""f:Â¥ hi m ,ki "i* ,;-:-â- n â- Hi- ":^.al â- I I am m M^Hl «l 1 lil^H nP J ^^HTS TO AE8T0AE THE EMFIRR What Is 9«|d IB raHt Ak«at the ۥâ- de '.£:-â- Paris' Appeal. ' " The Bomte -de -;f aria htt^itow Uif some days appeared 1 i i l t I tbi^re^ maiSbo. in the role the 8ifHi)urotiocie»; Copttkof hia detailed menu of mOf3emij|^ monarefay have been thron brdadpaa^' thra^ont France. But tllffe has not yet bem the slightest sign that royalty will reap from it any harvest. The masses of the people read .• it with indifference, or with the platonic curiosity with which they daily read the posters of some new financial prospectus or advertising scheme. NO STIB MADE IN PABIS. Even in feverish, over impressionable Paris, the elaborate manifesto cAusea no outburst of party animosity. Preudent Grevy read the manifesto at Mont sons Vaudrey. A^ter pondering over each phrase with his scmtiniziog legal mind, he slowlv rose from his chair and said :^ "It is a well written historic thesis. It is thoroughly academic, but it contains not .a particle of danger to the Republic." THE PBIME minister's VIEWS. M. Kouvier, who presides over the most moderate and conservative Cabinet that has governed France for many years, said, after reading the manifesto â€" " This will consolidate the republicans more than anything that could have been devised. It shows the necessity of republi- cans of all shades rallying round the Repub- lic, and will force my colleagues and myself to seek a majbrity in the ranks of the repub- licans solely, and not count, as hitherto, on the votes of the conservatives. As to the effect of the manifesto, that's briely stat- ed: â€" HIS COITBAGE ADMIRED. " The Frepoh people, no matter what their political stripe may be. in a mild pla- tonic sort of way commend the descendant of the Capets for coming down from the sublime atmosphere of generalities and emunciatiog clearly and distinctly his poli- tical creed. They approve his pluck in throwing overboard, once for all, the fiction of the divine right, but feel convinced that henceforth the return of any kind of a mon- archy in France would be a mere idle dream. " Under the Rouvier Ministry the royalists and imperialists have found a modus vivendi, a sort of truce with the republicans and for the Comte de Paris to launch his thun- derbolt at the present time seems pretty good proof that he himself and his reaction- ary advisers felt that his truce might be- come a lasting peace, thereby destroying forever any chance of the monarchical resto- ration. THE NEWSPAPERS HAPPY. The manifesto has certainly been a perfect godsend for the Paris newspapers. Column after column of leading articles appear day after day. Figaro says â€" " The act that the representative of the monarchy has just accomplished is perhaps the most important one in our history since the French Revolution, for the charters of 1814 and 1830 were only intended to orga- nize the purely representative machinery of government, but the programme of the 15th of September embraces a wider horizon and aims at an entire reorganization of society. THE count's courage. ' M. le Comte de Paris, after studying the conditions of modern life in the United State3 and England, exposes with a loyalty equal to his courage the entire mechanism and details of his future government. The Rppublic is now more than ever impotent. With an army ready to face any foreign enemyâ€" as General Breart now says it is â€" with £in army ready to quell any insurrec- tion at home, and with a worthy heir to a race of kings on the throne, Fra-nce wou'd again arise from her ashes and regain pos- session of herself." Oanadiaa Xtaikatassa.. Over the line in Canada they are quite as inqaiaitiTe aa their Yankee ae' ' probably the aonth i^d carridlh ___ tionoxer â€" and^lhey •i?