~ --SI i ·rl C:onsul·Geueral Boulunn Sa.ts sl1e is a Dan· . E m·openn Ai·tisans Start n T ,lttle 1 r>Y11 ' ' ger01u C:orupeUto1" of tile lluite<l ~ ~ ---·=-o:w:z:==on the Upper .Niger. Stales. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 9. 11117. }'our yeai·s ago the l<'rP;nch transport ed a. The report of U. S. Consul-General · · · ' steamboa" hundreds of miles overlan_d froul Bonha m at Calc11tta British Ind.ia treats at Senegal to Bamaku on ke Upper N iger . It length of the wheat i'nterests of that country. was to be a gunboat large. enough to. ca1 ·Y The a rea devoted to wheat in 1886 was nearly three hundre~ s~ld1ers and then· bag- about 27,500,000 acres, and the total y ield g.age, i..nd was to assist m ~he worK of subdu- 280 000 ' 00 bt1shels. As compared w1.th '. Poisons. h M0 h d t ? th Upper ,v Nm~ t e fmmdc rl ~ts tontheeFrench the the Indian Poisons exist in na.ture in the mineral, iger w h! o rea use ta.n o sub m1 o I 'wheat t . of . f the . Pacific b t coast, h t d t the Largest and best Assortment on hand · · re ime This is the boat that has recently """.:Jell. l~ ~n e1:10r, u w en exl?or e o d A vegetable, animal · . rsemc is g<l e rtse ·· lf f amous b Y l'ts t np . t o Ti"m' . , All the N ew Styles. an instanceand of the first, worl strychnme of the ma . o uctoo· Europe rt lS . mixed. and ground h · hwith whea.t 'rhe cos t 0 f t raD"po this vessel to the f of. a supl'!rwr qua,1ity, 1 iy w rn_ proc~ss a 8 acond, the virus of certain serpents ot the ~ 1·ti'ncr o v N' J l d 1 f en arr mar k et a ble g racl c of fl ou r 1s obtaiued . a very large variety, but ~he third: Those of the vegetable world are J: iger w_asdenormous,tahs 11.'.0 re<fs 0 · lmnd The method of cult ivating the soil is in the d of them as were req1re to carry e pieces ar 10 a . . t · ' \.. , Sout1.. Sea Seal ar.;.d Persian most numerous, an a.re, s~~nl . "ple~ of to the river where the boat was put together mam t 1 1e same as it was cen .u~1es ag?, · Laml take the lead. v,iolent as any. The essen ta pnann cd.1 form 11 ·l '.a l'l t 0 f excellent building 11nd ~here seen:s to be g.reat di_fhculty m tea and coffee are poisons, t a;nc .. aunc ie · en dy B ,. 1. an i the inducmg the farm er to rnvest ID modern b all the latest improvemen ts-a very · "f·a I cryat·a Is. im iser c~nceived "rows 11roun · a,m,"u· · · le1!1e?-t.s~ and ye t w1 'th a 11 1turn1 imp eaut1 ]'rench the idea that they < might agrw~1 choice and varied stock to choose There are a tew, including snake-poisons, ll build ·heir steamboats on the spot t~e simple and p~umtive .rr:ethods the Inthc1.t are not used as efficient medicines. as we " f h t ft , dian farmers ca.n, m the opm10n of the Con. from. 0 That physician ma.kes a false · claim who an~ savd a part E t e cos ~y rf!sp;~~ sul· General, suceessfully compete with those asks for patronage mainly on the groun.d tatwn, epen mg ~11 ~llrope 0 Th 'd of the United States in the production of 1 ea ·hat 111's remed1'es are veg.·table. There is machinery needed m theyear boats. e firdt · d ue to the fact that the " h b · d t th's and the wb eat . Th' is IS 1 no doubt t hat ma.ny of the best are of as een carne ou . . · 'Af · lndian farmer's outfit represents a capita.I A magnificent selection good and cheap. Call early for first cbofoe. large vessel ever b11ilt in mner w aR ' d mineral origin. d t l N' r1ca It h a of no t more tha n $· ,.O or $50, and h' is h ire . ti a_lso while ago la.un,c1 ie upon· leh iger. f help works, feeds, and clothes himself on T he poison of poison .oak, caJie been named 'Ihe Mage, onor 0 one 0 about is poisol'.'