HEALTH. The following wise remarks on this sub· jeot we quote from I-lealth, an English monthly uevoted to scientific hygiene :. "Another cause of imperfect digeatlon ls fatigue. When we sta1 t on a walk, it does not ma.tter much whether the road be rough or not; any little obst1:1cle le 11ovoided wlth ease, and we tread our wa.y over rough stones, through tangled heather, or over a quaking bog, without difficulty, Our nervous syst.~m is in full vigor, a.ud preserves perfect co-ordination among the movements of the different parts oi the body ; so that one helps the other, and all difficulties are surmounted. But when we are tired, the case is very different; a. litt '" roughnees in the road will causa us to atu< nble, and an unexpected stone ma.v give us a sudden fall. The wearied nervous system no lonper coordinates tbs movements of the various parts of the body, so that they no longer work tJgether for a common end. The same thing occurs wlth the various pa.rte of the Intestinal 011.nal, The meohanism by which the acts of chewiog and swallowing appear to act as stimulants to the circulation and nervous system, thua;ineurlng the proper oo-ordina.tlon between the functions of the mouth, the stomach, intestines, aod liver has been described. But if the nervous system be exh:i.usted by previous fatigue, or debilitated by Illness, the req uisite co-ordination may not take place, and In digest.ion or billousnPea may be the result. CJataN"I;. Bow ofben do we find that the meal taken by Oa.klans, Ont., Canada, March 17, '1883. a person lmmedi11otely after a long railway lltf.eSSTs. A. EI. D'i.mem & Son: DEAR Sms,-Yours of the 13th inst. to hand. journev dis,.grees with him, and either It seemed almost too good to be true that I am causes slckMes or diarrhea.: or a bilious eured ofCataurh, but l know th.at I am. I )leadacbe ! Forty winks after dinner is not have bad no i.;etu'i',n of the disease, and never always a bad thing ; but forty winks befelt better i.n'"'l'n!Y' life. I have trted so many fore dinner ls certainly much better, things for ·C atwl'rh, suffered so much , and for t hat it ie hard to realize that so many years, · How often do men who have worked· ha.rd I am rea:lty bevter. . all day, with their mental fac1dtiee contlnI consider that. mine was a very bad case; 1t was aggravated and chronic, invclving the ually on the stretch, go 'home and have throat as weH "'"s the nasal passages. and I dinner forthwith ! Exhausted as they are, thought it wo<:o1ld require the three; ti·eatments1 how can they ex pect to dlg,.st pr operly what ·b ut iI feel full!v cured by the two sent me. ana I am thank6nl that I was ever indneed to send they eat! Almost thll only savfog point is, that ma.ny of them live some distance from t o fg~·are at Uberty to use this letter statin~ their phcoo of business, and have a short t hat I have · be6n cured at two treatment~. and time during the homeward drlve to alt still [ shall gladl'Y recommend your remtidy to some and rest. '.llltie ie sufficient for seme, especialof my friends who are sufferers. ly for young men; but It is iusuiiolent for Yours, with many thanks. REV. E, B. S'!'EVE"'1SON. elderly men, and they oughit to m11oke a. .And hundreds of others point of ha.vlng a little rest a.t home before dinner. Some men, unfortunately, a.re so ARD OF THANKS.- To the Mana- misguided as to believe th&t ex ercise after ager of the l"ire Insurance APSOCiA .tion : a hard day's work wlll do them good ; and Sm I hereby return thanks for the prompt payment ,('by your agent, Mr. Thos. Bingham, instead of ,u tilizing t he little time they have for my loss by fire. caused by a spark from a for rest alfter a da.y's labors are over, they steam thresher, havinll.' got payment for con- walk three or four miles, or tta.ke a t ricycle. tents at ·m arket price; no i or ~ payment like ride of several more, before dinner. The I see on the Dominion Grange Polley to tenants. consequence is that, under the combined Yours gratetnlly. Taos. liArm1s. mental and physical strain, their digestlen 38 'J'yrone, Se.p t. 11, 1885. ------ --------- -la imJ;>a.ired and their strength broken ARD OF THANKS.