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li **** -r-rrmir-r HWwrtjAW *H*Lmr*m i»\ , -a* *. ••-*- ff'V THE NiJWABK OTTION-GAZET^pTSATUBDAY MOKNING, JULY 30, 1910 sszsMsk CASTORIA itae Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been jin use fop over 30 years, has borne the signature of \ and has been made under bis per- sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and \ Just-as-good\ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infiants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Oastoria i s a harmless substitute fo r Castor Oil, Pare- goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It -contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. I t cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind You Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 .Years. THC CENTAUR OOMMNV , f T MUIIRAV STMCCT, NIWVOH K CtTV. The Rochester Trust & Safe Deposit Company wishes to call the attention of those residing in surrounding towns to the exceptional banking facilities which it offers. It pays 4 per cent, per annum calendar months' on deposits, which are subject to check at all times. Money for deposJTcan b e sent in form o f draft, post-office ordeF o r by express, for which a receipt is immediately sent, or in case of a new account, a bank book. If one wishes to draw against a n account a check can b e sent for the amount needed, for which a draft or currency will be sent as desired. 1^ Deposits made the first three days of the month are allowed interest as if deposited th e first. CAPITAL, S3OO.000.00 SURPLUS OVER $1,000,000.00 RESOURCES over $20,000,000.00 Rochester Trust & Safe Deposit Company Rochester, N. Y. NOUS BY |C^fBARMTZ RIVERSIDE PA. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED [These articles and Illustrations must not be reprinted without special permis- sion.] OH, YOU COUNTRY HAM! Oh, for a slice of the graod ham That mother used to make, That was so red and smellod so sweet When she cut off a steak! It wasn't painted with shellac Nor cured with benzoate. It wasn't fixed with nasty dope To kill or nauseate. It hung upon the rafters Above the fragrant wood. Where mother smoked It Just the way She only understood. Oh, when I smelled that country ham Upon the morning air And knew fresh eggs and ham were fried And ready down the stair No need to pull me out of bed. For, hungry as a bear. I hustled on my cambric shirt And sprinted down the stair! Why, when 1 got mumps in the neck Or stumped my toe I'd yell, \Here mother, slap on some ham fat!\ And, presto, it was well! C. M BARNIT2, IS YOUR POULTRY YARD SICK? \Lady your ground Is slckl\ exclaim ed the chicken doctor who .was called to diagnose a disease that was killing a flock by wholesale. \The ground sick?\ she gasped. \Yes this yard Is polluted. It is alive with disease germs u foot deep. You'll have to lime It, plow li down and grow a crop before you'll have healthy hens at to eat and breed from.\ \Well I never!\ she gasped. That's true. People never think of the excrement constantly dropping in poultry yards. A, hen drops eighty pound* a year. Then think what some yards are where hundreds of fowls run. where rots the accumulation of years! Such yards are so full of fertilizer that pumpkins couldn'fc grow a snuasb J j Pack Your Grips. lines and Rods a and prepare for a few days of real sport. There are plenty of juides to show you where the >ig ones are hiding at the piiownto THE POULTRY YARD. tbem, but there would be such Stomach Blood and Liver Troubles Much sickness'starts with weak »tom«ch, and cos poor, impoverished blood. Nervou* and pile-people lack <ootr, rioh, red \blood. Their stomachs need inviioratin* •oi.'after alt, * man can be no stronger than hi* stomach.. A remedy that makes, the stomach strong and the liver. active, makes rich re'd blood and overcomes and. drives' out disease-producing bacteria and cures a whole multi- _ IBM S&SggSSss tude ohdiseases. \ \ Wm g^^Sg, Get rid ot Toar Stomach Weakniaa and M===SJ==SS Liter Lazlat*? by tmklai '* count, ot Br. PierefM Golden Medlcml Bleeorerr ~^the treat Stomach Beitoratlre, Lirer Jarltorator and Blood 'mfeaaaee, Yojji^att't afford to •cceifcaoy medloino -of **knnm *^l3wWcfi ii a meoycineoF itjdwN^6Mro,mbN,having ai complete list of ingredients ist plaint English on its hot- tie-wrapper, same being attetted-as Correct under 0i ~-Br, Ptme-m JVasjjajrt ^m:tt^mi^}^^^-;fH a m§»rLtm'^'Bowa*. tremendous tangle of vines and leaves covering the space aifu shooting over the fence that the big green