DMnn l‘oo‘j‘ ' AN unpublllhou “at.†' L wrlsun immodlutoly 31hr Wuhuoo. coma to 1131:. in Borlin. The mush-J Wm“: “My child. the ï¬nest hula ha been to t. the moat glorioul victory sun' . calls will follow. lthlnk the oil-pane mail.- is now ngsin about an. ï¬lled. Ls Belle Alliance, the 19th only. I on: wrib no more. torItremblo in all In 3 long communioction to the French Accdcmy of Sciences. M. Poul Bert. a high onshority. notiï¬es to thogxcellcnoc of 8 men of chloroform vaporized in 100 'trcc ct sir u on anaesthetic. His ex n- mcnu were made on hnmm being: of th limbs. The exonion in too gross." men from 17 months upwards. The mix- ture is not disagreeable. Some rather like it. Ineeneihility resulted in 6 or 8 min. ates. and in one case was maintained 11» hours. There was no nausea. In a letter dealing With Land Law Rs- torm. Mr. John Bright expresses the belief that opinion has so far advanced on this question that the British Parliament will before long consent to changes which a tow ï¬oars ago men thogght almost Impossible. 0 tools satisï¬ed at in the main the owners of the soil will proï¬t by those changes not less than other classes of our Fnou a recent decision of the German Beiclngericht it appears thet snuff is to be considered an article of food. A taker of ennï¬ discovered that his none was colored blue by the use of a certain article. and chemical examination proved that the tobacco had been colored with nltramarihe Teetimony was pronght forward __to chew ohengea not lees than other classes or our populetion. " Some." he adds. “ mny be timiduwme mey doubt, but tnture years will prove flue wisdom of the changel we hove suggested. and which cannot now be long delnyed.†Lnsssrs, the Suez and Panama. Canal proprietor, hes a running account with sleep. takingtwenty-tour hours at a time. and at another none for ï¬ve or six nights. In travelling he gem into the ï¬rst oompart- ment at hand. and sits anywhere; it he ï¬nds an agreeable companion he talks. it not he folds his arms and goes to sleep, never waking until he reaches hie destina- tion. When he went down the other day to Cheenay, near Bordeaux,.he requested the guard to wake him lest he should go beyond. On a voyage from Marseilles to Alexandria he slept 107 hours out of the 430 of the voyage. and then not for some ah» this was in accordance with long- eatebliehed usage. but the judge regarded the mnnipuiation as an edulterstion and imposed a ï¬ne upon the manufacturer under_ ihe law prohibiting the adultoretion of foods, cto. raï¬â€™idit . Kt Bristol Aeeizes, a few years before in retirement. he was once quite :floored by his own hieroglyphioe and alter a delay of some minutes he turned for aid to the re rtere' 'box. “ ,Oen you gentle- men kind y waist me with a word here? I has not put in the vowels, and what I have got in my book looks as it the witness had said: ‘ Go and call the baby.’ " The witness had been referring to a policeman. which the judge had rendered " bobby." AxEngliah judge, the late Mr. Justice Byles, always took his notes of evidence in shorthand. and he was therefore enabled In 1842 there stood, and there is every reason tobelieve. still stands. at Voetiza, on the Gulf of Depento, Greece. an Oriental flue tree, whose girth was. in 1842. at ï¬ve eet from the g.round 37 feet. This tree. situated in the middle of the village, on a Fncu a rough draft of Prince Bismarck‘s Bill for insuring men against accidents and death. it appears that all the various em- ployers will be required to establish in- surance companies, and to pay the whole of the premiums on the lives and limbs of their workmen. in proportion to the wages earned b the latter. and to the danger tarifl’. hue one element in the previous Bill, which formed such a bone of conten- tion. had been droppedâ€"namely. part pay. ment by the btate o! the accident assur- ance premiums. with which the labor-givers or capitalists are now to be exclusively burdened. Should, however. any of the companiee (Genossenschalten) prove un- equal to their liabilities they may be aided. or even taken over by the State. grsduel slope. standing on a raised plet- torm of flat stones, evidently for protection to the roots, is e- striking object on entering the village, and eepeoislly noteworthy as existing in the deys o! Psnsaniss, the Greek historian. who. living in the second con- to . makes mention at it in his travels; on the tree must have been of considerable size and age at that time to have made it worthy of remsrk. its e, probably