In 1867 aubranch of this establishment was organized in this ciyt. Mr. F. Paul beoming resident member 01 the firm and manager of the estlbliehment, the business being carried on under the style of ly possible in warm cliirates the silk eulâ€" "e is necessarily conï¬ned in Europe to . .Jy, the south 01 France, and Spain. From :heso countries it is exported to England, the United States and now to Canada, u are ibis manufactured into threads and tartile fabrics. 1111862: the firm of Balding Brothers & " . COmmenced the madufaeture of sewing his and twist at Rmckville, Conn., where "hey have two mills, each 300 feet long and tour storeys high. They have also mills at Northampton, Mass, for the manufacture of silk fabrics and hosiery, with warehouses at: New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chica- go. Cincinnati and St. Louis. They rank wrong the largest houses, if they are not sutnally the largest house, in the silk manu- facture in the United States and their goods hear the highest reputation. manna, I‘AUL AND (14)., for the purpose of manufacturing sewing silks, threads, ribbons, and handkerchiefs. At this time the production was limited as the intention was so to speak “ to feel, the way,†the manufacture being from 50 to 100 pounds per week. From this, however, it hasI rapidly developed into what may be termed a nice business, now producing 1,000 Lbs. per week witlï¬a rapidly and con- stantly increasing demand for a more en- larged production. At the outset it was necessary to observe caution, owing to the fact that the fashions change rapidly and it was undesirable to have manufactured stock on hand. No apprehension is now felt on this account, inasmuch as the demand ex‘ ceeds the supply. At ï¬rst it was impossi- ble to procure skilled labor here, and it was found necesmry to import it from the mil 5 at llrockville, Conn, but, one by one these gradually returned to the States, and now tm operatives, with the exception of the fozeman, cousist of those engaged and train- ed here. These consist of representatives of all nationalities, butflprincipaly of French- Canadians, who are found to be very quick, docile and excellent operatives. THE BUILDINGS xow 1): USE are two in number. ï¬ne of these, built of ‘(3 p unds of mulberry leaves are food sulliei< mt for the production of one pound of co- mons, and each mulberry tree yields about "Oil poun‘ls of leaves. l‘he Chinese were the ï¬rst who under- alood how to rear silkworms, unravel the threads spun by them, and manufacture the k thus obtained into articles of dress and ornament. Silk appears to have been worn by the Clnurse and Japanese from time im- memorialâ€"even 12,000 years ago, when our ancestors were naked savages. The silk- worm moth and the mulberry tree are in 'act both natives of China, whence both were brought to Europe during the sixth century in me reign of the Emperor Justinian. At first the culture of silk was conï¬ned to Greece, particularly to the reloponesus, where it spread so much that this part of Greece derived its modern name Morse, (Latin moms, a. mulberry) from that circum- >l2ancc. From (‘ureeee Tm: sun )IANUI’AI‘TI'ILIC mum/w km Szcily, haly. Spain and ï¬nally France. .33 the breedin of this valuable insect is "this is a dry room, the temperature of which is regulated, and which is well ven- tilated to purify the air from the noisome orhalations produced by the excrements the caterpillars and the decayed leaves. h are not unfrequently, unless ilue Lil'imillllolls are taken, fertile sources of ‘iiseases amongst the worms. In this room w1cker shelves are arranged at cox-l- venient distances, lined with paper, on which the worms are placed. The mul- mrry leaves presented to the caterpillars are chopped. Four meals a day as a regu- lar rule, and luneheons between, \\ hen the worms are particularly voracious, is the lib- eral allowance for their subsistence. The silk worms live in the larval state lrom six to eight weeks, during which period if moults or changes its skin four times, in- reasing its size and veracity with every . t, and when fully grown is about three aches in length. W hen about to spin, the silluvorms are provided with little bushes ' vroom, heath, or other flexible substance, :1 which they suspend themselves after spinning a few