Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 29 Nov 1884, p. 4

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FOR THE FABMBR. Wounds. There are two principal methods by which wounds are repaired. The first of these, and the more favourable of the two, is the method termed by surgeons healing by the fin: fiffme/n. Under favourable Circumsmnces this takes place in an in- cised wound when the cut surfacws are brought carefully together and maintain. ed in Clue? contact after bleeding has ceased. The two surfaces then become cemented together by the formation of a thin intermediate layer of new tissue. The other principle mode of repair is [ruling by the mo ad intention. This is what takes place in large incised wounds when the cut surfaces cannot be brought and maintained in apposition, and it is the invariable me‘hod of repair in punct- ured and lscerated wounds. Here the gap in the texture becomes filled up by the growth of new material taking place from the bottom of the wound, while a new skin grows inwards from the edges of the wound. This new skin, however, is not. exactly similar to the natural healthy skin from which it extends, be- ing thinner, more delicate, and without any hslra. A third and much rarer pro- cess of healing in wounds is what is form- ed immediate unit/n. In this, it is said, the divided surface being brought into accurate contact, unite without the inter- mediate growth of any new texture. It is questionable if such is really the case, but it is cer:sin that sometimes in small wounds the cut surfaces, when placed to- gether, unite so speedily and exactly that on scar is left. In an incised wound treatment, in the first instance, should be directed toWsrds favouring union b the first intention. The essentials fort is areâ€"a sound con- stitution on the part of the animal, accu- rate and close contact of the divided sur- faces, and the absence of inflammation in the wound. Without man's interference this process would seldom or DOVt!‘ cnsue in the lower animals, for in all wounds, except the smallest, the cut BUIILC“e gape spart, unless some means be adopted to keep them together. The III-'ullfl c0m< monly adopted by surgeons for this pur- pose sre the application of strips of plas- ter across the surface of the wound. or the passing of miurcs through its edge. In adopting the former plan, a few strips, according to the length of the wound, should be applied at intervals; but the entire surface should never be covered over by the plaster. The surfaces, more- over, should not be brought together until bleeding has been arrested; for, should a clot of blood be effused into the wound, it would prevent healing by this method. Suinns are simply stitches used to tie or new the edges or surfaces of a wound together. They are used of vari- ous materials, such as thread, horse-hair, cat-gut, and wire. Nothing further need be said about the application of these, since their insertion into a wound should always be left to a veterinary surgeon. In a punctured or u. confused or lacer- atcd wound, or iii an incised wound where the surface cannot be maintained to- gether, or where inflnnmst‘on ensues in such a wound, then the treatment must be that favourable to healing by the second intention. Inflammation, by red- ness, swelling, and a great tenderness of the edges of the wound, should be com- bsted by usslduous bathing with hot water. In a. contuscd and lacorated wound such as “ broken knees," part- icles of sand and other foreign matter must be carefully and lightly sponged from the surface ; in punctured wounds, or stabs, it must be made certain that nothing remains in the bottom of the wound: and in all classes of wounds Iiesl- ing in this way, provision must be made to allow the discharge from the wound a ready escape. With the last object it is often necessary, in a punctured wound, to enlarge the opening, or to make what is called a “ couiiter-opening"â€"thnt is, one running from the surface upwards to the deepst part of tho wound. The necessity forniroo escapofrom a punctured wound is seen in the case of “ pricks of the feet. “These are generally simple in their effects if the tiack of the nail be carefully followed ; and enlarged ; but: if ‘ not, the nail hole is apt to become ob- structed, and prove insufficient for the escape of the dischargo from the wound. In that case the discharge accumulates within the hoof, and gradually forces Its way towards the surface, in the direction of least ~resistance and hence comes to burst out at. the top of the hoof. In all wounds union is promoted by putting the part at rest. In the case of such largo animals as the horse this is often difficult, and sometimes it may be necessary to put the animals in slings. Healthy wounds are seldom much beiielittcd by the application of lotions or oiiitineiits. When the wound is of small size, it is best to leave it uncovered, and if it be in summer it may be smeared with zinc ointment, or with forty parts of olive oil to one of carbolic acid. In large wounds the surface should be lightly covered with a cloth kept covered with a solution of carbolic acid in forty parts of water. When tvound shows what is called “ proud-flesh" it should be rubbed over at its most prominent part with sulphate of copper (‘blucatono") or washed with a solution containing two ounces of sugar of lead to a pint bottle of water.