dating oonsiderebly_betore the hristisn ere, mak- in n more than 2 000 years old. It was in f vigor in 1842. The villagers hold it in high respect. Tncnmcu. newspapers in Germany hove (or some time been discussing the relative nine of olover grown in this country. The opinion letoly expressed by e former in on agriculture} eeeoo tion in Elbing. Eeet Prneeie. on the an jeot will beotintereet. Herr Bohwmn said that he had used Amerioen olovereeed for more then ten yam. end never noticed theâ€: suffered in winter: chat ho had previously need Ger- man clover. which aufl'ered considerably, tad onoo ch. orop entirely failed. He has, too. nosloed that. though Amerioon clover he: I winner atom. it grow- luller and yield. more. 80. noiwithltonding he oeulione of the pepore. he inlended lo con- tinue eowln Amerloen olovor. Ho con- sidered the median the but. out! recom- rnooded gppllonnte to ho metal to procure Tm: word- “uwongo†md “nwugo’ m to anon oonfoundogl tint "on our boat Monouns- Inn boon compelled to give each of “mm the sum. pd: of meaning. Y» n w in“ to “old the ombun-mcnt Md mm 5 metal distinction am he, floral Wm. ‘ Invented. They were coined by Mr. .elnee Pilbrow. en emlnent E civil ‘ engineer. and were ï¬ntneed by in: in e , report ln 1860. They coon ceme into L general nee. but es they were not then in any dietlonnrty. he wee on one coon-ion | enmmonedhe ore the Lord Chancellor of ’ Englend to state their exact meaning. He ' then explnined “uwernge†en mennin ' ‘ the complete eyetem ol eeweroplpee tn - drain 0! any city or district.†cud “ new- 1 ego †u denoting “ the refuse which a through such pipes or the soil.†Th I die- tinotlon in plnln and ehonld elweye be oh« served. Tns absurdity of the existing English marriage law is well illustrated. says thej Pall Mall Gazette. by a pieoept persecution about which aquestion was asked in the House of Commons a few days ago. A parishioner at Ep ing and his wife were refused the Holy mmunion by the vicar on the ground that the woman was the man’s deceased wife’s sister. The hus- band was 82 years old. and the wife 77, and they had been married 50 years; but Dr. Olaughton, the Bishop of the diocese, ap- parently held that they both came within the deï¬nition of “ notorious evil livers." and sustained the vicar in his action. The Attorney-General. however, has now pointed out that the marri e, having been contracted before Lord Lyn urst’s Act. is strictly valid, an]? the vicar has been ad- ‘ vised by the Bis op that the two parishion- ers “cannot legally he repelled from the Holy Communion." “Had this view of the law been present to my mind." adds Dr.Claughtonin alettertot e arishioners. “ I should have been spared t e painâ€"no less to myself than to yourselvesâ€"of order- ing the said repulse." No mum: in Britain probably has such strong reasons for desiring the accession of the Tory party to power as that o! the Duke of Aberoorn, whose sons are the bitterest personal assailants of members of the pres- ent Government. The Duke is a poor man for his position, and the action of the Land Commission has by no means raised his income, which is chiefly derived from Irer land. His daughters have married men who have no need of money with their wives, but he has ï¬ve sons, three married and with children, all of whom mainly de- pend upon their father’s puree. while in addition to domestic expenses four have incurred those of elections. The eldest re- ceives a salary as a lord in waiting to the Prince 0! Wales, the second sites out his income by being Vice-Chairman o! a rail- road and Director 0! about a dozen com- panies. The ablest, Lord George Hamil- ton, married alady with some 35,000 a year, 3 which his brothers did not. It may' easily be imagined that to men so situated exclu- sion from ofï¬ce year after year is a serious mortiflcation. The Duke has now to ï¬nd money to pay the election bills of his son who has Just been defeated at Paisley. “ There are more than 10,000,000 iron car wheels in use on American railroads,’ said the master mechanic 0! one of the trunk lines. “ and it requires about 525 pounds of pig iron to make one wheel. About 1,250,000 wheels are worn out every year. and the same number or new ones must be made to take their places. The iron men are called upon for only a small proportion of the 312,600 tons of material required for these new wheels, however. for nearly 290,000 tons are supplied by the worn-out wheels themselves. Formerly the life of a car wheel was estimated at eight