Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
More than 60,000 miners have re sumed work in South Wales. Several war vessels will be concen- trated by our Government in Chinese waters. to his home in Indianapolis. He is in good health. Zimmermann, the bicycle champion, has heart trouble. He has been warned to take a rest. Several cases of cholera have oc eurred at Grimsby, a seaport in Lin- colnshire, England. A young Scotch woman, Miss Leal broke the bank at Monte Carlo, win- ning $300,000 in one hour, after a week of remarkable luck. Six young men were lost by the cap- sizing of the yacht Alpha in Lake ‘Champlain, near Port Henry. A trolley car in Cincinnati ran away, jumped the track and crashed into a saloon. Eight persons were killed and neariy forty injured. Labor day was generally observed. In New York city 20,000 men marched, and 15,000 in Brooklyn. Anarchists at- tempted no demonstration. The mills of the Falcon Iron Com- pany at Niles, O., which have been shut down for months, have resumed, giving employment to 1,000 men. The old Van Rensselaer manor house at Albany, erected in 1765, is to be de- molished. The bricks of which it is constructed were brought from Hol- land. The Carnegie steel mills in all de- partments started in full Monday morning. The resumption gives em- ployment to 2,000 men, who have been idle for several weeks. Pierre Lorillard, the owner of the Rancocas stables, will sell all his rac- ing horses, including Lamplighter, for lwhom he paid $30,000 a year ago. Ill health is given as the cause. France has given Siam three months lin which to accept the new conditions presented by the special French envoy. It is probable that England and China will both support Siam in resisting the Inew articles. Among the passengers on La Cham- pagne, which arrived Saturday night, was M. Bartholdi, the famous French sculptor and creator of the Statue of Liberty. He comes over to visit the \World’s Fair. A big cloudburst is reported at Guy- ton, on the Central Railroad, thirty miles from Savannah, Ga. The people were caught on the street and country roads and had to swim for their lives. Bridges were washed away. France was excited over the second ballots for members of the Chamber ‘of Deputies on Sunday last. There ‘were 164 second ballots to be taken. Immense excitement was caused by the news of the defeat of M. Clemen- iceau, chief of the Radicals. by M. Jourdan. The result was to strength- en the Government. Investigation shows that the accident on the Boston and Albany Railroad, in Massachusetts, was caused by the crim- inal carelessness of the bridge repair- ers, who removed the rivets from a section of the bridge truss and then went to their dinner, regardless of the fact that the express would pass over the bridge before their return. The famous murder case of Dr. T. Thatcher Graves, formerly of Provi- dence, R. L., has at last been settled. The doctor found dead in his cell at the county jail in Denver, where he fi waiting a rehearing on the charge ing poisoned Mrs. Josephine Bar- yy, a wealthy widow, also of Provi- dence. In a brief note he stated the reason for his suicide: “Died from per- secution—worn out—exhausted.” A TROLLY CAR’S WILD DASH. Eight Persons Killed and Forty Injured in Cincinnati. Avondale electric car No. 644 of the Cincinnati trolley system became un- manageable while entering the city, dashed down a hill at frightful speed, left the track, broke a telegraph pole, and shot into a saloon, wrecking both itself and the structure it struck. As a result of the collision eight persons were killed or injured beyond recovery, land nearly forty more injured, many of them dangerously. There were over fifty people in the car and not one of them escaped in- jury. The motorman and conductor jumped just before the car struck the pole, and thus escaped a horrible death. 'The car was smashed into splinters, as was the front of the saloon and the bar, and from the debris at once arose and moans that told those within he: that a terrible acident had oc- curred. Six patrol wagons were upon the scene within a few minutes, and the dead and dying were quickly trans- ferred to the City Hospital, where the entire medical corps was soon busily engaged in rendering such assistance jas was in its power. The accident was icaused by the failure of the brake. THE GREAT HURRICANE, Latest Details of the Loss of Life and Property. The calamity that devastated Charles- ton and Savannah has continually grown in magnitude. Reports from the Sea Islands, near Charleston, say that bodies are still being found, but, it being seven days since the storm, they are not to be identified. They are quickly placed in the trenches and covered with earth and an entry made iby the Coroner. This tally, for it can scarcely