Sir Andrew Clark, the famous Eng liah physician, died in London Monday after- noon. Mayor Desjardins, of Montreal,is opposed to the winter carnival as the pictures sent out to all parts of the world of ice palaces and men and women clad in the warmest furs induce the belief that the commercial capital of Canada. is in the Polar regions. Lord Roberts, since his return to Eng- land from India, has greatly improved in health, and he will be urged to return to employment. The Canada Revue, referring to the im' mense wealth of the Seminary of St. Sulpice. says that its actual possessions at the pres- ent time are worth more than sixteen million dollars. Mr. McLeod Stewart, tax-Mayor of Ot‘ tawa, advocated at some length before the Board of Trade the construction of the Ut- tawa ship canal, which Engineer Walter Shanly estimated would cost ti‘wenty-four million dollars. As far as known, the general elections in Newfoundland have resulted less favouratly for the Opposition than was expected. It is believed that the ï¬nal results Willshow that the Government has twenty seats and the Opposition sixteen. General Herbert insists that proceedings be taken against the non-commissioned ofï¬cers and men of the 14th Bath, King- ston, Ont, who refused, when ordered, to board the train at Montreal on the night of the third of July. The offenders will be taken to Montreal and dealt with by the Police Magistrate. A snowstorm prevailed Monday in the Midland Counties of England. During the salmon season now closing, the Duchess 01' Fife captured with her own rod forty salmon on Mar lodge water. In the British House of Commons, in re- ply to Mr. Redmond, who questioned the Government in regard to the course it in- tended to pursue in the matter of evicted tenants, Mr. Gladstone said that no new legislation would be introduced this session beyond what had been already announced. I" N ITED STATES. The vintage of the present season in California will be about eighteen million gallons, or about three: million gallons in excess of last year’s yield. “Doc†Andrews and his wife, charged with having caused the death of Lucy Den- ning, were brought from Buffalo to Toronto Monday afternoon. Sir John Abbott’s will was admitted to probate on Saturday, The estate, which is valued at, $500,000, after paying an annu- ity tothe widow, is to be divided equally among the deceased’s eight children. It is announced that the great Manches- ter ship canal will be completed to-day, when water will be admitted to its entire length. Mr. William'FieId, member of the House of Commons for St. Patrick’s division of Dublin, and Mr. Luke Hayden, member for South Roscommon, have been sum- moned on the charge of illegal assembly. \Vith the personal endorsement of Presi- dent Cleveland and the approval practical- ly of every important medical society in the United States, 5. Bureau of Public Health has been formed. A boat conveying a number of workmen from the quarantine at Hoffman and Swin- burne Islands to Staten Island capsized on Saturday, and ten of the men were drown- ed. The mortal remains of Sir John Abbott, ex-Premier, were buried at Mount Royal cemetery, Montreal, with solemn services. Amongst those present were representatives of the Governor-General. the members of the Dominion Government, and the Mayor. A hook and ladder truck and an electric street car collided in Detroit. Tue ladder man was thrown from his seat, struck his head on the asphalt pavement, and was in- stantly killed. There was a ï¬ght in the Chicago Council chamber on Saturday over the unexpired term of the vacant ma.yoraltyâ€"-Democrabs and Republicans fought like Wild beasts and had to be driven apart, by a. strong posse of police, Richard Savage, aged twenty-seven, shot his wife Maggie, aged twentysix, and his child Richard, aged four, yesterday morn- ing, in Halifax, NS. He then committed suicide. Father Hamon, of the Jesuit order, in an address in Montreal on Sunday, urged Catholics not to countenance theatres,which he denounced as immoral and contaminat- mg. Mr. Hodgson, Master 0? the Rolls in Charlottetown, P. E. I., held on Friday that neither the Mortmain Act nor the Statute of Edward the Sixth against'surer- stitious trusts being in force in Prince Ed- ward Island, the bequest of one Gillis, who devised one-third of his estate to the parish priest for masses, is valid. r James C. Shannessy. of Kingston, Ont., w ho deserted his wife a. year ago, has been arrested. in Evansville, 1a., for bigamy, having married again since heleft Kings- ton. Sir John Thompson, in an interview in Montreal,said that the Government, intend- ed calling Parliament as early as possible, at all events as early as last year. Charles Shipman manslaughter at, Brm to seven years in the manslaughter-at BrockVillc, and Eat to seven years in the penitentiary. Mrs. \Varwick, an old resident of stock, Ont., who is now living in TI has donated a. site for a. hospiml in stock. The gift. is valued at $1,500 Mr. S.R. Armstrong, edi‘ borough. Ont", Review, has town clerk of Pcterborough THE WEEK’S NEWS The trial of Piendergast, the murderer of Mayor Harrison, has been postponed to the 27th inst. His counsel has announced that the defence will be insanity. Mr. Crisp, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, believes that the Tariï¬â€˜ bill will be ready for the consider- ation of Congress when it meets in Decem- ber for its regular sesaion. He understands that the Ways and Means Committee will recommend a. reduction at the tariff to a revenue basis. Armstrong, editor of the Peter- t., Review, has been appointed CANADIAN BRITISH. found guilty of c, and sentenced bentiary. esident of “700:!