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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 4 Sep 1885, p. 2

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THE CANADIAN STATESMAN IB PUBLIBHJ&D ~ KING'S EVIL Was the name !~rmerly given to Scrofula because of a superstition that it could be cured by a king's touch. The world Ls \'\·Iser now, and kn9ws that HEALTH. A Presentiment. h an impression on the ~ind, that some thing is going to take place, and usually such ia the case ; perha.pa we may say without exaggeration, that something always does occur, after a presentiment is formed, if such were not the fa.ct, we cannot conjecture · hat would become of everybody. Just imagine for a moment, tha.t something did not take place in such a. larg11 world ae this ! Presentiments love weak places, hence they flourish among weak-minded people, not necessarily· weak-minded by nature, but made so by a diseased body. We are told of a young lady at Kinderhook, who was visited by .an apparition t wo years ago, at dead hour of night, which announced to her in solemn accents, that in t wo years she would be the inhabitant of another world ; this circumst ance had such a depressing influence on her mind, that she pined a.way by degrees and did die, o.t the term named, o.nd was buried a few days after. A n eminent clergyman, on parting from another said : " I have a. strong presentiment that we shall never meet again," and within a few hours he perished at the Gasoonade on the Pii.oific Railway, An almost infallible cure for presentiment, however violent, is a good emetic, a . grubbing hoe, with a few days' brer.d and water diet. For ourselv11s, we would omit the emetic, 11.11 we do not patronize physic, except by proxy. The reason we give medicine a.t all Is tha people a.re always in a hurry, not eu.ctly to get well, but to get able to eat ; if they om 011ly 11at, nine out of ten think they a.re get · ting a.long famously. Everybody wants to get wen ina. minute, and for the hire chances of doing so, with a. slight degree of assurance to tha\ effect from any knave who u willing to promise, it having the wit to see 11t a glance that the assurance must be father to the fee-we repeat, with a very elim assurance of being ma.de : well in a ehort time, the large majority of invalids would swallow a quart of Shakespeare's soup thrice a day, said soup being made, as the reader may remember, by several 11ld witches, of such things as newt's eyes, frog a toes, lizard wings, stings o~ rr.ttle-1nakes and other in· grediente not necessary to be named, but all brought to the climatic point by-onions. An emetic wlll dissipate a presentiment in five minutes, while the vigorous use of the grubbing hoe in the open air, would work off the extra and thick blood, abue accumulation in the b.rain generates these dieea. ed Imaginings, while the diet of bread and water would supply a. pure article of blood in the place of th11 impure ma.terial. Who ever heard ot a healthy, out-door, day laborer, having a "presentiment" In the pursuit of his ocoupation ? The fa.ct is, they ha.re not time to be moping a.bout such tom-fooolerie11 ; the only pretentiment that ever troubles them ii .. veritable fa.ct, a tangible realiry-. "Root pig, or d \ -" is their ever living ghost. - Preaentimenttt do not e:idst-exoept in oonnecuon with one · ot the three following thinge- 1 A weak .mind. 2. A diaeal!ed body. 3. An idle condi~on of life. Loafing twid gluttony 11.re the great orginators of this uofortnnate condition of mind &Dd itll almost certain removal follow inteI11pera.te ea.ting, combined with phyeioa.I t he boy in three months returned home oonv,.' cscent, a.nd