â€" (N. British Agriculturist). Winter Management of Sheep. Shepherds, like poets, are born, not made. You may find a dozen men who can be trusted to take care of horses, Cows, or pigs, to one who is fit to be en- trusted with the management of sheep, Why, we do not know. Ail the great sheep breeders of the world have given much of their time and care to the super- vision of their llosks. We have not space here to go into details, and in fact it is not necessary, as these vary greatly, sc- cordiug to cireuuutanccs. Much must be left to the common sense and experience of the shepherd. If any of our readers are going to keep sheeptliis winter, and and infantile pneumonia, but as soon as dry quarters were provided, the animals greatly improved in health.â€"-[Amsrim Agriculturist so 103923 EIPBBOR. low Input.- I". Tack Ila Defeat. After a few minutes he came into the room alone, and with that remarkable smile which could light up his dark coun- tenancehe shook me heartily by the hand, I confess that I was never more moved. His quiet and calm dignity and absence all nenuusness and irriubilify were the grandest examples of human mural cour- age that the severest stoic could have irn- agined. I felt overpowered by the posi- tion. All the past rushed to my memory; our youth together at Rome in 1829 : his dreams of power at that time ; his subse- quent desperate attempts to obtain it; prisons, where I found him still sanguine and unchanged ;his wonderful escape from Ham, and his residence in Londou,where lathe riots of 1848, he acted as special constable like any Englishman. His elec- tion as president by millions,iu France, in 1850 ; his further one by millions to the Imperial crown; the part I had acted.” an English minister in that event, which had realized all his early dreams ; the glory of his reign of twenty -two years over France, which he had enriched be- yond belief and adorned beyond all other countries and capitals ; his liberation of Italyâ€"all these memories crowded up- on me as the man stOod before me whose race had been so successful and ro- mantic, now without a crown, without an army, without scountry, or an inch of ground he could call his own, except the house he hired in an English village : I must have shown, for I could not con- ceal wh at I felt, as, szsin shaking my hand, he said : “A Is. guerre comma a la guerre. C'esf: bien bon do Venir me volr.” In a quiet, natural way he then praised the kindness of the Germans at Wilhelm- shohe; nor did a single complaint es- cape him during our conversation. He said he had been tramps as to the force and preparation of his army, but without mentioning names; nor did he abuse any- one, until I mentioned Gen. ’I‘rochu, who deserted the empress. whom he had sworn to defend, and gave Paris up to the mob, when the emperor remarked, ‘SAh! voila un drole.” During half an hour be con- Versed with me as calmly as in the best days of his life, with s dignity and resig- nation which might be that of a. fatalist but could hardly be obtained from any other creed ; snd when I left him that was, not for the first time, my impress- ion. When I saw him again in 1871 I found him much mt re depressed at the destruction of Paris and at the anarchy prevailing over France than he was at his own misfortunes ; and that the communiâ€" ists should have committed such horrors in the presence of their enemies, the Prussian armies, appeared to him the very some of humiliation and of national infamy. Oann. 9, 1874, he died, in the presence of the empress, who never left: him, released from the storms of s fitful existence, from intense physical suffering and saved from knowing the loss of his only son, whose fate she was soon destin- ed to deplore aloue.[Memoirs of the Earl of Mslmesbury. <-.N¢»â€" A GOOD WORD FOR THE TURK. His Woll-Kntwn Fidelity and Courage. This brings me now to a subject on which I must appeal to the public sense of justice and fair play, I must protest against the indiscruninste employment of the word “Turk” whenever there is oc- cassion to mention any case of mlsgov- ernnieut, oppression, or cruelty In Egypt, Is will probab$y surprise the reader very much to hear. that, speaking generally, there are few, if any Turks in that coun- try. If proper inquiries were made about these so styled Turkish mudlrs and Turk- ish soldiers, who are so often referred to in terms of indignation :nnd opprobrium, it would be found that they are mostly Egyptian natives, and although some few may have a dash of Turkish blood from a former generation as part of their inheri- tance, they have nothing In common with the Turk, as he is understood in England except their Mohammedan faith. Very different are these men to those who serve the sultan in the European or Asia- tic provinces, snd it is but just to both that they should be indiscriminater con- founded in names. Turks there were in Egypt in the time of Mohemlf All. Their presence and service was the essence of his strength, and it was with their assist- ance that he built up his power and was able to bequeath s principality to his descendants. It was the policy, however, of his successors to get rid of this Turk- ish element or reduce it to a minimum in the government of the province, seeing in it one of the strongest ties by which Egypt was bound to Turkey, and conse quently a great obstacle to the achieve- ment of that independence which the heart of Said, as well as that of Ismail, so strongly longed for. It was a mistaken Iicy. The Turk, with his well‘known fidelity and courage, was set aside, and