A friend. in a private letter. thus ex- resses her convictions on the subject of ressing infants. to all of which we utter a hearty Amen: “ I want to see mothers brave enough to lay aside the long toggery with which they fetter little infants; see them clothe them healthfully in an elastic fabric from neck to ankles. and then treat them so they will have as good a chance for development as our little lambs and calves. I believe great mischief is resulting from the dragging sheet of fashionably long clothing upon infants; also. from its having no support exoe t as the bands are pinned tight round the dy of the child. If our little colts were treated thus. how long would it be are men would comprehend the fact that the ‘ good points ’ of horse flesh and trotting were being depleted ‘2" The Pie Question. “But he has always been brought up to have such things. and likes them." That settles the question. Certainly, people must always have what they like and what they have been used to! But wouldn‘t it be well for the children to have a different diet? What sort of stomachs will they have if they eat such things? For eat them they will. you may be sure. if they are on the table, even if other food is prepared for them, which few mothers will take the trouble to do. Besides. they will be grown up some day. and then they must have these things because they have “ been brought up tohave them.†etc. Per- haps if an one article could stand as a representative of all those things which it is difï¬cult to make well. and which are good for nothing. physiologically. when they are made, it would be that curious Ameri- canismâ€" pie. I never could understand the peculiar fascination which these gas- tronomical compounds have for the mascu- line palate. but the man or boy who can resist the blandishments of a piece of pie would be a natural curiosity. The under- orust may be "soggy; †that’s no matter. there's the top.crust and the “ï¬lling.“ The one may be leathery, the other full of all the untold indigestible horrors of ‘molasses and mince-meat. citron and cinna~ mon. cloves and cider. apples and auspice. butter and brandy. sugar and snet. wine and raisinsâ€"but it's pie. and that’s enough. For the sake of the next genera. tion of wives. mothers of growing boys ought to educate them into a better taste. lest by and by “ a piece of pie like that my mother used to make" be the dreadful will-o’-the- wisp to lure the poor wife into a slough of despond. And you. tired housewife. by occasional desserts of fruit and uddings, introduce your husband into the undiess supply of wholesome and toothsome things that we neglect for the sake of pie. He may speak scornfully of your blanc manger and custards. or. as the dessert comes on. raise his 0 ebrows and say si 'flcantly. "Nothing ut apples?" or "O l its rice again.†But do not press your “reform " unreasonably; remember the defects of his early education. and if you can convince him that it really saves your time and strength. and if our puddings and custards are good. he wi soon be willii‘ig to accept the substitute for a part of s time at same in the corner of the floor. The result will he a perfect stampede of the rats and mice. Give the same place aooat of the same yellow wash every spring. for a puri- ï¬er as well as a rat exterminator, and no typhoid. d sentery or fever will attack the family. any persons deliberately attract all the rate in t e neighborhcod b leaving fruits and vegetables uncover in the cellar. and sometimes even the soap is open for their re element. Cover up everythm eatable in t e pantry or cellar and you wil soon starve them out. These recautions. joined to the service of a g cat. will prove as good a rat exterminator as the cat can provide. Never allow rats to be isoued m the dwelling; they are liable to ie between the walls and produce much annoyance. - Pickled Tomstoes.â€"Let the tomatoes be thorou hly ripe and let them lie in strong salt on water for three or {our days; then put them down in layers in 'sn. mixin with them small onions sn pieces 0 horseradish; then at on vinegar. cold. after having spiced it. Use plenty of spies. Compiled by Aunt Kate.) Bus vs. Meal. Would it not be well to subetitute more egge for meat in our daily diet? About one-third of the weight of an egg is solid nutriment. This is more thanoanhe said of meat.