Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 29 May 1890, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

* - FOR AND ABOUF THE HDIES. Ihings Which Every Woman Ought to Koow. HINTS FOE HOUSEKEEPERS. Frills, Fashions, Fancies, foibles Feminine Oonoeits. and HOW TO BECOME HANDSOME. Snpeitlaous il;8h troubles the minds of many pornous in addition to its nlneical banlcnsomiinoss. Uow msny womun ilo we Inly meet who would utvo all they have ud stop at po iueonvemtnoe or saentioe could they by <oinn ao reduce themselves to the liuea of grace 4I1 j beamy. The Due-bees of Manborongb, who Utely re- tamed to this country, baa amazed those former American fiienc.s who knew her as Mrs. llammersley. Then -he waa fat greatly to her discomfort, not to siy mor- tiii^atiou. Now she is *< pretty and lithe tigure as one could hope to tee. IIow ci.i she work the transformation ? Weil, according to an investigator, wbohas Hiven the world the beuetil of bi< or her investigations through tbe medium of the New York ll'orlj, she offered an adipose* specialist a fat f<- to take her tu training, and pledged Utrself to carry ut minutely his commands, ilera are -,?mt- of them : Not a morsel of bread, cakes, rolls or paatry. No tea, coif je, chocolate or s *eet wine. No potatoes, peas, rice, carruts, turnips, macaroni, uheese, butter, on am, custard, jellies or sweets. Not a drop of ire- wati r. No warm bail:*. No ilanuul, aud only enough clothing to keep from taking cold. N j bedroom lii-ai. Not a drop of any liquid food at meals. Iti place of bread ahu bad fruit, a aeution of apple or orange, some fresh grapes, ber- ries, churrit-s or stewed fruit being used when ordinarily ouu uravts a b.t of bread or swallow of water, ller diet was limited to two meald a day breakfast at 10 and limner M 7 -with tbe 'ollowiui; bill of fare to select from : litre, lean meats, game and poultry, soft-boiled e^a, aea foods, toast, lutluov, spinach, celery, creases, Iruiiu. She bad half a ^allun of hut water to drink every day, with lemon juica in it to take away the tlai taste. Culd water was denied her, and ales, f rappes, ohaiunaguu and olarut atriutly forbidden. She was even forced .to forego tlm luxnry of bath- inn in w:er, in place of whu-h une had sponge and vapor baths. Every few days shu took a fast, allowing the system to consume tho tilipjsu u.-sue. While no limit was put upon iho pleasure of driving or ridnit!, she was aukul u> aelicl the roughest, rockiest roads, and to walk from live to ton miles a day in the opau air. This practice of self-denial ihe Duchess of Marlboronjjh lias persisted in for the last two years, and to-day she 14 perhaps the handsomest woman of her nti in New York society. Shu weighs nbuut 140 pounds, her eyes are bright, her complexion is as clear and smooth as a souool (girl's ; she has the -uma^o of a cadet and the health of a child of nature. HuKBrmloil fur IVI\ i -. Here is a UBJV wriuklu wan regard to roasted duck that some^ojd wifo, fond and foolish and out of fashion onou^h to care about pleasing bur husband, may enjoy serving up to him toine ni^bt when be oomes homu a lititu more perplexed and annoyed with business than usual. Taku the .luck, whicb lias been roasted in the ordinary way with sage and onion dressing, soore it deeply witn the carving knife, scatter into the furrows no formed salt auo white or blaik pepper, and pour over it a glass or two of Hiirutidy warmed, not heated, so that it will not chill tbe duok. liaste tho bird with the wine i few mom- ents, cover it up, and let tlm uvaioumg soak well in, and when it is burvud to your lord and master it will be ad mnob of a revelation to bun as was tbe far famed pie of "four and twenty blackbirds, '' which was set before the king. Wliou this last juioy mot-.. 