six months later the cavity h,.d diea.ppeared. Tobacco a.s an Antizymasio. M, Pecholi11r in:tha Montpelier Medical considers that the use of tobaoco preserveR one from an infinity of contagious diseases. He thinks that as typhoid fever is due to a ferment, the pollulation a.nd life of which in the <Jrga.nism is the initial ca.use of the dise~se, tobacco is the most powerful destru~t ive agent, and that its action is due to nicotine; he declares that a. number of smokers have been protected from epidemic influences through tobacco. Perhaps it is for this ea.son that Willis recommenclf: the use o tobaccofin armies, as a pr11serva.tive against certain epidemic diseases, NEWSY NOTES Mr. John Roach, the Philadelphia. ship· builder, is an Irishman from the neighborhood of Mitohellstown, in the county of Cork. · Brandy used to be the drink par excellence of the Southerner. It was displaced by whiskey; and now whiskey is giving way to wine, a.le, and beer Prinoe Louis ofBa.ttenberg Is an excellent pra.ctical printer, and once when hie ship reached a small port where no one wal!l competllnt to print the programmes required for a dance given by the officers, the Prince oame forward and undertook the work. Ola.ms to the number of a dozen or so fell recently from a clea.r sky at Mamsoatc, Minn, the velocity of their decent shattering the shells. The clams were alive and a.bout four inches in lerigth, . The phenom11non, it is said, was witneased by. several 1 trustworthy men. The colored people of New Bedford had a JOemorial meeting in honor of Gen. Grant the other evening, at which addresses were made by several clergymen. One of the speakers electrified the assemblage with this declarat ion : "I believe that when such na.mes r.s Hannibal aha.II hQve been lost in tho vortex of revolution, the name of U.S. Grant shall shine like the morning)tar in the Jl!.ilitl\ry diadem," SOIENTlFIO NOTES. .An ii.ncient mausoleum of circular fonn, a.bout 115 feet in diameter, has been diacovered reoently near Rome, outside the Potta Selara.. EVERY FRIDAY MORNING; -BY- M. A.JAMES, AT THE OFIUOE · 01tOJllceBlock,IUng St.,Bowmanvllle,Ont SCROFULA can only be cured by a thorough purUicatiou of the blood. If this is neglected, the disease perpetuates its taint throug:h generation after generation. Among its earlier symptomatic developments are Eczema, Cutaneous Eruptions, Tumors, Boi~sJ. Carbuncles, Erysipelas, Purulent ulcers, Nervous and Physical Collapse, etc. If allowed to con· tlnueJ Rheumatism, Scrofulous Cataun, Kidney and Liver Diseases, Tubercular Consumption, and vari· ous other dau~erous 01· fatal maladies, are produced by it. TERJY.I:S: $1.50 perannnm,o:r ljH,OOltpaldl· advance Payment strictly in advance required from ubsor1bers outside of the county, Ord<)rS to ·aoontinue the paper mu~t be accompamed by lie amount due, or the paper wipno~ bestoppe~. subscribers are responsibleunt1lfullpa.ymentis made. RATES OF ADVERTISING l 5~ Whole Column one year ....... .. ; ... $50 00 ;::J ~ i;; " " Half year· ·-·-- ..... - 30 00 "'"' " " One quarter ......... 20 00 ~~ Salt Column one year···- -- -·-·-···· 30 oo-. " Halfyear_ ........... .. 2000,, " One quarter _ _,_;_ , ___,12 50 Quarter ColWLn one yev.r- .... ...... 20 go = " " Raltyear- ... _ ...... 12u0 5 " One quarter...... .. 8 00 Blx lines and under, first in~ert!on .· $0 50 Each subsequent inaer.t1on .. --·· 0 25 ,. trrom six: to ten lines, ftrstrnsertioll, 0 ?~ _ Ea.ch subsequent insertion...... 