' ., ,understeodbutsreesehu- tor-taxis, persl press! "we. cheeks. nature. O n . felt better; my god ' - » parse with me; I could?“ to â€11:3. an‘hd. â€â€œ38 began to come beckflto my lliubs- Onterio, and Morristown, N. Y i box“ â€0y 0 LINDSAY. FRIDAY' APRIL 39' 1898. I began to bereble to not aboutouerntcheez dglsdsdnor hunch-1:6": In loose form by the â€"\ ‘ my°’°‘3‘“|°1W*Izflllesnoodlesever: boxes for 8250)at¢i1500suteebox, crux H n ..- . E DARATOGA MIRACLE am! now, after the useofeight boxeeof the. drunists or till-extI bmueitl° If.“ “Um 3...... in ,A. m3.t..°3':.2‘.2:l’..i‘.°°.:li°:lr‘.:“ W."...."-m-'Mm°w'»3v-mil“; â€37333 INVESTIGAm BY â€the Muraglflï¬ï¬r'; wood. 3:11 3: :0 sold milk]: was o'fht‘rodkt‘ihnmt gill;- W up w ,..xmss_mm. . gym, mg. a... institute seminars; em: "in II ' "m GIIII'II- ; 0. new man, _ [:99 1"!“ h ,, â€ï¬rm 3?“. m. :h".m 09630 I up.“ ‘0 b‘ 311: all: A Home-Made ruse and M c m e myorgsn and piano agency; Icennct A d . . " . . 0". â€new.“ um. “ â€.3 too â€85 terms 0‘ Dr. Williams mp1s, mex sive and eï¬â€˜ective ed â€"1390... i- tl. Ill- ï¬ln‘kdï¬i'lg 301:0. Pele Pen 1., as I know the ï¬lter, which I e in 1884 and have used co- :3. ago an article appeared in 3"“ me up “incurable". §;°{h:‘§§°,;,,‘,'p,‘f§’,:; its; copied from the Albany. N. Y. ElShellie the wonderful at: which the Iketch- It is 30‘ PI' a 9. giving the 9“.“ch of on. of WWW“ insecuring tented and your .. 0;: â€Mum cm. 0, m 19.1: zeriï¬cetion of in all its details, from the reader; are free to _ y :1â€. Too nucloflgngu the head- gwém; tbs? Mr. Quant was P make and use it. The .u smug: Co. s. and excited case m hand and who gmuwgggï¬f . ‘_6 oil to be puriï¬ed is widespread continent that another "my paperâ€"the km-dotailed . . one make a :horongh Emmaï¬on mstslsments appearing in mumma ‘. .. The factsss elicited by m. . are given in the following ““331 in that 93â€? “I A l - red .mwzaï¬kw one of the most interesting , x .3100 :- :31: r: are there Was published in slow) Emmi: Journal the story of ‘21:: ' S I .-l indeed so remarkable . ' ‘2 {Hallieâ€" ' u kz’n’d“ inï¬rm. ily the term "miraculousâ€â€" of assrere case of locomotor ataxia ' lysir: simply by the use of curable. Let it be remembered that ell this hospital treannent was two and three years ago: while his cure. by the use of Dr. Williams Pink Pillsfor Pale People, has been effected since last So tember, 1891. So it is beyond a doubt evi that .hls recovery is wholly due to the use of these i famous pills which have been found to have made such remarkable cures in this “310%†cases. . r. usnt placed in the hands of the reporter his card of admission to Roosevelt hospital. which is here reproduced in fur- ther couï¬rmation of his statements: 9. coarse strainer into the chamber D, strainer E, cock G, pipe H, and elbow I, into the water space " water through the ï¬l- "' ter J, and is ready to be drawn 03‘ from the noun-maps on. chamber L through a â€ping par" ‘ Onion .. Pills! r We 1’6â€â€œ. "id- “ °°m- oeesas m . 1'1er the cock R as re- â€"-’ ' a "“ ‘n’5‘3°5i§“".o£§ afï¬x: noosnvnnr ~ M“ method Olmtignodf 316 real facts of . HOSPITAL" The ï¬lter is made of porous material, .... investRI 7’0; OU‘l‘oPA‘I'iBNT. -9 such as bone charcoal, about as ï¬ne as â€0......-..- , - coarse sand. This is perhaps the best ma- ï¬a)†'of the wonderful cure of ., has A. Quest of Gslway, Saratoga .z. _\',Y._ or) ï¬rst told in “The Journal," 5°23 copied into hundreds if not (is of other daily and weekly .. .rs and has created such a . 'on throughout the entire country i: was deemed aduty due all the people especially the thousands of similarly a. .-, that the statements of the case .. in “The Albany Journal†and .. into so many other newspapers .‘d, if true,bs veriï¬ed; or, if false ..:« as an impoiition upon public .. alt . its risult of the Express reporter’s ~stlcns authorius him in saying 'the story of Charles A. Q-iant’s curs locomotor ataxia by the use of Pink ;. for Pale People. a popular remedy .. .. and putup by the Dr. Williams ‘ihe Company, Morristown, N. Y.. .. Broclmlle, Ontario. IS TRUE, and . 