tangle would remind you bow twisted some people are on poultry science who al- low yards to get into such condition and how green they must be to expect good returns from poultry Imprisoned in'such pollution. Such yards are mostly bare, and wlujf a sight and stench when rain fllls'them with pools, where the fowls wade .and scratch ijnd drink! Some even throw feed' on such a surface and especr ben health, sweet meat and eggs. Such yards are a case for the board of health. They are a menace to the family and breed a pestilence for poultBy. But it's easy to make sick ground well. Change the flock to other ground or raise no fowls for a season. Lime the yard well, plow It deep and sow to kale, oats, wheat, rye, alfalfa. Let It come up In sweet blossoming clover and talk green tlmoihy, and. O ye gods, what a differencer* Advertise Your Business DQNTS. Don't buy much cracked corn except for Immediate use. Hot corn, mold; moldy corn, dead chicks. Don't get the bines and loaf and fret. Just keep real sweet and push and sweat. Don't expect eggs to be at Christmas price in May. The bens In sunshine now make hay. Don't look on the preacher with sus- picion every time he looks with ad- - -miration at your pretty roosters. Don't forget the bees are a good Side line with • iiens, though inside a flack they bring bad luck. Don't tarn chickens on ground where ducks have been penned before it is well cleaned and disinfecfed. • Don't brag nor chew the rag. A big open month often reveals an empty head. Do^'t bqjher with a brooder that Is not first eliss. Poor brooder, bad stock; bad stock, stumbling block. iHw't let the cluck_be worried with crawlers. She hatches beat with no Ueo In the Beat: Keep the Bast Ewss. Too often ewe lambs born after the regular lambing season are retained for breeding ewes because the? are not large enough to market with -tare re gi of .the flock: These develop .Into awes that are undersized and late breeders and hence are detrimental to the bulid big up o f good stock. SCALDED OR . DRY PICKED— WHICH? Shippers of dressed fowls sometimes get tantrums over the way they are treated by the fellow at the other end of the deal when he refuses the con- signment or sends them a check for low grade stock. They will swear and a clond of wit- nesses will swear those chickens were purty as a plctur' perfectos when they were shipped, but really If they had seen them unpacked In the city ware- house they would have taken oath those weren't the same fowls at all. What did it? Scalding. Boiling water destroys skin struc- ture. If you don't believe it dip your hand into some. Scalded fowls have a parboiled sur- face. Billions of bacteria are everywhere Waiting for an entran.ee to destroy. A fowl's perfect skin Is a bulwark against tbem. A bad rub, a tear, a softening of the skin, and In they go by the millions. Chemical decomposition quickly sets in. There's a change in a day. The clear, bright color leaves the skin, the flesh loses Its firmness, hoi- 1 i -v *-4B ISBK. - ? f ysi R ^Hh^ * * Bask. \** ^^*JIM BOALDINO A FOWL. lows form, the sweet flavor gradually disappears, the fowl takes on a blue and gray cast, becomes slippery, and an unpleasant odor is in evidence* Big shippers of first class poultry not only dry pick, but have ceased to chill the animal heat from fowls In water. They use cold air, claiming that the skin soaks up water, which jeopardizes the flavor and keeping quality. The former may be proved by weighing th„> carcass before and after_Injmersian- and the latter by an inspection of a dry picked, air cooled bird and one that was scalded and water cooled. A carcass dry picked, ah - cooled and stored fresh shows little change In six months. Scalded fowl in cold storage are ap uncertain quantity: they often go bad quick. For quick consumption scald- ing will do; for distant shipping It will do you. Peanuts Fatten Hogs. Experiments conducted by practi- cal farmers showed that many tons of valuable hog go with the peanut crop and that after the peanuts have been -gathered bogs can be turned in on the ground and fattened for market on what Is left of the crop without other food. Several carloads of hogs fattened in this way sold at good prices last -fajll after having been rounded off with a ration of corn for two weeks. It takes but a few months to mature a peanut crop, and It has been found practical to follow it up with a crop of Irish potatoes on the same ground, and In some cases a sec- ond crop of the peanuts has been raised. As the peanuts will sell at from 90 cents to $1.25 per bushel and hogs will fatten on what Is left -after gathering the peanut cropv it makes tbls one of the cheapest foods for tbe south that can be raised, and It puts on weight fast enough to suit any hog grower. ««>••••• \BACK TO THE FARM\ •»»>«»»>. I.