DETROIT CHARLEY ROSS. The Strange Mystery of Little John Goanertoii. A. Pet San'* Abseace For Twenty-flve Yearsâ€" A Food Mother's Vain Searcb â€" A Fortune Awaiting the MiHifinK^ Heir â€" Another Sad Chapter of the California Wreck. A woman with sad, frightened face, and eyes reddened and swollen by weeping, harried off the Michigan Central train from the north this noon, says the Detroit Nevii of Thursday. An undertaker was with her. Aa they passed forward men were nnloading a lon<; pine box from the baggage car. The woman was Mrs. Cor- nelius Connerton, saved from the wreck of the propeller California. The rough box contained the remains of poor " Con." Connerton, the son who went down before the mother's eyes. There was reason why she should be sad-eyed and pallid. Not alone from the fearful death struggle she had with the waves, but from the chapter of afflictions which was in her life. This rough box was only the last of a series of bereave- ments. The strangest feature of them has yet remained untold. It was the first blow which came to the Connerton home, which has stood for 30 years on Sixth street. First it was a rude shanty, but it had a dozen around its table and prosperity followed the thrifty occupants. Among the brightest members of this family group was little Johnnie Connerton. He was an apt youngster at school, getting along BO well that his proud father sent him to the Academy of St. Koches, near Montreal, and then to Toronto. Of course be was the pet of the household when he came home for the summer vacation. Although but 14 years old he was unusu- ally intelligent, and particularly quiet and obedient at home. One day Johnnie came home in company with another youngster named Cahill. " May I go down town a little while?" be asked. The question was addressed to his older sister, now Mrs. Sanpier. She did not readily assent to the re<}uest, for the Cahill boy was considered wild. " Oh, let me go ; I'll come right back." Johnnie was so earnest in his promise and so trusty that his sister hually con- sented to his going. He ran off chatting and laughing. But he did not come right back. lie was not back in an hour. The next day he was still gone. A week passed by and ho was still missing. That was twenty-five years ago. He has never boen heard of since. Is he dead or alive? That is the question which daily comes to the bereft mother. Search was made for the lost pet. He was advertised for and traced. But all trails came to naught. The young Cahill boy had also disappeared at the same time, but he Unally returned. He told an improbable story of how the two had made their way to New York city, where they had finally got separated. They parted in one of tlie busy streets of the metropolis. Young Cahill returned here and was the youth who burst a blood vessel with fatal results during a family quarrel in Spring- wells a short time since. But the fond mother has never aban- doned hope. She had thought that her boy shipped on some man-of-war and she determined to go on a personal search for the lost one. Starting alone she went to New York, where tho shipping offices and the wharves were scoured. " Have you seen my boy ?" That was the question which the rough wharfers heard all ouo summer as she car- ried on her search. Then she turned to the navy yards and then to Washington. But it was no use. A whole summer of searching was in vain. The years have gone by and hope has almost given way to despair. If John Connerton came home to-day he would find himself a rich man. When he left tho modest little shanty 25 years ago there was little wealth about it. But the thrifty father soon added to bis means, until the Connertons have become well off. They own houses and lots on Howard and Sixth streets, and only recently sold a farm for ?17,O00 cash. Of this Johnnie is in part an heir, his share being worth some- thiu« like a hundred thousand dollars. His absence ties up the estate, and the law for- bids a division. Perhaps the lost heir may some day return to claim his thou- ands. For 25 years this has hung likea pall over the Connerton home. But another and a younger sou, Cornelius, cheered the bereft mother, for his devotion was constant and warm. It is this son who was drowned on the