be called a record, now foots up close to 800 as the number of lives lost in South Carolina. The loss of property cannot be well estimated. The loss of the rice crop is e upon $1,000,000. The loss upon sea island cotton is estimated at $500,000. The losses sustained by the railroads ana ithe telegraph and telephone companies and the great prosphate industry were | ormous. Leave all of these out of sideration. however, and take those individual properties, such as dwell- 4, stores and small and large craft, the total would foot up a sum ch can only be conjectured, but ch will amount to many millions. orts of small wrecks continue to be | ‘ived. Cholera in Europe. holera continues to spread in vari- parts of Europe, but it is so late in season that it can hardly become eh worse. Deaths in Gallacia have aged ten di: The average of ths from various parts of Italy is ut twenty per day. The disease made some progress at Amster The outbreak at Grimsby, Eng: is now under control, ane mated Phere is a grea scarcity of silver if | Rtaly. Ex-President Harrison has returned ; HOME RULE WINS. | MR. GLADSTONE’S BILL PASSES THE HOUSE OF COMMONS. The Lords Are Preparing to Reject it by a Big Vote—Hot Political Times Ahead for Britain—The Autumn Session of Parliament. The majority of 34 by which Mr Gladstone’s great measure for the gov- ernment of Ireland was adopted by the House of Commons is small, but it represented a solid, compact alliance composed of most incongruous mate rials. The very fact that Mr. Glad- stone was able to hold such a majority for the bill in the face of the enormous difficulties that confronted him shows that a strong and determined public sentiment is behind him. The bill will be defeated, as a matter of course, in the House of Lords. Mors than 400 Lords have already promised to support the Marquis of Salisbury iz throwing out the bill. The Earl of Kimberly, leader of the Government's forlorn hope in the House of Lor can muster at most forty-two votes. For every Peer supporting the Dill, therefore, there will be ten opposing it. There will be little debate on the bill among the Lords. For three nights they will devote most of their time to dividing against it. Then the bill wilt be discussed in a perfunctory way. Not all Unionists look with favor on the Salisbury plan of rallying an over- whelming majority of Lords to vote against the bill. Such a course, they feel, must direct general attention tc the broadening chasm between the Lords and the Commons, and tend to precipitate the fight of British democ- racy against the upper house. For many years the British people have watched with increasing jealousy the interference of the Peers with the work of the popular representatives in the lower house. The assembling of the aristocrats to defeat a measure ap- proved by the Commons after the most exhaustive debate in Parliamentary history will not only aggravate this jealousy, but will also excite more in- terest in the passage of the bill than has been felt before in the United Kingdom. It will arouse again the enthusiasm of Mr. Gladstone's follow- ers. A period of intense political ex- citement is certain in England. The present prospect is that the House of Commons will not adjourn ! before September 27. The leaders of the Unionists are busily plotting trou- . Gladstone. Mr. four, Mr. Chamberlain and Sir Henry James decided in a conference to defer as long as possible the adjournment, and thus defeat the Government’s plans for ap autumn session. Mr. Chamberlain has canceled his order for passage to New York. His family will s to obstruct the progress of Government business. He and Mr. Balfour think that by means of a system of relays they can keep the House sitting until all opportunity of holding an autumn session will be gone. The Ministers, however, declare that even if the House be obliged to sit un- sume business on November 2. EUROPE AGAINST FRANCE. Great Nations Uphold Germany’s Military Display at Metz, To understand exactly the present European situation it would be neces- sary to read the thoughts of three per- sonages who are the masters of the diplomatic game. sonages are the Czar, the Kaiser and King Humbert of Italy. What is visible is, in the first place, the speech, marked with displea: and bad temper, delivered by the Czar on the occasion of the inaugu ion of the Port of Libau, in which Alexander ‘II. declared that the Baltic ought to be, in spite of all opposition, a Ri i) lake. The second sign of the times is the holding of the German army man- euvres on the French frontier and the entrance of William II. into Metz on the anniversary of the capitulation of Sedan, accompanied by the Crown Prince of Italy. Thirdly, there is the significant fact that the Italian military maneuyres are also