—The Growth of the Cities and the Increased Cost of Living. ]»y.C.V. GREGORY, Author of \ Home Course In Live Stock Farming,\ \Making Mone/ on the Farm,\ \Home Course In Mod- ern Agriculture,\ Etc. Copyright, 1910. by American Press Association HE high cost of living, or the \cost of high living,\ as James J. Hill puts it, is a subject which just now is engrossing the attention of the entire nation. The cost of the necessaries of life has been steadily increasing since 189U. The symptoms have been viewed with In- creasing alarm by nearly all classes. Within the last year the matter has reached an acute stage.. Tbe average increase in the cost of necessities from Jan. 1, 1909, to Jan. 1, 1910, was 11.7 per cent The increase over July 1, 1896, was 61 per cent. The wage and salary earners in the cities have seen the \bread line\ grad- ually drawing closer. The margin be- tween income and expenses, narrow at best, has shrunk to the vanishing point. All this while newspapers have been shouting prosperity, forgetful of the old maxim that \the real prosperi- ty of a nation is the citizen's margin of saving.\ Whatever the cause of this inctease In the cost of necessities and comforts, there are but two ways In which the citizen as an individual can meet it The first is to Increase bis Income, ...»•»•». Lumps on Horass'Lads. Oh.-the; appeArandev at any lumpabout P \ »,»*,«, hofs^ft.snould be bathed itsf ^#itbr*tate£ as hot **• can be ^. _..__-_ ~ a ~™™^™^ btmei * inm * Circulation in Wayne County M- QIVW. US A TRIAL sometimes In this way be * Painter* Jn {Meeting the Cow If yon are buying a cow look for a lone udder lengthwise of her body. •n^ elastic, as thto invariably-meant ttUffrtiat iktnr Ian* toomy digs* Or* ot*an*, with twoad Hba wide •»Pettfc .. .. FEATHER8 AND EGGSHELLS. On Feb. 1 thirty cold storage houses of the American Warehousemen's as- sociation contained 183,000 cases of eggs. Jan. 1 there were 500,000. This shows how quickly the trust moves and markets its goods. An egg laying contest, with 1,000 hens from Europe and the United States competing, will be beld at Mex- ico, Mo., and will continue six months. Here's a chance for those who 250-egg hens advertise to prove It's not all lies. The idea that kerosene keeps tin and galvanized Iron from rusting is a mis- take. This Is why so many incubator and brooder lamps leak ID the spring. Tbe oil left in them eats them full of holes. When the owner of a Pennsylvania poultry plant in course of construction rode up In an automobile tbe workmen threw down their tools, claiming that a man who drove an auto could pay. more than $1^60 per day. Better keep that auto in the garage under lock and key or you must pay more spondulicks. See? When you buy that brooder and in- cubator, before you send the cash get a guarantee as to the kind of wood of which they are composed. Many man- ufacturers are using soft wood, and\ after one season the machines are no •good. j How will those goose prophets wAo have written again and again on tbe subject \More Money In Geese Than Hogs\ amend their statements to fit tbe price of porkers? At a recent sale a sow and pigs sold for $80, while twelve big geese brought $18, While the ancient' Egyptians were remarkably wise, they take the bis- cuit for carelessness, judging by the number of arts they lost. One of these tost arts recently discovered is how io raise every chicken that's batched, but - -yOT-mSBst-tose-Ta-doHw-to-getr-the-se^ cret There was a day when the Bocks headed the procession In this country, bpt they have been outstripped by the Dottes, which are now the American leaders through merit alone. Their -winning qualities are quick growth, plump, '|ttractive carcass, delicious meat popular gjize,. excellent lay bag, hardiness and beauty. \Ohi that rank smell In \the cluck's nest! \\IjTiat Is It?\ Thafs the aroma from remains of a broken egg that yon didn't remove from the nest, and i t will affect quality and quantity of your hitch accordingly. The Idea, that, poultry'ferHUser hurts fruit trees ls.;aii,^ettor» . ffllo Bartlett pear trees planted, close to our poultry plant are three feet higher and bore fruit a year earlier' than those planted (n tba open field. ... • ^.