1 is mil iin^'tmi; in bis'iiouth, making hfo indeed worth living, ilien auk him for your new spring bonnet or tell him that tho ooal is out or that " mamma " is ooming for a nice long visit ur that you must no ami hear I'atti, and ava how ho will rustle his an^tl wings and till yon that heouly lives for the sake of carrying out your *idhrs and rfupplyiug :- cur wants, and the only thing net- ilul to perfect bliss is a visit fruni his motlur-in-law. Thr I i.i \ i:.uiii-i . The lady barber has come, au.l iho heart of overy )oung gentleman whu thinks that bid mtiatacbu will oouin up if uuly ihr ground bo ploughed butlioiently, is j,ld within him. Happily. ;liu lai'y barbe' is a noun of multitude, ami 11 is lik>:l) uuough that she will very soon add MSMUMablj to her number. At present her operations are oonnned to tbe sedate aud deuorous shades of Chancury Lane ; but if it be true that to know tho lady barber id 10 love her, we may bo HUM that sbe will presently establish herself in the gay and i;iiidj West End. Shaving ia, at tin I). HI, an ordeal ; but if, instead of the coarse and lumpy hands and tho inane politics of tbe male, we can have the pretty lingers and tho art- loss prattle of tbo feminine pract it ioner.must of us will hasten to Chaucsry Lane. I in ladies are hair-cutters as w-li, whu li i exosjedingly nice, since it is obvious that tho operation of liair-.-ntting, which lasts olose upon half an hour, is full of opportunities for conversation. tit. Jamti' Iln,i : i,t. S>ni|>Mllij In Knlduc a . lilld. liow many parents tbere aro who are readier to provide playthings for their children than to share tho dohghte of their children with those pla>tlnngH , readier to set their children at knowledge-seeking than to have a part in their children's sur- prises and enjoyments of knowledge -attain- ing ; readier to make good, as far as they can, all losses to their children than to griiwo with thuir children over those losses. Vmi what a loss of power to those parents .runts IH tins lack of sympathy with th. ir children as children. There are, however, parents who sympathy with their children in all things , and, aa a result, they praoticilly train and sway their children as they will , for when there i i entire sympathy between two per- sons, the stronger one is necessarily the emit rolling foros with both. .Sunday School Timti. The Prlujr Bane; Ha* done. An entirely new style of hair-dressing is threatened, says a fashion writer. In Paris the frizzy bang has meekly subsided to give the Jsvanoise head dresses a chance. Fashion appears to have gone daft on those peculiar ornaments), aud tbe great jewelers of tbe line de la Paix have been ordered to reset diamonds of more than one grande dame after tbe pitlrrn of those lUt metal ornaments. At the opera a few weeks ago a dazzling light in Parisian society appeared with her hair dressed perfectly tin to her head, on one side, right over the ear, an oarnment as Urge and as tlat as an individual butter plate, composed of diamonds and pearls, and medallions as large an an English penny, of the same gems, going round to tbe other ear, across the forehead juit at the line of the hair. A . .in MI; r in. > Taut*. The young princesses of Wales take after tbe princess herself in their iiiiet taite in dress and in their liking for tailor-made gowns of tweed and oloth for day wear. Navy- blue seems a favorite color with them, perhaps out of compliment to their sailor brother. Uedft-rn is building two neat dresses for the Princesses Victoria aud Maud. They are of gray-bine tweed, interlined with threads of navy-blue. The skirts are very simple, depending for style on the way they are hung and arranged. Above tbe In m three narrow bauds of navy-blue cloth are atitched on. Tbe coat- like bodicea open on vests uf navy-blue cloth. Altogether the gowns are quiet and unobtrusive in the extreme, and yet are neat, trim, and very ^ood style. London tar, Flxluc Hi., llali There was never more freedom shown in the arrangement of the hair than to-day. More attention in pi i to the contour of the head and face, and there is less anxiety to oopy a aet style. The two styles most prevalent for rvery.iay wi-r ure tho full graceful ooil o( braid.