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Flesherton Advance, 29 Mar 1894, p. 2

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p THE WEEK'S NEWS. CANADIAN. The {vast week hu been the wont of the year for failure! in Montreal Latest return* (how that 24 Liberals and 14 < 'onser-'atives war* elected in Nova Scotia last week. The Semaine Religieuse hu compiled a table which shows the total Roman Cath- oli.: population of the Dominion to be '-',- "JO. Mr. John S. Mnokleston, treaiurer of the Maodonald National Memorial Aaaociation, KiiiKtton, received a cheque on Saturday from the Karl of Derby, the late Governor- general, for five hundred dollar*. Hanry Wellner, a commercial traveller, wai (hot the other morning in the thigh at the Halifax railway tatiou by Mrs. Mary Connolly, who layi he intuited her. ArchbiihopTacliehaa addressed a lengthy memorial to the Governor-General in Council in answer to the Privy Council Committee'* report on the Northwest ichool ordinance. The New Brunswick Provincial Legit- ture wa opened laat week by Lieutenant- governor Fraser. Mr. Connell announced hi* resignation a* a member of the Govern- ment and member of the Hou>*. He 11 not in accord with the Ministerial policy. BRITISH. The coming British budget, it ii aaid, will propose a considerable increase in the income tax. Sir Win. Harcoart told a deputation that the Walea disestablishment measure will be pushed through this session. The London Time* says that, freed from the magic of Mr. (iladntone's domination, the Government majority are already split- ing up, and are ready to accuse one another of treachery. Mr. Gladstone from hi* retreat at Brigh- ton keep* up regular communication with the Liberal ministers, advising them upon all ma'.ter* submitted to him. The three days' session of the McCarthyiU section of the Irish Parliamentary party resulted in a victory for the Dillon faction, and while the outcome has healed some old wounds, it has undoubtedly created now feuds. News oomes from Australia that near the old mining oamp at Hallarat, the scene of many crime* ol the bushrangers, the richest Sold quartz found in twenty year* has been Hoovered. A great rush for the new field* ha* set in. At the meeting of the directors of the Ii ink of Kngland Governor Powell, referring to the grave irregularities nf Frank May, the late cashier, said that the sum of two hundred and fifty thousand poundi had been act avid* to meet the bank's leases. The Unionist* have decided to put up can lidale* to oppose the return of the Min- isters whose change of orhos in the Cabinet neoeeii tales their re -election to Parliament. An exoep' ion was mad* in the case of Mr. Herbert Gladstone, who was returned on Friday without opposition. Admiral de (lama and five hundred of the insurgent sailors and marines are on their way to Portugal. At two o'clock the other afternoon a bomb was exploded in the Church of the Made- leine, Paris, and one person, supposed to be the author of the explosion, was Killed and several others were injured. Muoh damage was done to the church. Admiral Mello U at present at Curitiba, Brazil, personally directing the concentra- tion of the sourthern insurgent land forces, and he does not think that the cause of the revolutionist* i* lo*t by the surrender of- Admiral de Oama's squadron. Kmperor William ha* conferred upon Count von Caprivi the chain of the Order of the Home of Hohenzollern, and upon Baron von Bieberctein the Grand Cross of the Red Kagle, in recognition of their servicee in securing the passage of the Rnsso-tiernun treaty. A Chinese paper lay* Mariano San la Ana, a native of Albay, who i* one hundred and seventeen years of age, ha* just completed the long term of fifty-sight years' imprison- ment. The railway from Tientsin to Shanghai is completed, and i* being patronized by im- mense numbers of passengers, and carries large quantities of heavy good*, which were formerly conveyed with immense labour on spriugless cart* and pack animals. ELECTRIC ROAD CARRIAGE. * ar. r.,rul Hark-In.- %vt llr I n- OfHTHIr.1 ! BfcelBM. Mr. Henry P. du Bellet, United State* Consul at Rheima, describe* in a recent re- port a new electric read carriage which i* being successfully operated in that city. The carriage is that of Mr. Paul 1'ouchain, | of Armentieres, Department of Nord, France, and it is considered a* th* solution of (he problem studied for many year* by the French electricians. " This carriage," say* the Consul, " is a six-place phaeton built on four wheel*. All its upper part is movable, so as to facil- itate the inspection and care of the conden- sers and electric motor. The electric cur- rent i* furnished by a battery of condenser* " Dujardin" composed of six boxes of nine element*, or altogether fifty-four