11 eqt ma sup nit me its pk af th tin uy al tu: ve en © grear Al i it it t fo h. t el tl IP‘rc Of all dogs the buildog is the preâ€"eminent watchdogw. HMe may be accurately characâ€" terized as t>e best friend of man while day light lasts. He is always ready to lavish atlection on his master except in the dark, In the dark he must be approached even by his master with circumspection and a stout club. This idiosyneracy should not be conâ€" Sidered as a fault, but rather as .m‘ @eishing virtue, His faithfulness may alâ€" Here, then, you have an incorruptible and most faithful guardian of your home or place of business, as the case may be. Such an animal is almost invaluable, and it may he put to excellent use even during the day, though the police dogs‘ duty really is at night. In the day, should you deem it necessary to have your cash drawer EM. ed, get one of these dogs and tell him to watch that or this particular piece of propâ€" erty, and you may rest assured no sneak thief will have the temerity to disturb it. A curious but according to the trainer a very valuable feature in training doge for thiefâ€"catchers is that they (the dogs) are discouraged from making any noise ; these animals are not given to idle barking, but do their business with as little racket as possible. also doge Next they get pri thieves entering de dummy is piaced ou body makes a slight suspicion of ‘he do accomplished his object and has his man down with his teeth in his throat. Then he is told to guard cr hold the imaginar thief for sometimes fifteen minutes or h-{l an hour. in this way the dog soon knows what is expected of him, and once taught will never forget his lesson. . ‘The clothing of the lay figure or dummy is changed very frequently to prevent the dogs from getting an idea that is is only one kind of man they are expected to attack, The trainer first takes the dummy in his hand and indicates with his finger where ne wishes the dog to seize it. As soon as the dog makes a spring at the throat of the figure he lets it fall and induces the dog to retain his grip. After a while the dummy is fastened so as to give great resistance to the dog‘s efforts to throw it to the ground, but he is never nermittad is vast +il) ha L.2 attemp‘ to remove anything that a dog has been told to guard. Aiter a dowz has passed a utinlw1.03 exâ€" amination in the primary grade of his educaâ€" tion he is initiated into the art of scientificâ€" ally seizing a man by the throat, throwing him and holding him down. This is, perhaps, the most interesting as well as the hardu'.‘ thing to teach a dog. _ The canine puril is introduced to a stuffed dummy rigged out to resemble the conventional idea of a burâ€" glar or sneak thief. _ The dogs are taught never to attack the legs or arms of the dummy, but to concentrate their efforts on his throat. I S m CRE! tain thing and to prevent anybody from touching it or coming near it, E:n the bone als> comes in play, as almost all doge will grow!l and show their teeth if ou should try to take a bone from them., 'lzhin habit is encouraged in every way and varâ€" ous articles are substituted for thebone, so that after awhile it is worth your life to The first thing the prospective fourâ€"legged policemen are taught is to retain a strong, neverâ€"letâ€"go sort of grip on whatever they happen to fasten their teeth in. Or, as the dogman said, "the pups must freeze onto the stufflikeâ€"â€"." This accomplishment is taught them as soon as they have got their second set of teeth. A bone wrapped in a piece of cloth and tied to a stout cord is thrown to the puppy ; it i# encouraged il‘ every way to hold on to it, and after a few A young Englishman and his German partner are the promoters of the ides of establishing what they are pleased to eall ** Watch dog Exchange or Buresu." They will be prepared to sell specâ€" ially tramed dogs, or the dog* may be engaged for so much per month, week or night. It appears that in several of the larger European capitais there are similar dog bureaus doing a very good businets. The dogs chiefly used in this business are bulldogs, mastiffs and great Danes. Of these three the first mentioned is by far the most popular. (ther breeds of large dogs wre sometimes used, but only in exceptionâ€" al instances. The training and breaking of these dogs require infinite patience and a long time, The animals are put in training when mere puppies and are given their lesâ€" sons with as much care and regularity as it bestowed on the education of any child. 1 WHEN WELL TRAINED THEY ARE BETTER THAN WATCHMEN. Balldogs Are the Favorites But Wastifs and Great Danes Are in Good Bemand â€"MWow the Dogs Are Taught to Keep TRAINT ulled ls in [ ® efforts to throw it to the ground, is never permitted to rest ti‘l he has Cuard â€" |o cemove anything that a dog has »ld to guard, c a doz has passed a l‘tinlwv.o.rg exâ€"| ion in the primary grade of his uce | 18 initiated into the art of scientificâ€"| zing a man by the throat, throwing i holding him down. This is, perhaps, st interesting as well as the hardest ) teach a dog. _ The canine puril is ced to a stuffed dummy rigged out Klllx‘ A y get practical illustrations of tering doors or windows ; a rinced outside the door, someâ€" + a slight noise to arouse the f ‘he dogs. The door is then xl open by the string, which n tne dummy, _ As soon as the the supposed intruder they are nify and hold him till told to DOGS A$ POLICE CaUGHT. )os. it a DUyary DAYTIME HOLD _ It is proposed to reâ€"elect the whole counâ€" cil ul|"lill|. township by acclamation and spend the money which the electi cost on the roads, action would When terrified, the ostrich is travel at the rate ot