3.11:3 statements are not only Justiï¬ed veriï¬ed by the fuller development oi farther facts of the case. Pshspst'ns readers of the Express are all of them fully familiar with the 1s of this miraculous restoration to "' of a man who sfter weeks and his of treatment by the most skillful m. in two of the best hospitals in state of N-w York-The Roosevelt pixel in New York city and St. Peter’s ill in Albanyâ€"was dismissed from as incursb.e and, because the case deemcdl curable, the man was denied into several others to which t'lcetioh Was mode in his behalf. The as told by Mr. Quent himself and 4 hedln the Albany Journal, is as .73;â€" liynslne is Charles A. Quant. I am Mold. 1 “a born in the village of ‘ ray cud exerptinfl while travelling on Jm: â€if It lime while in Amsterdam, aspect my whose life here. Up to eight year-â€go I had never been . and n. .hnn in perfect health. I lacy 5:! fuel. tall. weighed 180 pounds via my wrong. For 12 years I was ' gflalrsmnu for a piano and organ - -y. and Dell to do, or at least did do, ‘ deal of neny lifting. not my meals . irrruularly and slept in enough ‘spare in country houses to freeze any "' man to death, or at least give him icrial for the purpose, though .spongc, coarse sand, or sawdust may be used. When it becomes dirty, I take out the ï¬ll- ing, wash it thoroughly with potash and re lace it. n the sketch, A is the covcr,M is a clean-out cock, and N, O, is a i-inch steam pipe, which forms two heating coils, one in chamber D and one in K. These coils keep the oil and water hot, only enough steam being used to condense in its a s through and drip from the pipe at 6.1‘ï¬e two upper sections are removable for clean- ing, couplings at S and P allowing the pipe to separate. P is the steam inlet. and Q is a gauge glass, the use of which is obvious. It may be thought that the oil would be injured by heating, but the temperature is never very high; and I have handled all kinds of oil without the least damage to them.â€"Powcr. _... To verify Mr. Qusut’s statement our re- porter s few days ago (March 31. 1892) call- ed on Dr. Allen Starr at his case, No. 22 West Twenty-eighth street, New York city. Dr. Starr is house physician of the Roosevelt hospital, situated corner Ninth avenue and Fifty-ninth street. In reply to inquiry he said he remembered the case of Mr. Quent very well and treated him some but that he was chiefly treated and under the more especial care of Dr. Ware. He said he regarded this case as he did all cases of locomotor ataxia as incurable. In order that our reporter might get a copy of the history of the case of Mr. Quant from the hospital record he very conrteousiy gave him a letter of which the following is a copy: Dr. M. A. Starr, 22 West Forty-eighth street, omce hours. 9 to 12 a.m.. N ewYork, March 31st, 1802. Dear Dr. Vought: If you have any record of a locomotor ataxia by name of Quant, who says he came to the clinic three or four years ago, No. 14,037, of the 0. D. Dept., Roosevelt, sent to me from Ware, will you let the bearer know. If you have no record send him to Roosevelt Hosp. I D HIGHBBI' Answers to a Variety of Questions. Writes a lady: “Will you kindly tell me, through your columns, if you know of any book on the chemistry of cooking ‘3 Would it not prove a subject of interest to all for a talk in your department 2 It seems to me as if some knowledge of the reasons for do- ing these familiar things, for putting such and such ingredients together to give such and such eï¬ects, would give additional in- terest to the performance of them.