threads. By continually “listing their bellies theygraduallyenvelop in: itiaelves into a thick, silken \JVAL simricn umtoox, Specimens of these bushes laden with 30300112; appcand in the London Exhibition I" éSSl, like diminutive trees hearing golden rnit. The Silk i::elf i: u :ueci'etion of a pair of , which terminate in a prominent pore .A-innerct (111 the under lip of the cater- piilgl. The m0 line filaments are glued wgcthcr by another secretion from a small gland, so that the apparently single thread which iorms the cocoon is really double. m; :00 cocoons, when completed, are thrown 1:0 warm water, which dissolves tho glu- muus matter, causing the threads toadhere, 4 nd separate them. The end of the thread ‘ then found and placed upon a. reel, and ‘10 silk wound from oll‘the cocoon into what called a bank. The length of the silken . cad obtained from a silken cocoon is sometimes from 750 to 1,150 loot long, or of an average length of 300 yards. Twelve pounds 01 cocoons yield one pound of raw :Hk, from 2 U to 2.3L) cocoons going to the 31021.2“! weight. About 0.\E 073mm: or S[LK\\ an)!“ mus will produce one hundred pounds of cocoons; QUR SILK INDUSTRIES- they are FlZ‘LuUl, and in passing through the males to get at the mulberry leaves they :rce thenmelvcs from their shells. The worms speedily settln 0n the leaves and sprigs of mulberry, and are thus easiiy trau- iured to trays, and removal to a cooler room alled wove \‘v'nen 1m liltéhing pron-ms com- st sum: :1., .114; young caterpillars lkC' m ‘z‘ aitpmrunce 1:. pipe? perforated With hows. and cover-ed with mulberry Icavcs, :3 Spread over the lmslut in which ‘ m: Jlflkm'ixq illherwting 8.000111 t of H :0 and m :ilk manufacture in Canada 'L‘fl by the Mont-real [fa-aid: "' moth lays its eggs on inc lcaws ‘ ...‘m:;'rv tree upon wk 1} tin: cater- ‘ mmâ€. mw'i these caterpilla {mm the May “hich the 5111: 1.» manufac- mmw‘t. Tim L 7;; mm hatched m an‘ apart- )?an heth d" IV: the proper teml'wrrature by A Chicago maiden has embroidered the motto, “ W'alk in Love †on tarleton, done with 100 cotton, very ï¬ne. After she gets a. fellow she will embroider in a. comma after the “ \Valk in,†and then it will be super‘ ï¬ne. Nearly all the silk manufactured is for the Canadian market. the remainder being sent to Newfoundland, where there is an excellent market, considering the number of the population. The ï¬rm have had samples of their silk manufactures on exhibition at Toronto and St. John, where we understand they took high honorF. The distinguished Arctic explorer Sir George Nares thinks there is still hope that Lieutenant Greely may have reached Port Faulke late in the season. This ï¬rm manufactures here the same brands of sewing silks that have become so universally popular in the States, and if ladies see that Belding, Paul & Co’s. name is stamped in the end of the spool they may depend on getting an excellent article. The Montreal ï¬rms derives no little ad« vantage from its connection with the Ameri- can house referred to, from the fact that they can procure from them the newest and latest patterns and all desirable infor- mation, in addition to which they allow the American ï¬rm to test new appliances and when success attends them they avail them- selves of the others experience. The operatives employed average 300. The remuneration to these is $2 per week for green hands from the day of engagement, to 86 and $7 per week for more advanced ones. is the next adopted. In this there are three hundred colors, requiring a large stock and assortment ot dyes to be kept on hand. From the dye-house the silk is again taken to be spooled in the lengths ard sizesjrequir- ed. The dyer first boils the silk in soap and water, to free it from any remaining gum, and to give it a. more lustrous appearance. By the boiling prwess the silk, if pure, looses about '21 per cent. of its weight, so that :1 pound of silk will weigh about 1:! ounces. This is the reason that American silk is put up in 12 ounces to the pound. Sewing silk thread runs from 150 yards to 1,800 yards to the ounce, while silk for rib- bons, which is much ï¬ner, runs 2mm (3,000 yards to 10,000 yards per ounce. THE COLORED muss. The ribbon manufacture is one from which more is expected than that of hand- kerchiefs, plain goods in the latter article being