. sumach (the bota.mcal name ?f w h!c l1 the early explorers of them. Soudan, . "2 "" 50 a month. A table f h annexed f ' is Rkws 'J'oxicodendron), and o1 poison iry The best a liances for turning logs into sh~~mg th.at t 1 l~ export o w eat r om on hand. Pl'ices very reasonable. (Rims Badicans) · is particularly tr<;mblesome, b PPt t a ed at Bamaku and British Indra has rncreased from 300,000 cwt 1um er 1 iaveno the ye vessel appe was r · 1868 . 188" , n d t hat from the fact that the slightest h an di. mg b Y TH.E T.E.RRI.BLE OPI .w. HABIT· the building-of a work of con- m ' . t 0 21 ' DOO' ooo cw t · m , · i, a GENTS' FURNISHINGS AND UNDERWEAR, A COMPLETE susceptible persons, ignorant of their __ siderable difficulty ; but, in spit e of the the m~ri:a.se of 18SG over 188<> a.mounts to Display. Shirts, Socks, Gloves, Ties, Braces, · St uds, charaeter,- say summer ho_arders irom !he us Etrects u11on the System-Increase in Us disadvant&ges under which the artisans about <>, 000,000 cwt. f . city,-gives rise t o a Vl?lent, bu.rnmg c:onsumi·tion. b d th d d in producing it is 1 The Consul-General says that some o hrs Buttons, Mits, Rubber Co'.tts, Umbrellas, etc_ 1 b t d . . . a ore '· ey suc~ee e . ' . predecessors have claimed that the United !itching, which is sure to e commum ca e T he ex tent of th.e op.mm ha.bit 1s not to , Bi.d, qu,ite a creditable spem~en of the ship- s·.. t e" has nothing to fear from lndia as a i.o every part of the body that the sufferer b fi d b f 1 Th ecord cf b Ld t "" " ·th h' ff t d e xe Y care u m qmry. e r Ut er s ar · competitor in the production of wheat In ~Furs h may chance to tone Wl is a ec e the importation of opium to t he. U nited . So!'Ile yea!aago an iron stea~boat was car- this view he does not concur, and beiieves hand. h b th t States shows a steady and. l arge mcre~se. ned m. sections around the r.ap1ds of the.Og- 1tha.t to·day India is second onlyto the United N ead1:' Block, Bowmanville. · The poison oak is a woody s ru · a in 1878, 1879, and 1880 the imported opmm owe Rive1· and transported. for h~mdreds of States in wheat rowin' . Furthermore, M. MAYER. grows to the height of three feet or leas; reached 207 ,752 pounds, 278,554 pounds, miles to the banks of the Ahma. R iver, where wheat growing in In~ia is y~t in its infancy, the ivy, a vine that climbs on stone walls and 370,000 pounds. In later yea.rs the she was to be put together and devoted to and further develo ment de ends rinciand trees. . . - stat;_ sfi'cs refer to the impo1 ·tation of cases the service of t he ex1ilorer De Brnzza. When P P . P. 0~i1~t~h~~ The lca.".co of both are :rifohate; tha t. rs, instead of pounds, but show t he same result. . the machinist went to work to put the ves- r:lly uton Jhe H_1e;ns s0!h!~~i~"Yi 1 they consist of three lea ets; c~m~on ~Y In 1885 2,344 cases were consumed in the ; sel together they found to th~ir dismay that ~.sea J°'br · of d~~r and the const~ntlf has. five. It i.a D: sufficient pro ec ion Unit ed .States, in 1886 2,857, and in 1887 Jan eisential pirt of her m achmery had be~n n~o~k a f°:ci!itie~ for trans ortation t he avoid eve,.y ~nfohate .w_oodypl~nt. _ 3,362 cases. The. legitimate .uses of opium: enti~ely forgotten. After a year's work m t1JnitedgStates will find her ~ formithible Many poisons or1gmate m chemical ha.ve of course, mcreascd with the growth gettmg the vessel to the Ahma she was as t't d f he t combinations. Thus oxygt<n a~d n_ itrogei;i, of th~ country and the population. · In ita ' useless for tho purpose intended as so much compe i or as a pro ncer 0 ~ a. · AT mechanically combined, constitute the. air medicinal uses opium is an unmixed bless- driftwood, simply because a piece of her en· -·· we breathe...l:..hn.t combined che'.