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The Wingham Times, 1897-05-28, Page 2•1 11 ` `, t .` : %I. MAY 2 3, tAPFENED IN FRONT pen on the tato than in the audience," thxengh the advertisement to the wom• When he was Mt ?rinweben, chants in the world today is the feet M1$5 PAfthOA, ON SOUPS. I find more *neap ected gs ap- Haat ich now cappca a thinh 1 k how t 1 attractively Haid Mr. Melntoeh, "However, the first are..•—Fourth Estate. PLAYERS TEU OF FUNNY EXrifP11- night we opened in "At Piney Ridge' 1 ENDES TiIE"Y M}tVE HAD. got a piece of advice from the front. I A Bible sled. (`said to the villain, 'Yon lei' the colo- A friend of the Listener saw a funny poi's baby up that., en you bring yo' eight down in Maine. At n place there, lEireet Upon Actors of ixterruptleas Erman, own dawn heath.'And his lines follow: which needn't be named, there lives e the Audience—The Best Wk. Sae•sed. "you lie.' I iltetxsstly wake smoveeeent small boy named Jonathan Longfellow, ]dray Irwin and "The Wide,/ Jeans; us if to strike him; but, remeMbeeing' who is a third or fourth cousiu of the Wanted Burr Ma ted& to ""S.sk Was." that ladies are present, my arm drops to poet, and he is a greet tiny too. Ono day Players are affected almost as deeply guy side. A man•iu front was so infuri- this frieud of the Listener was driving ated with the heartless villain that he past young Jonathan's house and saw by happenings in the audience as is the called out to me: `Soak him, Jack! Hit , the boy engaged at a little distance in audience by happenings on the stage. hien a good ono for hunk,' and thou he I sliding down hill on the slippery crust Sometimes they are moved to wrath, but hissed like a mad gander."—Hew York on something that was not aced, What snore frequently to laughter. Occasion- thin, could it be? Evidently the scrutiny of ally they are frightened out of their tlto ptisscry was o b heaved by the boy' lines. A man sat in an aisle seat, three rows from the front, at a performance of "El Capitan" the other night. He was a fat Iran, and he gave a sneeze sur]deuly--a terrific sneeze. It was followed by an- other that 'shook the plumes on the big bats of the women around and made the lights flicker. The audience suspended attention and locked at the aneezcr, and the players paused just as he snorted out a third sneeze that ended in a high a note suchs seldom had been heard in those parts, thought the Metropolitan Opera House is /ear by. El Capitan 1 stretched out his long arms toward the man, rolled his keg eyes heavenward and said in a sepulchral voice: " He avcei bless you, sir." • This brought the audience back to the stage with a rear, and in a second the performance was running on at high preer..ure, while the fat man chuckled over the fact that for a brief space he had been the star of the evening. A few minutes latera Sun reporter asked Mr. Hopper how be was affected by the funny things that happen in the audi- ence. After getting a grip on El Oapi-" tan's Lose and throwing down a cup of • hot coffee, as he dors between acts, he' answered: "American -American audiences are not demand' strative, and as a rule things don't hap -?l pen in front. Of course the man who? sneezed tonight couldn't help it, but he,`' made such a blasting success of it that - it affected the whole house and there- fore the players. If an actor is playing a part where he can say something, it is the best thing to do, for it makes them all laugh and keeps them from noticing a pause." May Irwin is an actress with whom even metropolitan audiences take liber- ties. "People have a habit of calling to me from the audience when they want me to sing a special song or to recite something," she said the other evening. "One night a man in the body of the house called out to me to recite 'Hia- watha.' He took me off my feet for a minute. I couldn't remember a line of it, but I called back: 'I will if you'll give me my cue. I've forgotten how it starts.' He gave nee the first line, and I shouted it for Slim. "When I was playing the Widow Jones ono night, during the kissing , scene between Lice and myself a man !,•4 shout ,,'I'd lii:e to be in your place, -Mr. Leese .I would.' Rice and I were both cenvolsed, and the audience roared. 'lie f reaek Il[.*salte.per'e Way of Making tthemrte ?