.u-_ o WI“ NEE}? wonnï¬n romance to Kindsâ€":43 or People-Some «momma: Atoms or Kat-rem The Cleveland Micrcscopical Society re 1 P eeatly held their ï¬rst annual reception at ‘ therewiny room of the Board of Educa- tion. It was eminently anintelligen: crowd: and while the man there who stands round and obotru e way LI other: a 1m wish to look,thc boy who rays “0h, bnkee," when no one but himself can see the same thing at one time, and the inquisitive pL-r- r sons of both sexes who systematically ask what the objtct is. after havin: read it off . the ca 'es and looked at the accompany- ing crow , it was on the whole a discerning crowd and a careful one, betokcning a lively : and appreciative interest in science. onegentlrman: “I never expected such a. throng as this is. I don't think anybody did, but it shows what all this teaching in the schools is leading to. l'eopie are awak- ingtothe value of the microscope, and are 1 beginning tolearn something (i the won- ders of the invisible world which inicri scopy opens to us. I wish there were more time and space to show more subj :CLII, but i we cannot." A ve of the tables and the insufficiency of illnininv stion. the microscopes on the table, magnified an object about 3,000 diameters, but not with perfect satisfaction. It isprobable that non of the other in- strument attempted more than JUOdiam- eters. Sixty-four microscopes oi all sorts and sizes were there. ranging from the "Jumbo" of Dr. Layton, two inches and a half in heivht, to the magnificent instru- ment shown by Dr. A. Y. Moore. There wualsoa microrcopc of the last century exhibited. The list of :nbjccts is a long one, and it is especially hard to select any to describe, as they are all so interest- “! . . gl’ho first one worthy of mention was shown by Dr. W. B. Itenzer. It is the cir- culation of the blood in the web of a frog's foot. The unfortunate batiaehan was caught last October, and has been imprison ed ever since, being fed every two weeks on a piece of beafstca anoc'r as um As A PEA. The usual methods of keeping them still while being examined is to clilcroformthcni or inject curara hypodermiczilly, a South American poison, but this one was put under the influence of morphine very suc- cessfully. Professor John Bolton showed some very beautiful feathery crystals of gold and a tongue ofn whelk by polarizul light that. was quite well mounted. Dr. George C. Russel EllOW’ifl how the trichina coiled up in the muscle of man. Dr. Nodino bid a large number of sections of the human eye that were exceedineg in. toresting. Mr. II. C. Gaylord dealt a severe blow to the cause of temperance by the subject of his microscope, which was the organisms ï¬ltered from the water supply. There was a confused mass of all sorts oi wigqu tails and “whatucallunis.†which looked unap- pctizing enough, but a hope sprung up anew when it was known that they are nimble to live when the water has infused In it a little alcohol, or, in vulgar parlance, “has a fly in it." Mr. M. Roger's, who had the next table, confirmed his statement by showing the terrible Cyclops Quadricornis infesting Lake Erie, which dice happy when it is caughtin the watersupply. Mr. James Icil showed, some beautiful Polycistina minuto shells from B .rbndoc’s, each about as big as a dull pin point, and a tyre plate of400 diatoms, which cost the trifling sum of $60. blr. L. A. \Vilson exhibited some very finely mounted crystals of sugar and salicylic acid, by olarizcd light, obtaining some gor- geous c cots. The crystals of sugar are particularly hard to mount. Dr. Dayton had somo beautiful fcrnsliapcd crystals of copper and a number of other objects of interest, among which was one not of Fasoldt's microniotor rulings on glass. Those delicate lines are from 12,000 to 1-151,000 of an inch apart, and are cut by a. diamond planing tool, whose feed is regu~ lntcd bya micrometer screw, and although it is as yet impossible to ace tho fines lines, they arobelicved to be there. Dr. Allen Y. Moore had on exhibition nine microscopes with a varied assortment of subjects, the most interesting of which W88 'rlii‘. moon or .\ (‘oxuo sxxxr. so s'rained that the bloplusm of the cor- luscles is colored a brilliant green while the periphery is red. This process was first uscd by Dr. Moore. Another beautiful slide alien ed the fructiiication of isms. Dr. B. C. Parker had on his table a num- ber of preparations showing the bacteria in consumption and other diseases, and a speci- men of the charming little vermin, the Sir eopctis Hominid, which iiiibmlsiisclf in the. skin and causes what is known in circles where it flourishes as the itch. The bacilli in tnberculoris or consumption have a. pecu- lisr form from which they get their name, bacillus, in Latin meaning a stick or cane, and those look something like kuobbcd canes. They are invuri.-bly present in the blood and saliva o consuniptivus. Mr. C. M Voice, among nuny other in~ tori-sting things, showed it pigeon post lil'ii used in the siege of Paris. ’l‘licsc debt-zit films, containing wliolo newspspers, micro- scopic in their b-ticrs, w rc aunt by can-lo:- pigeons when it \vusiiiipossibo to get in or out of the besieged city during the Franco- I’rusdan war. When those were received they wcru thrown upon a screen by means of an oxy-bydrngcii llllcf‘u;c0pfl, rnd .VL'I'U read by the multitude. It is impossible to enuincratvull the re- maining subtle-ts, as they \v- re all iquully ‘ interesting, ut the exhibit of fluv. J».ch Ilalldeuiandscsjweial notice. .\ littfn ani- ninl cal ed the hydra was shown in watt-r with Other organisms on which it pnya. Both kinds, the voridis or green. and the fuses or brown, \vcrc exhibited. They look somewhat like a cuttlci‘iali. as they have a number of tentacles or arms set around the mouth, and they are Inccssllitly in motion. and seemd pinsessed of alums: iiiliiizlc elasticity as they stretch out after their ptvy, and the body of tho animd is now as Ilini as asboc string and now as round as a obe . It is all stomach. and can live just as we 1 wrong side out as right. li‘ one of Rheum: be cut off, it Will grow to be a pa. feet. complete hydra, and it inervaso‘s by budding. Dodging round like a drop of wateron a but slow was a little something which dodged the waving arms with the ut- most alacrity. but the bydm's elasticity has probably by this time bocn too much for it, and it is no more. This micr. scope wa-i quite a favorite from the first. because it was align, and many were the speculstmns, hazarded as to whether it enjoyed itself or not. At any rate the visitors cnjo) ell look at it. end it showed no symptoms of strange fright. It is to be hoped that the Micro- aeopleal Socieiycan be prevailinl upon in given reception oftencr than anuslly, as the public seemed to be very much interested in the subject. ....._........e.._ ASoutb African Editor. in announcing hb conversion to anti-vaccination views ob- aervu :â€"-"Srnall x here confines itself almost exclusively to the colored people, whose 6%“! of unitary arrangements is notorious. or one white man or woman who has died of the viscose, fifty of the ml- ored races have pezlihcd. My own opinion is coming to thisâ€"Cultivate cleanliness and regularity of life, and you may dispense with' vaccination." ‘ and all the risks I‘bivh everyoneaeoaacecsnpany it.w on nets fool or fanatic." Aeoopaf lire prune hens from the 11de was Iii-resided a few days since tntbe Prince of Wales at Sandring. ban. The birdsar;dtu beturnedintolbe royslpnaservu, in er to try an aceii~ watt-sinus. 