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The Exeter Times, 1891-2-19, Page 8y that French officer;: and privates shall no °regi i CWS, longeeloungeiurestaurtuts hotels,ardcafes b ■■■ frcquentedbyforeigners. Otviceisara alsofor- bidden to employ foreign servants. The object of the order is to curtail the exteut of .LOST ON 1'ESU%JUS. the Italian, German, and Austrian systems of espionage in France. A OURIQUS QRAEGE, Germany's new military stet contains an Rens of about Mi00,000 £or increasing the The,tewael,able walla "a cessaeh' .military supplies of coal and for building News flat been received at Toulon of the new coal storehouses. This proposal is the •aspture at Bandolsvarof a shark avert feet result of the fears excited among military' in length, and weighing more tha t$00 kilo- , men by the ;;rest coal strikes in Germany .in grammes (15 ett•t).The sharkreseltltlly a,t-.ISS - During the miners' troubles in West - tanked the boats with its mouthwado e ,alia Bis ar a„ repeatedly called attention and lashed the boats' side with its tail. Itwarmto the necessity that the Government should only by great good fortune that none of the accumulate larger stores of coal for just such boats were capsized. "meer onet es, Ye arae ithva is uthe sufficient coal, The Universal German Educational nod_ "e would be crippled, and the whole military ety for the maintenance of German Customs: pp y Abroad has offered a rite of 't0 for the clockwork of the general staff would be best dranat nem concerning itsntission, throwntout of order. The poem m:. emphasize above all else the That adveuturousoffi officer of Cossaeks cali- f.* e, s s beadapted , otlrerla oil of a tar rm �u nnu t da 'br c .p cal Winter, who has undertaken to walk to pro ietion with, or without muses, and from Russia to France, has at length enter- ust be con pr- ssible ear little stages anti ed the territory of the liepublie. On Friday email companies, as well as expandable for he was to halt at Ferte•aous-Jonarre, a town more heroic occasion. Manuscripts will in t!1e1eprtrnent of the 1eine-et-Marue,antt be received till nest Oct. 1 by the society's he i$ esp. eted to mach Paris on Sundaynext -committee in Eouigsberg. eshould all go well. The energetic pedestrian Karlsruhe is to have a school after the has been defrayed 'ennsiderably in his pro- Eu,peirerle, mem heart. Latin and Greeff are grecs owing to the slippery state of the roads tobe settee e.l down to the minimum in it, after the severe fi'iistn t►ud. mast Of the tinge thus savetl is to he de- re rabeaetntai.er re Berlin, wbo was de• at voted to •n 1' In al French. a 'ns .ree- l; is n 1 t The t g ,putetl � his fellow -workmen to warn their "tions n natural aeie les, nnstlrematies, anti a employer that all work would be mopped if 'drawing are also w be expanded. Thufile did not grunt them an increase of wages, eeho.ar trs w willget jut double o bl the inuttther {;as recently sentenced. by the Provluotal ggyy t Y t onrt to Sift mouths iniprisomueut for at - u erman :rebottle of the class. The turning tempted extortion. pplace is to be next to the street, and the building, with twenty•oziemodelMass rooms -is to he away from the nee -seam' dust of the pavements. The court in Algiers has acquitted a man. who murdered his wife on a mere suspieion of her infidelity, it being adjudged that she ha deonductedher,elfw thenoughunwarrant• able freedein to excite his spirit of venge. tone. M. Omes.a, the murderer, a Corsican by birth and an Algerian journalist, by pro- fession, was told that his wife, also a Corgi.. eau, lead been reeeiv ing attention from an are:., officer. Oa coming home he accused hie n ife and she denied inech erg es, admitting that she lied been to see the IMO," where- open he shot her and rushing to the ottit ex's house shot him. His a.rluittal was lousily Applauded by the goeti pimple of Idem, the. city of his deed. The latest addition to the Italian navy the Franeesea ltiornsini, a twin-serew battle Chip of eleven thuusand tonsand sixteen and a half hunts, carries four llt.,i•ton Armstrong , guns mounted in pairs on barbett'es, besides • other smaller ernes. According to :r telegram from Naples ear the Gotdoas, three Englishmen the other. trade the ascent of S :envois. Two of them, Atelegram from St. Petersburg says :— The " black :loath" has reached Tobol+l;, in Siberia. The whole of Asiatic Russia front Samarkand, in the south, to the