in the nainhlyernoor-l.„ BIG WAR ON MOSQUITOE8. ITALY IS EXPERIMENTING WITH THE LITTLE PESTS. Authorities Will Fight 'Them in th.e Campagna—Successful Experiments. The Italian authorities are pre- paring this year to continue their. war upon mosquitoes in the Cam- pagna so as to give further proof that malarial fever, the dread dis- ease of that region, is not only spread but Propagated by these in- sects. laaperingents along this line have been made for two years,, and they- have proved that in nearly every case the railroad employes who have been protected- from mos- quito bites have escaped malarial fever. The constant susceptibility of the railroad workers to malarial fever has always crippled these trans- portation lines. Practically the en- tire force has, had to be changed twice in a season. The first attack on these mosqui- toes began in 1899. Prof. Angelo Celli conducted it. Ele worked on two railroad lines, the Prenestina- Cervara and the Ponteglara sys- tems. He...selected five cottages oa the first line occupied hy workmen and three on the second line. The windows were covered by net- ting, and the outer as Wall as some of the inner doors also has screens. The workmen on duty -had TO WEAR COWLS.' such as beekeepers use. The chim- neys of the houses had extra pro- tection, and in order to discover the presence of stray mosquitoes the walls of the rooms were whitewash - cd. On some of the houses the porch was protected by a cage so as to allow the inmates to sit out of doors in the evening. In one of these cottages on the Cervara line the residents .would adopt none of the precautions and malaria attacked twelve out of the fourteen persons who lived there. Itt the protected cottages only four out of twenty-four persons contracted the fever, and these four worked at night and took no heed of the in- structions to wear cowls. None of the wives or children living in the protected houses took the fever, and Prof. Celli says: "For the first time since the con- struction of the railtoad the families of railroad servants were able in IiighIy rnalarious localities to pass the whole summer. and autumn in in the Campagna without contract- ing fever., ' On the Prenestina line out of fifty- two persons protected Only TWO CONTRACTED THE FEVER, one of whom was a night watchman, who was attacked before the experi- ments were really under way. The other was a woman who did not obey instructions. Twenty, -,one adults and twenty-nine children re- mained absolutely free from the dis- ease. Not far away, in a place that Was not protected sixteen out of eighteen persons on one section- of the railroad line had the fever and out of 100 peasants near by, none of whom was protected, all sickened, Of this Prof. Celli says: s "Our protected zone thus remained free from malaria in the midst of a fever strickeli region, and in order to render healthy a district where during a preceding year every one had had the fever, it sufficed to ex- tend to it the new method of pro- phylaxis." The , experiments were extended subsequently to another line, the Casteigiubileo. In the protected houses not one took the fever, and out of fifty-one inhabitants of un- protected houses ONLY SEVEN ESCAPED. and these were immune to the fever by reason of previous attacks. In the unprotected huts only two Out of twenty-nine children escaped the fever, while all the thirty-six child- ren in the protected huts escaped. .k man and his wife and child were transferred from a protected hut to an unprotected cottage and the wife and child soon came down with the fever. A fainfly of husband, wife and six children, all of them sick with feVer, were transferred to the healthy cottage and all made a quick recovery during the height of the malarial season. Of, this exper- ience Prof. Celli says: "Of a whole community of persons all subjected to the same conditions in other respects those whom we de- fended against mosquitoes have re- mained free from fever, while those left unprotected have nearly all been attacked. It is as if we had a book with its pages alternately White and black, the whitepages corresponding to our protenhed houses and families theable.ek-pages representing thos'e left unprotected. No less decisive were the experiments made on the other lines." BIGGEST OF BATTLESHIPS. Three of 18,000 Tons Each to Be • Built by Great Britain.. For several years pas h the size' of the men-of-war Of the British 'navy has been increasing at a rapid rate, seat the London' Telegraph. We are building battleships 'and armored cruisers of 15,000 tons displacement and it has now been decided by the Admiralty to make a further almost ,sensational departure by laying down itt the present year 'three bat- tleshipa with a displacement of no less than 18,000 tons, They will be the largest ancl most powerful ves- sels for warlike purposes afloat. Re- markable as this further addition of 3,000 tons, the decision of the naval authorities, though it will be severe- ly criticised, it in keeping with the tendency of all constriiction in the past forty years. We began with the Warrior, of 9,200 tons; then built the Agincourt and her sisters, of 10,- 600 or so; in 1876 laid down the In- flexible, of 11,880; in the 80's tfac Admiral claes, of 10,600, followed ,ky he Nile and ,Trafalgar of 11,940, anti an the early 90's by the Royal Sovereigns, of 14,500 tons. Then came the Majeatica of 11,900, and a Perfect liquid dentifrice for the Teeth iind New Size sgzoDoiNT.LIQ1111) 25e 'SOZOLIONTTOO,Tit.POWIIER, 2$; Lurie LIQUID'iind POWDER 7Se all'Stores, or byMail for the prioa,i IOLA.Moretreal. , . _ aragzemmaegalaeauseateaames2a.ealarasaa.--aae...,:aa the Formidable type, 15,000. Now at a jump we pass to leviathans indeed of 18,000. The tendeneY abroad, though not so marked, has had the same direction. America is building a ship of 16,500 tons. OUr new monster warships will mount four 50 -ton 12-inala weapons of the newest type, being the same number as is carried by all battle- • ships of recent date, and ten G -inch quick -firers,, instead of tWeiVe, aS in existing. ships. The reduction in number in this instance is due to the introduction of an entirely new piece, the 7.5 wire wound breech loader, which has been adopted be- cause the eight -inch gun Is too hea- vy for rapid work, and it need has been felt for something betNreen the twelve inch and the six inch quick - fire. If there is an advantage in this adding to the size 'of our ships of war, in spite of the outcry againat the policy of "putting all one's eggs in one basket," it is not easy to see why we should rest- satisfied with the present stage. Vessels of 20,- 000 or even 80,000 tons may be re- garded as desirable before many years have passed. Meantime, the average cost per ton, which has ris- en in the past six years from £60 to £75 in this country, still continues to increase, and while the newest armored cruisers will cost over Z1,- 000,000, the battleships of 18,000 tons will probably not be completed for less than a raillion and a quar- ter each, possibly more, FRUISI.ERIN 8 GREEN ISLE, NOTES OF NEWS FROM THE LAND OF THE SEAFIROCK. Occurrences That Will Interest Irish Canadians—Ireland Day by Day. - Ireland sends to England 237,000 tons of meat a year. . Belfast is the richest and most, populous city in. Ireland. Pour young children were suffocat- ed by a fire in a tenement house in Dublin. Scotland, with larger population than Ireland, has thirty Parliamen- tary representatives fewer. It is proposed to organize a pigeon post a,t Queenstown to facilitate the reporting of liners off that port. • The number of Irish -speaking peo- ple in Ireland is said to be 679,145. Of -these 38,192 speak nothing but Irish. The Belfast upholsterers, with the exception of those employed in the shipyards, have struck work for shorter hours. The Marquis of Londonderry pos- sesses photographs of all interior parts of his collieries, as well as many elaborate maps of them. Only about 1i per cen.t. of the to- tal area of Ireland is under woods, while there is over 23 per cent. of uncultivated land -in the country. Recruiting for' the Irish Guards is not proceeding with that rapidity which the War Office authorities and the .officers of the regiment had rea- son to hope. The cities of -Dublin Belfast Cork •and Limerick., with a total popula- tion about equal to that of f-dasgow contain lees than a •sixth of the r.