- iving in Toronto, ospiml in \Vood- At a congress of revolutionary Socialists held in Brussels on Wednesday night, it was resolved to carry on an acuve propa- ganda to brim: about a. strike among the soldiers of Belgium and elsewhere. The power of King Lobengula and the Matabelcs in South Africa. is a thing of the past. The ease with which the Chartered Company’s forces smashed the king and his army. and the fact that they encountered him in force only in front of his own capital is signiï¬cant. The London illus~ trated papers, a few Weeks ago, when pub- lic opinion was being worked up in Eng. land in order to bring pressure to bear upon the Government to sanction the war, pub- lished large cuts showing the white people in the forts throughout Mashonaland stand- ing on their arms against a. beleaguering enemy. Despatches were all to the effect that the Mstabeles were raiding right up to the edge of the mining camps. As soon as the war was sanctloned, it was discover- ed that the Chartered Company’s ofï¬cials had been shooting down messengers and repre- sentative sent to the company’s stations,and that the Chartered Company’s force were compelled to march. into the Mstabele country in order to bring on a conflict. In the one combat necessary to end the cam- paign three thousand Metabeles were, it is said in the probably exaggerated reports, killed and wounded. while the losses of the British were slight. All this makes the danger to the British from Matabele raids appear very slight and unreal. As King Lobenguls received every month a. payment in gold from the Chartered Company, it is not improbable that ï¬the gold pocket pre- sumed to be in Bulwayo, his capital, to- gether with the consnleration that the com- pany would, in caseof his defeat, need to The Italian Government, has proposed that. the naval squadrons of Germany, Ausaria. and Italy hold a combined demon- stration in the Mediterranean. Supplies of money, provisions, ammuni- tion, arms, and coal, sent to the Brazilian insurgents from their sympathisers in Eu- rope, will reach Rio Jaueiru in a. few days. Twenty-six more arrests have been made in \Varsaw in connection with the Socxalist agitation. Most. of those arrested are educated women. President Peixoto has received word that the Governments of England and France will maintain positions of strict neutrality with regard to Brazilizm afl'airs. The Russiaâ€"n State Council has proposed Lheestablishment of a. State monopoly of tobacco. The Milan police surprised a Anarchists in that city on S made several important arrests Gen. Gourko, the Governor of Moscow, is no: expected to recover from the effects of the poison recently given to him in his food. The latest details concerning the disaster at Santsnder on Friday show that the number of dead, missing, and wounded is fully one thousand. pany would, in case or ms defeat, need to make these payments no longer, had much to do with the bringing about of the con- flict. It is probable that Lobengula and his predatory tribes, who lived largely by mak- ing war upon the surrounding tribes who were weaker and therefore more permeable, are deserving of little sympathy. Lobengulh had whole regiments composed of men of other tribes who were virtually slaves, and the Mashonas were almost annually raided by his men. Since the advance of the South Africa. Company placed the Mashon- as beyond the unrestrained power of Lob- eugnla, the Matabeles attempted to raid west and north of the Zambesi. The tribes there, however, successfully resisted the in- vaders and drove them back. Lobengnla and his tribe will probably settle down for a. time again to the north~westor Bulawayo u an uninhabited country embraced by the great bend of the Zambesi. It is not im- probable that though he has been defeated in South Africa, Lobengula’s case will be appealed to England and be tried out before Parliament, when a searching investigation into the ï¬nancial as well as the government methods of the South Africa. Company will be made. Those who have watched the or- ganization of the company from the outside are of the opinion that the company is now a hollow, rotten shell, and th tt the big promoters have the money invested by the victimized shareholding public. it is believed that the British Government will takeover the government of Zambesia, as the country south of the Zambesi under British protection is called. The ï¬rst thing