.`4...__gn__._ 1uc_}:ntf;u qupmzv cunt clan. halt, gthem the ache-_-uglutakan The White Plague Bu-In cures Rheuantlnn, bo- cnuoe it cuts: the Kidnap. 'Everyd:opofbloodint|:e'body punuthmughthck3dn_eyI,tn heluud. Ifthcdncyuuo lick-titer]-iananined-tiny `jdnb-on the n:6u-thnt csuenkhgunnti-n. ` rm: Nomannx ADVANCE .;"~`<:as `v~ ' gjlea.-te-.1t danger; -`but it is `stated by investigate:-.3 who have examined hu- e_a_r1ier age been attacked in V some structure, although only a healed 30:11- 13 left to bear wazzea-3 ts nus un.Ve aalizy 0; the disease. Thea nealedscr 2 a.iavo_-em.-r.-.at9.te:s`ti1-:..I: mne`:cmo~.3.3 can he cureu. n.,1. L`... .-.........n'A-.2-:.ne 4.-Kin-n-Iv-'-fin ah}- Tiny dees. -pe` - `while . ;- ether-" p`u~rts"' suc- c_1_mb.~' ' =E`a`:`I`_r" ~ adult" :r1tte:`:~ ;iott,e1's ` the. '- rnvan deed bodies `with -modern meth--- ods, {hat each one 0'. us has at some . _ 0:: cuxqu. _ . A-.-k the conscientious scientific stu- dent, What is the treatment tortu- bercu1a31a'8` `am he w.11 say, "Rest, ;-oad, pure dry air." _ _ 1+ in anoannir to saw w'n'.ch- of this 3.-oao, pure ury 8-11'." A 4 It is dittlcult to say w-h1ch- or this triad-rest, `toad, pureair-is the moat ` lmportan-t,as each is or such vital nec-` ' essity_in `t`ne"treatment, in uhe eLf0l'T. to stop one encroachment of disease, and in the still h-arder task or reducing the ` vlrulence.o;tahe germ, to kill it sothat t the patient maybe said to be 120:` from in'ectlon-to be cured. a Best is necessary. to an inamed lung (`nothing is to be gained by :l..scussmg any orm oi tuberculosis outside the lung). Best from exciting, exhausting extort. Food is necessary--milk, eggs, bread, meat, trash truit and vegeta- bles, lat an-d sugar-anything and . everything that the indlv.uu`a1`patlent~ can digest in comort: yet the only test ot its etticacy toward cure is the body weight. It the weight decreases the patient is losing` ground; it he or she gain in` weight,the ood is build- ing such a resistance that-in a pleas-. ant paradox`--the germs zind them.- selves starving !j ` And then we come to `the great fac- tor or tresh, pure, dry air, Fliwo gene erations ago rt was `thought that this was nearly attainable except in some I-ar-away Eden described by a few ex- plorers, reached only over a rocky way aiter untold hardships.` . 1:... M. 91.-D l>n.d-nvlearn-inn` the truth way aiter untoiu naruzmpa. -T But we are to-gday learning that there is no particular climate {or consumption. -.Wherev_er can be iound pure an--the leaa moisture in it the bet=ter--*there will the sufferer tr-om L-.1_..-....1~ah: ha nhhh tn fimhit hi5 better-`there W111 [DB `|lLu?l'|`.r Lxvun -tuberculosis .be able to tigmst his diap .ease-somet.imea to a auccessmi tin- lah-l he can at the same ltime obtain the proper rest and oo~1.-Ex'tra.cted 211-om an article in The Reader 52.2139.- z ne. V iumbrno THAT W11; [an or can? m'rn:a.us'r 1'0 want our: ms-2 J NOW . I0 ".1r:i3'i1-as certainly been a a record year `to : earthquakes and 1;-r volcanic erup- tions. At paints I-tar distant from one another these phenomena have occur- red,-and much tile and woperty have been aacrinced. The an Francisco catastrophe is without doubt the most` terrible 01 recent times-._ A convulsion almost unparalleled in is destructive work,it will go down to history as the disaster of disasters. s _ Alter such a calamity as `that which we are now deploring the public mind inseneibly turns to the great quesucn or the cause of earthquakes. How is it that the apparently -solid earth shakes with such violence, and that what appears to us to be the immov- able is lilted, or riven, or shattered?` Scientific observers have g;ven the- subjectagreat deal of mnsidehauzionzin a recent years, and` the conclusions at which they have arrived are euchas to- ............