PRACTICAL FARMING. WlnterTann and Market Wagon. Why ahouldn't the farmer take ionic comfort in hi* work ? Let him put a cloth top upon hu wagon and go to market warm and protected from the wind. It u an easy matter to make a light, bat strong, frame work and cover it with duck, or very heavy roYKKKD MARKET SLED. cotton cloth. Th* illustration shows how to make it convenient Ixith to get into and to get produce out of. It U especially handy when hauling potatoes, apples, etc., in freezing weather. An oil stove can be faatened securely behind the seat on the floor, and in the coldest weather the most perishable of articles can be car- ried safely and with couitort. The Farm Vegetable Garden . Atter nearly 30 years' experience, I think I can tell how anyone can mike good garden oil, writes a correspondent. A deep, rich, black loam, containing just enough sand to work well, with a light clay subsoil i* beet for a general line ot vegetables. We cannot, however, always have oar cho ioe, and moat use the soil at hand. The plat should slope slightly to the sooth or southeast, and is best if nearly level, thoagh it must have good drainage. If the land i* a stiff clay, render it loose and mellow by a liberal use of well-rotted manure, and by working only when dry. A poor, sandy soil is unfit for a general line of vegetables i* hard to make and keep rich , and should be avoided where any other land can be had. Neither i* a deep, black gumbo soil- ed for vegetable growing. Of coon* all these soil* are especially fitted for some one or mare of the many vegetables, bat for the family garden the soil mast be adapted to a large range. The size of the garden depends entirely upon circumstances. One acre, well tilled, will supply the largest family the year round. This doe* not include potatoes, which are generally grown outside. A* all vegetable crop* are profitable for feeding, ana a* the surplus can be given to chickens or cows, there is not much danger of rais- ing too much. Then moil people live with- in easy reach of some town where good vegetables can be sold. But do not lay off more than will be well tilled ; a one-half acre well cultivated is worth more than an acre half worked. A vast amount of vegetables oan be grown on a small plat if it is properly worksd. Laying out is important. Arrange in To have good vegetables all the year round, plant beans, beets, cabbage, cauliflower, <*elry, carrots, sweet corn, cucumbers, eggplant, lettuce, melon*, ouioas, psrssss*. peas, peppers, pumpkms,raduhes, squaahe*, tomatoes and turnip*. Also sow some mustard and spinajb. for early greens. Then on every farm there ought to be a good bed of asparagus and pieplant. The above applies more directly to the kitchen garden. Yet it is good pratice for the market g rdener, although he has more to study and must be governed more com- pletely by circumstances. He must know hu soil, the demands of the market,eto. For the beginner, I say commence in a small way do what you do well, and spread out as experience justifies. A little well done is better than much hurried over. Veterinary Notes. Yon cannot begin too young to teach your children kindness to animals. In training a colt use the whip less and kindness more and you will have better horses. It is too cold weather to compel your stock to chase themselves around a straw stack to keep warm. A nice warm bran-mash with a teaspoon- fnl of table salt well be appreciated by your stock this cold weather. First, give the cow plenty of pore water ; second, feed her enough food and in a proper manner, using those substances, properly mixed, that contain a large per cent, of the elements that an found in milk, and to properly combine them : third, good care : fourth, warm stables, well ven- tilated and lighted in winter, and, fifth, cleanliness at all times and in all places. Hoof, bones, flesh and skin may be com- bined to make an animal, but to-day they uo not make a bone. They oan be pro- duce i %t a total outlay of about eight to ten cents a pound, but they have little value, and that grows leee every year. Behind an-t over all these most be the brains, if there is to be value over and bbova that already indicated. The greater the intelligence, the more complete the education, the higher the value. The animal as grown will bat little more than pay expense* : profit comes from training and education. SEVERE SENTENCE LARY. FOR BURG- A Prtoeaer Who rtesle4 JIIIy n M far Fliteea Wean. A desfatou from Buffalo says: The) se verest sentence given here for a crime less than murder since Otto Susdorf, the jail breaker and highwayman, was sent to Auburn, w* pronounced on Saturday by Judge Hatch on George Calvert, who pleaded guilty to burglary in