to do is to get the house thoroughly warmed. When it is heated to the desired temperature, it will require less coal to keep it warm than if constantly cooling and heating. There is more eEonomy in ï¬lling the ï¬re- pot full of coal than in putting In only a. small amount, because than burns away more readily. Do not use a poker on the top of the ï¬re. It is bad management in the use of hard coal. The grate in the furnace will remove the ashes and clinkers, thus allowing free passagg for air bhro_ugh the ï¬re. _ In “ï¬lling the fumnce with coal, the smoke- pipe gdsmmper should be opened, and the ashpxb door and slide closed?e otherwise the smoke and gas Will be forced out of the feed door. When the rooms are heated, and there is a. good ï¬re in the furnace, shut it up as clgse afs possible. In the-morning open all drafts, put in a small quantity of coal, let it burn thorough- ly. then add fuel until full. Let it burn for a. short time for the gas to be consumed before closing the dampers. If the furnace heats quick and strong from a. good draft, so that in warm weather there is too much heat, don’t shake the grate, but allow it to clog with ashesâ€"not under, but on top of the grate. Ashes then lessen combustion. Never shut off all registers at once. If it, is desired to shut, the registers close those on the upper floor, as when the lower rooms and halls are heated the air ï¬nds its way ’to upper rooms. The editor’s wifeâ€"“ I’d justlike to know what you wanted to bu me that measly old calico dress for '2†'the editor (humbly) â€"“ Because, my dear, I-er thought you’d look well in print.†In the Established Church 0‘ Scotlaué the average income of the heneï¬ced clergy is about £300 a year, with a manse. The War in South Africa Managing Flu-n AL. COS. a meeting of Sunday, and One Thousand Lives Lostâ€"The Citizens in a Slate of Apathy. A Madrid special says :â€"The latest details concerning the disaster at Snntander on Friday last show that the number of dead, missing and wounded is fully 1,000. The people have not recovered from the ef- fects of the catastrophe, and are entirely apathetic, paying no attention to business but standing about streets discussing the awful calamity that has befallen the city. The men and women living near the water- front, who providentielly escaped from the wrecking of their homes, can be seen in numbers standing neer the huge masses ef debris that ï¬ll the streets waiting to recover the bodies of those known to be under the ruins. The scenes everywhere in the vicin~ ity of where the destruction was wrought are sad in the extreme, and whenever a. body, crushed and mangled beyond recogni- tion, is removed from the ruins, a heart- rending wail goes up from the women, who fear that the shepeless mass of flesh may be all that remains of one of their loved ones. There is no doubt many of the dead will never be identiï¬ed. Senor Gamazo, Minister of Finance, at once proceeded from Madrid to Sancander when the extent of the calamity became known. He summoned the town ofï¬cials and expressed to them the sympathy of the Government. He also assured them of the sympathy of the Queen regent, who, he said, had wept upon hearing of the calamity that had befallen the city. When Senor Gamazo saw how helpless the authorities were in the crisis confronting them he in a. great measure took the administration of affairs into his own hands. He telegraphed to Valladolid, ordering that medical stores, nurses and other helpers be at once sent to Santander. A subscription for the relief of the sufl‘erers was started, Gamazo head- ing it With a. giftof $5,000 on behalf of the Government. England, a cablegram says, is to be kept out of Morocco at any cost. The French explorer Soller states that a secret treaty has been arranged between France. Russia, and Spain, by the terms ot which the lat- ter's ultimate occupation of Tangier is pro- vided for. It is added that even should this last-mentioned portion, of the treaty fail to take efl‘ect, the powers have deter- mined that the British occupation of Tan- gier , must be prevented at any cost. The press of France has gone daft on the subject of English aggression and join in declaring that Europe cannot afford to allow England to occupy and hold the key to the Mediterranean. The government at Paris is urged to immediately dispatch a powerful French squadron to Tangier in order to support Spain against any inter- ference upon the part of Great Britain in the disturbances about Melilla, and to en- ble the French to be in a position to check- mate any attempt upon the part of England to land troops in Morocco. It is represent. ed to be the plain duty of France to take the initial step should any interference be necessary upon the part of any other power than Spain in the affairs of Morocco, and it is also urged that the presence of a French squadron at Tangier might be used to force the Sultan to take steps to support the Spanish troops against the troops now surrounding Melilla. In any case it is con- sidered the duty of Spain