the fellsh, with his subtlety, unscrupul- ousuess, and cowardness came in, leading to the advance of Arabi Pashs, the bom- bardment of Alexandria, the battle of Tel-el-Kebir, and all the other evils with which the land of the Pharaohs is new again afflicted,snd for which England in history will be made to bear the ones and the disgrace, unless by following the spir- it of the national proclivities and tastes she stops in time and retrieves her fair name by generoust admitting the errors so far committed and by at 0(ch adopting the remedy which will bear out her professions of friendly intentions whileconsistently acting with due regard to her acknowledged just in- ternmâ€"[Illsckwood's Magazine. -«w Q--b 09%-... Seller Jack‘s Intelligence. A gontlemon from Socorro has a setter pup named .Isck that is gifted with almost human sense. Jack daily accompanies his master to the butcher shop, where a have hsdlittlcexpcrlcnce, we would ad-li’iec“ 0‘ meal" ‘3 bought {0" him. and vise them to consult some good farmer in :dhiCl‘ h° am.“ If) y lpacksgo was too largo to admit of in passage with it in his mouth through iii the neighborhwd, and in addltiun this the following hints may be useful: Sheep must have dry quarters. Nothing is so injurious asdainp, ill-ventilated col- lar. barns or sheds. Do you think you can make such places warm and dry comfortable b' the liberal use of straw for bedding. iis only makes the matter worse. There is nothing a sheep dislikes more than a formentin manure pile. compel a flock of bre a mass of damp straw and manure amoral t lowed by a wmk. puny, sickly crop of lambs. We onto know a valuable dl'ck , uni } laid the pac ago at the hole jumped home before being allo w- to est it. The other morning the hole in a fence the dog was scc.stomod THE LIKE KILX CLI'B. There was great general satisfaction among the large number preacntas Broth- erGardnertouk his accustomed seat at the opening of the meeting. Since the accident mentioned at the last meeting stveral wild rumours had been flying around. One was to the cflect that he hadmade his will and infavor of Sir Isaac Walpole; another that the doctors had held acouncil and found that his liver had been pressed two feet out of plumb; a third that the heavy weight resting upon him so long had given him such a crook to his legs that a wheel- barrow eould be run between them with plenty of room to spare. “Gem'len,” the old man as he smiled benignly down upon the shining pates of the first row, “do presumdenshul ’leckshun sin a thing of de past. It am gone foreber. It am gathered into the archives of (is forgotten, dar to be kiver- ed wid de cobwebs of decay. It am weIL Dsr' am some things we doan' want too much of. “Let us now turn ober a new leaf. If political bigotry has fur do paa' three months prevented us from borrowin’ cof- fee of a Democratic naybur, It need no longer stan’ in do way. If dc bias of our feelings his made us hesitate to lend our list irons to a Republican, we mus' now offer him our wheelbarrer as well. It has been a long, dark night. We hev called each other liars, horse thieves, chests, swindlers, robbers. nabobs, tyrants sn' corrupshunists. We has set each odder’s houses on fish, sn' burned eacn oddcr's hay stacks. We has pizened each odder's dogs sn’ shot each odder’s cats. We has stood an' glared at each odder wid murder in our hearts, an' we has skulked along de alleys wid clubs sn’ brick-bats in our hands. “De lon night smober,sn'dayliglitlias broken. t. us forgive au' forgit. De country am all heah yit, sn' sick of us as hev survived de struggle mus' purge our hearts of rsncor an’ bank up de house agin cold weather." RESOLVED. Judge Cadaver offered a resolution to the effect that it was the sense of the Lime-Kiln Club that the Constitution of this country be so amended that Presi- dential elections should be held but once in eight years. The Rev. Penstock, who is said to be looking for a nomination in 1888, object- ed, but. on a. rising vote being taken he was left all alone, and the resolution was declared to be unanimously adopted. SENTENCE SUSPENDED. Judge Cadaver took the floor with both fch and explained that a warm friend of his at Ashlsnd, 13., was in the poet busi‘ ness and had a few sample verses to be read in open meeting. The object was not money, but to prove to the world at large that the colored race are advancing. Permission being granted the Judge coughed seven times in the most reckless manner and then proceeded to read as follows - THE BEAUTIFUL SNOIY. vsnsu . The beautiful summer is gone. And ccld winter very soon will come; Then, the snow-like snow, so charming and gland, Will make its appm'nncc, with s. smile He blmd like bland. VERSE LIX. Oh I celestial snow, why didst than not come Two weeks ago ; when the burning hot sun bin-ale I118 hie ourselves lo the ice cream par- or. And the men be-fill themselves with ice- cold lager. N.B.