'I‘batasu for mahogany red, tern colts, all brick eoloudglorea is on the wane. Said 3 highly magnifying power could I not be s own, owing to the constant tremor Dr. C. B. Parker, however, in one g .. ._..... l Too Nice for Real wins. The Philadelphia Times lately had the , following sensible, though not very new reâ€" fmarks : “The boys now grow ing up seem to ’L-r: too nice for real work, and they seek ' :eiticns as desks and bookvkepers and ' such light places. where they scan to care ‘ little for the pay so long as the work does not muestheir hair and soil their clothes.†"Eliot's so, and as true of Cmada as the States, but then, are the young fellows ex- clusively to blame for such a state of things? , Nat by a 1: ng way. On the contrary, they .c oftun vi-.-;iins to be pitied quite as ranch A fool.- to be condemned. In the first. place, ‘the education ihey are getting indis ' :hI-in for flirty. laborious toil. It lesdsthem - to think that they were born forsoinething ' letter. This may be be.- .nsc the education That maybe, but ithc fact is all the same. There is not an ;ambitious mechanic but wishes his son to r is bad and mm iwfcsome. lib??- n “ tidy bit of education," so that he {may earn his bread without sailing his Then mothers and >istcrs. heaven ; bless them ! are born ariatocrats, and have ’ n awful horror of the idea of son or brother lcf theirs being a “base mechanical " Their "onls‘ loathe the smell of swcit, and their v fingers. ieycs turn away with disgust. from grimy 'faces and horny hands, They blush for a boy that learns ii trade as if he had coni- united the unpardonable offence, and are sure to make nasty remarks about his low tastes and 111E311 ideas. W hen sweet-heart- ing time coiiici round it is the same thing. «What! take up with a mere carpenter or have a stinking blacksmith come to our parties}! That would be too much of ajokc! And so the mechanic is sent to Coventry and the bank~clcrk with almost no brains, the law clerk with no coppers, and the book-keeper with no prospects but of mean pinclicry, take the Cake. Cm any body wonder in such circumstances that boys crowd into the cleanly but. ill-paid and de- pendent callings, and leave the hard work and the solid foundation severely alone? Tncrii does. not. It is a pity that there should be such a state of feeling, but as there is lef the boys not be burdened with all the blame. Just look at the late calico ball. Everybody know: that a goodly num- ber of those who there ï¬gured as “ gentle. men of the lllth C ntury,†are hopelessly in nrrcar with their tailors, and that their landladics may think themselves fortunate if there are no overdue accounts. But what can the poor fellows do? If they tried any other role they would assuredly lose caste. Radiant, though non very sensible, beauty, would not contuiuc to rain smiles upon thch from carriage v. iiidows or In street promen- adcs. The “stony†stare would be immedi- atelv put in requisitim, and “socially†they would be “slain.†TRUTH is sorry for them, but till they get more back-bone, and their mothers, their sisters, their sweet-hearts, their cousins and their aunts, get more sense things will have to remain as they are, and the ornaincntalin the world's work- ers be preferred to the useful and indispens- ablc. Ladies! you understand? You are yourselves the great sinners in bringing men into competition with the other sex, for nice, easy businesses with clean surround- ings, and you thus secure that the weaker go to the wall, and men milliiicrs and masculine dealers in ribbons and feminine furbclows rule the roost. Sad! Of course it is sad, but again Tim'rii begs in fairness not to lay all the blame on the lily-livcred young men who will rather live cured her- ring-J, if sobe they can work with their coats on, than on roast be-ef and all the trimmings if they have to strip to the struggle like men, I'cople soon learn to prefer dabbling in margins lots and shares, in spools of cotton and lace - decked Chemises, to heaving the hammer or driving the ciiginc ;and why not, when all that they count fashion and respectability say unanimously flint this is exactly what cuglit to bc ?â€"’1'oronfo Trill/i. QM.â€" ; Bank Sharon as Investments. A great; many people are under the ini- prcsmon that one of the best; and safest ways for them to invest any loose cash they may ha] pen to possess is to put it; into bunk shares and live comfortably on tho divi- dends. Thorn never was a greater delusion. Ufall the plans for investing money, that of bank shares is about the most risky, and in the end will be found the most unsatisfac- tory. It is a great deal worse than putting the nccdful int) any single individual’s business of ordinary business capacity and asking him to take the management, for tlicsobank shares are regularly made the subjects of gambling†by those who think they l-{ll/O‘d' a thing or two, and are deter- mined in make money at the expense of their easy going and loss expert neighbors, while tnc usual managers are neither better business men than nine-tenths of all em- ployed on their owu account, noriii any way nearly so cautions. Then if the thing go to the bad, the shareholders are responsible to thc depositors for double their shares, wliilc iftbcy llflllil their money over to any man engaged in business in whose capacity they have confidence, if they lose the de- posit they lose no more. Let any poor‘fcl- low who has little business capacity just try to think how bunk shares are being made ducks and drake“ _of every dayâ€"bow at any time they may no up like rockets and come down like sticks, without the shareholders proper knowing anything about it. and they will think twice before they embark in such an unhealthy IIIV'PetlllCllb. } liver. day bank shares are being put in as collateral securities to this bank and that, with min per