•op- ulation of Ireland. ,A movement has been instituted for the establishment of a class at the depot of the Royal Irish Con- stabulary in the Phoenix T'arlc, Dub- lin, for the teaching of the Irish • language, .The population of the municioal area of, Dublin, including t,he inde- pendent townships, is returned as 318,965, which gives the noriliern city a clear majority of 1.,s61. A salmon of , the 'Bann River, weighing seven pounds, and rehrised on January 1st, after being untilm,l, has been taken in another Irish River, the Dunclrowes, 14 t) mi les around the coast from its nalive stream. 'According to the Lord-Lietitenatit, the poverty in the 'South of Ireland is caused by over-populatien, fcr there are no industriee'' to attract the people to the towns, andthe bar- ren soil will not support all the in- habitants. ' Cork is to have its Industrial Ex- hibition next year. The Irish De- partment of Agriculture has granted, 05,000, and a portion of this sum will be devoted to the organization of an exhibit' of products' appliances and processes relating to industries which are capable of being introduc- ed into Ireland, or, when already es- tablished, of being developed, . A number of airs for regimental marches, were recently- submitted to the King for tho uso of the newly formed Irish Gnards, and His Meta Jesty has approved of, "St. Pat- rick's Day" for the quick march, and .,Come I3ack to Erin" for the SI ow. The rewards f or Services at the front have not beon conspicuous, in the case of the Irish soldiers. Not, e single Victoria Cross has yet been conferred on a -member 0 an Irish regiment, while Scotland 1uaf3 had the lion's shoro of this coveted decora- tion. Of course the war in. South Africa has been, and now is, directed by Trish generals, but so for tho in- numerable Irish Oflicers and prlyeles , Imve get nothing beY9nd Mention In LiQspatches. Outrages are reported from Five- muotowh, county TYrone. I'Vhile a farmer named Maguire was absent from home several men assenibled and set his house ell fire at mid- 3vraguire's wife and two children in their night clothes" but three valuable cows were burned to death, the buildings being destroyeU. In the same district the grouse moors 01 Zfr • De P. ATontgomery, D• L., and other gentlemen, were fired, great damage being done, ROYAL FAMILIES OF ETJROPE, The Sovereign families of Europe, despite all political differences, forme one vast family closely bound by ties of blood and innumerable inter- marriages. This wilt be understood better when it is stated that every crowned head in Europe outside Turkey at the present moment is de- scended from Mary Queen of Scots, with the exception of the King of Sweden, the King of Servia, and the Prince of Monaco and Montenegro. NATURAL LEAF Is Free from Any Particle of Coloring Matter; is Daintyr- ating; is the only tea that suits fastidious palates and is wl,.-o'igomo 'tor the most delicate digestions. IT IS ALSO A BRITISii PRODUCT Ceylon Teas ate sold in Sealed Lead Packets only, Black, nixed, Uncolored Ceylon Green. Free sanntAes sent: Address t,SAL,ADA," Toronto. 2f You Wantbeat giAligg APPI.28, other F/WIT8 and a5e91/00. to - The Dawson Commission CoUnttijerZZ41;1X°"gorI;j,. 000000.041100000000.0,4400000e-0000000004"'00.000e0 0, 0 TEE COMMONEST : ALL TRODBLES. DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS ARE USED MORE FOR BACKACHE ' THAN FOR ANY OTHER KIDNEY AFFECTION. Bright's Disease not so Frequent of Late Years—Dodd's Kidney Pills Undoubtedly the Cause— Diabetes also far less Freya - lent. Matane, Que., July 15,—(Special) —Not only in this neighborhood but throughout the Province of : Quebec there is a marked decrease noticeable inthe number of cases of )3rightia ,Diseaee reported. This fact is un- doubtedly due to the wide use of Dodd's Kidney Pills in the earlier stages of Kidney Disease. : :Bright's Disease atone time was the cause of a large Proportion of the death's in this Province. It was con- sidered incurable and until Dodd's Kidney Pills were introduced it Was incurable. Not, so, however, now. Dodd's Kidney Pills have almost wiped the disease out. Nor is Dia- betes heard of new to any great ex- tent. cm 6 „A&TEEMEMEASTM,VM-WIMMTIZZ•VaiNSUFSZ 19®00,i20€00G1 prit illg Material fop Sale .0 U, 0 17 O .11.41.111•41"*.0.0.5.0.0.0.0•01.01.6.11,4.0.0.0”0”0“t.0.0.11W6.41.0.0.0.15,.9.0.6.0.11.0.0.*.O. 0 O a 1:2,11MICill'alL°3E3.V"-- LIL:2"M‘IMMEI;MES. One Four Roller Campbell Press front delivery, bed 43x56 $1200 e 0 • • $1100 0 $400 0 0;$ One Four Roller Campbell Press, bed 37x52, . 0 0: M',EC:)72r-a::SoZCnTCer IVE-41-ta."