The For, commenting on the hoeiilitiee in Tonqu u end the Souden. exclaimed: " The Church hue smell cause to thank the greet western were for services in hehei! of religion en civiliution. When Alrics and Tonqnln ere pccifled we shell be at the point where we were hell 3 century ego." _- _- _____ I,“ -m- v-uvu-II' â€6500“. Thus as three daughters and one son by the manage. The domestic troubles of Prince Fred- erick Charles of Prussia and his indignant and jealous wife are stated by the Vienna Freie Press: to have been a topic of private conversation in Berlin for mars past. Two years ago the disturbance tween the Prince and his spouse assumed such an aggravated character that the Emperor washimseli forced to take a hand in it, and. under the plea of sending the Prince away on along journey through Oriental oouutries.to virtually banish him for a time from the Prussian oa ital. The Prince was not even permitte to return from his involuntary tour for the purpose otattending at the funeral of his aged father. Prince Charles. The Prince‘s wife, before marriage. was Duchess vcn Anhalt. She now lives in rigid retirement at Dessau. “I hed I talk with e doctor about this motto: a couple of months ago, and he told me that this insomnie, I think he called it, was getting to he a very common oom- lolnt. He wee utoniehod when I told 1m thot I met men on my poet who hnd come from New York to ï¬nd relief for their troubled brnine. a week. The business they transact during the day in all gone over with again at night by those active brains. and insomnia is the result. There was a failure down in Wall street not long ago. and I see by the papers that the man who went under is suffering from mental strain. I might have given the reporters something about that case, tor the man has been a night-walker for nearly a year. He can’t sleep. and on several occasions when I have met him at 2. 3 or 4 o’clock in the mornin he has complained about his head and o the continual wretchedness his business. stocks, bonds, and even his money caused him. When I heard it I thanked my lucky stars that I was a Brooklyn policeman at a thousand a year. “ Now from leerning a. lime of his his- tory I hue made it e point to look into this Iubjeot of night welking. and ii is astonieh~ ing she number cf men who allow the cares of business to Worry them so thee- sleep Is the furthest thing from their minds It night. I could point our not less forty men-s-some of ’em ere lawyers. others are in Well street and still others are merchantsâ€"i1 you were o_nly on post with me for “Yee.sir; bot-lore see. font and ï¬ve are nineâ€"yes, I ï¬rst saw him in 1875. end the": nine years ago. Changed? Why I've never seen x mm grow old no test .in all my life. When I ï¬rst met him he had been in business ï¬ve yeers. His hair was Neck and he couldn't have been more than 35 you-s old. I remember that‘s what I tho ht he was at the time. But now I ehon dn’t know him it I didn'e meet him nearly every week. Hie face has grown haggard end his hair and heard are as grey as a. rat. ï¬ing. I don‘t know whet it is. keeps me awake neerly every night. When I go to bed only in the evening I do nothing but roll end toes about. and when I retire at midnight or leter it's just the some. I don’t eleep more than one night a. week on an average, end so I come over toBroolllyn, where very few people know me. and walk about until I think I'm tired enough to drop 03 through exhaustion. Some nights I can go home after e couple of houre' well: and go to sleep and other nights it is im- possible to get A wink.’ " “ Thet mm who went eround the cor- ner. is he the same men?" naked the re- hunt. As he passed me very elowny I new that he was worried. I said to myself on he oroeeed the street : ‘ He's been oenght in some geme over in New York and the Me hove Booked him.’ Two nights otter- werde I met him again. He wee coming down the some etreet. He hadn’t been drinking. When I stopped him he looked 3 tether suddenly. end he gave me a nerd. tor I hed read his neme and found that he wee one of the partner- in e wholesale establishment on Broadway. over in the oit_y._he eeifl: ‘ My‘ businees or some- New bonnet unpo- no until and- 0134;. ‘Al_ 4 “ When I won on duty in the Fourth Pre- cinct seven] years ego I men 3 mm about 35 yam old one morning. He wu coming up Clinton avenue and I wns sanding at the ooxner at De Knlh. I paid no pnniou- hrnetontion to him. bus I do remember. now I think of h. than his head wee bent gotwudeo them his oh_in rested upon hie “ Brooklyn. shay say. is tha bod-room of New York. Well. to a. 00an extant ii is, but besides it u a midnight promenodo to: citizens who have little use for 3 bed- “ l wee thinking when I epoke of come- thing thet every policemen on night petrol must heve noticed in Brooklyn. I refer to the number of people who no seen under- ing ebont the city nt night. It hes been I Itudy to me ever eince I come on the dome, end a I said before it's one 0! those fling: I cen't coconut for. I've been on duty in thin city for neurly seventeen years. end in ï¬ve diï¬erent precincts. During thet time I‘ve endeevored to solve the ploblem of night-welken, but without lumen. Some pocnlieriï¬ee of thet class hve come under my notice as e policemen, end 1 will_tell you what I've leaned. who wu dilappouing in the duknm down the stress. The ofï¬cer tried the knob of I store door. wd than. in mower to u look_ot inqgigy,_oontjnneq: “but" preeino‘. where voice and hold upreuion not; and gentle we not otten needed. Yet vim-ll he was 3 mm to: whom the expreeeion. " Beuenh thil rude “WWI." elm. mlghl well be suited. He had culled the reporter's nttenï¬on to u my: eloulyumnï¬led- in 9 hegvy evereoet Indiv- II Right. (New York World.) “ It's one 01 then wings I m't moonlit hr." uld I Brooklyn polloomtna tow mu use. The oflioor was a “ll. blood- ï¬onldorod mun. pump. n ma. gun! in his manner. for he wu a patrolmun in a “I151!" nun-I'm... “I.--“ m“-.. -_A 1-4-: "MI-ovmh Now You om larder. Hoopâ€"lawn“. would ’mu who Wat the m I. VICTIMS OF INBOMNIA. The Royal Divorce. Poker. says Le Gaulois. is an American lm rtation. At the present epoch it is in- eta led everywhere in Paris. and itis begin- ning to threaten the eurremacy of baccarat. Amusingand exciting, t leaves snfllcient to chance, while allowing ample scope tot I- spiratlon and ï¬nesse. Taking long toleern and bein difï¬cult to know. the beginner may bed conraged ; but, when once it ie actï¬nired, even veteran baccarat playere ï¬n a “ palpitating delight " in the Intoxica- “nn H [In ï¬nal: of Au gem-In)†II “on " dciflu3h ct duvoiiéi'ï¬i." ,,i_ "Inn-“6 1over sentimental disappointments or for counting liemay hairs in her head, or amenting the créw's feet by her eyes. Every girl. whatever her social or pecuni- ary condition, is liable at some time in her own life to be thrown upon her own resources. and this emergency should be provided against. There is no good rea~ eon why girls should not at least have the reparation for doing something, even 1! {hey are never called u on to do it. Know- ledge of any sort is no urden.and may be- come very metal at any moment. A woman with no knowledge of business is at the mercy of every one with whom she deals. and we hear constantly of widows being cheated out of everything they possessed simply because they were obliged to con-‘ tide their business matters to some man whose oupidity made him take advantage of the confidence. â€"â€"~â€" â€"â€" - ..v- w ’ girls. But in nine cases out of ten a girl e education oeaaea when she leaves school. and she frequently graduates at 16. Then she sits down at home and waits for the happy manto come along. I! he never comes, or comes only to pan by, ehe eettleehereeltto old maidenhood with a sigh that she has missed a woman’s natural deetiny, but with no thought for the oppor- tunities of another sort which she has neglected, and which, had she cultivated them, might have given her a place among the busy been of lilo where she would have no time .for eighing ABA. “‘63....1...