- 1 , which covora the bs.uk of the head from, the crown to the cape of the neck, and the long English ohatelaine of braids which hangs !. the back of the neck. The front hair is generally drtssed in a vrry slight, light bang, curved up a little at the sides, aud a curl is sometimes carelessly arranged in tho centre, where the face will bear it. In tbe evening tbe hair is worn very high, in full loopi in French styles. .%'.. i" .rk frili it IK. To Uxcuntte I Im HUIUB. Here is the advice of a decorator in making over a houie : Have your library dark aud rich, your dining room bright in coloring ami your sleeping rooms as near white or culard as possible, draping the windows with lawn, banishing carpets or upholstered furniture. If the rooms are very high it Jeep frie/.e will lower them, and paper on the ceiling will also bring them down. There are few tloora that can- not be rubbed, poliahed and tilled in lir or Imrdwco.l effects. The cost of wood carpet can be saved in doctor's fees. Tbe cool, clian, bright, colonial dTect is to be pre- ferred above every other period lor tbe drawing room or ptrlor. It costs money, to be sure, to appoint a house, but ta.ie goes a very long way. A Hlrm-li I. ir Hi timid*. There is an old fashioned preparation which our grandmothers made for whiten- ing the hands, pays tbe New York fribuiu. Two cakes of old-time brown Windsor, soap, it wineglass of German cologne and a wineglae) of lemon juioe added. In a day or two the lijiii 1 became incorporated with the soap so mat the mixture could be molded into a cake. Though old, this is an admirable prepara- tion or bleach for removing otains from tho bands. Ihe Clll of Krrn.-h I mlri <*!. The greatest simplicity prevails in th u cut of all French uudurgarmeuts. Any at- tempt at elaboration of trimming or out it considered in tbe verv worst taste. Chemises are low and sleeveless, with a -implo btnd around the neck ; they are daintily trimmed with a deep fall nf lace, or laoe and insertion, meeting a full front finished with lace aud insertion to tlu< waist line. i. ii i- Schuuli. In 1'itris there are live professional schools for girls. These have a course of instruction embracing modern languages, iloiiit alia economy, industrial designing, cutting and liltuis! I'^nnenta, and accounts. Each school is equipped with a kitchen and workshops for making corsets, fc nthera and other staple articles of trade. Girls are vinuitr.i u 14 years of age and remaiu three or four yeara. A Koyal WmldltiK in . . The Ktnpresa of Austria has caused her wedding dtess to be cut up and made into a set of vestments for thu Chnroh of St. Matthew, in 1'csth. The dress was of white brocade with silver threads, embroid- ered all over with i auuftil garlands of roees in silver. Uor bridal wreath en- circles an embroidered picture of the vir- gin, which is to ba hung np in the Loretto uhapel of the same church, which the Empress atl>ots for her devotions. The vestments will be used for the service in honor of iho Virgin Mary in May. Utxl - i i-> -i i ... i Uriuv. There seems to be a craze for red this spring, and this lurid hue ia observable in many branches of my lady's toil"l. lied coats and jackets of box cloth are very fashionable for walking or driving, red cloaks are worn over evening gowns to ball or opera. I saw a girl on Tw nty third street the other morning in a ijruv gcwu Mlh bright red gloves. Chiciyv lltarU'f rkl.ftter. How i he Ililili-n I n. '"ill. Here are the costumes of four brides at fashionable weddings yesterday. A gown of white corded ailk and dnoh- ease laoe, and a tullo veil ctoght with a cornet of orange blossoms. The