lio, after which Mrs. Hyde r‘etutn‘d to 0 ioago. where she summed oonnidonbla propony by watching, but took to drank and diuipnflon. Eleven tone of turkey end ohioken spoiled by worm weather were eeuxed end 001.. demoed in the enhnrbe of Wuhlngton Mer- ht, New York City. before Thanksgiving The sump lo of the Mm] uin of London do .who has become 3 roqtdl cod donor, in to lowed by Lord Budeloy. who in going to sell jun. _ _ U An inqueet was held in Chicago on Mon- dey over the body of Mrs. Mery Hyde. 60 yeere old, who hue lived as a recluse for yeere end died alone. She chimed to be eniece of the Duke of Argyle end It cousin of the Merquie ol Lorne. She merried below her etetion. end for that reason wee lepereted from the clen Campbell. Her husband wee killed by the Indiana on the overland trip to_0e_l_lfornj§ thirty-ï¬ve yeere A Montresl‘despstch says: J. A. Craig, the large furniture manufacturer on Bons- venture street, has assigned. Mr. Creia felled two or three yeere ego, but since thet time has been domg I very large busi- ness‘ emounting to 'sbout 8100.000 e year. A short time use he became interested in the electric light and clsims thet his inven- tions were so successful that he lest year ut 820.000 derived from them into his iness. Hie lisbilitiee now smount to somethin like 835.000, end he oleiins s Inge surp ue locked up in lend, machinery, Narrative oi the sister-inn e! the Survi- voreâ€"Tle Captain Renamed Behind. ADuluth despatch says: A letter has been received from a survivor of the lost steamer Manistee. He says they en- countered a very heavy gale from the southwest, and about 20 miles out the ves- eel broke in two. The life boats were taken out. but before they were launched all but one were swept away in the storm. and only nine persons who were on the boat allowed to get in the remaining boat. They had a terrible time alter the steamer went down. '1here was nothing but the wide expanse of water before them. They rolled around on the turbulent waters, cold, wet. and hungry. three days. and one by one dropped off, death having come to their relief. Some froze to death, some died from exhaustion and exposure. They ; say Captain McKay never left the boat, but remarked, “ I am captain of this boat. and it she is a cofï¬n for anybody she will be my conic." After the men lelt the boat they saw the Manistee make one plunge under the waves. and that was the last of her. There were ten of the crew and seven pas- Iengers on board when she went down, and out of those who started out in the boat only three were saved and reached Bough- ton. The wreck occurred of! Eagle Harbor. m0 Burn Claimed turn the United lit-Ice by Canadian CIYIIIII. A Buï¬alo despatoh says: Before the Court of Claims yesterday morning Gen. J. 0. Strong was present to argue- the claim of a portion of the Cayuga Nations of Indians living in Canada for a share of the 82,800 annuity promised the Gayugas by the State in 1810. The amount claimed with interest makes a formidable sum. The Canada anugas hold that as the chief of the nation, Aysgeghti (ï¬sh carrier). lives with them and they are a majority of the nation. a large part of the annuity should have been paid to them and is now due lrom the State. The matter was held over for a decision. l remembered that the United States is a missionary country ; that the lines of discipline are not so tightly drawn as they are in countries where canon laws and the decrees of the Council of Trent are strictly enforced; that the relations between bishops and priests have been deï¬ned, and depend mainly upon the will and disposi. tion of the bishops. The report that ï¬lm American bishops were considering the Irish question has only the foundation that the Ancient Order of Hibernians and other Irish secret societies are tolerated in some dioceses and condemned in others. This was a matter of consultation. pox-taut questions of disoipline.’1‘opro- perly qngergtand the matï¬eg it should be bear the powers of ablegate. Dom Bmulders is a Belgian and is a member of the Cistercian Order. Among other things he will settle the old controversy' in Canada in reg ard to the Laval University, and in quire into the assertion that numbers of French Canadian Catholics are members of the Masonic Society. Mgr. Seppiaci is a prominent member of the Augustinian Order and has held several