years, but the reduction or the railroads generally to the standard gauge, and the improvements in loading and unloading facilities, have materially decreased the length of service theta wheel may be depended on to perform. ' The uni- formity in gauge keeps cars in more con- tinuous use. while the decrease in time of loading and unloading enables them to be put to more active servtce even where they are run only on short local routes. These ï¬gures do not include the wheels on palace coaches and the better class of passenger coaches. The wheels on that grade of rolling stock are now made almost exclu- sively of paper. They are as serviceable as iron, and combine lightness with strength, a great deeideratum where speed and economy in motive power are of paramount importance." Two bridges have been carried away by the helmets at New Hamburg. On one occasion when her grandfather in his haste forgot to ask the blessing, Dot called out, “Whoa! whoa, pope Willard! book up and say your prayerelâ€"Harpcr’: Bazar. The younger none of peers are described in the Eton school lists .8 "ML," while the names of other boys are put down without any preï¬x. Snohbery is rompont at Eton. Among the speakers at 3 mm meeting under the auspices of the Church of Eng- land Temperance Society, in Toronto, last night. were the Biehcp of Enron and Hon. G. W. Rose. President McCosh, of Princeton College. is considered conceited because he told a gentleman who complimented him on his ability in diseecï¬ng Kant. “ Oh, it was perfectly easy to me." But most men are aware of their own shiliiy. When Thackeray was in New York eome years ago speaking of his books one eveniugalady remarked: " Mr. Thackeray. you are the vainest man I ever met." " Yee.m adame," was she neply. “ but you forget that I have a greae deal to he very vain of." The Smith funily ï¬lls ï¬fteen oloeely printed oolnmneln the new London direc- torymnd the Browns eight. There in in the city ooherity for poor Bmltha eetob- llohed by an uldermnn of the nemeaoo your: ego. He gave £1,000 to on than held 1) Turkish lrntea, and £1, to roor nemen. on the letter fund ha noun-ed nntllit is worth ebont 960.000 3 A mm wu remind km the Luboriuioro H'ocplul. Pain. the om" dty. with a. yud of rope bulging [tom his mouth. Truman upon the con! nvulod Q notion of closhos llno mounting sigh. to». Ho Ind been surprlud In tn Hump. a midi. md bud and to oonoul MI duign by "allow- lng thonoorg. Ho flvod. of maneâ€"they 53am, do. Ten lllllllon Car Wheels. Lute-I News Notes. The Way In Which the Authors Came to Ills Upo- Then. Shortly after marrying his ï¬rst wife. who. though a most sweet and charming creature (see “ David Copperï¬eld "). wasn’t ver much of a housekeeper Charles ‘Di ns same home' from the lodge one morning in the wee. ame' hours. and as usual struck a bee-hue for the pantry. He was unusually hungry even for him. and as he stole etealthily across the kitchen floor in his stooki feet he thought to himself ‘that the heat alf of a cold fried chicken would be about as aoosptabls a mghtoap as he could wear to bed. But when he got there the cupboard was bare. From the top shell! to the bottom sud from one end tothe other of all of them there was not to be discoveredso much as a pickle. It is said that upon this occasion Charles Dickens uttered his ï¬rst, last. and only oath. “ By sad. sir I" swore the great man, " this blawsted cupboard presents as blsnh an aspect as the rest of the establish- ment. It's a demnition bleak house ;" and Mr. O. Dickens was sostrnek with the happy signiï¬cance of his lut remark that he im~ mediately forgot his hunger. and. rushing upstairs to his study. wrote on the title- page of his last hall-completed novel: " Bleak House. by Charles Dickens." __ A noted .Frenehman of an alleged scientiï¬c turn or mind ran away to sea in his early youth. Failing to gain either tune or fortune in the sea-flaring business, he became deepondent. and ï¬nally. re- solving to learn what the next world held 1 in store for him, plunged one day from the mast-head into the sea. Several seconds before he came to the surface he had come to the conclusion that he was hardly pre- pared to die. and wondered how many miles it was up to daylight and air. He was at last discovered. hauled on board the ship. the water pumped out of him. and lived long enough to embody his submar~ ins experience in a voluminous lie entitled ‘B‘Tweuty Thousand Leagues Under the ea. ’ Messrs. Gilbert a: Sullivan had always belonged to that despised