°ically, ~n·a ing, and is spoken of in the medi~al books gine costing only $200 or $<JOO was. la~killg. Excursions in P aris Eewers. certainpi'iJportion, t hey form mtrous mnde, as one of the most· valuable remedies. But Work was suspended as aoon as t lus d1scouE . th h ti f or laughing gas ; combined in another the testimony of drug dealers goes to show raging discovery was made, and for many p ';i:cur~wne rol~t. le gorge~_ua sef ers 0 proportion, nitric acid. that the pernicious use of opium increases. months the vessel lay in pieces, piled up like adrisd-s ~~nge a.st is ca_niunc ion f~~ Fresh meat may be made poiscnous in The action of the drug and its enslaving I cord wood on the bank of the river; It was an a. ietch1Yef mhu.s sbou l n -a lr de nfowtba .t' 0 . 1 f d th . t i d ··b d . ' ·1 h" th t th ·s ing machin rage m c as ion11 e wor o e C I y. various ways. Th~ an1ma.l may i<we e ·.on· powe_r upon · e senses Is · m s escn e · 1not untr t is ;year a , e mi s - A few evenings since I was invited to accompAND cry was s.upe,hed a nd tne steamboa.t finally ' an a select art " vVe started from the noxious plants; or it may have been ~rck "It l8 before being slaughtered, n:n? the po.1s?n A STIMULANT NARCOTIC, lar~nched...She rece~tly started d~wn ~~e Pa1ace Chatel~t at)3 o'clock, and descended a may be di.:e to powerful medicmea adTUu~is- and a moderate dose administered to a I Ahma. to .JO~n tte flhtill: ~~ ;h?t ?so~~~· ~:sis little winding staircase, the steps and walls tered. ; o: it m~y havo bejn affected wi.th healthy person increases the force, fulness, : bnnoyrng :us~ bl~n~';;. to ap~t explor~rs i~ of which were covere.I wirh a green cloth, a contagious d1seaso, eay, P euro-pneumonm. and frequency of the pulse, augments the I '"!some. s upr d ' ts rI that of the un- fringed by a red border. There was not the Tainted meat also develops chemically a temperature of the skin, invigor ates the : fiatress~ng fre \'tmen fe~r~ears · agv who sfo~htest danger of soiling our clothes or of very violent poison. G6rman sausages are muscular system, quickens the senses, ani- i fortudnatl et ravte f er l . a mmunr· ··i"on was per- encountering the least disagreeable odor. · t m · th" · · · la mos 0 118 " idges· had ' On arrivrng · · · a fi ne pre-cmmen IS respec t . mates the sp1r1ts, and gives new energy t o faun ti a. t th · c f oo t of t 1 1e s t airs s a the cartr 1 1 the intellectual faculties. Its operation, ec : use e~s ;e[ia~h~ display of fruits and vegetables was the firs t 1 Diphtheria. while thus extending to all parts of the not een 'Ila ~ · ? . /~hY~lII~ar there were thinir to greet our eyes. These products At th~ beem~mg ~he U Y Congo 'I'he were from Gennevillir rs, and wero grown in Dr. Turner, of London, :England, has system, is directed with peculiar force to 5 made ' a study of diphtheria and has the brain, the functions of which it excites ' seven 0 am .oa stonthe fiee~p~~s one. 011 so gardens that a.re watered by the sewers. embo(Ued the results of his enquiries in a sometimes eyen to. into~ica~ion or <l;eliriurn. , b<?rtl \~d:bgth~ 30d of the ea~ t here will "\Ve got into a wagon, in which were seats th · y ive. The for twenty persons. OJI we went, shoved r eport to the Local Government Board of In a short time this exc1tat10n subsides. A ns Y a Y on be ~p~;~ ~he Bishop along by solid-l ooking fellows, all neatly London. H e says : "Almost nothing is calmness of the cor poreal action and a de- be fourt~e~hsteamer: 0 · e. new 8 eamF oa. 8 h and Con , 1 dressed. Above us was a mass of tubes and lightfol pfacidity of mind succeed; and the : ~wners 0 with certainty known of the beginning