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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 14 Dec 1882, p. 6

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 jgHifrif*i!«S*!!v«'«'***-' .:.i!?:«r«si»#.^ J***.®**-*- y^'tr" i-" ^•*ifc.«» .*^^f LUfiHsaif**. -i"' I! ,r Her Majesty and the Troops. DistrlbQtion iof EZSYPtiu Medals Windsor Castleâ€" Speecli by tUe Qaeen. at striking Seeaes Within tbc Tamoas Qnnd- rsBSlcl A broad gleam of â- wintry sunshine floodeii all parts of t'.ie quadrangle in the upper ward cf Windsor castle, except that side on which are the Queen'i private apartments, so that the tent or porch-iike pavilion, erected in the south east correr, just below the pro- jectin; window of her Majesty's breakfast- room was left in cold shadow throughout the impressive and memorable ceremony, which lasted from half-past twelve o'clock till twenty nduates past one on the 21st ult., says trie London Ti 'r-jraji'i. Some little time htiorc the l:our of noon had sounded the spacious encloiuie began tofill witli a gradu- ally increasing throng, threc-fonrf'S of whom at least were iu uniform. This part of the castle pertains to the site added by E Iward ill., ani it is surrouude;! by the rooms, whether of .State or of private habitation, occupied by royalty. Sir Jeffrey Wyatt- ville's handiwork, wiuch has altered so much of Win Isor cattle, not even excluding its ancient keep, is seen nobly in the /l-.\.-il-r.i.7]Ur AKniITECTCRE OF THE yCAU- KA^'OLE. the -worthy knight having rcmod' lied this together with the -whole exterior of the buildings in thp Upper Ward, raising them a storey higher, and bringing them into a palatial uuiiurndty of character. Though not open to the public the (quadrangle may be very -well seen from the pa-sage at the west- ern eiul, behind the equestrian statue of Charles il. This mediocre piece of sculpt- ure was presented to tiie sovereign whom it commemorates by Toby Rustate, a page of the back stairs, who is described hy Evelyn as "'a very simple, ignorant, but honest and ioyal creatu-e," and who gave a thousand pounds for the work to Josias Ibach Stada. "Tlij man and horse," says W'alpole, " may servo f r a sign to draw the passenger's eye to the. pedestii." This, indeed, is an ex quisite piece of floial carving, by the famous (iriiiling (j-ibbons. On the north tide of the ([uadrdngle is the Sta'e entrance, with its l.oUily projecting carriage-porch, beneath wliicli, till callcil upon to join in yesterday's core;::ony, stood the native oilicers, non- comnii-sioned olHecrs, and men of the Indi- an contingent. The guard chamber is ovtr this purcico, and at I'ne wind iws were gath- 1 rcl nia-tiy spectat-irs of the scene. It was on this side of the ground that all spectators admitic 1 b. card were stationed on the 1to^i1-:1 igj;ed footway. Opposite, on the Puiiih ,-i"i;. near iieorge IV"s 'gatcwiy, wli ch, flanked on cither hauil by the York IV. Liii'usLer towciS, commands a full view of t'lc Loi'g \\ alk from end to end, Merc placed tiie irin!s o; the Househohl 'Drigadi;---, the cavalry being dismounted. Across :h â-  L;! !i aid, ifwiii north to south, a I'uard (/f hii,;i)-. t: ji:i;i(jsi il of three comp n- ies uf t .(.' -t ljitLa--,oii Coldsticajn Guar is, 'jo)ii:neu 1 of Lieutenant-Colonel 1; 'ipttin F. 'rteseue and Liouten- M;.!e:-, .-.ti o 1 ia open oriler, hav- :uU r the '.eitio. v.- -.It S,r II. 'J h:in 1 oji t!ie:r rij-lit .U'ation; tor the ceieinony which -waa Vr s( o-.i ti) c inie «oro thits far complete win yet the greati r number of those who were to ;ake j'ri.inuent part ill it were in tho midst " thj.r j 'oriR-v' from town. The h if-past i;'n tKi ii w,;s ' ivideil iiit two pai ts, one t);-il;n:iry and the other special. This last eo.nvv-ye.l the Dui^e nd U.iclicss of Con- na;iL;l'.t, Sir Oariiet Wols ley, and about eighty or niutty liicerB, whose assembly on the main dowa-platform had been watclied witli keen i .terest by a crowd of ladies and gentli-nieii a Imitt d within the birriers, and liy a r.uich larger gathering who looked on from y raere removed situation. Aiiicng'.iit .up; h:i i;i;ai'1i.y uhcog.mzai^le OFrioEus liargid •.â- â- icc:i.;g=: •"" .