propeller California. She Liked Beys the Best. Motherâ€" Nursery dialogue â€" Nellie, I have told you a great many times not to romp with Tommy, and you must obey me. Nellieâ€" Could I play with him if he was a girl ? Motherâ€" Perhaps. Nellie â€" But I wouldn't want to. A Hrlght Prospect. Motherâ€" Has Mr. Goslow offered him- self yet ? Harrietâ€" No, not yet ; but I think he will soon. Last night he said he was look- ing around for a wife, and asked me very particularly if I thought I could earn enough to venture to marry on. â€" Life". She (lot tjust Puulshiucut. Mrs. Brown (after exceptionally fine din- uer)â€" I tell my husband that if he will bring gentlemen home unexpectedly, he mustn't complain if every thing isn't right. Dumleyâ€" Pray make no excuses, I wasn't at all hungry.â€" Li/e A most remarkable imitation of black walnut has lately been manufactured from poor pine, tho quality and appearance of tho article being such as to defy detection except upon very close examination. To accomplish this one part of walnut peel ex- tract is mixed with six parts of water, and with this soluticn the wood is coated. When tho material is half dry a solution of bichromate of polish with water is rubbed on it, and the made wabiut is ready tor nse. 8T00IJ TO HIS POST. The Captain o( the California Traduoed by Cowardly Men. A Detroit despatch says : Thei^Vee Preti has the following despatch from Mackinac : The opinion is expressed that if Capt. Trowell had been supported by his first officers and the rest of the crew there would have been no loss of life. It has been stated that only one boat could be lowered, but such was not the case. There were two boats lowered. The first, which should have takenthe woman, was taken possession of by eight of the crew. Two more of the crew jumped into the water and caught hold of the boat, but they were not taken in, and, after hanging on as long as possible, were forced to let go, and were drowned. It is claimed by the men that were in this boat that they could not lift their compan- ions into the boat, but this is a tlimsy excuse. It is probable that the reason they were not taken into the boat was because it was feared thsy would overload it. The second boat that was launched was taken possession of by the first mate and two of the crew, while the captain was in the cabin after the passengers. When he returned to the deck they were gone and the passen- gers and remainder of the crew were left to their fate. It has been charged by one of the crew that the captain deserted his post. The man who makes the charge was one of those that rushed into the boat and left the poor women passengers. Captain Trowell remained on the deck of his steamer until it sunk from under him, and even then he, with the assistance of his brave engineers who had manfully stood by him, succeeded in clearing a boat from the wreck and rescued the lady passenger that was saved and also the stewards. Mrs. Connerton, the lady passenger, and also Mrs. Blood, the stewardess, are loud in their praise of the captain and engineers. From all tho facts learned it is evident that Captain Trowell stood at his post like a hero and did all in hia power to save his passengers and crew. THE Tt'G ORIEKT Founders In Lake Krie In Tuesday's Gale- All on Board Lust. A Detroit despatch says : Another dis- tressing marine disaster took place on Lake Erie in the great blow of Tuesday. Tho ill-fated crafc was the tug Orient, which went down with all hands near Point au Pelee about °i o'clock that day. The Orient left Toledo Monday night for Sandusky, expecting to pick up a tow, but retraced her coarse as far as Dammy Light. On the following morning she was seen by the crewof thetug Oswego making bad weather and dying a signal of distress. TheOswego herself, although a much larger tug than the Orient, was in great danger of founder- ing, and any thought of attempting to ren- der assistance in the fearful sea running could not be entertained. The violence of the storm increased, and the waves broke over and almost submerged the little craft. The schooner Uleniffer, Captaiu Ilobertson, lay behind the Point, and her crew were witnesses of the disaster. Shortly before the tug went down the crew could be dis- cerned