WILDG ATS IN A EIGHT. A Duel Between Two Tone In the Presence oran Applaudlu; Female Levi Smalling a Spring Brook hunter, re- cently witnessed a remarkable ï¬ght between two male Wildcats in the woods of that sec :ion. “ I was stiil hunting for squirrels and rabbits," said Mr. Smalling, "when I heard a terrible yowling and snarling down in the ravine from where I was t‘amping through the woods. I knew at once that the noise was made by witdeats, for I had heard them scream at night many a time, and my ï¬rst thought was that a wildcat had been caught in a trap and was yelling from pain I listened for a minute, and then I heard two distinct voices. I hurried to the brink of a ledge. to look down into the ravine, and on my way it seemed as though I could hear three wildcats’ screaming, and I was not mistaken in this, as I soon found out. “ When I got where I could look down I saw what all the fuss was about. In an open space two he Wildcats were making the hair fly from one another's bodies,yelliog, scratch- ing. and biting, and every now.and then tumbling over each other and tearing up the leaves. On a limb close by to them saf. a she wildcat, with her back bumped up, and she was spitting and sisaing, and urging the he ones on. 1 made up my mind right away that the two toms were ï¬ghting over her, and I snj and the row more than anything I had ever seen in the woods. When the toms got tired of clawing one another they crouched on the ground a few feet apart and lashed their tails and howled, while the she one on the limb kept up a continual noise and lash- ed her tail, too. “ After each resting spell the toms rushed at one another again, and while they were ripping and roaring and making the blood fly, I clambsred down the ledge, stopping every time they stopped,‘ for fear they might hear me and either run away or make for me. It seemed to be nip and tuck be- tween them, for they were both big and strong, and each appeared bent on killing the other before he would give up. I want- cd to kill them both, and get their hides and the bounty money, and so I waited for a good shot at them. I had a charge of buckshot in my right barrel and a bullet in the left, and my intention was to send the flickshot at them when mixed in the next bouv. †They flow at one another again, but before I could reach the spot that I want- ed to got to. before 1 bits :d away the toms separated once more. By this time they were pretty well fought out, and for a few minutes all they did was to glare at one another, swing their tails hack and forth, and bowl. Tue she cat then sprang from her limb to another branch, giving a scream as she leaped, and in less than ten seconds the he ones dashed at each other and fought more furiously than ever, ï¬lling the woods with their yowls. “Then Ibanged away at the been with the charge of buckshct. One of the wild- cat! is ipcd into the air and fell down dead, and the other went howling into the bushes out of my sight. I saw that there was no use in trying to get another shot at him, and I sent the bullet at the she one and knocked her off the limb. I didn’t stir from the spot until I had chucked a charge into each barrel, and then I hurried down to see if I had killed the she one. She was dead enough, I was glad to ï¬nd out, and then I thought I would scorch for the live Tom, thinking that he might have been wounded by one of the buckshot. I found him after a little, and I guess he would have given me a pretty ,lively time of it if two of his legs hadn’t been broken. As it was, he showed tight and tried to tear my bootleg off, but I had the advantage cf him, and I shot him through the head.†â€"â€"-â€".~â€"â€"-â€"-â€"â€" Another Desert Disappearing. The Australian desert which was once sup‘ posed to cover the larger part of the in- terior of test ccntinent is going the way of all the other deserts that have failed to stand the test of exploration. J ust as the early explorers of the African coasts ï¬lled all the regions that had not been visited with uninhabitahle wastes, so a great part of in- ner Australia has been represented as utterly valneless to man. The faith in this inimitable desert was somewhat shaken in 1872, when Giles found Amadeus l. iko,‘200 milts long, at its geographical centre; and the fewrxplorers who have since visited inner AUSTIF'ULI have ‘ whittled all great. sections of the (insert and put forests and streams where only and was supposed to be. Sir Samuel Davenport, in an address