«_^rtain», jaawein jellftv^. fevar vit the cpwaniM ^t, S«»y Hoot Sqpw yeai« aioft^ afcwej»rn by letter irom » GaniifiiaB fHand, the Beowrer- Oeneni ynm twnding on a atewnboatf with conaiderable fnnSs for the Government, and for the sake of safety and privacy he engag- ed the whole of the ladies' cabin. The pas- sengers were all alive to ascertain the rea- smi of the arrangement and especially to know what baainesa the great man could have on hand to require so much room and money. At length One of them, more bold than the rest, ventured to introduce the subject as the Receiver was walkine the deck, and approaching him asked if he was on a Grovemment contract. •' Yea " was the gruff rep y. " A very large one " "Yes â€" very large." " May I ask what it is ♦" "Yes." " Well, pray, sir, what is it " " Well, you see," said the Receiver Gen- eral with great seriousness, " the King of England has made a present to the King of Siam of his half cf L%ke Ontario, and I am ensiaged to bottle it off " No more questions were asked. on An Excellent Season. Minister (dining with the family) â€" You never go fishing on Sundays, do you, Bob- by Bobby â€" Oh, no, sir. Minister â€" That's right, Bobby. Now, can you tell me why you don't go fishing on Sunday Bobby â€" Yes, sir. Pa says he doesn't want to be bothered with me. fiiunan Bemains as Medicine. Such details as all these are apt to sound to us strangely unreal as we read them somewhat in the light of travelers' tales, with reference to far-away lands but it certainly is stiartling when, for the first time, we realize how exactly descriptive they are of the medicine- lore of our own ancestorsâ€" in truth, to this day we may find among ourselves some survivals of the old superstitions still lingering in out-of- the-way-corners. Thus it '" only a few years since the skull of a jide was used in Caithness as a drinking- cup for the cure of epilepsy. Dr. Arthur Mitchell knows of a case in which the body of such a one was disinterred in order to obtain her skull for this purpose. It was, however, accounted a more sure specific for epilepsy to reduce part of the skull to powder and swallow it. Even the moss which grew on such skulls was deemed a certain cure for various diseases. Nor was this simply a popular superstition. In the official Pharmacopoeia of the College of Physicians of London, A. D. 1678, the, skull of a man ichohas died a violent death, and the horn of a unicorn, app^arashighly approved medicines. Again, in 1724, the same pharma- copceia mentions unicom'a horn, human fat, and human shilh. dog's dung, toada, vipers. and worms, among the really valuable medical stores. The pharmacopoeia was reAosed in 1742, and various ingredients were rejected, but cehtipedea, vipers, and lizards were retained. Nor were these strange componnds pre- pared fOT human subjects only. In the " Angler's Vade Mecum," published in 1681, anglers are recommended to use an oint- ment for the luring of fish, conaiatins;, among other horrible ingredients, of man's fat, cat's fat, heron's fat, aaafoetida, finely powdered mummy, camphor, oil of lavender, etc. and it waa added that man'a fat omild be obtained from the Leadon chinrgeona concerned in anatomy. mm 1 v; *• A FlansiUe Theqzy.^ Old Mrs. Bentlyâ€" (In art gary reading the wamine: "Theae u^e viJaable Old Maatera and mnat not be tonohed.")^ " What's that fer, d'ye a'paMl" Old Mr. Bentlyâ€"" I gaem the paiat on 'em un't dr yeU^' *• T ' ;. She F«edect Bzodie- "Yea, nr, yoil on^t ttiflw iahamed of yonraelf to let jpxa pal^hlgld^ wife. chop that knotty wood t i^iSm ^jbrnea M Mo- £lroy Moloelic^. "five^tq^^Jbiot nin aot. Be soba. aa' tt ynm mt,t^^^ paid the Aoea foivedJWli.y.t liw ii Kt» " "Ad- vicef "YlB. %tfdthat pmr woman, â- he needed ezerdae, and itll not be McEl- xoy Moloahey thatll pat a log in her way." Likes and Dislikes. " I s'pose yon like customers that pay as they go," said a suspicious party as he reg- istered his name. " Yes," replied the hotel clerk, "if they've got baggage if they haven't, we like 'em to pay as they come. Two dollars, please." His Nationality in Question. Old Gentleman (to Irishman about to strike a match) â€" My friend, you will never be able to light that pipe in this gale of wind. Irishman (striking the match â€" Phat do ycz (puff) take me for, a (puff) Frinchman A Seflection Upon the Boad. Conductor (on Georgia railroad) â€" Do you mean to tell me, madam, that this child is not 12 years old Madam (sharply) â€" Well, she wasn't when this train started, but, land alive 1 there's no tellin' how old she may be now.. A Disappointment- Bobby (to young Mr. Featherly) â€" I heard Clara tell ma that she was disappointed be* cause you didn't call last