‘ .12-- __ Every wise lather. no matter what his circumstances, teaches his can some busi- ness by which he can earn a livelihood. The same principle should he applied)» m_l.. “â€"1. :_ ._2_ _ A sandâ€"e of women who followed their husbands and tor whom death was a release from a life of hunger. of sorrow. and of humiliation; with the suï¬erings of those thousands who yearly under- take to make their escape from Siberia and walk through the virgin forests, living on mushrooms and berries. and inspired with the hope of at least seeing again their native village and their kinsfolk? Who has told the less striking, but not less dra'matio, pains of those thousands who spin out an aimless life in the hamlets of the far north. and put an end totheir wearisome existeuoe by drownina in the nicer waters of the Yenisei? M. Maxi- moï¬ has tried. in his work on “Hard Labor and Enle." to raise a corner of the veil that oonoeals these suï¬erings ; but he has shown only a small corner of the dark picture. The whole remains and probably will remain unknown; its very features are obliterated day by day, leaving but a faint trace in the folk-lore and in the songs 1 of the exiles. and each decade brings its‘ new features. its new forms of misery for the ever-increasing number of exiles.â€" Prince Krapotkine in Nineteenth Century. Few of those who have endured the horrors of hard labor and exile in Siberia have committed to paper their sad ex- perience. The protopope Avvakum did. and his letters still feed the fanaticism of the raskolniks. The melancholy stories of the Menshikofl. the Do orouky. the Biron, and other exiles of h' rank have been transmitted to posterity by their sympa- thizers. Our young republican poet Ryleefl. before being hung in 1827. told in a beautiful poem. “ Vainarosky," the suï¬er- ings of a little Russian patriot. Several memoirs of the “Decembrists " (exiled for the insurrection of December 26th. 1825). and the poem of Nehrasofl’, “The Russian Women.†are still inspiring the young Russian hearts with love for the prosecuted and hate to the prosecutors. Dostoevsky has told in ' a remarkable psychological study of prison life his experience at the fortress of Omsk after 1848; and several Poles have described the martyrdom of their friends after the revolutions of 1831 and 1848. ' ‘ ‘ But. what are all these pains in comparison with the sutfer- ‘ings endured by half a million people. from the day when, chained to iron rods. they started from Moscow for a two or three years’ walk toward the mines of Trans- baikalia, until the day when. broken down by hard labor and privations. they died at a distance of ï¬ve thousand miles from their native villages. in a country whose scenery and customs were as stran e to them as its inhabitantsâ€"a strong. intelligent. but egotistic race! What are the suï¬erings of the few, in comparison with those of the thousands under the oat-o’-nine tails of the legendary monster. Rozguildeeï¬, whose name is still the horror of the Transbaika- lian villages ; with the pains of those who, like the Polish doctor. Bzokalsks and his companions. died under the seventh thouâ€" sand of red strokes for an' attempt to escape ; with the sufl‘erjngs_o_f_ tho_ss thou- __‘.a_ 8am“! I. Tildon has just tnmod 70. The Salon-go at the Blatant who on Deal to albedoâ€"An Awlul Bee-Id. In the Irish Land Court one week re- oently tour oetatea. situated in the counties 0! Tipperary, Dublin. Limerick and Mayo respectively. were oï¬ered for sale ; but not even a single bid was given for any 0! them. Pstriok Cluaoy, stuionmuter. Balin- gnno, wu ï¬red .3 on Jan. 24th, and nhot through the had. n he was waiting the {pg-ouch of 5 train from Tulsa to Lime- ‘ A very «vote solo flied over Belfast on Jon. 233d. doing you dnmnce. Lox-dun orCl .of Dublin. will pro- ?nliity be n imam!“ the M. P. vnonnoy n oath. and o Juntin MoOnnh (or The dam is nnnonnood of Colonel Blood Smith. oi Fodunoxo Home. Ho was LiontonnnI-Colonel of the 01m Militin. nnd n Sub-Loud Commissioner. Aldumm Puma Murphy It: won In High Sharia o! Kflkonny on Jun. 17th. “088088 08' BIBBBIA. latest th- lulu-d. â€elective Educlllon. Polar In Pam. " We’re down on how Itealln’," said the chief of the vigilance to “no homo thin! they were .bout to string up. “ and we mplomd to no you train board ' “h u." " I say, Mr. Painter, can you do a job for me to-dey ‘2" “ Certainly. certainly ; what is it ?" “ I went a sign painted.†' All right; what kind of a sign 7" “ A sign of rain.†[Exih dodging a. paint-pot] John du Bois. the Pennsylvania lumber king. is sold to be the richest man in that State. He is worth $14,000,000. and em: ploys 600 men in his lumber milk. The new cottage at Rockwood Asylum will be occupied by chronic patients. of whom it will accommodate sixty. If he is a bashful little thing. devote the ï¬rst two hours to remarks about the weather. hie ma, his pa. and other familiar subjects. This will resume him. When the dude begins to yawn and covers up an 1 immense gape with his jeweled hand, don’t ‘take the hint. but re lenish the ï¬re and turn down the gas. e will probably say. “ Oh. you shouldn’t." but recollect his action last car. When the old lady calls. “ it’s 10 0’0 ock.