‘ There are no bones. no tough pieces that have to be laid aside. A ood eggis made up of ten parts shell. xty parts white and thirty parts yolk. The white 0! an egg contains sixty-six per cent. water. the yolk ï¬fty-two per cent. Prae- tically an egg inanimal food, and yet there is none of the disagreeable work of the butcher necessary to obtain it. The vegetarians of England use eggs freely. an many of these men are 80 and 90 years old, and have been re- markably healthy. Eggs are best when cooked four minutes. This takes away the animal taste that is oï¬'ensive to some. but does not harden the white or yolk so as to make them hard to digest. An egg if cooked very hard is difï¬cult of digestion except by_those of stout stomachs; such eggs should be eaten with bread and mas- ticsted very ï¬nely. An egg spread on toast is food ï¬t for s king, it kings deserve any better food than anybody else. which is doubtful. Fried eggs are less wholesome than boiled ones. An egg dropped into hot water is not only clean and handsome. but a delicigushmorsel. like:d ple spoil tbs taste 0 t eir eggs y ing pepper an salt. A little sweet butter is the best dressing. Eggs contain much phosphorus, which is supposed to be useful to those who use their brains much. least. new to Deal with Rule. The premises may be kept clear of this vermin by making whiteth yellow with on pores and ooverin the stones and rafters in the celler wit a thick coat of it. In any crevice where a rut mi ht tread put the crystals of the cop re. en scatter the some in the camera! t e floor. The result m DOME§HG CIRCLE Ladies Will Here Find Smonabls Topics Discussed. ' [Juli-I chlpn, lie. Bren-In; lumnu. The leaves of the geranium are an excel- lent a plioation for outs. when the skin is rubbeg OE. and other wounds of the same .kind; one or two leaves must be bruised and a plied on linen to the part. and the woun will become cicutrized in a. very short time. A mossen or was sent from Muskogon to nMiohigan umber onm toinform a man of the death of his ohil ; but he used the money given him in getting drunk, and did not perform the errand. He never got sober, for lumbermen hanged him before he had time. Man people who handle wood do not know t at if they wish the bark to come off they should ile it hark down; if they wish to retain t e bark the opposite should be done. A correspondent writes to the Detroit Post-Tribune, giving his experience, as follows: "I have sol wood for over forty years in Michigan, and I ï¬nd that when split wood is oorded up the bark remains on until I sell and measure up the wood, and all that is‘piled bark down the bark falls oi! and measures nothing; besides, there is more heat in the bark than in the sap of the log. The most and best ashes are also in the bark. I have on my place now some maple wood that was chopped nine years 0 and corded bark up. and the bark woul hold on if I would draw the wood to Saginaw (18 miles) and cord up and measure; besides the bark is lighter to draw. Where the bark is piled dowu the water runs in around the wood and makes it dozy. wet and heavy. Tell your neighbors to try it. Railroad oom- panies will save thousands of dollars by piling their wood bark up. Stewed Beamâ€"To six large pears add half-a-pound of white sugar, hall the rind of a lemon out thin, ï¬ve cloves, and a little prepared ooohineal to color them. Cut the pears in halves. and core them. Put them m an enamelled aauoeï¬an; water enough to cover them. Let t em stew gently till quite soft without breaking them. When done. place them carefully on a dish eufli- ciently deep to hold the juice. Strain the syrup, and reduce it oyer the ï¬re ; then pour it over the pears. Lemon oauce.