+ n...u- Hm thnmv of solidity as wmcn tney nave arnvcu aux: ouuuvaa luv suggest that the theory of solidity applied to the earth is scarcely justifi- able. It has been discovered that, rat Zrom beingacampact body, vdnzs sphere is but a collection. or tra.gmez1=ts,.and that these particles are ever rnovin-g. True It is tha.'t the `motion is to the m-ass imperceptible, and th;aIt,gene:~a11y speaking, it is slow. Still, `the pr-aces-o goes on from day to day, and o:oa-s$on- ally the manifestation ls ea .marked thatwe cannot fail ta notice it. nnnnfnm AG nu TT~.T.TTR'l`RA'|"l'ON. thatwe cannot Iau 1: ) notice it. PORRIDG AS _AN ILLUSTRATION. Prof.`Arc ibald Geikie illustrates the ea.rth s con=di=tio'n by calling `to mind the a.-ppea.ra._n-ce 0! parridge when cool- ing. A3 ours-cottieh friends will `testi- ty.a. thin crust forms on the porridge alter the pm: ha-3 been-withdrawn err"-m the tire. But 'the_heat is still in the tporri-dge. Everiand anon a. puff of steam will break its way thraugh the crust leaving a. chasm behind. This is a. volcano. Again, there will be a movement of the crust, a sort of un- dercurrent, which is particularly no- ticeable at the thinner parts. This is an earthquake. It appeara that cur porridge has not cooled sufficiently to render the cruct free from disturbance from within. Thus we have cnntinual `shocks of more or less force. The `re- peated and minor sh-9'-kingsere known as mi-croseismsl They -are such small tremors that they carm:-t be `dis- cern-ed withcut the aid of an *n.=tru- men-t.,v which has the same relation to motion M3 the microscope has -to ob- jects. Te-rnnto experienced a. micro- -e.e.lsmon the` day 0! the San Fra-ncisco d-twister. -The eelsmcgraph recorded a _ terrestrial movemerlt, altheugh the a.ver9.ge rw"-n did n-t nv~t'e lthnt any- th.in'g or the sort had taken place. BELOW THE SURFACE. The t`hecry- of 'mot.'on.be1ow the eurface. and, in proprert-ion to the vio- lence of the m5vement,a;bove the sur- ' I-ace as wel1,ia eats.-blished,n=at only by the -aelemogr-aph, but alert by the mi- crophone.` `An It.-alia-n scientist nvent- e l-utter ir.'Jt?.u.ment `tor. the `pur- 1AnA A. Ennn`n.lI b B `in Swine 1'3`-IE8!` l!`.".J1;?u-nu-nu. `.`L'I' I-u" yin- `poae or hearing what toes onfin the interior of the earth. .The_ machine is `no de1ica.te,anr1 an ettlclen-t aasra magn -' 1-ler of sou ad, that when .the - movement of a fly is ltitened tn `through tt'the n-olae is-asnta man marching w`t-h all the torce he can bring tn. bear unon the ope:a.t=.on. -The mic:-onhone, taken Into .9. velcanfc cave.wh!ch. 0' cou.`-`n. haw ,2. thin crust, "otherwise it w-um not be _vo1canic, reveals a procession or wearing: n.nd.exp1=oe1c.ma `going on r the er."-th a in-terior. Thus: it is mew`: plain that there is a vonth~u'~ua r"wIn- nation A! the. ma'tes=.1-5 w!th'n. It in believed thet the heat. the ram that 1r venerated.` the team that canon '-em the admt-anion of waftelunre all factors intensifying the H-terlor mr-yements. and `leading to tremors and `to earth- quaksm. _ - 1---1.-cn'1oUuI|I fiflfl. IQ 111?`? my The Emu Quakes. A] g urw FJohnston s I \`\l'-l\~' - WHERE THE CRUST IS THIN. Now, where the crudt of the earth is thick the danger on . a. disturbance from below is not so great as where it is thin. Thus. -`there are p~r_t .ona or the earth a sur:'ace~-that are free from tneubie. An examineti-.'~n of "the r-ouree at earthquakes, or or the points at which they have been meat firequerrt, has led to the `conc1ua1on'that there is a. belt of thin i'c:'-uat `n beth hemi-. epheres. That on the Nar-th `American c-~.~ntin'-1-t is believed `to commence at Cape Horn, to take `its course by way n! the A":de.'1, t'~ crma fco` the` _We~.t Indies end . to Cu-b~. then -1:-rs pz-as to the west coast '0! North America. n~-`rd M proceed north, until the Aleutian Ialando are re`:v%**.ed.wher.e it `.3 carried over to Ania. There. it dtrikes Jam-n and certain of ._t`r~e ndjat-enit `A -1.1`4=.ndr4.` a--A "then tr-uvhes Indie. Thin `hebt '.-v 1-ibhew. T w--uldgeeem to +ro1Iows.t`~e mwunha-inc-us}. portionn of :the- eert`h -g ..~u- .a`c.-.; A `Peas! 1y. ..i?-.i.w':ul_dj he-7m9r'e_ 2 yarreact r-W: 31-?".'