The Wingham Times, 1897-06-04, Page 7PRE ISE
M «'�.DICINEs
TRE ONLY ABSOLUTELY 7RELIABLE
PREPARATIONS ON PRE MARKET,
Plestatltnt, Pore and gealthful.
pEEULIE
rheumatic
• peeific
Guaranteed to mire
P heums.tisrrtt,
r'b f
Geist sad
Nearalgia.
A /tore euro for
Ile,l,ttawho Dizziness
u.,.,stil.acioo, lndi•
EM,QfiFIRIN�q g"'10..i,tlioueneas,
f t� Lys,. Bright's. Disease,
Diebetes, Paralysis,
Convulsions, Iieart
Detroit, t reit•, etc., eta
PILLS
CRULI7 SCIATICA
nteaseA;e. 1'ASN—etneelIN;rrtn•.--BACX)-1AM
John Marshall, Varney, P, O„ Co, e! .4. le"
Grey, writes these street:. words ; "For .
two years I was completely laid up with
sciatica. I doctored without any per -
T.k{.E W IN(ATAIVI TIMES. eJT. NEE, 4. 1897.
MJ YON'
reagent relief, T hats given up hope; A
friend saw a notice of a cure of what
seemed a parallel case to mine, by South
American Rheumatic Cure, and irpow-,
ing my little faith in the efficacy of any
remedy, he procured a xbottle himself
and brought it to me. I took it and to
make a long story /short, it saved my
Bre. In a day nr Ara I Toes mut et' heel.
and in three days I wail able to walk to
Durham, a distance of four miles, to
purchase anstber bottle. I are now
entirely cured" Sohl at Chisholm's
Drug Ntore.
Por Over lefty Years.
AN OLD AND W1+:IiL•razED REMEDY—
Mrs. Wiaslow's Soothing Syrup has
heeu used fur over fifty years by mil-
lions of mothers fLr their children while
teething, with perfect success. It soothes
the child, softens the guilts, allays all
pain, cures wind collo. and .is the best
temady for diarrhoea. Is pleasant to
the taste. Sold by druggists in overy
part of the world. Twenty-five cents a
bottle. Its value is inoaluable. Be sure
Manufactured 2:.1 honor & SSolcl on and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing
l'Ierit. Syrup, and take no other kind
Eoldin Wingbam, only by Grercirl, t Co
ro tho Haddon Yeast Co., London, Ont.
Gontlnmen,—We get Quicker and better results from
using Mrs. Madden's Yeast than any ether we hare
steed, and highly recommend it. DEAN EBUR., Bakers
THE MADDEN YEAST CO., London. imperfect heating of the brooder, or
{ tee long exposure to the outside
' temperature at feeding time,
Prevon t ing Dysentery.
In starting off your chicks just
from the shell especially those that
are consigned to a brooder instead of
the mother ben, the main thing to
guard against is dysentery. This is
a dreadful disease amongst the little
ones, and will clear out • a brooder
full of them quicker than anything
else. We know this from experience
that saddened and half discouraged
us at the' time.
I The dysentery that we speck of
manifests itself in the swelling of the
bowele and the stoppage of the vent.
It is highly contagious and spreads
rapidly among the brood. Chicks in
brooders seem more liable to it and
are more frequently attacked by it
than those with hens. This would
indicate that it is caused, in part, by
Positively cured by theca
Little Pills.
They also relieve Distress front Dyspepsia,
indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per-
fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi-
ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue
:Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They
Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SoTtail milia Stroaf!i t'lcasem
SmaiiPrice.
,Substitution
Mao fraud of the day.
See you get Carter's,
.Ask for Carter's,
and demand
Little Liver Pills.
SiIN DISEASES!
i when the weather is cold. While it
'under
• for the chicks to come from
tinder their Mother and eat, yet it is
' not t natural a torhem to stay out
1 afore than a reit' minutes at a time,
]fence, in feeding brooder chicks,
they should be replaced in the hover
as soon as fed. They don't usually
know enough to return themselves
daring the first few days of their
existence—the very -time that they
should be looked after the most
carefully, in order to prevent ehill-
ing1• and the after result, dysentery.