â- lin^'-..' lijforc mt ;iia.; t \: -\ c, wiio v.as ;:.. ;iud eiiattcl m tr.iin wfio Sir i-.Muied bv I'.is tii'ii' Liur-'s '/.'ill:-:, Miep'it i'-Min, Sir i' !- 'iidey. Si;- i-le,-iyii W Do 1, and Sir vstai;--. M/Xe 1 .\diiirals Sir Au- bsl^i::-- Sir 'W' li\cll, aui Sir Siil'iv '.; I '..iiiLui'i ];-iV.-sjn, U. X., itai.i ii'Auy Irvii.c. li. A" A figure ir :!.' wi;o attraetc'L ir.ujli no'ice. â- J i.irriioned inul.rhipin:-i'.i, iSlr. De -r.iiei !;:gi ai;ii auxit t:es in c â- ' ii .11 trace j of baneful cifc'et o .ij.i. Tiie ^peeia' train, liavin. vViiuls -.1 M • ll. :i t iL o " '.;. t !:X' ditii.Il to t'i- .! -.vn of th: I.:-iM 1 '.;ni t-uaby. mide ;i lapid rr.n to • nv..\ t!.o '-.rilli-.n' company of tra- -.1 :i' :;^i;t;iij; ic.ind a large crowd as- ';•â-  .t,:tinn yard to greet tlieirar- j" uA.as gaily decorated, and ?-,t:isiiine looked as :-nii'iagly as Hi ti;-.' eventful o.-'ca^ions v."liich l:oui 1 ' i,ne enliven tl'.c Royal borough. Ad- 1 b:i^-htne-3 of colo- h;i I been givm Mi-^ete by the -nany uniforms bro'ught -.e eailier tr -ins and tlie popularity Ulues, the 2ad Life (iuards, and thj Hrigitle of I'O'jt t-i-aarvli, va^ agreeably dc- ntousirated by the welcome « hich was every: v.-he: c aeeordcd to tho men as they pass' d t!irou:;h tho crowded thoroughfares. Even more entuur.iastie, perhaps, because the oe- i-asion w^.s iesj familiai-, were the cheers that lireko farfch as the sqr.aus of lilluc-jiiekets marched r.p the hill. About eleven o'clock the Duke and Duchess of Albany, who had tr.ivelled en the South- Western lin •, entered \Vind.-e,r, and were louilly cheered as they drove in an open carriage to the castle fol- lowcil by te.c Duke and Duchess cf Teck. ir.in-.eiliately after came t'ae Indian C yntin- :;cat. in private oninibuees and carriages. Tiie Duke of Albany wore his full uniform of Colonel of the Seaforth Highlanders while the Du'se of Teck vras in tiie uniform of the 1st Surrey Volunteer. Half-past twelve had c'aimed when the Royal Pavilion began to fii! "^ith the Princes and Princesses of the Roj-^^l family and their several suites, her iNIajesty soon afterwards appearing in front, -with the Prince and Princess of Wales on her left hand. iMr. Childers, Secretary of State for War the Earl of Northbrook, First Lord of the Ad- miralty and the Marquis of Hartington, Secretary of State for the Indian Depart- ment, stood on the right hand of the dias, and bowed low as the Queen approached. HER MAJESTY, who looked remarkably -well, wore over a black dress, which, besides the orders and decorations, -was ornamented -with a bow of white ribbon, a long black velvet mantle. triaitncd witH fur. In the pavilion, besides the Prince and Princess of Wples, were the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, the Duke of Albany, Princess Beatrice, the Dnke of Cam- bridge, the Dnke and Duchess of Connaught, the Grand D;.ke Louis of Hesse, and Princa and Princess Christian. The suite in attend- ance included General Sir H. F. Pontonby, the Dowager Duchess of Roxburghe, the Dowager Marchioness of Ely, Major-General Du Piat, Sir John Cowell. Captain Bigge, Colonel Sir .J. C. McNeill, Colonel Ellis, Col- onel Gordon, Major Egerton, General Sir Dighton Probyn, and the Hon. A. "i orke. As the Queen came forward, the guard cf honor, having advanced nearer tL wards the dais, saluted, and the band played "God Save the Queen." UER MAJESTY THEN' ADDRE.-dED TUE TROOI'a in a voice so clearly audible and so perfectly modulated that' son.e of the words were h'.a d en tiie oppo.dte side of the groun l, and in particular tue sentence, "lam proud of my Soldiers and sailors," fell on the listening cars o: some who could not have expected, at so great a distance, to distinguish a single syllable of tt.eRcyal address, which was as follows â€" "I have summoned you here to- day to confer upon you the well-earned medals commemorative of the short and bril- liant, although arduoits, campaign, in which all have done their duty well and with cour- ageous and I nceasing devotion. Tell your comrades that I thank them heartily for the gallant services they have rendered to their Queen and country, and that I am proud of my