element*. Kajli box i* 44 centimeter* (17 inches) in K nebary in K Uanurgn on Krid y id that hi* remark* on H >i i Rule in th e H MM-! of Lxird* had been misinterpreted. It is not necessary, he said, to demand an K:i<lih nvtjnrity to carry Home Kula bill, or to beat the Kigllsh vote to convince the F.n^lish people of th] justice of Irish Homo Rule. A woman nm -d Margaret Walker ha* been sentenced to death in Liverpool for murdering her husband. It cme out in evidence that she was jealous of her hus- band, whom she chained up in an upper room of her * house and Bogged every day for four months, and finally she brained him with a heavy chain. UNITED STATES. John Hart, who murdered hi* two lister In a row about property, wai hanged at Uoi-kland, III., Friday. W. C. Cro*bie, a son-in-law of Krigham Young and once a well-known comedian, i* now a hopeless maniac in Chicago. Another case of smallpox ha* developed in Sing Ming prison. Dr. Mary Walker has applied to Pout- mastar-General Bissel to be appointed post- master at Oswego, N. Y. Mayor Sohieren adhered to his resolution, and no Irish flag flew frum any public building ID Brooklyn on St Patrick'* day. The police of New York have put a slop to the niekel-in-lhe-elot business in saloons and barlwr shops. The first theosophical funeral held in New York for llfteen years took place Fri- day. It i* stated that Hon. James D. Porter. American Mmimer to Chili, has decided to resign and return to the United States about the middle of April. A prairie fire has bean raging for several day* in the south-eastern part of the Chey- enne country, and several farmers have lost everything. It i* feared that some seitlers have lost their live*. representative J, A. Lee has introduced a bill in the United States House providing that foreign drummer* ihall pay an annual tai of $1, 000, and shall py a fine not ex- ceeding 93,OOO for violation of the act. At a wedding in Beattyville, Ky. , on Friday the groom became insanely jealous of a former suitor who was present, and after the ceremony he shot him and another man dead. Ho then fled, leaving his bride, and lie ha* not yet been arrested. A number of bUhnps, prominent clergy- men ami laymen of the Protestant Kpisoopal Church in the United States will visit London thi* summer to attend a missionary conference of llin Anglican Church. The proceedings will be^in May -S in St. Paul's Cathedral. A Washington despatch ssy* that the Administration intend to have all faots about the len<li.ig of British marins* at Hlurtield, Nicaragua, but propose also to be prepared to prevent any interference with the sovereign rights of Nicaragua over llio Mo*<|uito territory. (1KN1RAI.. King I. i|Mld of Ifjlgi i'n is slaying in- Cogniio at Geneva. The Trench (lovarnment will increase th* duty on foreign wheat to nine francs. Fifto m in <n have bean killed an I many elheis injure I by a minx explosion in Kka- terinuland Province, Russia. 4 ourac*. It i* sometimes contended that courage is altogether a matter of temperament, that the bra** inherit their bravery, and that, consequently, they do not deserve so much credit for wtat i* more of a gift than a merit. Though there i* some truth in the contention, it does not cover the entire ground. Courage, like other virtues, is due only in part to heredity. We come into the world not with full-fledged qualities, but with tendencies in various directions. These are continually being modified by our environment*. Some are strengthened, some ate weakened thereby. Couraue, like the rest, is capable of growth or decay. It may be fostered by exercise, or with- ered by neglect. Kvery tune we rise to the exigencies of the occasion, baniihing mental indolence, conquering obstacle*, restraining unworthy deiires, choosing the higher rather than the lower motive, sacrificing inclination when it conflict* with reason, we give fresh impetus to native trength of character, iu which true courage i* alone displayed. On the other hand, whatever courage we naturally poxes* may be weakened by disuse or by a refusal to respond to its suggestions. Yield to indo- lence, or fear, or evil persuasion is to fore- i go all claims to the merit of heroism. Self- I control soon become* impossible, and the man who is without it is altogether the lave of circumstance*. Moral weakness, not absolute cussedness, i* responsible for moat of the evil* of society. No on* delib- erately says : " I will do what I know to be foolish and wrong," for this would be to profes* himself a fool, which no one, who i* not an imbecile.ever thinks of admitting. It is only that he lacks the courage to do right, the power to sacrifice desire to principle. It may be called by some other name, but it i* generally cowardice that i* responsible for wrong-doing. The "bold