to insist that the Sultan of Morocco take immediate action against the Moors, and when the latter have ï¬nally been driven away from the heights surrounding Melilla. the Spanish government must insist upon a heavy in- demnity for the loss of life sustained in the engagements in Morocco. The Sultan is to be compelled to pay the cost of all the war preparation and other expenses to which the Spanish government his been put through the revolt of the Moors. Many of the dead were buried yesterday. Among the bodies interred was the head- less and mutilated remains oi the Marquis de Pomba. The services were attended by large crowds of people, and many distress- ing scenes were witnessed. Many fragments of bodies found in the vicinity of the quay were buried in acommon grave. The divers who were employed to recover the bodies in the bay have been so appalled at the num- ber of the dead and gruesome appearances of the corpses that they have refused to con- tinue their work, have prayed the ofï¬cials not to insist upon their carrying out their engagements. The authorities granted their petition, and now men in boats with grap- pling ironsare employedin searching for the dead who were blown into the bay. Some of the bodies, upon acursory examination, show that death was caused by drowning, and not by the shock of the explosxon. Trade In the St ates. No great improvement in trade has oc- curred in the United States subsequent upon the repeal of the silver purchasing bill. The price of wheat has declined from 2 to 24: cents per bushel, as uresult of heavy stocks and an indifferent foreign demand. Although receipts are still running thirty per cent. below those of last season, the movement to commercial centres exceeds the outgo ; and there will be little encour- agement for bullish speculation so long as there shall be large weekly additions to the already excessive stocks. Exports, although liberal, continue to fall below the ship- ments for the corresponding period last year ; and the new demand is comparative ly light. Late cable advices report liberal tenders of Russian wheat in the English markets on terms more favorable than those offered by American exporters. The‘ increasing competition of Argentine wheat‘ is also a factor in the export situation which is unfavorable to the establishment of high- er prices in America. Values of corn have advanced if to S; of a cent per bushel, owing to a bullish sentiment in the markets, which has been strengthened by a. falling 03 in the interior movement and fairly liberal exports. Values of provisxons have been generally well maintained, owing to mod- erate stocks and comparatively light pack- ing operations in the \Vest. For the season which ended November 1 there was a de- crease in hog packing at Western centres ggregating fully 1,000,000 head. “ I am really an a. loss, minister, “ to know why my last sermon. Didn’b arguments sound?†“ S ,, exciusively.†Tllli SANT.ANDIZR HORROR. To Keep Brllnln 0m. BURYING THE DEAD you 3'0}! i the youngi did not like consider my she reylied; “Awl'nlly Ghaslly " and “Awfrliy Charm-l Ing" Among the New Expressions. There are fashions in speech as well as fashions in clothes, says the Pall Mall Bud- get. Everything in society just now is either “awfully ghastly"or “awfully charm- ing, don’t you know. †If your new bonnet isn’t awfully ghastly it must be awfully charming, and if Miss Fourstars’ sing- ing at the local concert the other evening Wasn’t awfully charming, then it must cer- tainly have been awfully ghastly. \ Pretty is no longer pretty, but pooty. Yâ€",the famous man milliner, has caught the trick from his duchcss customers. You hear him talk glibly of pooty gowns and pooty gails. Gorgeous or deadly are the correct adjec- tives to use when speaking of the weather. Nowadays it is quite customary for edu- cated people to talk of the (look. In quite aristoc ratic circles the ï¬nal g is dropped in many words. They talk of ridin’, shootin’, talkin’, singin’. I suppose the next thing we shall hear will be that they have ceased to aspirate their hs for the excellent reason that it hns become so common for ordinary folks to do so. But, after all, these ex- amples ofafl‘ectation,ridiculous though they sound, are not quite so had as the mincing style of ati'ectation fashionable in days gone by. Mincing is now chiefly conï¬ned to old maids or young girls under ‘20. Other folks don’t seem to get time for it. In these days of push “side" seems to go fur. ther than mincing manners. The extensive drainage that has been carried on through diff-smut parts of On tario and of the Northern and Western- States has disposed a good many farmers to believe that the effects of such dra1nage are apparent in the recent severe droughts that have largely reduced the products of the crops. It is believed that the rapid passage of the water, of the rainfall into the drains and from them into the streams, not only dries the land excessively, but reduces the average supply of rain because of the lessened evaporation from the land. Thus