i BAD FOUNDATION. *J ^ ^f AD Economic System that Comers Our Natural Opportunities. OR THE LANDLORDS'? > KiltDoe Have Not o Them ? A Ouritlun overy and Owuvniitp of BUUiry. j. ) treated of in preceding papers ^ . a great interest in any con- * uu ' t the pressing question of socio.' ..i reform, out they all pale into irjuignidcance before the root evil with which we have to deal the land question. Of coarse there are people wbo are ready to cry out, Laud question ! Isn't there land aud to spare in this great country for unborn millions ?" Now, with all due respect to tbeae people such a query in no way touches tbe vital question. It is, in the tirat place, an avoidance of tbe issue as to the righteousness 0f the existing land system ; in the second place it as- sumes that, because there yet remains land in other parts open to settlement and appropriation, no evil results from the system in use, which I deny ; aud in the thirdjilaua it ia, in a degree, an admiasion that ware there not unappropriated land the subject would at leaat be a debatable one. Now we have evidences all around ua particularly where the population ia dense- that the etfacts of our land system ditfer only in degree from those in Britain, ia France and in Germany ; and tbe dif- ference in our favor is due, not to any snpe- periorily in our people or country, but to the fact tbal tbe large areaa of uw terri- tory bave aerved as a safety-valve to relieve the pressure. The principles we proceed upon are practically those whicb have produced in the old lands an aris- tocracy of landed barons and a population of savagely competing serfs wnu remain in the country by their Uudedness' permission and live on the ragged margin of subsistence rent day leaves lo them. The order of progress will not be different ; and as most economic movements, whether good or evil, progruss more rapidly than in past limea, wu will, considering our condi- tions, reach tbe period of pressure more rapidly than our European ancestors did. Wise men look ahead aud profit by the ex- perience of others. Why should we wait until the evil is an oppressive oue and poo- pie are in no, humor to reaiou or to adopt the gradual methods so advisable in bringing about great economic changes ? Why uol consider well what wu are doing aud steer clear of the rocks ahead ? Why should we do wrong at great cost to onrselvvs aud in- fliot an ovil on posterity, when it is easier to do right and when peace and prosperity are to be promoted by a proper course ? Why, indeed ! Inree conditions are enconlisj to life on this planet access to earth, air and water. Without these life cannot bo supported. In the .'0110111 y of creation these are so wall balance! to til our requirements that life is fairly enjoyable in most parts of tbe globe. Water aud air become matters of proprietary interval only under special cir- cumstances involving peculiar personal exertion in supplying tbein. Wbcu a diver is at work the supply of a snmjieut air pressure by arlilkial moans becomes au objiiot of purchase. When a village (as some villages do) suffers from \trtmo drought water-haulers sell water, bul, as in tbe case of thu ir furnished tbe diver, tbe recompense is for tbe labor involved tbe artificiality employed (if I may use tbe term) rather than for tne r ttural gift of water itself. 1 nave no i oubl, however, that were some means discovered to coruer ih" air and water of the world we would soon see these ulemeutary gifts of nature monopolized by " private owners," aud by th taxes derived from tbe sale of rights to breathe and ilrink, a race of plutocrats rivalling the Westminsters and Koukufel- lers would soon aggrandize all thu wealth of the world. To apeak of " owning" a certain given proportion of the water that llows down our rivers, rises in vapor and desoonda in rum, and charging mankind for using il , or to claim a title to a cubic mile of atuios- pin ro with the right tj tax those who br< athe it, would be to court suspicious of insanity. Can anyone tell me why tbe olbar element necessary to existence should bu plaoed by human enaolinent on a dif- ferent basis ? Can anyone te)l me why apart from ilio fact that conditions bave rendered it pjssible to fence it in, and the mighty bave done so and by tbe laws they have enforced and long possession have asserted a right lo it a man should own, and be entitle to exclude others from, Ibu earth any more than from the air or the water ' Bought aud paid for it? Whim did they buy it from ? No man oau sell wh*t he does not own. A oanuot sell a lot that is owned by B and give me a good tule to it. Whoss is thia earth, anyway? lathe earth the Lord's, or the landlords' ? 