the third degree. Calvert was indicted for burglary in the second degree for breaking into a saloon sad stealing a small quantity of iiqaor and cigar;. The stolen property was found in the room occupied by Culvert mistress. Both Calvert. and the woman were placed under arrest, but Calvart ex- onerated the woman from even the charge of receiving stolen property, and she long (trips j^ for with^our improved hor** discharged. In his own behalf the pnaonsr aid that he never did anything wrong unless be was drunk, and if the Judge would send him where he could be jured iti'e for liquor he was sure he would reform. In pronouncing sentence Judge Hatch said that it was quite appar- ent to him that the prisoner wa* deter- mined to lead a life of crime. He had comtnittjd assaults that placed human lift in danger, he had committed burglar- ies which endangered property and this community. The prisoner nad apparently no regard for either life or property. There wa* nothing left for the Court to do but t > consular him an habitual criminal. Th* sentence wa* confinement at hard labor '-I the .State prison at Auburn tor fifteen yean. Calvert wa* almost -V' I fifteen years. Calvert was almost pro- good wagon loads each season will >wmu a with the unexpected .eventy of hi* sentence He had evidently looked tor the leniency of the Cooit when he made his plea of guilty. hoes and one-horse cultivators, nearly all tne cultivation can be done by horse power, thus saving much time and labor. Have the rows run north and south. The old I O j Dl( idea that a garden must be protected on the north and west by a grove of tree* i* a great mistake. Even if the treee do not shade the plants, they will take up the moisture and do more harm than good. After selecting and laying out the garden, fertilize properly. Nothing is better than wtll-rotted stable or barnyard manure. A sufficient, supply of this is usually available on tnost of our western farms. Wood ashes, poultry dropping*, all decayed vegetation and hog manure are good for the garden. Th* amount to apply will depend on th* soil. On land moderately rich 20 to 25 keep an acre in good condition. Spread (his on the land in the fall and plow under late in the season, so as to tarn out and freeze all insect*. Plow deep, and where there isa stiff or clay bottom subsoil to a depth oi 10 to 12 inches, at least every third year. Re plow in the spring. Do not plow when wet, for the lod !! bake, be har 1 to wor k all the season, and wilt not pro- duce good vegetable*. After plowing, harrow until the ground is fine and leve . Mark out row* the long way, two feet apart except for cabbage, which should be tnree feet. Early cabbage can be set in these rows 12 to 15 laches apart, and late ones JO inches. For sarly lettuce, cabbage %nd tomatoes, seed can be sown in box** in the hous-s sooner than out of doors. This U a common practice lor growing piant* for family gardens, but a much cheaper and better plan is to make a hotbed, say about sixteen feet long and si< or sight feet wide. The time of sowini will depend on the season. Plant* can be grown ready to sat in the field in four to six weeks. Should the plants become crowded before setting time, transplant them in a cold frame. The ding in the open ground should not be done too early or too hastily. A few bright, sunny days in early spring has caused the loss of much good seed. There are not many seeds that will grow until the ground becomes warm. Do not plant in wet soil. The depth will vary with the variety. After seeding, if the (oil become* baked, wait until it become* dry enough to work, then with a light steel rake brake the crust over the plants. For good cultivation on* must be pro- vided with a few good garden tool*, the combined hone hoe and cultivator, with it* various attachment*, will do most of the cultivation. A good steel rake and hoe are essential . In gardens too small for the us* of a bora* a good wheel ho* oan be used to advantage. Begin cultivation as soon a* th* p'ante are through th* ground, and keep it up regularly until the crop is secur- ed. Never work the soil when wet. Cul- tivate shallow, and just after a rain, as soon a* the soil becomes dry. The weeds are just starting, and can then be more easily killed. The beat time to water is in the evening after sundowc. Pour the water in the trenches between the rows instead of putting on the plant*. It i* th* root* and not th* top* that need moisture. Do not plant too many varieties. Select a few of tne best kind* adapted to vonr want*, (oil and climate. Oo alow about taking hold ol new, high-priced novelties. An Expensive Household. There are sixty servant* on Mrs. Have- meyer's pay roll ; twenty are in active ser- vice