â€"Tho last line was suggested by a. Indy. VERSE CCXXX. Bat alssf we sufhred and sighed for the in vain ; Though we knew, that some cooler day, thou woulds't come again. And now we feel that that cooler day is nigher, As for chestnuts we go and climb the tree higher. Trustee Fullback, who had been mov- Ing about in an uneasy manner, hopped up as soon as the reading was finished and declared the verses a. dead steal from Lord Byron. Pickles Smith was Inclined to believe he had read the same thing in Shakespeare, and the Hon. Cabifl‘ arose and declared upon his sacred honor that he invented the poetry himself about ten years ago, but lost the manuscript while fouling a river. The discussion bid fair to be excited and prolonged when the President cut it short by observing: “Judge Cadaver shouldn't hsv read de poetry until it had been submitted to de Committee on Sentiment sn' Art. While sentence sin suspended in his case, let dis be a solemn warnin' to ye s11." BROTHER JACKSON. Announcement was made that Brother Kyann Johnson would set out on a tour of the West. and South to look into the welfare of the various branch lod es, and ssthe meeting closed Brother srdner said to him : “In gwlne out among the world, put on no false pretenses. Doan' claim dat your but am too small sn’ your boots too large. Act as if you war’ used to psyin' your fare on the street kysrs, but dosn’ try to make anybody believe you am Ilbfn' on do interest of your mama . Be courteous, but you am not required to re- turn thanks for a kick. Be affable, but a continual grin on deface s ile's a man’s looks. Be upright, but ta '0 all dat am due you. Be honest, but best a railroad companyoutoryourfsrewheneberposslble. We will now put do unfinished binness on ice sn' reproach ourselves homeâ€" wards.” . A Big I’rIze. The hiuhiet prise by a very long way over offered for a literary performance will be awarded in 1925 to the success- ful author of a single biography. Fifty years ago. according to a weekly contem- porary, Gen. Arantsehejefl', the friend and confidential adviser of the Emperor Alexander I.. deposited in the Imperial bank of Rmsia the sum of 60,000 rubles, which is m be allowed to accumulate at in- o m'gotluou h. but the intelligent animal ten,“ ,m um I“ of December 1925 I , over the fence and pulled it through Icitg'h‘ "it ing owes to lie oni'luk set the reaches down, want when the entire amount, princi tereit, palandin- is in be handed over to the Another time while carrying a, - pup“ "ck of pack“: um “ck b“mum.t‘pithar ofrhe best work on the life and T“! 1"!" ‘ndl‘ will!" push dmpped 'm' Jcadeiny of Sciences will decide 0n the go of Alexander I. The St. Petersburg merits of the different performances sent and gut the one that dropped, and mplac-i - - ' inches thick, is aluicet certain to be ill l 0‘1 if i" ll” “‘1‘- m. md “Ind m8 pnu‘ will“: win by -‘so In south Siberia there is an uncivilizod of Southduwm that bu intirely dissp- ’ race known as Bantam who worship I hu- man god. When their potted. Goitre doatru ed the lambs. Vs know another large flock of ang- i see of 19 they poison him, and choose a wool sheep that suffered soverer in the younger god, who is likewise poisoned same way. were shut up The rain from the roof of the shed ran in~ time mum, and dis pm shoe compellcdto either stay in the s stand on this mass of wet straw. in a small shed and yard; god reaches the ‘ a In the former case the Illeep. when he reaches that age. There is not gimp, (hum much mmpou'u'on among the youth of ' south Siberia In seeking to the yard. Straw was thrown in {mini for human god. They don‘t put theiri were, cards in the newspapers a couple of this notof’ oil or! months before the convention moon, In the string themselves as a candidate for tho: I ll tell you what I will I . the nomination . 011- , don't know about month? 0. that time amount to the enormous sum of 1,918,000 rublesâ€"about £300,000. A sin. of the amount will be deducted for! the cost of rinting the work. The ro« mainder wi go to the fortunate author ; , and so for once in a way there will be a “min” Pfoptfllel 0‘ the blOOd. lad 61' man who Is . mallow-[8L pals impurities from the system. g-.. Bill-eollcctorâ€"“Ilow about mee‘ Impecunious reportsrâ€"“ this note. but other case the sheep had damp sheds and ‘ ethos. subject to the rules of the Boer-sis. : you propose to do 1" “Instead of meeting ! callammaleepln,bctutheyhadtfseu\houahtba ofiiceis sainecure, the; i run of a large so disastrous. , the results were no: youth prefers to work sixteen hours a day. y lambs died of goitn In a wwllencmill. this note, I'll just make a note of this I ing-sting, That will do just as wall, won't it ' completel b ken down in health by the Irish troublu. l ElfGLISII SERYASTS _â€" An lumen 01 Lou: William” 13‘ 31w. Bmhdd. The oldest of Mr. Msnnering's servants, if not the most important, is Splinter-bar, the coachinan. For three generations, grandfather, father and son, the Splinter- bars have lived under the squires of Dur- Iestone, and in spite of some shortcom- ings, have given them honest and hwty service. The grandfather drove the four guys, and though, after the approved fashion of his time, he more than once found himself in a ditch after anevening‘s carouse, he made it his boast he was never drunk on the same night as his master, and that neither the squire nor the squire's horses were one jot the worse for his occasional deviation from the strict rule of sobriety. In the next gen- eration the father not only drove the four grsys.