-To the Mana- down.' ger of the Fire Insurance Association : There is grave truth it these remarks, and Sm I hereby return thanks for the prompt payment ~hy your agent, Mr. Titos. Bingham1 they sholllld be well laid to heart by those tor my loss '~ Y fire, caused by a spark from a who are eompelled to work a.t high pressure, steam thresher.having received the full amount a.nd t hus fail In that due repair ot the bodily of my insurance IN GOLD on the occasion of my waste whuch lieR a.t the root and foundation golden weddiing. Yours tbankfllll;r, '£ROMAS of a.II hea.l~h. But mental emotfone and the JARDINE. play millJ.<il may in their turn produoe dieTyrone, Sept. 11, 1885. 38 turbance of the body's duties in the way of ARD OF 'l'HANKS . - To ·Messrs. food-digestion , Here, again, the views ex· Gault & Tattley, managers ot the Iloya l Insurance Company (of England). :Montreal : preeeed teem with a common sense and philGEN'l'LE~'IEY,-1 tender to you my best thanks osophy which commend .them to t he thorough for the prompt l}layment through your agent, appreciation nf those who find digestion to 1\Ir. James Bingham, Tyrone, of m y claim fail from tb.e nervous influences that chase against your Company for a horse killed by J.ightning in theJileld, havini;: received. a. cheqlle one another .and career over the surface of the mental atmoephE<re :tor the fnll am°"'1nt. MRS. c. J. l>faRSH. Hampton, Oc t. i~. 1885. l'Jl-4w · "Effects, somewhat similar so those of fatigue, may be produced by dopreBBing or disturbing men. ta.I emotions, or bodily condiON~ARIO Continues to do a General Banking Business tions. We know how rea.dily excitement of almost any kind will destroy the appetite in t sBo wrnanvillu Branch. some people, and depressing emotions will DEPOSl'l'S do it in almost every ca11e, We not nnfreReceived iu Savings Bank Department and quently hea.r of girls in whom consumption ca ll and interest allowed at current rates. N . appears to ha.ve been brougb.t on by an unnotice of withdraWal necessary. All depOfll tr fortunate Jove affair. If we aooept the new ':l!l.Yable on demand, that consumption depends upon the presence of the tuberole-ba.cl!lue (or living germ), we EXCHANGE might, at first eight, think that there ca.. n RM ((b t a nd sold and Dr&!ts issued upon EuroJl(I, ' n1red States and Canada, also Gold, Silver and be little or no connection between consumption and diasapointed love ; bat the deprest: ui ·cd States Greenbacks bou11:ht and sold, sing effect of the disappointment will lesse11 , COLLECTJONS the digestion, impair the nutrition, and renPrOJ'. ptly made at current rates upon ,p.ll parl der the body more likely to afford a. suitable f G rest Britt.ain, the United States a nd Dg nldus (or eoil) for the bacillus." in. un of Canada. From this it would seem to be fq ually pro· T elegraph 'l'1·a11srert!il bable that various emotions affect 1peohl -.111·'.·· !or large or small sums on all parts of parts of the digestive system, A strona im ! '"n" a. Thia is especially advantageous to prenion of disgust may excite vomh1ng; p...