•tiled' Is • teeture. "Eeopeaay h t1 a watehword of the peeptei ' raid Idiom Parloe in her talk upon the eharstrtetistics of French To* cookery at the Vew TeYoung Wom- an's Christian association, "and the French housekeeper, ne matter how simple the dish, comic in the making of it. The market prices are•Inuch higher in France than here, butter and sugar costing more than as ranch again. One may buy half a lemon or rut of a car- rot, and it is not thought unusual, anll only a sufficient quantity is purchased to 'supply each meal, and an unexpected guest is never provided for." Miss Parloa added that roasting and HOLDING HIM BACK. for he stopped" his coasting and called broiling are hardly known am and out amiably, "I'm sliding down hill ou the working classes, and pastry is tVliy an Enterprising Nan Was No Chance J the Bible." And it was the fact too. He made or n the kitchens of the veli to Became a xillieash•e. had got the smooth, leather bound fame y " Blummer is one of our citizens who ily Bible, containing the generations of wealthy, An American housewife may live well and do nothing. He toils all the Longfellows, and was coasting take the lead in the making of dainty net, neither does he spin, and yet he on it with magnificent success.—Boston and fancy desserts, but to a French - and his family live in comfort that is • Transcript. woman the making of soups and sauces net many removes from luxury. This t is the most important part' of the aicok- hae subjeeted Blunlmer to adverse crit - t Tile Humorous Bicycle Repairer. cry. icism, which fairly lacerates his sensi- 1 Reuben Rakestraw—Well, look there! The following simple soup is said to Use feelings, and heunbosomed himself There's a sign that says "Bicycle Asy- be savory and delicious: Put 8 table - to et few friends the other evening while Inns." What can that be for? speonfule of butter or moat fat in a soup they were enjoying the good things be :Romana Rakestraw—Ohl Why, that kettle and poor over it 2 quarts of wa- keeps on tap, be for folks that have this here ter. hat it cook 10 minutes before add - must f r t e s Jut into cub about.—Brooklyn Life. and 8 leeks wash ad and shoed thin. "There's not a lazy bone in my body," he began aggressively. "I'd rather work than eat, and I've always thought that I had a great business head on me. But the record's against me. My father set me up in a mercantile business, and when I had balance struck at the end of a year there was not onough left to make a decent assignment, On his death I came into a handsome fortune, and I just thought I'd show my rela- tives how I had been misjudged by in- vesting secretly in a great southern land scheme. I Rent down gleefully to look oven my new purchase and gloat over my prospects. Most of my real es- tate was at the bottom of a lake, and what was on dry land wouldn't raise a hill of corn to the acre. "My brother got me a nice position as traveling salesman, and I had sold whole carloads of goods at half price be- fore the house cculd head me off. They told me that I mast sell to hold my place, and that was what I was doing, but they discharged me so hard that I never got rightly over it. Mother bought me a farm, .and again I etarted to aston- ish my folks by my business shrewd- 1 um. I traded the farm for the state right to a patent fence. All I got out of that was a judgement against me in an infringement case. Mother left me what I have now, with a proviso that I should forfeit everything if I tried to clo Inesiness of any kind. That's !ley I have no chance to make myself a mil- rionaire, "—Detroit Free Press. ' MELTED SNOW POWER. Swiss Towns That r,tilia• the Mountain Stresaasr. Besides a ccnsiccrable member of large water power installations Switzer- land is full of small power plants, nearly every town in that land of mountains and waterfalls being well supplied with power from the "white coal," ea the melting snow on the mountain sides has When the piece is funny, it often adds well been called. When there are nc to the )'-amorous situation for some one large strcan:s, ninny small ones are fin - in fat et to do something unusual. pounded and collected in reservoirs en "i Lever shall forget an Experience I the hillsides, and it is rare to find - a had ee bile playing the Widow in Cin- 1 place of any size which is not well cinnnei, tiicugh of course itien't art for ! lighted by the power cf some mountain an eeeer to see auything that goes on in i stream. front cr to recogeizo anybody in the au- I; At Montreuz the electric tramway diene . and I never do—I don't think. i gets its