Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 22 Nov 1894, p. 7

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THE WEEK'S NEWS CANADA. Twelve degrees below zero in Winnipeg on Saturday. Agricultural teaching is to be intro- duced m the school* of Manitoba. The health of Lieutenant-governor Mackintosh has graatly improved in the pa*t few days. 'ieirge Clark ha* b en sentenced in Hamilton to IS months in the Central prison for stealing a bicycle. The live stock export* from Montreal this year have been larger by several thousand head than last year. The Consumers' Cordage Company's works at Branlfurd have started work after being closed for some ;:me. Mr. Flynn will apply to the Quebec Legislature to be authori/ed to aet apart two public park* in that province. Eugene Cote, of Montreal, pleaded guilty of mailing an indecent photograph, and was lined fifty dollars. Mr. Hiram WVker. of Walkervillo, pro- pose* to erect a large creamery and cheese factory near that town. The rate on parcel* between Canada and Japan by post will be reduced to 'JO cent* per pound on and after January 1, Is9."i. Mr. Kicnard Bayly, Q.C., of London, has been chosen by the Middlesex Law Associ- ation to succeed Chief Jnitic* Meredith a* a bencher. By the overflowing of Lake Manitoba some settler* were drowned out, and many lost their live stock, including valuable horses. The navigation season for the port of Montreal is practically doted, and it hu proved a disastrous one for the steamship companies. According to the Government inspector's report, nearly J.UOO mote can of live stock passed through Windsor from the west this year than last. A Port Arthur despatch says the ther- mometer on Tnusday marked i lower tem- perature than at any lime siace the place was a metorological station. John Downs and James Royd, of Belie- ville, have been fined $-."> and costs each I for fighting their dogs, and spectator* who witneased the fight were fined 95 and cost* each. Application is being made to the City Council of Quebec for permission to erect in that city a monument to <-ener*l Montgomery. It is to be erected by Amer- ican subscriptions. Mayor Villeoeuve, of Montreal, ha* had placed in hi* chair of office a beautifully chased medallion, commemorative of the fact that he was invested with tlie chain by tbe Earl cf Aberdeen. The school Board o ; Winnipeg intends taking step* to establish a school tur teach- ing boy* of tbe criminal class, so that tbey will not hav to associate with tbe children 01 a better class A we* ',- bound freight train ran into a rock slide between the tint and second tunnel*, about two miles east ot Gniden, B. C.. at daybreak the other .lay. A tramp, ! who wa* tiding between twu box can, was killed. In London, Ont,, on Friday, tenders were opened for $20,000 worth ol 4 per cent, free library debenture*, and it was found that the oOen were above the face value of the debentures. The exact figures were uot made public. Diphtheria and scarlet fever have increas- e 1 to an epidemic in Montreal, and the Mayor, in response to an urgent deputation, has promised to open the Civic hospital for sufferers from Ihoee disease* as early s possible. The Royal Military College cadet*, o' Kingston, who weje puuiiheu by confine- ment to the grounds of the college for four week* because of their connection with the hazing of ex-Cadet Plummer, werr given their freedom on Tuesday, Three convicts ntmed Carter, Johnson (colored) and Home, escaped from the {penitent i i ry at Dorchester, N.B., on Friday. They had been working on a farm outside, in charge of a guard, and bolted when on the way back to prison. Frank Hall, a young married man, em- ployed at R. S . Williams & Son's piano factory in Oshawa, wan struck in the stomach by a board thrown by a circular saw and so badly injured it U feared he will not recover. The Aylmer, Quo., Town Council has passed a by-law granting a twenty years' charter to the Hull Electric Hallway Cum- I pany for the operation ot an electric railway j between Hull and Alymer, and through the street* of the latter town. Sir Adolphe Caron has gone to New York, where Postmaster Patteson, of Toronto, and .Messrs. Everett and McKeu/ir, of the To- ronto Street Railway Company, will meet him, to investigate ibe electric postal car city service, with a view of introducing it in Toronto. The cattle shippers propose to petition the Dominion Uovernmenl to reduce the cattle space on ocean vessels from two feet eight inches to two feet six inches, which is the regulation space on tha American line*. There i* *o much demand for lugar beets by the manufacture* of beet sugar