“d repeat the bath several times a day to put a stop to the patholog- Ical processes on the point, of breakâ€" hc out. This conclusion led Xi. Fiiatofl to have recourse to the application of compresses of alcohol in the case of I boy twelve years of age. suffering strom appendicitis. in which he Was sent for in consultation. Here is his method of procedurezâ€"A compress of gauze folded in tour, and wide en- ough to cover the entire stomach, is Woughly steeped in alcohol at 93 y hour. as soon- as the alcoï¬ol evaporated. Opium is adminis- at the same time. ; At the end of two or three days a. marked improvement. was re- ed. and the child recovered a ’ ort time afterward. ‘ . .16: do not think that in this case 139 curative role should be attribut- gl to the alcohol alone. It has hap- â€ed to all physicians who are ~not “meet! 0! the necessity of an op- ,nth!) in every case to witness the traction and cure of appendicitis the action 0! Gold compresses opium. had it would appear ' g u the case cited the alcohol ' u a retrigerant. degr ., slightly squeezed, applied y on the skin. and covered ~'ith flannel. Over all is placed an I: in ag_. and the compress is changed It would appear that, compress-vs 0' alcohol may be used in the treatment of appendicitis. At any 1."). M. Filutofl so asserts. Ho be- ‘an to use this treatment. from the day when alcohol. used as a. tonic ot the curly period of whitlow, ap- WM (.0 him to be endowed with .pecllic properties. This surgeon. in tact. considers that it sutl‘wes to keep the ï¬nger in a small glass of Dandy It is possible that in this diet is due the admirable “liberte do ven- tte" o! the Chineseâ€"to use M. Mal.- bnon's expressionâ€"and the conse- quent absence of appendicitis. It. cannot be denied that. the preceding observations strongly support. the, theory which attributes to the stimâ€" ulating influence of an excessive flesh diet. the frequency of cases 0!! appendicitis observed (or some ycurs‘ past among civilized nations. A MEAT IS A LUXURY which only the \Voll-LOâ€"(lo can nï¬ord. and its conmuuption is extremely small. The grunt. majority .0! the population. who are poor. mostly consumo- millet, simply boiled in wa- ter; a little rice. cabbage, sweet. po- tatoes. turnips proscrvvd â€at In sau- murc.†and at quantity of garlic. 2w (‘himunun also cuts a great al 0! Maxim flour or wheat flour, of which he makes cakvs and buns and unliuvcncd dough, cooked by steam. The diet. 0! the (‘hinnsm in the north. says .\I. Minimum. is not. 3 '08h diet. but. rather vegetarian. At 5’ekin and in the country very little be?! is Putt-n, (owls and ducks. mut- ton. and c-spccially pork. being preâ€" terrcd. Europeans alone‘ cat. beef. A SINGLE CASE 0! appendicitis: either in the French missions or in the hospital at Nun- tanq. Nor did he meet any during the same period among the little in- ternationnl community of 120 per- Ions who were under his care. Three times onlyâ€"~11: the case of a young Russian girl and of two Lazarist missionariesâ€"Aim he observe nbdmw innl pains having a distant resoldâ€"- blance to appcmiil‘uiatr colic, but they appeared to be due to the pres- ence of u toeniat in the intestinal tube, for they were not reproduced alter the expulsion of the parasite. The extreme rarity of appendicitis -not to say its non-existenceâ€"um- mm a people whose digestive tube is infested with worms appeared to M. lutignon to be in conflict with the theory of M. Metchnikofl, which tends to attribute to lombricoids an important part in the appearance of appendicitis. He considers himself inclined to tutor Hie theory of the influence of an excessive flesh diet, which has been incriminated by Keen, of Phila- delphia. in the ï¬rst place. and since by M. Lucas (‘hnmpinnnierm of Par-l is. This hypothesis is strongly supn ported by what he has observed in China. In spita of the great frequency of Intestinal worms, M. Mutignon dur- ing the four years that he spent in Northern thin“. never met with Northern China is. perhaps, of all countries in the world, the one in which helmonthlasis is the most. widely spread. and a rPCcnt commu- nication presented to the Academy 0' medicine in reply to M. Metchni- kofl'l communication. M. Matignon dates that appendicitis is very rare “for. even If it. is noticed at. all. Among the Celestinls Bombricoid â€lashes are found amen]; ninety- ï¬ve to ninvtyâ€"cight per cent. of the children and among sc‘t'c'.'nty-flvc per cont. 0! the adults. .Mzmng Euro- Deana Um proportion if; only twenty- Ive per rout. In short it. is very ï¬re to ï¬nd a (‘hinr-se whose digest.