cent. of margin. A slight (lip with the inability of the speculatm' to keep the margin and the whole deposit is thrown on iln- market, and down go the shares of tlicbnnk, perhaps all round. In short. a l man to-duy may think he has 810.000. and IO-llllll‘l'flw be may have only $8,000, and next we: k perhaps not ihat, and all because rilllply the muikc: has been “benrcd†or “bulled,†as tho care may be, by the gum- lilt‘f‘a who make their living out of the “green 4 nus." A Celebrated bunk iiingnatc has laid it down as on axiom that people who don't “know-"should rest satisfied with iiiortgaycs and not meddle with bank shirts. Spoken as a perfect Daniel. andif single lzidilsand stupid, nnbusmcm-likciiicn with a litllu mom-y which they ain’t make to fructii'y by tlicirowii uvrrtions would only ginkc the hint. i‘ would lc all he better for 1 all concunul, Mirfgugrs may yield lower interest but they run safer every way, and it ma peor look out \\ 110‘) an investor g :tlllllli he has a valuable and permanent g ieprrs- 112.111“! of so much cash to 2 find some fine morning that it has per or suiiirthing \16:'?('. all very well, safe, honorable and all that, i . in bank shares, 1 but as things g-i, iin csting ; is about the riskicst business. 3 who knows that licdm-s not vkccp his ‘ wrath-1‘ vyc always open. had better give the \vhi-lc tying a wide berth, till as the {bunker aforesaid, may phrase it, be isa i little better “up to snuff." ._.- a-.. c.... l l Worldan recs. I l The story of a New York clergyman who was in lhc act of admiring a 320 dollar gold piece which he b:..l neeircd for a mating lice when a messenger finm thv groom arrived l to exchange i: for a small hill, reminds a (correspondent of an iccillcnt‘in the clerics. experience of the Rev. Christopher Corey. of la Grange County, Indiana. Several teenage, can very Cold day. that excel. ,lent man rode on horsebac‘ a distance of ‘xsix miles to perform :\ nurtiagc ceremony. ‘As he was about stirtin: for home, having 2 duly authorized the two hearts to beat as one, a coin. was plaer in his hand. He ,drop it Intel-is pocket and rode away. 3 \"hen he got born: he looked at it, and lo! E it was an old-fashioned copper CL’tIL The next morning the groom appeared at his 3400:. and having explained with CkhSithl" fable cmlnrrusincn: ow the annoying mis- 0 f handed the clergymanâ€"a quarter. I. e .W-d a..- _â€"-â€"â€"â€".. __ 5: The Home: lie Trifles! says that grain ' an: the but land cleaners known. It says thatcherd of 1,000 entirely clam! 500 arm of brush land in three years. Not a , vestige of undergrowth was left. ,, _ . ..,.._._.._.. blcn tnrizrd into :i im-rc pleas of waste pa- l b‘lllll-'|)"9|-‘l10(’lChild“!!!- ‘XIIIlill'g may ml The ma" . sight, acc;dcnta|ly overturned asniall wood- take had been made, look back the cent and l no Importance to sum: or im- 1 American Colonies. i l . -.. ....._-....._,_.. ____- .. .. Intellectual Precodty. One characteristic of the-ordinary boy is “1' am middle OI We eli'hlfl‘nlh Own"! l his want of what is called moral thoughtful- the colonies had indeed come to be a factor;- of immense importance in the ‘ , ness. He lives in simpleobedieneetoachool Pâ€-l“'~‘11 l traditions. These may compel him, at one world : if any proof ware needed, it 11 sfl’ord- in.th lo 53;“); in a pump“- jm‘uge. and ed by the tremendous struggle b.tween::o France and England for the poreeaiou of lat learning tbiel ngmc. persecute and beat all boys u 1:0 31-: slow At another school Xinh Amfllfl- Bill’- ‘Thile 0“? atitnuon l3 ' he may iegard dislike of the manly gauze of this fact upon the development of the re- sources of the mother count . We are so accustomed to think of Engnd as a domi‘ nant power in the modern world, and to see the record of her prowess shining so bril- liantly for so many generations back, that we are apt to forget how subordinate her position was in the sixteenth century com- pared with what it had become in the eight- eenth. The London of to dayâ€"a city of four million inhabitantsâ€"is twice as large as Paris ; but in Sir Walter Raleigh‘s time Parisâ€"a city of four hundred thousand in- habitantsâ€"was twice as large as London. And‘this "act serves to measure the change that has taken place in the relative weight 0: alie tuo nations. In the reign of Henry V'Ill., though the memory of Agincourt, but a century old, issunsn RESPECT For: ENGLAND from amilitary point of view, she was dis- distinctly rated as a second class power when compared with France or Spain or the Empire. In Elizabeth’s reign the victory over the Spanish Armada greatly raised her restige. During the evil days of the Stuarts ier power increased rapidly, though the foreign policy of these vile and detestable tyrants was such as to cover the name of England with shame before the world. But between the time of Cromwell and the time of the elder Pittâ€"between 1650 and 1750â€"- tlic growth of the physical we: of England was so prodigious as to malfg her indisput- ably the foremost of civilized nations. Now this prodigious growth of- the power of England between 1650 and 1750 was largely due to her commercial intercourse with the colonies she had planted in Ain- erica. Their influence on the “trade and manufacturis of EnJand had brenenormous. The exports to the colonies in 1775 were equal to the whole export trade of England, including the colonies, in tho ï¬rst year of the century; while the growth of individual settlement; may be estimated by that of Pennsylvania, which in 177:2 took in nearly ï¬fty times the amount of British imports which it consumed in 1704.†But the effects of this direct intercourse between England and the colonies, great as they were, were surpassed by the effects which the colonies wrought upon England through the planta- tions in the “'est Indies. “ Sugar, Mr. Speaker l†ciied \Villiam Pitt one day as he rose to address the House of Commons ; and as some frivolous members began to laugh. at this common plflLU exordinm, the great orator, after waiting a. moment, again cried, †Sugar I†in such portcntons tones that those who sat and listened FELT TIIEII‘. HEARTS Kxocx AGAINST 'riIi-zni RIBS, and were convinced, without any further parlcy, that sugar, rather than the sun, was the real erntre of the solar system. The philosophic historian who has come too late into the world to have listened to the e10- qucnce of the greatest of modern orators will nevertheless be quite ready to admit the supreme importance of the West India sugar trade during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. “ How great the im-, portaiicc of the plantations was to Europe in general may be judged of from the fact that at the time of the French Revolution France drew as much wealth from the single island of San Domingo as England drew from India, or Spain from Mexico and Peru.