highway* man," " the daring robber," " the fearless bandit, ' are all misnomers, for every man Jack of them is an utter and absolute cow- ard away down in his boote, because he has not the courage to act decently or consist- ently. The free- hooter an.l the guerilla ii never mistaken for a soldier. Courage i* not a spasmodic effort to be used on great occasions. It most be inherent in the system, and it must be exercised on all occasions. Kmerson says, and tha' settles it, " The day never shines in which heroism may not work. Whoso is heroic will always find ernes to try his edge. Human nature demands her champion* and her martyrs." Mr. n<l Africa. Mr. Henry Labonohere has long been a fount of misinformation about Africa, It is hard to say just what his attitude is on African matters, but it seems to be wholly opposed to any sort of British enterprise in the undeveloped ports of th* continent. He has for years written and talked more about Africa, and the doings of Knglishmen there, than any other member of Parliament or owner of a British newspaper, and he ha* known a good deal less of what he was talking about than many men who have not talked so much. Geographer* and Africaniste, in particular, have been simply astounded bv the array of figure* and fan- oie* that Mr. Labouohere ha* glibly dis- pensed every time it ha* been propoeed to send out a British expedition or spend a penny of British money. Kver since the Matabele campaign began, Mr. Labouchere'* apeeche* and newspaper hitve overflowed with the most reckless statement* and orne! charge* againlt his countrymen. It was easy to see from the first that his chick sns would not be long in earning home to roost, for his ohargos were sup- ported by no reepeotable evidence. One by one they have been most effectively dis- proved and refuted by such well-known AfrioanisUas P. C. Selous and W. B Har- ris ; and Mr. Labouohere has been subject- ed to oaitigatlon, by a part of the liritish press, more severe tnan is often visited upon a prominent public man. The London Time*, in summing up th* case against him, lay* this -. "He does not make any inquiry either into the honn MM of his informants, or into their opportunities of knowing the truth. It i* enough for him that somebody n South Africa brings some shameful ac- cusation against British subject* fighting under the British flag. Any evidence ou the other side Mr. l.abouchero leaves to be published, if at all, in other newspapers, while the undiluted stream of calumny Oows through his own. It is no light mat- ter that a member of Parliament occupying a conspicuous position and exeroisinf con- trol over a widely circulated periodical, should USD hi* power with so complete a disregard fur the elementary rule* of fair dealing between man and man." \Ye ob- serve that this gentleman's African view* are sometime* dignified by transmission over the Atlantic cable. This i* really taking their author too seriously. What Mr. Labouohere doe* not know about Africa might fill a considerable library. Mining engineers now use photography to Illustrate thir report* by presenting j.i. -lures of ledge* and other feature* of th mine*. AX RLECrHJC PHAETON. length, 3-'t centimeters (14 inches) in width, and .'(I centimeters (l.'l. 6 inches) in height. Each element contain* one positive and two negative sheets inclosed in a box of ebonite. Tho nine elements are coupled together in tension and always in the same manner. The commutator, made out of bronze, i* a cylinder in th* itiape of a dode- oagon, on ten aide* of which are placed pi'cea of copper electrically insulated from tbe body of a commutator and connected together in a permanent manner. In using a lever the. commutator turn* and can lie placed in five different positions, establish- ing contacts between the pieces of copper and fourteen elastic jaws communicating through twelve wires to sii batteries and through two wire* to the motor. The motor ii of the system " Rechniew- sky," of a normal energy of -Moil watts, able, when necessary, to develop as much more. It is placed in the center of the carriage, and, by the means of a Vauoansion (endless) chain, puts in motion a shaft re- volving on the system of differential motion. Over the back wheel* are placed four bat- terlo* of accumulator* or condensem, the motor and theduferentialsystem controlling the wheels ; under the front anal are th* two other batteries, a commutator coupler, and a tool box. On the dashboard i an electrometer, a disconnecter, an interrupter of the lights placed in the three lanterns and an interverter to back the carriage. Under the vehicle are found soft wires, which can be connected with a stationary dynamo for the purpose of reloading the batteries. The mechanism for guiding the carriage is applied