cwentyâ€"fiue hour, and clears twelve t fourteen a stride. Jules Simon, in his Slst year, has jast undergone a successful ‘operation | for "Do we travel on time on this road * asked the seedy individual at the railway. ‘‘Sure,"" replied the ticketâ€"seller. "Well, gimme a ticket to Montreal to be paid fur in thirty days." Less than 200 years ago the ears of horses were also cropped, and this disfigurement was as much admired as the mutilation at the opposite end is at the present time. Whether this mania will spread so as to include other species beside the horse and dog remains to be seen. _ With the horse it is an act of unwarranted cruelty. voutis o9 $P...000 | green horse, fresh from the pastures of the country, is brought to his stables, and a farriet is summoned, who brings a charcoal furnace, sharp knives, ligatures and a sort of a plumbing kit withhim. The horse is slung from the floor in a canvas hammock, so that his feet are lifted from the floor, and a fence is crowded close to his heels, to prevent him from hurting the gentleman who is about to make him in fashion." Then the long hair of the tail is turned back so as toLro the place where the cut is to be made, and a cord is tied about the tail. With a keen knife the farriee then hews and whitles until the flesh and nerves | are cut down to the bone. Then the point of the knife is driven through theâ€" joint, severing the spinal cord, and while the horse gives an agonizing scream the tail drops into the farrier‘s hand, The worst is not over. Now the charcoal furnace is brought forward, and redâ€"hot irons a‘? taken from the glowing coals to be jabbed into the raw stump to stop the flow of blood. Refore proceeding at all the doors are closed and the windows darkened, that no one may witness the crime against nature, and bring both operator and procurer within the grasp of the law. + | quantities, On that account the ;;ru;u’oe i: ‘| cruel only at the time of the amputation« : The fadders who insist that their horses |shall be mutilated and exposed say the |operation is painless and that the horse will not notice it enough to stop feeding. |Unprincipled farries can be found who support them in this ridiculous claim. In contradiction of this is the whole anatomical structure cf the tail. Its angle of use is universal, as it is awung to any part of the body at the will of the horse. In order _ to do this, a thousand little ’mn!cle.\! and sinews are required. The energy which calls these into play is re~l presented by a multitude of nerve fibers, while in the centre of the tail is the spinal cord which is the centre of the nervous system, The purchaser ot a carriage horse in New York will not buy a docked horse except it be a highâ€"bred hackney. He is afraid the horse will be secondâ€"hand. A fine, green horse, fresh from the pastures of the In England the mosqu fliee and guats abouns Une of the worst of all the imported manias of fashion is the docking of carâ€" riage horses, now practised in defiance of the law,. _ It is a relic of the days when bull baiting and dog fighting were national sports in England. Even then it was only Is "I‘ll have a Welsh rarebit," she said, with some importance. Then a disagreeable possibility occurred to her, and she called the waiter back. "And be sure," she added," ‘‘that they don‘t put any cheese in it 1" Margery Lynn has an unconquerable aversion to cheese and apples. N’oc long ago, she went to a restaurant, all by herâ€" self, and it struck her that this would be a good time to try something new and even eccentric. She had often heard of Welish rarebits but had never seen one. Place No Reliance on Turkey. An influential German newspaper, the Cologne Gazette, declares that no reliancé can be placed upon the promises of Turkey with respect to the condition of affairs in Armenia, and it urges the Howers to be on their guard, as Turkey is possibly placing obstacles in the way of the Commission, in order that the severe Armenian winter may intervene to render the inquiry difficult of prosecution. ‘The Sultan is said to be broken in health, the result of anxiety a but, if so, he is doubtless worrying about himself, and not about his defenceless and outraged Christian subjects. In the olden time all Christendom was stirred by tales of Turkish atrocities and by thesentimental consideration of the domination of the Holy ’ Land by the Paynim. 1t was hoped when the Powers bound themselves by the Treaty of Berlin to protect the Christians, who were politically subject to Turkey,that the last vestige of 'furkuh oppression had disappeared. That hope seems to have been illusive, if the stories of cruelties practised upon the Armenians have subâ€" stantiality. Having put their hands to the plow, the Powers cannot turn back. They must redeem their pledge to guard the lives and liberties of the Armenians, and the Turk must be brought to his knees, if necessary. The diplomatic wiles of the Sublime Porte are proverbial. Hissmooth words and fair promises must not be acceptâ€" ed as their own security. The Ottoman Court must be taught that the Treaty of Berlin is something more than ink and paper and sealing wax. to watch a thingâ€"animate or inanimateâ€" and he will watch it with a degree of care and solitude utterly unknown to a policeâ€" man. He has but one really noticeable deficiency ; his sense of smell is so infinitâ€" esimal that water for eau de cologne or attar of roses. rh.: bulldog does not claim to be the Apollo of the canine world, but this does not prevent him from being extremely popular with the ladies. His features are far from classic, but he makes up for his ugly handsomeness in his digniâ€" fied demeanor. The