†don’t mind it; wait till she calls 11 and 12. Stay. in fact. until you hear the milkman rattling his cans. Ask for a match to light your cigar. linger at the door until his teeth begin to chatter, and make 'him think that he is our own and only. and go to see another fe low next evening. on value tome. Ives leid up with typhoid ever for over two months, and could get no relief until I tried your Hop Bitters. To those enflerin with debility or any one in feeble health, cordially recommend them. When you come to the house, cross the street and pass by; it will give him 3 momentary thrill of disappointment, and give you a chance to see if there is any other girl calling. ‘ When you ring the door-bell inquire innocently it the young gentlemen are in. Wear your hot into the parlor and hang it up on the pinno. Chew cloves assiduously. otherwise he may think you’ve been drink- ingt Girls may be able to proï¬t by a. few words of advice now, as there is only one year in four in which they are allowed to practice. Hence. leap year ï¬nds them scarcely prepared to " step in and win," so we will give a few hints as to how it should be done. First. ï¬x up nicely ; black your bootsâ€" be sure not to forget the heels. Some trouble will undoubtedly be experienced in putting on your collar and necktie, so you will need a good-sized lookingoglsss and a. ï¬re in the room. On your way to “ his " house speak to all the fellows you meet. He will see you from his window and be deeply interested. .V._....__ w." vv 0 ask a girl to dance just as if they were afraid of being laughed at. Yet we have never heard of a really well-mannered and graceful dancer being laughed at even by the most gawkish condemner of society pastimes. Perhaps if the fashion of slow dancing is kept up for a few years longer it will lead naturally to a revival of the grace which comes from carefully executed move~ ments. and the result will be seen in a greater polish of manners outside ballrooms as well as in thornâ€"London Graphic. ,V' _‘_..v_ ".u_ mu.- zephyrs on shrink up into elouohing ï¬gures when they pup on their dress-coats, and ehemble forward with ewkwegd_geite to ..L _ _:._I AA 3,, o ___ â€"-â€"â€"vv' vvulvu W {erfectly conveyed the poetry of motion? t is a rather ceremonious dance for these times. but a little cultivation of that ccurtli- ness of demeanor which ï¬rst gave rise to the term “ ball-room manners " would Iarhaps do some of our English youth no arm. Beau Nash would have been soandaliad at the style in which many of our young gentlemen bob their heads in- stead of bowing. and we doubt if the courteeys of our best-trained young ladies would pass muster before his critical eye. There is a cubbiehneos in some youngsters which make them ashamed to be graceful in department before ladies. They are graceful enough in their athletic sports,1 their riding, rowing and cricket. for in these pursuits grace is called “ form," but no form has yet been set up as a standard to be at- tained in hall-rooms. So we see young fellows who. are very Apollos with their .___L_.__ _ , } There has been a great improvement in the style of dancing in this country during the last three or four years. The fashion of mad galcps and waltzing which resemble the charges of football players has tempo- rarily gone out and the mice a mic temp: hu come back into favor. Shall we ever see a resurrection of the old minuet. iwhich so _-_Ar -AI, Gnnryalpprrogr Bog tween hgvp been 9 u-‘ __ _4 0. BTOETZEL, 688 Fulton treat, Chicago, Il A Vice-Beau lea-r7 About to Elam one 01 the Governor’s Luca. Acorrespondent of the New York Sun, writing about Bideau Hall, says: Two lovers are living there now. Lady Florence Anson. who came over with her brother. the Hon. Henry . Anson. the handeome tashion-plate-lcokinf aide. is engaged to wed Mr. Streatefle d. the other equally dainty and beautiful aids, and they are to be married in a few weeks in Ottawa. The Lady Florence is far prettier than Mrs. Langtry. 