at Adelaideashorttimc ago, said that f‘» arecent travels of Messrs. Lindsay and Tittl: :us had proven that inner Australia was by no means a Saharan waste-mud, though now unbukitcd, it was crpahle of supporting a large popula. tiou. They found not only wide regions co- vered with lu‘xpuriant grass, but also mineral deposits that are certain to attract attention. Almost in the geographical centre of the con- tinent Tictkons founded several large rivers whose head waters were on the northern slopes of mountain ranges. The rivers flow- ed north, nodes for as be traced them he found a great deal of large and valuable tim~ her along their banks. Lindsay's investigation between 18 ° and ‘24 ° south latitude resulted in some surpris- ing discoveries. In the McDonnell range of mountains he found garnets and rubies and abundant indications that mining in this re- gion for precious stones will be highly pro- ï¬table. On Tenuant‘s Creek he found gold- bearing quartz in abundance, and he brought home stories of almost boundless pasture' lands, of water in abundance, and of deep, bite lakes, one of which, some 3C0 miles north of Amadeus Lake, is of large and as yet unknown cxtent. His explorations cov- ered a region, extending several hundred miles north and south ; and both east and west of his route stretches a vast and whol- ly unknown regicn that elves promise of be- in equally inviting. ‘ glib:- great railroad which is to extend across the continent from north to south through the eastern part of the country once supposed to be a desert, will much facilitate the work of exploration ; and although inner Australia has been sadly neglected bytrav- ellers, it will not be many years before the last of her geographical secrets is revealed. This railroad is now in o ration for $60 iles north of Adelaide. rack laying is pushing steadily on and the line is growing southward also from Port Darwin, its north‘ urn terminus. An exploring party has just been sent car. by the Geographical Soniety of Australasia to more fully explore the re gion, of which our ï¬rst accounts have been so our xpectcdly gratifying. â€â€"4-“ D.) nc: allow yourself to lose temper, or to speak excitedly, l l g l BIEGULAB. PRBHOR ITIONS. 1 sun 'rwleo Saree Ills Life by Obeylnx‘ ll: ates-Ions lmpulses. A few minutes after the fall of the \Vill- ney building, while a crowd was gathering to view the ruins in which so many mangled and dead people lay, a stranger who was gazing at the wrecked structures from the opposite side of Wood street entered into conversation with a Pittsburg reporter. He said: “For about ï¬ve years on every week day. l have passed along that side of Wood street at about the hour this terrible disaster oc- curred. To-day I was on my way to Fifth; avenue, and had reached the Chamber of Commerce building when a sudden impulse; came upon me to take the other side of the} street. I crossed over, and before I reached; the sidewalk the crash came. Had I kept‘ along as I was going I would have been in front of the Weldin building just: in time to be crushed by bricks and falling timber,l I can no more account for the action which probably saved my life than you can ; IT simply felt that I must do it and Ida no: know that I felt even a premonition o dancer. l “Years ago I escaped being robbed and possibly murdered in a Way that was equally remarkable. At the time I was a collects: in the province of Ontario. One bitter cold winter evening I found myself in a small town about ï¬fty miles from Toronto with a large sum of money in my possession, Haw; ing determined to go to Toronto that night on the nine o'clock train, I telegraphed to the hotel where I usually stopped and asked that a room be reserved for me and a ï¬id put in it. When the train came along I got on the front of the smoking car, walked through the car, through the next one, then got 03 and walked to the telegraph ofï¬ce and sent another message to the Toronto hotel stating that I had changed my mind and was not coming that night. What made me do so was more than I could tell â€"the same indeï¬nable impulse that controll led me today had possession of me. i “I went back to the house where I had taken supper and remained there all night, The next morning I read in the Toronto papers of an assault and attempted robbery of a man who had arrived in that city on the train I was gotng to take but did not. The man was sandbaggad while on his way from the depot to the hotel, and from the dos;- cription given he must have been my exact counterpartâ€"dress, size, color of hair and even the cut of his whiskers, being like my own. The thugs had mistaken him for me and they knew I had money.