- he tube is not iufmu-d by tin-:0 pa- hsih-x‘. 'l’hc ascaris Inlu'n’iCUitlvs is the conmunmst 1mm; trichoccphulcs Ore also met with. Appendicitis is'thc malady o! the day; it is the most prominent mul- Idy in the course of the discussions 0! the learned societies. Its causes Inst be numerous; in any case the theories emitted respecteing its ap- pearance are mauiiold. ll. Memhnikoti. in a. recent com. munication to the Paris Academy of Medicine, attributed an important part in the development of appendi- citis to intestinal worms. uscuifles and trlchocephales, cxpccially tho inst named. which, by causing cro- Iions of the intéstinai mucous mem- brane. create an easy means of in- Mtio' by the morbid germs con- tained in the intestine. “PENDICNIS Ski; TO BE DUE TO ml‘ EATING. THE MALADY OF THE DAY. Inch 0! ruin equals one hun~ â€I to u. we. Trench Pmau Say: That lash Diet Cause: the Disease. FOR HALF AN HOUR It is the mission of Dr. Willinms' Pink Pills to make rich, red blood. nourish the nerves, tissues and vari- ous organs ol.the body, and thus by reaching the root of the trouble. drive disease from the system. Other medicines act only on the symptoms of the disease. and when such medi- cines are discontinupch- the trouble returnsâ€"often in an aggravated form. It you want health and strength. be sure the full name, “Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills (or Pale Peo- ple," is on the wrapper around each box. If your dealer cannot supply you the pills will be sent postpaid at 50 cents a box. or six boxes {or 82.50. by addressing the Dr. Wil- lim' Medicine 00.. Brockville. Ont. I have not had any return 61' villi; trouble. I am positive Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills saved me {tom an early grave. and I cannot recommend them too highly to those who are afflicted as I mun.†“Dr. Williams' Pink Pills ,s the only medicine that ever gave me any real benelit," said Mrs. 1!. K. Har- ris, a well known resident of Wind- lsor, to a representative of the Re- lview recently. “I do not know ex- ‘actly what my trouble was; doc- itors seemed unable to tell me, lthough I thought myself it was con« lsumption. I had a constant rack- ing cough. and a constant feeling of llanguidness. My blood seemed to have turned to water, and I was very pale. I had a feeling in my 'chest as though some foreign sub- 3stance was lodged there. The slight- lest noise made me nervous; I was fdejeeted all the time and could not ’scarcely do any household work. I {tried medicines. but they did not éhelp me in the least. Doctors did {not seem able to help me or tell me :what ailed me. although their bills Fincreased with alarming rapidity. I: {grew so weak. and so despondenti Ithat ï¬nally I decided to take a trip {to Colorado to see if a change of ‘climate would benefit me. While contemplating this trip I read in a paper one day the testimonial of a person whose symptoms were almost identical with my own. who was cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Il decided to give them a trial and purchased a box. When that box was done I got another, and found gradually that! the pills were helping me. The trip to Colorado was abandoned. and I continued using the pills until I had taken eight or nine boxes when I felt like an altogether different person. From a pale. thin. listless person. I became the picture of health, and felt it too. It is sev- eral years since I used the pills, and, Subject to Headaches, Dizziness and Heart Palpitation. They Grow Discouraged and Pro- maturely 01d. From the