only now made up. and also upon the character of the gmds to be woven, It is then taken to the stretch- ing machine, the patent for which is con- trolled by the ï¬rm, to remove the rough or knotty appearance which appears. It does not, as its name might imply, stretch the silk, it evens it out, removing the lumpy appearance, and imparting to it a uniform tension. It is made up into skeins prepara- tory to being dyed. This is done by recl‘ iug, each skein consisting of 350 yards. It is then put upon delicate scales, and its weight marked, after which it is ready for the dyer. It has now reached the condition of thrown silk and the process is complefed. The Having desnrihed the buildings, the n( xt and by far the most interesting is THE MANUFi "PURE. The raw silk is obtained from the New York llouse. 011 its arrival here the raw threads are sorted, an operation which re- quires a quick eye and proï¬ciency. This is none by the eye. All the threads of the same cocoon are not alike but vary consider- ably at times. It is then soaked in water at a temperature 0f11()° 1“. to soften the natural gum and facilitate the process of winding. This done, it is wound on bob- bins, an operation which though apparent- ly simple requires great care, owing to the tact that the silk thread is very ï¬ne. It is then doubled, that is two or more threads according to the purpose for which it is in- tcnded, are joined together. It is then put on the spinning ‘machine and spun, alter which it is twisted, which consists in doubl- ing and Spinning three of these threads, the twist being reversed to make the thread stronger The number of threads depends upon the / brick and iron. fronts on St. George street, being number 30. It is ~l5x75 feet, four storeys high, with basement. The base- ment is used as a. machine shop and store- room, the ground ilaor as rm ollice and sample room, the second floor as a. spinning room, and the fourth as 2). weaving room. The machinery is operated by steam power, which is obtained from the udjoinsng es- tablishment of Mesars. Rogers & King. The second building is located at St. Unh- ricl Locks, on tho south bank of the ln- chine Canal, adjacent to the Ma lee Bridge. It has a frontage on the canal of 100 feet, with a depth of 45 feet, is of brick and is four storeys high. It was formerly used as Tces’ chair factory, and has been altered and fitted up for its present purpose. THE I\[0'l'l\'li POWER. here is derived from the canal, the machinery being operated by a water wheel. Great inconvenience is experienced from having the works thus divioed up, and to obviate this the firm is now erecting a new building at the cnnal, running parallel with the one it now possesses there. This will be 160 feet long by 45 wide. four storeys high, with an entrance tower in the centre, in which will be placed closets, wash rooms, (to, &c., for the use of the operatives. Between the new and the old building there will be a clear soace serving as apassage 47 feet long. l‘lsch floor will be unobstructed from end to end so as to secure a perfect light, the floors above being supported by two rows of pil- lars which will Iorm an alley, on each side of which will be ranged the different ma chims. The ï¬rst floor will be devoted to spinning, the second to winding, the third to doubling, and the fourth to weav- ing. \Vhilo the building will by a. plain structure in so far as arpearance is concern- ed, it will be ï¬tted up with the latest and most approved appliancss. There will also be a. dye house on the canal front, separate from the mills. covering a. space of 2,200 Square feet. There will be two boilers, 5le feet, for supplying the necessary steam required in the operations. FISILNESS OI" THE RA“: SILK, DYEIXG I’ROC 004.