baling her out with pails, but their feeble efforts did not ceunt for much against the groat mountains of water breaking over and filling her cabin. Her fires ha<l evidently been extinguished, and having no steerage way she wallowed help- lessly in the seas. Finally, to the horror of the helpless spectators, she took a header and disappeared from sight, carrying with her the lives of si-x brave men. They were, D. Lyons, master ; John Davis, first en- gineer ; Wm. Pangborn, second engineer ; Edward Kane, mate ; P. Dillock, fireman ; Joseph Sharkey, steward. The crew all belonged to Marine City, where the boat was owned. Captain Lyons and Engineer Davis were both part owners. The crow was composed of young men, all well known and experienced tag men. ♦ A UARKIKO MAN Advertises his Business by Insulting his Wife and She Sues Blm. A St. Thomas despatch says : A singular lawsuit is now pending between John D. Alton and hia wife, of West Lome. Alton, who is a tailor by trade, opened a shop in a house deeded to his wife by her father. His mother-in-law came to live with them, and domestic infelicity ensued, resulting in the husband being imprisoned, in default of payment of 81,'20O sureties to keep tho peace. During his confinement his wife and her mother removed his fixtures, and rented the building to a dressmaker. The husband, on returning, ejected the dress- maker and turned out his mother-in-law, but his wife accompanied her, whereupon the husband opened out business, posting ap all over the village tho notice, " My amiable, adorable and most abominable wife having left, and my domestic expenses having been thereby reduced, I am now able to make suits much cheaper than here- tofore," etc. He now claims he did not know the meaning of " abominable." Mrs. Alton now brings suit to eject her husband f jom what she claims are her premises, and Alton enters a counter suit, claiming that whereas he expended SI, 100 on tho property he has a lien thereon. What Causes Inteuiperuiice ? " Are you familiar with the various causes wbioh bring about so much drunkenness in this benighted land ?" ho asked. " I am (hie) quite familiar with some of them, sir," hiccoughed tho young man politely : " such as whisky, gin, brandy and beer for (hie) instance." ♦ Mrs. Ezra S. Allen ascended alono in a balloon from tho State fair grounds at Narraganaett Park, Providence, Wednesday afternoon. She reached a height of three miles, and met with diverse currents of air and a whirlwind. Tho situation grew so threatening that she pnlled the e.xplosiou cord and fell with the balloon a mile and a half. The force of the fall was broken by the balloon alighting in a treetop. Only four cruisers will continue the fish- eries protection service after the 10th iust., the rest being withdrawn from commission for the remainder of tho season, now nearly closed. So far little or no complaint of the manner in which the service has boen performed has been made by the United States authorities. â€" Mrs. B. B. Keefer, wife of the clergy- man of that name, is lecturing in various I places on " The Buined Temple." THE COST OF FINE PIANOS. An Alleged tflO.OOO Investmentâ€" Prices of Wealthy Men's Instruments. The one subject of which piano dealers and piano manufacturers and workmen in piano factories have been talking for the past few days is the piano said to be for Mr. Henry G. Marquand, with five figures following the dollar mark in the invoice thus : S4(i,'JoO. No such price as t4(i,1450 was ever paid for a piano before, but no prophet will venture to say that no one will ever pay so much again. ' What do you think about such a piano ?" said a reporter to an uptown music dealer. " Had you arrived at the age of maturity before the war of the rebellion began," said the dealer, " and had you been of a cynical disposition at that time, you would have been interested, not to say astaunded, at the large sums of money paid as income taxes by men in this town. It gave one notoriety to pay a large income tax, and no one was debarred from paying as good a tax as he chose. Perhaps a piano could be built with that sum, but it would have to be inlaid with gold and have the monogram set in dia- monds before the bill could honestly call for half as