to be held on the Italian side of the French frontier, and that the hatred of Italians against the French is constantly on ths increase. Beside all these outward and ale signs England is again protesting, and more loudly than ever, against the policy of France in Siam, and seems now inclined to refuse what she was only a short time ago ready to accept. It looks as if Germany, Italy and England were in a combination to overawe the French republic, together with its Russian ally. NIGHT SESSIONS NEXT. Big Developments Likely in the Senate This Week. A Washington dispatch says there will be important developments in the Seneate before the week is out. The silver Senators gvill have to do most of the talking and their plans of pure delay will become more apparent to the country than ever. Before the week is ended it is likely that the antl silver Senators will compel night ses sions. In the meantime the opposition to the repeal will continue to dwindle. The fact that the silver Senators are forced to defend the Sherman act. whose weakness they have admitted on the floor of both houses, greatly em- barrasses them. Their programme is merely one of obstruction, to compel concessions. The weakness of such a policy in the face of public sentiment is daily becoming more apparent. Busl- ness men in the silver States are send itions to their Senators favoring ional repeal. There is a great deal of discussion to follow the repeal of the Sherman State bank plank of the Democratic form will be ac ; on in some way. President Cl is represented as favoring the pr tion to repeal the State bank tax. if a | measure can be framed that will sur- mount the difficulties in the rehabilitation of S' | Cholera Stamped Out. | ‘The authorities of the United States, of New York und of the State of New Jersey ajl comb.ned to master the threatened outbreak of cholera upon our shores. An official bulletin of the Jersey City Health Department an mounces that no new s have ap- peared, and that the disease ha ven. stamped out. Mr. Gladstone has decided to take RCRHOM yi scl & well-earned y: on Septem: ; | ber 16, while he will remain in London | til October 31 it will be called to re | These three per: | about the financial legislation that is , INTERVIEWING TRAMPS, Curious Information Regarding a Curious Class of Individuals, IcCook, ef Mew York, enship by practicing it. He is always pegging away at something for the public good. Now, with the help of the mayors and police officers of fourteen American cities, he has been taking a “tramp census,” and he communicates the results—or some of them—to the Forum. The number of American tramps covered by this census is 1,349. Thirty- two questions were asked in every case, and Mr. McCook grieves that he inadvertently omitted a thirty-third, though he tells us in the same breath of one involuntarily catechumen who found the thirty-two too many. “That's a devil of a lot of questions,” exclaim- ed this indignant victim, ‘to ask a fel- low for a night’s lodging!’ In the most ambitious previous tramp census of which Mr. McCook has heard—Lon- don, 1889—the number of weary wan- derers questioned was only 286. Of these 1,349 American tramps, less than one-half describe themselves as unskilled laborers, and only sixteen say they have no regular calling. Of the representatives—on the retired list —of skilled labor, 46 per cent. say they used to be sailors, firemen, brakemen, shoemakers, curriers, teamsters, hos- tlers, blacksmiths or horseshoers. Mr. drag net caught three elec- two brokers, two reporters, a acher, a designer, an artist .“a real German count”), a Salvation Army captain, a “gentleman,” but no clergy- man and no profe: “The sedentary clerk,” he tells vas just as numer- ous as the nomadic peddler.” Nearly all of the 1,349 tramps are in the prime of life, averaging much younger than their (recorded) fellow pilgrims in England and Ger 'Y. “Following my results,” says Mr. Mc- Cook, “we may expect to find one tramp in twenty under twenty years, three out of five under thirty-five, sev- enty-five out of every 100 under forty, and one in twelve fifty or over. Only one in 111 will be over seventy.” Of the whole number questioned 83.5 per cent. promptly said their health was “good;” 8 per cent. “pretty good,” or “not very good;” 8.5 per cent. “bad.” This at a time when the grip was rag- ing among well-fed, well-housed peo- ple, and the general death rate was uietingly high. ‘‘Nefther the tramp’s age nor his health, then,” concludes Mr McCook, “is a bar to successful j labor. Only fifty out of the 1,849 owned up | to having been on the road more than a year. The explanations of their | presence there given by 82.8 per cent. ; of the whole number were: “Out of money,” “Out of work,” “Looking for work.” Twelve “wanted