important ofï¬ces in the Church. He has considerable acquaintance with the English language. and is fairly well read in Ameri- can history and literature. He will be ammpanied by several secre. taries, the chief of whom has already been named, and is Dr. Stanton, 0.81, of Philadelphia. Mg r. Sop iaci will preside over the Council 0% the C urch in America, which will be held in Baltimore or New York in 1884. and which will settle im- md ng. Seppiaoi es Papal re re- sent-tire in the United Btetes. he letter appointment has been hinted at in despetehes irom Rome. It is now cï¬icially announced. The appointment of Dom Bmuldere has not heretofore been an- npnnced. The two appointments. though similar in nature, are entirely disconnected horn each other. The latter is one of the results of the visit of the American bishops to Rome. while the former is the result of a Papal investigation ohthe peon- linr condition of sflairs in the Church in Condo. The oflicial title of both of these Papal representatives will probsbly be that of " Apostolic Commissioner.†Their oiï¬oe and their mission are entirely ecclesiastical. The report that a " nuncio" was to be sent to the United States was absurd. The meriment was tried once end tailed. ther Dom bmnlders nor Bep iaci has my mission to the Governments 0 Canada or the United States. To the Catholic Church in those territories they will, doubt- Amt-mom ol Papal Burma-nave- Io Onudn and the lumen. A London oublognm uyu: Pope Leo XIII. bu tppolntod Dom Smnldou gl_ P22“ rgprogonguivo _in _ Canal. NIW OATIIOLIO DIGNITABIBU. A Finn-re Man’- Fall-re. A Lady's and Danni". INDIAN ANNUITIBS. 'I'IIE “ MANIBTEB.†.Row much more we might mum of our family life sud our friendship: it every gooey thought of love blossom“! into. An ungreteiul Ion, end e diegreoe to society. recently ettempted to drown his mother in e weeh-tub, in Brooklyn, for re- tueing to give him money to buy liquor. When e young men hee to depend upon hie mother for money, eepeoiely when ehe eerne it et the weeh-tuh; when he is too lexy to work end epende thet money for liquor. when hie menhood ie no fer one thet he will eeeeult thet mother. then t ie hie deye of ueeiulneee ere over end the eooner he diee the better it will be for hie poor mother. the world end himeeli. A men thet will beck on hie mother. hie only beet frien . le no men et ell. Faun Union Workhouum From Take Fund ...... .......... To Huniltonâ€" From Union Workhouses.» From Tnko Fund................ To London- From Union Workhonsea... From TukeFund................ The pflnoiï¬d contributors no the Union of Truce, M8; onmuo. 1m; Killuney.133. Out of this number have been sent 'l‘o Torontoâ€" From Union Workhonees................. From TnkeFund................ To Ottawa- From Union Workhouaes. From Tuke Fund..............‘ Number 0! Deelllule People From Ireland Sent to This Conan-y. The following table shows the number of persons from Ireland assisted out to Ontario during the present year from the workhonses and by Tuke’s Committee : Sent by Tuke's Fund toward which the Imperial Government contributed large] ,ane o! Bedlord. President ...... 1,323 Sent out rom Union Workhonses............... 2,460 Assisted emigration of servant girls ........... 550 Some curious episodes occasionally occur when the Land Commissioners in Ireland take evidence for the purpose of establish- ing a fair rent. The other day a farmer near Shibbereen. in County Cork, applied for a reduction. It was found that he kept two cows. He pleaded. however. that the land wastoo poor to feed them. and that they were “ hand-kept.†on which he was called to produce evidence to that effect. Paddy brought out a grocer’s account, which, said he, was for food given to the‘ cow. The ï¬rst item was a pint of parafï¬n. ‘ Did you give that to the cow?