?'1fv`.5:,'-*-?5"'51.h 9'L.m9l"-I-535374? av`: thee ghevwn '1't;~ . T- sures `thit have been produced, and Unit ` `int theoe T A the .ea;-thquake nsns :9 kn Au--nan?` Jlli _ IIIIU "VOA lu'LI`@-D&U ` :V1'HQi~T`A'I'I1E"'B'ELT.t * San F:vanc;aeo,undouht_epdly,ls in the eartnquake oe.t. S) i-:31 St. Vzncent, where. the vr.-Zcanic ex-up'cl~:~n took DI.aCu with so much dean-uotlo;;._ to human .1119. Japan; at course, is continually being shaken. ~-It seems probable than the movements in the `interior or the earth assume d-iiterent proportions at dltterenttimes and in ditterenzt places. Wnere the explosion or the dislocation in minute no ertect la felit. Where it is very great the exterior effect is ex- nailnnn of fhnlf nnl-Hnn hf Rllfc 13 very great. but : l:A'u=L'LvL' coach; so 1;- gzrlenced at that portion of the sur- ace that iscovered wlth but a thin `crust, unless there be a volcano handy to act as a. safety valve. If there is a volcano near by we have a. demon- stration- such as that ,made by Vesu- vius. Ii,.there is myolvano, a San Francisco calamlty occurs. The [act seems to go, in brief. that the'lnt.er1or or the earth ls continually In a state of convulsion. The heat melts rocks, and produces movements which lead to changes nearby. Gas is generated: steam ls manufactured. "A venvt is needed, and a. calamity the.`-t shocks mankind occurs. f|- In cu-LA-u 1-urn vn`."|Anf n-nsn like: `-715. manxmu cvcur-3. -It is when we reflect upon -the im- mense pawer exerted by these natural phenomena, and the utter helplessness -of man in" the presence or such ca.'ta.a- -trophea,.tha`t we realize how small and how weak human-ity really it. We may chain the lightning and -harness `the rivers, but there remain forces that man can neither control not under- nnnA . tan_d. Violent Changes in _ The Earth`: Surface . or more or the In speaking of of the violent changes. which have occurred on the earith -3 surface in recent -times a -New York paper says that the steam- ship City o1"Pana/ma, on January 21. while 01': the coast of Southern Cali- fornia and many miles at; sea, passed through a belt of water miles in width that was covered with trees. plants, and the bodies of animals. .'1`he mass of dritt was so thick that the vessel made her way only with the greatest care. Man-y `trees were from ve to six feet in diameter, and `the dead ani- mals were at many kinds. The only theory concerning thistind is that one `four lsl-and-s forming the Revillo Gigedo group, uninh-abht-alted by WIIOLSHE WAS SKI-ml offnm LII-`I3 or l.Yl)lA'E.PlNKllAI' `rm: reularxaulu wuuuuu, vv uvuo maiden name was Estes, was born in 1--_-4_ -u-..._ 1.~..1._........on. 1910 nnrn- nnuueu IIKIIIU Wi ISIQB, "cw IIVAAA u. Lynn, Mam, Feb 9th, 1819, com- ing from a ol Quaker family. For some years she taught school, and bemme known as a woman of. an alert And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound V Had ltsTBirth and How the Panic of 73" causea` (it to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores.`- main 6ngmind,an at 1: me: am" o'w"i`-hge. and .m:2fffi.o;;;,5 and in ' ting mind, an earnest seeker know maa, and above all, possessed Y sympathetxc nature. . In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham,` a builder and real estate operator, and their early married life was marked by prosperit and happiness. They had our chil ren, three sons and a daughter. In those good old fashioned days it was common for mothers to make their own home medicines from roots and herbs, nature's own remedies-calling in a ph 'cian onlyinapecially urgent cases. 1 By _ ition and experience many of 1 them gained a wonderful knowledge of the curative properties of the various room and herbs. Mrs. Pinkhamtook a grestinterest in the study of roots and herbs, their char- acteristics and power over disease. She maintained that just as nature so bounti- L.I`.. -u-n-o:;`- :n {Jun Inn!