†It was estimated that every Englishman em- ployed in the plantations furnished work for fourpairs of hands at home ; so that, early in the eighteenth century, one-seventh of the entire population of England were do- pcndcnt upon the \Vest India trade, which occupied very much such a place in those days as the cotton and iron manufactures occupy in our own time. But this immense developemcnt of the \Vest India trade was rendered possible only by the agricultural dovelopcment of the North American colon- ies. 1n the course of the year the English West Indies DID NOT muss A sixoLE DAY's nixxnn; but the American colonies fed them, while they devoted all their energies to magnify- ing beyond precedent the lucrative commerce of England. So important did this com- merce become in its effects upon English society that it raised the commercial class to something like an equality with the great landed proprietors, gave support to the pol- itical doctrines of the Whigs, and during the long and beneficent ministry of Sir Robert Walpole quite transformed the general tone of English political thought. Throngh such a complicated network of circumstances did England, between the days of Cromwell and the days of I’itt, acquire commercial and maritime supremacy in the world. But for the American colonies no such resultcould have been wrought. But for them England could not have dictated the glorious treaty of 1763, or have become the mistress of the scasâ€"Joiix Fisxn, in IIarpcr's Mar/azure for ï¬lm]. â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"4‘--~â€"â€" Cliineso Showdneas. The vice of gambling has suclin strong hold upon the Chinese that they will play formoncy despite the best efforts of the police to suppress the games. lvcry time an arrest is made in the Chinese quarter for violation of the gambling law and a con- viction follows, the accused anl their friends watch the case closely to ascertain what evidence the officers secured, and in what manner an entrance into the gambling plncewus effected. This they do for the purpose of guarding in the future against surprise by the police. lfeccntlya case was dismissed against gamblers who were tried in one of the police courts, because the ofï¬cers had failed to discover the implements used in the game if chanceâ€"an indispen- sable link in the chain of evidence to so. cure a conviction. The Chinese having ob- tained knowledge of this point in their favor. at once set themselves to devise means to have the evidence put out of the way when officers enter the promiies. In this way they have been very successful, for witliina few weeks Sergeant Birdsall and his men have raided a large number of gambling and lottery places, in every one I of which they found a number of Chinese, ii ho appear to be as innocent as a number of 7 Yesterday Ofï¬cer Travers. while assisting to raid a lottery shop in Jackson Street, in which were two Chinsmcn, but no evidence of a lottery in en bench, and as it struck the floor the top flew cff, diclcsing a shallow drawer, in l which Illlfl been stored lottery tickets, Chinese ink, and brushes. The to ofktlie bench was so arranged that it could raised, the evidence thrown int) the drawer, the top replaced and futrnel by a sprin lock in such amanner that no one wool sus- pect that it could be raised. The officers then visited a number of other lottery shops and gambling places. and found in each a bunch titted up in the manner dcscribcd.~ Srm B‘amisco Call. Oequ Queer Insets out Lightning Bolt. The fierce 1i htning and thunder storm of Thursday night layed strange freaks in the residence of is. C. W. Jennings, of 5 Grceiieville. Tnc bolt struck on the roof makiu: a hole large enough for a man to leniva through, shattering some of the oak l rafters and shaking up the chimney so that 5 it will need extensive repaint. Prom theat~ l tie it made its way down between the plas- : tering and clapboard: without disturbing is lath until it reached the aink~pipe. when it , burst through the clapboardsnear the . It followed the water-pipe under ground until i it reached the main in the street and shat- tered it. The occupants of the room direct- ,ly under tlieroofwherethe ï¬rst entrance was 5 made were unaware that the bolt had struck the house until the rain which entered throocn the hole admonished them that Tmetfiing was wmog.â€"-Nnr London (Coaa.) )ay. socialist, ideas of these sorts are like measles, and that it is better to take tliemlearly and be done for ever. the boyish character which seems, at first sight, to make good the opinion that private education, at home, is the true method. all sorts of which lie about them in their infancy. I have known a little boy the of that miniature forest with fairies and a. kind of vision. for a season. ,rci'ei red protest against gs who ï¬ll trzeir studies with photographs of Greek frag- ments. casts, etchings by the newest etcher, ’ hits of china, Oriental rags, and very curious ,old brass candlestick; The “ challenge cup" soon passes away from the keeping of any house in a public scbcol where un- thorne is a popular and imitated character. But when we reach aesthetic boys, no out of the savage state into hobbledehoy~ ho.d. The bigger boys at public schools are often terribly “advanced,†and when they are not worshipping the sunflower they are vexing themselves with the riddle of the earth, evolution, ngnosticism, and all that kind of thing. what conservatives fondly deem them, and even cricket may, is is said, become too ab- sorbing a pursuit, but either or both are better than precocious freethinking and sac- riï¬ce on the altar of the BeautifuL A big boy who is tackling Hacckel or composing rirelais in playtime is doing himself no good, and is worse than useless to the society of which he is a member. are the most ardent of hero-worshippers, either despise him or they allow him to ad- dress them in chansons raj/aux, and respond with treblcs in triofefx. many boys leave school, pass three years or four at the universities. and go backas masters to the fellows are still pupils. very young masters, perhaps, that “ ad- vanced†speculations and tastes get into the schools, wncre, however excellent in their» selves, they are raiher out of lace. Indeed, the very young, though nsna ly earnest in his work, must be a sage indeed if he can avoid talking problems that interest him, and so forcing their minds into precocious attitudes. advantage of Eton boys used to be, perhaps is still, that they came up to' college abso- lutely destitute of "ideas," intellect: were quite fallow, and