Sunday night. Young Featherly (in a tremulous whisper) â€" I say, Bobby, did your sister say how dis- aapointed she was Bobby (thoughtfully) â€" I'mtryin' to think â€" Yes, she said she was agreeably disap- pointed. Bongh on Teachers. â- '" " Parent â€" " Who is the laziest boy in your class, Johnny?" Johnny â€" "Idunno." "I should think you would know. When all the others are industriously writing or studying their lessons who is he that sits idly in his seat and watches the rest instead of working himself " "The teacher." The Use of a Doctor- " Ye're very sick I see. Mistress Broon?" " 'Deed aye I Im sufferin' sair." " Ye'U better let me send for a doctor." " Ehna no unless I thocht I was deein'" " But he could dae ye nae gude if ye were deein'" "1 ken that â€" but it wad just keep aff re- flections a doctor, when ane's deein' keeps aff reflections, ye ken." The Little Fellow Struck It- " What is it, my children," exclaimed the temperance advocate, " that causes men to ignore the ties of home, neglect their fami- lies, stay out until after midnight and get up with a bad headache in the morning 1" " I know," shouted a little wide-awake in the room. " WeU my little fellow, please tell the others what it is." "Politics!" Only a Little Quiet OouTersation- " So you're tired of my crazy notiona. You think I'm becoming insane, do you " repeated Mrs. Snapper. "That's what I said," said Mr. S. atolid- ly- " May be you wouldn't object to having me locked up in an insane asylum either. I don't anppoae you would hesitate a minute." "I reckon, I might hesitate a minute," was the defiant rejoinder. " You would, would you T You'd wait a minute in hesitating. WeU, 1 will wy to yon right here, Mr. Theophilua Snapper, that you're too late. You can't get evidence now that would aatiefy any court that I am Don oompoB. I don't know what yon might have done, though, if you'd ap^died when I consented to marry yon. I dare aay you might have ancceeded." The Lady Was Probably Disappointed. Mr. A.â€"" By the way, have yon heard the atory ahout the magieiali Hermann?" Miaa B.â€" « No, what ia it " Mr. A â€" " Why a lady sot on the atreet one day laat week and found a seat n^t to Hermann, who waa taking a ride. When ahe waa about to leave the car ahe found her ^atch miaaing. Sa^eotiii^ «oid« •mim*.^ ahe accnaed Hermann of tiding it. He denied the accuaation,^ but invite! the lady out to the Ezporition to aee hinu Well, ate went out there tinfc iiteC Hermann m VM of hia tricfca came down off the nfakt-- fonh with a aaiidwici^, whk^ he Jbanded^o the bdjr. Ai^ what do you auppow wu i^theaaadwidir! -i ,^*?"^i*'?«'» w t a rw Ud)-^'«:gEhftwiaeh of oouAe." Ml. A â€" "No, a piece of ham! Ha thai Helhel HawIhaVT y AGiaAHTIO Jilinr £NT£SPBI8E. A Blver Tused Omt t Wiout doubt one of the achievementa of modeni.en«ii conatmction of the BicBaiia ' Feather river, aituat^ in Butte Cfc, C^- fornia. Feather river ia formed by the North, Middle and South Forks, which tjie in the Sierra Nevada Mountains in Plnnwa Co., run south weatward, and unite in Butte Co. to form the main Feather. The river, including the forks, ia 250 miles long, and entera Sacramento river at Vernon in Sutter Co., about 20 milea aboVe the city of Sacramento. ,, It ia well known, among gold miners, that the richest and moat productine gold minea of California have been the beds of rivers, and the "Feather" atanda pre-eminent as to ricfaneea wherever it has been possible to work it. In fact, old miners have known it for years under the name of " The Golden Feather." Prof. Horace C. Burchard, late Director of the United States Mint, in speaking of the gold-producing river beds of California, says " They are the natural sluices cf thousands of square miles of auriferous ground, the wash from which has been dis- tributed on the beds, bsu:s, and benches, where, by a natural process of concentra- tion, the gold was redeposited in such man- ner that it was easily accestibls to the early miners." ' The bars, which at low water are dry, are exposed to the operation of the miners, and from many places in the bed of the river â€" where it waa possible to turn the river out of its channel by means of dams and canals, or flamesâ€" the miner soon found the ways of abstracting