â€"â€"Grate the yellow peel from one lemon. Tear out the pulp con- taining the juice, and cut into bits. The thick white portion is of no use. Soak a heaping teacupful of bread crumbs, or a long thick slice of bread in hot water, rubbing it ï¬ne and smooth. Add more water, putting lemon, crumbs and water together, so that there shall be about a pint and a half in all. Add a small teacupful of sugar, and let all boil together for a few minutes. Then add a level teaspoonful of butter and one egg well beaten. To prevent the egg from cooking unevenly, stir care- fully a little of the boiling mixture into the egg, thus thinning it before you turn it into the mixture, always stirring fast as you gradually mix the eg with the rest. When cool this makes «an, excellent sauce, and eaten with bread iebe'tter for children (or any one else) than the common lemon pie. It " goes further," too. Sir John Lubbock. in the opening address to the British Association at York on August 30th startled the scientiï¬c world with a. new theory of the physical charac- ter of the globe. Scientists have almost universally held the view that the interior of the earth is a fluid mess intensely hot, but the President of the association asserted that this theory " is now very generally admitted, both by astronomers and geologists. to be untenable.†The prevailing feeling of geologists he edded, has heen well expressetl _hy Professor Le Conte. who says : " The whole theory of igneous agenciesâ€"which is little less than the whole foundation of theoretic geologyâ€"must be reconstructed on the basis of a solid earth." This will be news to many able physicists,but it will strike unso histicated minds with no little force thati . as Professor Le Conte says, the old theory must be reconstructed, then the pretentious fabric of “theoretic geology†founded upon it and the inferences of which many eolcgists have not scrupled to put before t e utterances of revelation itself must be discarded as baseless conceits. Sir John Lubbock certainly seems to exaggerate the scientific sentiment which rejects the old theory of the earth’s internal fluidity. But that sentiment ap- pears to be gaining ground. At the session of the Paris Academy of Sciences on the 22nd ult. M. Roche read a pa r arguing in favor of a solid globe, and cone uding mathe- matically that its interior mass is two and one-third times as dense as its crust, the nucleus.†to specific wei ht, being analo. gone to meteoric iron. w ile the exterior coating is comparable to aerolites of a stony composition. To Keep Jellies from Moulding.â€"Pul- venue loaf sugar and cover the surface of the jell to the depth of a quarter of an inch. his will prevent would even it the jefljeahe kept fogyem. To Preserve PIums.â€"Look them over and pick out all that are imperfect or unsound. Make a syru of clear, brown sugar and clarify it. n perfectly clear and boiling hot. pour it over the plums. Let them remain 1n the syrup two days, then drain it off. make it boiling hot. skim it and pour it over again; let it remain another day or two. then put over the ï¬re and simmer gently till the syrup is thick and rich. Use one pound of sugar to each pound of_fruit. The British Consul at Kiukieng. Chins, says that the Chinese are too much wedded to their wedded cotton dresses to make their country :5 good market for imported woollens. But the Government have recognized the desirability of woollen cloth- ing for the troops. and have started a mill where oosrse blue cloth is made at a rate lovmr than it could be imported. cover carefully and let stand for a mouth below using. Pickled Bod Csbbsge.â€"Slios the cabbage. cover with sslt And let it stand two days. Then drain and put. it in a. pan; cover wnth vinegar and spios to your taste. Give it a mid and when cold pus it. in ins and tie up £1059. Rusty Neil Wounde.â€"â€"If you have the misfortune to wound your foot or hand with a rusty nail, you have only to smoke the wound with burning wool or woollen cloth. Fifteen or twenty minutes in the smoke will remove all the pain from the worst oleee offinilemmatjon. In the Earth's lmen Piling Wood. “ Well, you see, a hot season like this they have to salt a claim lots of times to keep it. A fresh claim is good enough {or a fresh tenderfoot, but old-timers won’t look at anything but a pickled claim. You know what quartz is, probably ? †“ Ne." ' “ Well, every claim has quartz. Some more and some less. You ï¬nd out how many quartz there are. and then put in so many pounds of