Review, Windsor. Ont. ready for the tiny plants just as they need some nourishment to give them a strong, healthy start. On the other hand, if the soil is dry at seeding time, the fertilizers will not pass into liquid condition. and the crop is deprived of the feed it needs, and this is a drawback not usually overcome during the entire season. and results usually in much reduced yields. Again, there is even a pos- sibility of injury ensuing in a dry season when fertilizers are applied at seeding time. The plants just as they are sprouting are tender and may be injured by coming in contact with crude fertilizers. The remedy for all this, then, is to apply the fertilizers before planting time, in order to give opportunity for them to become dissolved and spread out through the soil. There are some fertilizers, though, that are so solu- ble that they cannot be applied be-: fore planting time, otherwise they‘ would leach out of the soil and be lost to the crop. A few words. then, about the distinction of the diï¬erent classes may enable farmers to follow, Pale and Dejected Every opportunity should be given to facilitate this change. I! the soil contains plenty of moisture at the time o! planting. the fertilizer, will, of CUIII‘SC. dissolve rapidly and be Taking every item on the {arm there is probably none in which the maxim “Knowledge is power†mani- fests itself so much as in the use of fertilizers. There is really nothing complicated about the principles of feeding plants, and it is due almost entirely to ignorance that so many mistakes and failures occur.- A soil; may be almost destitute of planti food and still fail to rCSpontl to ap- plicntinns simply because of lack of judgment. or ignorance in using them. It. must. be understood at. the out- set that plants can only take up their nourishment. in a liquid form. therefore. before fertilizers can be of one particle of benefit, to the growing crop. they must. be changed from the solid to the liquid form. --~vâ€"â€"â€"v-- â€"- VV-v Sings a pleasant and (air refrain. Through the bows of the orchard trees. O'er the ï¬elds of the waving grain. Hark, the echoes about him throngâ€"- Nn‘AQ-n.-â€" â€"--‘ _ --_v.~v gnu-o. VIII VII Nature' 3 singing her harvest song Love is brown with his harvest toil. Brown, and brawny of limb is he. Master strong in the gardenâ€"mail. Lord of pasture and plant. and tree; Treasure-burdened. he plods along. Singing brightly hi- Larvest. song. And in answer the autumn breeze Summer all is a pleasure past. Summer charm is a tale that's told; Days 0! reaping have come. at. last. Days of ripeness and days of gold; Down the meadow-way, glad and strong. Love comes singing his harvest TRYING CONDITION OF MANY WOMEN. HARVEST SONG FERTILIZERS. Clover is the best crop to plough under {or wheat after the second crop of hay has been cut. The soil is theh richer in fertilizing material than at any previous stage of growth. The shading oi the soil y clover, and the-fact that it adds n t- rogen also makes it one of the most valuable crops that can be grown, as the value of the plant food to the soil is nearly equal to that of the crop itsell, I The value of cabbage as food for 'stock may be summed up as strong in two points, the large amount that {can be grown upon an acre. of soil {and its succulency, which makes it a milk-producing food easily digested. But it requires strong soil and good cultivation, does not, keep well for winter use unless pitted where it will be frozen until spring and even then having but a Short season, while if stumps and any decayed! leaves are fed it is almost impossible! to prevent it imparting a rank. un- pleasant flavor to the milk and but- ter, or even to the meat. unless its use is discontinued two or three weeks before the slaughtering. As regards the nutritive value. Profes- sor Johnston. in Agricultural Chem- istry, estimated seventy pounds of cabbage to have about the same val- ue as {our pounds of oil cake, twelve pounds of pea straw, sixteen pounds clover hay, twenty pounds of meaâ€" dow hay, 110 pounds of oat straw or 