the precious metal from the sand and cravel in which it rested. The Big Bend of Feather river, however, whose gravel deposits have been estimated in value fr9m $110,000,000 to $150,000,000, has hitherto baffled the skill of man to rob it of its treasure. This vast amount of wealth has been guarded and preserved for ages by the minimum constant flow of one hundred thousand miners' inches of water rushing through a narrow canon of from 1,500 to 2,000 feet deep, which rendered it impossible to wing-dam or flume. Yet,i while nature has thus seemingly placed impregnable barriers sgainst man's encroach- ments, she provided, at one point at least, a way whereby these obstacles could be over- come through the intervention of modern engineering skill. There is a little stream running through Dark Canon, which empties into the West Branch of the Feather and from there into the main Feather. Dark Canon is ssveral feet lower than the bed of the main Feather, at the point where Big Bend begins. A tunnel was commenced in D^rk Canon, and a bore 12 ^16 feet drilled through a spiir of Big Bend mountain a distance of 12,007 feet, or nearly two and one- third miles in length out to the mountain side of Feather River, at the upper end of the Bend. Just below where the upper end of the tunnel taps the river a dam was constructed which is to force the water through the tunnel into Dark Canon, out of which it will flow into the West Branch, and then into the main Feather again. This will leave about four- teen miles of the river bed exposed to sight during the season of low water, which is from seven to nine months in the year. This stupendous undertaking required the services of one hundred men, working night and day, for about five years, and has just recently been completed. At the head of the tunnel six gates of iron and steel, 4^ by 8 feet, will let the water in or keep it out. In times of high water the gates will be closed, and the river will run along its old bed, to be turned out of its course and through the tunnel at low water. The past yield, from those parts of the Feather accessible to mining operations, is sufficient evidence that the most sanguine anticipations of the projectors of this grand enterprise will be fully realized. The fam- ous old Cape Claim, below Big Bend, yield- ed S680,OOJ in forry- tiwo working days, and from 3, SCO lineal feet of half -worked river bed. In fa,ct, the river-channel, both above and below the Bend, has pro. en itself im- mensely rich. The President of the Big Bend Tunnel and Mining Company, and the largest stockholder therein, is Dr. R. V. Pierce, who is, perhaps, of all others, most entitled to credit for the successful termination of this great undertaking. Being fully satis- fied with the feasibility of toe plan from its inception, he has with an unstinting hand supplied the funds for the prosecution of this enormously expensive work, and his confidence and liberality will soon meet its reward. The Doctor has been, and is now, connect- ed with very many other important matters. In the fall of 1877, he was elected to a seat in the New York State Senate, and in 1878, he was placed in nomination for Congress, and waa elected by a deciaive mMority. He ia preaident of the Buffitlo Loan, Tmat and^afe Deposit Company, one of the foremost banking inatitutea in the city of Buffalo. But he isperhapa best known as President of the "Worid's IMspensary Med- ical Association and Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute." This institution is sit- uated on Main and Washington screeta. The design of the Invalids' Hotel is to fur- nish a home to those desiring private treat- ment of thd most skilled class, eapwsiaUy to those suffering frim chronic and surgical diseases. It is not a hospital, but a pleas- ant, remedial home, fnmuhed with every comfort, and the most approved sanitary, medical and sur£|ical ap^iances, whioh study, experience, invention, and the most liberal expenditure of money can produce. There are eighteen skilled payaicians and surgeons constantly at the Hotel, and a corps of efficient and trained nurses. The Doctor ia alao in- vMitor of several well-known medidaes, which are conqpounded at the Worlds' Dispensary. The efficacy of theae medi- (An8 is undoubtedly what led to the Idea aad gtimate estoblisj^msat of the Invalids' HoteL Verynuiny who were using these remedies of Dr. Pierce's found tiiem so beneficial tiiat thqr Ibegan tb Mud applica- tims for personal treatment, and these ap- peals bewn^ig so numsmoi, tUe Dootbr owdnded faft erect hblavidids' .Hotel The KgJSend Ti^nel Company is fortunate th having so prograarfve a man as Br. Pierce as their Preaidait. ,ne toeiie«^^ e(kpended In Oa^eSMitraction quiring title to tiiis vast.