salt to the quart. Wild cat claims require more salt, because the wild cat spoils quicker than anything else. Sometimes you catch a sucker, too, and you have to put him in brine pretty plenty, or you will lose him. That’s one reason why they salt a claim. Then, again, you often grub~stake a manâ€"†“ But what is a grub stake ?" “ Well, a grub stake is a stake that the boys hang their grub on so they can carry it. Lots of mining men have been knocked cold by a blow from a grub stake. What I wanted to say, though, was this : You will probably at ï¬rst strike free milling poverty, with indications of something else. Then you will no doubt sink till you strike bedqock, or a true ï¬ssure gopher-hole,with traces of disappointment. That’s the time to put in your salt. You can shoot it into the shaft with a double-barrsled shot gun, or wet ‘it and apply it with a whitewash brush. If people turn up their noses - at your claim then, and say it is a snide, and that there is something rotten in Denmark, you can tell them that they are clear ofl‘, and‘that you know it is all right.†The last seen of the tenderfoot, be was buying a. double- barrelled shot gun and ten pounds of rock salt. 7 ' There’s no doubt but a. mining camp is the place to send a. young man who wants to acquire knowledge and ï¬ll his system full of information that willbe useful to him so lohg as he “mmâ€"Laramie Boome- rang. " But that who leave in this bleaaib island of 903329351; prooï¬ng __Oh. you1 yen! _ The Crate to Make Money Exhibited Even in the Prue-MOI“! Death. There is a melancholy satisfaction in remembering that the mourning tor the dead President was so universal, and that the funeral services were conducted in a manner every way worthy of the occasion and ot the nation’s grief. The only break in the train of satisï¬ed thought is occasioned by the reflection that a few sor- did souls saw nothing in the occasion but an opportunity to make money. The indivrduals who got up a “corner" on black goods and proï¬ted by the desire of the nation for badges of sorrow, were engaged in a legitimate business transaction ; but it is not leasant to think of them. The same ma said of those who eddled Garï¬eld adges and pictures wit in the funeral inclosure at Cleveland, and of their neighbors who made the presence of mourning thousands in that city a pretext for putting up the prices of the necessaries of life. Among the meanest of the business ghouls was the ï¬rm that scattered Cleve- land broadcast with a black-bordered dodger, purporting to be “ Garï¬eld's Last Letter.†which turned out, on‘ examina- tion, to be a letter froma niece of the elder Mrs. Garï¬eld, thanking the ï¬rm, in her name, {or a lithograph of the President. The ï¬rm probably regarded this as an enterprising way of advertising; but those who were deluded by the heading into reading the advertisement must have a very different opinion on the subject.â€" Detroit Free Press. “ I wish you would explain to me all about this salting of claims that I hear so much about,†said a meek-eyed tenderfoot to a grizzly old miner who was panning about six ounces of pulverized quartz. “ I don’t see what they want to salt a claim for, and} don’t understand how they_ do it._†“And how‘ greetoful should we be that we do not leave in the for South, beneath the equswtor, and a sun aye burnin’, burnin’. and where the sky’s 'awfu’ hot. Ah, yes! And the yearth’s hot. and the water's hot. and ye're burnt‘blwok as a. amiggy. Ah,yell Scowhmen are intensely patriotlo. and take great pride in old Scotia and every- thing associated with her. Some one has reported a. Highland preacher whose aer- mon shows his loyalty to Scotland: “ Ah, my freends, what causes have we for granti- tudel Oh, yea, for'the dee st gratitude! Looliat the place 9f pur_h_a. ltagionl “ Where there’s teegars. Oh, yes! And lions. Oh, yes! And crocodiles. Oh. yes! And fearsome beasts. growlin’and griniq: at yeamang the Vgoode. “Where the very air is a lever, like the burnin’ breath o’ a. ï¬ery drawgon. That we do not want to leave in those places. 