expression worn by a blueâ€"blooded buildog is a happy fusion of unreasoning ferocity and wholesale good nature. l'ï¬n unadulterated ugliness will make the most villainousâ€"looking south sea sland idol blush for him. ways be placed at A100, Tell such a dog gnats abound in INHUMAN work On Time Worse New Variety ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO nothing is sacred. to is unknown,and then it was only i1 said to â€"miles an en feet at very sparing Docking a spear Whiskey, cigars and tobacco, too, togethâ€" er with precious stones, are the things which seein most tempting to the frontiersâ€" men in Maine and New Brunswick. There is many a load of hay that #Ofl over the border with a big jug of whiskey hidden within. â€" Bustliog Calais, in â€" Maine, The chief article smaggled there is liquor, The Canadians, by avoiding the duty on whiskeys and alcohol, save an amovnt which is sometimes as high as $2 or $3 a gallon and profit accordingly. THE "UNDERGROUND PassAGE" is more risky, but it promises great returns. He calculater to a nicety, does the wicked "free trader," the chances of profit and loss. If he carries his goods up the water way, in wholesale quantities, he might have all seized and confiscated at once. He knows better. Big schooners sail from the free haven of St. Igiorre, richly laden, and without a port before them. â€"That is the trick. When they have gone far enough, and it is dark enough, down goes the anchor and up goes the quietest of signals. Te lfob is secluded. The big schooner rides alone, without a light beyond those carried by the most honest merchantman, But in the night smaller boats come alongsideâ€" sloops, rowboats, any craft of emall capaâ€" city, and which can float in shallow water. The cargo is distributed auickly, until it becomes one hundred cargoes. Then the big schooner beats back to the free port of St. Pierre, and the amaller craft take their chances of landing where they may. One ar two may be captured, and the cargoes confiscated . â€" The majority escape, and the’ OS un o Pnd h o d Ens CBpO 3 profit on the stull that is 'T.LHJE'.:':::J?} easily compensates for the losses and leaves a handsome margin, _ What is true of the ice is true of the water. Far down in the Guif is the "free" port of St. Pietre, One may land there what he will, free of duaty. Thus his wares are at the gates of two protected countries, safe as yet from the revenue officials, . Will he lose money by entering them through the regular channels? Not he. 1 FREE TRADERS, cutter cannot be everywhere, even in sumâ€" mer, In the winter the smuggler with a little money to earn will go further in ice and anow, in the dusk of early morning and evening, in the night itself, than the reâ€" venue policeman, who, after all, is but human and may earn his salary much as he pleases, If he discovers a solitary sleigh track mcross the frozen river he may surâ€" mise, or he may even watch for the return of the driver. Even then he is hours late and finds, if anything, an innocent traveller with an empty aledge. The innocent traveller‘s pockets may be heavier, but that is his businese, Along the wooded stretch of the lower St. Lawrence and in the thousand and cne sheltered caves of the gult the "free trad« ers" have long since been most formidable as far as the Kastern country is concerned. As for the river itself, there are boats in summer and there is the ice in winter, The revenue posts are far apart. The revenue /.., { ,TX&S 5 7 "‘le MA _: w * 9 lay But methods, like smugglers, are innumâ€"« erable and vary with une goods to be carried and the station and dress of the person who carries them. man rocm to alip in the thin, oblong cakes, and fthen coolly carry them over the bridge, or bor: er,after the manner of an honest work» Takefor instance the tricks devised by the men who smuggle ogiumintoche United States from Canada, You b:m:w what an ordinary carpenter‘s tool box looks like, I‘hy will take such a box and fix it with litt e panels or drawers, which oniy & minâ€" ute inspection would disclose, or place a false bottom in it, or a false top, leaving P ie ut o t t + & A SORT OF GEOGRAPHICAL DISEASE at which one might be shocked were he alene, but which troubles him little since his neighbors sre infected, too. The fact now is just what it has been ever since there has been population enough on both sides of the bortr:r to make the evasion of the tariff a paying business for adventurous spiritsâ€"Canada cannot police her long line of border fence, nor indeed do any more than make & poor bluff at it, and trust to the moral sense of the people for the rest. And when the fence isn‘t watched the almighty dollar crowds the moral sense o the people to the wall and there‘s an end to it. Give the frontiersman a chance to smngile and he will arrange the matter with his conscience, He has the chance, and arrange it with his conscience he surely does, to such an extent, indeed, that there isn‘t m heartier, happier chap in all the land. & And how do* smugglers smuggle? i The avswer is : "In any way that strikes them as safe," ‘ up of frontiersmen, born and bred, are inclined to take a lenient view of such matters, . From a crime smuggling becomes an enterprise, or, at worst, IR DISCOVERS A SOLITARY SLEICH TRA In the woods and on the waters along the American frontier it is very different. . The communities of the border, be they Ameriâ€" can or Canadian, as surely as they are made We hear oftenest of men and women caught in an attempt to evade the customs officers as they leave the big transatlantic liners, and the crime is set down by all as serious and properly punishable by heavy fine and long