that Air. Beaulieu, Commissioner of Agriculture of Quebec, in sending out circulars to tbe agricultur.il societies to ascertain how many acre* of land will be sown with beet* in the province of Quebec next year. : Steps are being taken tor the establish- ment of a large factory in Ottawa for the production of porcelain-ware carbens, etc., connected with the electrical demands of the present day. The building will cost about thirty thousand dcllan, without tue machinery, and at the start will employ from fifty to a hundred men. According to Tho Journal of Commerce a number of western Ontario merchant* have been nipped by sending money to the pool brokerage firm of George M. Irwm A Co., of Pittsburg, for investment. Irwm A Co. have ju*t failed, owing their depositor* ' some $800,000. The Hamilton Spectator ! ays several Wentworth county men are . among the victim*. Sir Donald Smith, president of the Bank oi Montreal, who ha* just returned t> Montreal from England, referring to tha proposed Atlantic service, said 'hat Mr. | Huddart is an energetic, earnest man, and he is doing everything that possibly can be done to push the scheme through to aaatis- factory conclusion ; but at pretest, the money market is against him. r.REAT BRITAIN. The Bank of England's rale of discount is unchanged at '2 per cent. The Queen arrived at Windsor Thursday morning in excellent health. The London Economist thinks the days ot excessive cheapness of money are draw- ing to a close. The wreath sent bv Queen Victoria to be placed on the tomb of tue late Czar is five feet ling, and a beautiful work of art. The Royal 'Geographical Society opened it* cession in London n Monday night. Several very interesting papers are on the program-ne. I'bwrvfrs of the Queen's arrival at Windsor noticed that her Majesty's general weakness and lameness Hal visibly | in- creased. The waters of the Thames have risen so high that son.e of the Kton buildings are inundated, and the boy* have been all sent home. The Chri*t Church meadow* at Oxford are four feet under water. Member* of the moderate section of the Russian political refugees in London seem to be fairly well satisfied with Nicholas II., and the proapec Is of reform under hi* rule. The Realm, of which Lady Colin Camp- bell is the editor, made it* first appearanc* m London on Friday *nd wa* favorably received. A despatch from London say* if Yale will challenge Oxford it i* likely the latter will lend an athletic team to the United State* in 1895. Caroline Agnes Ueresford, Dowager Duch- ess of Moniroee, known in the racing world a* "Mr. Man ion." and also a* the " Red Duchess," is dead. She wa* seventy-six yean of age. The London Standard, commenting upon Sir Charles Tupper's address to the Forfar- shire farmers, says the Commissioner would be doing better service for Canada by multiplying proof* of the non-existence of pleuro-pneununia in Canada than in assert- ing that it does not exist. In a speech at Glasgow the other night Lord Kosebery said measures for Scotch and Welsh disestablishment would be in- troduced during tbe coming session of Parliament. Frank Rocque, a French-Canadian, ha* been arrested in Denver, Col., on suspicion i>f being the strangler whose crime* so shocked the city last week . Three women were strangled. Sir John Pender, in an interview in Lon- don, said that the existing Atlantic cables were not making anything like an adequate return for the amount ot capital expended upon their construction. The Habitual Drunkards Commission, which held its fint meeting in Glasgow on Tuesday, will visit many of the northern toon* of Scotland, and report the result of their investigation, so that their sugges- tions may be embodied in the Habitual Drunkards' bill to be introduced at the forthcoming session of Parliament. The manner in which a deputation from Swaziland, who came to England to ask the British Government to annex their country, ha* been treated is greatly com- mented upon. The Queen received them kindly, but when they obtained an inter- view with the Margin* of Kipon, tbe Co- lonial Secretary, he ordered them to return at once to Airici, threatening them with tbe anger of the great Queen if tbey did not comply. At a meeting of the Central branch of the National Federation in Dublin onThund tv. Mr. Justin McCarthy laid that the I'rish Parliamentary party held the balance of power, and he hoped Irish claim* would be admitted by the present (Government in the near future ; but if by any chance the Unionists came into power, the Irish mem- bers would reduce it to a failure if it did not listen to the Irish demand*. r SITED STATIN. The ion it fire* in Arkansas an still burning fiercely. George W. Scoggan, the Louitville, Ky., turfman. I* dead . Sarah Meyer*. 