0 35 _ 1o l)ver ten lines first insertion..perline 0 l~ _ Each subsequent insertio , " Q 03 The number of lines to be reokoned by he space occupied,.measured by a see.le of rolld Nonve.reil. . I ;; At a recent meeting of specialists for the discussion of the cholera question Dr. Koch, th11 Germa.n investigator, reiterated, as the general result of his. researches, that the comma ba.cillus manifests itself nowhere but in cholera cases, and is never absent from them. The M icroscope describes a pretty experiment: Upon a slip of glass put a drop of liquid Cl.uric chloride or argentic nitrate, with a. h alf grain of metallic zinc in the au ric chloride, and copper in the silver. A growth of exquisite gold and 1ilver ferns will form before the eye, = Sarsaparrilla Is the onT11 powerfiil and aZica11s reliabl~ blood-purifying medicine. It 1sso effectual an alterative that it eradicates from the system Hereditary Scrofula., and the kindred poisons of contagious disca.so11 and mercury. At the same time it enriches and vitalizes the blood, restoring healthfu l action to the vital 01~ans and rejuvenating the entire system. 'J:hlsgreat; . Bta.nley's Faith. "One faith against the whole world's unbelief," sings a poet, and the poet only echoes the doctrines of the great Teacher. Ha.ve a right purpose in life, r.nd fa.ith in that purpose. Purpose !l.Ild fa.ith a.re destiny. A leaf from the journal of a great explorer vividly illustrates this truth. In the heart of Africa, years ago, two whitemenmet. One was old, grey-haired and ill; tho other young and enthusi1utio, Th11 elder man was one whose fame a.a an African explorer was world-wide, but for yea.re the civilized world had lost eight Of him. Scientific assocla.tiona were asking vainly, "What has become of Dr. Livingstone?" AJi a correspondent of the New York Herald, the younger man had distinguished himself for indomitable perseverance, r&pid decision and sterling oommon-sen1e, and in 1870 he was chosen by Mr. Bennett, it1 proprietor, to find Living1tone. Hl1 story ls w11ll known. "Draw a. thouaand pciund1 now," ea.id Mr. Bennett, "and when you have gone through thr.t, draw anoth;r thouar.nd, ii.nd so on, but.find Livingat01ie." On January 6, 187,1 , Henry M. Stanley started from Za.nzlba.r for the interior of Africa., a.nd for eleven month1 he and his party toiled through 1wa.mpa and jn·gles, exposed to countless dangers from wild bee.ate and pestilential a.tmosphere. Worn by fatigue, surrounded by in11ubordlnate nativea, a leas resolute man th&n St.a.nley would have aiven up the nnequa.l contest with clroumata.nces and gone back, but 'his, Stanley neTer thought gf doing. He had fa.Ith in God, in himtelf and his purpooe. In hie j nurnal he wrote, and the words glow with a.n <'n ergv tha· i1 1ublime, and deseJve a place in the m·mory of every young man. "No living man sha.11 1.1top me; only dl'ath can prevent me. But dt111oth- not even this ; I 1hall not die- I will not die[ cannot die l Something ttllla me [ .Bha.11 find him, and write it larger, FIND HIM ! FIND HIM!" Full of the intensity of couvionon, a fa.Ith born of faifa in God, Stit.nley pressed on, needlelll!I of ba.rdships, till one day he, with his party, ca.me In sight of Lake T1U1ga.nika, and o. little le.ter he atood in the preaenoe of the greii.t tTaveller, who for years had lost tidings of hla native land ; and had almost oee.sed to l6ok for a.id from his fellow countrymen. But for the f&ith oi S&r.nley, Dr. Livingstone might have died of sta.na.tion, IUld the world rema.ined ignorr.nt of hl1 fate. The subsequent career of St&nley has brought into still grea.ter promineuoeJii1 1ublime faith and the re11olute persi1tence which i1 satiafied with nething but the at· ta.inment of his object, e.nd which has al ready placed the world deeply in hia debt. The leaf from the jouroal repeats a.n old lesson: F aith Is