What they eat has a Food deal to
do with it too. Chicks fed on this,
and that and the other all mixed up,
are liable to take dysentery. They'
are not in a condition for promiscu-
ous feeding the first week from the
i nest. They come from the egg, and
the yoke of the egg, enclosed in the
abdomen, is the first nourishment
i they get, and all they need for the
first thirty or forty hours after com-
ing from the shell. Being created
from the egg we take it that egg
should be good for thein while their
digestive organs are in an imperfect
or untried state. At least, we have
found it so. In our first experience
with lfttle chickens we followed Mr.
Wright, the noted English writer,
who said to feed chicks just from the
shell, and for ten days or weeks
thereafter, chiefly boiled egg and oat
meal. In following his advice we
had success. In departing from it
we have had dysentery time and
:again in a rnaligant and destructive
f"cerm. We find he was right. I3oiled
egg and oatmeal together make the
very best primary food for newly
hatched chicks. After several days
add onista or apple, finely mut up
with the egg and meal. Tender
sprouts or grass would be better, but
are not obtainable in winter—H. 13.
Geer in Epitondst.
One Remedy Which has :lover Failed—
Tried and Togtod Oiutrn•hnt.
• Because other alleged remedies for
piles, scrofula, eczematic eruption:r,
scald head, eluding, black heads, salt
rineuni and tsldn diseases generally have
proved u:.oleee, don't coademn Dr. these s
Ointment. It huff !:ever been known to
fail. ]?or ineta.nee. Nelson Simmons,
.Meyerflburg, Ont., 'writes
" I used Dr. Mame)) Ointment for
Itching Pilt't,. alto can recommend it
liiglily. ;once using it I Have had
perfect freedom from the di':eese."
Peter 'Vnnoilen, L'Aniablt, reds•, had
-the eczema for three yeare. ilo tried
-three doctors, but received no b�'netit•
•threeboe boxes of Drys C ase%ayees 11Pillstyand
ctlred
htm
completely. Large seale=r covered
bier legs and body,, but the Ointmeut soon
'removed them. Ifo will s't'eer to these
Facts.
Chase's Ointment may be had from
iiai dealer or from the manufacturers
Edmannon„ Bates fit Co„ 45 Lombard
'street, Toronto. Price 60 cents.
1 Mother's rreetee .
Roads, brencb'el• l a • Y
ir. Chaso's Syrup
p,mntire. The near
leiietgttitsld makiwe
Lane battle 26 eeeeat.
:.,Key for coughs,
K„'„ ,ltieetione is
et-eset and Tur-
sete fa wholly
...sot to take.
1 holt,1'e Derr* Store.
EtE 11Y,T1 Y STOICA.0 1
--
Happy Mani—Nothing Experimental
About fismg the Great South
American Nervine—What it
has done for thousands
it Can do for you
•
Rere are Strong'eVords from a r°ll-
able Business Yuan—Read Them.
L have been a,grettt sufferer from in-
digestion caul dyspepsia. I tried many
remedies, but obtained very little relief.
I sa'tv South Arnerlcan Norvine helvortis-
od, and concluded to give it a trial, and
I must say 1 consider it the very beet
medicine I have over used I obtained
creat relief from the first few donee, I
have only, used two bottles and am
happy to say it bee made 1 new man of
'roe. I atronitly r000nin:mid it tet feellow-
ssftercrts. C. .t1VRIt•CJIt, Dry Goods
etercheet, rarest, Out. Solei at Chits.
With Munyon's Iniprred Hamm-
. opathic Remedies you can
Doctor
CURE YOURSELF
No Guess Wort t—Na Expmen4-
ing-Na Dig Doctors' Bills
--Eacb Remedy has Plain
Directions, so There
Gan De No Mistake
A SEPARATE CUE FOR EACH
DISEASE ---AT ALL DIiDG-
GiSTS--E- CENTS A
BOTTLE
•
Mrs. Hardman, Bateurst St., County
York. Ontario, Canada, says: .'I suffer
ed for six years with a large and painful
ulcer on'my leg. 1 tried many things
' but all ussuocesefully'. ' I was induced
to begin Munyon's Remedies and they
were a perfect success In overy way. 1
gh'o this testirnofaial with the hope that
others may see and be benotited.
Munyon's Rheumatism Cure seldom
faits to relieve in oue to three hours and
euros in a few days. Prico 25c.
Muuyon's Dysponsia Cure pusitivoly
cures all forms of indigestion and stom-
ach trouble. 1. 'rice 25c.