100 yean old, h.n just been sent to Uouverneur hospital, N. Y. All the Hebnw hatmakets of New York city have returned to work at the old wages. Seventeen Chicago policemen have been suspended for neglect of duty and disobedi- ence to orders. Hon. .1. G. Carlisle, secretary of the United State* treasury, ha* issued a call for $50.0110, 1100 worth of .-> per cent, ten-year bonds. The operators in the Clear fiald district of Pennsylvania have given notice of a reduction in miner*' wages, and a strike is talked of. Diphtheria is epidemic in Anderson, Ind. One hundnd and forty three case* havt been reported, and about half of them an fatal. The athletic council of Cornell Universi- ty ha* deci led to send a crew to compete in the Henley regatta m London next June. General 1'jine. one of the beet known yachtsmen in America, has announced his intention of withdrawing from the Ameri- can Cup Committee. Ives i* now champion billiard player of America, having defeated Hchaefer in the six game* last week by 3,600 to 3,074. butlalo police made a general raid on the dive* of the city last Friday midnight and gathered in about 500 loose women. Hon. Robert < 'harles Wmthrop.of Boston the last of the leaden of the abolition movement of long ago, died on Friday night. The Rev. Dr. William Greenough Thayer Shed. I. proieMor of systematic theology in Union Theological Seminary, New York, died on Saturday, aged 75 years. Mr. Levi 1\ Morton, Governor-elect of New York state, spent, $19,790 in the lec- tion, according to a statement tiled by his private secretary. Charles Wilfrid Mowbray, the English anarch mt, is reported to have reached New York, along wi'h hi* *on. They assume the name of Curry. Forwt fire* aie raging near Gold Hill. Colorado, and that town 1* in danger of being wiped out. The cash balance in the treasury at Washington on Friday was JiO > _',ttlt.'V-'7- : gold reserve, $l,7S4,4o-- > , The Royal Electric Light Company hare purchased the patent* held by the Stanley Electrical Company, of Pitutield, Mass., the use of which, it is expected, will greatly reduce the expense of the production of electricity. The new steamship St. Louis wa* launch- ed from Cramp'* shipyard in Philadelphia on Monday. Mrs. Cleveland did the christen- ing, in the presence of "*>,<*)() people. Rabbi Max Magil, of Brith Erne* He- brew synagogue, in Allentown, Pa , ha* renounced the Jewish faith, and will join Bethany United Evangelical congregation. Exports of merchandise from the United Stale* during October amounted in value to $H3,5o.S,.TT2, againit $H7.675,43l for the same month last year. Tbe import* amount- ed to $59,081,674, againsl *51.735,3 I _ > A banquet of the Two Million Club was held in Chicago on Wednesday night, at which it was declared that the estimated population of the city was now two million two hundred and thirty -six thousand. Mr. M. H. De Young, of San Francisco, director-general of the California Mid- Winter Exposition, ha* purchased for the memorial museum one of the most valuable collection* of relic* of the Napoleonic dynasty that the world possesses. CoL John A. McCanll, of opera fame, who fell on the ice anil was paralyzed in Chicago early in 1 388, died suddenly on Monday at Greensborough, N.C. Three danghten survive him. Twenty-six expert diamond cutter* from Antwerp are detained at Ellis Island. New York, it being claimed that thoy ha-e come to tbe United States in violation of the Contract Labor law. It is stated that * syndicate, backed by Mr. John D. Rockefeller and the Koins- ohild*. inlebds obtaining control of the silver market of the world, and will dic- tate the price of the metal to ail silver- uimg countrie*. A large detail of police had to be called out in Chicago on Saturday to queii a bread riot in the City hall, owin^ to the fact that there wa* no money in the treasury to pay two hundred an.) riitv d.rc larged employees of tne water depart- ment. Mgr. Satolli, the Apoitolic delegate, and Cardinal Gibbon*,after studying the ritual, etc., of the Independent Order of Forest. TS, have decided that Roman Ctinolica have a right to join the association, and that there is absolutely nothing wrong it its dealings. Rev. Dr. .NL-Cosh, professor of philoaophy of Princeton College, died at Princeton, N. J., on Friday. He was born in Ayr- shire, Scotland, April 1, 1>I1, and came In Amenca to aasume the presidency ><f the college at Princeton in !8oS. Or. Patton succeeded hint a* president in 1SS.H. Dr. P. Gibbons, of Syracuse, N. Y.. has made application