power. "Endurance Is the crowning qua!Uy .And patience all the paaalon o! grea' hearts: These are their 1\ay, and when the leaden world Bets !ti hard face again" their ra·etul thought, And bru\c-otrengM> like a conqueror Plunge· lta huge mall down on th· other scale, Tho iI111plred aoul but 1lluga hit patience In, And ·lowly \hat outwelirhe the ponderoua iriobe, Ono falih a11alnet 1ihe whole world's unbellel, Ono eonl l&jf&JDllt the lleeh of all mankind " P G DR, 'l'A.lllBLllN, HYSICIAN, SURGEON tLnd .Acc9ucHEUR. Office :-Silver Street, Bowmanv1lle. . 7 Regenerative Medicine Is composed of the .genuine Honduraa Sarsaparilla, with Yellow Dock, Stil· lingia, the Iodides of Potassium and Iron, and other ingredients of great potency1 carefully lllld scientifically compounaed. Its formula ls generally known to the medical profession, and the best physiolans constantly prescribe AYER'S BJJlBAPARILLA. D:r, A. BEITH, RADUATE OF THE TORON'l'O UNIVER Sl'l'Y Physician, Surgeon, &c. Office King Street. MORRIS' BLOCK, Bowmanville_ L J, w. JleLa.ugblln, M. B., ICEN'rIA'l'E OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE ot Physician!:! a.nd member of the Roya.I College of Surgeons, Edlnhuri;th. . Oftloe; MORRIS' BrlOCK Klng-st.,Bowma.n!!}e. Dll. J. (). MlftHELL, EMBER OF COJ,LEGE OF PHYSICIANs and Surgeons, Ontario, Coroner, etc. Ofll.ce and Residence, Ennlskilleu. U. as an Absolute Cure For all diseases caused by the vitiation of the blood. It is concentrated to the high~ est practicable degree, tar beyond any other preparation for which like etrectll are claimed, and is therefore the cheapest, as well as the best blood purlfytng medicine, In tho world. M Johll Ieltll Galbraith, ARRISTE R, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC, &.c. Oftlce-Bounaall'B Bloc,k King Street, Bowmanville. Money to lend, B Ayer's Sarsaparilla PR;itPARE.D DY D, BIJJlKE SIMPSON, ARRISTElt, SOLICITOR &o., MOPlUs BLOCK, up eta.Ire, King Street, Bowman Tt.Ue. Solicitor tor the Ontario Bank. Prlvat.e llloae71 loaned u.t th11 lowest rates, B R ./Jr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Ma11. [Analytical Chemtsts.] Bold by all Druggists : price $1; elx bottles for $ri. &OBERT AllltlOlJB., EGU:!TRAR, WEST DURHAM ISSUER of Marri&&'e Licenees, BarrleteT and .A.ttor llJ' at La.w and Solioitor in Ohe.noery. Money hned on Real Esta.te, Offioe on King street ' 8owmanville. .... T. PlllLLll"S y Cheap Life Insurance. Insure in the Confederr.tion Life Asso· ciat10n. It is cheaper tha.11 the Cana.diaa Mutual Aid, A. 0. U . W. or any pass a· round your he.t instit ution, as the follow· iug examples will prove: Thos. McChmg bas been insured eince 1872 for$2,000a.nd the last five years it only cost him $2.65 per annum on each $1, 000 to ineure. John McClung insured at the same time for the same amount and it only cost him $1. 74 per a.unnm on each $1,000 to insure, he being a little younger. We certify the above to be correct. Thoe. McClung, John McClung. THOS. BINGHAM, Agent. ICENSED AUCTIONEER for the Count ot Durhem, Sales.Pro1Dptly attended. L Address-Hampton P, 0. 59, IL lllJT()Dll591!1. Money to Lend: on reaeonab!e terms, A<1dresS Cartwright, Ont. · 4.72 GOOD WIFE GUARANTEED TO every man wbo bu vs hie Licenee from HENRY SYLVESTER. Enniekillen. HUGRES. -Liocnsed Auctioneer ' OHN Valuator and Arbitrlltor. Flre and Lit ' J . nsurauce, Notes and Accounts Collected. Wlded to promotly and a& reasonable rates. Q.Addrcsa-Ewiiskillen P.O. AUCTIONEER, CONVEY AN LICENSED CER e.nd Commiseioner in B. R. Salee a t e A V W. ,'f. DUJKEY, i'll ....s ~ - 9 ETERINARY SURGEON, graduate ot the Ontario Veterinary College. Office and ReBidence, Nl!lwTONVlLLE, Ont. Will visit Orono every Tuesday. Ofllce hourS from 12 a. m. to 4 p. m., at Coultor's Hotel. Special attention paid to Surgery, 32-ly* Has received her new stock of 'l ~~ cf '~ M avtsH. GQ 0 D S ONEY ! MONEY !