-.. -. s living in Mamto.ba or the North-west compassion le s11.id to produce movements of a· 1· 'Ja kes the funds available at onoe at the gas In the small intestine ; worry Is known l a< J! payment. to affect the liver; and Dr. Brunton gives !'or ~urther pa rticulars call at the BanklnR s ome countenance to the popular notion that Hou·· jaundice may be brought on through a men!, Bl DIE, G EO. McGILL, tal canse,jilluetra.ted, for example, by ande· Accountant. Man~!eT ty. The old adage respecting the wisdom of maintaining an easy mind if we would grow fat, has, therefore, a phy.aical basis. lt is ~LOOK OUT FOR~ the ~urest of inferences that the mind and nervous eystem which are allowed to remain placid and unruffled are most likely to be found presiding over a. body and processes which respectfully live and act in a healt hy and normal fashiov, If care really kills us, it seems provable that Its method - - o- F'or tllC NK~T 30 DilYS I will sell for LESS of slaughter .is largely that of destroyb1g the harmony of thOlle functions on which UU)I COS'.1.' the r emainder of my stock of the proper nutrition of our bodies d epends. Stylish and most Durable Millinery The foregoing coneideration.D have paved DRESS SILKS, SATINS, VELVETS, the way for the discussion of the practical question that faoes us at the close ot the &c., with a VeTy heavy stock of iut ereating lectures we have been ~ngaged in F e a the rs & Flowers. reviewing. We have seen, in the first place, how very varied are the ca.uses which pro- -o- duce ~he disordered states collectively known Thanking my_customers for past favors, I as 'indigestion." The whole subj ect is a. r.·pectJ ully sohc!t all to call and ,msi;iect my complex one and these papers moy have rP;r<11t stock, whwh I am sure will give the · . rfl ~ " · oatista.etion. a.ccompliehtd at lea et one usef ul rrsult 1f . .. QIU rea,d~n h1;w e been led to note that each I ca&e r eq uires per Q onal study before t he exact cause ot the d igestive dJsturbance can be t raced, There Is no gr eater or more foolish error, against which one might be temp ted to speak iu strong t errne, than that which prompts the idea that all cases a.ud classes of Indigestion are of s imilar nature and origin, I t ls this Idea which encourPoges that detest able ha.bit of indiscriminate drug· swal ~ lowing which char11cterizee out 11ge. Given an ingenious " puff" of any drug or prepar .~~}J ~~~ . ation, and the "szreat army of martyrs" (to indigeatfon) will fly thereto for relief,- only, of course, to experience the trebly bitter disappointment which a ttends the da~hin g down of hopes of r enewE>d h e11.lth and re- :B'Ygained vigor. If people would only study, t1Ven slightly, t he p ar t icula.rs of their mode of life, habits, diet , work, and other details, tr I " in tully prepared to attend F unera ls on d · d' k l d , .l.o , notice, at the lowest possible rates. an acquire even 11o ru 1mentary now e ge " ~ t~ ,.,, Bul:ia!Cases rnady on shor t notice of the physiology of digestion, we should at <1t· '¥4 ,.hearse on very moderate terms least find t hem Infinitely l ess lfable to pour · . ',di Coffins constantly on hand. Fun drugs, of which tbey k now little, into frame2 ..~" ·upplied a t onhe. Furniture Shop&: of which they know lees. ,., 1s- Bounsall' Sew BlQck. l · nr e sold by~ m ride by t he U . C !..et us cle llrly recognize th at there jg n o Llr· . Co. of Bowm,....,.ville . I do not buy panacea, no universal healer, n o ()ne nnfail· ·p !-. rn i i ure and represent it to have been Ing r emedy, no sovereie-n epecifio, for the m···'· .bY the U. 0. F. Co. or this town . ~ ·o n.!-'··?\tfor the LI·QUOR 'l'EA for this town many-headed ailment we have named " dya· ' " ' it.y. I t is cheap and as good a.~ can be pepsia," or ".indigestion." Those who la bor ot ;n tn.,. 1arket. A valuable prize given under such an idea are only to be compared , ~.-=~=~=,!.;,,,.,,..........,..... to the deluded persons who, believing in th~ absurd ities of the qvack, a.re found to pur"'te me.n who will not execute h is resolu· chase a plll or ointment wh ich, if the ordinhen they are fresh upon him can ary statements puffing the wares in question o hope of them afte1wards ; they are to be credited, will as r ea dily heal canl · P dissipated, !oat, and perish in the cer as cure consumption ; as unfailingly cure ·rry : f the world) or In the slough of In· scrofula au dissipate a tumor of serious ·lenoe. n~ture, R ecognizing the t rue and solentifio CATARRII.