in the New York house and the rest are scattered between the houses at New- port, Tuxedo and the farm at Stamford, Conn. The white-capped French chef draws a salary of f 10,000 a year, snd one taste of the Nesselrod* padding he makes would make you declare that he was worth the money. He ha* two assistants and four kitchen maids ; these he select* and i* responsible for. There are, besides, a stew- ard a butler, four footmen, a housekeeper and four housemaids, two laundresses, two ladie's maids, a coachman and six stablemen. The maids have their six o'clock supper. The 6rst of each month Mrs. Havemeyer hands the housekeeper a check for f500 $100 for herself. $100 for the steward, 175 for the butler, and the rest to be divided among tne other ten servants. The chef ha* 91?5 in addition to hi* (alary to pay his help; the two ladies' maid* sham $1UO between them, and Mr. Havemeyer settles with the coachmen and the grooms to the tone of about 9409 a month. This u only for one of the four booses, bat the others are not so expensive. Where the Matabele Have Gone. There ha* always been a doubt since the last hostile operations of in* English in South Afrioa as to what has become of that once powerful and prosperous tribe known as the Matabele, which for so long held the British invader in check. That they have disappeared fro'ji the scene and that Africa is rid of their presence h*s repeatedly been su ted officially both in and oat of parlia mint. It was reserved for Mr. Rhodes, the autocrat of the southern portion oi the dirk continent, to enlighten the world iti to the ultimate fate of the unfortunate ua- tives. In a speech delivered in Lomlon the other day, with a* little rezard for grammar a* for the aversion fell by civili- /td nations to cannibalism, he deliberately confesseeV is speaking of the Matabele : " We've incorporated them into ourselves." British and Foreign. At the suggestion of the King of the Belgians Osteud* will have a yalching week next Jane, to which foreign boat* are in- vited. At Krakow recently a theatrical manager obtained permission to perform " Julius Ctfsar," provided the soldiers ' were not 1 reused in the uniform of the imperial and royal Austrian army." In a Hungarian village recently a famer triad to shoot his tenth wife and her father. He explained that the previous nine wives had all consented tc be divorced when heask- ed them, but that this one had annoyed him by refusing, owing to the injudicious advice of her father. A man named S' ings by, thi last of the smugglers, died lately at nearly ninety in a work Douse 13 Kent. He belonged to the old race of half piratical smuggler* we read of in Marryat and G. P. R. James, and figured in the trial of the Addington bandiu 1827, when hu escaped prison by turning state's evidence. Bicycling has conquered the French Academio ties .Sciences. It announce* a* the subject for the Fourneyron mathemati- cal prize for 1*97. " The Theory of Motion, and More Particularly the Conditions of Stability of Velncipedic Apparatus(bicyoles safeties, Ac) in Rectilinear and Curvilinear Motion on Horizontal and Inclined Planes." J. Taka*usn, a Japanese A. B. of ( )xford, has translated into English a description of India and the Malay Islands, written twelve hundred year* ago by I. Tsing, a Chinese Buddhist priest. The book des- cribes the monastic life observed by the au- thor in India, and contains a great deal of information about geography, chronology, and literature. At Westminster Abbey the two hundredth anniversary or the death of Henry Parcel), the composer, will be observed by the per- formance of a programme of hi* music, including the Te Deum in D, the first set- ting of the hymn to nrisic by an English composer. In two hundred yean Purcell has had only sight successors in the post of organist of the Abbey. By toe death of Professor Sir .T. R. Seelsy less than three month* after Mr. Froude, Lord Roaebnry is called upon to fill the Regius Professorship of History at Cambridge as well a* that at Oxford. Though Professor Seeley's fame with the general public rests on his "Ecoe Homo," and "The Expansion of England," his bust contributions to history ore the "Introduc- tion to the First Book of Livy," and the "Life of Stem." At Augmagtalik, on th* oast coast of Greenland, in latitude 65 degrees 37 minutes north, a meteorological station ha* just been established by the Danish Govern- ment. It is provided with self-recording instrument* as well a* the usual ones. Holm, who spent a year there ten yean ago, found the mean temperature for the year to be 5 degree* Fahrenheit below the freezing point while the minimum was 13 degrees below zero. la Paris there is a theatre to every 32,- 000 inhabitants ; in Berlin, one to 81,000; in Bordeaux, on* to -84,000 ; in Budapest, one to So.OOO, in Hamlmrg, oi.e to 113,000; in Vienna, one to l.'W.OXi and in London, oueto 145,00'. The proportion of theatre* to population u greatest in Italy, however, where there is on* for every 9,800 at Catania in Sicily. 