of 11 10 expediti~n i pipes. They are the water pipes, tho two diphtheria., thou~h_ much ha~ be~n learned individual, insensible to painful impressions, 1 Y ( . :Missiona,t t~~ forgetting all sources of care and 11-nxiety, ; f ta~h .overnme!1 j ~.gia~f the U pper [ largest containing our drinking water fro!D respecting cond1t10ns favorini:: i~ llpreP,d submits himself to a current of undefinecl' ?r e commerci"' exp! or~ ion edition and the Vanne, and water from the Ourcq, which and something, perhaps, of rnfiu.ences and unconnected but pleasing fancies, and ' ()hnlb, ~hh Sat;fo~d ex~ o;m~.exp fi s thut la tte r is used for washing the streets and fosterin o its virulence." . Among ,. the is conscious of no other feeling than that of , ~ e . u .c b dnth renc !a mg rm sidewalks. Then there were the p neumatic foliuenc~s " tending to enhance the se,;v;erity quiet and vague e njoyment. Doses which' ave reac e e upper river. tubes in which we could hear the rattle of of diphthoria," he mentions " over -crowdthe , despatch boxes. Suddenly we heard ing badly trapped drains, datnp walls and induce sleep after such an f'xperience often Boulanger's Arrest. the passengers in the w:agon ahead of us utfl.oo'rs." The saturation of t he soil un~er are succeeded by nausea, headache, and. tretering cries of admiration. · the dwelling with fecal matter, or with mors. B ut the recuperative energy of the body, if the dose be not too often repeated That Gen. .Boulanger. c~miy.itt~d a bre.ach Y\ e were under the R ue de Rivo1i, but water contaminated by excrement, he has found to be a condition especially favorable is such tha t there are no really harmful of decorum, if not of d~sc1plme.' m ~ubhcly soon we reached the cr ossing of the Pontto the d evelopment of the disease in its esults. In closes insufficient to produce Icriticising the acts of his supenor officer the I Neuf. This tunnel was lighted from end to Minister of War, is. umleniabl~. B~t by end with garlands of colored lamps. The most fatal form. It i P 1 however,:with cases r · TllE FULL SOPORIFIC EFFEC'l', siezing the opportumty to pu;i1sh him ~y effect was fairy-like. The same effect was " for which neither personal communication t he stimulant influence upon the menta- placing him under arrest for .thirty days !us produced under the Rue de Louvre, the Rue nor any of the above conditions can be ' ' ,1; u ,a ' " ' · ' · . . .· " . .' I '. ' ' . .. . · '. . Q !!!· a,gsWnfili ."'ii:s"' the probable cause" that he function continues longer, and the subse- enemies and rivals are helprng to ma,ke a de Richelieu, and t he Place des Pyra.mides, quent calming effect is sustained for hours. hero of him, and to jus~ify his P.atul ant com- where precisely under the statue of Joan of 'dea~ in his report, as well as "wit h broa.d clinical and pathological r esi;mbla.nces Sleep not infrequently is prevented or ~en- plaint that the proceedings a~mst. Ca~arcl Arc appear ed in luminous glass the arms of between the maladies of lower animals and dered so light and dreamy that the patient were instituted for the p~rpose. C!f m1phciit- t he city of Paris. We passed along, still diphtheria in the human subject. " P igoons, wilq scarcely , admit that he has s lept at ing, or at a.11 events d1scred.1tmg the too following the R ue de Rivoli, where each popular co!'1m8:ndant o~ the 'l'h1rteenth a~my hcnse has its number in the sewer, just as' chickens swine, horses, cats and sheep all." These are the effeets sought for and ob- co1·ps. H is friends. will contrast the rigor in t he street until we reached t he P lace de suffer irC:m a disease re~embling diphtheria tained by the' devotees of t