month of the River Obi, in the extreme north, is sufterint, fonder the same awful scourge, speet ally in the town of Ohdorsk, situated on the bay of the same name that borders the Arctic Sea, the " death" is making ravages among the inhabitants, chiefly atnoyedes. Thousands are dying, and as there is only one doctor in the whole dim triet there Is no hope of checking the fast, spreading disease. ,Does it Pay to St'Toulate fowls? it we want eggs when prices are high and want to get the utmost profit out of our poultry ie does pay, to stimulate the ovaries' and promote digestion, Does it pee- to eeto stimulate our cows with natal, oil -cake, cottonseed meal, etc., etc.? It does, and cows well cared for and ,gently stimulated pay their owners twice the profit that they would lay following thenatural method. It is the same with poultry. By the natural method the chicks are hatched about June, become mature about the following April 'swim were aecotu anietiby guides. rcaehcd1{vhen eggs aro away down and pay their owner just about as much as the fond cats ; while by inducing early laying and (as a coin sequence) early broodiness, the ehieks eau be hatched the last of March or first of April, and, if fed to growth, will come to maturity in October or November, or if fed for eggs and gently stimulated they will lay vigor- ously all winter when eggs bring high prices, and pay their owner a liberal profit. No better proof of this can be furnished then the egg yield on our farm for two weeks last past. We have about 300 pullets (40 of plan was approved and a large sum of money 1 them area year old) and they have hail in the was placed at their tlispa;sal to begin the work of restoration next July. the%utnmit, but t third insisted onascend- lug alone, and frothing has since been seen yr heard of hint. Early in 1St+9 the Czar issued sankase that the Imperial Arclueologieal Comnii€tion, in. •conjunction with the imperial Academy of Art, should have the extensive power to re - *tore ancietrt v�itrounments in Russia. For the iaat two year." plan for the restoration of eneh monuments, graded in importance am' cording to their historical siguitieanee, was worked nut by the two corporations Their The "Free Economical Society " of St. Petersburg est month received the large old tneda. he AgrieulturalEehibition of a . 1+ ria for t excellent exhibitionof Rum ka L� 0 R stoat seeds made there. An interesting discovery of acieutifle Me portance was made at Revel, Russia. Digging the ground at same distance from theses to lay the foundation for a sailors' bath, the laborers discovered the frame of a vessel. Try order of the architect, with the approval of the local authorities, a thorough search was a. The un• n ad �. w s iter vessel was dug up, and vestiges of cannons and other appliances were found in the whose manufacture belongst oo this cen- frarne wh tury. This proves that within this aentnry the sea has receded in that place a distance of a veret or more. At the same rate the sea' recedes in St. Petersburg. During the late holiday season the tem- perance society of St. Petersburg arranged popular entertainments, tea parties, con- certs, and dances in the wards where the working people live, for the purpose of in - diming keep awayfrom the f liquor the latter o shops. The numbr of rrests for drunkenness was in 'consequence much smaller than before during that season. 1.4 deem ending Dceenber 24, 1454 eggs for which our grocer paid us A48.43. It cost us not far from al a day to feed them, which leaves 534.43 profit, about x''3.50 a day, Can any twiner tner earn w2.50 a day easier than by taking care of ,100 pullets and hens? We know a farmer who keeps about 80 fowls and who actually had to buy a dozen eggs last week for the Thanksgiving cooking. He said his " pesky hens dou't lay." Well, he follows the natural method. Tie has pullets, vear-old and twn-year-old, all running to Leather and roosting in one house.. , IIs feeds. them once a day on " corn mostly " and gives them a drink once a day if he don't forget it, and his " pesky hens don't lay." We intend to sell (for killing) all of ourfowls when they are about 17 months old, believ- ing that by that method we get the utmost profit out of them. By getting them tolay- ing early and keeping them laying by keep- ing the birds healthy and stimulating the ovaries, we get the cream of their egg -yield before they moult the next fall, and then market then.