to see the country;” eight “wanted to take life y;” six said they would not work; twenty-five laid their tramping to drink. One exceptionally candid wanderer | diagnosed his case in three words, | “Whiskey and lazy.” As to nativity, 56.1 per cent. of the , 1,849 were born in this country, 20.3 ‘per cent. in Ireland, 6.6 per cent. in England, 8.4 per cent. in the Scandi- navian countries, 2.6 per cent in bonny ; Scotland. There are rteen negroes | in the lot and one Indian. Only one Southern State is represented, and that ; by a white man. “The tramp,” re- marks Mr. McCook, “seems to be a , product of our Northern ¢ivflization ‘and to move along the more temper ate belt, avoiding extremes of heat and ij cold as being disagreeable and less ; favorable to health.’ Don’t think of the tramps as illiter- ate: 1,187 of the 1,349 can read and write, 18 of the 162 who can’t write can read, and one of the favorite pur- chases is the daily newspaper. 7.3 per cent. are married; 4.4 per cent. are widowers. Thirty of the 1,849 say they are total abstainers, 459 that they are temperate, 825 that they are in- ; temperate. Only 5.8 per cent. own up ito having been convicted of crimes | other than drunkenness. Only 113 say | they have no religion. Only 116 say ; they have seen the inside of the alms- house. By their own admission 14.9 | per cent. of the whole number are, or | have been, speciaily dangerous to the public health. Are Women Responsible ? It was Marguerite of Valois who said, with unusual severity for a wo- man, that “the less one sees and knows men the higher one esteems them.” It is obvious that the cynical Mar- garet really meant to say that the bet- ter one knows men the greater is one’s contempt for them. These sharp-tongued assaults are in- teresting and diverting as specimens of satirical raillery, but to the analytical mind they present nothing worth while. The simple truth is, women do not hold such sentiments towards men; though every one knows that to a con- siderable extent they would be justi- fied in so holding. The general atti- tude of women is one of seeming wor- shipful admiration. This is bad, espe- cially for very young men, who are thus puffed up by conceit and made unspeakably disagreeable, whereas were they let alone they might disclose a becoming measure of modesty and self-distrust. It is about time for wo- men to face the fact that they are di- | rectly chargable with most of the un- j pleasing characteristics of man. They constantly feed his vanity; they habitu- ally practice duplicity and in their in- | tercourse with him the note of sincer- ity is seldom heard. Naturally the | man desires the “clinging trust” of the woman, but he is too dull-headed to perceive that what he takes for cling- ; ing trust is clever diplomacy, and it | come a clever diplomat is to cultivate i deceit. Tho Creole. } A creole, strictly speaking, is any person born in this country or the West Indies of European ancestors; also any person born in or near the tropics, and this is the sense in which the word is usually employed. The use of the word, however, has been by some restricted first to children of for- eign parents born in Louisiana, and, second, to children of Spanish or , French parents born in Louisiana, and then in the North the word has been perverted so that it is believed to im- ply some strain of negro blood in a person to whom it is applied. It does not imply anything of the sort—New York Herald. Already Done. Starter—I met a man this morning who said I looked like you. Smarr me who he is and I’ go and knock him down. TRF a Starter—I did that myself. ae | ls an axiom that the only way to be- | VANDERBILT’S MOUNTAIN HOME. How a Wilderness has Boen Transformed into a Flower Garden, George W. Vanderbilt, one of the younger members of that famous fam- ily, has developed an untamed North Carolina forest into a beautiful home. He is not yet thirty years of age, but, to judge from the Lewisburg, Pa., Chronic description of the transfor- mation he has effected in the North Carolina mountaius, he seems to be spending his money with an intelli- gence somewhat rare among men who have so much to spend, and his enter- prise is suggestive of the period which, in view of the rapid increase of the population of the country, cannot be very far distant when land in the United States must be very much more valuable than it is to-day. Mr. Van- derbilt’s tastes are said to run in the direction of art and letters. His North Carolina enterprise indicates that he represents a development in his be- yond the money acquiring stage. His first step was to purchase, besides sev- eral mountains, 18,000 acres of along the French Broad and the Swan- anoa Rivers. The next step in which he exhibited unusual intelligence in en- joying