much as that." " What, then, do the elegant pianos of the men of great wealth cost ? " • Ordinarily from 31,500 to 32,000. Mrs. Jay Gould bought one recently that cost $2,500. It was an upright grand and just as fine au instrument in everything that goes to make a piano as ever left the fac- tory of one of the best known makers in the city. C. P. Huntington has recently purchased a piano. His cost $2,000, while Judge Hilton, another millionaire, got one not loun ago for which he paid a little more than 92,200, I believe. Now, these instruments were the very best the workmen could produce. The builders knew, of course, that it would help them to sell fine pianos to other families if such people as these had their make of instru- ments. The choicest woods, seasoned to the exact dot, were used in tho cases ; ex- tra ijuality cloth worth $18 a yard, where the ordinary stuff used is worth from 95 to 910, went to the actions; the ivory was selected from perhaps a hundred different tusks, and so on from the casters under the legs to the varnish on top, everything was the best. The monograms were worked out in gold or antique metal, or some other expensive stuff, and when the instruments were sot in the parlors of the purchasers there was a richness to the tones that would enchant any one. And the tone was there to remain ; such an instrument will last wonderfully. But, after all, you can get just aa good an instrument, one with precisely the same tones and xine that will last just aa well, for leas than half the money paid by Mr. Gould." â€" Sew York Sun. LIGHTNING CALCULATION. Some Feats Performed by the Famous Zerah Colburn. Zerah Colburn was asked to say what number multiplied into itself would give the number 5G8,33U,1'J5, writes Professor Proctor. The idea was to see how far he would get ahead of a practiced computer, who was set to work finding the cube root of the number â€" for that was what Colburn was asked for â€" by the usual process. But before the practiced computer had written down the number Colburn ga%'e the answer, (145. Colburn was at this time only H years old, and he had not even so much instruction in arithmetic as most boys of that age have received. He knew nothing of the rules of extracting roots. But even if he had known how to extract the cube root of a number, his feat would not be less marvellous. Let any one who would learn to appreciate Colburn's calculating powers try the following experiment ; Set down the number just named, and obtain the cube root by the ordinary method, making no hurry over tho work ; next copy the figures thus obtained, setting them down â€" in their order as obtained â€" as fast as a pen or pencil will travel, noting the time taken in this easy part of tho work. Then con- siaer that a child H years old obtained the right result, without pen or pencil, in less time than had been taken to copy down the number itself, to which all the calculation thus written out had beeu applied. -Isked what numbers will divide :iG,083 exactly, Colburn at once answered : " None." Let the reader try how long it takes with pen and paper to prove that this is really so ; he will have to try the divisors 3, 7, U, 13, 17, I'J, 23, 21), 31,37, 41, 43, 47, 53 and many more, up to la7, before the proof will be complete. Once, and once only, did (,!olburu have to make any considerable effort in dealing with a number as he had ilualt with 3ti,083. The number was somewhat famous in mathematical annals â€" viz.; 2,2'J4,'J07,"2y7, of which the great arithmetician, Farmat, had declared tfiat it had no division. Format oven gave what appeared to him a proof of this; but the celebrated mathematician, Euler, showed that the proof was incom- plete. Kuler also, alter long labor, found a number, 041, which will divide Fer- mat's " indivisible." Colburn was set tho same task that had foiled Format and had occupied Euler for months. The child could not answer that day, nor the next, nor for a week or fortnight ; but in the third week he gave tho solution. During that time he bad kept no record of hia work save in that wonderfully retentive brain of hia. It may interest the reader to know that the number over which Fermat and Euler had contended is obtained by multi- plying two into