—[New England Farmer. FROZEN EUROPE. Anti o Weather in Eu:liand triad ou filo Oontinent. Buried Tarsus. The complete obliteration f p a nom the face of the earth of this once famous city is one of the most strikinginstancesof theevaneseenoe of human grandeur. In modern Tarsus The Department of Agriculture will make (says a writer in Blackwood) you see what efforts this year to introduce in South you think are workmen engaged in drawing Russia the cultivation of "fast-growing." water from a . well: there is a windlass and rice. At present this kind of rice, which a rope, but instead of a bucket of water up ripens within sixty days from the time the comes a fine hewn stone ; you approach the seeds are put into the ground, grows only edge of the supposed well, and you look in China. It is used by the Chinese court down to a depth of forty feet, and see that exclusively, and a severe penalty is imposed it is no well at all, but a quarry from which on those who would give the seed for eulti- the men are bringing up the hewn stones vettion to private persons. But the Russian of the former city to construct their own Minister at Pekin was fortunate enough to miserable , tenements. Blocks of marble, it seedo h i broken statuary, • a quantity of the b y a special ,sore p ag , an d many valu- favor of the Chinese court. He sent it to able relics of the past come up out of these the Ministry of the Interior, and the wells ; and the fact soon becomes apparent Department of .Agriculture will try to intro- that the Tarsus of St. Paul is as completely duce it. a buried city as Pompeii, and now reposes A famous German restaurateur went into undera mass of earth -earth which has been down b floods from the the Bankruptcy Court the other day. washedy m mountains, hich has increase - and earth w d in bulk ' a ofthe sensations of his cu by Judgecustomers of self - generation which who-�a they learned. that he owed a bail of Process g w c only those 16,000 marks to a knacker for supplying Heal realize who have to do with ancient him with the carcases of horses and don- ruins, and the unaccountable way in'which keys To the ingenious question as to nature buries them when they are left to a who wanted with these animals the process of decay. This obliteration is, of man;; o answer, Why,"my customers course, most marked in cities, like Tarsus, ate asvension?" situated on aplain ; but even then we find The armies of the Central Asiatic: States few 'which have suffered so complete and under the protection of the Czar will be widespread an atuiihilatort. gfiicered herieafter by Russians from Russia's European army. Two ron cannons of a late eighteenth century model were found. two weeks ago underground near Wartenbnia on the Elbe., They are supposed to be relics of' the fight there ini Ootober, 1813, between 21Q000 Prussians under York and 23a000.Fre rm"443n under Bertrand. Rivers and ltnttways Frozen -Incidents or the Late Thaw -Terrible Suttertngs of the Shivering ]People. The thaw whielt set in on Tuesday brought to a happy close a spell of frost of almost Arctic severity in England, during which greati tut%r n s h� been ,reel bothin a c eei ends ityaud coup ry among the labouring poor. As showing the intensity of the cold, it is stated that at Kingston-on-Tiran:es a print- ing press was set working ou the iee and a sheep roasted. The iee was from 12 to lb laches thick. Owing to the quantity of ice in the river between London Bridge and the Tower tugs and barges were unable to move. Even in the docks barges could not he moved without steam power iu cense quence of the thiel; slabs of iee, which pre- vented the use of oars. On Saturday a cricket mate w > h as lti ed o the ice at Sheffield Park, Newhaven, the seat of the Earl of Sheffield. The team consisted of the members of the Sussex County Club. The body of a man, apparently about thirty years of age, was found at Totterton Bridge. on the tsranthant Canal, near Nottingham. ate t b o ha l been walkiug n theice . and fallen, n � tg ni ul fill , bruising himself severely, and being unable to rise. Three men were drowned on Satur- day through the breaking of the ice on the river Soar, .near Leicester. On Sunday to little girl fell TIIIt0rai1 THE ICE on the riverren and nlost a T t nlr r life. e. At Wakefield, .ort Sunday, the son of a boatman ventured on the lee on the Aire and Calder Navagatiou Caual, and was drowned. A boiler