-M2E3.73E3M. O Two 7 -col. quarto Brown Folding Machines, each e • °12371E24:1,.Mesvtb-b2.21.2..m' IlEozele-ixcit..tmo,7. 4.4 Att O 'Two Roger'sTypographs, in first-class order, each . . . $550 e 0 0 411) Also Cutting Machine, Stones, Stands, Body and Display Type. ? All this Machinery is in First -Class Order. Easy Terms will be Given, tit • or Special Discount for Cash. On accouut of addle°. a more uro-date 0 crilim.1=•06513=1.1r OIESOOD2.1.11.12MINFE:C. (c) Plant the above Machinery and Type be dispos411 of at a acrifice. 0 47 The Wilson Publishing Co,, of Torortto, Limited (2 TORONTO, OAAIaA. 0* e000e0G000e0e0e e@e0e0e000e0s000000 000060 The most common form by which in the first 82 Kidney Disease manifests itself is tury the British Backache, and here Dodd's Kidney 27,010 laws. Pills are doing their most active work. They are recognized. as the The King first took his scat in the :surest and quickest cure for Back- House. of Lords on 5th February, ache ever invented. They Work on 1863. . the sound principle of 'going to the root of the trouble—the Kidneys— years of last cen- Parliament made Are you a sufferer with corns ? If you wherein they em all °Linn -2 cliff -i fro.e get a bottle of Holloway's Corn Cur Backache medicines except imitations has never been kuown to fail, of ,, Dodd's Kidney Pills. They do more than merely relieve. They pos- ' itively and permanently cure, as thousands of people are ready to testify. O. Dionne, a well-known resident Pills have made a grand success in Keep iliffirdS 1,11111110111111 1101183. . curing me of Bacicache and I recom- mend everybody to keep them in the house. They are a wonder as a re- medy' for Backache and Disease of the Kidneys." SHE WASN'T AFRAID OF HIM. ie n ose nment pays 16,- 000 a year in bounties for the killing of 20,000 wild beasts and 560,000 snakes. of Matane,. says, ".Dodd's Kidney • • A lady went out after dinner 'leav- ing the new servant alone in the house, and said to her on departing: Now, Sarah, please remember that we never buy anything of gipsies or peddlers, or anyone at the door, and do not, on any account, let strangers come into the house. ' I will not ma'am, replied Sarah, firmly. An hour later the front door -bell rang. Sarah went to the door. There stoOd a stranger, brief -bag in hand. Nodding carelessly to the servant, he was about to enter, when Sarah braced herself firmly in the doorway and said, Go back! Why, girl, he said in surprise and indignation, what do you mean? What do you mean by trying to poke yourself into folks's houses? Oh, you needn't glare at me like that! I ain't afeered of ye! Too angry and too much amazed to offer any explitnatiori, the gentle- man said, sternly, stand aside and iet, me pass! An umbrella, and walking -stick stand stood. in the hall by the girl's side, and, seizing a heavy cane, she brandished it bravely, saying as she did so: • — You try to come in here if you dare! I ain't afeerecl of ye! Consciousof the ludierotts and un- dignified appearance he presented, standing on his own doorstep with a servant girl brandishing a cane over his head, the master of the house, for he it Was, decided to capitulate. Where is your mistress? he asked. She ain't at home, and she said I was not to let nobody in while she was gone, and I ain't going to, re- plied the girl doggedly. But, ray good girl, replied the gen- • tleman, his sense of humor overcom- ing his anger, I am Mr. I-1—; the husband of your Mistress. ' Now, may I come in please? Not at all abashed by this infor- mation, t'he girl stepped aside, say- ing in a tone of comical condensa- tion, Well, if you're him, I s'pose you can come in. Sore Feea—Mrs. E. J. 