soldiers and sailors, who have added fresh glories to the victories won by their prdcces- scra." The th ee lines of ofBcors and men retired at the close of this gracious and earnest ad- dress and wheeling to the right, and 1- av- ing her Alajest facing only the commander of the expeditionary force, they stood in or- der to 6li befors the pavilion, the band of the 24d Life Guards playing "See the Con- quering Hero Comes," as an appropriate prc- luiie to the ceremony. Handel's march of honor was still resoundi g through the wide space, and bearing to many hearers beyond its boundary a signal of the chief incident, -when the first medal of the day was pinned to the breast of SIB GARNET WOL.-^£LEY, adding fresh lustre to a long row of similar honors. A moment or two afterwards came Vice- Admiral Sir W. Dowell, leading the Bluejackets. Otlidr naval officers at the head of the X'^aval Brigade -were; Admiral Sir Francis Sullivan, Admiral Sir A. Hoa- kics, Capt. Rawson, Capt. D'Arcy Irvine, and Mr. de Chair. The Marines brought up the naval division, v.diose members were in- troluced severally by Admiral Hoskings, wdale Lord Northbrooit handed the medals. Some of these her Majesty pinned on the breasts of the recipients, this process being relieveif of its former tedious difficulty by an ingenious though simple appliance which quickly attiches the ribbon to the cloth. But only in the case of tho=c who have re- ceived the clasp for Tel-el-Kebir did. fhe Queen affix the meJal. .Some five or,8ix to one took it dmply from her Majesty's han i â€" this beiug a great, though not the great- est onor â€" and afterwards attached it on their breasts. THE DECORATION, which is suspended by a ribbon striped ver- tically -with alternate wtiite and blue, bears her iNIajesty's profile in frosted silver, with the folds of a veil drooping from a diadem over the back of the head. On the obverse of the medal is a sphinx, the emblem of Egypt. \\ hen she small contingent of the X^aval Brigade had gone by, and the turn of the army had come, Mr. Childers was the introducer, wliile Sir Garnet Wolseley took up the task of handing the mcd44s to .her iMiijesty from a small table in fr6nt of the' dais. Sir John Adye was first to present himself; and \vheu the Queen had afxed t'le nv3dal, the Prince of Wales, who wore the uaiform of a general with the blue rib- bon cf the Garter, heartily shook hinds v.-ith the distinguished chief of tho staff. This act, accompanisd with fitting congrat- ulations, Ids Ro al Highness repeated in s'jveral cases during the ceremony. Generals Willis and. Sir E. Hainley, co'nmandera of the First cud Second Divi.sion of Infantry in Iv-'ypM folioM-cd Sir John Adye. Then caa'.e tb.c Dake if Connaugiit and when lit; hid sc-'pped up to the dais, and had sal- ute' his Royal me.thcr in military form, the Q;;een, 'a p: lear.ed f. rw: -iniag rd ani. iic medal to his breast. ;ly KISSED lu:,!. been a proud a;i\l and as a tender eiously formal in AIFE-, tioxat; Thj raonient mu^t a happy 0110 on either part epi.^oile in a ceremony graciously loima its general chirretcr, the action had ;â- . deep interc-itfjr all beholders. Th.e Dake of (iair.inuuht was folioived by three heroes f the ';etoria, Cross, iMajor-Gensrjl Mac- phersiiU, Major-(ieneral Sir Evelyn Wood, and Sir John Carstairs McNeill, the last namcil of whom, like tho Duke of Tcek, who followed afe-w niniut?s later, had the lion- our of kissing hands with the Queen. The suoccedirg group of ofiicersincludcd Colonel Butler, Sir Oriel Tanner â€" who wore the green tunic and led pantaloons of the Be- h)0ch.cs- M jorFit2Georgo,and Colonel Tul- ioch. This ofiicer will he remembered as having performed the gallant act of swim- ming ashore with the party at Alexandria to spike the guns, and is the only m.an in tho army with he clasps both for bombardment and for tho b.itde of Tel-cl-l\iebir. TTIE iNilAN CONTIXOENT. ad remained under tho porch of the cnt:-ance till the ceremony had begun, i;o had DOW joined the body came last! led by Colonel Pennington and Cip' t in M'Bay. Each of the Orientals, whose appearance on this memorable scone confirm- ed the favourable opinion of their soldierly