†There are two excellent works on the subject : “The Chemisty of Cookin and Cleaning,†by Mrs. Ellen H. Richer s, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and “The Chemistry of Cookery,†by Mat- ticu Williams. Perhaps it will be possible, in the near future, to carry out the sugges- tions in regard to the scientiï¬c reasons why certain things are to done in household work. A letter from a girl asks if it will be pos- sible to have some dining-room doors paint- ed, the old paint being so smooth that she fears new paint will not adhere. Painters say that the smoother the surface the bet- ter; so there need be no diï¬iculty on that score. A subscriber asks how she shall prepare a black walnut suite of furniture rcvioua to painting it white. If she will ru cvcry E STOGK y. Yours. S'rsnn. By means of this letter access to the records was permitted and a transcript of the history of Mr. Quant’s case made from them as follows: “No. 14,037. Admitted September 16th, 1889. Charles A. Quant, aged 34 years. Born U. S. Married. Hoboken.†“History of the coca-Dyspepsia for past four or five years. About 14 months par- tial loss of power and numbness in lower extremeties. Girdling aenoetion about ab- domen. (November 29.h,1889, not improved, external strobismus of left eye and dilata- tion of the left eye.) Some diï¬iculty in passing water at times; no headache but some dizziness; alternate diarrhoea and constipation; partial ptosis past two weeks uTREET. rheumatism. About eight years M0 in left eye. ' - - to feel distress in my stomach. “0111. R. F. 31 1109- “3“ 5043-†art With sandpaper and then Shell“ It, the consulted sev-ral doctors about “v- These are the marked-lylllllti'imill 0’ ‘ furniture “a be pained when dr ' Cement for repairing broken c ina, that will stand washing, is wanted. I know of nothing that will resist water, although that uality is claimed for many cements. If t e china or glass be thick enough, and the piece or pieces large enough to hold ï¬ne rivets, it can be riveted together, and will be as ï¬rm as ever. Fish Cakesâ€"Take any cold ï¬sh which is left (boiled is best), pick out all the bones and skin, pick ï¬ne, chop enough cold Iboil- ed potatoes to make twice the quantityof ï¬sh you have, beat up an egg and stir in, make into round cakes and fry in a kettle of hot fat. A correspondent says that she made a lot of fruit cake, using wine and orange and lemon-juice, hoping to keep it through part of the winter; but it has begun to mould. Fruit cake, she should understand, should be wrapped in paper, placed in tin boxes, and kept in a cool, dry place. She can scrape 03' the mould, steam the cake for an hour or more, and then dry all in the oven. When perfectly cold put away as suggest- ed. Her mistake was in putting it in stone and in the cellar, which is apt to be damp. . _ A Western girl asks why raisins fall to the bottom of a. cake. Raisins should not be put in a cake that has a very thin better. When it is heated it becomes thinner, severe case of locomotor ataxia. “And Dr. Starr said a case with such marked symp toms could not be cured and Quant, who was receiving treatment in the out patient department, was given up as incurable.†“There never was a case recovered in the world." said Dr. Starr. And then said: - “Dr.Ware can tell you more about the case, as Quent was under his more personal treatment. I am our , he said, that the man is alive, as I thought that he must be dead long ago." Our reporter found Dr. Edward Wars at his ofï¬ce, No. 162 West Ninety-third street, New York. He sald:â€""I have very dis- tinct recollections of the Quest case. It was a very pronounced case. I treated him about eight months. This was in the early summer of 1890. I deemed him incurable, andthousht him dead before now. imagine my surprise when I received a letter from him about two weeks ago telling me that he was alive, was getting well and expect- ed soon to be fully recovered.†“What do you think, doctor; was the cause of his recovery.†. “That is more than I know. Quant says he has been taking some sort of pills and that they have cured him. Atoll events, I am glad the poor fellow is well. for his was a bad case and he was a great sui- f rer." 8Dr. Theodore R. Tattle, of 319 West Eighteenth-st, to whom our reporter is “ all laid ll. was dyspepsia, and for italaI was :reated by various doctors "’00!