15,000 at Florence, 20,* ' .0 at Bologna, 24,000 at Venice. 30.000 at Milan and Turin, and 31,000 at Rome. A cose of electricity generated by a plate of false teth occurred recently in Eng- land. A man feeling a severe pain in his tongue consulted a doctor and a dentist, neither of whom could find any thing wrong He then went to an electrician, who found that his false teeth were fastened to th* composition plate with two metals ; they were connected by wires to a galvanomet- er, which, as soon as the metal* were moistened by the saliva, showed a current strong eiough to cause ulceration and sever* pain. The plate was covered with an insulating varnish, which pat an end to the trouble. M. Rani Piotet ha* been experimenting with cotton wool and other baa conductors at very low temperature* to test their power to prevent radiation. Copper cylinder* were cooled do*m to 170 decrees below zero centigrade and packed in layers of cotton wool of various thicknesses. The cylinder* rose to SO degrees below zero very quickly, whether naked or packed in cotton wool twenty inches thijk, the cot- ton wool acting like a perfect conductor of beat. Above 80 degrees, however, the influence of the paukmg made iteelf felt, the rat* of warming varying with the thickness of the layer. On receiving the Testament recently pre- sented to her on her birthday th* dowager Empress of China began to read it. The Emperor wished to se* the book, and grow ing impatient, sent a servant named Li to buy at the American Bible repository one Old Testament and one New Testament, writ- ing the titles down with his own hand. The servant soon returned with the copy of the New Testament, complaining that a num- ber of pages th* corner* of which had been turned down w*r misprinted. A more correct copy was substituted, and since then, according to the Pelcin correspondent of the London Times, the Chinese royal family has been busy reading th* Scrip lure*. The great ordnance survey map of Bng land, containing over 108,000 sheets and costing daring in* last twenty year* about a million dollar* a y ear.is nearly completed. The scale* vary from 10 and 5 feet to the mile for th* towns, through '35 inches, 6 inches, 1 inch, \ and 1-10 inch to the mile. The details are so minute that "th* 25 ard 6 inch maps show every hedge, fence, ditch, wall, building, and even every isolated tree in the country. Th* 2o inch -nap shows in color the material of which every pert of a building is constructed. The plan* show not only the exact shape of every building, but every porch, area, doorstep, lamp post, railway, and fire plug." At Bangalore, in southern India, granite slabs as Urge a* 60 by 40 feet and half a foot thick are quarried by mean* of fire*. A narrow line of fire, about seven feet lone, mad* of dry logs of light wood, is gradually lensthenedand moved forward over an even surface of solid rock . It i* left in ptsition tiil strokes with a hammer show that the rock in front of the flro has bet DII e detached from the mamma** beneath ; the turning wood i* th*n pushed on a tew i:.,h**t Ihe rook keeps splitting about five inches below the surface. It take* about eight hours and 15 hundred weight of wood to set free a slab measuring 740 square feet. Afterward the plat is easily ut with blunt chisels into strips L'fc leel wide. Three new quick firing gun* are to be introduced into the British navy ; A 4 inch 25 pounder, 12 pound U hundredweight gun, and a I.' pound & hundred w< ighcgun, tne la*t two using the same projectile, but different charges of cordite. There sre now fourteen different type* of cannon in use, each requiring different project)** snd varieties of powder charge* ; the 111 um guns of the Sonspareil.the 67 ton gui.a of the Resolution, the 45 ton gnni of the Colossus, the 29 ton guns of the Contur.on, the 22 ton guus of the Australia, the new 12 inch un of the Msjestic, the new 8 inch quick lirer, the B men breech loader and the 6 inch quick firer, the 4. 