- The subscriber receives money on deposit tortheOnta.rlo M 8 Q N N ET S H ATS lfioa.n and Savings Company, and pays 6t the rate of o.nd per cent. No not10e ot ' !~res t and invites the Ladies of Bow'll d . . . l] manv1 e an : v1c.m1ty to ca and see her Pattern and &S$Ortment of a.ctlvity. If unaUended to, and friendly death do('ll not step in ~ .av11 from a. greatPROF, W. WllLSON, EACHER OF PIANO, ORGAN AND l!ITORE :- Seeond Doo:rweu of William· er calamity,· insanity wind· up the history. SINGING. Terms: For beginners $6; ror To the reflecting, we 1uggest a fact which advanced pupils, $10 for quarter of twelve Butehe:r Stan ~eseons. Residence at Mr_ Joseph Britta.In's disaipates the mystery which hangs around ' corner Liberty and Concession Street, Bow "ptesentlments. ' In or~inary cases, a. 11Jl.8,nville_ 51-tf. thing la not baptl"6d a1 a "preeentiment," Pianos Tuned and Repaired. 11ntil the coincidence of the fa.ct. SuperHAS REMOVl!iD :RER ·titlou1 minds, in which presontimentll ARTIES WISHING ·rHErnPIANOS mo + .;..i,.., no note of the countless Tuned or repaired canhaTe thorn attended 0 by leaving word at the DOMlNlON ORGAN impreeeiona tl'la.1; cert.&in thinga might take (Jo's OF~1c:e:, Bowmanvllle. A ftrst-clas man place, which did not. !IJ~etwards take pla.oe ; '!'J.OW l>einR in their molo '. to buildings formerly occupied by one euoh coincidence makes an impression So Do? Gentlemen oCFal!lh CODD & a.gr.inst a million non-ooncunents, withdrawal required. Aleo loans money on ·mOl'tgages at lowest rates. No commission 'Ol)ha.rged. W. F. ALLEN, Bowma.nville. 8-ly. 4 5 TR J M M I N G S T Mns. HUMPHREY co_ , P HARNE SS SHOP l·n, not so Cast. avewrittenthese few lines And all I have to eay~11.at you oa.n find me still a.t home, lam not gone a way. So all my kind old r r!end s ma.y oome, And all they oung ones, too, And get their garments nicely made In fashions that are new: lilhere old and young, dear friend~ may meet A welcome ll'reetinll. bv R. PEA·r.B: Sometimes a slight blow on the head has resulted in death, or, what is wone, in the She has now in stock everything permanent loss of rea.Hon, A; mere sora.tch the hr.nd, or a sliver in the foot, or a usually found in a well equipped on '(rain of dutt lodging in the eye, or the tin· HARNESS SHOP. lest fi ch-bone entering thejjwind-plpe, has proved fatal. Such fa.eta may lead us to accept the poet's statement, "The spider's MRS. HUMPHREY most attenuated thread i1 cord, ia cable, to ma.n's hold on life." But ther· is another cla.Ss of facts q uite ) u surprialng, that a.re different from these, .An iron: bar ha! been driven through th11 brain, with a considerable loss of bra.in sub eta.nee, and yet no perma.oent harm has come to body or;to mind. The fa.ct la, while a WlTU TEETH, W ITHOUT Tl&ETH. mere prick in a. particular part of the brain Is the best place in t own to buy Wakhes, (the medulla oblongata) may cause death, Clocks and Jewellery of all the newest Plt..A(JTJ(JAL DENTIST, designs. Before p urchasing give me a the great bulk of the br&in is exceedingly ?VER TWENTY YEARS E XPERIENCE, call and you will save money- we will not tolerant of many forms of injury, IWlt:ronsOxldeG1111 Administered for Palnles b e undei:sold by any small firm. Even the:, heart is much more tole.rant We Oucratton.s, carry a large stock of such goods as are than is generally thought. The physician OFFICJE lllC(JLIJNG'l!I BLO()JL usually kept in a first-class j ewellery store. may