«»Hfcn«| iMl. n^nl ag gro imda. BoardBafSoSes hav* been c wtn M t ed aloog tlia livw, roads and tracks have been boiU a sobataatial Mdga arom^ t mining I F««»%yj2°l isthljfgyj?^^ sncted acre SI the Wtst Braneh of the river, and what was an i n'lroken wilder- aroim^ tljKSy'oinity • f the tunnel, when th)^Bmnppy asmaienced opsrations, vilme ^it^ puod "KagboMieSt ag^iacal^nst^i^^te'...^ ecliiol-jianat. A soet office has alitl esiabllriied^ere. and • tele^^kOae lii* taOrovOle, mzte^ sifles distant. ^4|l 37" 'i-ECTVQ--:^' *9 AOEUUoKt r .- ^Afaelsaaesorfinewrt. ii^^' Sbifs and Metal Fii^;.'*|M;^ BABY'S B t 8 BlRTHi names ottwo or mow Sfe?S2 •louicB 111 iwo or mote nuZ W««nte' sddreMa, tofonnaoB. • mood Dye Btaai, (Vj ' A Gkukbops oompaky. â€" A beautifnl pre- aent will be given by the Brea-lmakers' Yeast Company, of Toronto, to nearly every one, as long as they last â€" first come first served. The most accomplished woman hasstillsome-*' thing worthy to be added to her list if she has never yet made a good sweet white loaf of bread. To encourage the art of Home Bread-making this Company have secured ten thousand presents, which will be sent to all who comply with their terms. They want all who are old enough either to fol- low directions or work under instructions, to learn how to make bread. They will take your word for it when yon have suc- ceeded to your own satisfaction in using their Hop Yeast, and write them to say so, enclosing a wrapper of a five cent package of The Bkkadhakebs' Ybast, when they will send in return a lovely gift. This offer is open to any young lady, girl, single or mairried woman, matron or housekeeper, who has never before made a loaf of bread. Any person having domestic charge of a house- hold who is not now bakinp for the family, and who will commence by using their yeast, and who will send to them the wrapper of a ' pacKage, and write to that effect, will re- t-tntpt r-v o ct"-ttt â€" ' ceive a still better class of gift than that lil'ljLt.Y blvWAHTM' 'OKjNcSEr^ PEARL PEN AND PENCii WITH NAME 50C ' 6 Cts. Extra PRINTS ,NAME BUSINESS AND ADDRESS *HEI(CU,gJ above offered. Better yet any one at pre- sent making their own bread, using their own or other yeast, "but who will bay a five cent package of the Breadmasers' Yeast from any grocer or storekeeper, and, after nsing, will write and say that their Yeast is Superior, they will believe her also, and will astonish that lady by return mail with a lovely gift. You must get the yeast from your own grocer. Don't send money to the Company direct. Please mention this Paper whe ntins HE^ ' the Em tr ana E iPlaiiits. i- ill Uami!tii J ibeen hneltel ise SiiKll 92 Robert SlI ifEr)-sipel»/ «I1, '24 S^ Epilep-icry eats' saSfiiil Bincil, j| nut St., 9 \Vetknest! and bun..' Trouble John Wojj j cart St., riired of Liver Complaiut and Bi used only 3 fifty-cent bottles Mrs. J. Bca!,ti, I St., troubled for years with Xenx-jsProsis! small bottlee gave hor ij^eat relief. SoldatS I F.F. DALLEYiCO.,? I ICURiFITi I Wh»ii I sm; core I do cot mesn men!? to tmh nice and then have them retorc tgilu. Imwi, I tnn. I haTe nade the dlceat! of FITS.EHLSmJ ISO SICKNESS a Ilfe-looB f.-jd.v. Iwimjilt » cnr» the worat cases. E'irtnse oihtn hm i_ naioni6T notnov receJvln^k core, Seidtl^ treatise and a Free RottU ot m; iDftUIble nakl txpresi and Pott GClce. it coil: ;ce ODtbleibnl tnd 1 will core you. A.!1: eer Dli. H. Q. BOOT BraDcliOfflee,3?YoDi8StJ' BARNUM WIRE IRON WORKS, .Windsor, I We are offering speciall dncements to purchasers of Fere a for delivery this fall We Guarantee the Best^ Cheapest Fence made ill Dominion. IRON FENCES OF ETERY DESCRIPTION. Send f«r Catalm ASK FOR DIAMOND STOVES IP TOU SEB THEM YOU WILL BUY THEM. OUR IjJiST NOTICE In this paper referred to the Annual Meeting of the Af*"' tion. This meeting (being the 15th since tbe Company was oi^anized) took j^ace on Tuesday, tbe r^tn April, when the following gratif}ing increases were announced PREMIUM INCOME INCREASED FOR YEAR, INTEREST AND RENTS, ASSETS, $260,420 $356,375. SURPLUS, Were allocated as Prodts Holders. Profits payable ou May 1st. J. K. HAGDQHALD. Managing to p«22 GURNEY'S STANDARD STOV •jfA^r-U laanbctnred 1^ The S. ft G. Cfnrney Go. (L'd)i 1^ revcm^ that T^S!t^1i comiatti against 1 •^ iKtBi? 