imprisonment. If the job is on & large scale the community, for the moment, is shocked. Smugglers * Thousands of them. They swarm along the American border from ocean to ocean. It may be the track ofa _ solitary _ sledge _ on the . frozen St. Lawrence, or a fishing schooner beating into a quiet bay where there are no fish ; or, if you like, a well dressed woman hiding a small fortune in gems in the rug with which she protects a sick pug from the cold as the train nears the frontierâ€"the methods change from tiwme to time, for in novelty, oftimes, there is safety, but the smugglers, like the poor, are with us alâ€" ways. They Boldly Py Their Trade on Lakes and Rivers â€"Revenue Men of Both Countries are Powerless to Stop the WHO THRIVE RICHLY ON THE AME RICAN BORDER. SOME MAINE DEVIC® TRICKS OF OPIUM TRADER« SOME SMUGGLERS. ACKROSS TLE ICK 4t The third page ot the Toronto 1, Mail is noted for?" Want" Advertisemen :l.y If you want a situation, a mechanic, a businese, a machinery, lodging, if you want to find out whcrp any one is, Advertise in the Toronto Daily Mail and read the ad. vertisements on the third Page ‘of that paper. The charge is two cents « word each insertion, or ten cents a word for six insertions. Address the Mail, M Canada, ~ m ho has hi. ieE EY} =â€" * Fellow wife has just applied for a divorce," Peddlerâ€"*"‘An ! Weil, here is thing she will like, thenâ€"‘If ag fi don‘t succeed, try, try again,‘ " Peddlerâ€"“Plaue, sir, pe would be pleased if you‘d ‘God Bless Our Home‘ mot; colored and â€"â€"" Blinkers (savagely) â€" * wife has just applied tor a d Whoy it is sns 137 _2""2"00ADl¢ character, Why it is our Government protects manuâ€" facturers in machinery, cottons, woollens, etc., and ignores the rights of newspaper proprietors in the same direction, is one of those things which no man can understand In some cases the plant used in prmiuuing newspapers is more expensive than . thay employed in turning out machinery, cottons or woollens, and the newspaper men are as much entitled to protection tor their man« ufactured article as are those engaged in any other line of manufacturing, While the Americans object to our printers obtaining employment in their cities, they do not hesitate to accept Canadian coin for their papersâ€"papers that are edited by \'ankeen, the type set by Yankee compositors, print. ed on Yankee presses and on Yankee per. _ We think it is high time to give r}lncle Nam & taste of his own medicing, A timely article un this subject will be found on another page of this issue taken â€" from the Toronto Karth, for which we bespeak a careful perusal by our readers. _ A few weeks ago some printers who were thrown out of work in Winnipeg by ‘ the introduction of typeâ€"seiting machines, went to Grand Forks, Dako‘a, in search of employment, â€" While engaged in that occu. pation they were arrested at the instigation of the labor unions of tha; city. A Buf falonian cannot even engage a typeâ€"writer in Toronto without running the risk of a thousand dollar fine and a term in jail, and seamstresses have been denied the epporâ€" tanity of earning a living in Port Huron for the simple reason that their homes were in Sarnia. American citizens come into Canada and find employment without let or hindrance, and this is as it should be be. tween the two countries, The point we wish to impress on our readers | is this : There are thousands of American papers sold in this country every weekâ€"some of them of a verv nuesifagcis."" ~99 S n RmSrILT more pure and noble. We can breod upon our troubles until they become unbearable, or we can dwell upon our bleasinge until our hearts are melted into thankfulâ€" ness. . We can ponder over the faults of our neighbors until we are imbued with dizapproval and contempt, or we can muse upon their redeeming qualities till the kindly sympathies of our nature assert themselves, theactual deed. _ On the other hand, many an act of duty or self sacrifice, at first supâ€" posed to be impossible, has by continual contemplation â€" become so attuned to the disposition that it has been performed with ease and even with pleasure, Even where these imaginings are not realized in active deeds, they _ promote various mental conditions and nourish various emotions, _ A faint suspicion enterâ€" ing the mind and brooded upon will often devolop into jealousy, anger and hatred ; while, on the other hand, pure and noble thoughts cherished will make the character more pure and noble. We can breod upon: wee suss ds w e 05 1 suggestions, and will pass into real purpos: es, which are put into execution. In the words uf another, ""The mind plays with the picture of them, until suddenly the picture has becomea fact." Many a crime from which the doer would once have shrank in horror, has slowly shaped itself in hours of secret meditation; and from long familiarity in solitary thought has lost its reruhiveneu, and assumed & strength and proportion sufficient to crea',el‘ theactual deed _ On the athar hand c.oul2 of the best gifts that education can bestow. Beyond this, however, there is a vast amount of musing and meditation that ssems to go on within us involuntarily, Pictures rise up of the past as it was or might have been, of the future as we hope or fear it may be. These are more or less vague and indistinct; but they either grow in clearness or fade away, according to the interest they excite within us. Sometimes these floating notions will take the form of 2 + Wenoopo ue w to their training. To think consecutively and to a conclusion is one of the supreme arta of life, and the power to do it is one Thehuman mind is never wholly inactive in its waking hours, No matter how