class of human beings known as land-luhbere until a few iyears ago. when they accomplished a short voyage aboard one of Her Majesty's men- of-war. As might be expected. neither of them proved good sailors. and the weather throughout the entire voyage being un- usually tempestuoue, they encountered no little difï¬culty in keeping anything on their stomachs more than an hour or two at a time. At last, to save their shirt~tronts from utter ruin. both these gentlemen were compelled to reeort to an arrangement usually applied to very young children under eimi ar circumstances. And “ Pina- fore †wae the name they naturally chose for the opera they subsequently produced in commemoration of that remarkable voyage. “ï¬ns Yourself in His Place" is a title which is supposed to have suggested itself to Charles heads on observing the hope- lessly henpeeked condition oi the unfor- innate man who married his former sweet- out. “ All that glitters is not gold," manned a certain song-writer when he discovered too late that the coins he had received in change for I crisp new greenback were ecnnterfelt. He immedietely set to work m} “099 5 L098 Pb9uï¬._i‘- _ â€" One night Wilkie Collins awoke suddenly out of a deep sleep. oppressed with a sense of horror for which he could not account. but which almost deprived him of the power to move or breathe. After several which seemed to him superhuman efforts he man- aged to raise himself up on one elbow. but fell quickly back with a smothered shriek. and covered his eyes to shut out the un- natural shape which stalked mysteriously about in the moonlight of the room. The familiar voice of Mrs. Wilkie telling him that the baby had the colic, and the pare- gorie was out, brought him to. Before Mr. Collins had returned from the drug store he had already blocked out that thrilling story, “ The Woman in White." Three Menthe' lien-beat Nnvlgluen III that Can be Expected. The Hudson Bay Committee met at Ottawa yesterday morning, with Mr. Roy e1 in the char. Mr. Wm. Smith, Depqty_Miniete_1'_.ot Maine. was examined. He stated that he had secured (tom the Hudson Bay Company the log-books of their vessels running to End- son Bay during the past thirteen years. The vessels were sailing vessels. One of them took 42 days to reach York Factory from Stromness. Another 38 days. and one on the 22nd July met with many ice- bergs and thick fogs in the Straits. The Ocean Nymph was on one occasion 14 days working her way through the Straits. In 1870. 1875. and 1883. the vessel was 17. 22 and 82 days respectively working through the Straits. In 1872. 1873. 1874. 1876,1877. 1878. 1879. and 1881 the Straits were passed without detention. The opinion of Capt. Mollhenny was as follows on fhe subject of navigating Hudson Bay: “ I am of opinion that steamers titted for the work can make the passage with very little difliculty as early as August 1st. entering after the 1st. keeping along the north shore and avoiding the pack ice. Three months' navigation is all that can be depended upon. extended from 1st August to 1st November." Pride often miscelonletee. end more often mieooneeivee. The proud men pleeee himself et a distance from other men. Been through thet distmoe.othera perhaps appear little tohimghut be for- gate that this gory distance causes him to TI’I‘LII 0' Pol'ULAB NOVEL!- eppeer we!†little to others. Canon error in e men. in eppeerenee, of 56. ï¬le hoe is moot uncommon. end is. any: Rev. Robert Lurd Collier. beyond the power of words to ponrtrey. It in not e modern face. and it to not In any wey an English hoe. No more lelte Bootoh (one. The com lexlon le telr. the heir almost yellow. he eyee ere uncommonly smell -Io smell thet one cent at guess their oolor, though I ehould teln , them to be e very pale grey. There is e not in the left .eye. The forehead to not: w. the cheeks iere wide. end the cheek-home high. The month to e etrelght line on! e long one. Oenon Fem: etende shout ï¬ve feet ten lnohee. end hen e Iplendld phyllqne. elthough ‘1‘! heel- pole: 0am.» Db“ inn-mil robo- oonam of O shoot And 5 um. bu. Ho don no. do nd upon the not of hi. clothes for his D' flod THE HUDSON BAY BOUT!!