^ , T^M^§. T/SIKG OOBN FOR FUEI, IN 1896. and the second is to lower hjs stand- ard of living, The wage earner, band- ed together with his fellows iu a un- ion, has been able to Increase uls scale of wages to some extern, though not nearly enough to fill the gap be- tween Income aDd expenses. The wage earner who does not belong to a un- ion has profited to some extent by the general rise In wages, though not so much as the union man. The salaried man has borne the hard- est brunt of the rising prices. He be- longs to no union, and bis demands for Increased *pay bave brought little re- sponse All classes that are compelled to work for a living have had to turn to the other alternative In a greater or less degree. They have been forced to lower their standard of living. The first item to be attacked'is the food supply. Russell Sage once said. \As the cost of living increases the use of meat decreases, the proportion of dark rooms increases and child labor be- comes plentiful.\ Less meat means poorer nourishment, less resistance to disease and a higher death rate. Other foods of cheaper quality are used. Oleomargarine takes'the place of but- ter. Cold storage eggs are a luxury and fresh eggs unknown, and cheaper brands of canned goods are used. Aside from food, tbe big item of ex- pense in the city is rent. In order to keep up with the Increased post of things property owners have be^n forc- ed to raise rents. The frenzied crowd- ing of the people to tbe cities has en- abled landlords to make these increas- ed rents effective. The result is that a house with a porch and a bit of lawn has become a luxury, and more and more the middle classes, the classes on whom prosperity should react most fa- vorably, nave been forced into flats and apartment houses. Tbe poorer classes have moved Into teuements, The high cost of room has made crowd- ing Inevitable. Human beings ha've been forced to herd together like cat- tle or worse. The modern dairy barn is a palace beside some of the tene- ments that pass muster as human hab- itations! Many causes bave been advanced by economists and otbers to account for thVrise In prices. Many blame tbe tariff, but that will not explain why prices are rising nearly as rapidly in England as in the United States. The economist's favorite reason is In the Increase in the supply of gold. Money Is becoming cheaper, he says, and therefore it takes more of It t o buy a given amount of any commodity.' This explanation sounds very plausi- ble, but It does_ not explain the-Tact that prices have at other times gone down In the face of Increased gold production. The gold supply Is un- questionably a factor Influencing rls- lng prices. That it is the fundamental factor may well be doubteo.- Other writers try to lay the whole trouble to the growing extravagance of the American people and to the In creased standard' o*f living. It is true that at the present time WP regard as necessaries what yesterday were luxu- -rlesr - TJhis- increase la the-autmlan*\afc t ~ living Is but the product of civiliza- tion, however, and Is something to be encouraged rather than discouraged. Furthermore, it' is responsible in but a small degree for the increase, in the cost of living. The increase in„the standard of living has manifested it- self inost strongly to better houses, better clothing and more conveniences. Yet the great Increase in cost has been not In these materials, but la food. Between July 1,1896, and Jan. i, 1910, breadstuffs and' live stock Increased In price 106 per cent. During tbe same period the Increase In the textiles was 73 per cent; In metals 65 per cent and In building materials only 15 per cent That luxurious living has 'had much to do with the increased prices c&nriof be denied. That it is wholly responsi- ble Is far from the truth, . If we are to seek the real cause of this crisis that confronts our country we must, go back-to tbe old cause of supply and demand, coupled with other fjctora Jhat hare grown out of this. The period from 1S70 to 1895 was the period of development of tbe middle west, the bread basket of the world Here were lands of unparalleled fer- tility that had merely to be scratched to give forth their bountiful supplies. The result was that tbe markets of the world were Hooded with foodstuffs. By 189G the middle west was pretty well settled. The bloom of its virgin fertility had been removed. Soon the days of using corn for fuel and wheat to feed the hogs were past. Prices of farm products began to rise. If there had been no other factor entering in they would soon have reached a nor- mal level, and the readjustment