they made astonishing pro~ giess when they Latin verses may not be The small boys, who At present a great place where some of their old school- It is through these to the elder boys about the The bent their fresh and un- wenried minds to study. lot too many boys now leave school with settled opinions derived from the very latest thing out. from the newest German pessimist or American It may, 1i )wever. be argued that There is a curious fact in Before they go into the school life, many little fellows of nine, or so, are extremely org-incl, imaginative, and almost poetical. They are fond of books, fond of nature, and, if you can win their conï¬dence, will tell you pretty thoughts and fancies who liked to lie on grass and to people the alleys and glades dwarfs, whom he seemed actua'ly to see in But he went to school, be instantly won the hundred yards race for boys under twelve, and he came back a young barbarian, interested in “ the theory of touch" (at football), curious in the art of bowling, and no more capable than you or I of seeing fairies in a green meadow. was caught up into the air of the boy’s He world. and his imagination was in abcyancc This is a. common enough thing, and rather a melancholy spectacle to behold. One is tempted to believe that school causes the loss of a good deal of euius, and that the small boys who leave omo poets, and come back barbarians, have been wasted. But, on the other band, if they had been kept at home and encouraged, the chances are that they would have blos- somed into infant phenomena and nothing better. - Tho awful infancy of Mr. John Stuart Mill is nistanding warning.â€"-O’ornhi11 Alagazinc. H.Oâ€"-o Preservation of Yeast by Cold. It has already been shown by some experi- ments of Dr. Lintuer‘s that yeast; may be preserved, and yet retain its full vitality by eing frozen. A practical conï¬rmation of this on a large scale has just been obtained by H. Von Plunitz. A quantiy of yeast. which had been badly packed, was consigned to him, and on arrival, during some very severe weather, was found to be completely frozen. The solid block of yeast was broken to pieces by aid of a chisel and hammer, and crushed toa power under a mullet; i‘. was then mixed with water, and when the yeast had deposited, the ice which came to the surface was removed. yielded very good result, and yeast derived from it was in use for several months with- out sliowin the slightest signs of degener- ation. Alt ougli thcso‘resnlts fully conï¬rm- ed the view that ycast is not injured by extreme cold, the same observer made a fur- ther experiment; he submitted a quantity of well-washed yeast to intense cold, and having frozen it into a solid mass, he kept it for four weeks at a temperature just below freezing. This yeast, on being used, gave equally good results. The experiments here to were with " bottom " fer- mentation yeast, but there is no reason to suppose‘ but that similar results would be ob- tained with †top †yeast. . ._______ An old butcher way out in Missouri, “'itli neuralgia he suffered like fury, St. Jacobs Oil banished The pain which all vanishedâ€"- And prevented a coroner's jury. A cianky old man named Blake, Says St. Jacobs Oil “takes the cake,†He gave it one test. And says its the best, Cure in the world for backache. __._ Tu“... . w“- _...._._ ._.. A bill has been introduced into the l‘ciiii- sylvania Legislature preventing the per- sonation of Jesus Christ in theatrical per- formances, A F1130 Hit. When the proprietors of 'Burdock Blood Bitters put this renowned medicine on the market, they hit it exsctly. They hit dyspepsia, indigestion, and the liver and kidney complaints a hard blow, from which they will nevsr recover. (19) The man who has the faculty of shooting off loud ovations full of emptiness is like the man who an s of a song, “ I don't know the words, but ‘ve got the air." i'IAi-i'ixizss has been said to consist of " unre- penth pleasure." and if thls be true. can It be truihfu lysuid the repentance always comes toolsth We can mention In this connection the case of many thousands who were for long years sufferers from corns. and who were in. duct-cl louse that great corn cure, Putnam's I’ailms Corn Extractor. and with the usual satisfactory results-rapidity of action. abso lute absence of pain. ands radical cure. 1n- rest In Putnam s Corn Extractor. N. C. I’ol- son 5:. (30.. Prop's, Kingston. Ont. It. is said thntold Falher Time is bald- headed so that lie can‘tbetaken by the forelock. He is the fellow who acythes for more worlds to conquer. . Prom Mr. .\'.1£.'Paw11ng. one of the largest Fruit Grower-s in the Count of Lincoln: Loutb. A I. 29, 1881.1. Sothe d. .. 8t. Catt» as. out. Dear sunâ€"1 am much eased tobo able to inform yonof the marked Improvement in the condition of in wife since she has used the " lwenmallne.‘ 'or upwards of font years she has been unable to leave her chair without aaduwce: the atcr part of the time her feet andl be have been much'distorted and most powerless. while her sufferings from pale have been constant. frequently ex- ernclaliny. Four bottles of sour tlon have driven away the pain. rest sleep and by reducing the swelling about her jofutahave so much improved the action of her olnta that abecan nowfeedhenellstthe tabs. and he carried from room to room without suturing pain. Thebeae-flltohcrhasbeon wonderful: andsbould lteeasenow. I should still feel that a granulation rests upon in for your kind- ness In this relief within our reach. I hope. however. to ï¬nd even er ruulu from the use of the remedy can truly. N. 11. PAWLL‘N'G. I the spring months, with no real beneï¬t. of that at Kincardinc, but in June had it o Afterwards the P yeast was used in the usual manner, and g RSV m1) WW STOUT. History of ma Case. In the autumn of 1859 an indolent. les’s swelling was observed by my friends . to be ra idly growing 0'1 the left side of in j neck. 0a the wholeln'l'lc‘ In the spring of' 1561 I applied to Dr. l Syniines, cf )Iealord (now dead), who blis- terui and devoid of pus. punctured it but pronounced it ' But upon a deep incision being made over half a pint of genuine pus was discharged. Immediately it healed, and b.gau slowly to grow again, and in p of 1863 1 bad it operated on by Dr. Chas E. Bernhardt, of Owen Sound, after which, a terrible inflammation having set in, i went to the hospital at Toronto. and was about a month under the care of that eminent surgeon, Dr. Aikens. [10 treated the swelling by free incisions, and by setons, which were continued for six In December year I wass sin under the care of Drs. Earnhardt an Allen Cameron for three months. It continued emptying and ï¬lling until March of 1864, when, it being closed over, 1 attended the Grammar School peratcd on by Drs. Moore and Martyn, then practising in that town. I had it opened that fall tincture of iodine for the . destroying the sac. I began teaching m who“ seam“ ho" hm‘mrdmev l“ Fab†eision : and. yield with graciousucss or oppose 1865. In about thric weeks it violently attacked me again, and I was advised to w A Sumner tor 3: Yeast-An Interesting 0‘ Snakes obesth 'I‘beloaof life in India due tothera venomous makes is almost incredib e. Yet consumption. which is as wily and fatal as the deadliut Indian reptile, is winding its coils around thousands of people while Sirâ€"I have to thank you for the lief received from your " Favorite Prescrip- tion." M y sickness had lasted seven years, one of which I was in bed. After taking one bottle I was able to be about the house. . successfully treated by World's Dispensary several times, and bad it ï¬lled \vithlhledical Association. Address, with stamp purpose or j to Dr. 1’. R.