†, l The Farmer‘s Pot, the Heathsn’s Dread. ‘ It is a remarkable fact that the ancient Jewish regulations respecting articles of diet, seems to have descended in some man‘- ner to barbarous or half civilized tribes and nations found in widely separated portionh of the globe. For example, while the Ameri- can farmer counts his riches by the number of his hogs, and fairly dotes upon his fatten- ing pigs, the Hottentot despises the scaven- A PABLB EOE rem! G TYNE. The Only Way They-6:; llamc'lhelr Bus- bnuds successfully. Men are naturally lees amiable and more intractable than women. The ï¬rst point, therefore, to secure a married woman‘s hap- piness after the holidays of the honeymoon are over, is that she should study carefully the peculiarities of her husband's temper. It is in the power of a wise and good woman to make a lamb of the greatest bear that ever wore whiskers ; while by a foolish treatment the process may be reversed and .i generous bearded creature, with all the capabilities of a lion, may end in being a bear or wolf. A wife must tread on her hus- band’s temper ï¬rst as cautiously as a pru- dent boy does upon recently formed ice. Only when she has learned where the slip- pery humor of her husband will bear, and where it will break, can she perform with safety those graceful evolutions by which a devoted wife achieves greater triumphs than ever Bonaparte did by his artillery. Wise old Plutarcb, descanting on the topic, very appropriately brings in the old fable of the traveler, whom Boreas, with his oi:- streperous blasts, tried to disrobe of his good greatcoat; but the result was quite otherwise; the more violently Boreas puffed his checks the more closely the man wrapped his coat about him. But what Boreas could not achieve with all his strength the sun did with a few slight touches of his genial beams. The man was so overcome by the softening influence that he flung both his cloak and tunic away. So let no woman foolishly at- tempt to gain her husband in a rough way what she can surely achieve by gentleness. -â€"-.-â€"â€"â€" A Plucky Sheriff. The late James Wood, ex-Sheriï¬' of Nel- son County, Kentucky, was a quiet, unas- su ning man, never thrusting himself into prominence, and singularly exact in the per- formance of his duties. He seldom carried arms, and did not seem to know what fear meant. I have known him at various times to tackle some of the hardest cases in Bards- town when no other man would dare to go near them. In those daysâ€"1858 to 1865â€" and, for that matter, long beforeâ€"there were a number of tough fellows, young and old, in Bardslown and vicinity. They were personally clever men, but were given to using too much red liquor, and when drunk were generally dangerous. They all had the extreme Southern idea of insult, honor, reparation, and all that, for which the Southern students at St. Joseph’s College were largely responsible, and, despite their manner of getting cn sprees and terrorizing the town, were as chivalric a lot of young men generally as you could ï¬nd: _It was with these that Old Jim had to deal occasion- ally, and he never failed to capture his man, and that without trouble. Among those who lived near town were several who were considered desperate characters. One of these was John Robin- son, who in a street ï¬ght, killed Bill Hardin, a grandson, I believe, old Ben Hardin, and was himself so badly :ut that one of his arms was crippled ever after. Robinson ger, and turns from the beast with loathing, used to come to town and get drunk, and to dine upon a monkey or an untreater. The Hindoo would as soon think of becominga cannibal as of eating swine’s flesh. It is stated that the Indian mutiny so frightful in its results, originated in a fear among the Sepoys that they were to be forced to eat pork. A lady had an amusing experience in India which illustrates the Hindoo sentiment on the subject of the pig. Arriving very late as a grand dinner party, she and her husband saw the ï¬rst course being carried in as they went down the ball. A row of "k itmagars" were drawnfup, waiting to follow the dish into the dining-room, and serve their respective employers ; and as the dish of ham was carried by, each man gravely and doliberateiy spat upon it 1 Needless to say, Mrs. Bâ€"and her lord waited for the second course.