†asked a Commissioner. “ Share and I did, sor,†was the answer. “ I gave it to the poor haste for medicine." The next item was a pound of blasting powder. "Did you give that to the cow ?" asked the Commissioner again. “ Begorra. shure and the grocer has sold me. yer honor," exclaimed the man. It is hardly necessary to add that his claim was struck off. Another man demanded a reduction. when it was pomted out to him that his father had paid the rent before him for 30 years without grumbling. “ But me father niver told yer honner." answered the tenant, " that he had to borrow the money tobuy himself a ooï¬in and hasent paid it yet." Mrs. Alexander Sullivan, the wife of the President of the American Irish National League. who has travelled over the whole of Ireland as an observer. says that she is con- vinced that the soil of Ireland is incapable of more than comfortably supporting the tiller, and utterly incapable of supporting both the tiller and the superimposed land- lord system ; that the nation’s needs require abolition of the hereditary land tenure ;‘ that every obstacle to a division of the ro~ ï¬ts of agriculture entirely among the til era ‘0! the soil should he removed ; that so long 1 as the tillers of Irish soil have to support a non-producing landlord class they will remain too poor to support manufacturers; that emigration has been a misfortune because it has removed so many thousands of ï¬ne, deserving peasants; and that this misfortune is due to the landlord system which. without any return to the country. has for every landlord it has supported crowded out scores of tillers. To Kingston-â€" The story about the projected wholesale patriatxon of the Irish turns out to be alse after all. The Castle authorities took no notice of the rumor. until the Arch. bishop of Tuam became indignant and de- nounced the scheme. when he was informed that no such project had been either dis cussed or contemplated by the Irish Gov- ernment. Lord Devon has oddreeeed a. letter to his Limerick tenentry offering them [militias for the purchase of their holdingamllowing any balance of the money not provided by the Land Commission to remain on mort- gage at 4 per cent. per onnnm. in Stork county. ï¬ve miles south oi Oeuton. . He was srmted yesterday chsrged with useult end bettery. Mrs. M. Oglethorpe is the plsintifl. She slleges thst her 'dsughter Mary.“ yesrs old. was s pupil in g the school.snd on Wednesday lust. for some q trifling violstion oi the rules. Lsymiller. es s punishment. ordered her to remove her seat ; to the boys’ side of the room. This she refused to do. when Ilsymiller threw her upon the floor and tied hesvy cord about her wrists. He then dragged the girl to the well. and putting the cords over two of the hooks used for holding wreps. drew the girl , up until her toes barely touched the door. In this condition she hung item 9 o’clock in the morning until 3.30 o’clock in the afternoon. when her mother. hsvnng been told by one of the pupils. hastened to the school sud ordered the tescher to out her down. which he did. The girl when released was unable to wslk. and it is tested hes ‘ sustained serious injury. Lsymiller gsve bail for his sppeersnce on Beturdey next for a hearing. The Boyd Agriculture! Society of Ire- land have decided to hold next yen’e Royal show in Kukenny. who Wouldn't mm with the Don. AOlovolwd. 0.. tolegrom “ya: Tony Loymillor in 3 teacher in a country school A Teacher'- Cruelty Town“ I Little Girl Ought I. Get on ol the World. ASSISTED BMIGBATION. Illl “Cl." "le138 IUPLI‘JITID.§ Latest from Ireland. o... u. In u- 19 81 177 188 19 did tell him, and the jury probably thought that she might have married him without doing so had she chosen. At Wimbledon Mr. Joy was introduced, and was treated as her betrothed husband; and it is clear that what he learned of her previous history did not then deter him from acce ting the position. The defendant himsel insisted strongly that he had always qualiï¬ed his position with an " if," in the virtues of which saving clause he appeared to ‘have placed unbounded conï¬dence. “It", all was satisfactory to his mind,he intended to marry her,but it was indie ntable,on the evidence given, that he had lowed the"ii" to exist in the form of a mental reservation onl . He was introduced, and he behaved as Kits. Miller’s intended hushand,and that he should ay some penalty was, rhape, the inevitagle consequence. On h s return to Bournemouth strong pressure was put on him by his family to break of! the match. Reports about the lady, who had undoubt- edly been involved in a good deal of litiga- tion in the lace, were current in the;town, and the ups ct of Mr Joy's calmer consider- . part of the defendant it was said that. after all. this was but making a virtue of necessity; that a woman with so notorious ahistory. recorded in the newspapers of the day, could not possibly hope