â€"-which it has been a point of familv pride to maintain,~â€"-but when the storms of the French revolution and the suspension of cash payments made men hardly know what to hope or what to fear, be buried for his masterjn the corner of the stables £1,000, as a secret hoard against possible emergencies. And now the son, who is some few years Mr. Men- uering’s senior, gray-headed as he is, still drives the four-in-hand, superintends every detail of stable-mansgeineut, and sees that carriages and horses are turned out as smartly as the best coachmsn in London could discharge the task. His labors are not unspprecinted, for if Mr. Msunering has a weakness if: is for his stables, and no man has a quicker eye to detect s strap wrong, a carriage panel ill-painted, or a speck of dust on the harness. Mr. Msnnering’s butler is but a few years younger than his coschmsn. He too, was born and bred in Durlestone, was Mr. Mannering’s servant at college, travelled with him afterward, isnot much of a “scholar,” as the country people say, but brews the bat sis in the country, sees that the mahogany dining-table and the hsudsome old silver on it are polished like a looking-glass, is considered as an old friend of the family, and is heart and soul devoted to the service of the squire. When, a few years since, one of Mr. Msnnering's nephews, a good hearted but foolish youth, had involved himself and his family in some troubles, which I am not free to explain more particularly, old Holdworthy was immediately consult- ed, and by his shrewdness and devotion succeeded in releasing the young man from the fascinations of the Circe by whom he had been bewitched, and in settling once and for all a serious domestic sulty. Holdworthy is now growing old ; he is rather short of breath, and he is sometimes, it is said, somewhat sharp upon the younger servants; but he has lost none of his shrewdness,and he steadi- ly believes that there Is no one in the round world equal to his master. The housekeeper, Mrs. Blocket, holds no in- oonsiderable position in the house. She is past 70, but still vigorous and hearty except as regards her eyesight, which, she complains, is failing her. She Is, however, able to read her large text Bible of an evening, and to keep a very close eye on the younger maids. She divides her leisure between the care of the poor, the disposition of the furniture, and the making of preserves ; the latter of which occupation lies so close to her heart that it is said that when, some ten or fifteen years ago, there was a fire at the hall her first thought was for her confectioneries, and her second for the family portraits.â€" [National Review. -â€"â€"â€"â€"‘”<~.’FOO “ow Marriages arc Mail» In Brittany. One of the ca uses 1’; ’i :1 uss‘s remark- '5 lately shown able popularity in , on the occasion of ersnry festival, is the incitement vim. ‘ waltzes have contributed to the formation of frequent dancing parties, with the result of bring- ing young people together and, as a con- sequence, of promoting matrimony. The Viennese any that he is the greatest match maker in Vienna. “It was to the sound of one of your waltzes," Count O’Sulll- van, the husband of Charlotte Wolfer, the distingoished actress, wrote to him on the occasion of his fete, “that I first plas- ed my hand in that of my wife;" and the composer has had hundreds of similar letters. The Bretons of Penze and the adjoin- ing parishes have, according to one of the French papers, 2. Michaelmas custom which renders them quite independent of the musical and terpischoresn aids to matrimony found so useful in Vienna. On Michaelmas Day all the young women in the district who desire to enter the married state assemble on a particular bridge, tricked out in all their finery, and take their seat on the parapet. The eligible young men from Penze and the neighboring parishes presently make their appearance on the scene. They scan the features of the seated damsels; and tender glances are exchanged ; and when at length a swsln has fixed his choice on a psrtIculsr nymph, he approaches her and offers her his hand to help her to the ground. If she accepts his hand for this particular service she accepts it for life. The parents are never very far off on these occasions, and if they raise no objection- tion young couple shalt-.1 hauls and the wedding soon follows. Stranger than Fiction are the records of some of tho cures of consumption el'ectod by that most won- derful remedyâ€"Dr. I’isrco‘s “Golden Medical Discovery.” Thousands of grate- ful men and Women, who have been snatched almost from the very jaws of death, can testify that consumption, in. its early stages, Is no longer incurable. The Discovery and altorstive, and the most obstinate affections of the throat and lungs yield to its power. All druggists. A cologne firm have caused the arrest of a man who has be II imitating their goods. Of course the man had no right to make a counterfeit scent. “Wth we learn with pleasure we never forget."â€"â€"Ai.vssn llfnitcmit. The follow- ing is a case In point. “I paid on: hun- dreds of dollars without receiving any benefit," says Mrs. Emily Ilhoads, of McBrides, Mich. “I had female com- plaints, especially ‘drsgging-down,’ for over six years. Dr. R V. I’ierce's ‘Fa- vorito Prescription’ did me more good than any medicine I ever took. I advise ovary sick lady to take It." And an do we. Druggists sell it. Pale, \Voobegone Invalids suffering from poverty of the bin od, bilious suffer- ers and those whose circulation is deprav- ed, should use without delay Northrop &: Lyman's Vegetable Discovery peptic Cure, the celebrated blood purifier, which stimulates digestion, increases the Pile Tumors. ,however large, speedil and aislesst lcured without knife, y p jSeud six cents in stamps for XReferences and rsp‘l‘y. aw)“; doyaryMedIaJAnocis on, Buffalo, N. Y. i Mr. Trevelyan, Secretary to Ireland, ls has no equal as a pectoral} It never disappoints its patrons. i 'done at home. and the ins.