itself 31 times and adding units. Colburn did the work of thus obtaining the number in a few minutes. Very Well SttlisUed. " You don't mean to say that you had to pay jUst as much for your pew "during the summer months, when the church was closed as when it was open ?" " (Certainly." " How ridicaloub !" " Oh, I don't know ; I don't begradge the money. I enjoyed the pew (joite as well aa though I was in it ; better, if anything." â€" Bolton TrantrrijH. CUBED BY FAITH ALONE. A Doctor's liuse to Make â- Dumb Woman Ktfsuiue TulkliiK. A reliable physician in Daiibury relates a remarkable case of curing a woman who had been unable to utter a syllable in two years. She had been treated by a number of doctors for her loss of voice, but to no purpose. This physician satisfied himself that thcio was no disease of the organ of speech nor any derangement. He concluded that she could speak if only, she would be influenced to exert the will power. From a conversation with her carried on in writmg ho discovered that she had great faith in miraculous cures, and thought she could only be relieved in some such way. He found, teo, that she was superstitious. He •oucludod to try tho effect of a little mum- mery on her. Accordingly, one morning when visiting her he sat down by a table and leaned bis head down upon his hands for some five minutes without speaking, as if in rapt meditation. He suddenly jumped up and told the woman that ho was now right, and he was going to cure hor on a certain day. Ue then gave her minute directions in respect to it. He told her that on that day he should come to the house at 10 a. m.; that ho should first give three raps upon the window, and thou he should go to tho front door and give two raps ; that when the door opened be would be found standing with both bands upon the doorpost and his head leaning upon them; that the door to hor room must bo opened wide, and that ho would walk in with measured tread, and when he got to her bedside he shoold say : " Good morn- ing," and that she would answer ii: reply, " Good morning, doctor." On the appointed day he did just as he said he should, and when he said " Good morning" to her she promptly made tho reply, " Good morning doctor," in a loud, strong voice. She seemed utterly astonished herself, but said she felt that what thu doctor said would be true, and firmly believed that ho had wrought a miracle in her cure. â€" Seuhaven Neici. He Uiowned the Dog. "I drowned my dog last night â€" tho spaniel, you know." " Why, how did you manage it? Tho dog swam like a duck. " " Well, I tied a loaf of bread to his neck and he went down like a rock." "A loaf of bread?" " Yes, my wife docs lier own cooking and baking now." â€" Detroit Free Prens. This "funny man ' must bo in league with a bakers' ring. It Miifht Have Been Worse. Husband (reading the paper)-" Another terriWo railroad accident! " Wife (shocked) â€" " Is that possible I How many were killed ? " Husband â€" " One killed and four injured 1 " Wife (disappointed)â€"" Is that aU ? " â€" Money flies pretty fast, considering it has no wings. The dearest object to a man should bo his wife, but it is not unfreiiuontly hor clothes. Saturday was tho third day of the Mor- mon oonferenco at Salt Lake. Wilford Woodruff, President of the Twelve Apostles, read a long epistle referring to tho state of the Church and the Mormon people and to the death of Jno. Taylor, saying the Church was now in tho hands of the twelve, which was supposed to moan that they will not elect a president at this conference. The epistle was very long, and devoted mainly to Church affairs. Ho bears a per- sonal testimony to Jos. Smith, transmit- ting to the apostles tho keys of priesthood and power and tho coremouiesof the Latter Day authority. The House of Lords recently held that a horse is part of the plant of u wharfinger, and that vicioouness in the horse is a defect in the plant. A large number of Kingstonians, en route to Kingston from New York, in connection with an excursion, had a great shake up on the New York Central, near Kome, where, in some way, a coach got off the track. The prompt stoppage of the train avoided fatalities. .She Couldn't L'lidemtuud It* " What in the world has happened toyoa since the