Munyon's Cold Cure prevents pneu-
monia and Weeks up a cold in a few
hours. Price, 25c.
Munyou's Cough Cure stops coughs,
night sweats; allayssoreneas, and speedi-
ly heals the lungs. Price, 25c.
)Vlunyon's Kidney (lure e_peodily cures.
pains in the back, loins or groins and all
forms of kidney disease. Price 25c.
Munyon's Headache Cure stops head-
ache in three minutes. Price 250.
Munyon's Pile Ointment positively
cures all forms of piffle. Price, 2bc.
Munyon's Blood Cure e.radichtee all
impurities of the blood. Price, 25c.
Munyon's Female •Remedies are a
boon to all women.
Mu nyon's Asthma Remedies relieve in
3 minutes and cure permanently.. Price,
Si.•
Munyon's Catarrh Remedies never
fail: The Catarrh .Cure—price 25c.—
eradicates the disease rrom the system,
and the Catarrh Tablets—price' 250.—
cleanse and heal the parts.
Munyon's Nerve Cure is a wonderful
nerve tonic. Price, 25c.
Munyon's Vitalizer restores last vigor
Price $1.
A separate Duro for each disease, At
all druggists, mostly 25e. a vial.
Personal letters to Prof. dunyon, 11
Albert ,3t., 'Toronto, answered with
free medical advice for any disease.
KIDNEY WIZ.
Now INSIDIOUSLY IT wears, Bur Ytow QUICK
THE SURRENDER, AND NON .TI.E FLAG. 011
TRUCE IR MURIMEDLY MISTED wiles =AT
GREAT GENERAL, seven A•IIZItxaAN aIDNRX
CURE, TURNS MIS GUNS ON ens DISEASE.
This ie what James Sullivan, of Chat,
heel, writes: "Por years I was a great
mutterer from Kiduoy trouble. The dis-
ease became so acute that I was confined
to the house, and was greatly inflicted
with insomnia. 1 was persuaded after
tieing matey other remedtes without
relief to procure a bottle of South Am-
erican Kidney Curs. I bad relief almost.
from the first dose. 1 have persisted in
its use, and after using six bottles 1 am
well and strong again. 1 dare work four-
teen hours out of twenty-four and feel
yet), little if any fatigued. It is the beet.
medicine 1 have ever used." Sold at
Claishelra's Drug Store.
1002 !letter
Milburn's Heart and /Serve Pills ars
curing heart and nerve troubles in every
city, town and village in Canada; Mrs. P.
Abbey, Toronto, slays; "Milburn's Beast
and Nerve Pills cured nlyhusband who had
f
caused by heart trouble. He was subject
to pants in his head, dizziness, fainting
spells, eleeptesaness, oto. Re is now free
from these troubles, and feels 100% better
than when ho began using the pills."
ers were Scen prowling around tke I
back yard of the Bank of Commerce
on Alonday, and' one of then& Visited
the ,Mercluents' Bank, and walked
boldly into Mr. 13u';ler's private office
i 1Iu wanted is job at engraving, and
could do almost Anything. Fearing
that a raid would he, grade on the
banks that night, three or four eon
stables patrolled the streets all night
;but the hurglare did seal show up,
A Mpan of young and fiery horses
which Miss Sinclair waw driving: on
Months llft.rnnnn r•an e, we!, n•1d
' that elle tray not hast seems to be a
miraele, The horses turned in et
the exhibition gate at a swift pace.
.Just inside the gate she wise thrown
out but she escaped without injury.
One of the horses got hadls• tangled
up in the hugey. and before it mould
be extricated the rig was bully
Smashed.. The eorees seemed to get
off with only a few ecratehes.
rJ'lie License Commissioners for
South Bruce held a. meeting here on
'i'hur'sdae fir the purpose of passing
upon the hotel licences foe' the year,
and revising the rules and regale-
: tiuhs. The atuendmens to the liquor
License Aer, at the fast session of the
I.e 'islatere re'1:l.'f• n --4-r',- SIAM
changes iu the rules ned r'egehetion
and ntore.,vt r there Ince l»'oft no re-
visi('fl .t':),” the plea three ye'tra. The
greeting„ was held a liar" earlier this
'eat' ihanU .U1t1 t„ ffcc'•nrnf+rdnte Ait•.