1 only recall one instance in which the owner of thu planet gave any specific instructions to a people in regard to their dealings with each other in land and the record saith : " Tbe land shall not be sold forever ; for the land is mine." Tbe ayatem in vogue did not therefore oome from Uim. He who planned a universal brotherhood of man no more calculated that one man or one million men should own tbs oartb and thus be empowered to treat the rest of mankind aa slaves, than He ordained that universal peace and industrial happiness should be achieved oy Krupp guns, smoke- less powder and a wr of tariffs. The pro- fi.s-.mg Chrisi:an who advocates them is either an ignoramus or a hypocrite ; ho either fails to appreciate tbe meaning of facia coming under bis own observation, or, appreciating il, is satisfied with a mere profession of a religion to whioh the course be approves is a disgrace. I think that anyone who takoa thu tronblo to trace back tbeae titles to abao- lulu ownership of the sarlh will find that they reat in fores and fraud to which long ages of possession and the laws, made and enforced by the beneficiaries of that fores and fraud and their devises and assigns, have given a certain kind of eanctity. I say " sanctity, " beoaone with- out thai feeling on the part of the people who paid tribute to these men for the right of remaining on Ihe earth, these laws oonld not have been enforced. Might can- not properly be aaid to role now ; onoe let the masses fully comprehend that they are oppressed, wronged, and they will liiul a remedy, conalitntional or otherwise. It has always been felt to be ad- vieabie to give the laws, at least an appearanoe of right, no mat- ter how bad the law or tbe motive of its enaotors. Bat then have been times when religion bad more power in this respect to make men anbmit tamely to bad laws than it h*H to-day : and one of these days it will get backbone enongh to deny thu authority of any law not founded in natarrl right. In the past, however, it cannot be gainsaid that tbe suffering masses have endured oppressive laws rather from the confused idea that unequal aa wa their bearing they had in them something of divine right, and tbe hard- ships they endured were ordained of God, than that they did not feel tbal they were numerous enough or strong enough to unite in resisting snob laws. This was tbe essence of what certain politicians of to-day eulogize as loyalty, and lament its deoiy. There are those who have reason to fear the light that ia breaking in upon tbe masses. But even light brings its responsibilities to those who see. If we go back to the Norman period in England we will tind that when William wn-aied the kingdom from the Saxons bo possessed himself of their lands and par- titioned them, in great measure, among his followers. That was title obtained by foroe and conveyed by ftvor. I am aware thai it might be claimed that be gave color to a title to the throne by an alleged pro- viona will of Edward the Confessor, and also by a form of election , bnt this was laughed to scorn by hid own followers who claimed their title* by virtue of aharmg with him the hazard* of conquest; and moreover were the claim conceded it would bnt remove tbe foundation by force one step further back. 1 1 was not, however, until the Tudor period that our present system look shape ; and t-ven then the land was burdened with feudal cbargea which rendered the claim of Ihe following alstnte of Edward III., and which baa never ainoe sea repealed, t leaal nominally effective : Tnat tlm King u thu uuiYenal lord anil origi- nal propritttor of all land in his kingdom ; au<i thai no uian Join, or can puwess any part >( it but what has mmiiatvlv or