-» o. Dr. W. B. Carpenter, the great physio- logist, in the Modem Review, says :â€"There is no need to go back now over the melan- choly story of the slanderous attacks which were made on the greatest interpreter of the “order of (organic) nature †who has ever stood between its author and man; but they ought to be remembered as a lesson to the theologians of the future. No one has now ventured to throw a stone at Darwin’s grave. since were any to do so it would bring upon him general condemnation. The revolution in public feeling of this country, which has been silently and almost insen- sibly going on, but of which his departure from among us has brought out the manifest- ation, has been a surprise no less to his friends than it must have been to his former opponents. The highest eulogies have been pronounced upon him from pulpits in which he was once reviled; and his life no less than his word has been held up as a model for imitation where his character as a man was formerly included in the deprecia- tion of his achie\ ements as a philosopher. . . Those who knew Charles Darwin most; inti- mately are unanimous in their appreciation of the unsurpassed nobility and beauty of his whole character. In him there was “no other side.†Not only was he the philoso- pher who has wrought a greater revolution in human thought within a quarter of a century than any man of our timeâ€"or, per- haps, of any timeâ€"and has given what is proving the death-blow to theological sys- tems,~which had been clinging yet more tenaciously to men’s shoulders because of the efforts made to throw them OHâ€"but as amun he exempliï¬ed in his own life that true 1v Jgion which is deeper, wider, loftier, than any theology. For this not only in-' spired him with the devotion to truth, which was the master passion of his great nature, but made him the most admirable husband, brother, and father, the kindest friend, neighbor, and master, the genuine lover not only of his fellow-man, but of every crea- tum, Gone Never to Retut n. (:ARDINER, ME.â€"Mr. Daniel Gray, a, prominent lumber merchant writes that; his wife had severe rheumatic pains'; so severe as to render her unable to sleep. Mom the ï¬rst application of the famous German Remedy, Sn. Jacobs (Ll, she experienced unspeakable relief, and in two hours the pain had entire- ly gone. He Was Such a. Fresh Young Man. “Aw, yas, Miss Eveline, you knew I cam-e to the sea shoah because, you knaw, I telt that I needed such a. Lwip, you knaw.†Then everybody snickered, and M v. D. wondered what was funny in a simple health report like that. “ Ah, indeed, Mr. Du Dee?" “Yas, Miss Eveline.†“ No doubt you will be beneï¬tted. Some people need salt air more than anything else.†THE INQUEH'. An inquest was held yesterday evening at the morgue, at which Coroner Duncan pre- sided. A number of persons were examin- ed, the majority of whom were employees of the G rand Trunk. The most important evidence was given by Edwin Till, David N. Black, and J. Thompson, driver of the enâ€" gine attached to the train. Till stated that he saw Johnson standing on top of the train as it was moving out of the station. Seeing that he did not appear to notice the bridge, he {and some fellow-employees shouted to him. {e was, however, warned too late; he was struck by the girder and knocked between the cars and killed almost immedi- ately. Other eye-witnesses were examined whose statements were similar to ’l‘ill’s. The Jury, after retiring, brought in the fol- lowing verdict :ï¬â€ That the said John Johnson came to his death by accident by being struck;by an overhead bridge at the Great Wastern Station, and that the jury ï¬nd that the said bridge was too low to al- low a man on a car to pass under. and that the bridge should be raised higher,†A KEYULTING Sl’Etf'l'Al‘LE was presented to the horriï¬ed bystanders who crowded around. The unfortunate man was almost completely out; in two, the two portions hanging together by shreds of flesh and clothing. The remains were taken up and removed to the morgue. The de- ceased was :1. mm Well up 1n years, and leavesa large tamin of children most of whom are grown up. He was during his whole lifetime a. railroad man, beginning life on English roads. For twenty-seven years he has been in the employ of the Grand Trunk Railway, and was also a 1rusted and painstaking employee. The shouts of some workmen who were standing on the platform aroused him, but; as he was just in the act of turning and mak- ing a stoop the girder of the bridge struck him on the side on the head. The force and auddennness of the blow knocked him off his feet and precipitated him between two of the care. He managed to cling to the coupling works for a. second or two, but somn he dropped underneath on the right track. Several wheels passed over his body in the region of the abdomen, severing it; almmt in