120 pounds of turnips. This last we think he bases upon the flat or English turnip, which are not as nu- tritious as the rutabaga. The value of the cabbages as of the roots. is best found when a small amount is given along with coarse, dry {adder and limited amount of grain. l VENTILATION AND AIR CUR- RENTS. While the milk room should be well ventilated those who still use the open pans should be careful that there is not a direct current of air blowing over the pans. The outside air is not pure and sweet. It may be laden with dust or it may be bear with it odors which are not desirable in the butter, or bacteria that Willi produce bad flavors or early decay; But even if the air is all right it‘ toughens the surface of the cream so that in churning it does not break with the rest, but either goes away in the buttermilk or mixes into the butter, usually most of it doing the latter. and then the butter is filled with specks which are simply sour cream that will not only impart an undesirable taste to the butter, but cause it to become rancid very quick- ly. We learned this by a little un- pleasant experience of our own many years â€ago, as we have learned some other things, writes a correspondent, and we advise our friends to be warned before they have to pay for the lesson. One may remove these particles of tough cream by strain- ing the whole through a ï¬ne sieve, but it is easier not to have them. Place a screen between the wimlow and the milk shelves if it is neces- sary to open the windows to cool or ventilate the room. With nitrogen, though, special care has to be given: Take nitrate of soda, which is the most soluble, and quickest acting form of nitrogen and therefore best suited for practical use. It should only be applied at a time when the plant is in need of nitrogen. The effect of nitrogen is to stimulate growth and to hasten plants to early maturity. It is to be seen. therefore, that nitrate of soda possesses special advantages for truck growers and others who wish to get their crops on the mar- ket early in the season so as to se- cure the highest prices, which usual- ly prevail then. As the plant does not need all of the nitrogen at one time. it is best to divide the nitrate of soda into three parts, using the first as a top dressing immediately after the seeds are sown, the second portion two or three weeks later, and allow about the same amount of time to elapse before using the reâ€" maining portion. ‘ The three plant foods which have to be supplied are phosphoric acid. potash and nitrogen. Phosphoric acid can be used in the form of acid phosphate. dis-saved bone, ground bone and boneblack. These mater- ials can all be used several weeks b- fore planting time, and worked into the soil. It is best to work them in. as there may be less from surface washing. and again by Working in they are within easy reach of the plant roots. The forms of potash are: muriate of potash, sulphate of potash. sulphate of potash-magnesia and kainit. These products also give better re- sults when used in the same way as the phosphoric acid. In fact, au- thorities recommend that the potash and phosphoric acid should be ap- plied together several weeks before the seeds are planted. Thor) is lit- tle danger of these mineral fertilizers washing out of the soil, since they form new compounds in the soil and remain there until taken up by the crops. these suggestions without. danger of loss. forbe'l'EETHandBREATH I.‘ an. 8020M†l'OUID a I I 26. low him Box 802000“ POWDER . . 250 Largo llollib and POWER . . . . 150 At the Stores or by Mail, postpaid, for the Price. A Dentist’a Opinion: “ As an antiseptic and by 'enie mouthwash, and for the care and preservation of the teet and sums I cordially recommend Sozodont. I consider it the ideal en ' 6 fat chlldren’s use.