-vAssC!.All` "Id iiiriaeo ix; the harvest-elds and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds; so, if we but take the pains to nd them, `in the roots-and herbs of the eld there are remedies expressly designed to cure -the various ills end weaknesses of the body, and it was her pleasure to search `theseoot, and prepare simple and effec- s:_..` .....A8.:-unn (no Inn awn fnmilv and ORG IIIU. unvo- tivo medicine: 10: hrgr a:>l:g}ami1y and 1_!-__I_ -0! In VT 3 {HIV tillulvuanynvu "or the choicest medicinal roots and herb: This " `remarkable ' woman, whoge _-:_n-_ ._-_... ....... 13.4.. `mg Iv-n In All this so f;r was done fmee1y,~ without ngolnoy and without price as a labor o ova. Butin18'!3thonancialcrisiaotmck Lynn. Its ten snd severity were too much fog the. real estate interests otthPmkhun_ o'z,asthisclaaof busing tromfearful de- -------- '-A _v`unn `Gk. `PDQ. vul Lcgxnu uv- D\1lln% IIIIIBIUIA much u reunion, ` so when `the Centennial year - sawned it found their property swept _tobeound. away. Some other source of income had (gut Lydia E. 1>i_nkhun's L- L g lib pound was made known (?x;e-f.of than was 3 mm combination 1 LL- .I...:.....L ......I8..:nal nnnfn and hath: EYQEDONIA. ~.n,Isn".'.hxitl..w&n .$1nm,..,md... 1 ` 1ca.lrl,e`nneee,'ma.y have been * . , b;r..1a,a e_..ng.tur,a.l_lc.ul:ar.n1t On ovemberll; 1900;! I-IlIu1!"`W'a.p, suddenly produced by volcanic aouon near the Bonln group, and reached A height of 480 feet. The lent repartl received lash`. tall any that the Leland had ' wasted away until ltnuhlg-host palm: was only `ten ieet` epboveaeea lef`-` vel and the circumference had been re- duced about one-halt. It was `thought thetln a raw week: more it wculi be lost tn elgrst beneath the sea. - Yn rn-Ytronr fhn IIHH Talnn. {fl NEE ED S1`I.`J(. Dtfueutll uuu nuts. -~ In midyear the M1111 Island, in the Pacific, was almost campletely washed away by great storm waves, 179 per- sons losing their lives. Most of the ill- land is now twelve feet under waiter. IF.-nu}-n In 1 A n - u nnnn nvin nlnnn hf hA mnu L5 IIUW DWCLVU LCCI uuucz VVlInI.UL'- Early in Januarya wide piece or -r. coast, near Daver, England, estimated to weigh 4,000,000 tor.-s.1ell inato the 103.. This is the greatest destruction of the coast in British waters in the i-past half century. n 71:11:09 9 1-Irv (`halt in (`ha Rn`! I`? Hill. UUIILUKJ. On July 22 a .dry deck in `the Bay or Napleswas suddenly moved ab:-wt 800' feet to the right in consequence, it in supp:sed,o a. sharp movement 0: the sea Hoor. . ` ` `lB....)o. !_ Aka nnn hnnn urn: an An. ' BUG I LlUJL'o . Early in the year .there was an en~ ormous landslide on the slope at I mounltaln bordering on Lake Lone in Norway. An lmmen-ee quan-`tity. at rock tall l_n\to the lake, causing hlgh waves rthat paured upon the opposite shore. destroying a whole village. Fifty-e'gt persona losbtheir llves, and 9. llttle steamer was torn from its moorlngo. and carried about 1.000 feet .in1:and. Among the rmany landslides in the Alps were five of special lmpnr-trance in which human life and a consider- able quambity at property were do- atroyed. - n- A11G\lhF E Q Inn-dadn nf nn- scroyeu. On November 5 a landslide of un-. usual magnitude carried abtut fifteen acre-a at land from Moon Island into the Baltic. All of it wan either tilled. land or fine toreat, and the loss or pro-. perky was coneiewble. rm... nun... NP `r`!.nhac:'-hn..m_ In Ya:-ks peroiy was cansmeraauxe. The village OfU-plesi".ha.-m, In Yark~ shire, has been undermned bv coal mines. and is abea-dily sinking. During the last twenty. `years its population has declined from 800 to 70. Since 1900, the church. achoal. three barns, and twenty-"five houses have been de-_ strayed by the frequent earth move- lmenata. It....(L .0 ....A'.