two, and spattering the track in the vicinity with his blood. Death was instantaneous. When the train had passed A Grand Trunk Employee Instantly Killed at Toronto~A Most Horrible Spectacle. An accident of a, shocking nature recently occurred in the old Great \Vestei‘n Depot, at Lhofuot of Yongo street, Toronto, by which :1 Grand Trunk employee named John John- ston was instzmtly lzilledi A short time ago u. bridge was constructed inside the de- pot. about half way between the two ends and extending from one ylmtforrn to the other across the building. Underneath this structure the trains, when shunted into the depot, pass, leavmg not quite ï¬ve feet of standing room for brakcsmcu on the top of the trains. Johnston, who was employed as l‘lsplannde conductor for shunting trains, was standing on a car near the centre of a train which was moving out of the station. His back was turned toward the engine, and not thinking he would have to stoop so as to avoid striking the bridge he stood erect until SHOCKING ACOIDEN T. \VITIIIN A FEW P 1‘ OF THE DANGER‘ Testimony to Darwin. The baton used by Sir Michael Costa for years, and tipped with a coral efï¬gy of Gzri- baldi, together with the manuscript; scores of ï¬ve operas and {our ballets. has been given by him to the Naples College of Music. It is a. fact that Dr. Fowler‘s Extract of \Vild Strawberry has more well-earned bes- timonials of praise for its virtues in curing Cholera, Colic, Cholera lufamtum, Dyseu- tery, ebc‘, thhn all other remedies of that class combined. It will stand investiga- tion. (36) mam There is no remedy known to medical science that is more positive in its effect, to cure Cholera Morbus, Colic, Diarrhwa, Dy- sentery, Cholera. Infmtum, and all Bowel Complaints than Dr. Fowler’s Extract of Wild Strawberry. (35) “ I should not wonder, dear, it’s a grand remedy, and that pamphlet we received the other day stated that Dr. (,1 unn, of the United States Medical College, endorsed it. At all events the wonderful cures it is ac- complishing entitle it to he honorably noted among the great discoveries of the present century." However the facts above stated may be, the truth remains, that the germ theory of disease is the correct one and that the great; remedy mentioned is the only one which has ever been found that can put the system in acondition to kill these germs before they obtain a hold upon the body, and undermine the life. Canon Farrar has been a total abstainer from wine and spirits for six years, and John Bright has been for ten. True merit brings its own reward, in the case of Burdock Blood Bitters it is rapidly bringing its reward in its increasing sales; ass. prominent drugqist recently said, “it now sells on its merits.†It is the grand speciï¬c for diseases of Blood, Liver and Kid- neys. 25,000 bottles have been sold, during the last three months. (34) “John, say, John I does the encyclopedia. advertise Warner’s Safe Cure ‘2" When the circulation is bounding, the nerves elastic and the system all aqlow with life and energy. the germs seem to develop poorly, if at a!l But with weakened nerves, poor digestion or malassimilation of food or a lowering of vitality from any cause, a change ensues, and in this im- poverished and weakened fluid the germ ï¬ndsa genial home and develops until symp- qoms of disease are distinctly manifested. This is seen in the everyday experience of all. The healthy man resists the influences around him and does not take cold, whila those whose systems have become weak from any cause readily contract colds. This is on the same principle as the germ tlieriry. The germs attack any weakened spot in the body, and fixing themselves upon it, begin their propagation. It is plain therefore that it is only by fortifying the weak porâ€" tions of the body that the germs of disease can be resisted and driven from the system. But this has proved almost an impossibility heretofore, and it has been the study of phy- sicians for years haw best to accomplish it. Within the past few years, however, a pre- paration has been attracting great attention, not only throughout the entire land, but among the medical profession and scientists generally, which is based upon this theory, and it may safely be said, no remedy has ever been found which can so successfully place the