for the body of Charles F. Wilson, under sentence of death, as soon as he is electrocuted, to test his theory that electrocution does jot kill, but that the murderer is subsequently killed during tbe autopsy. The United State* Government Commit- tee'* report on the great riilroad strike has been made public at Chicago. The commissioners blame the Managers' Asso- ciation as wsll a* the A. R. U.,and endorse the calling out of the federal troops to quell disorder. Politic* wen mixed up with the pro- ceedings of the Women's Christian Temper- ance Union at iJeveUnd, Ohi, on Satur- day. Mrs. E. Morey denounced the contraction money policy of the present Administration, and thought that money should be issued in sufficient quantities to bin every idle man in the country on public works. Reports from the United States are of a more reassuring kind than ha* been ihe case lately. In most branches of trade we are told there is a noticeable improvement, and while the general conditions wnich have prevailed for some time have by no mean* abruptly changed, then i* prevalent in trad* circle* a better tone and more buoyant feeling. While, unfortunately, till more (killed labor is unemployed, the restoration of confidence, which is appar- ently in progress, will do much to rectify this. The new issue of bonds has ben generally well received by the banker* and | leading businessmen of New York. In the I cotton industry mil* are reopening, snd i others taking on the full complement of hand*. There is a poor demand tor iron. During the week there have been reccirde 1 ,n the United States J70 failures, compared with 3J.'l in the corresponding week last year. i; IN KRAI. The exodus of foreignen from Pekin continue*. The health of the King of Siam continues to improve. The French Senate ha* adopted the bill imposing an increased duty on raisin*. Morocco City is now open to trad*, the rebe lion in favor of Muley Mohammed having ended. Mr. Francis Magnard, editor-in-chief of The Paris Figaro, is dead, in the 5Sth year uf his age. It is reported that 100 people have been killed by earthquake* along the nort hern coast of Chili. In connection with the obsequies of the Cxar, 50,000 dinners will be given to tbe poor of St. Petersburg. The French press at Tonquin is urging France to lake advantage of the situation and sei/.e Formosa and Percadorei. Great preparations are being made in (iermany for the national celebration of Prince Bismarck's eightieth birthday next ApriL A cable despatch from Bueno* Ayres ays: Soldiers patrol the streets and a con flut is expected at any moment. The cenmony of swearing in recruit* took place the other day in Berlin, in th* presence of the Emperor. It i* laid that the expenses of the late Oar's illness and the cost of the funeral will reach 10,000,000 rouble*. During the recent flood* in Limaao!, a seaport town of the Island of Cyprus, twenty-one penons were drowned. It is asserted in Shanghai that should tbe Japanese succeed in taking Port At t.W ti-Hung-Chang will answer for it with his life. The earthquake of Friday extended over a large area of Southern Italy and Sicily. Much property was destroyed, and nuiiy live* were lost. A despatch from Brurx, Bohemia, says that tweaty persons were killed by an ax- plosion on Friday morning at, a colliery near that place. The supply if the new diphtheria cure having run out m the children's hospitals in Berlin, the diphtheria death rat rose from eleven to sixty per cent. _ A despatch from Shanghai say* that Gen. Wei. one of the Chinese commanders at the bailie of Ping- Vang, wan beheaded yeaterday for cowardice duriog the engage- ment. Two (iermans, believed to he army otfi- cera.and one Frenchman, have been arrested in Hart*, charged with acting a* spins, and illegally ot'tainmg important Government papers. Very compromising documents were found in their lodging*. While a party of twenty gendarme* were conveying a pnmr ac-cused or murder on Thursday 10 Alost, in East Flanders, they were attacked by a crowd who wanted to lynch the onsoner. A serious conflict en- sued, in which several men on both sides were wounded The prisoner was ultimate ly lodged in gaoL JAPAN'S QUEER ROBBERS. Tkrr are rlll. n... >>! Rrejuire Tkelr .'nr. Lafcadio Hsaro.in the paper " From My Japanese Diary." tells of a robbery in the house of hit neighbor, the dyer : Ha told me a queer story about robbers. Dyen are peculiarly liable to be visited by robben ; partly by reason of the value of the silks intrusted to ihem, and also be- cause the butintss is known to be lucrative. One evening the family were robued. The master was out of the city ; Ins