power in this way, and from the One night, as I was saying, in the city 1 old Roman tc'svu cf Vevey to the me - of cinders and beer, I noticed the queer- i disival castle of Chillon one may ride in est lcc:Ling old woman down in front. i a trolley car prcpelled by the powor of She lccked like a farmer's wife, and she i an insignificant- little stream which may kept peering up at inc over her glasses. or may not be noticed when climbing She didn't laugh Ince, and in all my ! up the hillsides just above. life 1 i:t ver saw a human being take a j The capabilities of this general ntil- play so seriously. She was with another ' izaticu of natural power are beginning -woman who wasequaily serious. Final- j to be understood lde teverywhere, wand, with .ly the old woman jumped up and, peer- i p possibilities of :ing at me over her glasses and shaking I the best methods of long distance trans - .her finger in my face, said, with a rasp- E mission, the development of many ramm- ing, v c r• tern twang: ! lain streams must surely come. There " ''•,:..i1, you don't look one bit like are innumerable streams, which, while her.' very small, are yet very high, and these "I was flustered, but I managed to can with comparatively little difficulty be impounded and carried down many hundreds of feet, thus making tip fox their lack of volume by the great pres- sure readily obtainable, and, either by the use of electricity or compressed air, gasp: '' `Liko whom?' "'Like the Widow Jones,' she an- swered. "'\7 i1, I am,' said I. "'1 don't believe a word you're say- the power may be transmitted to many I had seen in the mirror and not the re- in ' s i"1 rho `for I knolv'd the Widow points of application with but little flection of those on my side. And it was out of ono of those doors that Bill came. Tho man with the gun had been . ready for me the first time I locked, but it must have been that Bill' wasn't then. But Bill was ready now, and he came an past the other man, careful to keep out of his range, of course, mak- ing for nee, and he came around behind nio and took two or three turas of a rope around any body and arms. 'Thou the man with the gun came up, and be- tween them they tied me up good and strong. And that was a matter of some four years."—New York Sun. Lit ycle craze that we've been readies Ing a pun o po a o et•. - Add a teaspoonful of salt and one-third THE. RETIRED BURGLAR. of pepper and allow this to cook very slowly one hoiir. Break 6 slices of stale Ere Tells of SomeVery Unpleasant Expo- bread into pieces and put in the soap ?fence With Mirrors. tureen, and turn the soup over it when "I have had," said the retired bur- cooked the required length of time. glar, "some very unpleasant experiences A French oegotable soup is made thus: with mirrors. I think I_have told you Cut a large onion into thin slices and hots I onto fired. at my reflection in a put them in a pan with 8 tablespoonfuls mirror, mistaking it for another man— of butter. Let them simmer, together a mistake that I thought 1 ehould never half an hour and add 2 quarte of water: make again. But within two years after Have 'impend a pint of white turnips po- that I struck et a )slat in a mirror, and cut into cubes, the same amount of smashed the glass and smashed my hand of the, half a pint of carrots, half a pint and made myself uncomfortable gener- ally. of the -fe.white part of the leek cut into ally. It may seem strange to you that a thin slices, Add a clove of garlic, an ne- man could make such mistakes, but •in eri.chalot, a teaspoonfulfuloof sugar, salt a dim light, and where everything is third of a teaspoonful oe pepper and salt strange to him, and he's all sort of keyed and cook slowly an hour, adding some up himself, I don't know as it is after chopped parch*, 16. minutes before the all. Still, after that last experience I soup is removed from the fire. This soup did think it would be some time before may also be used for a vegetable puree by pressing it through a coarse sieve, I had any more trouble with mirrors. and to a pint of But within a year I had au experience the thick soup add a that was a great deal worse than either pint of fo g milk. of them. A pastteefor thickening sauces is kept "When I came out of a rears in a at hand for condtt ut iso. Here is the house I was in one night, on the scoond way to make one that will keep a long floor, looking down the hall—this was time: Cut equal amounts of beef, veal