to the fore part of the carriage, to which U added a screw wheel put in motion by an endless screw *nding under the hand of the driver and of very easy management This carriage, all ready to work, weigh* U.'iO kilrgrams, or 2970 pounds, and carries six passenger*. On a pavement in an aver- age condition 70 kilometers (42} m'ilas) oan be covertd at a ipeed at 10 kilometer* (9 miles 14HI yards) per hour without reload- ing the lotteries, and the carriage can be tin tied entirely around on a itreet less than 4 meter* (11 1 feet) wide. Ou a level and on an average pavement the usual speed naturally depends on tbe number of accumulator*, the greatest speed 10 kilometer* (9 mile* 14H4 yard*) per hour being furnished by using six batter- irs on tension tni.lhrr Ha. I I.i hn Ballwav. Great efforts are* being made to secure the construction of the Manitoba South- Eastern Railway. The route of this line i* from Winnipeg south-east to the southern ei.il of Lake of the Woods. This line would not only give the farmers of south east Manitoba a means of cheap transpor- tation of their grain, but it would cheapen the transportation of timber and firewood from t*>e well- wooded regions of western Ontario to th* people of the treeless plains of Manitoba. The freight rates on lumber are now fifteen and a half cents per hundred pounds, and it i* estimated that these would be reduced to eight cents per hun- dred pounds, or $3 87 per thousand feet. Another inducement held out to the peo- ple of Manitoba i* competitive grain ratei to the great lakes by a connection of the Manitoba South- Kastern with the Port Arthur, Duluth and Western Rail- way. Certainly, this line of railway Promina* considerable advantage*. It ha* a charter from the Dominion Government and a land grant of 6,400 acres of land in the vicinity of the railway per mile, includ- ing ISO acre* of, it i* claimed, heavily timbered land. The charter expires some time in 1895, if the road is not under con- struction by that time, and it is to secure the immediate buildiug of this line that the large lumber interests of western Ontario propose to undertake the work, with the aid of the Manitoba Uoveroment, which is asked to give guarantee for twenty year* of five per oont. interest on eleven thousand dollar* of bonds per mile to be secured by the land grant. The Manitoba Government is, it is said, not unwilling to do so if tlie Manitoba South-Kastern Railway inves a guarantee that the connection with a lino to the great lakes will be formed. M rlllnn T* The tilrrn. The paper on which letter* to Queen Victoria are written mini not be folded. No communication which bear* evidence of having been creased will ever fall into her Majesty's own hands. The proper method is to write on thick, gloeiy white paper, MIC' to dupatch the missive in an envelope which fit* it. Any folded communication never reaches tho Queen, for the simple reason that she won't look at it All such letters are opened by th Mistress of the Robes, and as a rulo their content* never get I cyond her, or, if the letter is of impor- tance, it is returned to the writer with directions how to forward it. THE D0(. OF W IB. Th* I !n*nr ll I (million .if t'rsarr SBSl rrnijinj l of War. In connection with the very general im- pression that we are on the eve jf a finan- cial and commercial revival the Mall sug gests that the European war cloud i* re- sponsiule in large measure for this feeling. Owing to the intimate financial relation* between all civilized nation*, this trouble reacts upon n* on this side of the Atlantic. It is France that will " cry havoc and let slip the don of war" if th* cloud hursts over Europe. But there are certain consid- erations which cannot fail to influence French financiers, military authorities, and statesmen. The treaty of commerce be- tween Germany and Russia cold-watering the hope* of the French war party shows French statesmen that the Czar doe* not intend to act a* the catepaw of France to pull the Alsace and Lorraine chestnut* out of the fire ; and without Russian help France will not stir. There are also other reason* which intelligent snd sober- minded Frenchmen understand the mean- ing of, and which incline them to shun war a* tin y would the plague. One important fact is, that if Germany bor- rowed all that was required for war purpose*, it would be several year* bw- tore it* national debt equalled that of France. But if France similarly borrowed, it would, by the same time, owe more than twice is much as England did in 1815, after waging 21 year* war. The French nalional debt when Napoleon was first dethroned (1814), was about 60,1)00,000, but under the Third Republic it has increas- ed by leap* and bound*, and it i* now Ll,-Ns,M,(H nearly twice as great a* tuai of England. It* annual taxation excluding local taxation is now, not count- ing resident foreigners, about 3 9s. 10.1. or at our Custom-house rate, $17 per head. Taxation in Germany is about Jt- 14*. Ud. , or $13. 