owl mother, hu wife and a female servant were the only persons in the house at the time. Thren men, having their laces masked and arrving long swords, entered the door. One ak-d the servant whether any of the apprentices were still in tne building, and she, hoping to frighten the invaders away, annwered that the young men were all still at work. But the robbers were not disturbed by tin* assurance. One posted himself at the entrance, the other two strode into the sleeping apartment. The women started up m alarm, and the wife asked, " Why do you wish to kill us?" H* wboseeiiied to be the leader answered, " We do not tun to kill you ; we want money only. But if we do not gel u, then i*. will betnis," (inking hi**wordinlo the matting. Tbe old mother sai j, " B* so aind a* not to frighten my daughter-in-law, and I will give you whatever money there is in the house. But you ought to know that then can not be much, as my son has gone to Kioto. " She banded them the money drawer and her own purse. There were j ust -7 yen and S4 sen. The head robber counted it and said, quite gently, "We did not want to fr ghten you. We know you aie a very devout oeliuver in Buddhism, and w thine you would not tell a lie. 1* this all ?" "Yes, it is all," she answered. "I .tin. as you say, a believer in the teach- ing of Buddha, and if you come to rob me now, I believe it is only because I myself, in some former life, once robbed you. This is my punishment for that fault, and so, instead uf wishing to deceive you, I frei grateful at this opportunity lo atone for the wrong 1 did to you in my previous state of existence. " The robber laughed, and said. "You are a good old woman, and we believe yon. It you were all poor we would not rob you at all. Now we only want a couple of kimono and this," laying his hand on a very tine silk overdress. The old woman replied. "All my son kimono I can give you, but I beg you will not take that, for it doe* not belong to my son. and was confided to us only for dyeing. What is ours I can give you, but I can not give what belongs to another." "That is quite right," approved the robber, 'and we shall not take it." ' After receiving a few robes, the robbers aid good night very politely, but orut.-i<i . the women not <x> look after them. 1'uo old set .-;"it was still near tbe door. As the chief robber passed her he said, "You told us a lie so lake this," and struck her senseless. Nans of the robben were ever ncaught. On a Cherry-Stone. Gesa Berger, the actor and newspaper man, ha* a picture in caligraphy that ha* a remarkable history. It is in size 'Mi by VJ inches, and is the work of Joseph Loew the most noted counterfeiter that the Aus- trian Government ever knew. When an application is made for a pardon in Austria the red-tape policy of that country compels the applicant to address the Emperor with all his titles. Emperor Ferdinand had about 40 titles. Loew engraved all of these name*, together wiln hi* petition for a pardon, on a cherrystone The letters ware so fine that u required the aid of a powerful miecroscope to decipher them. One day when the Emperor vicited the prison Loew in person presented a cherry- stone to the Emperor, and told him what it contained. The Emperor made an ex- amination. and was so amazed at the work that he gave him an unconditional pardon. Not only did he pardon him, but gave him t position a* a detective to trail down counterfeiter*. Loew was a well-informed man in all the arls and rascalities of count- erfeits, and in leas than two years after hi* pardon he ran to the earth almost every counterfeiter in Austria, and died a few years ago covered with detective honor*. The picture although made fifty yean ago is in a remarkable state of preservation. Upon the football field ye lad \Vith enemy doth kick a goal, And then at home kicks twice as hard When told to hustle in some coal. "You told ma the parrot you sold the other day could repeat everything it heard. Rubbish ! Preach to it a* I will, it remain* a* dumb a* s fish." "It is quite true I told yon it would repeat everything u heard ; but then it hears nothing : it u as deaf a* a A SIMCOE CO- MIRACLE. THE STARTLING EXPEKlENCt OP MRS. ROBINSON, OF HIOHURST. tlrvea Year*' irkn.., M.r .1.. c r uiirrcl r*.lll-l< In. .