thrust his ~ fine instrument through it with safety. An insane woman songht to kill herself tby piercing it with a hairpin, and Eye Glasses we keep the beet in town, but whollyl failed of her purpose, although and ours is the only plaoe in town where the pin interfor ed with the natural movean Optometer is kept for fitting the sight ments of the heart. properly. You cannot be too careful A woman swallowed a pa.per of pi.as. The about your eye sight. pins traversed various organs and. tissues of the body, and yet she recovered from the local inflammation. HARNDEN, L. D.S., our stock is all new and of the latest A boy was brought to the hospital indesigns, and will be sold at low prices to sensible, and nearly dead from asphyxia. Graduate of the Royal College of Dental suit the times. Surgeons, Ontario. (want of breath). The doctor having run a OFFICE OVER DICKi:lON'S STORE. catheter down the wind-pipe, a piece of & OLD FILLING A SPECIALTY. chesnut was coughed up. The next day &to Work executed in the latest and most Watches, Clocks a nd Jewellery and all there was evidence that another piece was improvedst:rle of the Dental Art. fine work we ~ive the very best sa.t isfaclodged in another of the bronchial tubes. fl:B:TH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN, t ion_ We do all our o wn work and defy It was in1possible t o dislodge it, There the use of Nitrous Oxide Gas, without injury competition, to the patient. Ol d Gold and Silver taken in exchange. followed all the symptoms of acute con· sumption (pthisis) : high temperature, sweat l?artlcular attention pa.id to the regulation or OHILDREN'S TEETH . MAYNARD, T h e Jeweller ing, emaciat ion, copious expectoration of ,,._ALL WORK WARR.ANTED.--.. . Morris' B lock, Bowma.nville offensive matter, and a large cavity. Yet First Door East of Rue bottom Hause. ·The Body's Tolerance. His Annual Pass. DENTISTRY Call at the new premises. The Jeweller's, J. II. BRIIIACOMBE, In Spectacles c. In Silverware In Repairing The editor of the Ra.okvitle Scythe i1 a. smart m ..n. The other day while on bor.rd a. railway train he sat down beside a pMlllen· ger and, handing him a pr.per, said: "Here'11 a copy of my lut iuue." The passenger took \ihe paper and thanked the editor. "Do yon travel much over this ror.d ?" the editor aaked. "Not a. great deal." "You bet I do. They give me an annual pan, yon know. Nothing like having an annual I am con· etitutionally oppoaed to paying a railroad anything; ain't you ?" "vVelJ. I am not fond of paying, " "Say," said the editor, "I don't mind telling you a little something. I am rather ha.rd up to-day, and I'll sell you my pass for ten dollars." "Then what will you do?" "Oh, I'll get another one. I'll tell 'em I lost it, don't you see? Oh, I know how to work 'em. Takes a country newapaper m an for tha.t, eh?" continued the editor, laughing h11a.rtily. "l never saw a. railroa.d that I couldn't work. How far do you go ?' " All the way through." "Tha.t so? Now, sir, if you hr.d a pass like this yon ·would be fixed. What business are yon in r "I am th11 general superintendeii.t of this A chemical paradox- That Prussian blue road. Let me take that pass." At present, the editor of the Rackville should mr.ke tea green, In olden times warriors were proud to be Scythe has no annual pass. in the van. Now11oda.ys if a. man fights and NC? man can oarry a leather bed and look gets in the van he quickly calls on his riends to come and b r.il him out. graceful. What is the difference bet ween wea.therClerk (to Mr. Isaa.cstein in baok room)ing a storm in r. pleasure cr11oft and sitting " Mr, Isa.acstein, d er shentlema.ns who is carelessly-in a ship's boat? One