i uuioiiiautly limm delivered a* a till from him to be liold ou feoUal service. In the reign of Charles II., however, a laud holding parliament relieved itself of this "aervioe " or return for the oooupanoy of the lands of the nation , aud from that time forward the men who held tbe land and made thu laws look oars to legislate in their own interest ; to keep up a church that taught respect for law without being hyperoritioal about its justice or right to bind them , and to enclose for their own use the large commonages that were nssd by the general public. I tind that from Queen Anne to William IV., inclusive, 3,954 enolosnra acts were passed, appro- priating lo private use I '_'Ui~.->*,t acre* of lands belonging to tbe whole people ; and I do not wonder that, taken with the other enactments of a landlord parliament, the oost of paoper* ha* aggregated as innoh as is. 000.000 in * single year in England ! Turning to newer part* of tbe world, we find force and fraud as usual, complicated with a claim of " disoovery." If we shut our eyes to the fact that admitting discov- ery aa a title tbe aborigines owned the country, we are yet entitled to aak whether the disoovery of America by Columbus could give Spain a good title to America, liow much are we to concede to discovery ? The acru landed on ? Tbe territory bounded by the hori/ju of tbe diiooverer ? All he travels over or around .' Would Crusoe have a right aa discoverer to for- bid other people to land on hi* island, if he chove to do so, if ils area were a e>|uara mile .' or if il were a million square miles .' ' It be oould enforce his refusal .' " Ah ! Now we get back to the doctrine of foroe, and on foroe and fraud will, I think, be found to rest all titles to absolute owner- ship of tbe laud which God said, " shall not be sold forever, for the Ian li* mine." If the natural opportunities are owned by the few, how can it be aaid that all men are equal before the law? If the many are deprived of tin ir birthright, yet heavily tared to enforce that deprivation, how oan competition the natural condition- oe fair ? la it any wonder that starling to build ou duch a fabric our social and political economy should be a thing of propa and braces tuosl unlovely to contem- plate, and whose aafety we feel alarm for in every industrial breeze ; that in an enlightened aglikg this we should witneaa lhi> anomoly of idleness taking the wealth aud honors of the world while industry struggles and starves, and the exponents of ihu gospel of tbe Teaoher of Truth and Justice 1 patroni/.iugly counsel contentment and prate about the " will of God "? Ws mnal help ourselves. It we put our shoulders to tbe chariot wheel lieroules will be tbore. Il won't hurt the storm- tossed boatman to pray, bul he will tind a good pair of oars and ability to handle them very useful in reaching a aafe haven. This world has buou much abused, indeed sometimes it baa almost been presented as a malevolent creation ; bnt I am of opinion that it would be a pretty good plaoe to spend a few years in if we only put our abilities lo the uses for which they are adapted by nature, cultivated aalf- reliance and acted up to our best knowledge. MABQCBTTB. Salt- For the Nlajbu Thu winter palace, 10 p.m. The C/.ar Have you looked well under the botlovitoh .' The Czarina Yes. Tbe Czar- And in the ulosols ? The i ,-ar m Yes, dear. The C/.ar Then give me my ateel linen night-gown, set the man trapsky, give me the double-barreled pistilovitoh aud turn Ihe gas off. 1 ahall aeek pleasant dreama wherein 1 may ev thai blaok and-tauavioh rascal, Ueorgeott Kouuikimki, breathing the sweet air of the Kara prison. It ia thought that the bill of the Imperial Parliament regulating merchant shipping will not apply to Canadian vessels, provided Canada satisfies the Homo Government that she will legislate on tbe loadliue herself. DOMINION PARLIAMENT. Mr. Foster, replying to Mr. L'atterson (Essex), aaid tbe charges of improper con- duct on the part of Outturns Officer Mo- Lagan, ol Hainia. bad been sroakjbt to the attention of the Government and were now linn r investigation. Mr. Armstrong moved that all branches of the varioui chartered banks be kept open