McLeod„ the cnllirnisaftlner rr'oia fZin•
loss. who ie, about t•:' see out on a trip
' to 1lar,itu'rw.
1 About. there (r't'i'it':;: on Monday
aftt•n" .set, end while the i.tnnplt; for
the nlnst !,art 'wd'f e nn their way to
l+Jhihilion gr,,urule, the fere bell rang
out rend kept it up so long that every
hssdry Legal] it, re•aliee that It wase'
something serioui Though most of
the brit"'.oke were in '(,iteoley, :1 n ani -
her of old isan+.lf, turned out and it
was not toms.; httfurr, the reefs were
belie hurried to toe t+eeue of fire. It
proved to ht ),Ii. Archie Cam phell's
reside I;ee. and as rt:,lutdv seting to
have been at 1ennc- when the fire
started, it. tial tieede edtn',iderehie
I1eat'twe bereft. it Was c(Ale
ect The. fire apore Otiy rt.erted
Erose! the i:itc:ire:,, stove, and had
week col Ira way into, the left, before
• tele:' firemen art need, so thee , the
kitchen lied to he d(sn'slished to get
the tire nut The damage to the
homes was cousi,lt:rable, but fortun.-
' ateky', it we_ suffieit'ntl)= well insured
• to eeivt'r nest of the. loss.
• A. t ree.py ezrant :Area Soso l r'' -e -r v., ' by
s., 1Sd:.ri.eta. rare°eLoi.i
"+1'+ mels ^Vol' i)e c( a b:,u t rOi.
Cotaa.,' �;, rr.:+lr i. ris,tti,, oi' 25ti e etti
i urrt et see. ,1'.1'rx)t•:'+ "�='ie nmirr,-if l.or,
Mee. iiupkint;, rectommend•,d mea to try
' Cues, e Syrup of .LI,,s*edi and Turpeu-
Lin 1 did flu mud tc.e first d„se did bun
Vex'. One hot :le eempletelt' cured the
mole, It 1s eurprisiu.c the popularity of
Olin• +'a Syrup in ties neighborhor,d. It
else's..••.; to me it eau ur.,w be found in
e.'.•, • shouse.
2! event) mires Cat'.zrrhal Ff:,selache
•' Loy: pier) L Cathrrh
•• ” Bay. Ft'rer
tettarrusl 1.)£etefna s
• C'uidi in the Lean in 10 n'iiu
' " 1''uul _breath cs,used 1+y
etc. r- 11, 2e: u'nt.e se -nitres Chase's On
t;nr,'i urea with ;)nrf'•.•r tie wee een:ot-;Ari
Gr: t krol t)•'K. 1-t'1'. rtz- et) (sealers.
Leek tee . JOr
r�d•!t',lr? ...ar, T,.),• r IN F3101,nd , l.':.d r••,
rich na't ' hare.:'+ } 0Ur' Ut.,a. i •:r:"i r.R,.Gd I
• up y1't,• od,.r.
es at) eye: eel ,t • • .e s'a'•e
ate) , e..n. r: , 7 ewe,. •.•'• :•••, e • n10••
L -In',, "i Lr•,:r(f i.lii:: w ra•, y.*. f+ roue;
:anti • '••, 7K .a..d v."it.. e 1 �fl:.'! T env
"Wood t:adgi•r1,• .. t.•s:• (lis-
neit.. .'•t(r ?'Yi,•••aci', ,;r.
1'i`'.1; r,r•' ;Ir. ' • :its: family
oNt.11.) a I, e;:;,,-• ,s.,;=-. , • ;.t.,, mild.
or fifteen years angered with weak nerves :'-.> tee. n
WALKERTON.
Atr. John McCallum reeve of Brant
was married on the 44th of May 31
years ago. Ile has stood the bines
well, end can dance the highland
its nimbly, and sing a Gaelic song
with as lunch gusto as he could then
There will be a meeting of the
county constables of Bruce at the Court
Home here on Tuesday Junellth,The
object of the meeting is for better
organization. Such meetings ere
beaming common all over the pro•
vine.°, and are said to be doing much
to make the force more efficient.
On Mondry Mr. Sam Watson of
Eden Grove left foe the Old Country
with one hundred head of cattle. Ho
was accompanied by Mr. Dougall
Solway. They expeet to got the cat,
tlo disposed of its time to take in the
preeeedings in connection with the
Queen's Jubilee.