- THE WORLD’S WORKSâ€. Wflthm boa Dunno. theG.'l‘.IJâ€" What the General Met layoâ€" Othoe' labor- Notes. A Montreal deepatch says; With refer- ence to the retrenchment policy cl the Grand Trunk Railway management. the oï¬icials state that no deï¬nite terms or re- duction in wages have yet been ï¬xed. Mr. Hicksca has held conlsrencea with engin- eers. conductors and trainmen. and laid the matter belore the men and asked them to meet the com anylairly during the time they are running e road at a loss. as the com- pany had met them when times were good .and advanced wages. He assured them that when roï¬ts increased suï¬iciently wages would advanced to the former ï¬gures. The engineers appear to have re oeived the proposition with a disposition t comply with the request. but the ‘Managin ‘ Directors having lets it to both them and the conductors to propose what the reduc- tion should be, the rates are as yet an open uestion. It was understood here that a eputation of employees on the Wester portion of the road were coming down lrom Toronto yesterday to interview Mr. Hickscn. ut up to the present writing nothing has been seen or heard of them by the ofï¬cials. Rumors of a strike on the part ct conductors and trainmsn. which seem to have gained currency more par- ticularly in the west. have not yet assumed aahape to be dealt with, as the ofï¬cials have received no intimation cl such an intention. The ofï¬cials state that notwith. standing the recent reductions in static, they could still proï¬tably dispense with a large number of traiumen. Pending a re- ply prcposing areduction from the em- ployees the matter rests tor the time being. APort Richmond. Pa.. telegram says: The coal troubles in the Schuylkill. Leg- hash. Wyoming and Lsokawanna regions are becoming worse. Continued suspension of operations and the hall-pay plan that has been exacted by the leaders of the combination are creating intense dissatisfao. an. Theminers are organizing for pro- ticn. Ernest Dore, elder brother of the lute Gustave Dore, is dead, aged 53 years. 0The eerm hydra mey be used to represent any menitold evil. It you would battle successfully with this many-heeded monster of disease you will ï¬nd it expedient to keep Mrs. Pinkhem's Vegetable Compound always at handâ€"Dr. Ban- mug. A Dublin deep etch says Mr. Parnell has need one or his senente for erreue of rent. I - u I am the Pastor of the Baptist Church here, and an educated physician. lam not in rac- tice, but am my sole family ph siolen, an ad- vise in many chronic cesea. ver a year ago I recommended your flop Bisters tomy invalid wife, who has been under medical treatment of Albany's bept physicians several years. She has become thorouguly cured of her various oom- pliceted diseases by their use. We both recom- mend them to our friends, many of whom have also been cured of their various ailments by them. st. E. B. Wannnx. Lient.~Ool. Villiera hes been examining eandxdaiec for second-clue military certiï¬cates 3‘ Belleville. The examinations concluded last evening. Antler Wolln' " Rough on Corns." 150. Quick. mien. permanent ours. Corns. wuss. n on. Falsehood is in a hurry; it may be at any moment detected and punished. Truth is calm. serene, its judgment is on high; its king oometh out of the chambers of eternity. La’ Foss. brilliam and fashionable m the Diamond Dye colors. Ono packono colors 1 to 4 lbs. 01 goods. 10 cents for my color. ‘3 “ The best advice may come too late." Said neufl‘ rer from Kidney troubles, when asked to try Kidney-Wort. “I'll tr it but it will bemy last dose." The man got we I end is now mama mending the remedy go ell sufl‘erers. In this one good advice came Just in time to save the Riches are leee wealth then is learning, {or wisdom cannot be etolen or lost ; it is therefore thy beet friend. One can no more judge of the true value of a men by the impression he mekee on the public than we can tell whether the seal w: gold or bras by which lhe stump was an e. Knocks a. Cons I: or Gold endwllo. For children or adults. Troch‘eo. 15c. Liquid 500. At druggiua Meiaaonierie painting a large picture which re resents Francis I. and the Chevalier nycrd in the midst of a gor- geous company. Success has current value the wide world over. It breaks down every barrier and holds the key that unlocks every door. Pre- judice. the result of many failures, and the memory of paininl experiences melt away like mist before the convincing merit of Psi-sun's Psmuss Cons Exriucron. and now when thousands are willing and glad to testify to its wonderful eflioienoy. it goes forth crowned with the success that only real merit attains. Buy Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor. Beware of imitations. N. C. Polson 6: 00., proprietors, Kingston. A little girl of 7 years. deughter of Mr. George Dunontier. of St. Beavenr. Que.. died suddenly on Sundry. She oomplelned toher mother of e headache. undimme- dinely tell deed It her feet. Pun beniehed u if by In in. Poleon’l Nseumxs in e poeitive end e moet ineten. uneoue remedy for externel. income]. or looel peine. The moet eotive remed hith- eflo known fell- ler ehorï¬ o_f Nerve! no (or polonTieri in the relief of nerve sin. Good for uterus! or internal use. uy I. 10 cent ample bottle by dodon. Lug. homes 25 onto. u sll danish. Bnonuvonmn Bus. ox-Pmldoni o! Sunto Domingo. has diod. mod 75. Ho 1ch . formno onimuod n 02,600,000. Tom at winning shower- whioh m the and of humn to twins up in tho Immm bun. “ ROUGE 0N COUGHB.