pasâ€" sive or how idle we may be, the thoughts and the fancies are busy, with or without our will. Sometimes, indeed, they act energetically, in obedience to our purpose. We set ourselves to work to think out a problem, to weigh an argument, to arrive at a decision,to fathom an idea, to consider the details of a plan or a piece of work,and our thoughts serve us well or ill according rlapPritdy tb rebitit s l owb Cing: , | We Must Be Master of Our Thoughtf, as $ Well as of Our Actions. ,| There is one part of personal culture , | which receives very little consideration p i. e. the direction and guidance of the , | thoughts. The habits we acquire, the , | principles we espouse, the duties we perâ€" form or neglect, the temptations we resist , | or yield to, the words we speak and the . | influences we exert are matters upon | which we are often urged to be vigilant ; | but the thoughts and imagiaings which s pass through the mind are seldom brought up for scrutiny. ‘There are two reasons for thisâ€"first, they are so entirely hidden from others that all the class of motives which include the hope of esteem or the fear of censure are quite inoperative ; and, secondly, we are accustomed to consider them so involuntary as to prevent any serioussense of responsibility. The first of these reasons is undoubtedly operative. No one but ourselves knows what we are| thinking about ; therefore we can be held acâ€" ‘ countable for our reflections only to our own , consciences. . The second, however, is only | ; partly cerrect. Impressions and concepâ€"|! tions do float through or minds unbidden; |‘ but we are not unable to arrest them, to |‘ correct them, to turn them into other|‘ channels, or to dismiss them altogether. The power to do this resides in every sane | " persun, and the degrse to which it is develâ€" | oped marks with tolerable certainty the| © etrength of the mind and the manliness of | ‘ the character, There are weak and indolent | " dreamers who are slaves to their fancies, who care not to break their chains, and | whose ability to do so is lr.eldilg.djminilb & ing, â€" Yet even in them it may be reinstatâ€" "I ed, nor is it ever wholly extinct, save in |P those unfortunate cases, when through °; disease or injury, reason bas been driven | from her throne, ’ _ In the wilder country which lies where the border line is a mere survey line, one does as one pleases there. An examole is the Megantic region where Morrison, the Megantic outlaw, solong defied the author ities, To cover such territory would pecessitate the employment of the army. It is not worth while, so the smugglerâ€"does as he likes, because neither government can afford to go to great expense to stop leaks which are trifling in the aggregate. faces St. Stephen, in New Brunswick, with a toll bridge between them. The towns exchange goods with little re« gard to the revenue officials, You may walk over that bridge, pay the toll, and unless you are carrying a trunk you pass unquestioned. So too, many a man drives a decr:rz, worn out horse across to the Canadian side and returns, after a proper lingering, with a quite a different animal, The officer at the gate has for%otten his identity, If he remembers it, he cannot awear to it, probably, and credits the vast improvement in the horse to the bracing quality of Canadian air. a Home Mottoes Paso e nE enett until they become unbearable, dwell ~upon our bleasings b€a use se e se l ol NT PESSONAL CULTUKRE g character and regul other intercourse, ~It re unconstrained, m« y 0 some printers who work in Winnipeg by typeâ€"seiting machines, . perhaps your ou‘d buy one o mottoes, beauti D @2 Nme to give 8 own medicing, . A ibject will be found dssue taken from which we bespeak readers, t to drift with wind be master of our of our actions ; we d into thankfulâ€" ver the faults of are imbued with t, or we can muse ictures in which the words which > make its influ must direct its ®, in search of d in that occuâ€" the instigation city. A Buf & typewriter producing than â€" thay Ty, cottons men are as their man. firs is more in some. t you regulat My more c 02 CUTY W. 8. Marsozy, KENDALL‘S ‘ spayin CURE Suxtay, Mici., Dec. 16, 1803, Dr. 1 J. KEXDALL Co. tlme 2000 P00 Délow : om fruxpore y Dr.B 1. k"r"!'lll‘(flxlsr, L.L, NY.. Jn 18 aons my tastes they Torm a part, The complete extirpation of infectious dliseases is by no means a visionary dream ; but its realization depends wholly upon the faithfulness with which the ind}:ldunl members of the community conform to the rules of hygiene. Heâ€""Ani you are the wife of a poor man ? Sheâ€"* Oh, yes : I am some, and trespass more or les private convenience, all members community are bound to protect the and weifare of the great public of they form a part. C eeesosls ce cureraq e i e c e enienite The two surest methods of warfare of which we are posseesed at the present time are disinfection and complete isolation, And though these measures are often burdenâ€" P tnee e e t ce knowledgeot the different germs themselves, by which knowledge we are able to classify them and to provide a line of treatment directly antagonistic to them, make it less unlikely that we may sooner or later welâ€" come a complete deliverance from contagion of every sort. This consummation must be labored for by a course of patient and thorough preventâ€" ion, 1+ is by stamping out the single case of infection that we shall not onlv fraa tha o4 g n ey community from danger, but cut off the disease from its greatest source of strength, PBR i cÂ¥ l coon l uen t ue n i - J : ~PowDERS worth We have come to recognize, too, better than ever before, the various channeis which are peculiar to, or which