for business on Saturdays until 3 o'clock in the afternoon, exoept when a bank hull day fall* on Saturday. lie slated that at present great inconvenience was caused to the farmers by the banks closing at 1 o'clock on Saturday. Mr. Foster eaid he doubted whether Par- liament could make any regulations as to the closing of banks The hours wore ref- itted by the demand, and he thought ibe banks bad always shown themselves willing to accommodate themselves to the wishes of their customers. The motion was lost on division. Mr. White (Cardwell) drew attention to the fact that the Bill did not require the banks to present a return of their business outside of Canada, and hence the monthly returns of some of the banks did not give uxaot details of the condition of the bauks. Mr. Blake suggested that the third read- ing of the Bill be deferred until it was ascertained what were the views of the bauka in regard to this point. Mr. Foster agreed to this oourse being taken. Mr. Landkerkin moved that banks which closed before 3 o'clock should not be allowed to protest notes on that day. The amendment was lost on division. The Bill was reported, and the tbird reading tiled for to-morrow. Mr. Foster moved the third reading of tbs Tariff Bill. Sir Kit-hard Cartwright said he would protest for the last time against the imposi- tion of these duties. The Finance Minister had informed them that there was a sur- plus of Si',500.000 on last year a transac- tions, that he calculated on a surplus of *-. 000.000 on the prevent year's transac- tions, and expected a surplus of $2,500,000 for the next year, yet under these oiroara- stances, the hon. gentleman, contrary to the praolioe of >:ml!/.d nations, instead of using that surplus for the purpose of ameliorating the burdens of the people, added to the taxes already iutlioted on Ihem. It there was a principle which ought to be well established and winch should command itself to everybody, it was that in a young country wniuh desirnd emigration, and bad large areas to settle up, they should avoid imposing taxes on articles <:' primary necessity to the whole people, and that they should adjust taxa- tion so that it should be as far as possible equitably distributed over the whole oonn- try and not prets unequally on the various classes, and least of all on the poorest classes , that they should avoid increasing taxes on raw material imported for our industries, and that DO tax should be im- posed in favor of oue 1'rovm >e against another. Under the exist- ing circumstances they ought to be arefnl not to impose taxation of such a nature as to involve retalia- tion on the part of their neighbors. With an existing aurplus aud an anticipated sur- plus of over two millions it -Mpropoiei to add one million dollars) to >. burdens of the people. The taxes) on dour ud meat must and would of necessity add to the cost of artiolesof food largely oonamned among the vary poor class of the popula- tion, would injure trade, and would increase the cost of the production of lumber. If toe Uovurumeut wished to bviiftit the farmers, they ought not to increase the duties on pork, but admit free of duty corn and the raw material out of which iurk was made. The Government altsuipted to justify their course by pointing to the example of the United Suttee. The market in the latter country, however, was larger, and the population was greater, the climate was varied, and they could to a very great degree pruJnoe everything that i nation oould require. He moved " that the bill be not now read a third time, but that it be resolved that in view of the oth'oial state- ment of the Finance Minister showing a surplus revenue for the past year ami a probable surplus for the present and suc- ceeding years, the increased taxation pro posed to be indicted upon the people by this bill is unjustiliable aud nnnuoessary." Mr. Foster said the changes in the tariff were not made with any idea of unlarging the amount of revenue, but to correct anomalies that exist and to provide for industries that wera uot anlnoieutly pro- tected, having special reference to the farmer. Instead of deriving a revenue, there were several items, auou as glass, molasses, utc , upon which a considerable amount would be lost. One result of the tar i If would-be to reduce the importation of moats from foreign countries by the increased production of the nmo ulasifs of meats in our own country. There would have to be mouths at itotaal r. \perimioe before they would know the result of the changes in the tariff. liu said with all the omphaais he could command that they had waited 1-nig enough, and the Menu iiiuuts shown in the United States did not justify their waiting any longer What they had to do was to sit down as oiti.'