\ nnnnuuonnnau nanc nnf I1 smenata. Most of such occurrences pass out at mind in a few years,`-and there is no doubt thtait cur knowledge 01 the earth would be con-sidertblyenriched if ac- curate 1-ecordsor such.. events had been; kept for centuries past. . Itheir mother, combined forces to restore `kn `nun:`cr `AJIIDIQ mu Q3311` Ionian Iuuulcr, uuuunucu Auuxxu vu lcuuuzv the family fortun . They argued that the medicine which was so good for their-_ woman friends and neighbors was equally good for the women of the whole world. The Pinkhame had no money, and little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots and herbs were steeped on the stove, gradually filling 8 gross of bottles. Then came the ueetion, of selling it,` for always before ey had given it away freely. They hired a ob. printer to run off some pamphlets ee orth the merits of the medicine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham'e V table Compound, and these were dist bated b the Pinkhatn sons in Boeton ew York, and Brooklyn. The wonderful curative properties 9!. the medicine were, to a great extent, self-advertising, fonwhoever used it no commended it to others, and the demand gradually increased. . In 1377, by combined efforts the family, had saved enough money to commence- newapaper advertising and from that time the growth and success of the enter glee were assured, until to-da LydisE. 'nkham and her Vegetable pound have become household words eve ~ where, and many tons of roots and her are used annually in its manufacture. paasedto Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not live- to see the great 311335 of this worst` 81;: er rew yearn , n ._n ~. till she had rovided means or continu- ing her wot gs eftectively as sheeonld: have done it herself. During her long and eventful expcli-' ence she was ever methodical in her work and she was always careful to pro- aerve a record of every case that came to her attention. The case of every alch- woman who applied to her for advice- -_.I nu... nrnrn \nnngnrln...nnnn!v!`~* WOIDSD W110 Bppueu w ucr nvr uuv'Ivu-- and there were thousands-recelved`t careful study and the details, incln symptoms, treatment and results` were: recorded for future reference, and today these records, together with hundreds oi thousands made since, are available 8) sick women the world over, and re sent a vast collaboration of informa on regarding the treatment of woman : ills, l'..`... 3. `EE '..`E`.! .I`,.`; 3.".'...`.};i'i.E`.`.,"`.Y RE regunnug tun uI:vuAvuv vs vvuauwu in Ann` which for authenticity and accuracy harrciliy be equaled in any library -in gt wo . . With L dia E. Pinkham worked her tdgughteb n-law, the present Mrs. Pink-. ham. She was carefully instructed in all her hard-won knowledge, und--for yeun she assisted her in her vast cones- pondenoo. - . an r: on .| go, _ _ rvuuv unva- To her hands naturally `ten the direc- tion of the work when its originator posed away. For nearly twenty.f_iv.. care she has continued it, and nothmg" the work shows when the that Lydia E. Pinkham dro her pen, and the present Mrs. -Pin tn, now the mother of is large family, took it u With 1ro1nenasistants,aomeaacapaleuhor- oelf, the present Mrs. Pinkham continue . thus greatnwork, and probably tram. the ooe of no other person have so many -..'....-nun I-non ndvuled h0W.vf0'|'mA Omc OI I10 ubucr xuuu unvu uv Imus. women. been advxsed how.to regain health. Sick women, this ndvieo h .Yom-a for Health freely given if you only write to ask for it. .. ... __n Such is the history of Lidia E. Pink. ham : Vegetable Com` : made from` aim le roots and her - the one L t m V cine for women : aflmenta, tting monument to the noble` ot sticky. an a few moment TRIPP, oayorum forte piayirizl I ervatory of. MI ndergarteu olu pg gmu.%m% nun `I59 .. }xMAN, amstill 1- _ , _ LAND d 25. ' char.-inc. 5" omcf Barrio rm produo. * _`1 eeob on mm In a nu-\II--Al. 1LE. % ETH s'r.j U ys cvv. VUBHX I-N HE CAN" dsaible --u-u 1` MNABDT Bmic.; Ii with the Ilistrict Exchanges. the Weekly Budget. 2 E Items of Interest Culled From cone ooooeooooooooooooooeoooeooooa A `B ` . .. u 1': ,,_,, uooooooooouooooeooooooeeooue ; BAXTER.--A gang or thiraty men started south from Baxter on Monday to erect -the fencing along the C. P. R. right or way. A'I`he telegraph wire-3 aremow` ex-`ected as far as the rails hav been laid. The line is being` pushed through as rapidly as pzsuible. --Alliston Herald. . __-...-- `I, 9.. 0,, L~__ AA-___ ELMVALE.-_-Elmvale is in the near future to have a company of its own in the 35th Regt.. to be known as No. 6,-. witn Mark Rsbinson or New F103 Captain. Geo. W. Vanslckle 01 Elmvale First `Lieutenant. and '1`. R.- Patte.-s~an c-;` Elmvale Second Lieuten-I ant. This will mean the erection at a drill saed here and should greatly in- crease the number or volunteers tram this locality.--Lance.T BRACEBRIDGE. - The _ new `steel bridge over the rivr at Bracebrldge was ucently taken over` by that fawn from the contractors. This tine struc- ture is 196 1-2 feet long, single span. witn rc-sxdway 18 feet wide, and cant $13,500 of w'nich~ amount $7000 was paid by the Ontario Governmenrt. \lfV\V A 1 ' 0- -1.` A\v name an vmvvvu -Iuuoqu-uv .r.\.IMII)uIJ.AND.-One by one t;'::e` old` pioneers of S_'.mcoe County are pass- ing away. and :40;-`n the;`6 will be none let: to tell of the many hardships en- dured by them in hewing out 'the1r homes, and makingprcvviioa 20: Ta. young and growing fa.-mlly. .'1`.he.laat _one_t~3 pass aiway in this immedmte district was Mrs. Cc-rne1!ua~ McCarthy` at the ripe old age or 80 years. About fifteen mc-n-tbs ago her partner In life Daased on before. at the skated use 01 106. 3";-.-1:3. Tae shock on the old lady`: nerves wa-s_so.-great tlvaft she never iuuy recovered.. Another shock, xhowevencajme to her 9. ieew weeks ago In the death of he: sun. and trom that time she gradually sank until deasth claimed he: as It own. The funeral to;k place Lrom her -late residence, lot `91. con. 1. Tay.` on Monday mo':nin'3 to St. Margaret : c}`.`urc1'f'.. Midls8.nd'.` where Requiem Mass "was held. thence I to the Roman Ca:thol~:c cemqteiygwhete lnterment tc':-k `place.-Free" I\P\v .. ..._._ % f . dui COLLINGWO0D.-"1`ne Boaggbf; at cation is arranslns 4?" "rm t'h1!,u"b- a kindergarten `1?'tmm' 'tn eM7a.n- 11c schools. The intentlfm 0" have the aging Commwtee was to m` or the class organized on the ovglicum nu schoals this week. but 5* ,m;c-M ,,i.... been found in-eecurtnzv 5 _` Bullet-in. EVE-`Ything, even -sewers. cdrriee the man that wa.`1t'.:, and now it lacks as it the sewer system Along-hrped`-tor by `the: people o2`.Col1'1ncwoo'd;w111: 30'}?! Hana..- - ..__1nL__' 0 A ... .-.-L 5;` - ---- yuuyaw us vvunaaoagvvvvi ""` Bonn become a reality . A 0't!0l,'t,j'P cial meeting or the -town cbunll__W held on Tusday morning, when s gon- tract was Aenitered 'lnto- wit-h'O`a' Clark. contractor, or Ganic`n9q\l95 5,101` v w an: 'IUw-wumau. 5x'ent.n.n. ` Royal Housdlold nonrishin v % ` The .5011! depehdsv uponxhe wheat and the . , wayitismilled.` % contracfr: varliqugq {Or ~`Zi"`""oo`xi'.'2 :'.'3'v'3 x'- p'?:'b1L`n&"I'o'$-' lo! fore. our . r can tell you hnwmnntit mm- - 1 "Ze"*a3"u};.$"L our. * and "" 5`. 93" "`.' tout. C `CO i e?$nTis ing: o_me, digestible, is L` me from sprig rheat only. Iti: -mill % _- `LA _.-_.-__-L -...' L -44. L, nuzuu one 158. 6;-"E1;J'{}m'c' REE mnchincry. It is uried; by electricity. 'Y.. 2... -._.I ..--_ '._`.A- ` In uuu braid? Zonxy c',}&Q `"34 .=pP=tii33s .9! ;;.a"'.;;{,;:;.:.;}`6;2"aTni$` wh`olgs'orn,digestible and nourishing; ` ' M van `-`A66-Au noggin T`i13af'33aJ13Td Flour from your grocer. M`?:o:`>;.;'-uvivgil. Abe.tter % bglftngjby bunng 311-` Cong - A-.-` ...'_-_L_`.. " ivie`i `Book for 3 Cook. oon nu 130. pan: of oxoellant `raping; `Inna nnvmn Innllnhnll ls. `i;i'7I..".`e"'I.'s~"Iii'}f the construction ot a complete sewer system, with septic tank. at 9. total ' costot $49,930. according to p1e.ne,pro- V me: and specifications ;prepa.:-ed `by R. McDowell, C. E., of Owen Sound.-En- t-erpriae. ' COOKSTOWN.-D-aath came very `suddenly to one of our`reepected'reei- dent! on Monday evening when Mrs. Chas. Jebb passed to the greait un- known. M;re. Jebb had attended cerw vice in St. John's chucch early in the evening when she became suddenly in and had to be assisted to her home where she died shortly -afterwards. Mrs. Jobb was `in `her 60th year. Her malden name was Mary Ann Lemon Lawrence and she" was a daughter or the late Wifliam Lawrence. Her` hus- bund, Mr. Ch-as. Jebb. predeceased her a. few years ago. Kind and enable, and a. good 'ne`!gh-bor and retvpected cit`.- zen, Mrs. Jebb. will be much missed In Cookstown.` The funeral took place to St. John ; church and cemetery on Wednesday ate:noon.-Advoce.te..' `Acnvv v 9 A ' !__....L._ 117 fi (D1,:-an`; VV UUILUJHIIJ Iloib Q I I V u o Q I - - v - - - - -- ORILLIA.-Inepector W. 0. `Black, who; has exhibited Va. good deal or zeal a,s'licenee inspector since his appoint- ment a. year ago, was summarily re-_ tired by the Department last week. and Mr. Wellington Fisher -o.ppoin`ted` in his stead. No rea.-zone-have been given for Mr. Bi-a-ck :3 diami-seal. ' Mr.` Fisher will `no doubt make is. capable in~3pvector.-'1`irne::. ' ` LONGFORD.-In the early part o:', last winter. magistrates Cockburn and _ Cross, of Gravenhur-at, after everai eeeeiona, convicted Mr. Fred Kerr. or Longiord. on the information of 'G. 1`. ` B. Constable Hodge. or having created a. disturbance on a. train at Long-ford . last November, and fined him $6` and coats. he.-mc-unting to $25. The proceed- ings of the magistrates ._were etoutiy resisted by Mr. Kerr, who -not only denied the charge. but dieputed the au- thority o'.' the magistrates-to enter.- tain the alleged complaint, notwith- sten-ding which; the .conv.idftZ:on.= aitter F emuchevidence and deliberation. was recorded. ,An appeal was irnrnedieatelyy taken etherefrom end ~'the.c.oe argued beiore.{HiI Honor Jodge :ucI_:ityre;`who recently` delivered `5u d'vme`nt f=`qus.-ehin_g , the conviction, completely vin-dlcetingv L the position set up by Mr.Kerr,:-zvwho new eon:temp1a.tee"b:-gm-ins the :ueu-a;1 ect'io'n- for redress torfthe greeit ihju-s- ' tice and unenviehie notoriety he re- , ceived by reason or. theuntogj_nded charge no .'ilie_ull y pressed" `against E him. Mr`- B. D. -Guam. K.` 0., repre- if--.-. -1uun on mnin.l2iInnd' ! Batik 3 twe,cn % ; Elet}ri%ity% Stun -. The New Ycrk Sun,` -in ` di-acupslhg the battle". between e1`mf.':-`lczty , and `mum In the United` Statea,oaya:f;-.-'l.`he atrunle which has been some on` be- tween glecmcity and steam 1&2; ap- pro.ch1n~g .a c1Im_io.x. ` ' ` nu.- .. .m=... n`|`nnhvh| nu*lI'.n1" pulled" the y wutyvnuwi-`J I se it and you` ...J ..;4. -..L- E_L;. ._ m. 50 III \IIlllll9, on: v-, -`-.,-, sent-in: Mr; Kerr valwayq main-tguned t_h_e.1nnocence or in client. 5- Orllua. pw9.cr;1n`s .5 uumaas. when the electric m:Jt.or ._.pulled the first ctreat car -tuccessfully through` the streets 01' Richmond. V9--9 'nf`_1888. mpn-y cmzhg-aiogts on vtpp subject or -. lgctrlc railway: propuhsicn Plcalledkg -this ..%r% --AAA AL A ' . _ -4 .3`,.,*:\. i" '=...?'.=_.'. . `V fvgiliaatthei-texoutr1c~.ra1Lwa7 .;ate :1: advanced 1n4[-dgyebqpgngpt. 121--.. .._-__n- _._V_.-,.-v_ wuulfutvttt A33 .v* ` _- ~- ` \3~\. .~- I `Fmm `propel!-Ins` torlzlnally the street cbarnln the larger cztla, Velgctrlc p:wer' became a'9_tei~w'?nr'd the -m~:Itive tree 0:, the` uuburban line, then or: the inter- urban llne,a.nd of laabe there have been many electric 1-on-dz built `to rpua. ra`.l-at the steam lines; umtll now the .electric ` road is in many came a ceniapatltor of the steam road and a dangerous: one. While the street car mot-:-r when was tire: 1n`tr'oduce_d hadacapnclty c-1! ~15 borne-pvwer only, motors ax-e,now being built up to 400 or 500 `no:3e-pow.- 31'. ` ' Evezy year since 1888 has wztneaed new develtopmen-ts and new -triumphs` no: eleotric1_- cy,~a-nd as every new elec- trical triumph meiwt aniat`her encroach- memt upon the titeam locomotive, at last the railroad comm-niea were {orc- edfbo. take mtice. .----- -u---ow-u ='1`he number or -electric roads grew e:uorm:~u`31yand wherever they appear- ed in competition wth "the zstea-m roads asha`nd1era.a local or -suburban freight: |thestea.m road was driven to the woods.` -What has been the result? VPr'acstica.llyLevei*y trunk line railroad company has already begun the metal- laibion or e'lectrici'ty on` its lines, or is making preparation-a to `take this step in` the immediate iuture; In`-.. M`--. 1-r....I- rc-..u.,_-I ..-n..--.a 1.. --- v... ..u..-'----- - vvuwtw .'1ne New York Central railroad 13 equipping its main iine with an elec- tric system to "run trains tram the Grand Cent'ra.l station `in New_ York city up into `the State or New York. 3:3 far` as Albany. lut` `a recentvmeeting outhe directors ttwae fdeclded to issue $150,000,000 addmanal stack to be used in extending their `lines in New York _by electric roads. 0 `L- 1-, 1-II.,-._j II__.. I-.. "'t'1`l1`e' 'i5u{1'v1{n:a Railroad has for some time operated electric trains on Re Long Island dlvlslomand this work 13 nc~wdbelng'constant1y extended. The eeme compa-rry`recerJb1y`m-ade a-nether contract for the `electrical equipment _or its line !rom~P11l1-adelphla. to Atlan- tlc City. V l - LL--- II____. A__-,_ I.____A.-..S-__- .I_--._ -vuv but` - Onnthese lines have heretomre been run some or the finest .'tra.in~_s that ever r-an on this continent, a.~n'd at a speed ndt exceeded anywhere. In the race or -this, the `company is now engaged In the abandon-ment or the ::.team eye- tem and 13 substituting electricity. 11.- i `I. .. \?-_- f?_---_ __.l The New York, (New Haven. and I-Iarlttord recen-tly cchtractede for thirty electric locomotive: to, be installed on the line. between New York Cltry and Stamord. The company has already begun -ho equl-phsomel or its main tracks electrically. The prewar _hc.-use, where theelectrlc current '13 to be generated, is "well under way, and `before lcng electric` express trains will run on 9. regular daily schedule; IlIv.- fn._r_ 1-_n....-.I 1... 4.1.- ._-_l. ..--..a ov---- -----' w v q - - V - - V. %'1`..he Erie Railroad 13 jethe `next road which will .11-xtroduce vlectrlcity on part or ipts main line, a.nd,- once the start has been mudewthere. the Geuld roads will rcaztur-ally i'x'111'1n-to line. ,, -L L- ___..._. `A`A`l;9 1_a__;_ 'T21e`:e cannou : be any` quezxtien that -the t2'a.ve1in=g. publicwlll derive beneri-t [mm the `change; The operation or electric lines being o`aen.p-:2-, there will be many more trainaand thus in- crea.-sed acoammodzztione. .Th.e electric locomotive will be cleagzer. .'If'nere will be no make, no dint, no cindera; neither will the oyperextlen '0! the road be so noisy-. A_._._.:. 1...... .|.\__ _.n:_..:__ _.._|..--v. 1.2.- vv --- iv-vwd . Apartt -from the effects which this change will produce upon :the -Suture m-sxtho-zl of railroad tran2.po1*b-ation, the lmmedl-alte results are ,wsc/rthvy of con- sld-eraxison. There` are "the large amc-umta or money the-.stl will '-be spent lzcferrect this change. At a. canaerva.- -rive estlmafte,-there` is wow a-b-:-ut $600.- 00l).000 .app'.*oprlcl':~d by the various railroad ccmpanles athroughout. `this caurstry, to be` used, in" the .-purchase or electrical machinery. '1`wen'ty th-ouraand nw `cases of con- sumpti-cn came to ._ * great south- west every year. From all parts or [the worth, the east and the middle west, they begin. as saa;_1 as -the mild days or au-tumh give place to frost and snow, to flock_y}mthervwar.d in the `belief that the 2,1aea,ie.rr-om which they aur-` (er will y1e)d;-speedily or Asbowly`, but surely, to `thfe milder c1_ima;te;w`n1ch they _kn~:w avsgai-ta them. here. v_An. H. -|.--|. L1..- .7-.- av..." .... -..`l i `general public to kngfow whast tuberculosis- con.~.umpblon-:f:ea1ly 1:? ' HI-__ L__I.-_-'l" |._-II1-..- I- 5|-A A A n n an attic.` -- baclllugz is the cause, i and the disease is infectious; that is, can be conveyed directly or indirectly -from one individual to another. It in- vades `every ergan and tissue or :the_ body and can be acquired at any pe- riod or lite. Intanteare very suscep- `Giro: Rheumatism. Too. %