pretty near the front where I was—I and pork suet in small pieces. Put them saw the figure of myself in a mirror. at in a kettle with very little water and the other end. It was plain enough, slowly render. Turn off the first fat, even in that light, but it startled Inc a and when very bet stir in flour until it little at test, and 1 threw up my gun at forms a thick paste—about a pint of it. Of course the figure's hand went lip flour to a line of li.glticl fat. Put these into a ranite pre vessel and place in an oven and cook three to four hours. rind down, just the same as mine did, g and it made me kind of laugh to tei_k of it, and I could innugine the sh..dvw laughing, too, at a man who was afraid of his own shadow. "Then I went into the next room, and when I came out of that into the hall again my eyes sought the mirror again. It wasn't very pleasant to see youraclf 1n the dark in that way, but it s ould have been a mighty sight lees pk sant not to. But then I was all richt, cud I stood.and looked at it a minute and threw up ray V.m at it mule we 'lereol'e, just ep and down, a sort c€ nuuece.eeary test, but it made me feel jc:.t a little easier, and up went the arm in the mir- ror with. mine, but this t.rit', when mine came down, the arnn in the mirror maid t,p. " `Now, don't raise your breeds, ' the man said, covering me Svilh a gun in his upraised hand, voice kind of drawl- ing, but meaning busincs':, you know. You know when a mate means busincse, and this man diel mean it, and I kept my hands down. "'Oh, Bill!' he says, not moving a •nuecle and not deeming it out, but just kind of drawling it out liko the other. "Then a mare apper.:cd Leyc,nd the. man that was holding 1310 up, corning toward him and me. He walked. right through the mirror, past the ether man, and kept coating. It was ell plain enough then. In fact, I'd guessed at it befcre, as may be you have. The mirror wasn't a mirror at all, but a doorway, an opening midway of a long hall, and the frame was the frame of the door- way. There were rooms beyond, just the same as those on the side where 1 ' was, and it was the doors of those that Jones rand her hnsbau' nigh on to 20 loss.—Cassier's Magazine. years ago. 1 stood up with 'em when they wee hitched, and you don't look like her. ;She ,vent off from these parte, and 1 hecrd she was a widow and that Jones was dcad, and then I heard she was at ' this t e-ater, and I cum to see. You ain't the Widow Jones, and I just want to say one thing more—I 4on't see how you dare to take other i pie's names and net 'cin. , "With that she flounced out, but the,? next day when I appeared at a rehearsal she was on hand to give me another blast. I explained to her how it was. She'd never seen a play before and had come 20 miles to see her old friend, the '.Viclow Jones. There Was a time when Such things frightened the life out of arae, but I've learned to turn them to good account." Perhaps there is not another man on iihe stage so phlegmatic) as llulx Mclil- toah during unusual occurrences in Iront. Ile lay's his coolness all to the ;,,•chops he nest on the froth ell field Women Read Advertisements. It is claimed, says the Philadelphia Press, that the women are the only read- ers of advertisements. In a measure this is true, and necessarily so, for women aro the larger purchasers for the house- hold and spend most of the money that is earned by business, professional and working men. Even in the larger transactions it will probably surprise ,dealers to learn how influential a voice women have. The purchase of a home is almost invariably determined by the women of the house- hold, and in nine canes out of ten thea information as to the situation and de- sirability of a purchase is gained from the newspapers. And every futnitnre dealer, dry' goods dealer, groceryman and keeper of any Sort of a store now that he must ap- peal to the worsen if he wishes to sell his goods. One of the largest elements In Harboat' Springs, MI6., there is a largo and flotYrishing wood toothpick in- i:ustry. White birch is exclusively used in the manufaotnre of the toothpicks, and abottt 7,500,000 are turned ont risaily. The marriage rate in Creat Britain, wiaioll has been steadily deelfniafg in re• in the access of one of the greatest Ince a tti ' is again alt tiw isseisaat+. CEYLON TEA AP" AN IDEM.. IEA FOR PARTICULR iDLKS , Lead packages only, z , 3n, 40, 5o nu 1 eon. Far lb, Sold by all grocers. Thq Dovidnus, . Ilay, Lid., Wholesale :gents, Toronto. FRENCH JOURNALS.