.ans of a free oonutry and make their own matters square with their own interests. Mr. Charlton aaid now the farmer was beginning to feel the evil effects of the so- called National I'olioy, the Finance Minis- ter brought down a aubterf nge in order to make him bolieva he was about M reoeivea little protection for the robbery to which ho had been subjected in the past. It would not deceive theCana>dian farmer any more than the MoKinley bill would deouvu the farmer in the I'nited Htates. Mr. McMulleu observed that the Govern- ment bad promised that the National Policy would obtain a home market for the farmers. Not one of their promises had been ftilnlled, however. The farmers now bad their eyes open, and the Uovernment would not be able to shut them again. The Uonse divided on the amendment, whioh was lost on a vote of '>'-' yeas and '.'. nays. Mr. Desjardins moved the adoption of the report of the Debates Committee, in- creasing the salaries of amanuenses from to *.; per day. Mr. Curran moved that the report be referred back for the purpose of increasing the salaries of the translators. Mr. Langelier aaid that the; French translation of the debates wa very. bad. In one aperob the translators made Mr. Lanrier declare that the French language should be abolished and the ! 'ranch rate wiped out of the oonutry. Mr. Taylor said the translation cost Si',000. The proper way to deal with this question was to wipe out the expenditure of the $75,000 snd oease publication of the debalta altogether. It would shorten the session. At any rate the reporting of the House in Committee should be dispensed with. Mr. Chaplean moved that the Ballot Box Committee bave power to send for persons and papers. Ihe object of the motion was to enable the committee to pay persons who had been in attendance. Mr. Blake said it WSH outrageous that persons who came to Ottawa to exhibit their particular fads should be paid for doing so. Sir John Maodonald Hear. hear. Mr. MoMullen supported the motion. Bir John Macdonald, in reply to Mr. Bryson, said the Uovernment have oome to the conclusion that, in the event of the United States Congress reducing the im- port duty on awn lumber to $1 per thous- and feet, the Uovernment will reduce the export duty on pine and spruce loge. We will take the opportunity of conveying this information to the proper authority at Waabington. Mr. MoNeill enquired whether the Gov- ernment would bring down a report in reference to the Baltic outrage Mr. Colby replied that there would De no objection to the report being brought down. Mr. Cbaplean moved concurrence in the amendments made by the Senate to the Act amending the Kleotoral Franchise Act. lie explained that oue of the principal amendments was that in cage the voters in a division exceeded 250, the returning officer could make sub-divisions so as not to invalidate the election. The House went into committee on the resolutions autbori/.ing land grants to the C.P.R. and other railway companies in tbe Northwest. Mr. Uewdney moved that tbeCP.ll.be granted ti, 100 aores per mile fora branch railway to be constructed from Gleubcro for a distance of sixty miles to tbe Brandon branch. Sir Hiohard Cartwright said tbe Govern- ment were practically giving away control of tbe lands of the Northwest by these various railway grants. According to a statement made by the Minister of the In- terior last year, there was a tract of 100, 000 square miles extending from the Hed Kiver on the one aide to near the Uocky Mountains on tbe other, but if thu policy of giving large grants to railways were per- sisted in there would soon be very little of this left. Mr. Uewdney stated thl the ferule bell embraced 135,000,000 acres. Of these V>. 