0! smaller form and ï¬ner features. She is not more than 20. and bubbles over with lan hing good humor. Her tine brown hair tel in a silken- cloud ‘npon her high white forehead, and her big :brown eyes are the eyes cl a lawn il- ‘luminated with intelligence and Inn. Her 'clothes have already been relerred to as ï¬tting her small and shapely form to a nicety. which is a wonder in one of her nationality. She sat in the Senator's gallery on the night of the great Paciï¬c Railway debate. laughing at the fun of a backwoods member, while yonng Streetc- fleld sat beside her. leaning overeoas to look into her eyes and least his afleotion. He is not as handsome as her brother. but then her brother is notin love, though he must be soon it the Sherbrooke street girls in Montreal mail him as earnestly as they openly assert that they intend to do. Lady B orenoe received an ovation as she passed hareheaded through the double line of members in the lobby as they were going to their wardrobes and she was passing to her sleigh. Every man bowed in willing homage to her charms, and she soattere pretty girlish smiles upon the to of their unconscious heads as she rustle her silks along the passage. Raul-h Fashion: in LOVIII AT IIDIAIJ HALL lug, Year lum- Ior Gil-ll. A New and Direct Line. via Seneca and Kenkakee. has recently been om...‘ between Newport News. Richmond, Cincinnati. Indianapolis and La Fayette; and Council Ilufle. It. Paul. Minneapolis and intermediate points. All Through Paeeengere carried on Fact lxpreee Trains. Ior more detailed information. see Mapeand Foidere. which may be obtainedme well ee 1ickete. at all principal Ticket Ofï¬ce. in the United States and Canada. or o! R-chéakiz I As It Is familiarly called. offers to travelers all the advantages and comforts Incldent to a smooth track. safe brldges. Unlon Depots at all connectlng polhts. Fast Express Tralns. composed of GOMMODIOUS. WELL VENTILATED. WELL HEATED. FINELV UPNOLSTEREO and ELEGANT DAY COACHES; a llne of the MOST MAGNIFICENT NORTON REOLININO GNAIR GARS ever built; PULLMAN'S latest deslgned and handsomest PALAGE SLEEPING GARS. and DINING GAR! that are acknowledged by press and people to be the FINEST RUN UPON ANV ROAD IN THE OOUNTRY. and In which superior meals are served to travelers at the low rate of SEVENTY-FIVE GENTS EAGN. THREE TRAINS each way between ONIGAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER. TWO TRAINS each way betweerl GNIGAGO and MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL. vla the Inmous ALBERT LEA ROUTE. By Its maln llne and branches It reaches Chloago. Jollet. Peoria. Ottawa. La Balls. Oeneseo. Mollne and Rock Island. In llllnols; Davenport. Muscatlne. Washlngton. Keokuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa. Falrfleld, Des Molnes. West leerty. Iowa Olty. Atlantlc, Avoca. Audubon, Harlan. Outhrle Center and Council Blufls. in Iowa; Oallatln, Trenton. Cameron and Kansas Clty, ln Mlssourl, and Leaven- worth and Atchlson In Kansas, and the 'hundreds of cltles. vlllages and towns lntermedlate. The “GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,†A- It I- n._.rnn__l_. -_n-.n _-‘__ A- ._-.,A.,,, ‘ ‘ ‘ _ 7 Being the Great Central Line. affords to travelers, by reason of its unrlvaled geo- graphical position. the shortest and best route between the East. Northeast and Southeast. and the West. Northwest and Southwest. it is literally and strictly true. that its connections are all of the princlpal lines 10 Ins-"I knew-a.â€" en... A..-..m_ -._.n LL- n---n_ CHICAGO, R_CCK ISLAND PACIFIC R'v Dalâ€"auAl‘Anâ€" -_AA- __ _ niataken (of diamonds. The shortest wills with the least verbi- age about them are the best. That 0! the Frenchman who went out fox-huntingin England for the ï¬rst time was short and to the point. When he came to the ï¬rst etiï¬ Jump. just as his horse was coming to it, he turned round in his saddle and shouted. “ Take notice, I do leave every- thing to my vile; The moat fashionable ornaments for the hair are oresoente, stars, sprays and combs otrRhiue oryejale. often so ï¬ne as to be ____ -_ _-_â€" unu- wu nun-y WIUIU VI". __ ,. " I, John Smith. leave all that I may die possessed of tomy wife, Mary Smith. and in the event of her dying before meto â€". Witneeeâ€". Signed John Smith. is quite sufï¬cient and will hold good in any court of law. Ilow to Make a Will. A will to be valid does not require to be long. All extraneous matter. such as “ In the name of God. amen." “ Being in sound health of mind and body." may be left out. U I Inlet. Rani.