bouquet was of white roses and violets. A ^ownof whito limeade and point loe, and tulle veil held by a half wreath of orange blossoms. The bouquet was of white lilacs. A gown of white satin adorned with feather trimming, and a tulle voil cvight with diamond pins, her mother' n nift. Tho bominet was of white violets and orchids. A gown of whilo aatin brocade and raro old point laoe, and a long tulle veil caught with orange blossoms. The bouquet was of white roses. Piuhlonable Kiii-ies. The fashionable fad at present is for an- trinities. A band of ribbon tied with a bow around the wrist is a new fashion. Some of the dowers seen on the new bon- nets are an impossibility in nature. Tbe tailor-made jacket and veal all in one has started in to be very fashionable. In light summer silks any one can see with half an eye that stripes will prevail. Ornamented jewelry is liavn : ; high favor, the most popular designs being tlowere. About tbe only nautical feature of the albatross tea gowns is the name of the material. Orchid jewelry is the latest novthy, and has created an immediate and decided sensation. It is a peculiarity of the bonnets this season that the smallest are eaid to be the most expensive. Masculine fashions are adopted by the women again this season, which is to be regretted. Straw hats and bonnets are alrctdy seen. There aro already women who will get ahead of the beason. Among the handsomest of the fans now exhibited tor sale are those of natural col- ored ostrich feathers. Ornamental hairpins now include bees and butterflies of the very natural looking kind that come only from Paris. There is a bewildering variety in aash ribbon this season and they are wideenough to oome up under tbe wearers' arms. In the Scotch tartan dress goods, the small, inconspicuous patterns are held by the dressmakers to be the most elegant. Old- fashioned silver pocket booke in the form of a shell, such as our grandmothers used to carry, have oome back again. The country house must now be fur- nished as near as possible in the India style, which is as useful as it it cool and ornamental. M.m.-'itielairp gloves oome in all tbe new and beautiful shades, aud the ones with the greatest number of buttons sell quickest. There are many so-called Easter novel- ties in leather good*, including the new leather chatelaine with leather ornaments. Special glass jars or vases are now made to bold violets. They are mounted in -ilvi-r and are beautiful enough to lind a place on some table in the irawiug-room. Why I'.MIO Will Mut l> i.,- .4|i Year. The ineatijn ia often asked. Will tho year I'.'UO be a leap year .' ' It will not. When Julius Cie.-ar revised the calendar he appointed an extra day every four yearn, aud bis calendar lasted until A. L). 1582. Now the ordinary year is 11 minutes and 11 seconds ohort of being iii.'j lys in length, so that there isn't reaily a full sized extra day to be added to February every four years. C.i'jar didn't know this, or didn't care about it, and for l.iiQO > > ars we kept borrowing from the future, intil in 1582 we'd borrowed ten days. 1'ope Ongory X11I. started to correct this, lie ordered October .*>tb, 1 ."*-.'. to be called October Kith, and to squar- v iinge, ordered that coutnrial years ahoul . t, as a rnle, be leap years. Uut if leap year is omitted regularly oacb hundredth year, wo pay back nearly a day too much . so 1'opc Gregory farther ordered that every centnrial year whicb could be divided by 100 should bs a leap year after all. So we borrow eleven minutes each year from the future . more than pay our borrowings back by omitting three leap years in three centuries aud nnally .|iiaro matters by having a leap year in tne fourth ueuturial \nr. This arrangement is so exact that we barrow more than we pav back to the txlont of only one day in :i,si.r, years. Sixteen hun- dred was a leap year, '.',000 will be, but 1,,'IK) will not be. 