may be followed by, the different kinds of infecâ€" tion. mostr successrul remgor EAB asacl 22 09 47 infected t 1 h A single case of smallpox or scarlet fever does not make an epidemic ; but the saniâ€" tary or hygienic conditions which will breed the single case are generally sufficient to give an epidemic its proper incentive unless preventive steps are taken. We have come to understand that there is no such thing as spontaneity in communâ€" icable discase ; that no case of such disease has any other cause than communication with some other animal body previously ATTTTOT The board of Health of eur large cities show an admirable desire to ferret out the cause and origin of those diseases which are recognized as communicable ; and if, in their zeal for the public welfare, they sometimes encroach upon the liberty of the individual, the effort itself is none the less praizeworthy, Many persons advocate cutting off the tonsils, alpecil.llf{ where there ‘s pronounced tendency to inflammation. This may be safely left to the judgment of the family physician, although it may be said that an enlarged tonsil is in iteelf an exciting cause of tonsillitis. These facts, added to 0d success success ge In:gt Linin appearance of ulceration upon the surface oFthe tonsils, there should be no delay in calling a competent physician, since there is danger of mistaking for simple tonsillitis what may really be diphtheria or quingy . ’ Fortunately, however, this disagrecable disturbance is speedily amenable to proper treatment. The attack should be made upon it from every quarter ; the general feverishness should be dispelled by m suitâ€" able perspiration starter, like a drink of hot lemonade, and the swelling of the tonsils should be reduced by hot gargles and by applications of heat or cold to the angles of the jaw. se s 7i U' ": f LUEPOINT, L. L J. Ke®Dart. Co. * T. KESDaLL Co } The onset of an attack is usually sudden, and in a short time symptoms of a very disagreeable nature appear. Headache, pain in the throat, inability to swallow and general discomfort render life nearly unâ€" bearable. Not infrequently earache, from the extention of the inflammation to the canal of the ear, adds to the sufferer‘s disâ€" tress, J Proximity to the sea coast or other places of a damp and changeable temperâ€" ature conduces to the chrontc form of this disorder. S a es es lc n e d l FOR man or BEAST, rtain in its effects and never blisters Read proofs below : "Puke s W ith those in whom there is a tendency to tonsillitis, there is often present conâ€" stantly more or less of a catarth of the upper respiratory tract. Some writers even go so far as to say that these cases are hereâ€" ditary in their nature, and it is true that very often two or more members of the same family are afflicted with the same disâ€" position to the trouble. eX We OR TATE C UERTOGH NNR 0 on ces unc n and TeE ERTE * The commonest cause of tonsillitis is probably exposure to cold and damp, alâ€" though it may be set up by apy form of direct irritation. a Above all, if there is the slightest ’ What happens in tonsillitis is briefly this: the membranes and underlying tissues of the tonsils, which are usually soft and spongy and covered with a secretion which keeps them always moist, become congested and the secretion being wholly or nearly: stopped, the surface becomes dry and hot. There is also more or less of fever accomâ€" paning the dilturlilnoe, e teig ‘ Many persons have a tendency to tonsilâ€" litis, and upon the slightest exposure the tonsils become inflamed and swollen, causâ€" ing much annoyance as well as actual pain. The inflammation may even go on to ulcer= ation. Then the disease is commonly known as "quinsy." The Modern Homebody. ima mCs ShuYin Cure. The m ‘e been offered $15) f 1 him nine weeks, so t Kendal!‘s Spavih C Yours truly, Tonsillitis. The common name of this disorder is ‘sore throat," although a distinetion should be made between an affection of the tonsils and an invasion of any other part of the‘ throat. Regard For Health Laws. ibflukh: n A?Ientdl:;i |,f.,- hor & Spavin. Igoi m for 800. ji0 EAYIn.. J got him for #3) 1 you are willing to become i poor man ?" », yes ; 1 am truly domestic in I belong to only nine clubs," on 20 W TC Suxuoy, Micit., Dee. 16, 1898 0. | your Kendall‘s Spavin Cu or }‘nrlm on two horses a ut I have ever used. y, Avover Prpemcr /COR Hadc THE HEALTH. Tess ETTE + *« L, N.Y., Jan. 15, 1894, splendid bay horse some ?got him for#90, "p used The sigmvin is gone now $150 for the ume horse, its, so I got $120 for using vin Cure, W. 8. Mansogy, po Podian shall not oni{(sr-e:o".-l;; protect the health t public of which or lesa _upéh our increasing "n Cure rses and of the "lPln has learned much in matters of practical utility from the Western World, l;ld it ha.l in its turn opened up a cominerce : .tho nche-.t. kind in things mesthetic. & lmfm“ also, in which, if anything, we may claim to have shown a certain mastery, ha ’f‘l"d no amall advantage from the ori gln?llty of our eastern neighbors. . Even sanitation has gained somewhat. Scrupuious ‘clvennllneu, it is wellâ€"known, is a Japanese virtue, and one which has arrived at a de» gree of excellence in practice . unknown among ourselves. How many of our artisans are in the habit of daily changing their working clother ? how many bathe daily the whole body ? The answer may best be left in discreet obscurity, _ Yet these are among the common and habitual privileges of every workman in the dominions of the Mikado. Many, indeed, bathe twice a day. In order to allow of this salutary practice almost _ every _ street ssesses . its public _ bath house. 