his opportunities was to restrain the natural temptation to carry out plans of his own and to employ the services of the greatest landscape ar- tist in the country, Frederick Law Olin- stead, who had so much to do with laying out the World’s Fair grounds. So far, sixty-five miles of macadam road have been constructed on Mr. Vanderbilt’s North Carolina estate. Seven hundred men are employed, their wages running from $1 per day to the salary of $12,000 paid to ihe overseer. Three years ago the work of trans- forming old fields, pastures and wood- lands into a harmonious landscape be- gan, and Prof. Harbeson, who has spent many days jn studying the devel- opment of the place, is enthusiastic over the progress made. He says that Druid Hill Park, at Baltimore; Fair- mount Park, at Philadelphia; the Bos- ton Garden and the Central Park, of New York, contain nothing that is comparable with several miles of the appreach on the Vanderbilt estate, which is art of the highest kind, a comn- bination of nature and the work of man so happily joined that the eye cannot tell where the one ends and the other begins. Bowlders haye beer set in place, rhododendrons transplant- ed, and the whole is dechared to be a poem in plgnts, trees and flowers, the lJongest poem ever made and one of the greatest. A trained forester is set- ting out large plantations of forest trees. The arboretum is declared to surpass the famous Arnold arboretum at Cambridge, and when completed will contain. every tree, shrub and woody plant found in the world which is hardy to the climate. Ten miles of railroads have been constructed to transport materials about the estate. Vast extents of land, which a year or s0 ago were entirely unproductive, have been so changed by plowing, heavy manuring and green soiling that to-day Prof. Harbeson says they are growing as fine crops as can be grown in the most fertile valleys of the Northégn States. Lately Mr. Vander- bilt has added 20,000 acres for a hunt- ing park. There will be deer parks and lakes, and the house, which will cost about $5,000,000, it is said, will be the largest dwelling-house in the world and one of the world’s most famous structures. Already by the introduction of mosses and vines at the bridges por- tions of the place have taken on the appearance of age and the appearance of newness has been overcome. The First Consul. Just before the review began we saw several officers in gorgeous uniforms ascend the stairs, one of whom, whose helmet seemed entirely of gold, was Eugene de Beauharnais. A few min- utes afterwards there was a rush of officers down the stairs, and among them I saw a short, pale man, with his hat in his hand, who resembled Lord Erskine in profile. But, though my friend whispered, “C’est lui,” I did not comprehend that I beheld Bonaparte till I saw him stand alone at the gate. In another moment he was on his horse, while I, trembling with emotion, gazed on him intently, endeavoring to commit each expressive, sharply-chis- eled feature to memory, contrasting also with admiration his small, simple hat, adorned with nothing but a little tri-colored cockade, and his blue coat, guiltless of gold embroidery, with the splendid adornments of the officers who followed him. ~ At length the review ended—too soon for me. The First Consul sprang from his horse. We threw open our door again, and, as he slowly reascended the stairs, we saw him very near us, and in full face, while his bright, rest- less, expressive and, as we fancied, dark blue eyes beaming from under long black eyelashes, glanced over us with a scrutinizing but complacent Jockesabra. Opie, in Tait’s Magazine, Many Eaces in One. A comical story is told of a young man who was shown a photograph of a young lady which seemed to impress him very much. The impression of the countenance in the portrait denoted a strong will, yet a gentle disposition. It was the face of a young lady whom ; one would like to know. | _ “Who is the original of this portrait?” | the young man inquired. “The graduating class of Smith Col- | lege, Northampton,” was the reply. It was a composite photograph, and | the admiring young man awoke regret- fully to the fact that there was in reality no such lady as the one whose | face had so strongly impressed him— ' or, rather, that there were forty-nine of her! | A young lady who, on seeing a com- posite photograph of a small circle of friends of which she was a member, exclaimed: “It is so charming to enjoy the portrait of somebody who Is alt one’s intimate friends at once!” Mind Acting on Matter. He—I am afraid it will be a great shock to her to find that her fiance is flirting with that handsome blonde. She—Yes; I shouldn’t wonder if it made her hair turn light in one night. —World’s Fair Puck. Needless Advice. Mrs. Essey—If you drink brandy without putting water in it you will ruin the coat of your stomach. Hen Essey (absently)—Never mind; it’s an old coat—Puck. E ) Thos. H. Clarke, REAL ESTATE AND LOANS. 