-A new treatment has been discovered whereby 0. permanent cure . of this h itherto incurable disease, Is absolutely affect· ed in from one to three appiications. no matt~r whether standing one year c1· forty years. This remedy is only applied once in. twelve da;ys, and a,ocs not interfere with bu ~mess. Dcscn p· t ive · Q9 mphlet sent free on receipt of stamp by A. ; .)ixon & Son, 305 King street, West, Tor.a~ '· Uanada. · WHA'r IS CATARRH1 Catarrh is a dangerous disease which thous· ands'are consciously or unconsciously sufferinll.' f rom. It is a muco·purulent dischari;e e:uused by the presence of a vegetable parasite m the lining membrane of the nose. 'rhe pred1spo~· ing causes are a morbid state of t he blood._ the blighted corpuscle of tubercle, tho germ poison of syi:hilis, mercury, toxomOl, f~·om the reten· tion of the effete matter ot the skm, suppressed perspirat ions, badly ventilated sleepin!l. apar.t· men ts and the germinatiou of othei: ~01sons m the blood. Irritated by the8e, the limng mem· brane of the nose is ever ready for the reception of the parasite, which rapidly spreacls. up the nostl'ils and down the faucea, or back of the throat, cansine: ulceration of the throat; up t he eustachian tubes, causing deafness: bu,:. r owing in the vocal cords, causing hoarsene~a · usurping the proper structure of the bronchie.1 t ubes ending in pulmonary consumption and death. Many ingenio11s speifics for for t)le cure of catarrh have been invented, but wi.thou~ success. until a physician of long s_tandmg rltscov· ered the exact 1mt.n~e of tb diseaee and the only applianoo which willparmanently destroy the panwite, no matter :bow aggravated the case. Sufferers should send stamp ut once for descripti¥e pamphlet on. catarrh. to t he 'business managers. A, li, Dixon &. Son, 005 Kinlit street, west, Toronto, Canad·. W ftal t ·heRw. E . B. snevenson,B.A.,a Clerf;v· nwt111 of t.J1e Londf:m, C011j'erence ol t{fe i1Jiet1io· d i f!/t Chwrch <i!f (,'Cl>tt!Jda, has to S<iy in re{fl'Lrd T· o .AJ/. Diroon&: Son's N ew T1·eatmetitfo" Fatigue 1and Indie;estion. C C of C THE BANK I BARGA I N S . IN MIL.LINERY. Mrs. DONNELLY, .. JN .nERTAKINC ! L EV 1 MORRIS. :s TB.E WORLD OVER. aspects and phases of the digestive process and its disturbances, we shall be the better able to appreciate the nature of the means The re,,.,nae of the widowed Queen of which a.re to be relied on for the relief of Spain is 110W reduc sd to $50,000 a year. the latter conditions Adelaide Rndolph, a niece of Mr. Garfield, hti.s been elected Latin professor of t he Railroads in Every Land. K<1nsa11 Sbte University, By the completion last month of the railMr. H. F. Blllhig, who has just returne:i road from Cape Town t o the South African from Honduras, declares that In that land diamond mines at K imberley, steam care three crops of corn can be grown In a yea.r , have supplanted the tiresome stages a.nd Glue Is rendered waterproof by firet soak· great ox wagons of the Dutch and _British ing it in water until it becomes soft, and traders for about 700 miles along the direct then melting It, with gtntl~ heat, In linseed route toward the z ~mbesi. The advent of oil. the locomotive into the very region where An Indian runner ran a mile raoe in Wv· MOFFATT and LIVINGSTONE lived am1>ng benighted savages is not only an evidence andotte, Kansas, last week against two of the substantial progress of South Africa, championo on roller skat es and beat both but also illustrates tbe impulse that is now with eaae. Prairie ch icken~ ha.ve this year appeared moving civilized nations to penetrate new in abundance in t he valley of the Colorado, fields of commerce with r11oilroads. These enterprises seem to be justified by