he drug , but and prompitude with whic~ he ~s made . to la Concorde. in all its symptoms. Children and others There the electric lights, crossing their who have come in contact with them have t hey are purchased at a fearful cost. The suffer for an outburst of 11npat1e~ce with been taken ill with diphtheria, and animals smok!)r of the Chinese pipe progre.cses to- the deferential treatment of M. Wilson, who fires with t he r eflcctiou of the Venetian ward the final wre~k with increasing pallor has been under oath accus~d of sellin.g the lamps, turned the squar e into a sort of a ball have been observed to be suffering from of eyes and face, t hat once seen can always influence which as the President's son-m ·l a.w room. Nothing was wanting, not even mu. the disease some time after being handled be recognized. The morphine eat er shows he has naturally wielded. sic. We all got out of t he wagons to em· by persons sufferinl.7 from or reccve~ing a The predicament in which President. Grevy ba rk in boats, furnished with cushioned from dipht heria. Dr. Turner's observations somewhat similar condition, varied by a lead to the conclusion that many of the tendency to pimples and f!rupt ions, the r e· found himself on his arrival in Paris was seats. The music was in the first boat, mysterious cases of dip~theria wh_ic.h occur sulb of the paralyzing effect of the drug singularly painful. He of course could not which was d ecorated with flags and lamps. in places wr ere the samta.ry cond1t10ns are upon the bodily functions and secretions. retuRe the request of t he public prosecutor · The bou.ts were started. vYe followed the 1 good and where there are no human beings In a ll phases of. the habi~ the '!ii~ p~wer is for leave to search ~he apa.rtmen~s of his entire route of Rue Rc:>yale by the light of entirely subordmated. The vICt1m 1 s help .. claugh ter'. s husband Ill the execut ive man- fifty dazzlino- electric lamps. After a quarfrom' whom the disease could be caugh t, have t heir origin in contact with animals ill less. Any delay in taking the usua.l d?~e sion for incriminating pa.pers, But this hu- t er of a,n ho~r in this boat we landed at the 1 of the disease. Several remarkable cases results in horrors suoh as the snake.seeing miliation was only the beginning of ~is foot of a starcase, which we mounted, a nd arc mentioned by Dr. Turner of persons drunkard never dreamed of. The stomach troubles. He will have to face the quest10n in three minutes we were above the ground l;ti.ving to all appearance cau~ht diphtheria is !\nawed by the terribl e appetite as with now pressed not merely by Radical jou~nals, ~at t he .Madeleine. It was much warmer in Produces a beautiful gloss and creates no offensive · from lower animals, and of animals catching the sharp t eeth of some wild animal, pa.ins but by some of th e most sober and weighty . the str eets t han it was in the sewers, where the d isease from human beings. The rack the body and limbs. 1:he head i~ also newspapers in l'aris, why !'f vVilson ~houl~ the temperature, su mmer and winter, is smell, will not bnm off, neither will affected and a general feehug of bemg on not be arrested and exammed b~ a Jtige d always uniformly pl easant. enquiry is an important as well as an the very verge of total coll!l'p~e invesya the instruction, like all other men agamst whom the pipes rust. intere~ting one and likely to lead t o sufferer with a horor that is mdescribable. criminal offences are imputed by sworn tesben~ficial results. An Ancient Ousto m. timony. If the P resident sanctions the prosecution of bi~ son-in -law, it can hardly be A.