burst at a dwelling -house in Hanley on Sunday afternoon. Two girls were ter- ribly injured. Frost was the cause of the boiler bursting. .A Great Western train from Durston to Yeovil was ddelayedatMar- tock for three-quarters of an hour, owing to the locking by the frost of the gear of s gates placed across the line when trains are the public gareleus, about n hundred sight- The Queen's Reproof. Weicula A MItraculous itictltctne. -�lr. T; II CRs - rear, St. Carmily, 'writes: "Send me at once three dozen Notrruncr 3s I,r safe's V aemenGB Dncovxrr. It is a niiraeuleur medicine and has performed gnat cures, testimonials of which we Ican give you. Gn know'sit*sGoota.•--'Mrs, C. Joussox,Metviile, writes:-"Ihavn greatplcasure in recommending, your Vsaexevns Discovraty. i[ have used two bot - tie; audit completely eared me of a bad ease of Dyspepsia. I also found it an excellent Blood biedieire, anti sure euro for Kidney troubles," The hest lltedhctue.--315. Trio. L'7, 5wurm, ofthe Dank of Comnrnerce,Torouto,writesi"'Ilav- ing suffered for over four years from Dyspepsia and weak stomach, and having tried numerous remedies wlthbut little eCect,Iwasntlast advised togiveNorxnnoz S LrgareaYnesreranI:A corxar It Gives Strength. -31n. J. S. Darscozn, of Granite 1li1,writes : "I have derived great bene- fit trout the use of Sour TcosnaCs Drsrovxar By appetite has returned, and I feel stronger %. Pleasure to us. --Ma. L. N, Doviueeu, e Ripon, tem, writes: "It is with great pleasure If you are Despondent, Low- spirited, Irritable andPeevish, e 'o ".re and unpleasant s nsatt ns �. felt invariably after eating, atrial. T did so. with a happy result, receiving, great benefit from one bottle. l then tried a set - cud and third bottle, and now I find my appetite d that. sem,uchrestored and stomach s#rengiheme , I can partake of ahead), raealwithoutany cf the unpleasantness lfornmerlyexperienced. 1consider inform yxtu thatyourrzarrreete Pt ar:maw NMI MO et 1 spepsla. T triad many remedies, but none had any efteet on Inc until I ravine across NoarnaoI' & Mgr -WS TzorrAccu Discovrnr ; cue battle relieved me, and a t:erorel completely cured mei You Cannot recommend it too highly." battle cf N.ci rnsor 4 I. iAtea St 3x. covRav, and it will give yourelict. Mon bavo Dyspepsia. Ma. F. Il. Dermas, et St Mary's, writes: "Four bettles of VkaErAFna itis• caysnv entirety rural um of I)yspepeie ; mine was ne of the worsteases. I POW ieellil.e a nesvm cu." it the bestmedteineln the naarketfor the stk::tash and system generally," v is n u Oat Ma, Giro. TOWN, Itazigg t, Gra •vela rst, , writes: "etycusto''merswhohaveused youtuner Vous%VSetrama ThsCovsnTSty thatithaa dons therm more good than anything they ever used.'• • •r =miry stool a Ro n � veyron the n oro lr es o y y tel i a um: le t degrees below freezing rut � tel 1 rtes c f p , the inhabitaa..nts declare that no such severe winter liar been known, The appearance of peeks of wolves and numbers of wild bears is reported from the more isolated parts of the country—the animals, driven by hunger, approaching human habitations. An ice accident occurred in Paris on Monday even- ing. As a number of persons were skating some by torchlight on the ornamented waters in not running. The past could not be mooed until buekets of 'busing water has been thrown tower the gates 'l'he siguals also were frozen and mild not be worked. The {tiscls in the Newport docks were fast in the ice. There has been great mortality amongst lambs. :Many of the mountain roads are blocked with snow. Several lambs, a horse, and ra cow were frozen to death at Yeovil, where 10 degrees of frost were regis. tercel. Tho ice on ponds was more than a foot thick. At Grantham 24 degrees of frost were registered. 'Messrs. Hornsby's sericulture' implement works in that town are entirely stopped owing to the watersup. pry to the boilers being frozen. It IVIS been tonna twee; easy to turn oft the waterworks' mains every* slight. All building operations are suspent"led at Leeds. The supply of ggas and water was out otr in many places be. cause of the frost. A eoaoh, on whish were several ladies, and which was drawnlry four horses and driven by Mr. James Porter, of St, Aldate's, Oxford, was taken on tho ice tan the Isis between Miley and Oxford, mak- ing, two journeys each way, and being fol lowed by a large crowd, It is not generally known that the Master of Trinity College, Cambridge (England), hoe