Western T~ xa.s, where they have never been similar ventures already completed, South seen hitherto, Africa's 1,562 miles of lines, all owned by A negro, overtaken upon n. ra.llwa.v trestle Cape Colony, paid all working expenses a.nu by a traio, a few de.ye ilgo, jumped down maintenance during the fir~ t six montba this sixt.y feet into the Etowah R iver, and esyear, and three a.na a. ha.If per cent, to apply caped without serious hurt, on the II>terost account, The British BorSome of ~he medical papers say that a mah railroads returned six pllr oent, diYi· dends laet year, and haYe paid good Inter· great dea.l of quiet tippling, especi...l!y among by means of the quasi· est since· the day they were opened. Gen, women, is carried on 11 bed, Iron, and wine." Stracbey, the greatest authority on Indian medicament called railroads, estimates that the benefits aoeruAn organization has been formed In Mading fromber railways to India amount to over ison Valley, M. T., with t his significant £30,000,000 per a t num. motto, 11 You had better mind whose range It la found also that immense and promis- y"u are on and whose cattle you a.re brand· .ing regions will continue to be isolated until ing." they are tapped by railroads. Mr. Holt An inter esting r elic of the famous Sir Hallett lta.s 1ho ~n that tb.e cost of, caravan traffic in Indo-China. is from fifty to one hun· Walter R aleigh was s<Jld in London the dred times as much as by railroa.ds. The other day. b consists of Sir Walter's origGlasgow C hamber of Commerce has declar- inal tobacco pipe, which on a. certain memed that railroads a.re indispensable to ooen orable occasion excited the disgust of Queen new markets for British commerce in Bur- Elizabeth. The Brltieh Museum ha.a now a dep~rt· mah, Siam, and western Chin-.., Gen. Gor· --AT-don wrote in 1882: "A belt of arid sand of ment entirely devoted to newspapers, which is a great convenience. Tho number of 280 m iles separates the Egyptian Soudan from ovllization, and till this la spanned no readers, by special tloket, has now Increased real progrees can be made. The route from so largely that although only adults ..re ad· Suakim to Berber is the natura~ route to be mitted, more room wul soon have to be proopened. When that raihvir.y 18 eompleted vided or the admission limited, an e~ti!re chang?, will take place In the wh11le Doctors say that women should be c&utious of th ts country. Wh11ot Gol'li!on said of the how they call to offer aympa.tby to neighbors Soudan the International Association now , having tiick children. Women's clothing Will always be found in stock a full assortment of Boots, , say~ of' the Congo- that _the populoua and ! offers inducements to fugitive bacteria, and fertile &p-·rlver regions ~111 not be worth a several instances have been recorded lately Shoes, Slippers, Rubbers, Trunks, Valises, etc.- as goo~ _ i~--· penny to commerce until the worthless die- in which contagions diseases are known to trfot of the lower river _Ia apa.nned by rail. have been brought about by germs carried quality and low in price as can be found elsewhere. ., The fa.ct also that railroads a.re needed to into the household in the folds of heavy further ~o political purpoees of ~ome great woollen fabrics. · ' Special attention given to ordered work and repairing:.