†[Name of writer upon applicnflm.) HALL Gs BUCKEL Montreal. CABBAGE AS STOCK FOOD BEST FOR WHEAT Here is Mr. St. Pierre's letter: “I am happy to~day to see my health {entirely reâ€"established by Dodd’s Kidney Pills. I owe that wonderful remedy a thousand thanks. Before using Dodd's Kidney Pills I had con- suited many physicians and taken medicines of various kinds, but each made me Worse. I had a constant pain in the back and limbs. At night I couldn't rest and I could not see by lamplight. Iiavim,r taken only two boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills I am perfectly cured. My eye- sight is eh-n w- all those whose health is not good. from whatever cause, to try Dodd's Kid- ney Pills. Nine times out of ten sight is clear. I advise all those Two dollars spent for Dodd’s Kid-i ney Pills will do more than millions spent otherwise. for who holds any- thing in the world more dear thanl health. or would spare any means' to save it ?" There is no attempt made to as- sert Dodd’s Kidney Pills are a cure for blindness. Dodd’s Kidney Pills are the greatest kidney medicine ever known. That is the claim made for Dodd's Kidney Pills. and there is evidence enough to prove that claim. But in cases where Kidney Disease has left poisons in the blood and the said poisons attacking the weakest spot. injure the eye. Ilodd's Kidney Pills are just as infallible as where the poison attacks the joint of the arm or the small of the back. That the eyesight of Thomas St. Pierre was restored is but another argument that Dodd's Kidney Pills make the blood absolutely pure. of America, and it. attracted more attention to Dodd's Kidney Pills than any medicine ever got before. For it was Dodd’s Kidney Pills that restored his sight. A similar case has turned up in the village of St. Epi. Que. Though this sun'erer was Hut stone blind, his eyes nevertheless were utterly useless to him by lamplight. And they have been completely restored by Dodd's Kidney Pills, which is an- other point of similarity. St. Epi. Que, July 29.â€"(Special). One year ago a miracle was announc- cd in Chicago. It. A. Wade, the great criminal lawyer, regained his sight after having for years been to- tally blind. His case was published throughout the length and breadth Health Entirely Ike-established by Dodd’s Kidney ‘ Pillsâ€"Another Triumph for That Wonderful Remedyâ€"His Eyesight Has Been Strengthened. OWES HIS EYESIGH'I‘ TO A MIRACLE. “Ah! guv'ner. if they was only all as quiet and peaceful as them, ch?" INDEBTEDNESS TO DODD’S KIDNEY PILLS ACKNOWL- EDGED BY THOMAS ST. PIERRE. DISCOVERY OF A TOWN. ,in g ‘M’Va-r The length of the night at any time of the year may be found by multiplying by two the time of the sunfs rising. Doubling the time of its setting will give the length at the day. - 'Passengers Get Glimpses of the Pan-American Exposition. People travelling from the east and west will come within the zone of the direct influence and spirit of the Pan-American Exposition miles away from the great and glorious spectacle :itself. Surrounding the setting of the exposition there are numerous features that will rival the attrac- tions of the great show for public attention. and especially is this true of Niagara Falls. There is no great- er or more wonderful eye-feast in the world than the Falls of Niagara, the beautiful gorge, and the dashing tu- multuous waters of the Whirlpool Rapids. If they are alert, long be- ,'fore their train stops at Niagara iFalls, passengers over the Grand i'l‘runk Railway will come in sight of ;the mighty observation tower from which searchlight signals will be flashed to the Electric Tower of the1 Exposition. In fancy one can pic- ture the beam of the powerful pro- jector extending. way 011' toward Hamilton. 