to conceal her set, and that to tell her intended hus- ban something of it was the only course open to her. Thepfaot remained that she Mr. Joy, the defendant. is ahuilder at Bournemovth.owningaconsiderableamount of property there, but he swore in the witness box that it was all mortgaged. and that his net income did not exceed 8500 a year. He is 62 years of age, with a large grown up family, and his ï¬rst wife, who was alive when Mrs. Miller ï¬rst visited Bournemouth. died in January, 1882. In the spring of that year his real acquaintance ; with the plaintiff ï¬rst commenced. According to his statement. he never walked with her or called upon her till June; and two letters from her of that date, inviting him to call upon her, and signed, “ Yours, very truly,†were put in evidence. According to her. the intimacy commenced much earlier, and he had asked her to be his wife at the end of April. It was, however. admitted on all sides that in the middle of June she had gone up to London, and that he had joined her there on receipt of a telegraphic mes- sage. It is ually certain that she took him down to imbledon, to the house of a gentleman bearing the same name as her- self, though not connected with her, and that Mr. Miller, of Wimbledon. had then communicated to him aportion. at any rate. of her past history. at the laintifl's request. It can hardly be don ted that the fact of the plaintiff having voluntarily given this information to the Bourne- mouth builder, before marrying him, was the element in the case which weighed most heavily in her favor. » ‘On the The case took a long time to try, but the main facts were simple enough. The plaintiff was a woman with a history. Ten or eleven years ago she brought another action for breach of promise against a very rich American gentleman, who had seduced her while she was a shopwoman at True- ï¬tt’s and with whom she had lived for four or ï¬ve years. The defendant in that action had married two or three years before she‘ sued him, and she admitted that she had received his visits, and that he had continued an allowance to her for some time after his marriage. The action resulted in her receivmg a sum 'of £1,500.‘ which was certainly not exorbitant. inasmuch as that defendant had unques~ tiOnahly betrayed her, and was the father of her child. All these facts she admitted ; but ‘in order to appreciate the motives of the jury in awarding her now a much larger sum out of the pocket of Mr. Joy, her sub- sequent history must. of course, be con- sidered, and it is right to say at once that no impropriety of conduct subsequent to her ï¬nal separation from the American gentle- man was alleged against her. In 1875 she went to Bournemouth and started business as a milliner under the name of Mme. Bevillion. The business did not succeed, and she left the place for a time, returning some six years afterward. body's feelings, we may say that the plaintiff in " Miller vs. Joy " was endowed. notwithstanding her age. with a fall share of these elements of success. On the other hand. the defendant in actions for breach of promise is generally something either of aknave or a tool, or, at any rate, is placed in such a position that he appears to be one or both. As a rule. a man is not made defendantin a breach of promise case unless he has been in some degree in fault â€"a notable exam le in ï¬ction notwith- standing. 0! the efendant in “ Miller vs. Joy " there can be no harm in saying what his own counsel saidâ€"that he had, at any rate, been exceedingly foolish. If the ver~ diet of the jury is to be taken as logically implying that the jury disbelieved him whenever his evidence was at variance with that of the plaintiff. he was something ‘ more ; though it is by no means necessary to assume as much as this. Nevertheless. even allowing for a prepoesessing plaintiff and a culpable defendant. £2,350 is a very considerable amount to award as damages, and those persons who like to regard juries as infallible will be anxious to understand the motives which induced so very decided a verdict. Ion-Ice and lxportc-cce t- the Plain- tlll's chequered career. The action for breach of promise of mar- riage. which. says the London Standard. has formed the chic! attraction to the unoccupied at the royal courts of justice idurinoiilthe past four days. has terminated aseu actions usually do. One might wonder. indeed, that they are ever defended. except for the same reasons that some- times cause the most timid of creatures to show ï¬ght when driven into a corner. The plaintiff in actions for breach 0! premise is. in nine cases out of ten. a witness eminently calculated to make atavorahle impression upon the British juryman. The same attractive exterior which enabled her to ensnare the afleoticns of the defendant in the ï¬rst instance again does her excellent service when allowed a wider range of operation in acourt of justice. Without hurting any- body's _leelin_g§.