bearing, was in turn presented by the iMai-- qais of Hartingtcn and her Majesty fast- ened on the medal in every case' touchincr the hilt of each native officer's sword before the salute was given. The order in which the Indian wariors came forward to receive from the Empress of India the reward of their loyal services were as follows f nd Bengal Lancers, 7th Bengal Infantry' 10th Punjaub, and 29th Belooches. It was noticed as a concluding Licideat of the d^y's inter- esting ceremony, that the first ofifieer of the Indian Contingent came forward to receive his medal as the first gun of the Royal sal- ute was tired. At the close of the distribu- tion to the British troops Baion tqu Hage- nan, the Prussian military attache to the expedi:iODary fores, had the honour of an introduction to the Queec, and was decorat- who 1. State but vr be in, -I M, of ed with the medal. With t^e «)ncln8 on the interesting ceremony, her ^^i^^' with the Royal Princes and Princesses, re. ri^dfrom^^e Quadrangle, the band agajn playing the National Anthem, and ever} one saluting The Pestered Man of Earth. As if the actual suffering of mankind from the various diseases common to the lot of all was not sufficient, the Hahnemannuin Month- hi of Philadelphia, enumerates the follow- ing possible cause for many mysterious com-- plaints which baffle the skill of the most ex- perienced physicians to cure, and enough in number to frighten a well person into a ner- voiis fever CommenciDi; at the mouth, the virulence of human saliva seems to have been proved. It is supposed to be due to micrococci. The human mouth is a culture chamber, wdiich is maintained at a constant temperature, and is furnished with a con- stant sjpply of pabulum, namely, saliva. These circumstances are highly favorable to the sustenance and multiplication of the mi- croccus. U, now, it is asKcd why every man does not suffer from auto-moculatiou, it may be answered that micrococci may kill an herbivorous animal, a rabbit, for instance but cannot destroy a carnivorous or omniv- orous animal as man. (See Philavielphia J/erf/c-a^ T/mf. 5 September 9, V8S2.) Most earnestly do we urge vegeterians to take timely warning But what is to become of the genus /iomo, anyhow? Vibriones tickle his nose into hay fever, the Bacillus typhosu gnaws at his bowels, the microcccus diph- theria swells up histhroator clogs his larynx with fatal croup, sarcina; invade his stomach and micrococcus envenom his saliva. If he eats a bunch of grapes, he must needs crunch the parasitic sae.^haromyces adhering to the skins; and if he inadvertently exposes the contents of his pantry to the open air, a blue green mould from the •Penicillium glau- cum spreads itself over the b st preserves bubbles line the glass jars, and wrigglng organisms and motionless forms looking like beads on a string, sour his milk. The greed of the yeast plaut for oxygen is the cause of the raising of his bread, and the same crav- ing on the part of the Mycoderma vini, sup- plies him v.dth wine. But if he docs not carefully watcH these results of fermentation mould gathers on one, and the other falls a victim to the spores of the viscous ferment and becomes thick, ropy, and unpalat- able. If he indulges in pork, trichinaj nestle cosily in his tissues, or the Cysticercus ccl- lulosus develops into twenty feet of taniato the discomfort of his alimentary canal. In infancy and childhood, thread worms and lunibricoides disturb his sleep and torture him with colicky pains. Disease germs ex- pose him to whooping cough and mumps, and threaten him with a long line of exanthemata and when, the gauntlet run, ho comes into youth, that fell destroyer consumption, fed, if Kock is to be believed, by bacilli, leaves him but six out of seven oliauces of ever reaching the period of ma- turity. If, by good fortune, he escapes this dan- ger, others meet him at every step. Through the parsimony and dishonesty of city offi- cials, streets are filthy and se-wers are im- perfect. If he flies to the country, perchance a dry summer and an open winter permit the generation of miasmata. And even it he seeks the salubrious atmosphere of a sea resort, defective