ia yaoht: looking at dot beautiful $17 coat says he ing in a ! quall, and the other is squii.tting voa a clcrgymans." Mr. Isa.acsteln" Make dot shentlemens who vas a oler~y in a yawl "There's plenty of room at the bottom," man 20 per cend, discount off," Clerksaid the undertow, as it tried to yank the " Der ahentlemans sr.ys he vill give five toldude off his pins ; but · the dude hning lar for dot coat, und not a cent mor e," Mr, plenty of room at the top, decl ined with a Isaacstein- " Let him have dot coat, Jacob, but dond make no dieoonnt off," gurgle. .. -·- - A Frenchman hall pa.tented a process of ma.king butter by passing & current of electricity through milk, thus rendering the operation of churning unnecessary; a similar method is to be used for cheese making and to restore ancient butter to ih origillal sweet ness a.nd flavor. The missionaries of Uzlgay, in the equatorial lake region of Afrioa, report that the use of a. sort of beer m&de of bana.nu hu been used by them with excellent r11Sulu 1111 a. prophylactic r.ga.inat malarial fever, Owing, a.s they suppose, to its use they have enjoyed in that pestilent region the best of A prer.cher in Yonng11town, Ohio, having declii.redfrom hie pulpit-" on the authority health. The matter seems worthy of inves· of a prominent physician"-tha.t "no less ti~ation. The digestibility of variona meat and fish than sh ladill8 belonging to the best oirclea require his attendance every month . for foed11, as compared with beef, has been a1oer· tained to be as follows : That of beef being delirium tremens," the doctors have held a meeting, pronounced the atat.ement to be a.·umed at 100 ; veal, 96 ; mutton, 92 ; ahlck..en, (light meat) 87 ; chicken, (dark'. ridiculous; and demanded that the name of the "prominent physician" shall be given, meat) 84' ; 11almon, 92 ; m.ckorel, 86 ; haddock, 82 ; trout, 87 ; young lobster, 88 ; This the clergyman promiseB to do. large female lobster, 79 ; large male lobster, .An entirely new kind of bank uote, ·print· 69 ; freeh cod, ·72, Light meat iB generally ed in colors, inet""'d of the black and white more dlieatible than dark, and raw tha.n of the Br.nk: of England notes, is being pre- cooked. ps.red for IBSue by the Bank of Scotland. About ten milee ea.at of Denison city, in The chief novelty of the new note is in it. Gra.yson county, Texas, h,.s been ducovered oolora, which will, of oourse, make xeproduo· an enormous deposit of that rich and valutlon by photography impoeeible, and, it Is r.ble metal knowna.11 manganese. Two veinB believed, will prevent forgery. The paper have thus far been discovered. One vein la on which the bank note is printed is made eighteen inches thick, the other io:ar feei. by the Bame firm tha.t produces the Br.nk: of In the latter vein were also found the mott England note, beauiiful crystallized ore cf manganese, Thia The pla.oe of the Keeper of the Royal crysta.llized oie ls more valuable than the Tennis Court is vr.cant through the death black oxide, and is oa.lled mr.ngamite, of the Right Hon. W. Beresford, the la..t bolder of the sinecure, which is worth $6,000 Connnia.tion on Olive street: Young a year. For this pit\ance the Governor is Swell- " What ma.de you pull na when we expected to vbit the co11rt opce a year and were ori a little t ear la.et night and have ·ea that it still exists. A somewhat similar our nam011 put in the papers!" Policeman 1inecure ia the Governorshfo of Duck Pond -"Oh, I was simp\v unveiling a bust. Island, a. piece of g round about as large at That'· fa.ahiom1,bl11 nowadays." the 1usembly room in the Cooper Institute, created by the Merry Monarch, the Hlary 111 $7,500. A London