7-inoh quick firer, the 6 pound and 3 pound quick firer, and the guns now introduced, without counting small-bore machine guns. The possibility of confusing the ammunition even without considering the blunders of red tape, be- come* a serious consideration. SPITTED ON AM IRON ROD. Lsutra la a Bl*r Wonder Tkm a ,*oa-b*rr*l ftpoaiiig on Well. Because he is alive and well to- lay." said an operator in the northern district of the Pennsylvania oil rield, "Henry J. Lutton s a greater wonder to the oil country than a 25,000-barrel spouting well would b. Lutton is on oil well derrick builder. About three months ago ha was putting up a derrick tor Frank Rockwell, one of the biggeat operator* in our district, at Claren- don. The derrick stood on a hillside. Lutton was at work at the foot of the der- rick, and stood on an elevation four feet or jo above the ground. In some way on Ton bar or rod, three-quaur* of an inch thick and over twenty test long, a part of the mechanism of an oil well rig, fell from the top of the derrick, seventy-five feet above the ground. One snd of this long iron struck Lutton on the right side of the neck. Passing between hi* jugular vein and hi* windpipe, it ploughed it* way diagonally through the flesh on Lutlon's cheat and cam* out below the left nipple. Striking hi* left leg just below the groin, the rod shot downward beneath the flesh, emerging again above the knee joint. On its furthsr way down the ro.i severed Lut. ton's left middle toe and carried it along with it nearly a foot into the ground. "Lutton is a six-footer |and over, and naturally well covered with flesh. That th* heavy iron, when it s'ruck mm on the neck, did not knock him down ahows what strength the man had. Nearly ten feet ot the rod passed through him in it* course, a foot and a half of it being through hi* neck and body >nd about two feet through hi* leg. When Lutton found himself thus spitted by the iron and pinned to the ground he actually slid down the rod from where hs stood to the ground and shouted to a fellow workman, who Ian to bis aid and pulled the rod out, a feat of strength whicn is a wonder and mystery not inly to him, bat to everybody eise, too. Lutton woi carried home, where he lay nearer dead than alive for six weeks. Then he begun to mend, and in three week* more wa* able to be around. He lays he will be as good a* new in a couple of weeks. And tiiat's why Honry J. Lutton is to-day a bigger wonder to the ail country than barrel gusher would be. ' Broken in Health That Tired Feeling, Constipation and Pain in the Back ippetrts) and Health Restored !>f Hood's Sarsaparilla. Jfr. Chaa. Steele Gt-Catocrir.c-'s, Ont. 'C. I. Hood ft Co.. Lowell, UaiJ. : " For it number of years I have been trouble*! with a genera! tired feeling, shortness of breata, asm In the back, and constipation. I could get only little rest at night on account of the pain and had no appetite whatever. I wan that tired imbs that I gave out befw i. t : :>: day . ii goae. fated a great nun .VHP* but did not get any permanent r . : TOOI any Hood's^ Cures t purchased a Bottle of Haod's Samaparill*. which made me feel better at once. have con- tinued Its use, having taken three bottle:, ana I Feel Like a New Man. ' 'lave a good appetite, fee) a* Mrocg as ever I lid, and enjoy perfect re- 1 at bight. I nav much pleasure In recommending Hood's ..- parllla." t HAKI.EB STBELK. with F- rYe- jerringCo.. St. Catherine's. Oatario. Hood's Pills are prompt and rd-i-ut. ye* **> u action, Sold by all (JrucsJ Jt. ". A MILLER'S STORY, HE WAS GIVEN JUST OHE MONTH TO LIVE. Flrmi Aimrtteil WIIH Inftammalirv athesi nulUu. a* The* Mri.-K.-n With ir Brallt l.i Keleaor HIM fiwaB i4l Lasl Me I on n. I -i I ur. <! Is WMderful Hecaverv. Bherbroolic CaaeUe. Ths benefits arising from the uo of Dr. Williams' i'mk Pills are well known to th* (iazette. It is a frequent icc^rrcnve mat people come :nto the otri.e a;iu -.<- that they have been restored to .a,:n ny their use. It occasionally h*r>[> u .t extra- ordinary instances <>: t'H-ir curative power* come to our notice, and one of these was related to us recent, y, no astonishing in it* nature that we fen the closest investigation was required in order to tnorougnly test the accuracy of the statement* inadu to us. We devoiod the necessary time for that purpose und can vouch for the reliability of tne following fact*, wonderfully passing belief us they may appear: There are few mote widely knn -L. - U a '2")'*WO- i *"" a* 01100 than Mr. A. T. Hojijns, ot i Johnville. (jus. Previous to his r. m.,val to Johnvi:!