'Any centurial year that can be divided by 100 will be a leap year. llartixrd Timtt. n.iii t Toy With Your Ki... Many people are troubled with itching eyosand try all sorts of washes. The eye is one of the most valuable organs of the body. Unfortunately for careless humanity, it is also QUO til tho most delicate. It does not pay to tritle with it. The best way to treat itching is to nee a oool, weak i%lt water watth ovpry few hours. If this does no good, go to n phynu'iin who makes a specialty of eye diseases.- .V, York Journal. i .MI., i. Doctor In * Hurry, Excited messenger Mrs. Sawbones, coma puck ' A man has fallen from the rojf of his house and is bleeding to death ' Female doctor All right. I'll be there as nun as I've got on my new dress and have done up my hair. Let mo see ; hadn t 1 better wear my dark blue dress or that light violet colored one .' The bine dress is more becoming to my complexion ; bat tbe Ottarit so stylish. Iliix-llill,.. Kr.-el|>U Mai Mentioned. First Theatrical Manager Well, you ought to have seen our audience last night ; we hardly needed to turn on the electric lights, such a brilliant audience, you know. Ha! lla ! Second Theatrical Manager Yes, I uiidi rslood that it was a very light houte : Ho ! Ilo ! An Authority* stranger (in western newspaper office) Ki:; pardon, sir, hut myself Mid frn mln noed help to decide a bet. Have you a oopy of Hoylo .' Old reporter No; don't need any. If tin Dispute is anything about cards, go into that roum across the hall and ask for the religious editor. .NVir York \\etkly. Mure people are worried to death by kind- ness than by abuse. Tommy 1'apa, what is a crank ? I'apa - Oh, we call a peculiar eccentric person a crank. Tommy And a baseball > rank is . 1'apa A baseball crank is a man who will not go to >\ game. Five of tho persons injured by the ex plosion of balistite >t Avigliano, Italy, have ainoe died, making tho total number of deaths nineteen. Three hundred work- Tiifii were present at the time of the acci- dent. Thirty were seriously injured. This is tho fourth explosion that hat occurred in the factory since 1873, KM KNS1VK WAIUIS. What Kinii. mil i inbuilt ii. at Food Cm it. Situi'i Indian! Eat. Uncle Sam's bill for Indian supplies is usually a large one, but, unlike the pension charge, it does not increase as tbe numbers dependent upon it diminish Among tbe articles for whicb tbe department are now negotiating aro the following : About '00,- 000 pounds bacon, it OOO.OOO pounds betf on the hoof, 1,000,000 pounds net beef, '270,000 pound* beans, 63,000 pounds baking powder, 500.000 pounds corn, ISO,- 000 pounds coffee, S.500.UOO pounds tlonr, '.5.000 pounds feed, 155.000 pounds hard bread, 65,000 pounds hominy, 30,000 pounds lard, 700 barrels mess pork, 17,000 pounds oatmeal. 450,000 pounds oats, 1-5,- 000 pounds rica, y.000 pounds tea, .(10.000 pounds salt, --'80.000 pounds soap, 'jJO.OoO pounds sugar and 70,000 pounds wheat. Also blankets, woolen and cotton gcodi (consisting in part of ticking, 13,000 yards ; standard calico, 100000 yards; drilling, 14,000 yards; duok. free'from all sizing, -'8.000 vards ; denims, 15,000 yards ; ging- liain. :CiO,000 yards; Kentucky jeans, 11.- 000 yards ; cheviot, 17,000 yards ; brown sheeting, J.iO.OOU yards ; bleached uheeting, .'5,000 yards ; hickory shirting, 15.000 yards; calico shirting, 7, 000 yards; winsey, J.OOO yardi) ; clothing, groceries, notions, aardware, medical supplies, school books, etc., and a long list of miscellaneous arti- :les, such as harness, ploughs, rakes, forks, 9tc., aud Tor about s60 waggons required [or the service. The Hllll.li Mlinrniu Uptn it Nii;lil. Thirty years have .