†‘ Improved Appearance- Dsntistâ€"“ What can I do for you, mad- ame 2" l Mrs. O Rihiliy (suddenly rioh)â€"“ I wan yrz to be afthcr pryin' the amalgam ï¬llin’t out 0' me back tooth an' puttin’ in qould. Since Dinnis got the construct on ther new acquedook ’tis not the expense we be mindin’ in any ways." Little Tom's Toothache. ‘ l Little 11m suffered with the toothache uni had Worn himself out crying. His grandpa told Tum to he a man and not cry any more. Tue little fellow looked tear- “1de towards his aunt for sympathy and sat : r “Grandpa'thinks this is a slow, soft toosache, but it’s a tonfonnded Buf’lo light- ning express toosache." 3 Poor Tom got lots of pity after his rc- markable deï¬nition of toothache. l -â€" l l A Suggestion. ‘ “ Why do you write so man verses, Mr. Smittherson 2’" said a oung la y to a youth who had long hair and squinty eyes. l “The answer is very simple, I assure yonl" “ \Vhat is it i" l “ I write verses tor a living." 1 “ Ah, but you should bear in mind that beautiful and most just of all maxims." l '~ What is that?" 1 " ‘ Live and let live.’ "â€"[ Merchant Tra- veller. ‘ The Matte-17;; the Mu‘e. ‘ A small Irish boy called "Tim" was accus- tomed to drive an old maiden lady to church each Sunday behind a mule which the old lady hired to Tim's father, But, for its “keep." Pat was a hard worker, and one day. during the harvest the mule succumbed and died. The following Sunday when the old lady inquired why the white horse was between the shafts instead of “Jenny," Tim quickly and truthfully replied: “Faith, but the old mule was too stiff to drive this morp- iug, ma’am." , l Toronto must confess her inferiori to London, Out, in the matter of snow 0 am- ing. In the smaller city the absurd by-la‘w which compels eve Citizen to do statute labor on the streets as been abolished, and the pavements are kept clean of show by ï¬fteen pioughs. A celebrated barrister retired from pric- tice was one day asked his sincere opinion of the law. " Why, the fact is," rejoined he, “ If any man were to claim the coat upon upon my back, and threaten my refusal with a lawsuit, he should certainly have it, lept, in defending my coat, I should lose my waist- coat also.†when in that condition always wanted to kill somebody. Nobody cared to interfere with him. I never saw but one man, aside from old Jim Wood, who had the nerve to stand up to Robinson, and that was Bill Rowan, son of Senator Rowan. 1 have seen him defy Robinson to do his worst, but J obn wouldn’t try anything but cursing. He knew that Bill was as game as he was. On one occasion, when John had been unusually drunk and had remained in town longer than usual, the good people became seriously alarmed lest he should kill somebody before he left. They wanted to have him put in jail, but no one could be found who would attempt the job. Old Jim Wood happened to be in town and some one appealed to him. The old fellowâ€"he was then about forty- ï¬ve, but gray-haired, and was called oldâ€" agreed to capture Ribiuson. He found him on the streetâ€"a street on which a score of mortal combats had taken placeâ€"walked up to the desperado and said:“ John, come with me." John didn’t: want to do it, but Wood notiï¬ed him that he had to go to jiil, and John gave up and marched along quiet- 1y as a lamb. In 1802 Bardstown was full of Federal sol- diers. Sn. Joseph’s College had been seized and converted into a hospitil, as were other buildings. The town was under military rule. Capt. Jonathan G:een, the “reformed gambler," was incommand,and his force con- sisted of a hundred or two convalescent sol- diers from the hospitils. One of these sol- diers, who was suffering from a wound in the head, which affected his mind in some de- gree. came out in town one day and took a drink or two, which made him wild. He got hold of an Enï¬eld rifle, loaded it, put a bayonet on it and deï¬ed everybody. Capt. Green sent the provost guard after him, some eight or ten strong, under a sergeant. The crazy soldier had created a terrible excitement on Main street and was flmrish- ing his gun in every direction. Whichever way he turned its muzzle there was a scatter- ing. The guard could not get near him. Every time it started towards him he is veiled his rifle and threatened to shoot,which he would have done. There must have been nearly two hundred‘jsoldiers besidesthe town people on the street. No one knew what to o. Suddenly some one said : “Here comes Old Jim Wood; he'll get him." To the as- tonishment of the guard, in fact, everybody else, the Sherif’f coolly walked up to the in- furiated man and laid hold of his rifle, say- ing: “You'd better give me that," took it away from him, and in less than two minutes he was a disarmed prisoner. Old Jim didn’t do anything but look at him either. That's the way he did everydody. There aredczsns of just such cases to his credit. When Nel- son County lost him she lost one of the best men in the county.