011,30, up, no, no! " And in that part 0' it named Scotland, and in that bit 0' auld Scotland that looks up at Ben Nevis. Oh, yes. yes, eat Where there’s neither frost, nor can! , nor wind, nor weet, nor hail, no: rain, nor teegars. nor lions, nor burnin' suns, nor hurricanes, norâ€"" " How grateful should we be that we do not leave in the far North! Oh. no! Amidst the frost,and the snow, and the oauld,__a.nd the _weet._ Oh, n9 1 “ Where’s a long day in the tee-halt o’ the year. Oh. yes! And a lung nioht the tither. Oh, yea! That we do not depend u n the nurawry boreowlis. Oh, no! T at we do not gunmehivering eboot in skins. Oh, no! Smo 'ng amangthe anew like gnodiyvartsl Oh, no, no lb Here a. tremendous blast of wind and rain from Ben Nevis blew in the windows of the kirk and brought the presohet‘s eloquence to‘ an abrupt conclusion. Prince Frederick of the Netherlands, whose death was lately announced, was one of the soldiers of Waterloo. During the battle he was stationed with 18,000 men to cover the Duke of Wellington and protect Brussels in case any sudden turn that way should be made by Na leon. There are not many survivors 0 those days now. The Emperor William of Germany is one. He took part in the campaigns against France even earlier than the Dutch Prince who has just died. The Emperor was in the ï¬eld in 1818, and entered Paris in 1814 with the conquerin allies. He is a mouth or so youn er than rince Frederick of the Netherlan s was; both were born in 1797. Vienna advices state that United States Minister Phelps has asked to be retired as soon as his successor can reach Vienna. Remarkable Highland Sci-man. 'uumuu on souuow. [low The! Salt a Claim. ‘ -No true women will use her hulbnud’l slippers to keep nicks nu. â€"Sti‘enge as. it may seem, there are plenty of people who ore happy only when they are miserable.~ â€"“ My te-epeoks to on," as the fly said to the drugglet who ed just completed cleansing hie show-window. â€"â€"Wea.ther auguries point to a mild open fall and green grass again. Further, an 91d indium says : “ No snow deep this win- â€"â€"The Home District Mutual Fire Insur- ance Company )8 being wound up after a. career of forty {our y.ea.rs Its head unr- tera were in Toronto, and Hon. ohn MoMurrich its President for twenty years. tor." -â€"A Frenchman has discovered that the principle of the revolver was put into prac- tical application by a. gunnmker at St. Etienne in the eighteenth century. He has much to answer for. â€"There is some talk of a. branch of the G. W. R. from Clinton to Goderich. It remains to be seen whether Goderich and other places intereetged have stenm enough to make it an accomplished fact. â€"The Senate of Knox College, Toronto offers a. scholarship of 8100 for the best essay on “ Scriptural authority for Pres- byterianism In its essential prinelp lea,†to be competed for by all who shall be cheolo- gioal students during the coming session in the varlous Presbyterian Colleges through- out Canada. â€"The prevailing fashion of bonusing enterprises that are likely some day directly or indirectly to add to the income from taxpayers. has led a wide-awake citizen of Guelph to ask if he can’t get exemption from taxation on the ground that he is raising a large family who will some daybe ratepayers. -.-Now is the time for tumors te talk about. ploughing matches. â€"â€"Heve the moths been in your ulster during the summer ? . - â€"The ho orcip in New York state is 25 per cent. b‘o ow est.†year 9 yield. â€"-'1‘o a. man who has no money to spend it makes but little difleronoe where he spends his time. â€"-A London paper says thst Ashmead Bartlett. Coutts is growing old very rapidly. Nevertheless, he can’t overtake his wife. â€"The French troops had better make the North African nomads no madder. They are alreadygotting thrashed badly enough. â€"In a. primary school. not very long ago. the teacher undertook to convey to her pupils an idea. of the use of the hyphen. She wrote on the blackboard "Bud‘s- neet," and. pointing to the.hyphen. asked the school. â€What is that for?†Aftere. short pause, a. young son 'of the Emerald Isle piped out: " Plaze, ma’em,for the bird to roosht on 1“ â€"The London Lancet says, speaking of church bells: “ They are an intolerable and most mischief-working nuisance. To the sick their ding-dong and jangle are a serious annoyance, and we do not hesitate to say that in many cases the loss of rest and the general disquietude they produce not only lessen the chance of recovery, but may expedite a fatal issue.