~ natiolllt! QB giving a. remarkable impulse to certQin large enterprieee. Had Koartonm An excursion of 400 people, on its way to Call and inspect. been placed within easy reaeh of Europe by California., stopped at El Paso, Texa.s, one the oom;pletion of !Email's railroad from day l ast week. Nearly every one immedi· (22) Wady Halfa pa.et the Nile eatara.ots, Eng· ately crossed to El Paso del Norte, bn the land would have been spared the waste , of Mexloan side, to witness the bull fights in treasurn and blood that her failure in the · progress a.t a festive.I. They were chiefly Soud11n involved, No fresll war cloud be- Boston people, and explained that they went 1 tween !England and Russia Gn the Afghan · out of puruly scientific curiosity ; but the border will catch them with r·ilroads pro- Me:xlaans, who observed their enthusiasm, jected but unbuilt. England's liron route think otherw ise, from the Ara.bli.n Sea to Afgh..nlstan has Lord Waterford, Master of the 6ackthie month reached the Qllet ta plateau hounds, is 80 ·crippled by a fall from his through the Bolan PaBS. The work on Rue- . horse last year that he cannot ride or even sia's tra.nscaepian road is advaneing day and walk without difficulty, His uncle, the night. It ls now approaching Merv, and third Marquis, was killed out hunting, as Russia e:x.p ects to C!llrry it on to Bokha.H was t he eldest s on of a former holder of tbe NOTE THE FOLLOWING: anrt l'ashkend. F or the purpose of giving title. Since the Irish people interferred facilities to her troops, England loa.ned the with his hounds, Lord W. has lived in Engmoney to Cape Colony with which the rail- land. He had previously reeided eight road to K imberley ha.a just been completed, months of the year in Ireland. From all cornen of the world we are hear· An Indiana. Congressman recently found Ing of rallroads · p roj ected, surveyed, or in course of building. In Venezuela, for in- in his mail one letter from a woman who eomplain~d that her husband had left her stance, eight or nine differ&1t lin6S of greater or lees excent are under contract, surveys seven yea.rs ago, a.nd requested the Congressare in progress, grading and track la.ylng man to go to the Census Office, get her re$4~50. a.re considerably advanced on two lines, and creant spouse's address, and send It to her. are soon to commence on others, Portugal A second letter requested the Representa· has granted a concession for a. railroad from tiv:e to require the United States Minister Persian Lamb, Seal, Russian Lamb, Imitation Lamb, P lush . Delagoa. Bay In East Africa to the Transvaal at Rome to send the writer, by mall, a llv· and Scotch Knitted Caps, all sizes, and first-class values. border to connect with the Transvaal . rail- ing Italian queen bee, road which It is repol'ted will be built by A new law In Georgia enjoins th&t p oiGerman capital, The more p rogressive sons must be put up in ecarle; wrappers, Pond among t he Boers say they must have rail- the bottles l abelled with paper of the same road connection with the sea. To It s rail- color, the printing to be in white letters. roads is largely due to fa.ct that South Af- " Of all the hard p,apers to find in this mar- Our 1'1edinm Sizes in all 1Vool at aOc., 60c., 7ac., a nti tio'l now sta.nds tenth on the list of the chief ket," said a wholesale drugglet, " scarlet le $ 1.00 are b ein g rapidly taken up. foreign nations dealing with England, the most difficult, and three printers to It is in the Oriental world, however, that whom l have applied say that they cannot new railroad schemes are m ost rapidly ad- print in white upnn such a surface. Those vancing. The King of Siam is e:iger to con- lawma.kere oonld not have hit upon a more nect hla capital with the Chinese frontier difficult p roblem In t he way of packing for by rail, and has promised to build this road us to 11olve." H eavy all wool HOSE at 25 cents; Children's sizes, all if the Indian Government will build a road wool, from 10 cents up. .Aooordlng to a lately lgsued department thr ough Burma.h to meet the Siamese ' syst m at the frontier. The leading Chambers report of the British army in 1883, the numof,Commerce In Grea.t Britian aent agents to ber of applicants for:t military service was Brwmanville, No· ember 27, 1885. report u~on the feasibility of this project, 59.436. Of these, :!5,976 were l aborers ; and M~srs. H:illett and Colquhoun have 