-lapsed einoe a select ommittee of tbe Ilouse of Commons recommended that ibe British museum should be open to the public between tbe hours of 7 and 10 p.m. Throughout three decades otlicial pasivity has successfully withstood innumerable tllorts on behalf of the people to bring about this desirable innovatiou. At length, however, those in high I'lws who . mulate the conservatism of Mrs. 1'itrtiugton. aud cling aa tightly to the " rest-and-be-tliknkfnl " policy as that reactionary old lay aid to her osean spurning broom, have been compelled to comply with one moiety of the recom mendatiou put forward by the Parlia- mentary committee of March. 1660. To ibe other namely that the National tial- lery should also be thrown open thrice a week nntil 10 p.m. they will, in all proba- bility, nluctantly aooede thirty years hence. ii.ui<;ruinr< .'Jtiienner. lii\<nll M II nlr rT (iulllulln.il. Some little sensation was caused recently by the execution in front of tbe gate of La ItO'juette of two juvenile murderers, aged respectively IV aud 'Jl. The had strangled an i i urlv concierge in broad daylight in the Hue Uouaparle, with a view to robbing her. President ('arnot was dissnaded from piring their lives, with a view to dispel a i:rn.t .i'ii .u cp rooted impression auiong the youth of the dangerous classes that it is unlawful t* guillotine "icianta." The one hardship in Ui.-ir case was that lifty- nine days were allowed to .lapse lotween their sentence and execution, aud the delay i-naiiirai,ui them to hope for a commuta- tion of their punishment. They met their fate with courage, i ' r. ! -,';*. IniliiuliiK HI* 3ii|rton. Little ilainin I'launicrag Say, (Jrauny, how much is dern apples Dear Old Apple Woman Oh, go 'way wid ye/ ; sure it'a not a penny yez have at all. at all Littlo (iamin Fitunterag Well, haven't I got dcT right u r:;o out shoppin', all der same In In. . I. liailstono One last request. Id porter- What's that .' Hailstone 1'leaso don't eay I was as big as a hen'a egg. Tilt* ItoTeriM^it uf Wtlr. " In linns of peace," said the Major, "I fr|iitntly go to military halli." And in units it war .' The military lulls come to me. That's how I lost my leg. 1 ' Tin re is a vast amount of solid re:rea tiou about being lawless once in a while. Strawberry fttiivalsnt which tbe game of hunt the strawberry is the attraction are now in order. There are any number of men who can write a column, 'nut the man who can put a distinct, complete idea in three lines a all too rare. ,/.iriu{i((. -I Mill 11. . , r l'ro\cH i hat tutuiutr'ii drawing Hsffs's to summsT 1 let u* tim*-. i M.. siU > aud liy. Ho many men are foolish who can t all'ord to be. A cynic is a man win is disappointed because tho world was all made when he got here. If the truth were known many a boast- M soldier has never been under tire except when di(charged from the army. lie .lul not look into a gun, . Miif. vu run irry up thr TMW iu-1 a i-iw.) ot -uici.te Hi jlltl liiuWOUl lllf KUftlld ilii'il. If modi-rate drinking la allowable and respeotablp what' the reason moderate stealing or any other kind of jualilud meauness ia not commendable ? I'rince Huppreohl, of liavaria, has began his ui'iifsat the I Diversity of Berlin; the first prince of a reigning boute to enter that iiiMiiuiion. A NTOBT or i III OAT. -..in. tl.iug l>.iiit th* Pamooa Htr Hay-pol* r.tfrt+d lu n.Jil. The custom of .-aising May-poles on tbo :.r,t day of May originated probably in the thirteenth or fourteenth oentnry. It wan ijoile general in Great Britain and other European countries) for several hundred years, bat after tbe advent of Puritanism it died out almost completely. The rroat renowned London May-p jle, and tbe one longest in existence, was that pat up in the Strand immediately after the restoration. The Parliament of 1044 had ordered tbe demolition of all May pole*. and enforced the decree by heavy penalties. When the populace ugam gave way to their May- day jollity, in 1061. they determined to plant the tallest of these poles they conld tind in the most conspicuous part of the