the peculiar prerogative of remaining covered in the presence of his, sovereign. Such is, however, the case; end avery, amus- ing anecdote is told of -the present possessor of=that office:- A°superstition 'prevails 'co. erning tiiiiiltessity for exereisi nlSssrItnt'S Eb'SECTS or visa Taz:1 iv. On Wednesday a deplorable fatality bofel a family in humble Circumstances at Xew- ington, two miles north of Sandgate, owing to the lengthened frost and sadden thaw. Eleriy on Wednesday morning while the north-west wiud was blowing a hurricane, some hundreds. ofton4 of mouldold fell from a hill, at the foot of which was an old cottage of one floor. In this house a family of six were in their beds, and the landslip swept the cottage and the occupants across the main road. into a field thirtyyards below. After considerable difficulty a boy eight years of age succeeded in escaping through the roof, and got out his sisters, aged re-' speetively ten yews and one year and eight months. Although snuch bruised; this plucky little fellow snatched up the baby and carried it into the nearest house, occupied by a. Mr. Mount. Mr. Mount went to the spot and called for the father, taut getting no answer summoned the county polioe 'at Chereton. Sergeant Road and Constable Walls, with other assistants, proceeded to the spot, and after digging for a considerable tame discovered three of -the inmates dead, name- ly, the husband, wife, and child, ' aged four months. All were very much crushed. A landslip occurred on Wednesday* ontheElham Valleyline, killing tem -people. It caused a stoppage of traffic On Tuesday night a flood occurred at Ospringe, near Faversham the water pouring into the bouses, the in- mates of which bad to fie for "safety with- out having time to dress pr carry offany property. The men, who .. removed, the' women and children,• carrying*, them on their : shoulders, had to wade through the icy waters up to their armpits,, while pieces of furniture,, food, and, other pro- perty floated fnevery direction. A'women who was ill wag reported mitsrrg.; The weather in Paris surpassed in sever- ity any thatisremembered. The Seine was frozen over, and'melinite employed tobreak up the ice near the bridges. All the trains, coining from distant places arrived late';. an express was snowbound within 400 yards of Macon. There was a snowdrift 6. feet deep lying in front of it. The Rhone was all but frozen over, and the Saone completely so., The iee ire the Seine was found to be nearly,. 16 inches thick at's, spot between P.the Pont n Neef and the Pont des 4r4. carnival was held. A number _of person lit a fire on the ice ender the Porti Neuf and then danced round it. 0theme:41k eereett,- upon the frozen, river carrying.lanterse, andr the whole scene as viewed from the banite; as a very fantastic orie. In the district Of i,,.: pigan, at the foot of the Eastern Pre>aees communication' with TIrn.M IINTAIN VILLA.efs ' is cut off, and several cases have:occurr persons being:frozen to death in att> to make:theirway from oncto an mailisteamer. Algeria, •: on ` ' Veridres, the eolith French•coast om a seers, men, women, and ellildren, ignoring the {warning of the keepers not to stand al- 1 together, congregated in one spot, when suddenly the to gave way, and over fifty persons were thrown into the water. For- tunately the depth was not great, and, with the assistance of thebystandrers, all -were re - cued, though in apitcous plight, On :4aturday morning the thermometer shoved 40 deg. below freezing in Bodin. From all parts of Germany news comes of heave- snowstorms interferntg greatly with railway'comniunieation. In consequence of the heavy snowstorms of the past few days, the roads and railways iu many parts of A•nstria are totally blocked, and towns and villages in different parts two soundly eut off fsoin the outer world, so that their ordi- nary suppfie3 of coal and provisions can no longer reach then. It is reported from one district that a locomotive froze to the rails. It was only after an ihour'e hard work that it eouhl once more beset in motion. Wolves have hien killed in the streets of Cadiz, Great excitemeut was caused at Ilan over by an. ice . accident. A number of ,coopers were, in accordance with au old custom, en- gaged in finishing the constr+tenon of o. bar•, rel on the frozen .blain. When the barrel waabcing rolled to the bank a largo number of people crowded round it, anti the ice