last time I saw you ?" asked one lady of another when they mot on the street the other day ; " I can't understand it. Then you were pale, haggard and low spirited, and I remember you said that you hardly cared whether you lived or died. To-day you look ever so much younger, and it is very evident from your beaming face that your low spirits have taken flight." " Yes, indeed," was the reply ; " and shall I tell you what drove thwin away ? It was Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. I was a martyr to func- tional derangement until I began taking the ' Prescription.' Now I am as well as 1 ever was iu my life. No woman who suffers as I did ought to let an hour pass before procuring this wonderful remedy.' â€"Queen Anne pills are said to bo tb atost novelty offered by tho druggists for nto rior decorations. How to Reduce Ynur Expenses. You can do it easily, and you will not have to deprive yourself of a single com- fort ; on the contrary, you will enjoy life more than ever. Uow can you accomplish this result ? Easily ; cut down yonr doctor's bills. When you lose your appetite, and become bilious and constipated, and there- fore low-spirited, don't rush off to the family physician for a prescription, or. on the other hand, wait until you are sick abed before doing anything at all ; but just go to the druggist's and for 25 cents get a sspply of Dr. Pierco's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. Take them as directed, and our word for it, your unpleasant symptoms will disappear as if by magic, you will have no big doctor's bill to pay, and everybody interested (except the doctors) will feel happy. â€" " In one of tho old Catholic towns of Louisiana," says the Waco Dmj, "the cere- monies of the Jewish New Year took place in tho Baptist Church and the musical ser- vices were conducted by a Hebrew lady, wife of a Catholic gentleman, who is himself of mixed Protestant and Catholic lineage." A Prize of 9100,000 is a good thing to get, and the man who wins it by superior skill, or by an unex- pected turn of fortune's wheel, is to bo congratulated. But he who escapes from the clutches of that dread monster. Con- sumption, and wins back health and happi ness, is far more fortunate. The chances of winning 9100,000 are small, but every consumptive may bo absolutely sure of re- covery if he takes Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery in time. For all scrof- ulous diseases (consumption is one of them) it is an unfailing remedy. All druggists. » Owing to the prevalence of Asiatic cholera in Italy and Mediterranean ports, tho importation of rags into the Dominion from those regions is prohibited. ImlUition Is sometimes called tho sincere form of flattery. This may account for the number of imitations of tho original and only pos- itive corn cure â€" Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor. All such fail to possess etjual merit, so when purchasing get the genuine "Putnam's." Safe, sure and painless. AU druggists. ♦ A large dog in a neighboring town, says tho Boston Journal, has a groat ploasuro in chewing gum. When he sees any one engaged in gum-chewing, ho will tease for a piece until he is satisfied. Then he will be quiet for half au hour masticating the gum with an expression of deep satisfaction. The treatment of many thousands of caw* nf those chronic weaknesses ond distrt^ssinf uilmenta peculiar to females, at the Invalidr Hotel una Surgical Institute, liuffalo, .S'. Y., luu) nffonled a vast experience in nicely adapt- uij; und thurouslily testin/f remedies for the eure<tf woman's peculiar muludiea Dr. S>lerce>M I'avorite Prescrlptloa is tlie ;nitKrowth, or result, of this jjreut and valuable experieuce. Thousands of testimo- luuls, received from patients and from phyal- eiuns who have tested it in tho more aginr viited und obstinate cases which bod burned tli'^ir skill, prove it to tx> the ino«t wonderful renie^iy ever devised for the relief and cure of ^ufTeriniir women. It is not recommended at a â- cure-ull, " but as a most perfect Specific for womun's peculiar ailmentd. As a poiverful, iUTlKoratlnc tonie« it importe strenirtb to the whole system, and to tho wuuib and its appeudutfes in partieulnr. For overworked, ''worn -out," '"run-down," debilitated teachers. miUinen, dressmakers. Beamstr<>as<-8, "shup-inrlg," bouse- keciKTS, nursinir uiotbcrH, und fe<'ble women ifonerally, Ur. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is thu sreatest earthly boon, being uneijualed OSac appetizini; eordial and nflorative tonic. As a ttoothiu^ aad siroiigilieulnc nerrlne, " Fovorito Pn-scnptiou " is une- qualed and is invaluable in allayiOK and 8ut>- ilulcif nervous excitability, irritability, ex- Uimttiun, prostration, bystenu, spufiuis and other diJBtressinK, nervous symptoms com> inonly attendant upon functional and orsaoK) disease of thi? womb. It indued refrt-ahlng sleep and relieves moutai anxiety und d» epondcncy. Dr. I*lerce>« Favorite Prcacrlplioa 19 a lesitlmate medicine, i-urefully compounoed by an experienced and KkiUful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate oriraulzation. It is purely veBetublo in its composition and perfectly hannlesa in iM efleeto iu any condltloa of the system. For morning sickness, or nausea, from whatever cause arisinif, weak stomach, iiidigi^tion, dys- pepsia anil kindred symptoms, its use. In small dosivj, will iirove verv Ijeneliriul. "Favorite Proacrlptlou " ie a posi- tive cure for the most complicated und oO- stinatt.* ctWfS of leucorrhea, excessive Howlny, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions, prolu|i8U8. or fallinii of thu womb, weak back, feinalo weakness,' antoversion, retroversion, besrintf-down sensations, chronic eonftefltion, Intlaininatiou and ulcerutioii of the womb, in- Uammution. pain aixl tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with " tnt4-rnal heat." As a roKUlator and promoter of funo tionol action, at that critical period of change from ifirlhood to womanhood, "Favorite I*i» scription " Is a perloutly safe remedial aaent, and '-an produce orilv (food results. It la ecuially clncacioua and valuable in its effects when tak"n for thoSf disorders and ilerango. ments incident to that later and most critical period, known as " Tho (hanirc ef Life. " "Favorite Prencripltoii," when taken in connection with the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden .Medical Discovery, and smiUl laxative doses of Ur. Pierce's I'urmitive Pellets (Little Liver PIllBi. cures Liver. Kidney and Itladder diseases. Their combined use also n'movos blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and scroftiloiifl humors from tho svstom. "Favorite FroBcripiloii " is the only modii-ine for women, sold by druff^ists, uuder a positive (guarantee, fnjm the manu- facturers, that It will give satisfaction in every case, or money will be refunded. This iniaran- tee has been printed on the bottle-wrapper, and faithfully carried out for many years. Largo bolllea iWO doses) 11.00, or six bottles for $5.00. For largo, illustrated Treatise on Diseases of Women ilfyj pages, paper-covered), send ten cents in stumps. .Address, Worid's Dispensary Medical issociatlon, 603 Kaiu St, BlIFFAI.O> N. i; l> O N U \i «J. IGUREFBTS! When I BAj L utt^ 1 do â- <!( tnc»n nismjr U) fttop U)«ni f«r • tImBAiid (ti«n havfi (tirm r«(urn aKMli), I tnrsii ft r«(Ile«l enr*. I li»»« ni**le tho .IImmc oi KI vs. Kl'CI.KPsY or PaLL- 1N» SICRNI'^^K lUs-loDC mu.lv. 1 warraul nirrei»«ilf to rure ttia wont roM*. llei-ftu*« ulhvrs li ' v.- fiil)«tllta<» r«MoD Tor not iii>w r«c«lvlnic ft curf. Send Kt i>oc« for • tivftttt« ftn<l A Fr^e nottU ol mj liiCftllllJf rvmiJy. Otv* Xt|>re«a 4ii>l I'diI uIQcft. It cotta yt>u tiulhlnc Tor ft trUfc â- Dit 1 will •-.tr* V *.Mrf«i DK. El. '». KOOT, BrancH Office, 37 Me St., Toronto. Merchants, Butchers, AND TRADEUSGliNKKALLY, We waut a ooou man in your locality to pick CALFSKINS For ufl. Cash fnriiishotl on satisfactorv i,'naranty AJilrtBS C, S. PALiK. H>tk< i'lirlt. Wrinont, U. 3 EJAKINC POWDER THECnCI!<'SR"ST;^-^^'';wr coNsuMPT&r:j. I hftv.t A pt)«Ulv«reiliiHly for lh«fttio««<JiMft«« . bt IU dm thouMtnda <>r <-»««â- ef tiM won! kind kd ' of lone â- Iftodlnc b«vf) be«ii rurt>d. Indeei), mi iirnnK -it faith In Jta •mrftcy, (bftt [ «i I wiKl TWi) B<iT1I.F« . ** t«|t«th«r Wllh ft VAl.UAni.B rKRATTSK r.n Ihlt <Um^ - *0 ftay â- offAi'vr. UKeiipr^M in>l f. O Kil'irfaau DB. â- . 4. '*I.OiTM. Branch OfiSco, 37 Yonge St., ToMtto ..ASk. MRl ^m MM