• • Shares of Several Iionil►t and Sold daily on the Stook Exchange. Most of the French journals have - sage de depeches, where bulletins are displayed need a museam of relics of the paper is inapt, 24ch journalism is ranch u,ee'•persontiloin regard to its lit- eraty composition tl'ai.n that of England I or Amerlia. A large proportion of the . articles are signed with the names of the writers, even when the work is more or less of a routine nature, such RS the sporting or law departments of the paper. On the other hand, the own • - ership of newspapers is less frequently lodged in single hands than is the case in America. Very many of the French papers are owned by companies or asso- tiations, while the stock of several of the best knowu, such as The Figaro and Petit Journal, is bought and sold daily on the Stock Exehange, the quotations appearing as regularly as those of rail- way shares or Government bonds. The circulation of nil but a very few of the Paris papers varies enormously, according to the contents. If a paper contains a striking artiele, well adver- tised previously, or if its feuilleton, con- firmed et:'•y er memoirs, which meet of the Freacl: journals consider an essen- tial part cf their daily issue, is by sumo well known author, the circulation will run up 50,000 or 100,000 in a week and drcp ng in as coon as the special feature is discontinued. When Le Jour began pnblisbing M. Henri Rochefort's memoir e, its c` :1::then went up five- fold, allbctgh the price of the paper had been doubled in order to make hay while the sun shore. Tie leeneoh ?tete: Is much mere con- centreted i:.t the c?.'pitt;.l than that of other I; rcrean cos: tr cs. In Germany, for iI1F.talICQ, it is Lot the press of Berlin that has the largest circulation or the greatest irifieence. In this, as in many at Liel•: n =.ttc re, ho;� ever, the French yires$ only hears out the saying that "Paris is France. "—Chautauquan. Seep in glass jars covered. NEW FUNCTUATibN MARK. , HE TURNED ON THE GAS. Another Incident of the Toath of George Washington. Mrs. Pickett, the svidow of General Pickett, hero of the desperate rebel charge at Gettysburg, relates an anec- dote of lur old mammy wheal she dis- Covered :it Frederiekrburg and who ver- itab.y htlieet s that s•he m stISbinb- ton's ft.: t nu:'_ acre 1 her ^tory: "She ~vas an tilcl V, uracil in a liesey wooltcy petticoat ead a ll ght turban, and we fcued her in ane cf our jaunts arcead the cit; and took a kodak picture of her. One r -f the company asked her in fen if rile semenAlert d `s aehing ton— you tee, tem wits very cid." "''hted andcc:dy Ido, miss,' si:e an- swered glibly. "ePahl:ps you were one of his nurses, „ " 'Teat am jcss so, missy—I nursed him wheal he was aleetlemiteer baby.' "'Ch, ;ben, you must have known about the cherry tree?' "But shetidnet, and 11' vas explained to her and uhe lietcned with much in- terest. "'Ise den know =thin 'bout nocher- ry tree. I::iFsy, but 1 'members 'zactly when his maw found bine in her rcoln an do gas a-buruin 'cause ho douo turn it on.' " `Did lie tell her ho turned it on, mamluy?' "' 'Deed an deedy ho did, foh ho neb- ber tole no lie.' " ` But, mammy, there wasn't any gas in those days.' " 'Yes, dere was, honey. I 'members dat too.' Wo decided that old mammy had been the servant of some George Washington, but not our own immortal George, and we left her to enjoy her peculiar delu- sion undisturbed.—New York Mail and Express. A Crow That Ate Clams. "1 knew a man once," said a fisher- man, "who had a pet crow that used to come down to meet him when ho came in from fishing. The crow's owner 'was a fisherman. His boat might be among 40 or 50 other boats, all coming in to- gether, but the crow never made any mistake. He always knew his own boat. He liked clams, and when he caibe aboard his owner would knock a couple of clams together—that would break one—and put the broken clam down for the crow to eat, and then ho would go on rowing, and that's the way they al- ways came ashore, the fisherman pulling on the oara and the crow sitting along- side of him eating clams."