pit.per ny1: ,, A tele gramfrom THE NEW Belgium, to the effect tha.t the dock 111.bor11111 on the Scheldt ha.ve consented to t h· erection of a grain elevator, reminds one that let1B .,hii.n 'sixty years eince' 1uch Ml exhibition of labor-saving machinery as that now being hold at Sou th Kensington would hii.ve beon impossible. If attempted, it would ba.ve been wrecked by an infuria.ted mob A good deal of enlightenment on the eubject of machinery and h:uid labor ha.1 taken plaoe Binoo then." Crinoline aeema to be exceedingly anolent. Hesiod, who wrote In th11 eighth aentury before Christ, mn11t have observed 110methin~ of the kind, for h& advises young men not to be led a.stray by certain womon of hla day who wor e their clothes puff11d < iut !iii behind. If dress lmpronra were actually All the "Raymond. " Shuttlo Mo.chinos !LI'e titted with the Patent worn by the Greek wemen of Hesiod's day lt la not improbr.ble thl.t they were also worn 200 yea.re earlier, and that Helen, 1111111111111111111111111111mm111111111111111111m when she fled with Paris tG troy, wore some CHAS. RAYMOND1 primitive kind of crinoline, MANUFACTURER S11.n Francisco oontinues one of the healthGUELPH, ONTARIO~ iest citi11s in the world, with an a.nnual " der.th rr.te of 19.68 per thousand, which ls lower than the death rate in th irteen foreign cltiea and eleven America.n cities 1eleoted for comparison- that ls to 1ay, of foreign cities, London, ·Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield; Leeds, Hull, Stockholm, Buenos Ayres, Dublin, Belfast, Berlin, Munich, and Hamburg ; and of American cities, New York, Boston, Pittaburg, Washington, St. Louis, New Orleana, ARE NOW OPEN. Charleston, Br.ltimore, Sa.va.nn.i.h, and Stand fonne:rI:r oeeupled by the Post omee, Richmond. JUNG STREET, The champion family for-elaborate names ::SC>~.A.JSrVZX..X..E. It is to be found near Ha.rdee, Ark. The father's name la Eliahr. 1 Shirley, his wife's The Ga.llery is first-claSB in a.11 its apname iB Hr.rriet Susannch Maria. Jane pointments, and furnished in a comfort Shirley, a.nd their oldeat daughter, 15 years able manner. There will be no poor work old, is called Anµ Elizabeth Dixie Shirley. allowed to leave the rooms, and these who favor me with a call can r ely on being Then comes B11njr.min K irby Smith General pleased Hardee Shirley, aged 13 ; Robert Enos .--.The insta.ntenous prooess only will Napoleon Bonii.pa.rte Lee W ilkes Booth be used for Photographs. Shirley, who is 9 yea.rs old; John Thomas · Oome in and see me. Emanur.l Forest Champion Gr.tewood Shirley is 7 years old, while Joseph Wheeler Zollicoffer Stonewall Jackson Sam H ildebrand Sterling Prince Shirley is 5 years old, The family ends with Mary V irginia South Cr.rolina. Florida Georgia Alabama Louisia.nr. Shirley,· who is 3 years old. · Surely it would be hard to beat this. --·- - RAYMOND Automatic Bobbin Winder PHOTOGRAPHY. ---HENRY'S New Photo Rooms R.H. HENRY. .. -·- - UNDERTAKING I ::S"Y- L EVI MORRIS. tfr I am fully prepared to attend Funerals on the shortest notice, at the lowest possible rates. Oe.akets and Burial Cases ready on short notice First-olass hearse on very moderate terms Shrouds and Coffins constantly on hand. Fon ral oards supplied at once. Furniture Shop&; how Rooms- Bcunsall'sNew Block. il furniture sold by m e is me.de by the U. C urniture Co. of Bowmanville. I do not bny_ slop furniture and represent it to have been made by the U. C. F. Co- of this town. Also agent for th e LT-QUOR TEA for this town a.nil vicinity. It is cheap a.nd as good as can be got in the market. A val.uable prize given with every pound.

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