would have come with little trouble. Unfor tunately the tide of population toward tbe cities had become too stroug to be turned in a day. From 1880\to 1900 the percentage of farmers decreased from 44.3 to 35.0. a decrease of 8.7 per cent. During the same period the percentage of persons engaged In manufacturing Increased from 21.8 to 24.3. This lncrease'of 2.5 per cent is no more than normal and may be accounted for bj the increase in the standard of living and the con- sequent demand for manufactured ar- ticles. The increase In professional lines during tbls time was eight-tenths 'of 1 per cent, while tbe number of per- sons engaged In domestic and personal ^service decreased one-tenth of 1 per cent. The great Increase came in the num- ber of persons engaged in trade and transportation, an increase of 5\.5 per cent. Of tbe 10.3 per cent of the work ing people engaged 4n trade and trans- portation In 1000 only nine-tenths were engaged In transportation proper. The others, 15.4 per cent of all the people of the United States who work, were simply middlemen. Complete figures since 1900 are' not available, but tht cityward trend has increased rather than diminished. Here Is the true explanation of tbe high cost of living. There are more than one-third as many uieu engaged in distributing food as there are In producing It. The consumer's dollar is worn thin before It gets to the pro dncer. The 10,000.000 men who farm must supply food to the 7.000.000 peo pie who are working in the factories. jMntfcffMi . IWjgCl Fresh Air Heaters } and Rfcto!<kwj , Bofiers have a deserved reputation. Thousands are in use all over the United States. Are the best heating apparatus possible to make. They heat where others fail—give best satisfaction. Send for descriptive circulars. Sold by MATTISON WAREHAR.D CO :P ••••« ••••,.••»••••••»* Crisp Hot Toast Why do you toast by guess ' > burned, accordinc ' • t toasted enough, baked hard or 1 huk. Get one of our Electric Toasters and make your toast no the dining room table -or wherever there is an electric outlet-just as you like Just think of the convenience. A Slice of Toast a Minute Jli! if m 4 You can wauh it all the time ami to.ist it just to suit each member of [he family or your guests Wayne County Gas and Electric Co. l| Main Street Newarh, New York ( 27w2 ) Fidelity to Principles. \Why did Brown let the man beat him up so brutally? Why didn't ho yell enough?\ \Well you see, Brown Is a simplified speller, and as there are forty-eight different ways of spelling 'enough' be had some trouble In picking out tbe form that was least objectionable, and that gave the fellow a chance to blacken uls-eyes and loosen his teeth.\ —Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Lazy One. Too lazy to sow and too lazy to reap; Too lazy for all things but plenty of sleep; Too lazy for makln' the grass come to hay. Each day that he lives Is his laziest day. And If he had wings to the regions on tilgh Ho'd Just be too lazy—too lazy to fly. With a harp In hla hand—and regret for to say It— He'd still be too lazy—too lazy to play It. —Frank L. Stanton. OVBKOBOWDED TENEMENT DI8TWCT IN A GREAT orrr, to the 12,000.000 people who are doing aouproductlve work and to tbe -10,000,- 000 people who do not worlt at\ all And because the changed ratio of sup ply and demand are enabling the farm- er to make a profit where before he worked at a loss there Is a great outcry over the high cost of living. Tbls out- cry will not change things In tue least Neither will boycotts uor anti-meat so cietles. There is only one remedy, a reversal F 0f the tide of population. The abnor mal growth of cities must be checked. Farming must be restored to its proper place hi the industrial world. Iu the succeeding articles we shall note some of the forces that are bringing this about. Hazing Him. \Mr. Chairman,\ said the new mem- ber, of the literary club, \I move you, sir\- \I rise to a point of order, Mr. Chair- man,\ Interrupted one of the other members. - \State your point of order.\ \The gentleman says 'I move yon.' ItTls not only out of order, but utterly absurd for,\a man of 114 pounds to talk of 'moving* a chairman who weighs 800.\ \The point Is well taken!\ roared the presiding officer, bringing his gavel down with a resounding thud. \The gentleman will merely 'move' or take his seat.\—Chicago Tribune. Two of Them. Towne— My wife's nerves are such peculiar things. She always worries when she's having a dress made Just asif- Browne (Interrupting) —Huh! Mv wife only seems to worry when she Isn't having one made.