'Fi?e bath, . @ warm one, measures about 5 feet by 8 feet, and is 3 feet deep. _ It is fed by a constant current of hot aud one of cold water, and is continually replenished by fresh addiâ€" tions, The bather plunges into it, remains immersed ten minutes or so, rubs himself with a towel, then has a general douche of warm water, which is fresh in each case, repeats the process, is finally drmied, and goes home. . The cost of thus cleansing the body is ver{ #mall. That it is not altogether free from objection, most of us who are acâ€" customed to use an entirely fresh supply of water on each occasion will admit, Still, the Japanese, with his douche basin, may well arrive at an excellant result in #pite of his immerson in water, which, though clear, is not, of course, miorueopicllly pure. The same idea with an improvement in this respect, should be applied to the case of our own comparatively unwashed working classes. One or two ablutions a week would be rank unclearliness compared with the daily plunge and douche of laboring Japan The provision of cheap public bath houses. with a sufficent ln:;ry of clean water is a dream of the sanitarian as yet unrealized in London, aithough the civic authorities in many ofGreat Britan‘slarge towns, notably Glasgow, have already devoted much t tention to this subject, A Lesson in Cleanliness Unfamiliar With Society LingOâ€" r%"" Highstyleâ€"** What do you Want, MPâ€"â€"**Pleas , if you would :':.2" 0‘ your :;vv'u'::: wive me a cold A complete stock of Whips. Combs. Brushes, Hits, etcy kept on hand. Repairing vromptly attended to. Is still in his old stand on Lambton Street, near the Post Office, where he is ready to fill all orders for Firstâ€"Class Workmanship guaranteed. Fighest Price paid for Raw Furs HARNESS §HOP| Darkhem," Jar. 26th, 1892, Lumber, Shingles and Lath always Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepared | to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY, |a a a | I We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash,! Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" | 1 JAPANESE BATH HOUSES Sash and Door Factory. ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting Our Stock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all or can bo filled. We are also getting up New Rigs of all kinds And get your Buggies and Waggons %epaired at Lowest Rates. April 2ith, 1804 Mrs. E. DAVIRSON‘S, HEAVY AND ;LIGHT l HARNESS, SADDLES, ; BRIDLES, | COLLARS, Etc. New Stock Horse Blankets, CHAS. LEAVENS, Jr., Teanliness from the Land of the Rising Sun, Millinery, creaks at each movemen; of ove the slate on j Wrap the old newsnana». ._"Certainly. . Por‘king naid to come and stare a recognizing him," Come ! Painting Done in the Latest Styles. ALL WORK GUARANTEED. _ Millinery. Fall Millinerv McKNIGHT & LENAHAN â€"<â€"smiad () cpronce» In Stocl. q. 0 Coor i capsul 4 whi.s, *‘ 2 0f one in an ol'dinlry t which acts on the Bowels, Liver & Stomach, l'm'miug _ never fail perd fect ti::‘tmen'i{:w uldlo Head and % complaints, not, as most w and so many oger medicinas a~ O | j thei» . pnany . . G. & J. McKECHNIE C 30 CC B bip affs.. othep their eflec::rymm‘medldm and are nice to take, 25 cents a all medicine dealary, English Spavin Liniment rem Hard, Soit or COalloused :,.."..:"l Blemishes from borses, Blood &M Curbs, Bplu_nll. Bweeney, Ating. Stifles, Sprains, all Swollep MI..' Conghs, eto. Bave #50 by use ol obe bottle. _ Warranted by arap._. °* 904 ke soldiers on the watch 16 46 souils mrmor on Slike prepared for alf C soldier‘s warfare !,d,....J"‘d for al Reurer in Six Hocas.â€"â€"Di-mm'nï¬ Kidney and Bladder diseases relief in six hours the "Great Scuth American Kidney Cure" This new remedy is a great surprise and delight on on accouut of its exceedmâ€ronph‘ in relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back, and every part of the urinary passages in male or female. It relieves retention of water n? pain in passing it ulmost imme=‘ a:‘;ujy. t you want quick relief and oure is is your remody, gdd by McFarlane & Co., Dru ggists, The marriage ceremony of a J «var ese bride is not complete until she washes the eet of the bridegroom, PMld Fubiietinaihhitts 38 Pefoagsines .1 ns1 C Bailio, C ARK‘s | Powders, each prckage of “:“(1\. contains two pn-pantion., in a round woodvn-lm:;. the mve:: which forms A Measure fop one dose am mmediate roliof for Sick Hr“du‘he and Stomach, also Noumlgin. and all kindg of nervous Pains, ang Another in (from 4 t,, } of one in an ordh':l';w which "acts on the L‘mwola, Xdvtien w 2 901 Slu_nmt‘h, Femunt. .l\ Not only righy rh('e, UbSAi4 the Moment, _ ham, Oat, Professor E. E. Barnard, of the Lick Observatory, says people make a great mistake in coming to the observatory at night to see the stars, for they can be seen far better in the daytime, â€" People flock there, too, to see the moon when it is fall "That is the very worst time," he said> " ‘They can see a great deal more when it is only half full, for then the rising sun shines on it, and all the mountainas, valleys and even the shadows can be distinetly observed, _ When the moon is full it simp. ly looks like a blur, or at best a map." A Boox o Homsexex English Spavin Liniment co a curb from my horse. 4 ste nmen The Time to View the Moon CHARLES LEAVENS, AT uns yiin _ to say the right thir , but, far more difficult _wrong thing at the Salo. i sAnal A.:â€" PMIS, and anoy her } of one in an org 8 on the Bowels l'm-nlingï¬ Dever (Ad °s °C remedy, asit acts with promptress i# the removal from hard, eoft or salloused lamps, a, splints, on:be, sweeny, stifles Grorar Ross, Farmer, Mark Bold by McFarlane & Co, y "Norse, 1 take . the remedy, asit hptcess i the ren L, soft wr sallou« 120 C C ETeEdsy 9 L20rnocoh. EX.