5J per head. The debt of Germany, mg the Imperial debt to those of the separate State* after deducting some cash in hand from the French war indemnity- is about 520,000,000. Thus the 50 millions of Germany do not owe one-half what the 37 millions of Frenchmen do. Therefore if they borrowed annually the enormous sum of 250,000,000 to wage a life-and-ileath struggle it would be three years before their debt equalled that of France. But if France borrowed at tbe same rate her debt by that time would amount to 2,038 million* sterling, almost three time* that of England. These fact* tend to frighten French finan- ciers, and lead them to advice against tak- ing the fatal plunge. But, in atluuiou the following fact* must influence the military authorities. Long range* aud rapid drum, backed by th* modern system of earth- works, operate in favour of those who are on tbedefensive and against those who attack. Th* latter must move aero** the open ; and the odd* will be against those who assume the offensive, and in favor of those behind earthwork* on the defen- sive. The German French frontier i* comparatively of small extent, and to a great extent mountainous, and therefore easily defensible. Consequently, if on that side the German" stand up >n the defensive, they wonld compel the French to attack at a great disadvan- tage; and it i* certain that thus 30 mil- lions of Germans, aided on the Italian frontier by their 30 millions of Italian allies, could keep at bay the 37 million* of French. This would leavs the sol- diers furnished by 20 millions of Ger- mans to aid Austria against Kussla if the latter joined in tho fray, French military authorities are well aware that in Issrt the army sent into the field by less than twenty millions of Prussians vanquished Austria and her South Ger- man snd Hanoverian allies. Now that the military arrangement* of Germany are 10 greatly improved, it is certain that, liter providing for tbe French fron- tier, it could sent against Kuma one- third more than Prussia put into the field in 1X66. Councils of war pondering before hand un all the possibilities of the contest muat take all these contingencies into consideration : and the result would show them that if Germany waged a defensive war ou her western frontier, and an oilen- sive one oo her eastern, France would tail to itibjugi' .e her foe. The leaders of the He- pub' ...an party would slso have to consider tl at if afler the loss ol l>.imlr.-<! of thous- ands of live*, and their enormous national deht being itouL'leil, the War should end iu leaviug the frontier* as they are now. Frenchmen would discover that the Third Republic like the t irst and Second was a failure, acd would again acquiesce I in some popular soldier seizing the helm. ' The foregoing fuels all make for ueacn ; 'ml unfortunitely there ha* liven no great Frenchman with eullicicnt moral courage to put the unvarnished fact* Lfoiu bis fellow-country men. The only real danger, as was poiuted out in tbe Mali of t'elmr.iry '.'4, arise* from the possible assiuainat ion of th* Czar ; which mi^ht m.lucc the then Kutsian rulers to imitate the French rov olntionist* iu 1792, and commence a great war in order to divert attculion from home affairs. But the Kmpci\>r leclrde* himself so carefully in his fortress palace of Gala- chins, and such wonderful pains are taken to guard iuin, that such a t;reat calamity will probably be averted, at any rate tor a long 'inn- to come. \V heu the nations of Kurope arc convinced that there will be uo war, there will be a rapid recovery in their business world, which will favourably atlect us on this side. FIIK Bl t< kll > r MDI t >* rtrtmrr Wrttlmg this iBtereMlne; ace -Blew Their Meeerds are sn-pt. A paper which excited much interest at the last meeting of the Canadian Institute) in Toronto was read by Mr. Me Dougall, (he secretary. It wa* on the manner in which tbe Blackfeet Indian* kept a record of their events and legends, and waa writ- ten by Rev. Dr. Mac Lean, of Port Arthur. He said that the native* of the American continent preserved their legends amljtradi- tions through the agency of men who kept an accurate remembrance of them, with important historical event*, by mean* of wampum records. A more permanent form, however, was needed for the record- ing of events.and conveying them to others, which originated and developed theiystera of picture- writing. Various kind* of this were referred to. Etchings made upon rocks and trees, pictures painted on the lodges, birch bark, and bnffalo robes, re- tained tbe knowledge of event* for future