0nt., to give glad wel- come and greeting to the incoming trains laden with humanity anxious to see the falls and the exposition. Speeding across the wonderful gorge the train will carry its passengers in full view of the Falls of Niagara and the Whirlpool Rapids, while the re- markable gorge will stretch out on either side of the greatest railway steel arch bridge in the world. This bridge of the Grand Trunk Railway at Niagara Falls is one of the won- ders of the locality. and resting. as it does, one end in the domain of King Edward. the other in the United States, it forms a portion of the industrial bond in the Anglo- Saxon union that forces a realiza- tion that no matter on which side 0{ the Niagara we reside, we are all Americansâ€"Pan-Americans. In London, when the sireets are muddy. there is a marked diminu- tion of diseases that are prevalent when dust is blowing. Consumption often gets its start from dust. Other illnesses, almost equally grave fol- low from the inhaling of (lying par- ticles of flying iilth. Add sumcient water to transform the dust into mud, and the power for harm is gone, for mud is not inhaled. The germs that infest dry dust become inert in mud, because these germs cannot go anywhere unless they’ are carried. Moreover, mud is very like- ly to get ultimately into the drain- pipe. and the germs are carried 06 where they can do no harm. Even when mud dries on the clothing and is brushed 00‘. the dust that arises therefrom does not appear as dan- gerous as that which has not been recently wet. This mysterious radium is capable of emitting two distinct sets 0} rays â€"one like ordinary daylight and the otlt-r like Xâ€"rnys. Moreover, the rays have the cn'ect of sunlight on a photographic negative. Finally, tried as an X-ray, the light was found capable of photographing through the wood of a plate-holder, Moreover, if in giving 00‘ light the radium parts with energy. it is so slight as not to be measurable. an estimate being that an almost in- definite time would be required to exhaust the light-giving pronerties of the two small vials in question. Its energy is a1 parently in the min- eral itself, for after being in the dark for a couple of months the light given forth was nowise weaker. Curiously enough chemists used to treat radium as though it were prac- tically valueless. but now the m ner- al has become so precious that it costs about $1,000 an ounce; for on- ly small quantities of it are found in uranium, and its extraction is very costly. a printed page held closely to them. The power shown by this small quantity of radium leads the scien- tist, to the conclusion that. half a pound of the mineral, if thinly spread out. would light. an ordinary sitting-room. This remarkable light gives its im- mediate surroundings a peculiar glow, like that from X-rays. One of the viais contains a white, starch- like powder; and the other a similar substance broken into cubes with faces a tenth of an inch in dimen- sion. In the dark these vials give sufï¬cient light to enable one to read a printed page held closely to them. The power shown by this small Prof. Langley, who has been mak- ing experiments in this direction. re- cently received two hermetically sealed vials containing radium. a mineral discovered by Mme. Tklodo- wska Curie. a Polish chemist, in the salts of uranium. The professor has found radium to possess wonderful properties. From these vials. which are each about the size of your little finger, an unceasing greenish-white light issues. Radium Has Wonderful Power and is Highly Expensive. Bottled sunshine has at last be come a possible thing. though some- what costly. Radium is the mineral which promises to furnish us with tactically enduring bottled sun- hine. The peculiarity of this bot- tled sunshine, however, is that it is without heat. FROM THE TRAINS. BOTTLE!) SUNSHINE. LIï¬IsJ-SAVI Nu Careful Housekeeperâ€"Bridget. you may get all the preserves we canned last year and boil them up again. I am afraid they have begun to work. Bridgetâ€"Like enougb‘ . mum. like enough. Everything ’round this house has to. 8100 Reward. 810:). Thu-endow or this ever will be planned to learn the: there in at out one drended dienun tint edenoe ha been able to cure in nil in smell nnd it» in Court-h. linil'e Conn-h Cure lathe only positive cure now known on the medical laterally. Cntnrrh being n cone. tltucionni dine-n. require: n oonnitniionnl mar. ’ Hnil‘e Cntnrrh Cure in tnkxn intol- tron nnll . noting dlnotiy n the blood d mno’one ant-{noon ot the 3mm. thereby 3:- uflm. the {dandelion at the dieeneo. nnd a! n th- Nit-t we?!