†Every one knows that every locality has its peculiar tone in speech, observed only by those who live be and the district. Not the least marked in t at of Aberdeen. A Pals- ley man had removed to Aberdeen from his native town, the accent of which is well known. He had preceded his family by several weeks to secure a house and have things generally prepared for them. At last he was laddeued by the arrival of his wife and chi dren. On their way from the station the wife had bezn struck with the local accent, so different from what she thought the purer speech she had been used to, and when they were seated quietly in their new home she remarked to her husband â€"-“Did ye notice, William, what a queer tone thae Aberdeen folk hae when they speak ?" “ 'I'onc, wumman," replied her man, “ I wish ye had heard it when I cam' here sax weeks sync.†How Best Londoners Farm. Rev. Hugh Huluthof Mooeomin,gives an accrunt of the operations of the London Artisan colony, which owed its inception to a drawing rocm meetinï¬ at the residence of the Baroness Burdetti- outta. The colony consists of nineteen families, numbering in all over a hundred souls, most of whom are from the east end of London. The London Artisan colonists, Mr. Huleatt says, in tak ing up their homesteads at Moosomin, " did every man that was right in his mind," like the children of Israel; every man had been doing what was right in his own mini, and so there has been many mistakes and disappointments. This is the cuisf cause why ï¬ve out of the fourteen col- onists have turned aside from farm- ing to follow their own trades in Macao- min and other towns. This is how some of the parties commenced operations ; Numbers 2 and 3, heads of families; in the morning they commenced work, harnessed their oxen to the plough, but they would not move; the men thought the beasts were obstinate, and belubcred them most unmercifully, but it was no use ; from morning till mid-day men, oxen and plough remained in stem (110 until a neighboring farmer came to their help. He found the Londoners had so harnessed tho bullocks that they could not possibly move; he put them all right, showed tnem how to handle the plough and turn up the earth, and both these men are now average plough- men. the experiment of making artisans turn farmers, as a success. How Washington Women Dress- There is very little tine dressing among women in Washington. This statement will probably astonish people who for years have been reading glowing accounts of brilliant society events at the capital, but it is true. Some women here dress very elaborately and in many new dresscs, but these are few and are conspicuous among their associates. A person who has been reading long descrip- tions of dresses might look in vain for the gorgeous array that has been pictured tc them. About nine out of ten of the women seen at the evening receptions miy be iden- tiï¬ed from one time and another by their 03 the whole, M“ Huleatt 5P93k8 0‘ ercd foolish. not to any criminal. who theerful, healthy womanis sh ‘ ht of home, but through overexs. on in her e'fl’orts torniniiter to the happiness of the household, her health is often impaired, or weakness, or displacement brought on, mak- ing life miserable, and clouding an otherwise happy home with gloom. The thoughtful and tender husband, in such cases, should be intelligent enough to perceive the cause of such gloom and suffering, relieve the faithful wife from drudgery, and furnish her with that best of friends to women, Dr- Piercs's Favorite Prescription, now recogniz- ed and used in thousands of‘ homes as a oer~ cain cure for all those delicate aï¬iictions peculiar to the female sex: “ F worm: Pres- cription" is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists, l‘under a positive guar~ antee from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfaction in every case. or money will be refunded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle~wrapper, and faithfully