' Three ettspieiotte looking oh& mo.
WHAT; St;1Atr_t. 1 DOT
Rhatraha11'I do-lest:life in silence pass?
Anddf It do
And -'never proral,t`thee,bray of noisy brass.
What`needsf thoet•rue?
femember-'{,yo the ocean deeps aro mute.
The.d3banows roar.
Worth -is the ocean. Fame is but the brink
Along'the shore.
What shallot do to be forever known?
Thy duty ever.
This did fall ninny 'who yet slept unknown—
Oh, nover,;nseeri
Thiiikst thou perchance that they remain un-
known
Whom thou knowst not?
f angel trumps in heaven their praise is
blown.
Divine their lot.
What shall I do Us gat eternal fife?
Discharge right
{i'heer mplu�'dlatieewib ' a;4iieh each day is We,
Yieiir with my might.
are perfeotoitegle;tfif•action thou devise
WO be flail.
While ho Wlao.p'vor,aet5 as aoneeienee dries
iRhal)?Itt'r, filen dead.
—Sohillor.
'winker wbeeQ yvu flMe **TWA ewe
fleettI t, neoot4tng to Nava
weather lett orseceetalemiart.
its rbutitt 1leeseets $Al►spezaelit M MN
are feevome semis 1111/1M1011111100411.111*
AfeTtitotbi., 11`rlifrs V.A.! tit 'e* *
FIE WANTED A kNTEE,
HOW "BLACK HAP.RY" TESTED THth
DRUMMEfR'S SAMPLE.
flo 2etep1ayyed 1'4arvelous. Skill In Threw-.
lag the Katie, and Ills .&bllley in
Direatlou Did Dim a 1ftood Turn, as the
Drummer Claw. •
Opo day in Leat1yille, Colo., 1 hat
just finished diluter, when a stranger
spoke to nee in the hotel. We chatted
for a minute or two, and then. the strati
ger, whose name I afterward learnec
was Harry Connor, or Black Rarry foe
abort, asked me if I was not sillies•
hardware. I told hiau 1 was, and he laic
he wanted to buy a knife, I said I had
some knives with me, but only as cam'
pies. and that, of course, I never soli
samples. "Well,." ho said, "that's the
reason I came to you, I hunted the town
over this morning to find a knifo, and ].
couldn't find one that was worth carry.
ing. I thought probably yr/alright !lave
one or two good ones,. and that you
would sell coo. I don't care what the
price is, so it suits me." I finally coin
Kilted to show him what 1 had.
I never saw• a man examine a knife
as he did ono that he selected. I bad
perhaps 40 different ogee, but he gave
duly a glance at the lot and. !licked out
the beet one there in an instant. Picking
it up, he weighed it iu his hand, turned
it over and over, ran the edge of it
acture the hack of his thumb Lail,
barber tries a razor, flicked the point
with his nail, scrutinized every frac•
tionaI part of t'he blade and hilt, and
then, grasping it fi_mly, swung his arm
fan the prettiest sort of knife ploy, as if
testing its weight and balance still more
carefully. Theo, stepping over to r
wooden bottomed chair, he drove the
blade squarely through the 13.e., i.nei
word with a powerful blow. Then he
threw it at a knot in the wooden parti-
tion that separated nay room from the
nest and left the knife sticking squarely
in the knot.
"That's a, pretty good throw," I said.
"Do you think so?" he answered in-
differently, and he stepped over to the
partition and drew out the knife, still
smiling, and stepping back 12 feet
threw it again.
This time he struck the exact spot
he had hit at first. T could see but enE
mark- after be had drawn the knife out
the second time. "Oh, that's nothing,"
he said, and with the point of the knife
he scratched a rough circle on the wood
about the size of a man's hand.. Step-
ping back to where he stood before,. he
turued his back to the target, and then,
looking at it over his right shoulder, he
threw the knife over his left,. sticking
it fairly in the target. Then he reversed
the trice:, throwing over his right shoni-
der, and finally, planting himself care-
fully iu the same place, he looked quick-
ly over his shoulder, and then, turning
his face directly away, ho threw the
knifo over his head, striking the same
target and leaving the knife an inch
deep in the wood.
"I want thtit knife," he said, rather
peremptorily, "and I want it just $50
worth." And ho pulled a $50 greenback
out of his pocket and laid. it en the ta-
ble. I took tho looney. I thought a man
who could use a knife like that ought to
have n good cue.