- " Do you know where the custom of Lockjaw. Flogging in China. without grave misgivin/:?s as t? the r esult, mothers t aking their marriageable daughters . . . for t he conduct of M. "\Vrlson smce t he pub · to the watering places originat ed ?" {!;he meilical name for lock jaw IS tetanus. A Chinese tragedy, followed by Judicial lication of tho charge has not been what B.-" I have no idea." Someti.mes it is only, or main_ly, t he muscle~ proceedings. and a re~ar~abl~ all-round I would be looked for from a nice sense of "Well, it d~tes back to the days of 1 of the iaws that are ~ff~cted ~ :he .disease, administr.at1on of rough i ustwe, 1s reported honor. Should M. Grevy,on the other hand, Abraham. You know it wa11 at a well that but common~y the rigid con?1tion is much .in the la.tei\'t budget ot news from the Celes. exert the whole power of his office t o pre- Rebecca found her hu sband.." more ex tens1v<l, often reaclung ~o most .of jtial .Empire. An offic~r nam?d Telengo vent a son-in-law's arrest, he must see that . t he r:in~cleS(_ ~~ the body. .In its ~~verei hearmg two of the sold iers of !us company he would provoke a storm of obloquy, ADVISE TO M.o:rrrn:as.- Are you rltS· ALWAYS I N STOCK. form 1t l8 one ot the most .terr\ble of di~e~ses. ·quarreling about a money debt, called t hem which would render his po·s ition at the h:ly- . t urbed at night and brok en of yo ur r est The mi_n~ generally rema~ns c ear tot e a.st, before him and qnestione;l them respectin_ g see untenable. by a si-0k child ~ufferin g and cryin g with unless it 1s b lunted by opiates. their unruly conduct. '.Ibey resented hts . · ·1 ·"ht · · ' If d t 'fhe disease begins by a pinched look of . f d fl d f b d' A possible escape from this d1 emma. m1.,, pam of C uttrng reeth 1 so sen a nce anf twlere og~ech' ~ ~gmbuy ~~ ~~be found in.an immediate resigna.tion of. the o nce and get a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow's t he face In a few hours 'the muscles of thE mt~er er e 0 · ion. 0 nehis .em, and Y · incurred severer ' c h' · tra ~ ·y , fot· then· M · Grevy might jaws,· neck, back, and ch< st become r igid, a aggravated ·offense 1 e f mag1s h l. S . >Oti· un~ S . y ~up. " F or ch"ld i ren . t ee th· ~ng, and the r!gi~i~y- at. length extends to th~ and re eated punishment by two attempts be r egarded with con;1pas~10n !l.S a man wr o H a value ~B mcalculabl~. {t .will r elieve limbs. This r1gid1ty 1 s permanent, and some· to esc!1pe the flogg ing by running a.way. h,ad suffered bfor thh misdee.ds ?f t<?the the poor htt le s ufferer 1mmed1ately. D e· times is so c:reat that the body could be tak· The officer 'l'elen"o himself administered 10 'Ihere, w 0 V1;,1~ e fperh. apskan mBc1 .meas!gonni . ngo pend u pon it, m others ; t h ere ill n > 0 · "k d on yr u c h' eng, b e- sparen e.e President yr 1 will , mi~ta . k e a.b ou t 1 ' t · It cures D ysen t ery en 11p l r · e ast' ick oft" imber or it may rest of the strokes inliicte - · "ison t th" .or itssa e ti its weight upon its head and feet. From cause he considered .t hat he was fnrther re- more over,t'.1'. its Junct· ur h~ h he 1 ·mpend and Diarrhrea regulates the Stomach and t t' ms occur lasting a few f f h · d ' · l' mere1 y au lCipa e a s ep w ic t · ' h t. · · ported to the Genera1 or urt er . 1sc1p Ill· in Ministerial crisis may of itself r ender B 1wels, cures Wind Colic, s of tens t e 1me o rme spas . seconds, or several mu_iu~es. . d ary treatment. Here even Celestial cndug d ' t '.l'l d nfall of 1\1 Rouvier Gums r educes Inflammation and gi les h The ,seatpo~~o~~~; ~/~r~:"~:r;~\;n rancewasa~.an:nd. ~~hef ma1 effectual!