- Is the most fsvora In for a speedy and fpormancnt cure. the majority of cases being d D i cured at one treatment. Snilcrers should cnr- an ' Y raven y. i Kingostrcct West, Toronto, Canada. and er rim Egsmp for their treatise on catarrb â€" Maurwi ‘ r ‘01-. ! butcher's bill. mastic or salve.l What Is Calarrhl From the Mail (Curt) Dx. 1501. Catarrh is a mum-purulent dischargr caused by the presence-ad development of thevegezablsparasite amceba in the inter- nal liningmembraneofthenose. This tara- site u «my developed under favorable circumstances, and these are zâ€"Morbid state of thu blood, as the blighted Nl'p- uscle of tubercle, the germ poison of syphilis, mercury, toxcemea, frcm the re- tention of the clinic matter of the skin, suppressed perspiration, badly ventilated sleeping apartments, and other poisons- that are germinated in the blood. These poisons keep the internal lining mem- brane of the nose In a constant state of irritation, ever ready for the deposits of the seeds of these germs, which spread up the nostrils and down the fauces, or back of the throat, causing ulceration of the throat; up the eustaohian tubes, causing deafness: burrowing of the voml cords, causing lioarsencss, usurping the proper structure of the bronchial tubes, ending in pulmonary consumption and death. Many attempts have been made to dis- cover a cure for this distressing disease by the use of inhalants and other ingenious devices, but none of these treatments can do a particle of good until the parasites are either destroyed or removed from the mucus tissue. Some time since a well-known physi- cian of forty years standing, after much experimenting, succeeded in discovering the use combination of ingredients which never fails in absolutely and per- manently eradicating this horrible disease, whether standing for one or forty years. Those who may be suffering from the above disease should, without delay, oom- municate with the business managers, Messrs. A. H. DIXON& SON, 305 King Street West, Toronto, and get full par- ticulars and treatise free by enclosing stamp. The South Africaii's Unerring‘ Aim The extraordinary proficiency of the Dutch Boers of South Africa in msrkman ship makes them dreaded enemies. An Englishman who has been hunting among them lately says that he saw one fire has- tin at a bustard which was flying about two hundred yards distance. and send a rifle-ball through its body ; but as this did not wholly stop the bird, which flapped rapidly along the ground, the Boer fired a second time and cut off its head. British soldiers dread with good reason to face these sharpshooting bush fighters, sni- msted by the idea that they are defending their firesides. Me‘s”. A young woman named Catherine Hughes, only two weeks in the bonds of wedlock, has made several attempts to commit suicide at Montreal. When ar- rested at the canal just as she was about to jump in she had been evidently imbib- ing liquor previously. A doctor declared subsequently that she was insane, and her committal to Longue Pointe asylum has taken place. A poet sings: “I miss you, my dar- ling, my darling; the embers burn low on the hearth ; * * * The midnight chimes out from the minster and I am alone.” Why don’t the blamed phool blow out the gas and go to bed, instead of moaning at midnight, and inflicting his complainings on newspaper readers. What 10 Cents will Do. A 10 cent bottle of Polson’s Nerviline will cure neuralgia or headache. A 10 cent bottle of Nerviline will cure tooth- ache or facesche. A 10 cent sample bottle of Nerviline is sufiicient to cure colds, diarrhoea, spasms, dysentry, &o. Nervl- Iine is just the thing to cure all pains, whether internal or external. Buy at your drugglst a 10 cent sample of N ervi- line, “the great paincure.” Safe, prompt, and always effectual. Largo bottles as any drug store, only 25 cents. A Philadelphia sign, according to The Call, Is “Essays, Plays, Poems, and Newspaper Correspondence Written to Order. Hsir Cutting a Specialty,” It requires considerable ability to cut hair. Young Men! Read This. ‘ The Voltaio Belt 03., of Marshall, Mich., offer to send their celebrated Electro- Volatio Belt and other Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days, ro-men (young or old) afflicted with nervous dehility, loss of vitality and manhood, and all kindred troubles, Also; for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and many other diseases Com- Ieto restoration to health, vigor and man- hood guaranteed. No risk is incurred as thirty days trial is allowud. Write them at once for illustrated pamphlet free. At church women are more apt. to con- sider the texture than the text. How They do It. So-called respectable people would hesitate considerable before pilfering your pockets ins crowded thoroughfare. That Would be too too. The same dis- crimination is not indicated by the so- called respectable druggist when that wonderful corn cure, Pcrs’ui's Psistzss Conx Exrnscron, is asked for. He will pilfcr your poakcts in the most. genteel manner by substituting cheap and danger- ous substitutes for the genuine Putnam's Corn Extractor. Watch for these gentle- men, and take none OLI'IBI.