†The bells don’t aï¬eot Hamiltonians in thatway. â€About time to gather and press the tinted autumn leaveu. â€"An enterprising book- publisher ls about to issue the Comet series. It will be devoted to tales. â€"â€"Vennor admits that the Weather is becomingaconundrum to him. He had batty gum in up.__ â€"Sitting Bull wears his hair very long. The trouble was that he would never per- mit the white people of his vicinity towear their hair very long. â€"The tsilom are drawing the coils tighter and tighter around the limbs of their unhappf customers. That is to say, trouser legs wil be more skimp than ever this year. It issbsrbsroue fashion. Better. far better, the rotund and bourgeois peg-top than the scent measure which betrays our feet in all their hideous enormity. and which contract vulgar bulges at the knees inside of 48 hours. ' â€"A manufacturer whose business requires the use of large amounts of emery has been trying an experiment with the ashes of anthracite coal. and he afï¬rms that he has got good results from ashes as a substitute for the ï¬ner grades of emery. He took ashes and saturated them with water, curing off the liquid after stand- ing an our or two, then uring off again and so on until he obtain several grades, down to a substitute for emery flour. When dried the deposit cuts readily and leaves a satisfactory surface. â€"Lemone are high and pickles sympa- thise with lemons. The cucumber crop of 1881 is about one-half the ordinary yield. By reason of this falling-off pickles may be expected to be raised in price this winter, as the pickle manufacturers have to pay a much higher sum than usual. The usual production per acre in 100,000 cucumbora. and it costs about one-third of the selling rice to pick them. The farmer note about 65 per note. In place of the market price being 81 per 1,000 it is nowflflo or 1.000, and A further tine maxha’looked or before the season is over; r -â€"A correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger eaye that“Llanfeir wlohgunyu ero- bwiohllandyssiliogogo," t e name 0 a Welch parish. is pronounced as it written thus: " Thlanvire olohgwingergoboolohth- laudieiliogogo.†his timely explanation will robably prevent any serious misunder- atan ing, but the Detroit Free Press thinks the majority of the people will keep right along pronouncing it as it is_ spelled. _ â€"Rev.William Arthur. father of the Pre- sident. was remarkable for his readiness in debate. Some years ago. at a meetin of the old Budson River Baptist Associat on, the Rev. Mr. Walden. who had been settled in the West. but had recently taken a church at Troy, said: " I can tell brethren that if they think any sortoi ministers will do for the West they are mistaken. It won't do to send second or third rate men there." Mr. Arthur was on his feet in a moment, exclaiming: “ Mr. Moderator. I never lmew before why 'Brother Walden came back.†per cent. below list â€year's yield. -â€"-Mrs. Jamieson, wife of the Toronto olothier, will. it is believed. recover. â€"-'A man with an impediment 1n his speech never speaks well of anybody. hid.“ Km m‘mvd‘ I" w. e “aw m TBA; TABLE Gossw. . In the possession or a member of the Berkeley family of England, is aring oom- posed of a large emerald, surrounded by diamonds. This once belonged to the famous Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovel, drowned of? the Soilly Islands in his war ship in 1707. On her deathbed an old woman sent for the parson, to whom she revealed that she had murdered ‘the admiral,whom she found in a state of exhaustion on the shore, for the plunder. The arson gave the rin to Shovel’s great frien , Lord Berkeley. w 0 was on one o the ships of the fleet when the wreck occurred. When thePrinee of Wales visited Liver- pool the other day. a zealous shopman on the way put over his door a large,red- covered board bearing the words: “ May the Lord convert the Prince." The man stepped out into the road toobserve his han iwork, when a brougham and a pair of horses driven rapidly down the hill knocked him down, and the horses trampled over him. inflicting injuries.