__ we m_ay say that the JOY TURNED TO GRIEF. Very Remarkable Breach of Pro mine Suit Won by a Widow. SHE GETS NEARLY 012.000. â€"â€"-â€"vâ€" â€"â€" by way of Abbiiiâ€"i‘iziuill nil on Junuuy 17“} for England by my of the Sun Cum). In the days of the wnr e New York junk deeler nmeeeed n fortune by buying ï¬ne linen clippings from ehirt mnkere end eell- ing them to the Government for the menu- feotnre of trees note pe r. He bought at Goente e ponn end eol et 75 cents. Now hie temily turn up their noeee et eteteemen end college preeidente who do not put livery on their taunts. Lord and Indy Bombay hue unnamed their intention of rotumln’g from Auntnlla L._ A,, But don’t thinkqof advertising in a well- ‘ established, legitimate newspaper. Not for a moment. Your advertisement would be nicely printed and would ï¬nd its way into all the thrifty households of the region. where the farmer. the mechanic. the trades- men and others llve.and into the femilies ol the wealthy and reï¬ned. ell who have arti clee to buy and money with which to buy them, and after the news of the day has been digested. it would be read and pon- dered. and next day people would come down to your store and patronize you. and keep coming In increaeing numbers. and you might have to hire an extra clerk or two. move into a larger block and more favorable location and do a bigger business. but of course it would be more expensive â€"end bring greater proflts.â€"New Ilaven‘ Register. _ Petronize every agent that ehowe you an advertising tablet. and. directory. diction- ary or even an advertising Bible, it one is ofl'ered at a reasonable price. The mm ma“ "Lake 3 Emma When the breezes blow. welted by a paper fun in the hands of lovely women, ’tis well to heve the air redolent with the perfume of the eermine ink in which your business address is printed. This will make the. market (or decent tune very good. Advertise on a calendar. People never look at a calendar to see what day of the month it is. They merely glance hurriedly at it so as to be sure that your name is spelled withont a pâ€"that'e all. A A boy with 3 big plmrd on a pole is an interesting object on the street. and lends e digniï¬ed air to your establishment. Hire about two. » in which to catch a train. he invariably stops to read depot advertisements, and your card might teke his eye. Cl course the street thermometer dodge is excellent. When 3 men’s ï¬ngers and ears ere “ phewing" at the heat is the time above all others when he reads an adver- tisement. \ Print in the hleckest ink e greet sprawl- ing card on all your wrapping paper. Ladies returning from a shopping tour ike to be walking bulletins. end it the ink} rubs off end spoils some of their ï¬nsry. no matter. They never will stop at your store again. Don’t fail to sdvertise in every circus rogremme. It will help the circus to pey its bills, and visitors can relieve the tedium of the clown's jokes by looking over your interesting remarks about “20 per oent. below oost,’f etc, Hove your end in the hotel register by all means. Strangers stopping at hotels for a night generally buy a. oignr or two before they leave town. and they need some inspiring literary food besides. If an advertising agent wants your busi- ness advertised in a fancy frame At the depot. pay him shout 200 per cent. more than it is worth, and let him put it there. 1 _When If men hes three-querters of aseeonm 80-0 Renal-In Telling What I. Do all What he: to Do. If you have goods to sell. advertise. Hire a man With a lampblack kettle and a brush to paint your name and number on all the railroad fences. The cars go whiz- zing by so fast that no one can read them. to be sure. but perhaps the conductor would stop the train to accommodate an inquisi- tive passenger. ' Remember the fences by the roadside as well. Nothing is so attractive to the passer by as a well painted sign: “ Millington's Medical Mixture_lor Mumps.