‘ than Putnam's Com Extractor. Sold by druggiste everywhere. N. C. Polson & 00., King- ston, proprs. Like the earth, many umsn's politi- cal aspirations sre flattened at the polls. important. when you vIsIt or leave New York City. save Baggage expresssge and Carriage Hire, and stop at the GRAND Uruox llorm. opposit. I Grand Central Depot 000 elccsnt roonmiftte-i [up at scost of one million dollars, :1 and up- wards per day. _ European plan. Elevator. Restaurant su plied with them. IIorsccsrs, sweet! and coveted railroads In all depots Familfcs can live better forfeits money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other flint- class hotel in the our. Light infantryâ€"Torch bearers. Catarrhâ€"A New Treatment. 1 i Perhaps the most extraordinary success that I has been achieved In modern science has been i attained by the Dixon Treatment of Cstarrh. 10m of 2.0.10 patients treated durinql the past seix months. fully nInety per cent. avebeen f cured of this stubborn malady. 'I‘nfs Is none i the less startling when It is remembered that inut five per cent. of the patients resenting , themselves to the rczutsr practft oner are {bent-fitted, while the pawn! medican and other Advertised cures never record some at 4 s alL Starting with the claim now fiencraf‘, bellevcd by the from scientific men that who disease Is due to the presence of lIv I,fna parasites In the tissues, My. Dixon st to theIr extoi. “‘1an“! but cure cstarrh soncc l 'minstlon: this accomplished the l Is pfflt‘IIL‘ttllf cured, and the permanency lsrn- ' questioned, as curcecifected 0 him four year; , No one e so has ever at” temptch to cure mt}. rrh In this manner, and no ‘ ago we cunts stiI'. oth-r treatment he: ever cured cstarrh. The application of the remedy is simple and can be ru-nt season of the d with Manur- A. II. DIXON GchN, W6 Fogg makes it a point never to pay his “Why,” he says, “ if I pay for a beefstesk, for instsnce, it would be mine, and I should be loath to eat it. A man does not care to dine off his own «nu 4-», MPH“. i flesh and blood." ' "’ World's Dispen-,l 063 Main Street, , .- QWEMMAWt xx 1113261131.!) scum-row New? £1.90: . lot 4. Man In: chain lard. said building. orchard. and Incas. o. it unto. W Turn. Gstwwsr k 00., Cm Woollen. 811s. 0a! t I _.__..... ll! WANTED. Wmmmngow-wm myhmou ‘5‘. W 5d“, u: mmluym luminanth J BLAUTJM M__‘_ _ r” \ V‘___ v, , HAND STAMP 3.13:": 33.233: Slims“ lama Micah tin-Int (on! years at ornate I xmm‘xw Aunts wantul KXNYUN. TINGI BY: STEWART. arm 00., hoody‘s‘ Cur Taller a) sir. .1 Km.- EL. “est. Mam. Dress Cutting. I'ItUF‘. mermOuL persons. xv lmsfi' about Y0 man). sill In- mu: balsam mznafodlr 3c. fvr sealed [wail-rs I»! ihm advcr J. .sm'ruwirx. music. (“11‘ CHRISTMAS cAsns sv MAIL: lb“l-.‘J£§§t-" BOYS a.er GIRLS (both large and smalll (‘an make money for (‘hrhuuss by selling our Car-us to friends and Neighbors everywhere. arorcady The assortment Is farm and the quality of the caids unar tnan any previous )car. A very handsome prom can be realised. a.- the prices are I. us than wholesale. Our stock is select- ed from the beg: makers of she world, and is very choice. No two nuke, Remember posh Ian nwpsld. No. l. MRSccnts we will mail you 25 beau- tifullxsmsll sized cards, worth from 3 to 5 center can: . No. '3. Fora] coats we wl‘l mail you above. With the addition of four handsome fringed cards. No .8. For 50 cents we will mail you 25 beautiful medium size cards worth from o lo 10 001.18 each. No. A. For 81.03 We will nisif you same as No. & Wllh six elegant medium size fringe cards. No.5 For SLIO we \vlli mail you ‘25 large size cards worth from IO In 15 cents each. ‘No. 6. For 31:0 we \\'I.l mail you the some its No. 5. andst very handsome large size fringed Cards. No.1. Forflul we \vIII mail you im some kind of car as No 5. Fringed Cards. Illnd-l'nlulul (‘anls Ivory and Ivor-Inc (‘nrds as (1 other ncvnhiv s at 10. I5, 25, 50. 7.) cents. and $1.03 each. which will be selected with care (0.- dul‘erent tastes and ares. Birthday Card Packages. excepting for Nos. 1 and 2. put up and mailed same us lhc Chri-tm-«s Cards; or if so desired they can be Assorted Christmas sand Birthday Cards. mailed the same day as order received. mud always sceomnanv order. 'Ioronto. Ont. HOLIDAY __â€"â€"[0] .â€" FINE GOLD AN D SILVER J E\VI'II.I.EII.Y. LADII'IS‘ AND GENTS' DIAMOND RINGS. GOLD AND SILVER “'ATCIII'JS. FRENCH MARBLE AND GILT CLOCKS. STERLING SILVER TABLE \I'AIII}. BILVEIII‘LATED, HOLLOW & FLAT WARE. VIZ TEA AND COFFEE SETS, SIN I‘II'ICIZS. FRUIT STANDS, CAKE BASKETS. EPEIIGNES, SWING I‘ITCIIISILS. VASES. JEWEL CASES, TOILI‘I'I‘ SETS. DRESSING CASES, (LADIIZS' AND GI‘IN'I'S'.) OPERA ANI) FIELD GLASSES. PHOTO ALBUMS AN 1) FRAMES MUSICAL BONE i. TWO TO TEN AIRS. VIOLINS. ACCOIIDEONS. CONCI-III'I‘INAS. “'IIITING DESKS, “'ORK BONES. GAMES, TOYS It DOLLS 01" ALL KINDS. .â€"â€"[o].â€". SMITH & FUDGER. (wuonmsns our. ) (rnsssn MENTION :rnis PAPER.) i‘ , g (JOHNST THE san ~ ‘ 2 ill - - â€"â€".-.~ 2 “'OOI) COOK. ETNA, COAL AND WOOD COOK. of : MOODY. ' l‘nsh Address MATI‘IIEWSBROS. & 00.. £8 Yonxo threat, I By whirl nail. nu: «Wow ' l n l I f for this sensual BRONZE STATUE l‘I‘ICS AND ()IKNAMI'ZNTS. CASTIERS, BUTTER DISHES, 5:. ALL TIII: STAPLES- SETS 01' DESSERT KNIVES AND I’OIIKSJN CASE. Iv'ISII CARVER?» S FISII IZA’I'I-ZIIS, IN CASE. also PLAIN AND CARVED XIII-IERS‘CIIAUM PIPES. Tflfilll'fl. THE ’S f FOR SALE 8‘! 8T0 v 1 Nu“)- l‘ll’plnaw.mul mu 1. w . IM Hart. E E KIIOTT’S i mum...“ All limb of real "We sold or “churn! or mini“.- lioa. Ilene: buch (n all huh (I rul rattle al low at nm if is. mi “Gunmen for many flu-.3 far» rrsa swam}. Rub n‘lhdo‘ m d «tans I‘. m to“ or many. NJ} â€" But at ivhrvrm on "NI- catich R. u. was: Laiillard's Climax Plug Loril‘mnl‘c . 