carried out for many years. The style for collars this winter is high. A very fashionable strap has rolling points open wide in front. Prof. Huxley on the Morals of Health- Prof. Huxley has predicted that the time 9 will come when it Wlll be a reproach to be sick. When one friend meets another he will as soon ask “ Are you honest?" as “ Are you well 2 ' fora man will be consid- gets sick. Such a state of public feeling Will sometime be brought about. Certainly it is true that the morale of health are receiv- ing more and more attention. A greatly in- creasing number of people every year pre- vent the development of all blood, pulmon- ary and liver diseases. This is proved by the enormously increased use of Dr. Pierce's Golded Medic il Discovery, which nip: all such ailments in the bud. The broad puff scarf is still very fashion- able. “M in wants but little here below." This is particulary true of medicine, and he really needs}: very small amount, provided it be of the right kind. Dr. Picrce’s Pellets ï¬ll the bill in respect of size, and are stupendous in point of effectiveness. If you desire im- dresses, and towards the end of the season I medlï¬tï¬ relief from h€3d80hei “liver com- the eye is met by a draggled and disrepu- plaint," indigestion, and constipation, they table lot of gowns. that assemble at receptions here and the bad manners so often met with discourage ï¬ne dressing on the part of women of exper- ience, except on very select occasions. in is the habit of fashionable women, unless they are to be of the receiving party, to put on none but: their old evening gowns to attend a reception at the VVhito house. The poor. est dresses anywhere are to be seen in the East room during any of the large formal receptions. At a very large reception given by a prominent ofï¬cial the other evening I saw not less than half a dozen dishes of various sorts of refreshments dropped on the ï¬ior, the painted China crushed, and the oysters, ice cream, or salad spilt on the ladies’ dresses. There is always a satisfac- tion in such a case to feel that the dresses are not: very valuableâ€"[Washington Letter. Sikkim and Suakin. Sikkim and. Suakin both threaten to give the British forces and their allies more trou~ his in the immediate future. The Mahdi is about to send reinforcements to Osman Digna for a new attack on the English lines, while the refusal of the Thibetans to make any concessions to the Indian Government seems to render another campaign among the Himalayas necessary for the coming season. Again, the dangerous impetuosity of the Amoer of Afghanistan needs to be restrained. Flushed with his defeat of Ishak Khan, he proposes, it is said, to take steps against Russia as the suspected instigator of Ishak. This imprudence England would have to restrain, since, however well pleased with the Ameor’s ï¬delity to her, she could not permit him to go beyond his frontier and thereby give Russia an excuse for driv- ing him back and crossing in her turn. Al together, if the bursting of that “thunder cloud†which the British Secretary of War sees gathering over Europe should not come to pass during the present year, there will yet be some play of distant heat lightning for the British \Var Office to watcb.-'lN.Y Times. They Outwitted Him. The parish of Skene in Aberdeenshiro was at one time much given to illicit distsllation ; a great part of the land being boggy, was favours bio for the concealment of “ wee stills" and materials. A gauger named Gil- lespie, one of the strongest and most efficient cfli:ers of his time, was sent to the district for the purpose of rooting out the smugglers. On one o:casiou he got information from a neighbour that on a certain day a quantity of whiskey would be conveyed from the par- ish to Aberdeen, and that it would go by the highway. Accordingly Gillespie was early afoot and lay concealed near the four- mile house. But though he continued his weary watch through the whole day, he saw no sign of smugglers or whiskey. Disap- pointed, and suspicions that a trick bad call played on him, he was anno ed and made angry by a visit from his in ormant, who asked whether he had caught the smn - glsrs. He replied that he had not, thong he had watched all day. He was about to accuse the man of having made fun of him, when he said, “ Whether you saw the whis- key or not, it went past you." “ Went past me l H00 could it do that when I tell yo I was there the whole day 2" " Did ye notice a funeral go past ?" †A funeral ; yes, I saw a funeral.