†“ ROUGE 0N 0081‘s.†Crowned will Success. The Agony Over. 601210. N.Y., Dec. 1. 1879. The mu ct Fare 33‘ Experience cl 3 l4..- do- Bode". Aloelety hoe teen recently tormed in London to advocate the Improvuneut and nhupeningot the diet, one at in moist objects beingtoehow that a flash diet in much more costly than a vegetable one. endless nonriehing. A number 02 onto:- “laments have been given under tho ‘enspioee o! the National Food Rotor. Society, of which the lollqwing supper in e specimen: One hundred snd dlty persons. for the most part belonging to the working classes. set down to a hill of tsre cousin of Scotch broth. with slices 0! whole m or grshsm breed, green pee pie with pets- toee. the pie crust being made with cotton- seed oil. end for dessert sweetened semolinn or (urine Budding with stewed prunes. Mr. F. . Doremus. Secretsry ol the so- ciet . addressed thoee present alter the ole had been removed. end said thst as they had all sppsrently enjoyed their sup- r, they might, especially the mothers end ends of families, like to know something shout its ingredients snd proportions. In rushing the soup. or broth. there were used 1for every gallon of water. tour ounces of pearl barley. one turnip. one carrot. two ounces of grants. or oatmeal. with pepper. salt. etc.. to sesson. In the green pen pie. the contents weredried green peas boiled tender. s herdohoiled egg. as little tspioos and mint to flavor. For-"the deeeert. one pound of eemolins or tsrins to s gsllon of water. with sugar to sweeten sud served with stewed prunes. Alter exhibiting some colored disgrsms to show grephicslly the relative qpsntities 0} water. muscle-form. ing. bone-forming and heat-giving constitu- ents of bread. oatmeal and beef. he remarked that they would see by the difference in the ping:-. tions of these substances. in a pound of butcher's meat 12 canon represented the water present, for which they were paying at the rate of 9 pence to 1 shilling (18 to 25 cents) per pound. while in the dried peas, costing 40 to 60 a pound. the water was a very small part 02th- whole, they getting 14 to 15 ounces of solid food instead of the 4 ounces contained in the pound of meat they had to pay“ ‘cents for. Mr. Doremus stated that the members of the ~ National Food Reform Society themselves prac- tised what they preached. He instanoed his personal experience of tour or ï¬ve years in favor of the sufï¬ciency. wholesomeness and superiority of a that into which meat. bird or ï¬sh had not entered. Dr. Allinson, aprominent member of the society, also stated that for nearly two years he had taken no meat at all; that his food cost him little more tnan 12 cents :a day; that he could do his ‘work as well or better {without meat, land that he frequently worked 16 hours out 0â€"60m, ’Prxco Lin and Testimonials ox Brick Machines and Drink Prouoa. We nlso mute the "nureku Combined Brick and mu. Mmhlne " for bone or steam power. I. 01;an a EON. Woodstock, Ont. U 8. 8.. Lecturer on the Eye. if.“ ond Throo Trinity medical College, Toronto. 0mm Aux-int to the Toronto Goneni Boopitol, in. Clinical Amount non] London 0 htholmio Bosnia], Mooreneld's and Contra London Enron and Bu- Hospital. 317 Church Biro“. Tmhto. rimï¬cfi "63:33:? hi ma.‘ '4 licked. ea Oolhorgpo «to» GIBB GALLOW All kinda 0! ll Prod-M. handled Al. laugh ogre-g.“ I!" Pagan. Tailor ____ n-..“- “'0‘ O poatlvo ‘"mad? for FM Iboâ€"v0 alumâ€"i no than-And. 0! com o the want llnd and of “and! ban been cured Indeed. no mm?a I. m In In «mum I will aond TWO BOflLé In In... be! h I'VALU xELI THIATIBB on an. m “5|!“ omn‘ gum and dr. 0. cadreâ€. ha. 12;. Known. m remnant"; NSIIMPTIO I n a poonlvo tuned for the above dlnmo of canon o tho wont kind und 0! , ed. Ind Med no anon lam “I END FOB DESCRIPTIVE OIB: Ll VIN“ WITHOUT MIAT. BRICK MACHINES. ‘R. G. s. RYEBBON,L.B. 07,71). 1; H5721}: AND Timon. ESTABLISHED 1809. P.1A0- .0 â€a†ldueajon or '