sanitation poisons his bed- room or permits the discharges from a drain to empty a few yainls from his bath- ing place. A .d finally, when he falls a victim to dis- ease fungi, or, happily escaping them, dies of good old age, his mortal remains ar3 no sooner consigned to the grave than a host of maggots and kindred scavengers complete the work of devastacion, and thus does tha man of earth become converted into the numerous bodies of his numeroas destroy- ers. Tnc Komc o^'bur Chiidheod. Docs anybody know what h^. become of the jolly ol i fashioned times that used to be- long to our lives? They are missing, and we cannot find them. The davys when tho mention of Thank^giving mejuit joy, and i.ladness, and reunion, and maifry fea.stin ' w-henrdl the metnbflW of the fami^;:»^se;ii- blcd arouufi- the pleasant board, and ttie great fir^'liuVued cheerfully in the great ,fir«i; place. How the brightly nolished brass" andiroi^ caugiit fhe ruddy rKactions of the blaz3 aad danced around Jiks-cgold fairiqa. Docs ahybo'ly remembei: such a^ fireplace The he»rth was of fredi^^-jjaiated rad-britlr, and tliema itel wa"-; higlt beyond the reach of the children. The brass candlestick's turned up. in a row, and the almanac hun^' atonednd. The shoviel and tongs had thei-.- separate corner, and there was a cran3 in the back of the fire-place, where the tea- kettle used scmetimes to sing like a nio-fit- ingale. Whey are they gone There was a pantry, too (hava you seen it ?) with a smell of cheese, mince pie, dough nuts, and a tempting display of jars tied up with white cloths. There was one not so tightly tied as the rest, and naugnty hands wouli reach after the peach preserves some- times. Anybody know where all those pan- tries have gone? There w-^ere two old rocking chairs â- Â« i:h cushions pieced up from scraps cf dresses. The paint was v/orn from the arms, and they tipped over if you rook- ed too far back, but we wish they could be found. There was a kitchen, too, It went away with all the rest. A sweet kitchen, where there was always a smell of good dinners, a spicy and aromatic odo' of garden herbs. No teajor cofiee has ever been fcHind since with such a delicious aroma. There are thousands of great residences, with every modern appliance for comfort, where they have state dinners with no end of pomp and show and style, where the china is costly and the epergnes are of cut glass and silver and the wines are costly. They are splendid, "hut somehow, to-d .y we want the old log house. There are echoes which come down from its smoky rafters, and they fall upon the heart with a mingled feeling of pleasure and pain. There are voices aid fotstsps, and laughter, and songs, and the patter of baby fest all min- gled in the echoes. Sounds that we shall never hear again save in the mystic hall of memory Reader, you know of such a house, and you can tell why the mention of holidays b^mgs a nameless longing to look once ftiore into the old empty rooms once so throngmg with life. fMXSSttrtO CMWSIP. Germany is to J^ive «25,000 for scientific exploration in Africa «»d other countries during the financial year 18»-4. This is the receipt for ag »te glass Ten parts of broken glass ar* melted, and to it Ire added 15 pfrt suboxideof chromium and olmanganese, .02 part each of oxide of co- balt and nitrate of silver, .01 of uranium, .4 red argols, and .3 part bone-aieal. Each oxide is added separately and at intervals of ten minutes. After heating the mixture for an hour .3 or .4 part ot hue Eoot is put in. R°cardin' the new ordnance which of late years has be°en introduced intoGreat Britain, a correspondent of Nature writes Jn the autumn of 1841 Sir H. Gough took the batteries of Chusan by a turning movement and thus spoiled the Chinese preparations. The fcrce captured a large number of guns, some very fine tronz3 ones, but there were also a good many smaller iron ones and as these were of no value they were ordered to be destrox ed. The Royal Artillery tried to burst these without sucoess at first, and only after sinking the muzzlesin the grouiid did they succeed. It was then ascertained that the reason of the extreme stre gth of this kind of gun