system in a condition to resist the germs of disease as \Varner’s Sale Cure. This article is un- questionany the best and most ellicient that has ever been discovered for this purpose, andâ€"~ There is as much varietyiu millinery orua~ ments as there is in shapes and matenals. Accordingly his wife opened the book at the word named and read : Germ Theory of Disease A theory advanced by the abhst and best investigators and scientists of the times. It supposes the surface of the earth, the air and water to be inhabited to a gree ter or less extent with a peculiar growth of the lowest form of fungiâ€"commonly term- ed bacteria, whose power of reproduction, under favorable conditions, is so great that a single germ will increase to fifteen million in twenty-four hours time, and unchecked in its increase would grow to a mass of eight hundred tons, in three days’ time, if space and £001 be lurnished. There is no condi- tion under which it can be said to be absent, unless it be from fire or air ï¬ltered through cotton-batting in numerous layers. A single drop of water containing a germ, put in=0 water, boiled, filtered and thus freed fioin bacteria, will grow murky in a day or two from the development oi new germs. When it is considered that it requires about forty billion to weigh one gram, some re- mote idea can be had of the Capacity of on reproduction. Professor John T_\'nm...;, a late work, elaborately treats m the in- fluence of germs in the propagation of dis- ease and charges upon this cause, the incep- tion and development of very many of the ailments most injurious to man. ‘ Professor Pasteur, an eminent French savant, has car- ried his original and beautiful experiments so far, and from them deduced such practical results as very greatly to diminish the num- ber of cases of anthrax among sheep and chicken cholera among fowl,â€"proving his theory that these areesscntizilly and actually germ diseases. These germs are carried in- to the system through the lungs, the stomach and possibly the skin, but throth the lungs chielly. Once in the system, they begin to develop, poisoning the blood, in- vadinrr the nerve centres, disturbing the functional activity ofthe great organs of the body and inducing a. general impairment 0: the vital processes. They are the cause 0t fevers, rheumatism, Bright’s disease of the kidneys, pneumonia, blood poisoning. liver disease, diphtheria and many other ail. ments. Lately Profeswr Koch, a fannus German physmian, has proved that con- sumption of the lungs is due to this causeâ€"â€" the presence of a. peculiar germ. A Wonderful Theory that Concerns the Welfare, Happiness and Life of Everyone. In his quiet; and cosy library at the close of a. busy day sat a gentleman and hxs wife, he absorbed in a new book and she in the newspaper. Quickly glancing toward her husband, she asked, at a certam point in the arhwle, "John, what is the germ theory ‘3†“ The germ theoryâ€"wellâ€"«yes ; just look in the encyclopedia under ‘Gcrm,†shat wiil 3xpiaiu it so much better than 1 can.†FORTY BILLION GERMS. They all tell the same story. Mr. W. Thompson, Jeweller, Delhi, suffered for years from Dyspepsia, got no relief until he used Dr. Carson's Stamach Bitters. He 8 Lys “it was just the medicine I needed. It hls cured me.†The ordinary restaurant waiter measures all his customers from tip to tip. Mrs. J. Mel’hee, A ppin, writes :â€"During the last eight years 1 have used almost every medicine recommended for Biliousuess, but found nothing equal to Carson’s Bitters. 11 you suffer try it. Price 50 cents. The Comte (la Chambord’s will began as follows : “ I die a good Christian and a Catholic. I feel no hatred for any one. I forgive all those who have injured me, and I beg all those whom I have wronged in any way to paudon me. I pray Almighty )‘rOLl to save my soul.†THE MOST SALEAIILE Honsr:.â€".\lp. Joseph Lamb, one of Chicago’s best known exten- sive horse dealers, in paying a tribute to the superiority of the grade Percheron-Norman horses, said : “Most of my trade is with lumbermen and in the city. I handle more Normans than of any other breed, because they are more salable aurl eagerly sought after, the only drawback to the business now being that I cannot; get them fast enough. They are possessed of more endurance than other breeds, give good satisfaction, and Wear well ; have better feet, last better on our pavements, and are more easily accli- mated than any other breed. It is very rarely you get a. Norman horse with bad feet. They are good, cheerful walkers, and more attractive and liner lacking, with better action, than the other large breeds.