†“ Well, did ye see what was i' the cofï¬n 1" Putting it Mildly. A phlegmatic Dutchman, when dining at a restaurant, detected one of your rofes sional overcoat snatchers in the act 0 walk- ing 06' with his new garment, and stepping up to him as he was going out of the door be tapped him on the shoul er, saying : “ Perhaps you will just allow me to another cigar out of my coat pocket 1’" An Apt Pupil. Dï¬nrâ€""The trouble with you is that you don't take enough exorcise. Take more." Blinksâ€"“ Thanks. you 3" Doctorâ€"“ Two dollars. change. Much obliged, feel very well myself." B'inks-â€""You take'too much exercise, doctor. Take less. ,Two dollars, please." {New York Weekly. get How much do I owe Here is your lleighol I don't The immense crowds , will not fail you. Shower-proof coats are now all made of check goods. Most of them are made with a cape. Goff No More. Watson a cough drops are the best in the world for the throat and chest, for the voice unequalled. See that the letters B. At T. W. are stamped on each drop. Black pearls and black diam:nds are very popular as studs for evening wear. Consumption Surely Cured- To the Editor :â€" Please inform yo.. ~‘ readers that I have a positive rsmedyfor Lllr‘. above named disease. By its timely use thousands of ho eless cases have been permanently cured. shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have con- sumption if they will send me their E recs and P. 0. address. Rcsp'y, T.A. SLO M, M.C., 164 West Adelai 0 St., Toronto. Square-teed and highheeled shoes are now the most fashionable for street wear. A. Cure for Drunkenncss. The opium habit, depscmsnla, the morphine habit, nervous prostratlon caused by the use of tobacco, wakefulness,msntaldopreaslou,softening cf the brain. slim, premature old age, loss of vitality caused b over exertion of the brain, and insect natural siren from any cause whatever. Menâ€"young, old or inld- dle-agsdâ€"who are broken down from any at the above causes, or any cause not mentioned above, sea: vour address and 10 cents in stamp» for bubon's Treatise in book form, of Diseases of Man. Books sent sealed and secure from oboervsilon. Address I. V. Limos 47 Wellington street East. Toronto. Ont A.P. 440 WHY YOU SHOULD USE SCOTT’S EMULSION 01' COD LIVER OIL mm vaopnosnmras. It is Palatable as Milk. It is three times as eï¬icacious as plain Cod Liver Oil. It is far superior to all other so- called Emulsions. It is a perfect Emulsion, does not separate or change. It is wonderful as a. flesh producer. It is the best remedy for Consump- tion, Scrofula, Bronchitis, Wast- ing Diseases, Chronic Cough and Colds. Sold by all I)rugglsfs,!iac. and $1.00. ATE)!“ procn red. Patent Attorneys and experts: l-Zet’d 1867. llnnuld (I. Bldout a Con'l‘muu. and Tumors C‘Ultlfl): no lame] book the. Dru. MCMICRABL, No «3 idem 814 m NJ’. III BOILER INSPECTION and In"! lance Comps of um?‘ Consul ing Engineers an Solicitors of tens, 1‘ 0 I o l 'I‘ o . C. Ross. Chm engineer. A. nun. Body-Tress. UIICAL ISSTBUHEwaâ€"Bend for our Large Illust atod Catalogue of Band Instru- ments, Violins, Guitars, Flutes, etc., Ind all kinds of Trimmings Arron! for Punches and Dertts Plays. BUT LAND‘J MUSIC STORE, 37 King 8|. West. Torcnoo, Ont. I'BLPH Bl’SISPAS COLLEGE. Guelph. 0 .i-rho Filtn scholastic You began septum berl t. The system of edncitlon pursued is at once intellectual and eminently ractlpal, meeting in a very marked degree the rrqu remenucl thl- prcgrco- sive and commercial age Few, if ziny,of the gradu- ates. sacrum; to the showing of past results. need be long unemployed. To mention thelr training school is, ma rule. a purport to eligible and lucra- ilve situations. Address. I. XioCosuvcs. Principal. AUTOMATIC SAFETY ELEVATORS Pat. hydraulic hand and steam elevators. LEITCH 8r. TURNBULL Canadian Elevator “'orks. Peter and Queen street! HAMILTON. UNI. .._. ...-.._-..__.~. .._-â€"_~ Young Men SUFFERXNO from the meta of early nil habits, the result of ignorance and folly, who ï¬nd thermolu- weak, nerv origami exhausted; also illness-Anon um OLD 1!. also are broken down from that" a: or abuse or cue: work. anti ln advancml ll'- to.“ 3 consumes-2e: of youthful excess, send 10‘ and g,“ l. V. Luhon's Treatise on the Discuss 0 Ian. the book till he sent sealed to any source: OM no.2» or twoï¬c. s .. Adding, I. V. L 1305, Wellington 3% FL. Inwatoï¬nt s i, in mu», w, ..A ,~.« {'1 .9“ .:.:< ' a, ______Wr~ , A§WQW31M . «7 3...,- '