—New York Sun. EA(lty :far u.t"1 Invertins: Si PN/AC(1 by t•. _ C e.:. tic Cch; Leader. "1 : ::. _.::.:eta. I i:.ve an idea that v;i]l and lay Lc;z::c thundering dozen thrcutb the ages," remarked the copy r itticr. "limni,h!" replied the humorist. "It will lee the 1: et idt:t yc,u have ever had. You ped most of y i.t_r tame destroying ILe Fc t ti ic;crt of tees: s." "Writ, tl:at;n i ,' Le, although yon never have taw 11.011 10 Ct-Lacy, s^eiog that yen ;ct tL see3„'..ic:h �:u have fieri Joe Mk.lcr's^eiclitieteek sial the old el - menace. " "Oh, well, let's have your idea!" "To tell theta~eels iLe nee' t,uggested to me by yen." "Ah 1 I thought as much, and yet yon say"— • "Dcn't bo in too big a hurry. Yon haven't 1:card my idea." "What is it?" "I have invented a punctuation mark for humor. It is intended to abcw the reader where to laugh. In clean times, you know, the point of the jot_e used to be printed in it:.Iice. Nowadays there is no way to show the point, and, as many of the jokes; such as yours, have 110 point, it is impossible to print the point in italics. Now, 'suggest that a punctuation mark be placed at the be- ginning and at the end of everything supposed to be funny, so that the reader may be prepared to laugh when he be- gins to read and know when ho has reached the point and it is time to laugh. I would suggest that the mark be two little squares placed above the line, and I shall call it by my name. VThat; do you think of that for an idea? It was suggested by your stuff, as I told you." But the humorist had given the copy reader a look cf scorn and had vanished. e --Chicago Times -Herald. Claps of linen, wool, straw, Ltiaa of trees and leather were extensively worn in Egypt and Arabia in early times and were usually of a pointed or peaked shape. The variety of headdresses need by the Egyptian ladies was very great. DE WOOD'S ��11,�y�yy. t. 1®''i A ;s *Vast a • F ' F 1 ' i PIME S`Y t1J P. "THEE MOST PROMPT, Pleasant and Perfect Curt) for Cot:glen, Colds, Asthma, " Hoarsen f:...3°I Sora Throat, Croup, Whoop- ing Cough, Qr~nsy, Pain in the Cite& end all Throat, Bronchial. and Lz;.s3;%sel5300. The healing r. n' i -c• 'tatm_•l ivo virtues of tie.) 1_Io'1'y Ta$' I'ieleat o c,eabine,1 1:l t1ii] ittetiion:ie ttlh vial: i elePe';,ente awl c•. `r pe, Carel r:::.erbee C1I I5 to mako a true specific fchr all farms oft: iscaso originating feor.icclus. t•I'r@ce ., r sc•. Gita 5'kt''Cv".'n > ; 3.! ▪ ,I ir .t AIL O PiEATII h�,� LO✓ It begins at enc Throat and en's at the Grave % How n x.ay a human lice is unneces- sarly sacrificed. ' .0 • ro"' .4 Tr -ire aro many remedies on the marker for the e.,rc of cot:iu.aption, but consumption, once it en :hes a certain stage, cannot be cured. In 4 proftissin;, therefore, to do o'hnt is impossible, these remedies prove themselves to be simply humbugs. C:ansumption is a disease which destroys the tissue of the lungs. Once gone, no medicine can rap:ace that tissue, Good rat..ricin may arrest ta= tliscase even after one Sur; is wholly gone, as long as the other remains sound. On.e both ate „ttaeked, however, the victim is doomed. lust why people should risk their lives to this d....1 disease and go to great expense afterwards to ,•hcek it, it is ha: .1 to conceive. It is much eas,er preventca t!••• 1 cured, Throat troubles and severe coi,!s are its usual forerunners. A 25-0e01 bottle of lir, Chase's Sy i•nprof Linseed end. Turpentine will drive those away. It is, without doubt, the best medicine for the t E urpoee to be had anywhere. There are more than 200 lakes within the boundaries of Venezuela, one of rho largest heing 1,600 feet above the level of the sea. 'l he Orinoco river, the largest in Venezuela, is 1,160 miles long. A Modern Instance. ,Monsieur--lf I were rich, would yon love me? Mademoiselle—I can't say as to that, but would marry you. --Paris Carica- ture. 1 Price 5o cents tier Box, or 6 for $2.55. At Dru;rgists, or Ma led on Receipt of Price by T. alit -BURN G C' ., Toronto. L• t'• : nuts vrd TradeMor be ness conducted for n`l•.e is in theimmedi , tc' and •ny facilltiea forscce Senn model, sketch or p pie•.. ripdon and statcme I1 ?Tocharge isnsa. prr',•atalaflr,,/ and r appuaatiyn svit1 not pot, xi,: t allowed. taini,.g full information crdie•is considered a FRAN ca-; F f3s emetu W ettet 1q, obtair^d. ••rd all patent klv1iEBATl, Bilins. IYIp kinky of the Paten:Off c e ing patents arc unsur passed ctograph of invention, wit s t as to advantage, claimed. le for an opin to,{ at to ✓ fee for prosecuting the e called for Cantil the Ioaz' Grnor," atf,tvesTrce, Alt Communicon- s : trictly Confidential. H. HOUGH :TnuirQrori. ]U. C. BEST Cures alt Blood iPimpte to the RING {19EDiDIME oases, from a commas it ecrotselous Sore.