'Neill, New Arn agh, P. Q., writes: "Foe nearly Si), 111011thS 1 was troubled with burnim 'aches and pains in My feet to such aa tent that I could not .sleep at night, anc- as inV feet were badly swollen I could not wear m3r beets for weeks. At lest 3 got a bottle of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil and resolved to try it and many estop ish- ment I got almost instant relief, and the one bottle:accomplished:a perfect cure: T. N. U 333 Hotel rateg AVENUE HOUSE ItreCail,-0011. cite Avena ref England has 1,017 women to 1,000 men, but in Italy only, 995 to each 1,000. StWar8 OT rantrnents tor.tatatTri, that contain Mereury as mercury- will surely de3troy tbe sense of me an 000150 a y eran,a t e whole system wbon entering It through the mnCOIIS snr race!, Such articles should never be used except OD proscriptions from reputs.ble physicians, as the damage they will do is ion fold to the good you Mu possibly derive from them. fla:l's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F.T. Cheney & Co., Te- ledo, 0., contains no mercury,- and is taken in. ter/ally, acting directly upon the blood and mucou--; surfaces of the system. In buying Ilall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the gene. ine. Ibis taken internelly.and made In Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold. by Druggists, price 750 )3er bottle. Efall's Family Pills are the best. A Australia's first paper was printed in Sydney in 1803: The COritinent has now 150 papers. ' Worms derang ethe whole system - In London alone over 909 million —.....— .Nlother Graves' AVorni Exterminator de ranges Nvorms, and gives rest to the stiffer pounds' worth of property. is insured against fire. • z.r. It only costs 2•5 cents to: it and be coavinced. ' IaNatare'a,Stereliense,There are 'Cures —Medical experiments 'tare shown, con- clusively that there are medicinal virtues in even ordinary plants growing 115 around us which give then), a value that cannot he estimated. It is held by some thaisNature provides a cure for every dis- ease Which negleptand ignorauce have visited anon num. However,: this ma,y be', it ie well ,known that. Parmelee'S Vegetable Pills, distilled hem roots end herbs, are a sovereign remedy in curing all disorders of thedigeStion, Indian canals cost 17 millions to make, and three mililon a year to keep up. w.r-xqgsrerara.rwrs.nctcz? ,w-1-.sat-arnwnsraKrzetm Deddock, June 11, 1897: C. C. RICHARDS ,& CO, Dear Sirs,--MINARD'S LINIMENT is my remedy for NETJRALGIA., ' A. S. McDONALD. It relieves at once. 460,000 tons of pig -iron was pro- duced by the world in 1800, against 27,000,000 tons in 1900. MilioN'sLlmet1IP1lYSIC1(111& Maud—I-Iow far dO you live from. here' Mr. Hangaround? Mr. I-Tang- around—Oh, 'nearly two miles, IVItterl —If you should start now, what time Wonld you get home? Autaes 61,14Z4 044172"" 01 ?tor inaxtcf,Y4 $0.011 46040000,00.00""Amimeizi tafra, - - In the West End of London the infant death -rate is 11. per cent. In the East it is 38 per cent. Out of 30,000 inquests held yearly in the United Kingdom there are 250 -verdicts of "died of hunger." For Over. Fifty Years WiNstow's SOOTIIING Svnur has been used by roilliom, of 'mothers for their children while teething% Itsootbes the child, softens the gums, allays pain, cures wind collo, regulates the stomach anti bowels, and Is the best remedy for Diarrhcea. Twenty-five cents nbottle, Sold by druggists throughout the world. Be sum stag ask for' MAL% WiNstow's sooTinse Syntir." Not counting the war, the expen- ses of the British Government have four years. £19,076,000 in the last • For the Overworked.—What are the causes of despondency and melancholy ? A disordered liver is one cause and a pri.rne one. A disordered liver means a disor- dered stomach, and a disordered stomach means disturbance of the nervous system. This brings the whole body into subjec- tion and 1,130 victim feels sick all over. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills are a recog- ilized remedy in this state, and relief will folldve their use. English S111c man- ufacture has fallen. from, 6,1.00,000,,pounds in 1860 to a present total of only half that. ,,amount. .Why will you allow a cough to lacerate " yourthroat and lungs and run tile risk of conshraMave's grave, when, bv the timely use of Bickle's. Anti-Consuinp, dye Syrup the pain can be allayed width° • danger avoided. This Syrup is pleasant to the taSte,abd thisurnaSsed for relieving, healing and curing all affectiens of the throat and lungs, Odhls, coughs, etc,, ate. In the 'English :fieldagua the -tOftin hat ,to draw 38: Cwt.' The Germaa gun, 'made by Kropp. is 4, owl, light - 431'. Aimarg's Liiliment itatBrmall's Out of 2,012,623 children on the register's of British infant -schools the average •attendance it only 1,124- 839. Ask for Minard's and take no °tiler --- Since 1870 Groat tritain's increase in military expenditcro 110 'teeti ' 41'7,654,000; that at listo.nee only, " Z18,9.46,000. •