141. '.'26 had been appropriated, leaviug a surplui of s-2.ii5el.OT4 acres. Mr. O'Brien said they were so accus- tomed to these large figures that they hardly realized what they were doing. Ilu pointed out that when the Territories be- came settled they would probably be divided into Provinces, and then they would bave to faou tbe difficulties that they bad encountered in tbe other Provinces in re- gard to large tracts of land over whioh the Uomiuiau aud Provincial Qovernmeuls had no control. The dilnonlty that was experienced in Ontario with regard to the Canada Company was a type of what they would be likely to incur in tbe new Pro- vinces if they gave away millions of acres to these corporations. Mr. Blake thought there should be a stipulation made in regard to these grants providing that lands should be thrown open for gale under a maximum to be tiv.il. The system of land grants pursued tended, he thought, rather to isolate than draw settlers marer together. Mr. Davin observed that if some arrange- nifni could be made under which railway lauds would be open to settlement under reasonable conditions, it would be a beueut to the Northwest. Mr. Watson said railway lands should be open to settlers. The Canadian Pacino Hailway apparently were of the opinion that it was better to hold the land for speculative purposes rather than throw it open to intending settlers. The Canadian 1'aoino Hailway held their lands at from #4 to $10 per acre, which was much too high. Mr. Hots expressed himself opposed to any maximum price for railway lauds. Sir Kiobarti Cartwright said the Cana- dian Paciuo Hallway's policy in Southern Manitoba had driven out settlers. Practi- cally tlii' Government was abandoning con- trol of 100,000,000 of acres. Mr. Blake said tbe railway lands to be open for sale should be ordinary agricul- tural lands, and not lands of special value such as coal laude, timber lauds, aud town sites. Mr. Mills observed that the railways should bo extended from time to time, to meet Ihe wants of the community as set- tlement extented. The aettlement in the Northwest was not what it ought to be, an I ouu of the reasons was the prices >i which the land was held. The public interest would not be servo J by any re- liance on the :;oo'! faith of the railways, as was evidenced during the boom m the Northwest. The motion was adopted. Mr. Uewdney moved the same land grant for the two branch lines of the Cana- dian Paoitic Hailway fora distance of l-'o miles. The motion was adopted. The largest peifect diamond in the world is the Imperial owned by a syndicate in Paris. It is valued at 91,000,000. A tmiRY OKTHB UAV. Lord U*ors;e Jeffreys h* A ppeared l>r- IUK th Hluodr AMlze*." Who is not acquainted with tbs blood- stained and infamous record of Lord George Jeffreys, of England .' The story of the " bloody assizes," in whioh be is tbs) central figure, will continue to be read with horror LU amazement to tbs end of time). It has no parallel. Perhapa tbe IMS* account of it is given by Maoaulay in hisi history of EingUcd, though v< ry writer of note who has hid occasion to touch upon it has grown elcqnent in describing its) horrors. The author of tbe brief sketch of Lord Jeffreys in the Briliib Kucyclopedisk says : " It was in this ' bloody assize' that he was to deepen tke slain thai already tarnished his fame, and to make tbe name) of Judge Jeffrey's a synonym for a monster of bloodthirsty ornelty, blasphemous) rage, and brutish intemperance. IB the ' campaign he gave rein to bis ferocity ; h; was maddened with ulaugbler; and hit appetite for blood grew with what it fed on. The horrible glare of his eye, the bavage lines of his (ace, hist tierce shouts of wrath, territied and con- fused guilty and iunooent alike. With hateful cunning he let it be bruited that Ihe only hope of mercy lay in pleading guilty, and by this oold-blooded artifice lightened his labors. He had a powerful incentive to active butchery ; the vacant post of lord chancellor was to be won by good fcervice. The estimates of the number of hie victims vary : the official returns to the treaiury was 320 ; Lord