8,636 were manufacturing a.rtiBans, a.nd returned home with enthusiastic endorse· 9,388 were meehanios. The clerks number meats of the scheme. In China the power - ed 3,203 and the p rofessional men or stuful Viceroy, Li H ung Chang, has for some dents 645. An improvement over former time been urging the need of rai!reads and veare in the education of the men wa.e est elegraphs. His influence, ·aided ;by the pecially noted. Of the 57 ,844 r eported upsupport of other able statesmen, bas already on, 4,553 are described as well educated, given to China over 3,000 mileaof telegraphs, 41,608 could rea.d and write, 4,507 could manned by Chinese operators, and the little read only, and 7,179 were unable to read. nine-mile railroad near Tientsln, and le pav- Among the 81,677 men eerying in the IS NOW PREPARED TO SUPPLY EVERYBODY WITH A ing the way for ra ilroad schemes that, It ie United Kingdom, only six oases of smallbelieved, will in the course of time reach a pox occurred , with one death, during the large development In China., The railroad year. that is to connect the chief towns of Siberia It Is siiid tb at a large part of the popllAVING 40 SE1'S IN S1'0CK. Is slowly advanciog eastward, and surveys corn used in the world comes from Bloomfor projected lines a.r e in progress in Asia ingt'on, Ill. , where the farmers' wives and A. SJllendid ran g·e of Horse JRlanliets t1·om $1 to $41. Minor, the Euphrates valley, 11nd Persia. children used to consider it their p erquisite. The development of some of those p rojects In 1884 the crop was so large that the price eacb. Also, Robes- Grey an(l Dlacli-Good value. will be the work of many years, and some of foll to two cents a pound, and then , experl· Rubbc.11· Rug·s and Ho1·se Covers, & c ., ve1·y low. them will doubtless utterly fail, Yet it is m ents were made to use it as a food ratner one of t he mo& t eignificant signs of the t im es than a confection, .A former who fed his that these schemes have entered so largely cows witli popcorn ea.ye they gave more Into the purposes and ambitions of the oom- milk th11n ever b efore, Others made " mush" merclal world. It may yet be one of the of it, a nd found it more palatable and For Cuts, Sprains, Bruises, Sore Backs or Sore N eeks on horses. chief glories of this century tha.t it intro- nour ishing than tb e ordinary article. Then Cannot be excelled. Try a Bott le. d uced on a Jarl(e scale among the Jess pro- the chemists 11nalyzed it and decla.red It to gressive race those Inventions and facilities contain more albuminoids than most of the CASH FOR BIDES. which he.ve a.sslated Western oivllization to other cereals; eo popcorn bide fair to become outstrip all others. a recognized diet, A eiugull.lr sort of manure for potato field~ has been introduced on a Pomer anian "Continued ln our neck's as the fellow model fa.rm , H itherto herrings a.nd pota.· SPoid when he ponred out a. glass of wine, toes ha.ve been k nown as a palatable dish in Leaves are light , and useless, and idle, family households. T ho manager of the - . - - o -- and WPovering and . changeahle, a.nd oven farm in question has h it upon the Idea. of I beg to announce t ha t m y supply of Gra nite a nd M ar ble Monuments was never so danca ; yet Gou has ma.de t hem pa.rt of the blending t bsm from the st art by pla.nting l arge as at present . oak; in so dolng he has given us a lesson his seed pPta.toea with a herring placed in not to deny the stoutheartedness within be· every heap, and with so d ecided a success In Variety of Pattern it is most modern. as to cause him to increase the area thus cause we see the llghtsomeneafl without. In F inish, far exceeding any you can see elsewhere. Ninete en years ago a MieA G reen lost $10! planted from twenty aorea last year to sixty ln Workmanship, first-clu.ss. at Eagle H 1>rbor, Mich. Mrs. Mary Sell>· in the