there is not water enough for the growth of the crops, especially at such times as in the early spring, when the sowing of seed calls tor the full supply and thorough satu- ration oi the soil for several weeks. But as the water Sinks through the soil, and passes into the drains, and is lost to the land, when the whole of the land is so de- prived of water the crops fail to grow and the harvests are unproï¬table. In consid- ering this important question it may be said at the outset that the weather is not a local question at all The world 1s wide and the influences of temperature are boundless, as compared with the nar- row limits of a country even, and it is due to the variations of tempera- ture with those correlated differences of the moisture in the atmosphere that changes in local weather occur. The ocean, which covers three-fourths of the earth’s surface, is the grand source of the rainfall, as compared with which the whole of the land is but the merest patch of ground. And this vast body of water, an area of 110, 000, 000 of square miles, 13 mostly under the influence of the torrid heats of the equator, under which ï¬ve- sixths of the circumference of the globe is water. The incomprehensibly vast mass of watery vapor that arises from the ocean, and is carried by the mysterious air currents here and there over the continents for thousands of miles, dropping the rain in this or that place, as the temperature may affect it, is the true source of our weather, and the conï¬guration of the earth’ 8 surface has most to do with the discharge of all this water. The moist air from the heated ocean is car- ried along, dropping its load on the thou- sands of miles of land as it becomes cooled or condensed by coming in contact with mountains or other cooler strata of air. No doubt there are local causes at work, as the small mountain ranges that intercept the air currents passing across necks of land between two water areas, such as the At. lactic and the Mexican Gulf, and again in the region of our great lakes hero in Onta- rioâ€"great as lakes, but small as compared with the enormous size of the ocean. It is difï¬cult thus to ï¬nd any local reasons for any change in the weather to any extent worth notice. The mere fact of the removal of the water from the soil may have a. small ellect, but it cannot afl‘ect the weather. It can only change the condition of the hind for the better in times of excessive rains, and for the worse in times of excessive drought. But there is reason to believe that the latter etlect is hardly worthy of any regard, and otherwise it is really bene- ï¬cral as tending to a. greater porosity of the soil and its greater ability to hold water in a. dry time. It may be the fact, and this very easily, that the air in a. dry time is really more ï¬lled with vapor then it is in rainy weather. It is the heat of the atmos- phere that influences its ability to hold water in solution or suspension, and while the air at a temperature of 10-} ° Will hold 2,215 grains 0t water in 1,000 cubic feet, at 77 ° this is reduced to less than 1,000 grains. Then the 1,217 grains of waterâ€" equal to nearly one inch of water in depth over the whole surfaceâ€"is held invisible vapor in the air for 15,000 feet in height only, not taking into account the dense clouds that float above that height. Then a reduction of ‘27 per cent. in temperature would discharge all this water upon the land in a single shower, leaving an un- accountable mass of water still in the air. Topnoddy made up his mind that he was not going to be trampled any longer by his wife, so when he went home at noon he called out, imperiously: “Mrs. Topnoddy! Mrs. Topnoddy!†Mrs. Topnoddy came out of the kitchen with a drop of perspiration on her nose, her sleeves turned up, a. dish-rag in one hand and a. rolling-pin in the other. “Well, sir,†she said, “what’ll ye’ave?" Topnoddy staggered, but braced up. “Mrs. Topnoddy, I want you to under- stand, madam,†and be capped his breast dramatically, “ I am the engineer of this stand, madan dramatically, establishment “Oh, you are, are yer? \Vell, Mr. Topnod- dy, I want you to understand that I â€â€"and she looked dangerous, “I am the Uiler that’ll blow up and fling the engineer over into the next garden. D0 yer ’ear the steam escaping, Topnoddy? †“Yes,†said Topuoddy, meekly. And then he inquired if there was any assistance he could render in the housework. LATEST IN LES“ 5L ‘Xt‘. Drnlnuge Benenclla? Resultâ€"No Change ! It has been remarked that one of the great- est objections to the suppressio 'f hemp cultivation for smoking purposeskglndia. is that it would drive the natives to the use of more dangerous sedatives. Une of the drugs which the coolie is the most prone to substitute for his beloved hemp, when the latter is not available, is the datum seed. For many years it has been known to the police and those engaged in medica- legal examinations that one of the favorite methods adopted by Indian thieves to rob their victims has been the administering of datum. The stupefying