“ '91 1erth n t!» A. A _ _- London had 51 inhabitants to the acre, Paris 115. Hlflfllfl's llflllflBfll cures GUWBI In GOES. In 1831 the paupers of the United Kingdom numbered 96 in every 1,000. In ten years the number dropped to 75 per 1,000. Minard’s Linimant Cures Golds, etc A 20-knot. steamer cannot be stop- ped in less than three minutes. dur- ing which she has travelled, in spite of reversing her engines, a full half mile. .v-vvvâ€"vâ€" vâ€" _________ wild colic. tofu!“ the nonncï¬ tad bowels. sad in tho bed. remedy or Dumbo». Twentyï¬ve cent.- a ham Iold hdmuisu thruughout the world. Be sum ml at (or “ nus. quww's Sooramo Brunt.†In. 'numw’o 8001mm Sync: but been mod by millions of mother: for their chfldrcn while teeming. “loathe. the child. softens the ums. than rain. cum wind colic. romaine: the flange md_ bowels. 3nd in tho Soldb Wâ€"â€"71 Hall'- m'yP I M.. Grouch Went, to a masquerade the other evening disguised as a bear. Did anyone recognize him ? Only his wife. also. ‘ The train runs from St. Paul to Portland, Oregon, passing through Minneapolis, Fargo, Bozeman. Butte. Missoula, Spokane, Seattle and Tacoma. Connections from Duluth and Superior and for Helena are made en route. Send to Chas. S. Foo, General Pas- senger Agent. St. Paul, six cents for Wonderland 1901, a royal book hav- ing a. chapter on this royal train. This Crack Train of the North- west. almost entirely new for 1901, is the epitome of modern passenger train construction. The Dining Car with its a la carte breakfast and lunch, and table (l'hote dinner for $1.00; the unequaled Tourist Sleep- ing car of 16 sections. roomy lava- ‘tories and electric lights ; the ï¬rst- class Drawing Room Pullman with two electric lights in each section and the palatial Observation car with two smoking rooms. builet, bar- ber shop, bath, library of 140 vol- umes, current magazines. ladies’ par- lor and observation platform, all to- gether form a train of unusual com- fort excellence, and even luxurious- ness even in this day of luxuries. Of course. broad vestibules, steam heat and steel platforms are there, and- there are nearly 300 electric lights on the train. the baggage car and day coaches being thus lighted also- Train of the Northern Paciï¬c which created such a furior during its first. season. in 1900, is again shooting back and forth across the continent in all the glory of its form- or days. Customer: Waiter, it is nearly half an hour since I ordered that turtle soup. Waiter: Sorry. sir; but you know how slow turtles are, sir. The If You Want â€WmflW-Lm. m The Dawson Commisslon Co. Q00000000000000.0000...00000000000000.0000... i â€" â€" v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v 'v' ...PRINTERS.. Paar-mu LUDELLA GEYLOnN TEA “ North. Coast Limited. " For Over me Van vi “:0 but exclusively know they ere hula e good thug. Try It and you will have e seine. MWQuuu-«em “(Mhlu'ofldiodm d. I! now umhyour ton.'fludm trod. Box ll. otod. Ht..â€" cum... (I've. Writ. In (or a; tun-mu. even town can um i {no Brass Band Halallic SKYLIGHTS CALVERT‘S CARBOLIG OINTMENT. for all «In manna. immaoo. W. w '- "w v--v â€"wv__ Int-rut to “’66; in Our Foil â€any II. can“ with the but. _-A 786 miles of Japanese railway owned by, the J apaneso Government. earns one-third more yearly than 2,942 miles owned by private con» panics. When I ï¬rst knew Brown he let. hi. money go like water. And now? He seems to have frozen up now. The oldest university is that 0! Paris, dating back to the eighth century. Then comes Lyons; and Oxford has third place. Minard's Linimont Cures Diphtheria Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper C. C. RICHARDS 5: CO. ., Dear Sirs.-â€"I have used HINARD'S LINIMENT in my stable for over a your and consider it. the very best for horse flcsn ‘ can get. and strongv ly recommend it. now, ABOUT nus SEASOI'S 0]]. hr noun. 3mg "mama momma. “S†PEERLESS "I“... auum DVIIIO 00. lung! to . GEO. ROUGH. Livery Stables Quebec. YOUR OVERGOATS In Flvd'lu with em Intro I USE MIOA AXLE GREASE. mm; mm: W I’ C ")8? ' 'vâ€"vvq â€" oer; wéei um; 6n. Toma.“ â€'0L£3 I"... 13‘ Adelaido 8t- ‘l‘onon-o. 0n. 0|