arose from the strange manufac- ture. It had an nner tube ot wrought iron over wdiich the gun was cast, anticipatmg^by many years a somfewhat similar plan cf Pal- liser. ' Dr. C. W. Siemens believes that the pres- ent content between gas and electricity will end in the latter winning the day as ihe hght of luxury but that gas will nevertheless fini an increasing application for the more humble purpose of society. He strongly argues again the use of gas as the cheapest form of fuel for towhs, and of making a general supply of heating gas besides illum- inating gas, by collecting each into separate holder's widle the process of distillation is go- ing on. The result would, he says, be this: 1. Lighting gas would have a higher illum- inating power. 2. There would be no coal to distribute or ashes to collect over town. 3. The smoke nuisance would be abated. 4. There would be a large increase of those valuable by-productsâ€" tar, coke, amrnonia, c. â€" the annual value of which already ex- ceeds by nearly §15,000,000 that of the coal consumed in the gas-works. Some correspondence has occurred in La Nature with regard to a statement by de Bronardeli that a girl.wdio lately committed suicide by jumping from one of the towers of Notre Dame, had probably died from as- phyxia caused by the rapid fall. The critic- isms have thus been summarized M. Bon- temps points out that the deptb cf fall hav- ing been C'J metres, tnc velocity required in the time (less than four seconds) cannot have been so great as t'at sometimes attain- ed oa railways yet we never hear of the asphj'xiatiop of engine-drivers and stokers. He considered it desirable that the idea in question should be exploded, as unhappy persons may be led ro choose suicide by a fall from a height under a notion that they wdl die before reaching the ground. Again, M. Gossin mentions that a few years ago a man threw himself from the top of the Colurrn of July and fell on an awni g which sheltered workmen at the pedestal. He suffered only a lew contusions. M. Reny says he had seen an Englishman leap from a height of 31 metres into a deep river uninjured and he was shown, in 1852, in the Island of Oahu, by missionaries, a na ive who had fallen from a verified height of more than 200 metres, and his fall having been broken near the end by a growth of ferns and other plants, he had only a few wounds. When asked as to his sensation in falling, he said he only felt dazzled. NEWS FROSI THE ROCKIES. Gold I'ound in the Kicking Horse Pass â€" I rouble Bet-veen tbu Black- feet and Crcc Indiansâ€" Calgarry Boom- insr. Tho saw null at Ca^garry iias shut do'ivn for w;.nt of logs. It is expected that provisions will be scarce during the winter. The Sotith Piegan Indians are killing cat- tle in the vicinity of the Marias. Pinclier Creek is much iuconvoiiienced by tlie lack of a regular mail service and p'.-cip:r means for distributing at tliit point. The Wood-Turner ranche on Willovr Creek has been fenced with wire, and is now (p.tite a respectable piece of prop- erty. Sergt.-MajorT. Liko, ofdliels. W. M. P. Calgarry. arrived with Mr. W'illiams. He is on his way to Canada to recruit men for the police. A. P. Patriek sent thirty one head cf horses up to his ranche on tue Bow River • one of the h irses was either lost or stolfen from the band. The snow is very deep still between High river and Calgarry, and probably will *-nain all winter. Travelling is good from High river to Macleod. Joseph McFar'aad has about finished his threshing. He has 2,000 bu hels of grain, of which 2.30 bushels is wheat. The number of acres sown was about eighty. Calgarry is reported as bocniing. New houses spring up constantly. A man goes to bed at night and wh;- he gets up in the morning, lo, a ifansion, the creation of a night, stares hiin in the face. It is reported that rich gold and silver bearing quartz has been struck in the KicHi- ing-Horse pass, in the Selkirk rano-e Specimens have assayed §90 to The ton. Great excitement prevails at Koote- nai. The Blackteet Indians at the CrosnnT have been set afoot by the Crees. The thieves dropped all the poor horses at the Pile of Stones (not bones). The Blaokfeet