—Catholic Stand- ard and Times. Rodental A long, lean cat once met a friend The friend was plump and round. Said the long, lean cat, \You can scarce- ly bend; Too fat by many a pound.\ The plump cat looked around In fear, Then whispered soft and low, \Do tell me, Tom, if no one's near— Tell me, does my rat show?\ — I.ippincott's. New from Cover td Cover WEBSTER^ NEW INTERNATIONat DICTIONABLY _ JUST ISSUED. Ur&t Chief, Dr. W.T.H«mi,formerir.S. Con. of Education. Tbe Webster Tradition Developed by Moden Scientific Len'cography. KeytoLit- eratureofSevenCenturiei. Geieral Information Practically DoubUit 2700 Pages. 6000 Illustrations. 400,000 Words and Phrases.' GET THE BEST in Scholarship, Conven- ience, Authority, Utility. Lost the Place. Sally—Please, ma'am. I can't find the broeim. Mrs. Shipshape—Haven't I told you often enough to have a place for every- thing and everything In Its place? ' Sally—Yes, ma'am; I did that, but I bave lost tbe place.—Evening Wiscon- sin. A Lazy Citizen. They talk about the reapers' Let 'em reap' Let 'em reap! I'm happier where the river Is slngln' me to sleep. Where It waves the water lilies, and It's mighty cool and deep— Oh, I'm happier where the river Is slngln' me to sleep I —Atlanta Constitution. Reliaf From Heavea. Heaves can be greatly relieved or temporarily removed by medicine and special management. In summer grass should form tbe only feed, aad In win- ter wet oat straw should h» preferred to dry bay. Fowler's solution of ar- senic In \half ounce doses twice daily lessens tbe distress. Commercial med- icines are also useful to that extent. 'Foley Kidney Pills Cured Me.\ Have Abbreviated Eulogies. Old Homer sans of Helen, wife Of Menelaua, king o* Spart, •Who thought to lead a merry life At Troy, Turk, (not on the chart): .Of.tasfinatra^jiusfln-olBgv --- A lot of poets raved, by groshl . But, then, they never know Fan Clegs, Who hails from 'Walla Walla, Wash. Tve heard a lot of Nlcolette, Whom Aucassin considered cute; Of Helolse, -who when a vet. By Abolard was thought a beaut.; Of Rosamund men caned the \fair\ Pve likewise read—I say, \All bosh!\ With Fanny. Clegg thercan't compare, Who holla from. Walla Walla, Wash. -HarpeM Weekly. Teething children have more or less diarrhoea, which can be controlled \by giving Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. ,411, that is necessary is to give the prescribed dose efter each operation of the'bos»els more than - natural and then castor oil t o cleanse the system.' It is safe and sure. Sold by all dealers. , 2$wS Olive Oil . Try our Pure Olive Oil id bottles, pints, quarts, and; gallons. No better anywhere. \City Grocery Go., .Main Street. \> 28*2 The above is a quotation from a let- ter written by^i. M. Winkler, Evans- ville, Ind. \I contracted a severe case of kidney trouble. My back gave out and pained me. 1 seemed to have lost all strength and ambition; was bothered with dizzy spells, my head would swiml' and specks float before my eyes. I took Foley Kidney Pills regularly and am now perfectly well and fee! like a new man. Foley Kjdney Pills have cured me.\ C. S. Hanks, the .drug- gist. . 25wS Crude Oil Shampoo at Murphy's SwlZ Must Be Above Suspicion. Kidney and bladder ailments are so serious in their consequences, and if unchecked so often fatal that any remedy offered for tjieir cure must be above suspicion. Foley Kidney Pills contain no-'harmful'drugs, and have successfully stood a long and thorough test. C. S. Hanks, the druggist. „ 2Sw5' Erpert Massagih»-„for the scalp :-nd face, electric or by hand, at Mtrphy's. 8wl3. Subscribe for the Union-Gasette, The world's most successful medicine 1 or bowel complaints is .Chamberlain!* ^ :olic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy! „| It has relieved more pais and mfftririg, 1 aid saved more lives than any otheV .medicine in use. Invaluable for chit- dren and adolts. Sold by all d«a>ra,. - ' 25wtf\ 31 NORTH and CASPIAN LEAVE CHARLOTTE 1000 island Tour Via Bay. of A 420-Mile WMer Trip ^mmm*mmmm^mmmamammaa^mm0mmmMmmf»' te . ~) m ~-\vM •'••Mm ':>$$% .^-i4il - - '£^ill * Viff&Slq ,-s$l 2 Nidht. and a.D« r Aflptt . Total (ka^&llPplfeiM The ONLY Steamer, matt* CJESrfffl PLETE TOUR of 1000 UuAmOmm ' \ - i-^&ea BayofQuinte. 9 Cobourg and Port Hope Route m. Steamer leaves Ojidoiie^i*^,-,,,,.,„ dairy except Sunday ^.CA&K^/mti Port Hope, On& R<*u^<:an^tat 7:45 P. M- Short Route to Kawartfa. Lakes. Ratcatrts^jblaf '\'' PoldenandmSnaMail Agents: LEWIS & CO.. ,67 - & »**i*ii& Wmtm m* •\>^ You v viav