generations. The totem-pouts and grave- poets, of various tribes, are a kind ot picture- writing. From tbe most primitive form of writing has this system developed in the rough outline, or lull picture, rudely drawn through A SYMBOLIC STAGE until the perfect stage of writing waa pro- duced. Various instances of symbolic writing were given, and method* described. One was to place the animal which repre- sents the name upon the pictograph. Thi* was shown iu the Selkirk Treaty, where the chiefs signed their names by drawing animals representing them, which were placed opposite the tract* oi land whicb they claimed. A copy of this treaty was presented. The writer then gave a de- scription of a number of pictograpn*, and their signification. Rock inscriptions are abundant in the localities frequented by the Indians scattered over the northern part of the continent. Many of them, ho we er, are in secluded places and not easily discover- ed by travellers. Ou a rock on the northern shore of Lake Superior, bet wen Silver Islet and Nepigon, and upon the Nepigon river, are pictograghs *o accurately drawn that Indians from the far north have been known I to interpret their meaning. Upon the , Missouri river, near Cow Island, and about I thirty miles south of Barton, there are figures of lodges, men fighting, and similar picture* U(.on the face of Till HKIH CLIFFS, and so great i* their elevation that tbe rn- | dians say they are the work of the spirit. | When the South Piejan Indians visited I these rocks they used them as moile!s, when | they returned home, drawing figures on robes similar to those they had seen. In- dians and while men have repeatedly told I the writer of the wonderful Writing Stones iu the Milk river, about forty mile* from Lethbridge, and near the West Butt*, where the mounted police have a post. These stone* are covered with figure*, -some of which the In lians say were written by the spirits, but the better interpretation given by many of the In lians i* that war- parties of the Bloods and Piegans, passing to and fro, were in the habit of writing upon these rock, slating the number of i men and horses that wre in the camps of their ei>3iir.ea. T'ia Blackfoot system ot pictography was used by the Indiana on the outside of their lodges. Figure! were ' painted in different colon, which were I a record of the exploit* of the master of the lodi{e. Some of tbe Indian* could draw | pictures of aniintU upon paper very well. llnoling and war scenes on paper and leather were ajiio we'l executed. Photo- graphs were exhibited, giving speci- men* of tne native pictography drawn by one of the Blood Indians. A short time ago Mr. M.icLnau procured fora friend in Kngl.md the hide of a steer having the autobiography ol oue of the Biackf^et upon it This is the Life of Mvny Snot*. The ! writer produced a photogi-aph and the translation of this native autobiography. "Many Snots" is the hero of many adven- tu'es, and the whole constitutes a native on leather worthy of preservation. I For every evil there i* a remedy, or then ! is not; if there i* oue I try to find it; and if I there is not, I never mind it. A Lucky Player. Two travellers in the expres from Paris to Nice get into conversation. "t!oin( to Nice?" "Yes." "Also to Monte Carle?" " Oh, ye* I I go there every year. " " You play there occasionally, no doubt ?" "Certainly; onoo in the morning and once iu the evening twice a. day regular- 'y-" "And you lose BOW and then t" " Never." "How i* that possible? Do you mind telling me how you manage it ?" "That is very simple ; I play the violin." [L* Figaro. The resident* of Frankfort-on-the-Main are so superstitions regarding the number thirteen, that no house on any of it* streets bears that number. Un J. W. Uuktman St. (Jeorge, New Uruiuwlck. After the Grip No Strength, No Ambition Hood'* Sarsaparllla Cave Perfect Health. Tho following letter la from a well-known merchant tailor of St. George, N. B.: " C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell. Mass. : "Gentlemen I am glad w sy that ITood'l RarsapurilU ami Hood's Pills have done me a great deal of good. I had a severe attack of the trip In the winter, and after getting over the fever I did not seem to gather utieugUi, and had no ambition, lloi irllln ;:<\e<ltol<e JiiHt what 1 peeili-d. 'I'h-.i revilu were very satisfactory, and I i >-mi'-mi HIM iiicilielne to all wuoareaBUctC'l nltli rheumatism or other Hood'sis>Cures afflictions caused by po!*on and poor blootl. always keep Hood's Sarsaparllla In my and use It when I need a tonic. Wn al Mood'* l-illM on hand ami think hltilily vi( J. W. DYKBMAH, 81 George. New Bruns Hood's Pill* are purely vegetable, ami <!o not purg", i>ilu or gripe. Sold bjf alt <

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