- lilr .fc, w , .! u Up I* IK. I.. Two r.i l..r, \.,v rirlure or Cuvil ttrallh **4 Mrraxib. From I he liarrie Kxaminer Nr tlie village of Midhurat, about nx mile* from liarrie, *t*nd*the smithy at Mr. John Robinson, while within sound of the anvil ia n:n nome, where in the midst of a l*r,je an<l luafy orchard dwelt the mnii/i and in* fimi.y. Sir. Robinson it a type of the proverbial blacksmith trilh "the musclei of "it brawny arm* u strong as iron bands, ' but with Mr*. Robinson it ha* been dilier out. The wife and mother his for a long time been a victim to acute and painful (irophv oi tha kidneys Shortly after the birth of I.er youngest child (now alraut I 'I yean } Mri. Robinson began to take Uinting pells, accompanied by violent headache*. This continued through the year* that have elapsed, during which time .he ha* obtained the bent medical advice available. For about a year sue wa* in constant terror of going insane, tier dull heavy Headache, beating pain in > he back and weak two len legs and Dody made her case something fearful. T.I a representative of the Examiner Mrs. Kobinsou i>aid : "it is some five or six years since I took wurse, and line* then we have spuut hundred* of dollars in .nedicme and for medical advice. The symptom* ol my ca*e were heavy headache*, pain in the back ami kulney* and swollen legs. 1 rapidly grew worse, and last July was given up by two doctors to die, and all my mends and neighbor* tell me thmt they never expected to tee me out again. 1 could not raise myself up, could nut drew myself, and had to bo assisted in every thing. Now I am well and strong, and can put out a big washing without any over exertion. I have also suffered from diarr bu-a for a number of years, and when 1 spoke of it to my doctor he said if it were slopped, worse results would follow. A- the urgent request of my son, who was then living in Manitoba, and personally anew or wonderful cure* wrought by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, I decided to give this remedy a trial. Since using the Pink Pills, I have been completely cured and have felt none bat beneficial effect*. Only the week he- tore I commenced taking the Pink I'llls 1 was told by a physician that he could not cure me, and that I would likely get worse when spring cam*. He analyzed my blood and said it wa* in a fearful slate and that my <lisea* wa* dropsy of the kidney*, which positively could not be cured. This wa* s limit the middle of last January. After the third box of pills my l>ackac-he lefi me and it has not since returned. 1 have taken thirteen or lourteen boxes in all and owe my recovery to tnis wonderful medicine. I can't praise Pink I'llls too much, whatever I ay of them," said Mrs. Robinson. "I recommend them to everybody. I can't speak too highly of them. They laved my life, and I teel it my duty to let others, who are suffering a* I was, know,. all about them." Dr. \Vii. lams' Pink Pill* strike at the roil oi thedisease, driving it from the sys- tem and restoring the patient to health and strength. In ca** of paralysis, locomotor ataxta, sciatic*, rheumitism, kidney and liver trouh'es, erysipelas, scrofulous troubles, 'c. , these pill* are superior to all otner treatment. They are also a specific for the trouines which make the lire* of so many wom*n a burden, and speedily re- store liie iich glow of health to callow cii'-rks. Men Broken down by overwork, worry or excesses, will find in Pink Pills a certain cure. Sold by all dealer* or sent by mall, postpaid, at ."iO cents a box, or six boxes for $i50. by addressing the Dr. Williams' Medicine Companv, Brockville, Ont., or Schnectady. N. V. Beware of imitations and substitutes alleged to be "just a* good." A tragedian recently playing "Kichard III." in a small Kentucky town wa* waited on after the show by an Honest farmer, who aid that "it the gcnel'm who wanted a horse wa* still in the same mind he woul 1 Ilk* to make a dicker with him." Jfr. .7. If. Dyke>ttuxn St. George, New Brunswick. After the Grip No Strength, No Ambition Hood's Sarsaparilla Cave Perfect Health. The following letter la from a well-known "if reliant tailor of -St. George, N. B. : "'. I. Hood* Co., Lowell. Man.: " Gentlemen I am glad to say that Hood's Barsaparllla and Hood's Pills have done me a groat deal ol good. I had a severe attack of too (rip In the winter, ami after getting over the fever I did not seem to gather strength, and had no ambition. Hood's Sarvaparllla proved to be Just what I needed. l'h results were *"ry satisfactory, find I rrcomnieml this medtclni* t> all wbo are afflicted with rheumatism or otlier Hood's^Cures afflictions caused by poison anil poor blood. I always keep Hood's Sarsap&rllla In my house and use It when I need a tonic. We also keep H.Hxl'i nils on hand and flunk highly of them/' J. W. IIYHKMAN. St. George. New Brunswick. ' Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, and do Mt purge, pain or gripe. SoU by all drug*"*.

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