“ Inn..- .1] AL-L7 ~-AÂ¥ as, “ Medical science tells us that all the implements of tortureâ€"the chains,irous av. I ringsâ€"are done away with. But what has taken their place 7 Are not the straps, the cords, the muffs, the blinded rooms, the chairs. the cribs in daily use in our uylums ? Do not the insane suffer from the old spirit of tyranny and neglect? Do they not hear the contemptuous word, the cruel taunt. the insulting and evasive replies to civil questions ? Do not patients experience the ignorance of doctors and the neglect and abuse of attendants? Do not blows with the ï¬sts. with straps or with keys iorm the daily part of the unprotected life of many patients in our asylums who are unreasonable enough and sensible enough to ieel the cruelty of it all ? It was a treatment of punishments then it is a treatment of punishments to-day The system under which these asylums are governed is a system that makes but never cures ; a treatment contrary to science and common sense. and is an outrage on com- mon decency and. common humanity. and the patients have no protection from physi- oians who do not know a sane from an ‘inssne person ; no protection from cruelty. abuse and neglect.†‘tAt the conclusion of the paper. Mrs. M.’ Eugenia Berry, the Secretary. explained that Miss Brigham had been conï¬ned in an asylum. and that upon her release her. representations to the authorities of Massa- chusetts had been made the subject of an ‘ oflicial investigation which showed that the charges of mismanagement were exactly and entirely correctâ€"New York World. A land, Pints-inn. own I Pullout Tclb of II" Experts-co. At the lenular bi-monthly meeting of the Society for Promoting the Wellare of the Insane. in New York, a psper written by) Miss Mary A. Brigham was read in whic gshe said : “ 0: all diseases. the most mysterious. the most intricate and difï¬cult to treat. and at the same time which shows an alarming increase among all classes. is insanity. It demands and must receive that merit more in accord with the laws 0! humanity than has been accorded it. The history of means asylnms has been tor ages one long ghastly chapter of inhumanity and sickening brutality. and every investigation made within the past decade. when honestly conducted. has revealed a state of aï¬airs. especially in the asylnms of this country. which is a disgrace to our boasted Christian civrlization. wHo IS uuAcQumeEo WITHWTHE ca'ocnm'mv 6F 'rms couarrnvl sea av cxmammo nus MAP. THAT THE BRISTSLITI To 'l‘lll INSANI. Vice-Proï¬t t'Oon'l Manager, ((135 n . .7 Ti CHICAGO. 31:: 2mm 3mm». IFEICEâ€" 1mm nhnrr. woonvmn, om. Manufactured only at Professor BouowAfl Establishment, '18 New Oxford St. (““0533 Oxford St.)London. and sold at. ls. 1511.13.06“ 49. 611., 195., 2-28., and 3:15. ouch Box au'd Pot. and in Canada. t 36 cents, mceuts, and 81.50 cents, and the larger sizes in proportion. ‘ IS-S" C.\UTIO.\'.â€"-I have no Agent in the United States, not are my Medicines sold there. Pur- chasers should therefore look to the Label on tho Pots and Boxes. 1! the address is not 683 Oxford Street, London. they are spurious. I. 81'. JOHN Colds. Sore Threats. Bronchitis. am? all disorder. of tho Throat and Chest, as also Gout. Rheum“ ism. Scrotum, and every kind of Skin Disease. Manufactured ugly 95 _Professor Bouowtfl ,___, .â€"â€"vvâ€"v vunnv- vlu‘l ‘\ and stront :11. after every other mqaus mafia, 211151100088 will befound invaIunble In every household LID tpe cure of Open Sores. Hard Tumours. Increase the secretory powers o! the Liver; Ibrao. tho uurvoua system‘ and throw into "no circula- lion tho mrost Elements tor sustaining and mo- pairiug a (mum. Thousands of persons have testiï¬ed that b thajgyrsgnwueshey have 139011 restored to ban .34." yaqsmugwuunus, couuHs' cured forritsulf auglifigï¬ABiJï¬LERGIfIVI‘!iugâ€"hOâ€"lit tho world {or the a .eviagiou am) OFTU of most diseases to which humauuy is 110. xr. nu-ify, regulate and im rove the quality of o iluud. They assist mepdigeativo orgaur‘. clog“ 'Il\ WORM POWDERS. Worth their Weight in (we; lupinnï¬tohh. mum“- Pmnflu. I- u Info. am. sad “rectal Wotmmin ChildrenorAdulu. J 08. J -. CAVE, PROPRIETOR. 'rnjs INCQMI’AkzuiLE “mom: mm se- AND OINTMENT. SIGNAGE and. BOWLS, I. “UN" 00-"! T'k't i Pau’r M‘ MN -\ “AW.wa '9 WILL