Strand. They brongbt it in triumph, with drum* beating, lltgs dying, and music playing, from Scotland Yard to tbe opening of Little Urnry Lane, opposite the Somerset House, where they erected it. The lane was afterward known as " May-pol*) Alley." -That stately oedtr erected in the ritraud," writes a contemporary author, " was considered as a type of golden Hays' about to return with tha Stuarts. It waa raised by seamen, ex- pressly sent for the purpose by tbe i)nke of York, and was decorated wnli three gilt crowns and other ornaments. In 1713 U was surmounted by a Uclu, with a long streamer beneath it. Four years later thisj famed pole, having become decayed, wasj taken down and sold to Sir leaac Newton, who used it as a support for a telescope. \Yi.iui, riui .Mechaoltiu. The Bank of England doors are now to uuely balanced that a clerk, by pressing a knob nnder his desk, can closo the outer doors instantly, and they cannot be opened again except by special process. This it done to prevent the daring and ingenious unemployed of the :rcat metropolis from robbing this famous institution. Ths bul- lion departments of this aud other great Knglish banking establishments are nightly scbmen. t in several feet of water bv the action of machinery. In some of the Lon- don banks the bullion departments are connected with the manager's sleeping- rooms, and an entrance cinnot be effected without setting oil an alarm near that person's head. If a dishonest official, dnr- nher day or night, should take even as much aa one from a pile ( a thoataud sovereigns tbo whole pile would insttutly sink and a pool of water take its place, let- ting every person ia tbe establishment know of the theft. Kxchange. llui WuTht-rv. Tho two socs of an eastern merchant stated for In lia. Some months afterward! the father received this telegram : " Jim's dead." In reply he cabled : Ship corpse." In doe tims a large box arrived -.4 huh wasi found to contain the lioiy of an enorrnoos) r. The parent attain cabled : " Mistake made ; tiger in box." To which) bis surviving son replied : " All right ; Jim inside tigtr. ' Mii.li. iV itiltl.. Young Paris mashers are now atid to wear colored -hirti pink, blue or rid in the evening. They are displayed withtbs) regular low cut evening waistcoats, and to ! heighten the contrast they are fault ned by larii jt Btndt. The demand fjr -uch *hirts) it already so great that they cannot bs> made faet enough. The young I'rince of Naples introduced the fashion. Would Nrvrr Ho. " Your refercences arc very satisfactory, but I cannot engsge vou." 'iv I in i u ire why not, inadatr ?" asked tbe would-lo butler. " Your hair is red aud my dining-room it decorated ia robin's egg blue." (ieorge Francis Train has not shaken the baud of a man or woman for fourteen yeirs. . o. N. u --. uo. I'M' 1 '* 1 and ptrt i. a lam ,.( (<*< it ty ILI p> #-ou t mamae. Tha liloua, York, f A.i Ir SCOTT'S EMULSION Of Pure Cod Liver Oil and HYPOPHOSPHITES of Lime and Soda Scott's Emulsion /u/rr,; ...i ,,(. ,, i ;,/, ;,,(,,,. ;,,,,/,, '"> '"r CONSUMPTION, Scrofula. Bronchitis. W.istiujr Dis- eases, Cl. aic Counhs .tod Colds. PAI.\TABI.K AM MII.K. Hrntr*Kmu ,..n ni.iilj ,.. 1 1 up in olmon color ' .'. .1 nil iraiiati.i-iii'r fiitmtilntioM. Sold l>> all t)r .rai<ltlMit. anil Cl INX ill. | I CURE FITS! USA"DS OF iiOFLLS CSl'EN AWAY YEARLY. VVh.'ii I -.!> Cure I do npt mcs* .n nave tin-in trim n .. ,...1:!. I MEAN A RAOICALCUHC. ' Fita, Epilci>y or F.-llin e Sickno** .1 htr-loiii: >tuJy. I war,. ',< Cur th hers hive .ileil is no n.. --rndat i iii-.itis.- ,,'. A Fro Dcttlo of my Infalliblo R.-mcdy. ' - '"J PMtOffcc It ..IM-V.MI ii. ,,i .< tiial. .uul ii i - '* V .OOT M.C.. Br.incH Ottico, lUti WEST ADELAIDE STREC.T, TORONTO. TO I II I I III KH( ' . 1 -.li.iil ' .Illllnli.. ' M.C.. iM Wt AdolAidc . '.., ORONTO, . - .

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy