A MODERN WIZAED Thtsai- 4. B4U*m IB Bin Werluhop al BY KIH\K CARPENTIR. " The United .States patent system puts a premium on rascality. I have taken out 701) patents for my inventions, but I have never had ne minute's protection." The speaker was the great inventor, Thomas A. Ellison. The time was about 1 1 o'clock one morning a few days ago. Mr. Kdison had had no sleep for :ttt houra and during the 72 houra before thia he had closed his eyes for leu than six. Still he looked a* fresh as a daisy when the morning sun strikes the dew on it* petals, and the sparkle of his eyes and the laugh which shook his frame from time to time were those of a boy. He was in the midst of one of those inventive period* when he takes but little rest aud works away night and day to accomplish his end. He had left his chemical* to talk to me and he came in hi* ahirt sleeves with his vest of Scotch tweed open at the front and with his shirt bo*om of white linen decorated with spots of all the col- ors of the ninbow. These spoU were having a kind of polka-dot dance up and down his great chest. They went in and out between his gold studs and some were stains of yel low and others of wax and melted brim stones. An odor like that of the hell broth of itarktth'i witches came from the chemicals in the room and all of the surroundings showed the simplicity of its owner. During these inventive periods Kdison sleeps in hi* laboratory and his meals are sent down from his magnificent home at Llewellyn Park. Upona plain ta Discovered with brown paper lay the remains of bis break fast. There were the bones of two mutton ciiops, the crumbs of a muffin and a glass fruit jar in the bot- tom of which was a little coffee of the same brown color as that in th glass beside it, out of which Mr. Kdison had evidently drank instead of a cup. In one corner of the room was a washstand with a couple of well-used towels over it and the remain- der of the space was taken up with bottles, machines and other articles of an experi- mental kind. The room in which Mr. Kdison sleep* when at the laboratory is quite a* simple and his bed is a folding ar- rangement which you could buy anywhere for *25. Still this laboratory all told must cover several acre*. Its original cost must have been more than half a million dollars and it takes, it is naid, more than $100,001) a year to run it. It is th* most complete laboratory in the world and no inventor in history has ever had anything like unto it. In its store room, which, by the way, is bigger than any country church in America, Mr. Kdison has pieces of every known material, substances from, as he says, aspool of :ottn to the eye balls of a Parliamentarian. He has every thing from moss from Iceland to a hippopo- tamus's tooth, and he has pieces of every variety of vegetable, aninml and mineral ubstrnces so that he doe* not have to go out of his laboratory for anything. There are more than J.'i.OH) different article* in the tore-room and some of these come as high as$l,UOU an ounce. Edison's photograph gallery. The workshops of the laboratory cover, I judge, more than four acres uf )! space and the great brick building with it* big windows looks more like a factory than a place for the making of experiments. Kverything in it is of the most complete kind in the world from its mechanical room* to iu musical department and you will n'ml no liner photograph gallery anywhere in the country. The head of this, Prof. W. L. K. Uickson, has an internation- al reputation as a photographer and ho brings out every week some new wonder in his ex- periments. He ha* a wonderful skill in the ii.ii! ot the camera upon objects under th* microscope and one of Kdison'sgreat suits was gained lately solely through the photographs made ot a slice of Japanese bamboo from which wasshown thu Hbaroulof which Kdi-on makes the carbon for his iucaudes.-eut lamp*. Th slice consisting of a section smaller around than toe smallest slate-pencil was iiiaguilieil to the size of the bottom of a din- ner pail, and a section of this photograph was put under the microscope and again magnilied so that the pictures showed the little fibres of the bamboo which after ex- Cimeuting with a thousand different artic- from all parts of the world Kdisun decid- ed was the bust for hn light. One of the hut experiment! in this photo graphic department was a photograph of the head of a houae-Hy. This photograph lies before me. Tho head as niagii i tied is as big aa that of a Newfoundland dog and it has hair standing out from it* center in all directions a* though about 50 cam els '-hair brushes with hair two inches long had been driven into a place the sue of a trade-dollar. Its eyes stand out from the head and in the photograph each eye of this tly which in the original was not larger than the head of a pin is bigger than thu palm of my hand and it is made up of thousands upon thousands of little bits of eyes fastened together like a honey-comb, and Mr. Uicksou, Kdison ' photographer, tellii me that if you will lay your watch, face upward, down near tho eye of a fly under the inuToscope you can read the time iu each one of these 10,000 eyes. Only an electrician can appreciate the won- ders of the electrical appliance* of this lab- oratory. In one large rqpin the machines are so delicate that solid walls 30 feel deep have been built under the slate slab* supporting them. They rest ou solid masonry ard are so arranged that nothing near them can affect their motion either by sympathy or vibration In one room 1 lo'iml hundreds of these little globes with wires of lights inside of them all bla/ing away though it was the middle of the afternoon. " These lamps," said Mr. Me- liinre " are all made differently and we are testing them. Everyone of them has its bio- graphy. It is closely watched from hour to hour and the brilliancy and the timo it will 1'iirn without breaking or wearing out i* carefully noted. Through this in time we hope to get the perfect limp and the per- fect oarbon which will burn forovvr. In another room lamps were being exhausted and rilled. In another the glass was being blowu and in a third 1 found a chemical lab- oratory devoted to ih* essaying and reduc- tion of metals, and here Mr. Kdison is work- ing away on the reduction of iron, silver and gold. In our conversation he told me of the vast iron fields of New Jersey out of which the companies with which he is con- nected are now making fortunes and as soon as he completes bin experiments in iron he is going to devote himself to the more pre- cious metals of silver and gold. Other rooms were devoted to heavy machinery and there i* hardly a*y kind of a machine from a (team engine to a pin that could not be made in Ibis laboratory. It i* Kdison 's pet. The inventor is worth millions but he pre- fers this to steam yachts, coaching excur- sions, polo and the amusement* of other millionaire* and his greatest ilelirjhl ia in his work. During our talk I askud him how lie fell when he discovered a new principle or something important in invention and he told me it made him happy all over and that lie grasped at it as the liotauut rloes at a new flower or the bugologist at a bug which lie discover* and knows is new to science. ' Do you think, Mr. Edison, said I, that the inventions of the next fifty years will be equal to those of the last fifty ? " I see no reason why they should not be," replied Mr. Kdison. " It seems to me that we are at the beginning of inventions. We are discovering new principles, now powers and new materials every day and no one can predict the possibilities of the future. Take electricity, when we get electricity directly from coal a lump as big a* this tumbler will light and heat a whole house for hours, ami a basketful would run a factory a whole day. In the generation of steam we only get fourteen per cent, of the energy of the coal. In electricity we get !H> per cent. When we get one electrical power direct from coal a few hundred pound* will carry you acroa* the Atlantic and a few baakeU full will take a railroad train from New York to San Francisco. I believe this to be one of the great problems of the future and I have no doubt but that it will be solved. I have been working on it for years but 1 haven't got it yet. When it does come it will revolutionize everything. It will cheapen everything and it will be the greatest invention of modern time*." " Will we ever have Hying machine* T" " Yes, 1 think so," was the reply " but it will not be on any of the plans now propos- ed. I have a different idea in regard to such matters, but I am not ready to experiment with them yet. ' " How about the making of fuel from water!" " I don't believe it will ever pay " replied Mr. Edison. " Water is the ashes of nature. There is nothing more like ashes. It took an enormous degree of heat to make the hy- drogen and the oxygen combine to make water and it take* a great degree of heat to revivify them. I don t believe it will ever be commercially profitable." The conversation here turned to the tele phone and I asked Mr. Edison as to his telephone to the sun. This tele- phone experiment is the biggeet thing of the kind in nature. There is in the New Jersey mountains a vast ma** of iron a mile long and of about the same width which runs straight down into the earth for a number of mile*. "The telephone." said Mr. Edition, " is, you know, made by run- ning a wire around the top of a magnetic bar and this machine when charged with electricity enables us to register the sounds which cume in contact with it. We are using this immense natural bar of iron of the New Jersey mountains as the basis of our telephone. Weba.'u wound miles of wire about its top and have formed an luductive cirouil in which we will have the most powerful of electric currents. We expect- through it to hear the noises made on the sun aud the explosions which are supposed to be constantly going ou there will I lie- lieve within a few weeks be hoard right here, \Ve have been working at the matter for some time aud have it just about ready for testing." " We have by no means reached the per- fection of the telephone," Mr. Kclison went on. Improvement* are being made all tho time and thu day will coinu when everyone will have his telephone. Lang-distance telephoning is growing and the ouly restric- tion of the possibilities of the telephone is in the .sympathetic contract of the electrical wire with the rest of nature. If a single wire could be placed so high above tho earth that U would not touch llie mouiain tops, you could whisper around the world and you could slug a song in London and have it heard in TVkm. Wherever we get the wire comparatively free from contact with the earth distance seems to make no different* aud on a government line 1,000 miles long over treeless country in Arizona wo got a belter telephonic connection than we do now between Now York and Philadelphia. If we could have a telephone from the earth lo the sun I mean wire we would send sounds there with perfect ease, and with the phonograph, were our language universal, we could make a speech here and have it re- corded and reproduced iu any of the great planetary bodies. " 1 hero asked Mr. Kdison a* to the phono- I graph and he told me that a large uuniU-t of '< them were in use and that he believed they ' would be eventually used everywhere. He | took mo into his laboratory and allowed mu bis last invention m connection with the phonograph which he called by the name of kini'togranh, and which is almost as wonder- ful as thu phonograph itself. With tho phonograph you can take a song of I'atti's from tho lips of the diva and c.ui reproduce it before au audience in all its intensity and bevity a year later aud a thousand miles away. By the kinelogriuli with thu aid of a steroptico you can throw on a screen a piauie of Paiti just as sho looked and act- ed al the time she was singing the song and one of tho great exhibitions of tho future will be tho reproduction of great speeches and songs in this way. You can reproduce a pantomime with the kinetogruph and you can make Uiauncy Dv|iew deliver the same after-dinner speech a thousand times with the same gestures and tho aumu smile if you can once get him before it. It i* made by instantaneous photography of the man whoia to be reproduced. The inai hinc takes him in action and it so works thai ittakos^,- 7tiOphotographBevery minute thalheisspeak- mg.or-Hi picturesof him every second. These photographs are taken on a long strip of gelatino him and iu reproducing them they | are made to revolve aa fast before the eye as when they are taken. The result is that the eye docs not see tho I4i p'lot r graphs but it sees only the one with tho motions or ges- tures of the man. I saw one of these nut- chines in motion representing onu of Mr. Kdiaon's employees taking a smoke and you can see the man raise the cigar to his lips, turn hi* head, and blow out the smoke just as naturally as though he were in life. Another act of photographs represented a boxing- mutch and it was an natural as though the men were actually lighting before your i eyes anil it sometimes took do/en photo- ; grauha to make a single motion. Mr. HMison ! expects to show this macliin- in its perfect- i ion al the Columbian Kxposition. The i machine 1 saw was a nickel-in the-slot ma- chine and it will probably be on the market in a short time. The strip on which the i photographs are taken ia about as wide as a tape measure, bub the figures are magnified through a glass iu looking at them. 1 asked Mr. Kdison a* to the profit* of the photograph. He replied that the invention hart not been managed a* well as it should hr, uid he spoke of Mr. Lippincott of Philadel- phia, th* man who son.- lime ago had the Contract to manage the phonograph ami L'raphoiihoni*. Said he, during the talk on. this subject : Lippmcott is suffering from a clot of blood on his brain. The doctors say this clot is about the weight ui a ^lain, but how- ever big it is, it haa lost Mr. Lippiucott a million dollars. A million dollars a gram ; $tiO,000 an ounce. That's the most expensive material I have ever heard of. I don't know whether he will recover or not, but the phonograph will eventually pay aud pay well. " i Mr. Edison takes pride in having beon a newspaper man. He likes to talk of the days when as a boy he edited and printed the (! rand Trunk Herald. He tolls me he was a newsboy on the tram when he did it and believes it is the only newspaper that has over been published on a newspaper train. He ran it for more than a year and by virtue of it he says he is now a member of the New York Press Club. He talked with me aa to the newspaper reports which he sent out while a telegrapher and told me that the worst copy he ever handled was that of (ieorge) M. Bloss of the Cincinnati Enquirer. Said he : " I was a telegraph operator at Cincinnati at the time he was editor of the Enquirer and his copy sometimes came into theollice. I rememter one piece which none of us 'oulil translate and we sent it back to the Enquirer otlice and had them copy it for us. It was worse writing than that of the Horace (ireeley and I remember that we tM-ked a piece of it upon the wall of the telegraph office and left a standing offer of 910 to the tint man who could decipher 10 line* of it, an 1 the money was never claim- ed." " Such a thing will never happen," said I, " when newspaper reporters turn in their copy on the phonograph." " No," replied Mr. Edison, " it will not. The phonograph and the telephone are now considerably used in newspaper work and we may have newspaper phonographs in the future, and newspaper pictures may be sent from one part of the country to the other by electricity "Will it ever he possible, Mr. Edison," said I, " to take th* page of a newspaper as set up in Now York tnd telegraph such a photograph of it to the other great cities of the country a* could be placed at once on n etching plate and one netting up in Uiis way Jo for the whole country T" Mr. Kdison thought fora moment and then said, " Yes, that could be done, though I don't know whether it would be profitable unl the day may iilso come when a man sit j ting at a type-setting machine iu New York may by tapping the keys of a typewriter [ up the press dispatcho* by means of similar machines in every newspaper utllce o America. There is no doubt but this coulii be done now, and when we have perfcc type-setting machines our press telegrapher: can do the setting up of their own dis patches." A* we talked in this way running rapidly from one subject to anot her my wonder aa to Mr. Ediiton 's wonderful vitality increased A* I said above, though he had had only six hours sleep in 7. h showed no signs weariness and his health seemeil to lw per feet. What man of .TJ who reads this pape could act and feel fresh after .'Mi hours ou of tied ? Kdiaan is 3'J and he looks as lliougl he would live '.o lie a hundred. Said he n response to my quentiou " I feel that I am in my prune and I sup pose I am a belter man tluiu I have eve! been. I have the knowledge and expert ence of Ihe pasl logo npona.nl I dou't know why I should not do good work iu tin future. " " How about your stomach," said I " Thomas Carlyle, you know, says he dk not know he had a atumach until lie was it!. How nliout you ' Do you know that you have a stomach T" " Yes," replied Mr. ICdison with a laugh, " I am like Carlyle in that 1 have u^ , ,M ed the fact. I find th*l 1 have indigestion sometimes, but I can easily cure myself. I do this by change of diet. The stomach is a chemical laboratory ami digestion is mere- ly a chemical operation. If I find that my stomach m not working rightly I know that the right chemical aclion is not going on inoide of it and I change my food. If I have I been oating meat I drop tlesh food altogether and confine myself to vegetables aud in a ! short time I rind mycelf all right. If I've been eating more vegetables than meal I j drop the vegetables aud Ihe meat brings me . back to my normal state." How do you get along with so little sleep '" I asked. "I don't believe," said Mi. Kdison, "that man needs as much sleep a* is genet ally supposed. I think we sleep too much and eat too much. Six hours or six and a half are plenty for mo and 1 seldom luku more. If 1 sleep eight hours 1 rind that after break fast 1 want to go to sleep again, whereas rive hours puts me in splendid condition and I am ready for anything. I inherit a good constitution. My grandfather lived to more than 100 years of age and my father is 9*2. Neither of them were long sleepers, ami I think sleep afterall is inoreamatter of habit than anything else and that in tlie far future ii we should have an artificial light which would make the world like day year in aud year out we would never sleep at all. " This remark concluded my interview and aftor a walk with Mr. Edison through his i laboratory I drove to the station past I, lew- ( ellyn Park where Mr. Edison basono of the most beautiful residences in New Jersey. : Here simple aud unpretentious he live* comfortably with hi* family, devoting the most of hi* time to hi* life work of inven- tion. His greatest happiness he tells mo comos from his work and among the million- aires of to-day his life stands out as a lesson for the young men of the future. Oigar Eiid Collectors. Who would beliovo that any one could make money out of cigar end*? Yet the business of gathering them is so lucrative that the Russian Philanthropic Society has organised a tegular system in St. Petersburg of collecting these trifles, ami disposing of them for the henetit of the poor. UVWMNh of $l,."iOO was realised in Ihe month of July. As to what is the ultimate destination of this refuse matter it would be somewhat ha/ardousto decide but posmbly many young gentleman who with " a fearful joy" pun away al choap cigarettes might be able to tell. HOUSEHOLD. A Birthday Song. A wUh for the woman I love, Oort hie* h-T ! I wlh that the birthday niuy always ulow With love ami with Hunslnno and flowors thai blow "or the patient heart, the tender anil true. Ynd jrirld [ Imir sweet fragrance h*r \vtiolo life through. For the woman I love, Uod hie** her ! A hope for the woman I lovo, i;*l kiH'p her ! V hope for the dawn of a Kind birtbduy, Vlinn the tear tilled year* haJI htmllml away, \s the stone wa< rollixl from t lie srpulcher. And the angel* -.Inn the hirth toag to her. To the woman I love. Uo<l koep her ! A thought for the \vomun I lore, Gcdrost liar! Uoil bios* her. keep her and love her for ayo, \iii! smile on the -top* "f her earthly way. \ri'l lead hor. Ilimxelf. with her toil-worn hand lleld close m 11U. to the ihailowy land Kven down to thai land tjod ru>t her ! Hood's Sarsaparilla la a eoncentr;itr<l extract of Saisaruirllla, Petty Dictators. There ia no spirit m iliu family that is ao alal lo peace aud conw [uently happineaa aa the desire to argue on trivial pretexts, )ne person possessed of the mania for set- .ing all the real right may make a house- lolil of worthy, easy going people miserable. Phero is nothing right in the household ex- cept what she herself personally supenn end* ; for ihe individuals who consider themselves delegaled lo the task of correct- j ng the other members of the family are usually persona who dovo e themselves lo lias employment aud have little time for any other work. The hard- working man or woman haa no lime to devote to the short- comings ol others. It ia usually the slug- gard and idler, who atamii about aud watches others work, who can sug- gest a dozen ways in which they ould do better. The wile man of [sraul baa truly said : "A fool's lips "ips enter into contention" ; and the uontcn- :inus tool is as common a nuisance to-day as 10 no doubt was in the time of Solomon. Usually in proportion to their lack of actual knowledge do such persons pre- sume to set themselves up as dic- tators lo the others of their Households. [f the household dictator U the mother of the family or an elder sinter she steps aside from her legitimate sphere :o argue and dictate to her husband or Brothers in matters of business, about which she often knows nothing at all, and neglects housework. If the husband or a brother ia inclined to exercine petty tyranny over the rust of the family, he is in mue cases out of ton a '* hen-hussy" who fails to furnish his iiuota of support to the family, anil works off the energy which might Iw employed in ' a worthier cause dictating to the others how they should work. As a rule the rest of the family where such a dictator makes his abode ari> too busy to do anything but stolidly submit lu nagging lon^iif, .unlUiev usually go stolidly on in their own way. Vet, like tin' dropping of water on .stone, whh ii in time leaves its mark, such argump is a source of annoyance and wears U[M>II the nerves oi the listeners, however they have iiclioolud thcmxelves to bear and fnrlwar. The men or women who excn ise their energies as houseliolil dictators are altngf'.hrr <ii>agree- able specimens <>l humanity, hut unhappily are not unconiinon. The dictator is often Yellow iVH'k. rtpslsaewa, Juniper Berries, llaiiili:>ki>, l>i. ill linn, and other valuable vegetable ronu-dlos, i-vrry Ingredient IM-IIIR strictly pure, and Uie best of Us kind it la possible ID buy. It U jirrpuroil liy thoroughly riinipetrnt l>luu> ni.icMs, in the must careful nunm-i by a peculiar Combination, rri>|H>rtii>n .mil I'rocess, giving to It curative power Peculiar To Itself It will cure, when In the power of mnlu .IIP, Scrofula, Salt Hhriun, lilood Poisoning, Cancerous anil all other Humors, Malaria, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Sick llead:ichc, Catarrh, llheumallun, uud all difflcultie* with the Liver ami Kidney*. It orerci uiies That Tlrod Keeling, Create* .in Appetite, and gives mental, nerve. IxxUly, and digestive strength. The valuu uf Hood's Sarsaparilla la certified to by thousands of voluntary nlt- i .ill vor the country whom It haa cured of disease* more or less severe. It la sold by all druggist*. (I; six for IS. Prepared ouly by C. I HOOD * CO.. A|>theearies. Lowell, Mass. Si. R. If yu decide to take Hood's Sarsana- nlli do not lie induced to buy any utlu-i. IOO Doses One Dollar was only certain that my heart had not de- ceived me and you were ready to chare Hold on there's no hurry about it. (ivo the wind a chance lo snb and mi>au outside ani'Miit the trees. This will make her lone- some aud call up all the love in her heart. When *he 'oegiua Iu cough and grow resiles* you can go on. ' Ili-ion 1 1 met you llns world was a desert to mi 1 . I didn't take any pleasure m life, audit didn't mutter whether the tun shone or not. Bui what a change in uue short year. It is for you to say whether my future shall lie a prairie of happiness*** one loug tiul nevi-: ending rnlhwajMtl thisUee. Spt'ak, dearest Susie, and say (live her tivu minute) morn hy^Uie clock and then add : " That you vim will be that is will- lie mine '." NIC will heave a sigh, look up at the c ami lound the room, mu then as she bur head over your vest pocket sho wi whisper : Henry 1 will." the last person in the house who realizes the discoinloit that his system of nagging pro- duce*, as such n person in the necessities of the case is* pre-eminently cellish individual, wliusi* li.ui/. MI is Inn, ted to himself and who only takca iu the rest of the world as they in- ''iii uid form a [iart in that way ui his selfish mliTisl*. flow to Propose. " Don't be too sinidi ii .vboui it." M my a girl has saitl " no ' when she meant " yes " simply because the lover didn't choose the right time and pop the queslion gently. Taku a 'lark uigl.t for it. Have the blinds In.i.i. thu curlains down, aud the lamp turned most out. Sit near .'noii|;h to hor so you can hook your lit: In linger into lier->. Wail mail the conversation Logins to llaj; and then quietly mniik : " Susie, I wu.nl to :t-tk \ ou .ninet liiiii;. " Shu will fidget aboula little and probably I reply : " YosV After a pause you may add : ' Susie, my itclinus miiHt havo shown that is, you must have seen I mean you must have been aware that " Pause heio fur a while but keep your little ringer firmly locked. She may i-ougli unl try to turn tho subject olTI>y asking you' how you likoil the ncrnion, but she only , does it to uiiouurage yon. After a pau.su you can continue " I was thinking, as I w.n lining up tha street to-night, that before 1 weat away I would ask you that is, I would broach the subject nearest my I moan I would know '"> Slop again and give bur hand a gentle squoe/.e. Shu may inako a move lo gut away or she may not. In either case it augurs well for you. Wait five minute... aiitl then go on " The laal year haa l>een a very happy one to me, lint I hope that future years will In- still happier. However, that depends en- tirely on you. Iain here to-night to know that is, to ask you I nm here to-night to hear from your own lips tho one sweet " \\ nt again. It Ian t best to be too ra*b about such things. Give her plenty of time to recover her composure, and then put your hand on your heart and continue " Yes, I thought aa 1 was coining here to- night how happy I'd beon, and I said to my- self that if I only knew you would consent to bo my that u, I said if I only knew if I "German Syrup" The majority of well-read phys- icians now believe that Consump- tion is a genn disease. In other words, instead of being in the con- stitution itself it is caused by innu- merable stnall creatures living in the lungs having no business there and eating them away as caterpillars do the leaves of trees.' A Germ The phlegm that is coughed up is those Disease, parts of the lungs which have been gnawed off and destroyed. These^ little bacilli, as the germs are called, are too small to be seen with the naked eye, but they are very much alive just the same, and nter the body in our food, in the air we breathe, and through the rx>res of the skin. Thence they get into the blood and finally arrive at the lungs where they fasten and increase with frightful rapidity. Then German Syrup comes iu, loosens them, kills them, expells them, heala the places they > leave, and so nourish .and soothe that, in a short time consump- tives become germ-proof and well, j* Sam*nn brought down the house, but no- body called for an encore. In this world a man wants a good balanc- ing polo lo walk the narrow path. Anybody can walk into tho parlor, but it take* nerve to walk into the spider. Young ladies and young men, too, had better be fact asleep than fast awake. Wo are waves on life's sea ; behind, our history ia written on the shores of time ; before", the ocean trembles with new forces. WITHOUT AN EQUAL. S T -|/kCOBS foj? CURE* I SyJL . ^ J rl M fc W nrl A 1^ I \J In TRADE f&ji]i$ MARtAl NEURALGIA. K tlHMiw' | LUMBAGO, REMEDY PAIN C.AT,CA. Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Swellings. THE CHARLES A. VOCELER COMPANY. Baltimore, Md. Canadian Depot; TORONTO, ONT. \ I