I had started out in the evening to rev
what was going on and had looked in at
three or four gambling hells before I
camp to one where Black Harry sat play-
ing faro, lie, sat with his left hand to-
ward the dcor, and as I sauntered up tc
the table ho smiled a little and nodded,
but did rot speak.
I noticed that he Was watching the
door. Re clivi not turn his head, but his
eyes seemed to be everywhere at encu,
and, though he was playing steadily,
and with fairly good leek, tee, I Sats
ceetain that he saw every motion th.;t
anybody read() anywhere in the room,
excepting of course right behind lei:a.
Pre:xntly I octieed that he was ware/i-
nn; al, man whowas just coming in. The
nowecrmr was a stent built, ugly 1ocL-
i:.•g fellow, who looked carefully around:
as he entered and who almost immedi-
ately saw Black H:trry. He started a
little, gild then, evidently thinking that
Conner did act see him, eti pped care-
fully to his right till he was rlancat Le-
hir(i where Center sat. Stili Conner
? 1:f;t tern his head, but I scold ecu
1.11.1 watching the other as he stepncd
rt'cw:y Leered until he was fairly out
of the range even of Ccl.'nor's renruri:-
hie cyte. Then I I V Connor suddenly
leek foil at the celetiier with a qucsticn
as plainly expreeeed as it could have
Leen in words. So I naturally cool:ed at
thodr.cr.
YIe ;:etre uo Niger at Cret that I could
see (.f even knowing that Connor WMio
trent cf hies, but scent on dealing as 1a
thete was notlitng else in the world to
do. Tien ill ,MA instant his eyes seemed
t" i 't ile;1 I e tw the dealer's sig -
ted, 1 ' d heel.: at Connor and in an
ir...,.J t tE ,V 1, retie .C'y. The newcomer
WWI c' V .,r t 11(V 1i'Vtl1, awl at the r,.ilie
:hilt! Connor S, ; tuniintl his head tend
tlircwin;; tree !.tale I lied veld hint. Be'
rc:s+n frein his chain as he threw it, grad
the t t .eng;er's 1'teedocr eeplcdcd, but the
. built vont et:U(1, fee he i;nnk to the
tete: as he fit't'd, with the iloint of. the
knife in leis keeda.
" C o:VA:miel , " 'snid the dealer. before
Itsy arl:c. Oise could re e.•k, "I Pay Bieck
Vary t:t.lit $1,111 : 1riMltt. That 'tvli: t c' lie: -
teed mss.. !rinse ,i 's fes •ki11 hint r eigett
7
and -woo *e+e►ttsr teem behind. 4ntl,
gentl,'a .'l. .« r att't1e >r'it0i11008
'1'llat Vol, liter) ei'wee sheet"—a prr,-
ciect *' • •• s 4, 1, t • dei t, -y er sit
nlit,r..c a ,. • ;r• . ., w a• ..
See.
•
10,44.
'' 't-t'•i .. u', M t',,1 .sti.get W;itr 140411
:e uia),k In ss, e • w r 1 tak let re ) t U are
ready to beak yt•ur opinion,"
"I ane," said the, infuriated inap as
a,e sauiee(i tire Jett r uuu'+tyre an :Paoli !
name on the envelope,.•—Exchange.
lieverdnig Nature,
The reversibility of the physical pro, -
ones of nature has latterly been the
subject of ipteresting oonament. Lora
Kelvin, for example, has been credited
with saying that all of them, no matter
how complex they might appear to the
human senses, consist in reality of the
motions of invisible rnolecules, and if,
therefore, by some means, 'all these
molecules could, at the same time, be
made to more ;n exactly the opposite di--
rection,
i-rection, and each with the same velocity
that it possessed at the moment, all the
world would begin and continue to move
backward; waterfalls would flow up the
sides of cliffs, rivers would run upward
from the sea, rain would rise, full blown
flowers would Shrink into buds and
plants dwindle into seedlings, man. him-
self would become young again, passing
from old age to infancy. Just what kind
111 pictures snch a topsy-turvy 'world
Would present maybe r:eouwith a kinet-
escope running backward. Professor
Queroult, acc erctieg to report,, has made
c.bservations in this line, and some time
ego communicated eaten to the French
Academy of Science.—Cessier's Maga-
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