~ ~~~hie~~ow·~~okedwupon asce;tain, wni to:Je ~nd ener gy to the wh~le sy~tem. 0 ~nhcet a· Be aa touch or even a"breath of air rabn l . ~wa~ t 18 im de ; ef ?n pe'I~nhianethne a<Ya.in brin~ up the claim of M. Clemenceau " Mr~. Wiuslo 1v's Soothing Syru p ,. l\fo r al1g no1s , , · o 1v1 on in an over ose o opm m. en " h h ' f th M' · t , · h' · 1 t t th t t As the muscles of respiration are usu~lly officer T eien 0 was tried. H e was found to _ the. ea s lp o e . mis r. y. . . cIn' Id.r en t eet m~ rs. p easan o e as e D unog the prolon.ged ; egotrationst chi~? au d IS the prescr1pt1on of one of t h e nldaffected lhe breathing is greatly Im · guilty of infi~cting excEssive punishment and podod ~nd often, for the time, r endered sentenced to be flogged Ninety blows or preceded. the fo:ma.tr?n the p~e:n a i - est and best female p h ysicians aud n u rses ,_,,. wholly impos"siblc, the chest being. held ha.If t hose infiict ecl on Y~l-ch'eoo- w ere o:cder- net, M.dGrevy mfle defR u sed . . s ummdo;i in the United Stat es, . an d i s for s11.le b y dxibly r 1 a vance · · 'D · h f tl . It f . "" . the lea er of tie a wa1s an is · . as in a vlSe. . eat req~en Y re~u s rom ed. T!ie man who admimstered the Jloggmg . d t h roul'( ll tiie worId . p rice l th· t ·oner th ~n make a1I druggists t his cause, the system bemg previously ex· was condemned to receive 80 blows ;. t he ~td to have l'ec1a:ec h a so Id r~sign As 25 cents a b ottle . Be sure and ask for . ha.uated by pain and l '.1-ck of sle~p and nou r · soldiers g uarding the deceaseti to suffer 60 eihe?cea~t r:mie~ho:ew~~ernatives' m ay "M11.s. WINSLOW'S SooT.HU!G Sy&UP." ishment. If t he p at1 .ent. survives beyond blows, and Ssu·ha.i, th e man who quarreled a c ~v u e~n him the President · fond t.·d take no other kind. the twelft~ .day! he is likely to r ecover i with the d eceased, to endllre 80 ?lows. 1:he ~~ol~e i~ ~h~~ ht to be 'of bis fine qu~rters butnomedicmeisabletodomo;e.t~~npro· report naively adds : "Yu·ch eng bem,g . g ma think.it r udent to mote sleep and benumb the sens1b1ht1es. d ead. no f,,rt.hor notice need be taken of his and prmce1Yea1 a ry, Y P 'l'he cause is unknown. It may follow offense and his debt to Ssu.hai is Ex tin- to t&ke t hat course r.ow. wounds or be inclependent of wounds, the g uished. When Baby wu sick, we grre her Cnstorta, latter being the most hopeful cases. The wounds may be severe or slight, but most "Don't be a Clam !" ~~~:~:\ When she was n Child, she cried f<>r Caatoria, wounds.a.re not followed by t etanus. It is . All on Account of a Dropped "H." " Don't be a clam !" \ Vhy not ? Olams When shft became MiH, she clung to Caatoria , probable tha~, persons of a peculia.r ner · There is a .fam ily in Toront~ who haY~ 9,5 nave no bills to pay ; their garments never 1Y12en.aho had Children, aho gavo lhem Caatoria, vous susceptibility, and under certam not a shot, they bav.e th a right. of, w~y. well understood. cqndit ions, a ,poisoh" is de· servants an, Irish girl as cqok .a nd au Eng· cost Their ulsters never go m pawn when Spnng veloped within the system, Hence, the only lish one as second girl. The latter has been days are about, and then, in Winter, sigh'. hope of a cure is to. s.u sta.in tll;e patient.wit h but a short time in this country, and has .11 and mourn ca.use they can't get them out. stimulants, nourishment, and sleep until the particular a.version to t he family cat, w hile The tax collector th~y don't fear, nor g irls . · ; the feline pet ha.a the good fortune to bask who dote on creams; no corns or boils have system can eliminate ,t he poison. 