†_ for by the defendant’s counsel. and granted by the judge. we may assume thatan appli- cation will he made to the divisional court to review the decision. No doubt the main ground will be that the damages must be regarded as excessive. since we fancy that every one who watched the case had arrived at the conclusion that the defendant would inevitably .have to pay something for his folly. Whether his folly was properly ap- praised at the sum of £2,350 is. of course. another question. on which it is highly probable that the lastword has not yet been by this trial ought to increase the amount of compensation which his breach of promise entitled her. There were many incidents in the case to which it is impossi- ble for us to refer to. and that the defend- ant exhibited a good deal of stolid stupidity, to say the least of it. in giving his evidence, is undoubted. It has often been suggested in jest that breach of promise cases should be tried by a jury of matrone. While we are not in any way disputing the justice of the verdict actually given,there can belittle ‘ doubt that a jury of matrone in this case would not have awarded the laintiï¬ nearly as much as she has received. _na§mu_ch ae_a stay of execution was asked ueticns oi the leiutifl's presence end the ettrections ci e metropolis. wee tbet be determined to breeh loose from the toils Bed be shown more promptneee in ecting upon his resolve he might bevs been less severely punished; but even then he deliied with tem tetion. end e very imprudent visit to re. Miller one subsequent Bun- dey. when he set teihiug to her n her bed. room. undoubtedly set the current 0! tb opinion c! the jury strongly einst him. It mey et ï¬rst ei bt seem guler thete men should be con emned to pey so lerge a sum for refusing to tulfll his eugegement with e ledy whom none of the jurymen. probably. would heve regarded as e suit- eble wife for themselves. It is e some‘ whet streuge reflection thet the pleintiï¬â€˜ could scercel heve been ewerded s lerger 'sum. even it or pest history bed been eb- soluteiy free from stein. It wes certein tbet she wee en experienced women oi the world. end tbet the deisndeut bed been. es the counsel for the defence urged. like we: in her bends. The verdict of the jury must probebly be regerded es intimetina their opinion tbet Mchy bed not been influenced by the knowledge of her previous tell from virtue2 end th_et the fresh publicity given to “ion. whgn be 119(17qude from the “col. TIIB ADVERTISEMENT- in the in» mm 'whioh the use. hu’o‘bééi peeking at. If u union’s oivilintion in gunned. :- the who dooluo.by m trenmont of women. than America stands baud. shoulders. tad hurt than .II “no mt of the world.â€" Katc Field. engineer on one of Her Mejeety 'e ehipe, ï¬nding itheet when on ehorye to live ep ert from8 hie wife he eent her to hie mother‘ e. Bether then live with her mother' in- lew. the wife enp rted herself by her own work. Feliingil Hhowever ehe wee obliged to we her huehend for the meene of euheietenoe; end the eimp ie re- Elytoher demend wee thet there wee e ome for her at her mother- in- lew' n. This ehe declined to eooept. But. efter heerin the oeee. the judge decided thet e hneben eepereted from 8his wife hed e ri ght to mpel her to live with her mother in- lew. The oonveree of this punishment would. in the oeee of meny e men. beeoneidered e very eevere one. â€"~St. Jams‘ Gazette. The wonhions pooplo no the most in- ‘ur_o_d by ï¬gndg. â€yo gaugflyï¬pd thgt to The opium eater is. with respect to dis- position. a creature of the most variable mood, his manner being moulded by the action of the drug. In the morning he is petulant and ill-tempered, sometimes to brutality,‘while the afternoon of the same day will ï¬nd him graciously considerate. Those who have had experience with them know that the meet truthful people become the most daring liars after long indulgence in the useot opium. The realities of life are so blended with the distorted opium im inings that the victim cannot distin~ gui between facts and fancy. So much is this the case that those who hear them talk. ignorant of their habit, are positively shocked at the glaring falsity of their state- ments. They