â€"Oue bottle of completely removed 1 take pleasure in McFarlans & thing in the , 10 leave lempli.. orders Winstow‘s Soorging Puinc uiL. "°~ °9 A sitk ch and erying with pain of Cutting at once and get a bottle of **Mrs Soothing Syrup" for Children 7 will relieve the poor little suffer iley mn.. . LCC n-un..lâ€""Nl,uu.eu ’ Mhnbuolouhgirl in m be For Over Filty Veare Mns, WiINSLOw‘s Soorm®s Syry sued by millions of muthers for the while teething, |J} disturbed at r::ken of your rest by a sick child For Over Mars, WiINSLOW‘s So ":d by millions of m while tsething, J; , m__"f, 1g C _ 12 " 7P LombardSt., Toronto. Bold all general merchants and, #rocers. b'om it a trial, Disgracing Hepse‘r. Mre, Smartsotâ€"«s; or mercy‘s sake, don‘t let me hear you tajk tbout baals su. f 110C momin "avre Your Amenin Monp 4} rappere And when you have 25 Ammonia or 10 Puritan Soap Wrappers send them to ns, and a three cent stamp for postege, and we will mail you FKEF,, a handsome picture suitable for framing. A list of pictures around each bar. _ Ammonia So? bas no equal. We recommend 1. Write your name plainly and address ; W. A. Bransnaw & Co., 48 and 50 LombardSt., Toronts. sns S Ls wl ___ 20 ~""6!fanday in each monthi Pergusâ€"Tbursday following Mouut Fores Mmku-leâ€"suurdny betore Orangeville Orangevilleâ€"Secone Thursday in earo month, Flesberton=â€" Monday before Orangevil l)nndnllr--Tuudly before Onnge\!liflvlo Shelburneâ€"Wedneedn y before Orangeville W-Il:;nouâ€"-hulf Wednesday in each mouth. Mrs. Smartsot..= you have b::fl a cash Mre, Sin, let me hen, again, Cultured Hora~~ 1 Douglasâ€" Hawiltor Durhamâ€"Third Tuesday in each wopth l'ricevl'.‘l'.'â€"Mond-y before _ Durbam Hanoverâ€"Monday before Dorbham. Mount Forestâ€"Third Weduesday in encb Z2 ineets on the first and t of every month. Thos. Br. C. Hawmilton, R. K. MEUHAI\ICS' 1ASTITUTE, _ New Hallâ€"open every Tuesday evening from 7 to 9 o‘clock, and every Saturday from 2 to 4 p. m. Anoual fee $1, Dr. Gun Pres. C. Ramage Sce. Mrs. MacRae, Librarian, 4 Board meets on the every month. Dl'.r&u.(fhnumuu. Thos PUBLIC SCHOOLT Hntid manks an 4 SONS OF SCOTLAND, BEX xEvis CAMP NO. 45, meets in S. of 8. Hall, Friday on or before full moon, George Binuie, Chief, Geo. Russel, Sec. AUGEEN TEXNT, K S meets on tha fivet as the 2nd and 4th M This Society offer $2000 at low rate Fee. C. L. Grant, Recorder. COURT DURHAM,No.111,1 of Meeting, on second and day in each month. John I Ciaef Renge, K. Barpect, Reco DURH.\M L.O. L. NO.: Meeting, on Thurscay moon in each month, . W See. W is .. "CC", M inslow‘s Foothing r children teething it pleasant to the is the prescription of one of the le physicians and nurses in the ates. â€" Price twentyâ€"live cents a Ifll_b! all druggists thronchont at 2:30 ‘ lay eve Subl..n, Sunday 5 Chureh \"hilmUre ECHANICS‘ INSTITT THI.\'H\ DURB A m URHAM I PC "~"" who g“". the post ï¬cc. whether q; lnp.: name or AnOother, op Whether he diu seribed or not is responsible for the j 8. "llulm:nher orders by, Fape stopped At a certaj, time, and d ghtt s sn fhe to sond, the $Ub8Criber 14 i to pay for it if he tukes it ourent gh, office. This proceeds 208 t < bat & men my,t PAY for rvbhay be C esc . s : M Su We call the sp masters and sube, HOPBI8 01 thio pew L If any porsor “"“‘- he must 1 Nuilher m"’, con ment1s annde, and whether it be take There can be no v pavyment iSmaAde , uind ous. 22006008 whelh:r Me h‘:':: seribed or not ;« responsible for the piy, 8. "lllllbï¬cnl:(-r orders i,, t stopped at a ceâ€""““‘"v‘hdlhnï¬n:: fontinues to 8end , the .uin-cmu,., boung o pay for it if he tukes it 9000 thy Pull oflice. Thi, proceeds "pPOD bhe groung hat & msn mMust pay lgr..,,‘m be lihGk, DITRD T2 a ue _ bi RJ Il rrup" ¢.,. my 04 ° Mr8. Winslow‘s Yrup" for Children Teething. 1¢ the poor little sufferer immedia -2 «pon lit. mothe;-, t.h:re is no U¢ it. It cures harrhoea, reâ€" Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind s the Gums and reduces Inflam~ | gives tons and energy to the im . +M .2 anes s I APTISq Sery REV â€"â€"Monday before Ounfevll Tuesday before Orangevilicle â€"Wednesday betore Orangeville ~Last] Wednesday in each CcHURCH Y I Monthly Fairs M Daughter REV Aay persop V. R. MAT (1 H M W Newspapep "~~ "Do :i«. vheu.:,.:"“m“n: Illflulel', Or wl et} €cted i 10L is rewn,.. it he bj s C SÂ¥are Ol M M A and emal MW. Al Syâ€"Ave cents a iats | throughout ask for *‘Mrg ) NYRUP has â€"been for their children ed at night and k child ..fl‘."'.‘ ie w in zun tting Teeth *Mr8. Win Dear who ‘s sake, don‘t .;Ny)kl im M(' DIchrog, Brown, C M Durham School 1st Saturday in A .0 CHd & °' ‘ M"‘::.“"‘:floï¬.. '.P'l’l.'. : rders hig t in Aw ‘""::.-.ut nuolouudn(u.m_ lleets1. .. H ; A. McKenzie * will think bookstore, " me », Principa " 220000 Clite & 90 Wednes bawe U No. 164 om Why U derso 4 T. M meels bur n 10 and 80 UB uy m.r vitaliz flling of t Pfl\'HI(‘lA N alist and F« Col. Toronto ; A cians and Sur« Resident Phy the Loronto Ge eoucheur to the Â¥, t 1 's‘ fr h’; u“'.‘“)-snlk:lt frow particulars ap; Office & Residen mERTAKIN woraky Paamiae.« MoNEY To 1 DENTIST I dence next d «ud at rea Priceville aop oY PeSt SSE A S3 J, SHEWELL & BUSINESS DIREC] DAN. COMMISSIONE® There‘s Bis Mor FOR SAL3 The EDGE PROI pFFICE ATTENDEI JAMES LOCK Reside SSUEL JCEXSH tronee DR. C. H. BIR ONOR G of Dental J. T. FOSTER HUCH McKA ICEXSEI A Farm tor Sa T. G. HOLT. L. L MISCELLANXEOUS . P. TELFOR _ DURHAM . L. McKENZ A. H, BUJ MRS, BURXET | of lor bets, Tables. | Bamboo : ment of 1 a Large | Frame N In this 4 Well Bto CaASKET the Late: MORT MoxKry To 1oa Alsolor n hip of 1. Dornoch. Ont AUCTI Apply ACRi Of the RGT MEDICAL DURH A M niture LEGAL M &1 H