1 In case of ~1<evere wound, . especially in in the suns hine of the cook's favor. For they, 'tis clear, uo flies disturb their dreams, the nei<>hborh 'jd of nerve centres, gr eat car e two or t hi:ee days t he cat was missing, and Policemen never take them up, yet someJEFFERY always at' the Door. should be exercised in dressin g the injury, so the cook, · a.ftex: hunting evecywhere s he times put t hem down ; they never bet on as to bring t he part s well together, a,nd the thouuht it possible for the animal to be, the wrong pup, nor crimson. paint the town. parts shou Id be k ept clean with mild ~arbo!- asked the second girl : "Louisa, you have- They never go to see best girls and find. old 1.c a cid solution, or some other good antiseptic n't done anything t o the cat, have you ?" men instead, no dad at them the boot3ack " Done anything with the cat?" repeated wash. th 3 one addressed, " I 'ate it." " Ate the hurls to cause them a swelled head. They cat r cried t he cook in horror. " F a.ix, ne'er go skating where 'tis nice to come Notes. then I'll give notice to lave immediately. down with a slam, but I have fallen on the W a.ter oa.nnot satisfy the thirst which at- I'll ~ot be under the same roof with a hay- ice and wished I was a clam. B 0 W MA I L L E, tends choler<J., dysentery' clie.rrhcca and then, .sol .won't!" ~ -=· · ~ mrrrm· 1~ -~~~~~~~~ -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~· ·· ·: someotherfor~~:fdisease; auadiau J tatt~mau ..ind~cc oth~r . HEALTH. infact,drinking ·oo!d wa.ter seems to increase the thirst and disagreeable sensations; but the thirst will be perfectly and pleasantly subdued by eating a comparatively small amount of ice, swallowing it in as lar~e pieces as practicable and as much as is wanted. M. Ginjeot states that of all measur es applied locally to boils, t~e .best r esults .are obtained from tincturo iodme. He pamts · the boil with a thic k coatmg, a n d somet' imh es a single application is sufficient to cause t e r'nflammation to subside,· it is better, however, to make the application several t imes a day for several days. He d oes no t rccom· f b0 1 ·1 b t 1 'f mend the early opening 0 s, u evacuu.tion of pus be necessary antiseptics should be used. · · A case is recorded m a German medical journal in which an infant Wtl.S poisoned by the lead contained in a cosmetic on the face of the nurse. The child was five weeks old , and was constantly crying and suffer~nir with colic. Its akin was of a dull blmsh 't ti11t. The nurse ha d 1 ong b een · mth e h ab 1 of ming a cosmetic which contained a. l arge proportion of lead. It is smted that upon removal of the cause and appropriate treatment a cure was effected in a few days. BUlLDINGASrEAMJ:lO.ATINAFRIOfl.I INDIAASA WB:EA.T.'. . PRO.DGCER. THIRTY · YEARS · IN · BUSINESS .n YE H The practical Furrier calls attention to the following Branches of his new Fall Sto,ck. la.le a:; Fall Hats Gents ' Fi ·ir Caps Ladies' Caps, ·L adies' & Gents' Fur Coats, Cutter & Carriage Robes,A~:~~ altered and repaired. Highest Price paid for Raw Furs. u·· I I I ° J° I I °1 J'-lorfeison's NEW FANCY COODS. I I Call and Examine the Stock, which has been selected with great care. £ i' Bole_ Hats Re-shaped, Stamping Done. ··· :PFl.IC:ES :C....C>VV. · ~ . .Jr. P ·· A · It· H ··· A~Y TD ---- o---- I J. BICCINBOTBAM & SOI, Chemists and Druggists. Our Stock is complete, comprising an assortment· of Drugs, Medicines, Sponges, Chamois, Toilet Articles Perfumery, Soaps, &c. J mp er .a l ----o- - Stove-pipe Varnish I Thorley's Horse & ·Cattle Food, Pure Ground Oil Cake, and Prairie Flower Condition Powder I I 1 1 1 t' JOSEPH JEFF· ERY, 8 ° b!Cf !': :~,, DUNN S BAKINC Merchant Tailor & Gent'sFurnisher POWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND Caetorla~ NY ChUdren Cryfor Pitcher's