Lonsdale save 700, and Burnet ''.00 Upward of 400 were transported to the West Indies) as slaves), while others only escaped by purchasing iheir pardons from the judge at most ex- orbitant rates.'' When King James tied Jeffreys made an attempt to escape to Hamburg, bnt was captured, and after narrowly t Heaping death t the hands of aa infuriated mob, was thrown into the tower of London. There K lay fi.. some months, tortured by anguish of mind and body, dying miserably on the ItUh of April, Mi. Wheu you fwl your BtrrnRtb is failing. In souie ttrftUK*. iuytriou way . When your ctiet- k is (slowly paling. And. ' 1'oor thing. ' the uoigubon aajr. As they look at you in pit?, To tliv nearest ilrui; stoiit send, At tb vifcrlit*i rliar ce. itud ;t a ilollle of tbe Sick Mau 1'rieuil. Von will get what you wut by asking for Dr. Piaroe's Qolden Medical Discovery. This medicine tones up and invigorates tbe weakened system by purifying the blood and restoring loit vigor. It is the only medicine of its class, sold by druggists), under >*>jif 11 < >jiuinnur< that it will btmutit or cure in all oases of disease for which ik is recommended, or money paid for il will be refunded. After the luinxlortlon. Mrs. Van Twiller (who mistakes Ur. Jovial for it physician) And where do yon practise, doctor ? Tbe Usv. Dr. JoviaU Ah, madam, I do not practise . I only preach. UoomvU to ill*, aud oh. to young. Is there uoihiug thu > u car* Thi* lH>or, Dopelae* cuflrrtr 11 ilic .Ink aud <Tnl grave f Couim s,u uwf r. Y*, umr is : Favorite PrvM-ripiii m tiy It IUM *avt)d thi- live* ut thuucuidf Wno wore gifeu up to tile." For all female diseases," Dr. Pieroe'l Favorite Prescription it the standard remedy, and no woman should despair of rtcavery until she lias given it a trial. A steel splinter from a ohisel buried it- seif in Ihe oysball of James Threadgall, IB an AIbuy boiler shop, a few days ago. A pjwerfnl magnet was applied to Ihe wound and a splinter of steel ODD sixteenth of an inch in width nJ three-eighths of an iocs) in length was drawn out. e> To "regulate the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, Dr. Pierce's Pellets exoel. '.'51s a vial , ouu a doie. Be otrefnl of the horse's mouth, who jerk the reins because they are too mad to be sensible aud humane, shoals) have bit placed in their own mouths and have il jerked by some brutal fellow who would enjoy giving pain. l>. 0, -31. 00. : Bermuda Bottled. "lu 11111*1 K lit Itrriiiiula. If ' > Illl (Ill Mill 1 Hill lllll 114- r'MMHI*l- ) lli tor i hr rillri|llrilri . " lllll, > ilnciiir. I rail allortl iirilhrr th- 1 inn imr Ihf ilium >. "Mr II, II ' thai >- liii|M>M>lnlr, lr> i SCOTTS EMULSION OF PURE NORWEGIAN COD LIVSR OIL. ' I soinri nnr- rail II llrnuiiilu Ilol- ) llrtl, and mini) i':lr ill CONSUMPTION, Itrinii'ltilia, i V/HJT/I or .SVrr'nf' CoM i II.IM- i i ill n with u: .mil nit- iilMinlimi- i* thai i In nn>-i -i HI- ) ll>r olomui'li ran HiUrii. \iioilur I ilium ninth riiuiiiirml* II l ihr I -Iliniiliiiiiik pri>irrnr> ul tin- ll>- ) ,o|ilinM'uiii - nlnrli i inn. nu*. ' ^ mi mil Illlil II lor -.il" ii >imr 1 UriiKKK.1*. In xaliiioii "r i|>|i, r. Be ! Mire MMI Krl tin- iii-inilllr." j HfOTT A- i>-.\^' 'i- Hi-rill*. TO Til K KII1TOK: Pleat* inloir.i y.'iir i.-.n!.-i - UMI I ' iv,- .1 posilivr t.-inrdy for tal above ii.im.il .Us, -.is,-. Uy its timi-ly u . 'i-ru piiiu.iiiriitly > tired. 1 sh.i!| I,,. K ,.i,i t,, si-mi two bottles > FULL ... . ....', i- who li-ive cos* sumption iMhry will *end in* Him Exuir.s- nut I'i'-t ()*, A... less, ..'. ... . tlully, T. A. <"" ' M.O.. <86 Woat AiloluiUt. -. ORONTO, ONTARIO. I CURE FITS! INOUSAHUS Ut- GIVEN AWAY YEARLY. When I say Curo 1 ila not im-irly tn vtt.p tli< 111 tor a tune, amltheai bave t hriu i, tin lt i,.. .m. IMEANARAOICALCURC. I liavem.ule the disrase ol Fita, Epiluuey or FnllinK Sichnf*** a Iiic-Uui^ siu.ly. I warrant my irmeily t.i Oxiro ths oihrrs have failed is no II-.ISPU for nut now i'. AIIIE a cure. S*ml at _ a Freo Bottle of my Infallible Remedy. Give bxmrsi *nd - It i lists you lu'thnv^ tor a trial, and it will i urfi you Aiiilrrss ; H. Q ftOOsa M.C., Branch OtHco, 186 WEST AOKUAIDS STRUT, TORONTO. once far * treatise and Post Office.