‘ Shovcr, of Straiford, \vlio,l with Dr. Hyde, opened the abscess and ap- plied iodine freely into the inner walls of the cavity, which destroyed the rotundin of the sac, but produced no other beneï¬t. In June, 1867, it inflamed again most violently, and I was under the care of Dr. S. Secord. of Kincsrdinc, for six months From that limo until 1873 it wasan open, unsightly Fore. I removed In Virgil, town- ship of Niagara, and taught during 1872, trying to labor, thoth under intense suffering. At Niagara I was so completel worn down that I consulted Dr. Wilson, who said Iic could only prescribe a nourish- ing and stimulating diet in order to meet the drain on the system. This kept me about, but offered no pcnnancntbcnefit. In 1873 I moved to Port Credit Public School, but after eighteen months resigned my charge, afterwards assuming charge of Glen Williams school, County llulton. In May, 1874, suffering terribly, I again went to Toronto to the same Dr. Aikens that had treated me in the general hospital in 1863. That summer and fall I was greatly afflicted, and suffered fearfnlly during the winter of 1874-5. The next summer I went to Dr. Mum", 0f Brampton. Ulldcl‘ great Slllll’vl‘ing- i injurious ; is, in fact, a natural liairresmi'cr, He treated me very skillfully and kindly, advising mo precisely as did Dr. “lilson of Niagara. January, 1876, I became hind master of the Bath school. During a nine montlis’ stay at W'ark- worth Dr. McRae and Dr. Goldsmith, of that village. both operated on me, and also did Dr. Mitchell. while I was attending college at London. After my ordination on the 18th of J unc, 1878, I volunteered to take the Bishop’s poorest mission, and through pain- ful trial laboured on under the providence of God. I now have three fairly good churches. Starting from nothing, I have made for myself a pleasant and desirable home. When I came to Wisrton in July 1878, I was again violently attacked and conï¬ned to bed for over two weeks under the care of Dr. Wiglo, who incised the abscess, and, by cars I did my work until the following spring, when his services were again no- ccssary, and again in December, 1879, Iwcnt to London and consulted Dr. Morchousc, and afterwards Dr. \Voodrnff. Although I had to work very hard that winter, I was under constant suffering. The abscess na- sumcd a cancerous appearance. I assisted the Bishop in March of 1879 at St. Juincs’ church. \Vcstminster, at which time my neck was completely covered with a. white cloth. I am rejoiced to say that I no longer need to cover my neck to hide my affliction, and fen no recurrence of the same. Dr. \Vicle, o \Viartou operated on me in May, 1880, and again in December if that year. I then went toLoudon, and on my return I was again attacked inorc violcntlytlian gver. I was almost on the verge of despair, having been treated by the best medical skill the country container! as the many eminent names previously mentioned will show. \Vlien I had exhausted the skilfnl resources of the regular profession, I then resorted to nearly all the patent medicines that pro- mised to cure scrofulous and blood diseases, but without any benefit whatever. When in an annual: helpless condition I tried Burdock Blood Bitters. I took it for about four months. and in that length of time used. several bottles internally, and having faith in its coinnion-sensc-likc rational romises, and believing that if it was a cor] alterative blood-purifying medicine that would act upon the glandular system when taken iiitcrnally,wby,1 reasoncd,would it not. by the power ofabsorption, excite the glandular system and tho secretions to a healthy action by direct application out- wardly, through the medium of the skin, and thus exert a double curative influence. I applied it freely externally with the most astonishing and gratifying results. Be- licviiigI had nude a singular and valuable discovery, 1 persevered in my cllorts, and thcy to my great joy were crowned with success, and for the first time for years 1 was able to dispense with surgical aid, which I firmly believe I shall never require again for the same disease. More than two years have elapsed since Iliavo had an attack of the disease, and I feel as well and safe now as if it had never affected me, wliicliafter more than twenty-three years of terrible suffering rooms almost like a inir- acle to relate. I have tried Burdock Blood Bitters for one of my children, who was nfllictcd with an ob- stinate humour of the blood. and whose face was covered with sores, now pcrfectl y smooth and clean; also my servant, treated for swell- ed neck, and many other cases in our parish to whom we have given and recommended the remedy. Such is our faith in its virtuts that I seldom go abroad without taking a small b .tlle for any suffei ing friend. Know- ing that it cured inc, and believing that it saved my life, I most earnestly and heartin ricommcnd it to suffering humanity, and would urge all who may be similarly afflict- cd to give it a trial. Believing it to be a true spceilic for all constitutional Scrofulous Blood Diseases, and unsurpassed as a raw healing reincd of great cleansing and curative power. I know of some who have died of my disease, and oncin the very neighborhood where 1 was attacked, who perhaps might, like me, have rejoiced in restoration toliealth badthcy been possessed of this invaluable remedy. In conclusion I beg to refer to the following well-known ies, who have known me personal! y in the various places where I have taught. school and labored in my mission work. Hoping that their names may still further substantiate my veracity, and render this atatementan encouraging message to many apoor suffering despairin morta , 1 am, faithfu yours. WILLIA STOUT. Parsonage, Wiarton, Ont. REFZKEKCI‘A. mï¬zgf’hau' School Trustees, \ irgil. John B. Sommerset, Inspector. Co. of l incoln. D. J. LleKinnon, Inspector, Brampton. Robt. Little, Inspector, Acton. Ont. 1-1. Scarlett, Inspector, Cobonrg. Robert Baird. Mayor of Kincaidinc, Ont. Benj. Freer, nighscioomuhu. Kincartlinc. ‘ Dr. Bradley, Barrie, County of Bruce. My Churchwarden. 