jealously guard their in- ï¬rmity. and it would be next to useless to ï¬xation them concerning their habit. ugging his chains. the rack would hardly ‘draw lrom the victim a true statement with respect to the quantity of Opium used by him it be suspected an intention to interfere with his allowance. Always with them,too, is the dread that by some un- happy combination ot circumstances. lack of money. involuntary conï¬nement. close surveillance. any or all of these obstacles. they may ï¬nd themselves so situatedas not to be able to procure the drug, experi- ence having taught them the horrors of abstinence. A outioue queetion hue just been decided in the Portsmouth County Court between 3 huebend end wife. i'I‘he huebend wee en In the oonree of n moneh your husband will probably oak why you never go nenr the piano any more. All men do. An effective reply is w hum up en old book of exeroieee and proohoe :hree hours every week while he is at home. He Will “rend to his own nfl'eire utter thot. Remember that getting married in no ree- eon why you should shut yourself up in the house. Accept all invntetione just the some as before. and have a good time. When he oomee home and ï¬nds both you end the ï¬re out he will realize how cheer- leeg life would be without you. If you need a pair of new shoes say nothing about them, but get the money for something else, and then while he is ewsy slip out and select the shoes yourself. Even s psir of sevens looksmsll to a men so long ssrhe does not know the number. Ityonr husband complains thnt you can- not cock as his mother docs. comfort him with the reflection that you probably will by thgï¬mc you are as old no she is. Do not get angry when yourhusband ï¬rst asksyou to darn his stockings. Smile sweetly and suggest that it would be cheaper to buy new ones. Your husband’s wardrobe will frequently require repairs in the way of buttons. Al- ways leave the needle. thread and button~ ba_g_whererhe can get them. No none but [In Manchu-Law's. Love is blind. but love is not dent. So don’t snore. \ Do now ehreoton to go home to your mother oftener than ï¬ve ï¬mes a week. As you. don’t go he may eventually begin to doubt your sineerity. . » 7 1mm water. And then gradually colder ‘water. A 2 per cent. corrosive sublimnto lotion is next to be pretty freely cpplied. The head in then to be dried, and the roots of the hair ore to have n g per cent. solu- tion of nnpthol in spirit rubbed into them. Finnlly 3 pounds of 1} to 2 per cent. of catholic or enlicylic oil is to be used to the head. This tmtment has now in mnny cases brought the disease not only to n stand. but the hair has been to n considern~ bk; extent restoredâ€"Boston Medical Jour- na 0 cause the hsirdreeser more frequently attends to them st their own homes. end there uses their combs and brushes. In order to prevent. us lsr as possible. the commencement of ulopoeie prsmsturs, the bar should be out sud dressed at home and with one's own implements. sud these thoroughly olesn. When it has begun. the following mode 0! treatment is suggested : The soslp is to he daily well soeped with tor or fluid glycerine potash soup. which is to he rubbed in for flitesn minutes ï¬rmly. The heed is then to bedrenched with. ï¬rst, What Omelene It and new it (‘u be Avoided. O. Leecer hee continued hie oheemtlone on the netuee of premeture beldneee. end bee lurther convinced himseli oi the cum munioebility 0! et leeet the form eeeo- oieted with dendrufl. When the heire which loll at! in euch ceeee ere collected. rubbed up with veeellne. end the ointment eo mode ie rubbed emcnu the (or of rehbite or white mice. beldneet repidly mehee iteeit vieible on the perks eo treeted. Thet this is not due to the veeelnne wee shown by enointing other euimele with the veeeline elone. which produced no effect whetever. He considers thet the dieeeee ie epreed by heir-dressers. who employ combo end bruehee to their cuetomere. one eiter enother. without eny reguler cleene~ iugtotheee erticlee otter eeoh time they are need. During irequent vieite tothe heirdreeeere it one ecuoely foil thet brneheeere need which heve been shortly before‘ dressing the heir of one eflected with no common e complunt ee eoely bold- ueeeu Femelee. he thinks. are leee often aï¬ected_ with _ this iorm oi baldness. be~ The 0pm- Incl-'- Dun-Incl. Advice to Brides. IIALDNIUS.