gave way under their weight, precipitating a0 venous into the water. All of them were, However, rescued. , On Monday at Geneva Mame people had strayed on a part of the ice which, through some cause, was less firm than the rest, and the ice broke under thane, In the dusk' there -was. some little delay in bringing them aid, and three persons were .drowned. .A DEADLY WEAPON, Gan R'W elt will Destroy an Irou•Cind at One Discharge. . jcation of very largemasses of high .s through the air in stoeFshella is ep�rarture in warfare, and is a new" be taken into consideration.. A The ps explosiv anew t terror tc, Ilirmingliant firm are just finishing the largest dylnamite gun -which has yet been. ETER LUMBER YARD The undersigned wishes to inform the Public ui general ' Il at he keeps constantly in stock all kinds of BTTI^- T cue MATERIAL ., 3 r... S ed. e Qd rax 'Cy' d � �� Sia PINE AND HEMLOCK. LUMBER. SHINGLES A SPECIALTY'. Shingles now in fi0fi,Q(lfl XX and �. X X Pule and Cedar stook, A. Ball solicited and satisfaction guar'anted.. made. 7 of the ii ciple of plosive jcontents are made up for greater safety lin tiny waxen pellets, and: lodged in the : hell, the true flight of : which is secured: y:a tapering telescopic tail; and that the - n is to be discharged h the ex g Y S' Y • an ionpressure of f condensed airata �c nd sed 55,000 MS,' per square inob,:the ,iimpulse .of which is i safer. propelling energy than' the ignition; or any kind of powder, because it does not operate so suddenly as to cause 5 �. danger of ;the premature explosion of- tris missile. The telescope tail .enables ,Lieu- -tenant Gr'itydon to -shorten his shell by one- half, ane? to.reduce -proportionately the length of 'the impulse tube: or gun:: proper ; gg while th a makes - g. use of a pneumatic charge it poo • e, without danger, to construct the shed more flimsily than would otherwise be Mob .15 -inch � case. The contract is for'a toiedo-projector which will throw a charge 'of 600 lbs of dynamite . a distance of three 'm' les. As soon as the gun now in hand is d livered there will be a trial of its powers, a with dummy shells, as in; the case with A actual ,.b ..with a iican ,experiments, but cl k s of dynamite ; and the results will be i. extreme in- oron llhands w a �direction of t a ekel to indicateh a new auleim ortant develo `meet in naval and other Pfare, and in- local, industry. The use of Sn aterrible weapon' as *heavy dynamite shell4�asbeen the subject of much earsome speculhticn.. The noise, o1 the d `scharge being small, the projectile might dropped into a fort ox onto`a ship without n_the besieged any intimation of the eetaele came., „The: smite .exploded' eutenant Graydon is the inventor apart in question, and in the prin hell propulsion he adopts, the ex - foo tore st , 0 It need both internally and externally, It assts quickly, effordlsg almost hasten xeiSorfrom the s everest pain. A DIRECTLY TO THr SPOT. INSTANTANEOUS IN ITS AMTION. COLIC, For CRAMPS, CHILLS, OL , DIARRHOEA, DYSENTERY, CHOLERA MORBUS„ and all BOWEL' COMPLAINTS, NO REMEDY mum THE PAIN -KILLER, In Canadian Ch lora and Bclwot Complaints Its erect le magical. It cures In a vary short time. THE BEST FAMILY REMEDY FOR BURNS, BRUISES, SPRAINS, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA and TOOTHACHE. Sow EVERywHEas Ar 250. A BODTLrr, £W Beware of Counterrelteand Imitations. DO YOU KEEP IT iN THE HOUSE" ALLEN'S LUNG -BALSAM NO BETTER REMEDY FOR COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, CO'NSUMPT'ION, &c. E,ulsial CodLiver01 AND THE H Hypophospllites of Limo and Soda. NO, other `Emulsion .is So easy It does to take. not separate nor spoil. It is always sweet as cream. The most sensitive stomach can retain it. CU RES: . Scrofulous and Wasting ,Diseases.,. Chronic . Cough, • Lossof'A pPP etite. Mental 'and Nervous Prostration. ostratx General, Debility, &c. ' Beware of all imitationsr Ask for "the D. & L." Emulsion, and refuse all others. �� PRICE` 60C. AND $1', PERBO SHILO . , r.. .;..rat• r �jC At $c -" k' pGEgi@Yfor strraehtetotInfo tion and 1l� rm b- of the %WO,Shelving now to Obtain • Patents, Caveats,, Trade hiCopyrights,arke,.dont, Asa... MUN & C 361' Drondwav, Now. -TOOL,. FLAX -SEED °EMULSION ammo ORONO ITIS 185 Lexington Ave. •x Nen York City, Sept, 10, 162,81 used the Flak -Seed Emulsion in several t cases' of Chronic. Bronchitis, and the early stages pt Phthisia,and •. -Sed :-iththe result5.