11:. )IcNeilI, M. I'., Wiarton. no Bilbo of Huron, floderich. The Very v. Dean Boomer, lmdon, and others on application. y scientific discOvcry, rcpletc which interest, I i l l l (overy" must be used to clause the blood of the scrofulous impurities, for tubercular con- sumption is on y a form of scrofulons disease. “ Golden Medical Discoverv remedy for all forms of son: alous disease, or kings-evil, such as tumors, white swellings, fever sores, scrofulous som‘eyes, as well as for other blood and skin diseases. By drugv gists. . . ,v Y the victims are unconscion of its presence. odinewas freely applied during the | Y following winter, but swelling contiiiu ii to “In? qffdï¬jfto'thehisT:msl:tdfnlfpmi:= l football as the sin with which " heaven 3 ' “mm "an! “ "lubed "l ' “‘9 of “ larg° ° ‘3“? ‘1 l e "l “' ' c .Y ‘en 9? heads the count of mime-s." American wilderness, we must not forget to: mi, “out... seems a useful consider the equally immense reaction of .‘ thcimmmmly artistic beg“ Dr. R. V. Picnce's “Golden Medical “is.- :a sovereign Where boasting ends. there dignity bo- gins. Takcn Out of Bed. Dr. R. V. Prunes, Buffalo. 1'. Y.: Dear great re- Rcs tfully. AMANDA 1i. ENNIS, Fulton, Mich. That silence is one of the arts of conver- sation is allowed by Cicero himself, who says: “There is not only an art, but even an eloquence in it." Pits. Fits. Fits. or pamphlet, Buffalo, N. Y. Deliberate with caution, but act with de- with firmness. Pun-ins xxn Hrnons ox riix Faceâ€"In this condition of the skin, the Vimi-rrixs is the great remedy, as it acts directly upon his cruise. It cleanses and purities the alood. thereby causing lininours of all kinds to disappear. Slang never heard from the. lips of a bride “Don't give me away." Advertising Dodges. “’1: know of nothing so well calculated to put the reading public out of humor as to begin a very interesting account of some and just as the reader‘s mind is tliorouguly imbued with the subject, and u gigantic effort being made to gras ) it in all its bearings, away goes the aufhor in praise of some patent medicine or new-funglod hair renewer; for instance. C.\I:iiui.i.\'n, a deodorized extract of petroleum, as now im- proved and perfected, which, by the Way, is an article of genuine merit, and has real y done wonders in the hair producing way, as hundreds of certificates from well-known citizens ample testify. It is cleanly, and so pcnctrating that the disease is renc icd, and a. radical change for the better take: place almost iniimdiatcly. It icutains nothing made from petroleum, thoroughly deodor- izcd and‘delightfullylperfume .. It is sold by all dealers in drugs and medicines. at one dollar per bottle. Why do‘csa kiss raise the spii‘i's? Buâ€" causc it’s the cream of tn-tu. Take Your Choice. You can be weak, nervous, debilitated, and dcspoudciit, disqualified for work of head or hand, or you can enjoy a fair share of health and peace of mind. Burdock llood Bittcis \i'ill alleviate your misery and do you n world of good if you will per- severe in their use for a few weeks. (:11) Man, being essentially active, must find in activity his joy, as well as his beauty and glory; the labor, like everything else that is good, is its own reward. Gr..qu Rux Minis, Baltimore 00., Md. Messrs. KENNEDY R: Co. :â€"-'l‘lio Cnrboliiic is making young linir come on in bald head. PETER F. S EARER. This is a. fair sample of the certificates which are received daily at the Pittsburgh office. 31 It has just been ascertained that Nebraska justices have jurisdiction iiicivil CLHH where the value of the matter in controversy ilors not exceed $1.000. This is another surprise perpetrated by the late chislatiirc. Tho Fourth IIussars (British) ha twenty gentleman troopers who have juincd in iln: hope of working up a. commission. (Hier regiments contain a great many. Rheumatic Repollnnt, taken internally has excellent effect on the system has do making wonderful cni'cs of Rheumatism, Sciatica and Lumbago, to which hundreds testify. Sold at wholesale by Sn rdcn Evans d: Cm, K. Campbell d: Co., ant Huswcll it CO. Montreal. Lyman Bras. and Northrop it Lyman 'l‘oronto; Harrison Bros. and Arclidale “'ilson. llamilton, and B. A. Mitchell, London and by retail druggists at ‘25 cents per bottle or five for 8.100. “'Iicn crcdulity comes from the heart it does no harm to the intellect. Why Be Downcast? ’I'ruc, you may be iii a miserable cou- ditionwyou'may be weak, palliil, and ner- vous. You cannot sleep at night, nor enjoy your waking hours; yet, why lose heart? Get n bottle of Burdock Blood Bitters. It will restore you to health and peace ofmind. ‘23) There are 40,000 women in New York City who support themselves. nuluus' GENUINE I-:i.I:(:'rizw OIL. ems» Electricity falls the brain "le muscles: in a irarrl, 1' f in Nature sfood. The Electric Oll possesses all the qualities that it is possible to combine in n iiicdlclno. 3! thereby giving ltn wide range of application mann internal remedy for man and beast. The happiest results follow its use and In Nervous Diseases. such as Rheumatism, Nouralgln and kindred dlacascs.'ll Inns no euiinl. For Throat and Lung lilnriincs. Bowel (30in plrilniii, Etc" It is truly a marvel. The Oil. besides exciting nppctltc. promoting digestion and checking fermentation on the stomach. antidotes or counteracts the effect of uric acld. whlch pro- duces rheumatism by destroying the oxalate and phosphate of llmo In the bones, and the membranes Incloslng the joints. Price 2.3 cents per baffle. Hold by alldruu~ glsts. llï¬clceiric is not ElectricJ The difference between a ropcvwalker and a bmkvkccpcr is that a ropc-unlkcr takes a trial balance before he begins business, and the book-keeper afterwards. AJ‘. 122 as THE GREATEST lMPURTilillif. .t copy or [his lum- or rich paper Ii aft span-lied lo. and carefully plnrnl om Me. in fur- ofllre or rash and nrry rim- of II- :iilvr-rllsers. Therefore. In nun-run: an advertisement» In (life Journal. “In: u re:- f'lltllyvlhlll you will get r\nrll) who! ,u" w'rIlr for. no sure and mrnltrm Ilia! sou saw their silver-theme“ In lhls pnpr.. ll wIII pay you: ' THE GREAT GERMAN R E M E DY FOB PAIN. Relieves and cum IIHEUMATISM, Nournlgln. Sciatica, Lumbago. m ('IIACIIB. HEIDIOEETOOTHICHB, SURE man. onixsv. swxnnrsros. spasms. 