effects of this drug enables them to carry on their depredations, and at the same time to avoid in most cases the fatal results which attend the use of other poisons. The symptoms present in the individuals allected were loss of consciousness, dilation of the pupils, picking at the bed clothes, attemps to grasp imaginary objects, and from the movement of their hands they all appeared to be drawing out threads from the tips cf their ï¬ngers. When taken upon an empty stomach the effects of the poison are usually discernible Within ten minutes, in the case of a. well-nourished person half an hour or more elapses before its effects are perceptible. The rareness of fatal cases in connection with the use of this poison is one of the chief factors in its selection by the native criminal. A Poison otter- I'm-d by Robberï¬ to ï¬ve: come 1 h eh-Victinu.’ The datura seeds may be gathered al- most anywhere in India, and also easily purchased in the bazars; so it is hardly to be wondered at that such a convenient instrument for the furthering of nefarious designs should be so popular among the Indian criminal classes. If it is desirable to render any particular person helpless for a given time the administration of the datum is the main difï¬culty, and this, unless ser- vants are absolutely trustworthy, is not in- superable. The period before consciousness is restored after taking a dose of the poison varies in different individuals, and is de- pendant very much on the state of the health of the victim at the time it is ad- ministered. Thus, in some cases, a complete recovery takes place in two or three days or less, While in others unconsciousness has been known to last as long_as a. week. The symptoms exhibited in many cases resemble those of alcoholic poisoning or de- lirium tremens. In some instances the poisoned persons not under the belief that they are following their ordinary occupa- tions. For example, in one caseastone- mason’s laborer was under the impression that it was his duty to haul up every- thing in this vicinity, not excepting his master; in another case a groom was seized with a. desire to perform grooming operations on those with whom he came in contact, and a third, a. goldsmith, seated himself on the floor intent on following his usual vocation. The following from the Baltimore Underwriter is an extract from the writ- ings of C. J. Heximer on the Causes of Fire, as being especially worthy the atten- tion of those occupying crowded tenement dwellings. and whence the means of escape in case of ï¬re should always be a subject, of discussion and arrangement during the hours of safety. To allow fear to overcome reason is half way to destruction: Ith If the means of escape through the door: on the ï¬rst floor, or the trap door on the roof, are cut off, and no ï¬re escape is at hand, hurry to the room least affected by smoke and hotair,and make a rope of shreds of bedding, attaching one end of such rope, and by this means try to descend to the ground. Never jump from windows unless you are satisï¬ed that all other means of es- cape are impossible. If this is your only alternative, get persons on the outside to hold a carpet or a blanket, or even a large overcoat, and jump on it, or throw out bed- ding, mattresses, etc., and jump on them. If a person’s clothing has caught ï¬rc,wrap a. blanket (not a cotton-ï¬lled quilt) around him quickly, as this will exclude the air, and therefore the oxygen, and cause the ï¬re to be extinguished. Woolen goods are to be preferred under such circumstances, as they are less combustible, ammonium car- bonate being given off during ignition.which tends to retard and even extinguish flames; but in a case of this kind, we should never run out in open air for aid, as the amount of oxyen fed to the flames will be greater and cause the ignited garment to burn mor’ furiously. Very Unfortunate. A fresh case of disease was discoverer- among the Canadian cattle on the steamshiw Hurona, which were slaughtered at the English port of disembarkation last week. The lungs were at once forwarded to the Board of Agriculture for examination. The board’s experts declare the disease is pre- cisely similar to that detected in previous cases considered by them to be contagious pleuro-pneumonia. The Canadian authori- ties, on the other hand, deny that the pres- ent case, any more than the previous ones, is contagious pleuro-pneumonia. The dis- covery, coming towards the close of the season, however, is specially unfortunate, as it is certain to diminish any chances be- fore existing of regaining free entry for Mode of Escape From Burning Houses. Canadian live stock. In order to ï¬ssure thcmselves of the nature of the disease the authorities at Ottawa have had a portion of the lung of the affected animal shipped to them. Meantime the necessity for a. close watch upon our frontier for diseased animals has been emphasized by the fact that. hogs returning to Canada. from the VVorld’s Fair at Chicago have been found to be affected with Cho TIF. INDIAN DATI‘BA snm‘