- u 8% ». and took all the patent " ineslcuull hear of that claimed to curator dyspepsia. But I continued Km" gradually verse for four veers. “ I Der-n :u have pain in my back and . ind oceans,» conscious that my legs Jiltliur West and my step unsteady, ' then I staggered when I walked. ‘ ': free-lied no beneï¬t from the use of ' m9diciurs.snd feeling that I was . â€â€˜t" flowing worse, I then, upon . .' bean the new of electric belts, pads M â€â€˜6 Many d=ï¬â€˜erent kinda of electric 4‘ch I couu hear of. and spent ' _M of dollars for them, but they Iâ€? 3° *00-1- (Here Mr. Quant showed 4 â€3"“: l'muzter an electric suit of t ‘2“ for ~n cu he paid $124) In the 1588“!" duo are advised a change ““1" wI wear. to Atlanta, Ga., and â€use!“ lul‘ the Estey Organ Com- -. Wm... mrs I took a thorough no “"Wu ml. ontit only seemed to 1??“ my disease, and the only relief .I‘ f" it0m u... sharp and distressing . ‘fu :0 mks morphine. Thepain *9 :- «use -. times that it seemed “9‘01 could not stand it, and I * “and i r death as the onlv in r â€â€˜f- I» September of 1888 :3? " Vs uu entirely and my left 3" ' *~ to one side, so that I I dam“ R‘i' and was dizz M - i ‘ ' Y- Y indebted for aesis courteeies, said of , , , he ’ ‘3 -~‘ "1 V003 mm. - “ have had “veal and there is nothing to sustain them. my whole nor 1 mthIat‘dldeaae in the course of my Roll the fruit in flour, and stir into the cake em “I l we“ to ve up business. I’m" d 'u NewgiYork and went .8, . n spital, where for four ,. . ruled by specialists and . D‘wï¬umd my case locomotor . , “ "car-we. After I had been if". “in by Prof. Starr and' Dr. ’ Uurrnon’hs, they â€Id me the its ' ,‘i r--u'd for me. Then . .3" b w York hospital cum:- . ~n--r-, upon examination, and cases of practice. I will not say that it is incurable. but I never knew of a case to get well; but I will say it is not deemed curable by any remedies known to the medical profes- sion." » After this successful and conï¬rmatory investigation in New York. our reporter, Saturday. April 2nd, 12, visited Sr. b i in Albany oornerof Al- Peter’s “Iggy-st. He had a courteous very li htly, and at the last moment.â€" Ladiea’ ome Journal. Viiliiiill'l‘l _0_F_ llii'l‘fliills. It has been demonstrated that while the grca‘ test velocit im ted toecannonball scarcely exceeds 6%: meters a secondâ€" sbout 1.500 miles an hour; meteors from space penetrate the air with a velocity. it d the 0 set of his Iliu'flgheo throne of poor Kr. th m...W.- grammes...“ case . iii-gen. chr fellow, he. the and. ' in. "ter condition sndhedtosehm. I speed raises the tem of the air at oncetoiOOO or 6000 degreescentigrade. causing in many cases a com leie des- truction of the meteorite by com ustion Within the last two.years it has been demonstrated to the satisfaction of all .wj" m' ‘udioldme the some n March. 1890, I was taken to St. â€"-â€"‘""/ Lulu,“ “ “I H. A-.beny, where Prof. H. ,,.'“;k ' ‘0 a my wife myeaae wee __â€"â€"/ ’ "3 a. could do nothing for me ‘31:. '-' , has better take me back home “if money. But I wanted to , , Rh ‘3‘! were freezing and my . gm“! 110’ retain food, and I fell Winds. Ia theAlbeny hospi- mg“ 17 his burns on my back one u, “'1 hot irons and after I few days 1:12;. ill? on and oath“? at" - got worse “:0“ lost eontreiofmy boweli and t†a“; “WI! Idvice of thcdcctorr'fh. ‘N no hope for one. 1"“ Where it was thought that ‘ Wei Macrame peat purity of its composition it can safely be left where the oung can use it when required It con no isonous ingredients and does not like or er couzh paratious uanseste or sickeu pirDuring this season of the year no home dyrup which should most ruminant. doctors prescribe i knowld’gthat it‘never fails. t. pplured into the chant- B, passes through thence through a ï¬ne K. It then rises to the surface of the ‘ mm neur r matiam, nervous heeid'acheg'thc :lffltdrefleggs ofia grippe, paipitstion of the heart, pale sod-anew complexion, that tired feeling resulting from nervous nrostrstion; all diseases :ggendmg upon vitiated humors .iuthebl ,suohssscrofuls,ehronie ery- _ Chaise, etc. They are also a speciï¬c for troubles peculiar to females. such as sup- irrengot’alsg‘iliiinls, eupheliblforms of : , u c cod ' restore the glow of health‘to pole or mild]: In the case of men they effect a radical ours in all cases arising from mental worry, over-work *or excesses of whatever .hï¬t‘t’ill".