'W*" bring him h E*»^«'Sgr«!ioiwly God « J^-Sev«r I-rdoDS stoma *•* " K«un These must ** "^«M and obvious cases nnmerow ^j^^ Nature, w 'Jl!l!«andseveritr. »«^.""«' '^Sfoffender enough djiring • ^A so she goes »n plying •^•.^JiUdren and his childr* •P^^'ifjm even to the third -»•**•'*; «^' Punishment is eatai «^r^d neither human law â- ***'i »n break the entailmt Jhereditary inflictions. Nat â- ^ nSopH«»^°*' ia the distemj ^^"'iS;. then. who. is i 'U.VK habitual trains o thou Sff.*? fcaWts crow, to look aro *Sk'£ex!mpi;s whose fort« _jj^et or whose fate he would [fSrW wSSse^tock of vi â- .lire ""i **"' "**? «*'"*^ ' r^red. His erect form, his firm s J?°JKlJfnhs and undimmed sen SSyScTtesofgoodconduct.- ^Whfch Nature has honored hinn J^ to her laws. His fair comp he« that his blood hM never been £j?his pnre breath, thit he has n E'hU digestive apparatus for a v T^lmool This exact language and 1 Lffln that his brain has never I T^ sttipefied by the poisons of a uZ a tobwconist. Enjoying his a] Itothe highest, he has preserved Vof enjoying them. Despite the r rtheschoil-boy's story, he has e, Lie and stiU kept it. As he^drams b life there are no lees at the bott loreaii wUl reach tbe goal of ^exisb ther Painleisly as a candle bi J in'its socket, so wUl he expire a kimsrination would convert him Aer Enoch, translated from earth Er world, without the sting of death kt look at the opposite extreme, w ipposite history is recorded, v iFsoshockmg to behold as the wrec iolate man,â€" the vigor of life exhs nd yet the first steps in an honor rnot taken; in himself a lazir-h ^eues dead, but by a heathenish fof society, not yet buried ones have had the initial letter of 1 burned into the palms of their ha iformnrder, Cain was only brande fcorehead but over the whole pers ^dMOchee or the inebriate, the si Bof infamy are written. How Na ids him with stigma and opprobri r she hangs labels all over him, to 1 diagost at his existence, and ti _Ji others to beware of his exam r she loosens all his joints, sends tre Ig his moscles. and bends forwan ne, as if to bring Mm upon all fours hredbmtes, or to degrade him t ile'i crawling How she disfigure btenance. as if intent upon obliter Races of her own imace. so that she T that she never made him Ho^ sriienm over his eyes, sends foul ^abit his breath and shrieks, a npet, from every pore of his feholdabeast 1" at vhy should not a young man L. Wbttion to lay up a stock of heal I u to lay. up stock of any other 1 ' yt eam^ as literally as any r~/ in the market. Health can ' Inuted, invested, made to yield » Wand its compound interest, anc ^W and redoubled. The capi r-, mdeed, may all be forfeited I Wsl miademeanor, as a rich mar I in Us property in one bad sp fil^ditis as capable of being inci Wftmr kind of capital and it [-!â€" i red. on payment of the BWm of temperance and vThis, too, is a species of • only capable of a life-lo "F its poneasor, but it m "wd to children by a will and P* ""t no, human judicature s as In m .eitniipoiiaent writes to us froi •. NaiiM»^ article on foot ^â€" J and most digestible. I-^** ot food ia to supply the IS^ with materiiS for the 'yzS"'**, for the repair of its fcV^W ^iBd f or the maintenance tZ**Pw«tare. A second but s nr^^ge^wre. And the two e a??r" t*^** other things ' "** wWch "relishes" "SS tin primary end, t wholeaome food for c_ r Mofiur. What ia snitec I^IMt adapted to the *^ idolt and the old ma tdiel Thesadentarj **yt^^oor mnscle-worl ..J*? fte same food, ••jwtttati.m, inherited â- S^ " "**** "i'ht "Mngoria not so great. ""»i Bav« something to t^S^^' ^•w peopl [^lly^tbs "hog and n *«• fact is, tie var **• stosDgtiiened, or or an not, called aga to â- hoold. i',. â- IIHttiiiMMiijiMia ^iiiiyi^Wttut^UiAududttiifeili