intended to start on the trail of the Crees. and make a raid on their horses, as soon as Crowfoot returned from Macleod. The polke ball at Calgarry waa a grand success. The wealth, beauty and fiShion of the place were there. The barrack-rcom was handsomely decorated, onela particular being a motto formed of polished Winchester cartridges. Another pretty and appropriate one was a seven-pound gun with the union th" th °°° "' *^^ ^*^^ ^°' ""P^^ ' KENDAlCs^ RAVIN CUBE iOffl] KENDALL'S SPAVlJi The most successful ever discovered, as it is certain and does not blister. Wz^a Pj, " Kendall's Spavin Hamilton, iMo.. .];.._,' B. J. Kendall A- Co..â€" (;f,.,| to certify that I have used Kea^'^J Cure, and have fouud it toLet^f recommended to be and iu ;j„' I have removed by usii:;^' the abr" Bone Spavins, Ring-bone, Siiiiri^l cheerfully testify and recoiDme'-j'l the best thing for anvl^ony saij;,"' ever used, and have trit'cl ma-" made that my study for yeirs. "" Respcetfdl]yycn-| CoS- T. L. FosJ YOUNGSTOWX, Oli.u.Mar-: Dr. B. -T. Kendall d- Co.. {\(.^.. very valuable Harabletoniau cultii^ very highly, he had a Luge 'cone; one joint and a small one un theoij made him very 1 ime; I had l-icj ch;rge of two veterinary sur^consi- ed to cfire him. I was one day i advertisement of Kendall's Sp, the Chicago Exprc.-^.-;. I Jetei'in-^;t:| to try it, and got our drugi^isti;;.! for it, they ordered three bottle^; ij all and thousht I would Kiveiti tr,' ll, I used it according to directiocJ f^ arth day the colt ceased to be ji the lumps have disapiieared. Iji, bottle and the colt's limbs are a- s lumps and as smooth as anvh;; state. He is entirely cart-d. Tbe so remarkable that I let two of .mvE have the remaining two botties wis] using it. Yerv res})ectfullv L. T. ra^ Kendall's Spavin WiNGHAM, Out. .Jan. 11, Dk. B, J, Kendall t Co.. Geni;- to certify that I have used Kf-nda'J:| Cure, bought from C. E William-,! Wingham, Ont,, and do uidiom i pronounce it to be an iavyLiablesJ the cure of Spavins, Kin;Aone oiJ used it on a bone spavin of soTtrJ growth which it com(.)letely rtmvi can safely say it will remove aivf Curb or Ringbone it properly u;ei also recommended friends tou?eit.i done so with perfect sucecs-. IfuM this public, and will answer air.- i,-~.-:f letters sent me. Yours GEOEOEELII Kendall's Spavin 'ON hi^?ia;\ fleh. West ENOsBUEcn, Yt.. lA.li. Dr. B. J. Keni'.ill it Co., deat':- months ago I injured uiy kueejoi caused an enlargement to f,'io^ 'JM a walnut and caused mo very sturej the time for four or five week^.^be:" to use Kendall's Spavin Cure â-  â- 'â- 'i^- satisfactory results. It hn~; ir.t-rt-.M ed the enlargement and ^L,lâ- ll 1 and pain. I have lon^; kunwu lent for hor.«es bui no-.v I Kii^r.v best liuiment for Jiuiuan :!-;: â- '--â- 'I (quaint cu with. Yoiir= iri'.lv. T. I' LA'"d.I U 0. S-r. John, Dr.. ' J. Kendall ec u.sed your Spavin C-oje v spavin.-, curbs and 'iiliiv a good riinedy for riiigb cuts, g.Tll and till I'linds dil'iicuities about the hor: fpraiued his nnlde vi-iy o .. Kondair.s Spir. iu Cure ao'l 1 :• thing v.'ork dko it, he wa.-. v, .il: I know it to be good for n; '• -- I procured one of your T;- 'ii ' by mail for '2."ct.=. p.iid I i â- '• means cf Srtvinc; me Jli' "^i ' I treated at'eortlin.L; to the iiu'^^ your book for displaced i-iide. Yours trup-, V.'ji.J. Send address for Illu;-ti:'.tedl we think gives positive ve.i| No remedy has ever met with' ed succe.-^s to our kno'.\;lv..l.ee, i' as man. Price §1 per bottle, cr .d;. All druggists have it o or it will be sent to any price by the proprietors. Co,, Enosburgli Full 1 Itlu ^- l)::eO: if i!-' ll c;i:i 1 D,; Vt. fi.J. Sold by Drugsi-I â- â€¢v.M iBarmuri LYMAN, SONS el- CO. Wholesale Acents georgInoble INSURANCE AND LAND LICENSED AUCTIO-N'-^' For the County of "^.' Agent for the follo-wing reli;ililt-' "' â-  CITIZENS' of Montreal, AGRIOULTUKAL, ofVuicil"' TRADE coii^ri^r.cJ of Toronto. A number of Choice Farms fof Village Lots .^v Auction Sales coaductediuTo"'" tty on Shortest Notice. Charge^ Bills, Blank Notes, and Stamps pr" GEO. '0^^ ^^LxiJ^iJM,^,!.:-!^. ».-.it.^^'i'i3-!^*i'l^i„."' i-i!i;

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