606 F Street, N. W., WASHINGTON, D. C a es Subscribe to and advertise in the Bzz, THE INDUSTRIAL BUILD- ING AND SAVING CO. Loans money to buy or build homes, Shares $1 each, payable monthly. Dividends declared ev- ery January. Secretary’s office: 609 Fst.,n.w. Open9 a. m. to 5 p.m. Monthly meetings at Lin- coln Memorial Church, cor 11th and 2 sts., n. w., first Monday night in every month. Henry E. Baker, Secretary. Advertise in the Beg. Rooms with Board: In first Fifty Cents Per Wee, $5 CASH ~~ AND~ 50c. Per Week WwW buy you a home in the CITY OF BOWIE. 50 CTS. PER WEEx, The first opportunity offered colored people to secure Homes on Weekly payments ot 4? cents a week or Two Dollars per monty, 1000 LOTS FOR SALE. In the city of Bowie, State o Maryland. Only 20 minutes ride from Washington. Double track 22 trains stop daily. Fare to ang rom Washington, only Six cents by commutation ticket. The jane. tion of the Baltimore and /’oto. mac and Pope Creek Railroad, Telegraph and Express offices, The best depot on the Baltimore and Pot ec railroad, Stor-s churchesan. hools already puilt, The most healthful spot in the State of Maryiand. Title to prop. erty perfect. No Taxes, and pur- chasers of lots will receive their deeds, with certificate of “Free ” PAIGE OF LOTS ONLY $100, TERMS OF PURCHASE: Five dol. cass house and in a popular partt|lars cash and two dollars per of the city, Cars pass the doo 922—11 etn’ CHEAP JOB PRINTING | At the “BEE” Office, 1109 I Street, N. W., near 1itu where you can get DODGERS. TICKETS, PROGRAMMES, CIRCULARS. BUSINESS CARDS, month, with no interest. [ig| casb, 10 per cent discount; all cash 20 per cent discount. Money will be advanced to par ties desiring to build. If abusband purchaser dies, before his purchase is compicted, a deed in fee will be given to his widow, if the property has been improved, or if not. the amount already paid will be returned her ‘The above presents an opportu. nity uever before offered the Col- ored people of the city of Wash. ington to secure a valuable lot, either as an investment or forg home on monthly payments, and at thesame time, entitled them to a vote and a voice in the Goy- ernment of the country. Those who apply first, will have the first choice of lots. Already many have made their homes in the “City of Bowie, and lots purchased on the above terms should double in value with. in the next six months. For further information apply to or CAMPBELL CAKRINGI(N Owner, 505 D St, n: w., Washington, D, ¢, Mont Strickland, FINE SHOES- ' VISITING CARDS,| No. 939. Pennsylvania Ave., N. W RECEPTION CARDS, WEDDING INVITATIONS, BILL-~HEADS, LETTEEADS, STATEMENTS, CONSTITUTIONS, BY. DRAFT BOOKS, CHECK BOOKS, & AT THE LOWEST CASH PRICES. Liberal Discount to Churches Benevolent Societies, Social Clabs, Military Organizations and Labor and Trade Unions. ALL WORK READY WHEN PROMISED. We have purchased an entire out fit of New Type with the most approved modern styles, enabling us to execute our work with satis- faction to all. We invite you to call and inspect our office, even if you have nothing for us to do. BEE PRINTING, CO., 1109 I Street. Northwest. better than ever, and should ng buyin de ‘contemplati: iz 1 TS °= BULBS. 2.22%; SEE O93 of Ilustrations, and nearly 150 5 Washington D C. Through the f facturer of Cashm Shawls, there has PLAID SHAWL GIVEN AWAY! a of a large Z tisfaction guarante ‘Or money refunded. Addre:s @ SPECIAL FRIDAY EXCUR‘IONS TO ATLANTIC CITY VIA ROYAL BLUE LINE. i{Spec'al excursion tickets to Atlantic City ana return via B. & O. and R Railroads will be sold each Frida the searon at the rate of 35.00 for t round trip from Washington to At! City and return. Tickets will be good returning regular train until Tuesday tc date of sale. The usual forms of season excursi tickets to Atlantic City are also on sal for all trains. Cures Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis ‘and all Serofulous Humor ; To Consumptives. b their testi Proved it to be a valuable remedy ¢sthma, Diphtheria, and all dis wungs. ’ Manufactured only by Boston. Sold by all druggists. Cures Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronch yp andl all Sergttious Hume has induced some unprinefpled person: Im off a simple article of their own m ‘Any person who issuffering from Consumption, should be careful where this article. The results of its use are mendations; and the proprietor has am file of its great success in pulmonary Phosphates possess a most marvelous eombined with the pure Cod-Liver It is regularly preseribed by the m¢ by 4. B. Wizzor, Chemist, Boston, and #!