°.2q“‘" “i" Fl???“ “M menu so n th D . Willisms’ Medicine Company Bl-ookEillg, .. an are X m“ s- l- on able and would not Phil “3° - _ . .. . no. don bySister Mary omens. corn» . ill. in At tr... Presbyterien hospital slate: â€parlor,“ St. Peta’tvg‘ozvm 3‘: 1.3.33â€; ogecgigoo' meggï¬endon: i v i "W 1')? 3' Iieg": °5 Paar. Hunt’s famous sk‘ill RW‘ ' M “'1 °’ ’1 treatment °' ver accorded an o erco hremcd . T P - ll'lhkl' 0‘“ secured 3° bencflt. A“ It‘swork in ailtgaweyh: beer?8 swift and! .017 PRICE bra.“ ha been mm 'om' I sure; and the speed so. 2: ."mr‘" 93‘1"“ from my namehasï¬own.istrul marvellous. 5‘06!- 'l‘ d Md partly 1°“ control of ‘ Harvard Bronchial yrup has become ’ ' i '3 sale was terrible; my 198' the famii , issafe withouta bottle of this wonderful in footabeingsointense’ as to render there be taken at once separation impossible b mechanic-isomer. when the ï¬rst symptoms are felt. Oar chemical maven-also showings-perfect as- l D English and Scotch engineers and ship- owners are talking over a scheme for dig ing abig ship canal clean across Scotland, so that Cgrcat steamers may be able to sail up the yde on the west coast and come down the Firth of Forth into the North Sea on the cast. There is actuallya canal between these two points at present ; it has been there 100 years, but it is only 56 feet wide and 10 feet deep, so that it is of no use for oceen steamers. The plans now under consideration provide for an entirely new canal, two routes for which are suggested. rill: Loon LOHOND ROUTE. One of the routes proposes to make use of Loch Lomond and Loch Long, and strike the Clyde near its month. On this route, however, the canal would strike a few noun 0? THE PROPOSED SKIP CANAL ACROSS SCOTLAND. miles of mountainous country, part of which could~be ed by deep cuttings, and about two miles of it by a tunnel 150 feet high through the hill. The length of this route is 69 miles, and the cost of the canal is estimated at $40,000,000. A more probable and more favorable route is that shown in the map, which is reproduced from Cassell’s Magazine. This line is very nearly direct between the two termini, and is only twenty-nine miles. It is ï¬gured that a canal on this line could be built twenty-six feet dce , and 100 feet wide at the bottom, for a at $35,000,000, and it is estimated that a low scale of tolls would yield an income of $3,000,000 per annum. On this route twelve locks would be re- quired, and the canal would cross six rail- ways and the present barge canal. Vessels now bound from a port on the east coast of Scotland to one on the west coast have to go round by the north through dangerous currents and prevailing fogs, or else run down through the crowded English chan- nel, and make a long circuit round the southern end of England. The proposed Forth-Clyde Canal would lessen the dangers and save some hundreds of miles. A Superb Machine. Another of those superb mechanismsâ€"a ï¬fteen-ton locomotive steam craneâ€"hes lately been placed in one of the great steel plants of England, and presents in its con- struction some special points of interest. The load to be lifted is ï¬fteen ions, at a radius of sixteen feet, and at this radius the center of the jib pulley is twenty-three feet from the rail level, but the jib is ï¬tted with a derrick motion, permitting it to be lowered so as to be clear under a way of seventeen feet. All the gearin , also the roller path and rollers, main crou sad. and many other important pan. m made of cast steel, and the post is a swcl forging. Steam is 'applied to both sets of resilient; a large a vertical boiler, double rive throughout, and arranged to work at a are of 120 pounds per care inch. e crane engines have donglec linden nine inches in diameter by two ve-inch stroke, these actuating the hoisting, slew- ing and derrick motions; the full load is lifted in single purchase, with two to of 1} chain; theslewin gear-l. wor ed by double cones, and the errick gear by means of worm and “v’vheel in the usual mullet. sensible people that Harvard Bronchial , . - . 8,... ............ mm mm»: blustecctzsmmsimc by twenty inches stroke, and drive direct with which its ROOd ; 9n to one'bf the axles; the‘ latter Hindu journals ï¬tted to steel axle boxes. VM slide in heavy steel brackets bolwd to the ‘ , co h remedy in all well i truck frames, the load, bci carried by ‘ regulated Cansdfan homes Owing to the ' three yolute springs over ngaxle box. ' Iron and Nickel Experiments. ironwithuiekel,the adhesioaefthemstsb, . u .3. -“flMg‘, “démm M do SO at once. PRIMEâ€" SEED 8. Farmers who have not yet selected “Mum _.._- -0 eï¬'ccted at a temperature of from ï¬ve hun- dred to six hundred degrees below the fusing point; The volatility of iron when heated to cherr redness is another fact which seems to ave been established re- cently. In this case two plates of iron and nickel, superposed, being submitted to the same degree of heat, the iron passing into the nickel to a notable extent without sol- . dering or adhesion of the surfaces result. ing. 0n the whole surface of the sheet of nickel an alloy‘was formed with the iron, which, in the case of one-millimetre sheets, penetrated to 0.05 of their thickness, and contained on the average twenty-four per cent. of that metal, the proportion being naturally stronger on the surface. In any I case, the exceptional welding properties . whichziron possesses in comparison with other metals must, it is asserted, depend on ' a partial volatilization at a temperature much below the fusing point. .hlmin their seeds for this season’s plantin should We have the best ,in A1- sike, Red Clover, Timoth , Peas, Oats, etcâ€"all clean, lump grains. In Field and Garden Seeds we keep only the best, and they can be relied upon. SPRATT 2r, gKl’LLEN, Gnocnns am). summer. Barley, New A d vertisemente. LSHORTHON BULL FOR SALE.â€" Eleveu months old. of good roan. well flashed and ï¬t for service. Bind b! an imported Crnickshank bull. Will roaster I purchaser’s name. Come to see him .near Woodville. or write to Woodvins P. 0. ‘Will sell cheap. as I have no use for him. ANDREW McKsY. April 20th. 1892-102 ind. ook’s Cotton Root COMPOUND. Areoent discoverrb’anoid pdncipleddrnggistswho ace of this. 000 ' Com Roo'rCo . take was: or enollbse 81 andnloth'xrge-oent "Cm Eudo Mineral Water. W. A. Goodwin. HEADQUARTERS ml PIPER all norm mm â€"rsa:râ€" W. A. GOODWIN’S MI 31.8! m m. aarrs'r's GOODS a Specialty. W needles. Alamo Worn smog m D†Ins urance THE mvnnroor. am) mm“. AND GLOBE INSURANCE WHY“. FIRE AND LIFE. mmmmmm- â€World. ...... ...... -.._....fll Accumulated funds um in M21: â€W Mmpeuy. Theeeciementofl.‘ Wench“. gorse-summaries“ "tumor-n: o masculine perï¬eotseourityagainstloes. b HflRSTs PAIN A Y EXTER WiNl‘lflR witt Posmvnx cue: iBiMPS, Pills Iii THESTilllil Bowel Complaints, Diarrhoea â€"A.\'D ALDâ€" SUMMERCOHPLAINTS KEEP A BOTTLE lN THE HOUSE. are; ".‘r‘r “(ivy . a 34“, “â€~ 1. . . _j _ w y†. ... - v..)-'t .., ‘ "~ a»: -: w and J. a ‘12“). 51“?n SOLD BY ALL DEALERS. Homage Licensee. R. J. tenori Commâ€"tun. a m Victoria. soars marge.“ m ‘ IOHARD BRANDON. â€02.1mm OiloaOemeronBtreet. W .Gnonen DOUGLASS, seam 0' m mm, mm ONT. R. s. PORTER, ISSUE]! 0P “BRIEF 1.102185. en's MN. 0st. I. luluâ€"ll. sine.iinedark Ask for ' 0a. m Ill. Full A Wonderful Telegraph. ‘ 34:me to ladies 3:?de stomped‘uAIdE ‘ ‘ I , A printing telegraph system has been in- 13mm“ WI"??? 