5) Serene». can. my swarm. nuns», scans». am saw many sense If"! CHIS A BOTTLE. Holdbyall and Drum Dir loll language. mantles theatres. mashLVflMtN») “than. .4. Lisa. a... which m... m... WKT'GHMAKERS ! as a liver candy. and finds them very efï¬cacious. (2111.1. Ainswortli, 41 Vania Block, Indianapolis. Ind. (201 Before bur Anthea. see the "Whlteomh.’ made by A [CAN WATCH Tom. 00.. Waltbaln. Man- i FOR T11! KIWEYS, LIVER AND URINARY ORGANS THE BEST BLOOD PURIFIER. There ta only one was by which any its- easo'ean be cured. and that Is by removing the causeâ€"wherever It mu be. The great nedleal anther-isles of the any declare that nearly every dlsenso Is caused by deranged kidneys or liver. To restore these literature Is the cal way by which Iii-nun can be an- eal-ed. ere II where WARNLB‘S SAYS CURB has achieved Its great antatlan. It acts directly upon “in kldnuvr and liver and by lacing them In a beauty condition drives Iseaae and pain from the system. For all Kidney. Liven-and Urinary troubles; Ibr- the distressing disorders orwornenr nu- Ilalarla. and p slcal lnnblca generally, this great run has no mil. Beware of Inspectors. Imitallona an concoctions said (she net as good. For nla m ask for WABRBR’S SAPS DIABETES CUBE. For sale by all dealers. H. H. WARNER & 00.. Toronto, Ont" Rochester, inn; London. n3. Base brawl is always seasonuble with a country church choir. An Excellent Report. Hon. Jos. G. Goodridgo. of Brooklyn, N Y., writes: “I cannot express myself in sufï¬ciently praiscworthy terms of Burdock Blood Bitters which I have used for the past two years with great benefit.†('2‘.‘ Mr. J. 13. Dcronic has been appointed Chief Engineer of Public -Works in Quebec, in the room of Mr. I'iorrc Gnnvrcau, super- annuated on account of ill-health First Rate Evidence. “Often unable to attend business, being subject to serious disorder of the kidneys. After a long siege of sickness, tried llurv dock Blood Bitlcrs and was relieved by bill a bottle." Mr. ll. Turner, of Rochester, N. Y., takes the pains to write. (2-!) There arc clcvcn States in which women can vote for school directors. .Im ortnnt. When you \‘lSll. or cure Now Turk City. snvo Baggage Expressugo and Carriage lllro.und slop ut GRAND UNION llo'rizi.. opposlio (lrund Central Depot. 450 ele rant rooms. llliud up at it cost of one million ilol are, reduced lo 81 and upwards per day. European plnii. Elevator. Restaurant on pllcd With the best, Home care, stages an elevated railroads to all do- pols. Famlllcs can live better for loan money at thoGrnnd Union lloicl ilmu at any other first-class 110ch in the oily. " Is it a crime in be a woman?" asks Mrs. Blake. Not, We think, if she sincerely rc- pciits, asks to be forgiven. and promises not to be so again. CATAllltllâ€"A New Treatment whereby a Permanent Cui'c is effected in from one to three applications. free on receipt of stainp. A. ll. llixon d: Son, 305 King-st. \Vcst, Toronto, Cuiada. The modesty of certain ambitious purnons consists in becoming grout without making too much noise; it may bo said that they advance in the world on tiptoc. Practice. 1'7. BALTIMOIU’. Md.. Jun Mr. 11. 11. Stevens: licreloforc I burn been strong! ' opposed to all proprlclnrylncdlolncs, but, no! rule iiinn ox. (-i-ptlon to most rules. I feel that my )Il‘l'Jllllllfll against piitcnt iiicdlclncs has bad a fearful shock In the case of your Vlfflli’l‘lhlc and has been compelled to give way before the strong- crcri'dmru of facts. About two years nun l was induced togivou fuli'trlnl of your Yum-min as a detergent In some Simmons (Serolulouln) cases of hereditary trnnsiiilssluiimftended \vllli swelling of the lymphatic glands and joints. carious ulcerations of bones, flllfl conslll ulloiml sypbllltlc tuliii.&c.. nnd lnjusilccd feel [should be dcrcllct to dut)’ did 1 not testify lo llio grout value of your chollin‘. ll'iI/ioul m-rqiliun. I have found It on ndinlrublc adjunct In the re- moval of the above constitutional disturbances. 1111" now using it freely in my practice. I am aware that lnin rendering myself nnicndublu to the char uofunprofosslounlconduct In thus onl- raging! it: rules of medical ethics. in fostering a so‘cnllcd Qum'l: )llnll‘cfnr. This in sliiiply Ii'imll. Facts tell llll! story. and I again iism-rl lbul chcilno in ii vitliinblo adjunct In our filiifrri‘u. Mullen. If [his testimony in its value Willtll'll ouo iiiorcbnlllc, 1 shall foul rim! 1 lmvi- dono some poor siill'creruSiunnriiiiii beiiclll. Yours very lriily, JARVIS ll. \l’ll.(?UX. III. THE (215011“ MEDICINE. Ncwnmrkr-l. ()ni.. March 2!. 15%|. Mr. 11. 1t. Sicvcimâ€"ln-nr Sir: This is In l'l'lll- fy that I lmvu used your Yum-line rm- I'mirrr, and can cheerfully my It did Illul'l! gum] Him: the doctor's Iiwdlclnru or (my (illll‘l‘ ro flll'll)’ I used, and I would rucmiiincuvl it In l‘\ or) «in- troubled with Ullni'rr ur Carin-rum: Ilumw'. Yours truly. ’I “(15. “11.1.. Ytuum-i l lmrobycorlify llml 1 know Hm nlmvi- party and know this nUllIEIIII'nl lu bi- lllll'. JAM 1-94 l(1-.l.\l.\ .‘v’. In "rum. VI: GBTINE 15‘ THE BEST -‘ SPRING MEDICINE nggllns is Soul} All Druggists. ‘ 13; fair hatch guaranteed. Norway l'.0. _ _ ‘, AN’I’Rliâ€"LAIJII'ZH AND YOUNG MltN â€"ln oil or rounlry. to [like n lluhi woik ntl iclr own lollies:iiii)'uiiie I‘ll“ do li; wink sent by Illull:f,’0041 salary : lllsfunm: no (iber lion: no canvassing. .‘tllllfl‘l!l¢..\\'llll slump. ItUII’I‘ a ivI.\l.\IU.\‘:‘l. llos 2.1M lluhll)". Mum. AMBER. SUGAR DANE’ . MACHINERY. New Paragon School Desks. K BEATTY d' EOHE. Wlililnl-SD. 019T- Wlinrly Amber (.‘unu Hi-rtl imporiml from i] a floulhcrunlutcs. Solid for Catalogue and l'rbrcn ' ‘HE SUI I " "it‘ll-’3“. No other Newspaper published on lbls chic of the earth In bun bl an! read by m many nit-ii and women. ‘1 y! Because It in mini trlith'tolllnx and always Interesting. It In cverybody's newspaper. Subscription: lulu l! men). by mail. use. a month, or MIMI; 'car: hlrxnav in neural. .1." per year; Wee Iy (a "WE'le CONSUMPTION ! Asthma, Bronchitis. 1842. lugâ€"(lain and l'ugslor slrulini; 82.0) for ll. UIIEHNII‘UOII. pollen. l l l Together with diseases of the Bye. [tar and Run. successfully treated at me - Ontarlo Pulmonar Institute, 125 Church strut, ornate. our. 31. HILTON WIIJJALIE. NJ)" )I.lt.l'.:a'.0.. vitamin-nor. hgor system all, rudiid‘ahls bagftillqp'teg rm ' earn it cant: u maladies. Over 10.0w «sumac-ted durinzolhe ï¬llgpuulble’yun toeall personally for an exam write for list alQnestIonsaad a cuppa! new eaten! Treatise. Address ON'I‘M IO I'ULMOXAIKY INSTITUTE. 12-5 Church 31.. Toronto. Ontario. IIITE LEUHOIKN HUGS l-‘Ult ll.\'l’('ll- ND. Publisher, h'cw ‘i’urk Giff. (J Particulars and treatise A . .. Vegg‘cie ' I Am Now Using it Freely in My ‘FAGTSTELLâ€"THESTURY.’ a