present one. The expense he caloul And price as low as at any experienced shop man who now Jives at M e.r quette found the ates at about n'ne markE per Mre, which is mou~y. a.nd, after adver.t iaing un~ucceseful- cheaper than the codt of any other k ind of I h ave r ecoived by S . S . " Indiana," a consignment of ly for the owner, ga.va it to an orphan a.eyl· manure? a n d amply repays the outlay. Of u m, with the provision that should the course 1t can only be employed nrnr the sea ~:i::l..A..l~ITE: owner a ppear it should be refunded, A coast. Another lot h as a.rri ved by S. S. "Nebraska, " and others are following. short time a.go a man who knew of Miiis The King of Bw arla k eeps oarcfully out Green's loss happened to learn the facts of of sight, but contrives to provide matter I BlJY DIRECT FROH 'J.'DE Nl A.NU.FAC".l'lJRE R S lta finding, and, after .much trou hle, Mias for more ch.ronique. about h ie privs.te doings in Ab~;r.-deen, Scotland, and from long experien ce (28 years) at t he best a dvan t age, I Green's address was le!!.rned , a.nd ~er long- than any of the visible monarohe of Europe. inte nd t hat t h e p u blic n eed in g work in my lino sh all be liber ally dealt with. lost money returned to her, She is a cook K ing Ludwig' s late8t cuentriclty Is r emarkI en g age no Agen ts. I keep for sale able even for h im ; he has been phot ogr aphIn a h ~tel at Montreal. ........ BUCK'S c·ELEBRATED STOVES The HAPPY THOUGHT &. G ARLAND .RANGES, RADIANT HOME- Single and Double Heater, PARLOR OOOK:1 all fitted w ith the Celebrated and only Duplex Grate I They stand without a rival. For sale by S. S. EDSALL~ FURNACES, a specialty. THE PEOPLE'S BOOT~ SHOE STORE'~ ., D. DAVIS, Proprietor, DA- -VIS MA~ 0lf BROS. are this week giving special Bargains in .Clothing. A Man's Overcoat, $7.50. A Youth's Overcoat, $6.00. A Boy's Overcoat, A Man's Suit, $7.00. A Youth's Suit, $5.50. A Boy's Suit , See our Stout Men's Shirts ana Drawers at 85 cts., ~eav~, all wool~ . See our Tie-downs and Blankets. MASON BROS. IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT. Carriage or Tea1n Harness remarkably low, ELLI MAN'S EMBROCATION! W. H . MAY;; ···4- ···- Granite and Marble Works, BOWMANVILLE. I SCC>TC:E-3[ .. . . . .,. An eleo'r ic boy fo r eport( d at Youngs· town, Ohio- F rank Burnett. A special t o the Cincinnati Jilriqui?-er ea.ye : " On his approa.ch chairs and tables da.nce and he&vy articles tottsr that his na.tural etTength could not move. The lad ie unable t o ex. pla.lo hie unnatura.J power , and has alw1J.y ~ enjoyed good health. '.Ihe teats made t hus far show the lad to 'be a ble to do more than he has claimed. It is proba.hle medic&l experts will examine him t o ascert e.in if p ea8ible the secret of his power ," He is clesorlbed oe being 15 years old and slight of build, and lives with his mother , I ed. During one of hie solitary walks in the Bavarian Alp s he encountered an una.miable ox, which barred t he wa.y and refused to allow his Maj esty t o paae, For a bovine for enclosing Lots, at Lowest Prices. subject to make himself so unpleaeantly conspicuous was not to be endur ed ; where· ALL W 0 R K G UAR AN TEED. fore the King seized a plank which hPopp en· ed to be at hand, and, placing himself in a position of attack, as with a. bayonet, he prepa.red t o charge. ThEn, of course, the N . B .- I have n o connection or inter est in the Composi tion, Pottery, or Z inc; surly ox sheer ed off and allowed the King to pass, and be wa.3 so pleased wEth his own M on umen ts, so called ; I have enqu ired concerning their mer its and cannot r ecomexploit that he had himself p hotographed m end them to t h e p ublic at a ny p r ice. Buwm anville, J u ne 18, 1885. in. the attitude of charging. 25-3m. Marble Mantles, GratesJ &o., and fix them. Head Stones, Posts, and M etallic B ars C. BOUNSALL, Proprietor,,