'lurfllarxl's . a 5mm}, am the tvst and cheap-st. quality. . . N I SMOKED SAUSAGES I The museums-mess am! for farmers In their has) some. These mm. an moi“! aid in for use. b the Dominion Ben for W (L! bit-mural _ W. & I1 if. OUMIE & 00 III) are: Nun Street. Montreal. Importers of l‘uru-ed (‘c melt. Liz's .t at" Sr “9M0” hating 3 NJ .‘iw fin: . '2.“ ll use Len I" :‘.m Drala Pipes, Chiming, 'I\t Canada threes“. \ nil Lhim \\ strr .ime. Fins toms. “tau hie Brick I‘lutu oi Parts. File 0 ay, liens. emu. (‘x :t‘r‘tzl, Cl Ina Oar. MwaKiuh rs vi Bessemer Stem act». chair a musprlnxa. 7- ~"r'fi;"§"-1LL1ARIS' SLATE AND FELT BOOFER. \Isnufsclurcr and healer In Tar-red lell, Iconnx Pitch. Renal-s PIN‘I‘. (‘arpu Fell, std. at inn-st runs. 4 Amman-x Sr. EAST, Tunes-r0 DIXON & 00 um... .rsurrr- 4- war It". 1. i .A'; ELIE. BLL‘IIJA G, 70 king hlrcal. lass. ‘loluule Large double Driving Bella is speoIaltr. Stud for I'rire fliers and Discounts. ‘ Punting Press For Sale- llouiln‘iiil‘31ix.IIrr. III ti 5! CILSII wnrk‘n‘.r»nlrv rvr Mlu churn. sm- - f dfl‘il 1'3; 1 aw also J:8lltlu‘liltl Book-uiiniurr as good as an“. -‘ \Vfis'l‘fl \N at B IKE“, 11‘.I my blue Turn to. A. R. ‘VIIJleAI‘lb, llhIAIlhIl I.\' MACHINERY, ENGINES. IRON 'I'OOI S, S~\\\'-I\IIIILS4 BOILERS, W001) TOOLS, SKINGIIK‘MILLS, DEL’I‘lNu. BAND SAW S. LA'I‘II MILLS. Send for new catalogue, iin-..tmnii u this ltlh'f. Sphog Mach ne Works. Ioronig Cornpuund ()xygcn Cures Ilroin Iiitlr, ('vll‘lllupllnil. Asthma, Ibsprpnia. Chronic n. r. 'I limat. I'iii.ui).ir, 2..tzrnlgia,Iihruuislmn, Catsnli, Scruiiila, N. I‘l'llfl II\I :uiatmu. (‘Ik‘ , 1141. Home and nius‘vTI’I’llllislil. 'l‘iisl i-‘r- r. All Iii-nous (lillllf‘ti‘ find Sp. l dy Ilelf- f mm IR riuin-ut euro. '1 firm who are suffering from the plml‘c iisiiwd disrst nfimilil give (.‘JII pound I'xy.,¢n u Ill:\l. 73 King Stru-t \\ can. Toronto. 1 v ‘ ow ItUPI‘URlii. ~=§=t¢v 23: mu 5 [\Il'f-ZIIIAI. Times. “73‘ with n 511ml Spill H; Um IM‘A‘ u'sil‘ ilin-uinl. l‘uok li.i yours to in-h fun. thin-s rut) chills out of )0 adults. Holds lfm Wurst IIt'YIIID. dining Iiardmt work. it mu.an rc- ‘ funded. 25 yzars'pinctfcsl mix-ri- riico, Circulinl free. Address. 'IIIN k‘ I EGAN INII'IIIII AL TIIUS‘I 00.. 2.! Adelaide Nercl Earl. Toronto, On. TEN-“KORES. IZAIII‘II’ITLIJL' SI fUATIlI), adjoinlug tbch rpor Minn of tliv'I‘ou'u (f (lllftA‘lI. The land slows gently tow ullld ifn- South and Is one of tl'c Iu-sl. rituut‘ Ions in Canada for fruit rinsing. Land on up!» rilu sf-Iu of the romlis III bl at H.000 per new. I uiil M'll this “hole lot for $1,100. $500 cash. Lalai co at six and a hunt in cunt sccurul If)‘ innngngu. Address “Iiu'i'li.” 1:01.10. Toronto. Canmln. ""â€" RMBONB a. 00; G” w m: H‘TICAI. «rs Martens have iiuafn ri-sium-«l IilIaII FL". and want In Ill'lll' from all their old custuiin-nl. \\'.- have the "In: Me truck" In the gun liu~iiiuss,nml Will lumiin you Fir-minim and Spurtinxuuuis at, mid in nu inv- cums lo-s Ilian trad-i prices. \\'iiiclirx:Ii-r IhIII-s 15.2. IIIIIAII'I for 811! ful, other good» Ju‘ t In! rh- np. We han- n Inuvrd from \‘ungv BIL, and how no connection with tin» uni sinful. Note change or mldmss. Fi-nd lie. I .r In will cut iii-sun. IlAWIlUNll: s Uu, nii.-I::.~|=nn null. 'I‘urouto. N. II.-â€"-Afi Itili In of liun If: i u n! IIUIII). ‘l'v r "' n ' l ‘ loin L-Illd snyaf Mail Steamships. flailing duriin wintrr from I'nrtlnndcnry Thursday and Illlllf.\\ m. :) Saturday to I.|vx-vpuol,snd III MIIlIllI from Quebec may r-nuirrlziy to lile‘lpmll, culling at Lou (Imidrrry In Iiunl imuls and per-mime” fur Emu-sud and Ireland. Ale-o from hullllliulc \in Halifax and Ht. John's N. It. to Livurpcol fortnightly (luring nuuiimvr months. The alumnus of the Gliwuuwlluus sail flurle winter butwucii I'UI’IIILIHIIIIMI Glasgow, and Ilmfun nndfllasuuw alternately; nu] during summer Iiutwwu Quebec and Iiiiisguw and Ila-tun and lifts-gun t'h'l'y mes. B'ui freight p449 44., In other Information inn!) to xh-SCIIIIIIIHUIH‘I :»: I'o., Ilnlffinurc; S. (.‘uniuii A (20.. “ohms . .tfn‘it \ (10., hit. John‘s N. BX; \‘v'iii. 'I'IIOIllrull i. (10., all. John. N. II. Allan 6t (10., (lhiitmw, In Yo (I? Alden, No“ Yorit ,ll. Iloullior. 'I‘umnto ; .‘\IIIU'IB, fin-e 5:. (to.. Quoboo: II A. Allan, Iâ€"‘oumnd. Huston. Mon. rcnx Burton's All Healing TA ll ANI) IEIA'L'HILINB 'l'lu- fwd In Ihv world for All dfs P Lu n m Iiw Htliinm Mini or “I an mm] I.) fill vlnu'ginfs. TUILET SOAP (If). TRAIGRPARENT CAIIIIOIJI} ACID AND GLI'CEIILNE III IIii- hut in lln' minke! fismve minim JilH If iii the only [I’f‘x'llf‘l'llon of [be kind “hit-l. noiiuifm all ffwnufiiliour. together will: lb: UIIIIIIIIIIIIIJI. IAIULN‘IIIIH oflum, slid the only on ~,wh;’m- mm the rows-r to sumin nrurlrb- i..eiit (or 1.: mo, III (I KILL“. IIhO muule. WILLIAMS (ig'h Alli: hintliineis i'ot- uczpnircc u flu.- Sewing Mullins of the PBI‘IUII, It In 1.1:!“ and In») In rats. hllrnl and Rapid In non-uni Plain and Hlmple to lean, It ii; strung, r'ii.ialxlr,nnd t. (-!i Iuiit, of fin. vciy lei-f [Lilli rial if m. n (14y rsi. bu) r ikili ircduco. It was awarded five medsv i-nii tum first urizmi at the Dominion lfxbilnitit i. Inst (Jle ‘cr. It is rapidly superscding all the old fashionld rm. cs CVLiywhtrc. has it, try It, buy it, and make sure that you get it. THE WILLIAMS’ fill} 00. I783 Not". Dunm .‘i'.., Mrntnr.l,snd 6E Kin; HZ “it'll. 'I‘O'finbn STUVES karat-aw 2‘ A, ,_ 20,. NORTH - was-r, GRAND DUCHESB. COAL AND woon itANoii. COUNTESS BASE BURNER, mm or. WITHOUT ovrm. R H RE.

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