†â€"C/Li- cage Tribune. M. \V. Dunham, \Vayne, 1H,, has imported from France and bred in their purity about 1,400 Percheron-Normans, and 390 of them within the past few months, particular attention being given to pedigree and French record. Miss Booth, of the Salvation Army, was forbidden to hold services in Geneva. She violated the order twice in twenty-four hours, was arrested in each instance, and conducted by the police to the frontier of the canton. VVHA'I'! LIMI’JNH Ym‘l Why should you go HRH)an around “11011 Putnam's l’azfnflms ('m-n, lair/radar will remove your coma in a law days. It will give almost instant relief and a guaranteed cure in the end. He sure you get the genuine Putnam's Corn Extractor, made by Polson & 00., Kingston,f0r many substitutes are beirg oii‘cred, and it is always butter to get tlicbcst. Safe, sure. painless‘ The navy blue, seal brown, (live green and other rich dark culors of the Triangle Dyes are: as perfect as the bright shades. They never disappoint the user. 10 cents. The Chinese Minister to France, Marquis Tseng, having seemed disinclined to treat with the French Ministers, believing them insincere, M. Ferry arranged with the Hag- lish Earl Grenville to act; for them. Tom Hughes, who, hy-the-way, is now sixty years old, says that eventuilly every- body on the other will come over to America to make money, and everybody here will go over there to spend it. Show is not substance, realities govern wise men and the numberless certiï¬cates of wise men show that the great petroleum Hair Renewer and Dressing Carboline is a stern reality. Tne Queen has haul telephone wires run from Balmoml t0 Abergeldie, the Scotch place of the Prince of Wales, and to adjac- ent places, and between \Vindsor Castle. Frogmore Garden, and the Farm. The use of PMS, Salts, Castor Oil, &c. and other nauseous, gripng Catharbias is un- necessary, as a pleasant substitute is found in Dr. (Jason’s Bitters, which act as a Cath- artic without griping or causing nausea. All. druggists sell it. 50 cents a bottle. (hes without sayingâ€"â€"the deaf and dum alpjlubet. Age should always command respe not. the case of Dr. Fowler’s Extract of ~VV1ll'l Strawberry it certainly does, for 25 yems that has been the standard remedy with the people, for Cholera Morbus. Dysentery. Diarrhoea, Colic and all Bowel Complaints, (33) Mr. Du Maurier so dislikes to be personal that if he ï¬nds he has a particular individual in mind while drawing, he immediately makes a thorough sketch of that person, so as to be able to avoid a likeness in his subject. C. S. Judson, \Vallaceburg, says Dr. Fowler’s Extract of \Vild Strawberry, for Summer Complaints is a. splendid prepara- tion, and 1 do not know of a. single case in which it has not given satisfaction, but on the contrary have had many testimonials to its efficacy. (3'2) J.N. Sutherland, St. Catharines. Judge Black left by his will $2,000 to his grandson on condition that he should drop 1h? name of Jeremiah Sullivan and assume that of Henry Vantrieas. From MR. WILLIAM MAGRATH. Erindale, Credit P. 0., Jan. 8th, 1883. MY DEAR SU'I‘IIERLAND : Some two months since I became so afflicted with Rheumatism of the neck and right shoulder as to render my right arm nearly powerless. I deter- mined to try your “ Rheumatine †and the result is that I am nowjrmfrom pain, and enjoy the full use qf'my arm. My general health is also much improved by the use of the medicine. The first two bottles relieved mcâ€"the tilli'd bettle freed me from all pain} “’31. MAanATn Soldbyall Dru gists and Dealers. Direct 0115 in 1] languages. The Charles A. Vogeler Co. Wino" to A. VOGELEP. l (10‘) Neurania, Sciatica, Lum'bago; BACKACIIE. HEADACHE, TOO’I‘HAGHE, SURE THROAT, And all other bodilyache: and pains. THE GREAT GERMAN R E M EDY QUINSY, S‘VELLINGS. SPRAINS, (23; Soreness, Cuts, Bruisesa FROSTBI'I‘ES, BURNS, ‘ LBS, FDR PAIN. RH EUMATISM, FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE Relieves and cures Bunk-m, Id†II. S. A 147