*, Mr. Hopkins resided at ~ , Windsor Mills uud was for three years a An Ere That Holds TWO Gallons. ; maln ber of the municipal counci. of that Oue of the most interesting specimens in | place. When a young man Mr. Hopkins th. National Musoun. at Washington. D . | "a. note.1 for hi. strength and n,s activity a* a wreetler. His strength stands him HI good stead for he works hard at hit I.IKI- National Museum at Washington, '., i* a cast of an egg of most gigantic six* ihioh was found in a guann bed on th* ness, carrying haavy sacks of flour in his island of Madagascar, about twenty-five year* ago. Die shell of this egg will hold almost exactly two gallon* of liquid, which would make it* capacity equal t> 148 averaged sized egge laid by the common baiayard fowl. The bird which laid this mammoth agg is now extinct, and has b*n for probably ZW years. To the SCIHUMSI niatory rheumatism. who knows it by its bone, and eggs -it, is i wor *> * lu null tor many hours daring the dav and frequently far ino the night. Active a* he is, and strong as he is, there wa* a time not Irng distant when h* was as helplcas a* an infant and sulhred intolerable agony. About three years ago, while residing at \V n.li.ir Mills, h* wa* attacked by inflam- It grew spite of meih after known as the epiornis, snd Hs"resu>red I J d > c ""d prescriptions, skeletons prove it to have been a bird at a year s illness he had a stioke .f paralysis. least twelve feet in height. A n*> sailors I His right arm and leg became quite useless, who visited MadagMOar cenumes ago when the epioruis was stili living, are be lieved to have brought back the stories Sores broke out on both legs. Hu suffered excruciating agony, and had rest neither day nor night. He sought the beat medi- oonceining u which tinally developed into ' *J d' c lb t ooul<1 obuuned, bat no the fabulous narratives oi the roc. New Method of Tanning. It seems to be admitted that the new or Sad tier method of liuimug i* nf peculiar value in it* application to the lighter leath- er*. The details of this process show tha the skin is first treated with a weak solu- tion of bichromate of potash, sufficient hydrochloric acid being a Ided to liberate the chromic acid. After the skins have taken op a bright yellow color through their entire texture, they are drained and transferred to a bath of hyposulphite ot soda, to which some acid is added to liber- ate sulphurous acid, this reducing the chromic acid to grMO chrome oxide, while the sulphurous i* at th* same tint* oxidizud to sulphuric acid, thus liberating a further portion of sulphurous acid until all the chromic acid is reduced. The leather pro- duct is of a pale bluish-green color, tough and flexible, and thoroughly resistant to water, this latter properly distinguishing it from other forms of leather, as the com- bination of the hide fibre with th* chomium oxide is apparently tnoro stable than its oomntofttion with tannin, and yield* less to boimu water. Th* leather can be dyed and produced in a variety of colors, bat the dyeing is required to be accomplished before the leather becomes dry, its water- repellant uhariuiter bumg such that, once dried, it cannot he w'.t*d sufficiently to take op a full color. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND hope* were held out to him by the physi- cians. " He will certainly die within a month," one well-known practitionei told his friend*. " He will be a cripple for life," said two other doctors. It is no wonder that, as he says, life became s hurdin to him and he longed for death to relieve him from his sufferings. This was in August, Is'.i '. About October of that year he heard of Dr. Williams' Pink Pill* and a* a for- lorn hop* determined to try them. H* did so, and before long wa abln to take outdoor exercise. HH persevered with the treatment, cloteiy to. lowing the directions, and is to-day nearly a* strong a* when a young man, and is abl* to follow success- fully and without difficulty the laborious calling by which h* get* a living. Such was the wonderful story told the Gazette by Mr. Hopkins, who attribute* : hi* recovery solely to the use of Dr. ' Williams' Pink Pills, and he is willing to : satisfy any person who may call on him as I to their wonderful stiecl*. A depraved condition of the blood or a shattered nervous system is the secret of I most ill* that atHict mankind, and by restoring th* blood and rebuilding the i nerves. Dr. William*' Pink Pills strike *t the root of the disease, driving it from the system and restoring the patient so he*lih and strength. In cases of paralysis, spinal troubles, looomotor ataxia, sciatica. rheumatiim, erysipelas, scofnlous trouble*, etc., theae pill* are euperior to all other treatment. They are also a specific for th* trouble* which make Me lives of so many women a burden, and specdiiy restore the rich glow of health to (allow cheeks. Men brokendown bj overwork, worry *f exomee, will find in 1'ink I'llls a cert nn cure. Sold by aM dealers or scut by mail, postpaid, at 90 cent* a box, or six boxes for &2. ~>0. by addressing the Dr. Williams Medicine) Company, Brockville, Ont., or >chenectady, N. Y. Beware of imitations and cubsti tutes Alleged to be " just a* good." Trajan, th* Roman Kmperor, knew t he names of all the Praetorian Guard* in h* city, about 10,000 in number.