‘ The result was that the board and inscription were removed without delay before the Prince reached the place. A new Chicago theatre has two “ fashion boxes.†containing twenty choirs. each directly in front of the customary pro. eoenium boxes. and so arranged, with the rails only slightly above the floor and' the seats rising sharply. that a clear view of the occupants can he had from the other Bin-ta of the house. The idea. is to lot ondaomely dressed women exhibit them- selves, and the astonishing foot in the matter is that they embrace the op- portunity. There are no less than four new theatres in progress in London now. The Bavo . M. d'Oyley Carte’s, will soon be ï¬nishedy; so will the Avenue, a. very handsome little structure, built altogether of Gun stone, at the back of the Grand Hotel. A third is in course of erection somewhere off Oxford street, and the projected new opera house stands half ï¬nished, as it has been for the last two years. with no sign of advancing further. A sad incident is mentioned in a London letter, as follows : " A few weeks ago I was in a large shop in London, when I saw a pale face behmd the counter become livid, and in a moment its owner was lying senseless on the floor. ‘ Poor thing.’ said her companions, as they gathered around her, ‘ it's her ï¬rst day bmk.’ Inquiry revealed the fact that the ' poor thin ’ had just recovered from diphtheria, an had hurried back to her work that she might no longer be a. burden to her mother.†petrbleum, the hatuml petroleuxh ihaiir r5: newer. It will positively do the work and Bower. It will positively do the work and it 18 the only argole that? will. It is again rumored that Lott. will soon be; marrged. ‘ , Joe Jefleruon bu h‘ootod ilv 3cm the hiatrionio bum-do {or forty-nix yam and is- goec} for: long. sio_g_q_yet. ‘ One remedy for one dollarâ€"there 18 bu one way to cure baldness, and that is by using Carboliue. a. deodorized extract oyf Machine Oil Mme.Chmtine Nilsson is goin to Stock- holm by express invitation of 0 King of Sweden. to mug at the opera there in the state performance on the occasion at the marriage of the Crown Prince with the Princess Victoria of Baden. Nothing is decider} as to Nilsson’e projected expedition to America. a Buï¬alo Bill introduces real Indians in his piays.’and the are expected to let him heroically vauquis them; but in aChioago performance one of them was drunk. and refused to fall when the scout struck him a sham blow. Instead. he tried to use his tomahswk. and had to be druggedoï¬ the -L- _._ [OI COUGIIS, COLDS, ASTHMA WIIOOPING-COUGII, GROUP. The London lllllltllo [or the Cure 0! Imminent in space. has reopened for the Fall and Winter. For cir- culars and mtlmonia'l from hundreds whom we have cured, address BTAMMERING INSTITUTE, Iondon. Ont. And for sale by dealers. Ask your merchant for mama onduke no other. This oil under the severest teat And most octive com etitlon woe u the Toronto Indus- trial Exhib tion awarded the highest prize; also the GOLD MEDAL at the Provinolnl Exhibi- tion.Hamuton and the highest owerd at the Dominion Exhibition, Ottawa. phqsuver medal. u_-,,,_ _h_ A _, Farmers andiil’l’ E56113 Kai-Edit“. Kuhn; ery. wbmtsne money and machinery by using none u LARDIN E. This old established remedy oen be with cant! dance recommended {or the above 001:1?!an TRY IT. nyour merehent he: not so It. be can get it 12: you. JOHN. W. BIOKLB .. gFog-merly '1‘. mom-g Son), _ "-__“A~_. LARDINE! IN THE wonLn, Ia manufactured by McCOLL BROS.CO.,TORONTO Bickle’s Anï¬-Eonsumptive Syrup Bummon On‘ 8160 per acre and award. Ono-sixth‘ cash and ï¬ve annu ants. no; ducod Faro and From h to settlers. Write for " Publications No. 63." ‘ Goo.bew,'rmvellln Agent, 7! Yonse! at. Toronto. R. M. airport, General; Land Agent. 8t. Pan). Minn. , ‘ [murmurs non [manuals 50.000 Par-I. 0.000.000 Ian. am mm mm. m. lulu. emu n-w.‘ I’mnhm. Mock mm . him-g. Fuel nd mm 1- A II‘IIQO. NORTHERN PACIFIC MINNESOTA. 'l‘. t). LIVINGSTON, Special Land Agent for Hamilton, Om. nantnuillutji THE VERY DES Fooluuhu. aflon Pro otor.