9“!- 0.31'iaherblock, El ID 0 troduced in the mills of the Illinois Steel Company, Chicago, by means of which apparatus the men at the rehcati pits can ' orm those at the ï¬nishing endtï¬ the mill as to the heat numbers of the ingot, the ingot numbers, and the number of rails to each ingot, so that the proper number I ma invariably be stamped on each rat? that leaves the mill. In addition to these numbers, the “pit" and “hold†designations are also dcspetch- ed by the some means. It is stated that though the mechanism is necessarily some- what complicated, its work is performed in a very satisfactory manner. The transmit- ter is in charge of one of the men at the reheating pit, and the receiving instrument is in charge of a boy, who reports on a black- board for the use of the stambcr the difl'cr- ent numbers and letters as they are printed MUNNCO Oldest bureau for aspid in LINDSAY by I. amour. S. Purim. A. 816W Pam. Manolo: - and by druagists everywhereâ€"7641. Scientiï¬c American Agency for caveats“ TRADE UAR DESIGN PAW COPYRIOHTS, etc. Foriuformntlouundfl'eewmfo $1 Bnosnwar. le Your. securing patents in America. Every Mi. taken out by us is brought before the public by a notice given free of charge in the ï¬tieutiï¬r gamma MINERAL WATEE, A M! ANDIIUBI manure. musics-unanimous... mammalâ€... m um mm. m- on this tape if; the receiving instrument. a The isiance tween the two is about three Int-rest emu] hundred and ï¬fty feet. . world- 031mg“ ï¬lm â€Wonm 4,-0- 3- um ' ganrsplfld‘xbemmtpplm indWeeklé, 83.00 s ‘15 all. â€M {Ill- I’Mâ€"«II To Get Bid or Fleas. , Ponusnna.’ aunmvtvlii: ir‘ora ‘ 00' is I ' “ ::::_.."_°II.â€"â€" : Place the common sidhcsivef fly per on 8‘ “ ..................._._: 1 the floors of the rooms incs ,witha Ifeeut humanism ‘ small piece of fresh meat in the center of reï¬llegatbéc. Wag“- â€.503!“ each sheet. The fleas will jump toward 3‘“ mm “M" the meat and adhere to the paper. M I. router. . Preurleuw. 83mm Oat Where Europe and America are Equal. Miscellaneous. The product of tobaocc in Europe is nearly equal in uantity to the average production of the nitcd States. To look ahead '3 That laws make no man honest 2 What per cent. it pays to keep warm 2 To avoid personalities in conversation 2 How small around the world has grown? That it pays to study variety in cook- [I’ll/II: mt: aux/1:51â€) mu /: mauve-magma†flit/lull†may. M M): GENTS WANTEDâ€"On ea communeâ€"to sell Singer 8e chines and collect in the Counties of and Halibunon. Apply to loan Hort!u eels-l out. iodicein Adam‘s Block) land-y. J" POLâ€"63 lrr. cry 2 ' . â€glint the proud man knows little of him- 7â€â€ ‘IA'IWIRJ. 1719.12.40“ Udllfglcialbï¬f bdAgE‘Pg'l‘IflN.â€"AL g 3â€â€œ WWW/I'm Mi aio'i'c'; no enter? air? we: That it pays 100 per cent. to be polite to every one, from the garbage gathercr to the governor 2 That it isn’t wise to ask your husband testep out of bed and reach the quilt on a chair user, when the weather has changed suddenly in the night fâ€"Good Housekeeping. g heveindï¬stion. ‘1,“ Use .msaomsdsmttsrs MW at†outâ€"1144‘. a ticklish positionâ€"e ï¬ne the we head. BOOM. How ofteeinehureb. leeturereom or theatre onewillnotioethe shoulders of e good-immune: 72% {If}? cimxowtwm For sein- by all Lin ssv drug atomâ€"76th G. A. Methoreil. G. A. METHERELL’S _ IS “I roses: are 6“ YOUR WALL PAPERS New patterns arriviu daily from thrush. Canadian and American Comm; Papers. Corners and Decorations. Prieesaudltyleseo seam only a make of Brick oennoo be beaten. WAKEl.IN.Oennington mamâ€"agar 'I‘ A. MIDDLETON, . Lille and W Agent Agent for the m momma». Thu-oedema“ the “when!“ â€M orehddghedmethh 'ueu. i =5 i I†fur bummed. JOBNBAOKVMI.“ m April is. mâ€"a. aadweil-ï¬tt garment plentifully with Beemiesieneryand people ‘ that Anti-Dandruff i: magistra- ml 5 05!!! ROI-I- UP "Milli CREDIT FEWâ€! â€" I whammmmunme x. 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