Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 21 Jul 1883, p. 4

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ha mimosa, no the said: “What's the mania the Councilman. Tom!” “ Wilham Barne- uole old anby'o paella-hook crunnud {all of money," An- waxed Tam. " and they're trying him now." 1 “Did Mr. Crabby at: him doit?" cned‘ Hope wonderinqu. “ No, ha didn'ueehim mam. but it's I“ the name. Be an the pocketrhook in his hand. mdwdidland a heap ofothetfel- lawn, too. We were I“ on the dock fishing, when old Grn coma dong grumblin 3111!:de behin us. Just thenab‘ fin pulledcfi'my hook, and I asked Winger-nu for mother. He took an old leather thin; out of hi: hot and began fumbling in It. for one. an I heard Grubby scram some- thing. and I looked up. He wounding glow lyy \Yill wish his 11de linked jun A u,_-__x __.l L:- on”. an“ Ya??? KW" 0: ”new nun 'â€"â€" -.-- _, , , ”So he did.” cried Hope, who hnd been listening with her mouth and eyes open to this long storyâ€"“ he did, {or I saw him, and them was not one cent of money in it when I picked it up myselfâ€"nothing but little pieces of paper. and I took them out and threw the old thing away. And I’ll just go and tell Mr. Grubb so," and Hope made a. movement toward t a door. “ I wouldn‘t," said“ Tom ; “ they’ll nll nugh at you. Who ever saw n girl walking through n court-mum with an nnnlul of pin- thxzh.” .. 21 AL-“ .1- hum». .5 “a " an. uwfll - “I don't care if they do_ laugh at me,” an- uwered Hope, angrily. I shall not let nlr. Umbby any that William Barns stole his money. yhgn I know bcgtcr." , ,,!_LLII ...2.1 In...“ DWI. “No,” replied Hope, decidedly. “You might break them." so she walked in at the open door and half across the room, but she could zeqnothing of Mr. Gmhhy. Although there were a number of persons in the room, it was so silent that the whining noise made by Hope's pin-wheels sounded so loudly that those sitting near turned and looked at her. She tiptoed along quietly until she came to the end of a long row of benches. Then she now an o 1: space with three or {our tables in it am a raised desk. Men sat at the table writing, and a very large red-faced gentleman, with his oyts closed, as if listen- :.... :._t,...u.. ‘Ivnu Imhiml the desk. nwuu’. "In-u - .....,.. .....V.. “ Well, I suppose you're right" said Tom, “ but let me hold those things till you come “nun J. rlvuv‘l u. “I“ A: her voice rang through t5: silent ha)! every one stood up and looked a: pact Hope. She had not meant to speak no loud, and was very much mortified at the attention she attracted, and tried to hide behind the near- cat bench. But :1 gentleman came forward and yhispcrgglh . 1 , 1 LA: 1..-..- “Ann... nun n llla‘lv.vu, “ Como, little girl, and tell these gentle- men what you know about Mr. Grubby’s pocket-book.” As he lifted her up on one of the tables in an open space a gust of wind came through the open window and set the twenty-four pin-wheels whirling around all at once with A loud noise. At this every one lnu lied, and Hope, remembering Tom n words, old her head down, and tar-nod very red indeed. “Never mind," said the gentleman who had lifted her on the table. " They are not laughing at you. Now speak loudly, and tell us where you found the peckct-book." ,u- _|___...r -n." nnl‘ nlmnnt 5; 3.553131; '{éiis’bem'nd the desk. 0L1 Mr. Grubbx was speaking when Hope first saw him. .. U ‘_ .. , I L L--I_. “le Du" A nnnnn . “ Yes,” he said, “ thntia my pocket-book; the some thnt I missed Monday afternoon. It then contained twelve hundred dollars in certified checks of one hundred dollars each.” . . .. 71,,,L_I, UJUII. “ 011, Mr. Grubby 1” cried Hope, stretch- ing her head forward, and speaking in a. very high voice. " it did not have cze can: in is whpn‘I picked it up.” ‘ AAAAA I. .1... AL.-. La.“ WII uu "uwv I ___________ She was quite alarmed now, and almost ready to cry, (or she saw that the man ho- himl the high desk hagl his c '53 open. and was looking intently amber, and that those who had been writin hold their pens aus- pcndcd in the air w ilo they turned thoir heads but way. "Tell them whom you found it,” said the gentleman again. ‘ Thou hope did as she was requested. “But. ' said she. turning to Mr. Grubby, “there was no money in it. only pieces of blue paper. and I threw the pocket-hook down on the ground after I had taken the paper out. mum it was so old and dirty." A . , -__ I-....L...l -m! "mm hm]. OUR YOUNG FOLKS. l :Xgain overv one laughed, and Ho , feel- ing vary much distressed. wlxiaperc to the gentleman near. “Please take mo down and let me go home." “ In a moment,” he answered ; "but first tell Mr. Grubby what you did with tho um." ‘I‘Iloro the are," said Hope, pointing to her pin-whee I. Mr. Grubby spun across the room, and, snatching one from or hand. tom it from its hmdlg 9nd agnznd itopen upop the table. .I _>- _: “o‘ri’uexx mugriiollw; ‘71? is pan of one of my c‘llmcka. Youwickedlittle irl,howdare yov «troy m property on fri Men me half to «1;»th _ ' g -\ A- ALA~_ Inn- «1 “WV-.- llopo opened ho:- cyea very wide at these words, and tho tom-a streamed down her chock: n she cried, "0h. Mr. (hubby. I did not mean to be wicked. Horn. take them all. I won’t keep one," and .110 thrust tho beautiful in-whooln into the old man's hauls and nob aloud. Everybody crowded around old Gmbby :- he pulled off the papers and uprcod them open one the; one. _The_y weroflao mush In. W cm WML at arm A. mwxxru. (ooscwnmJ iuvv uvâ€"v .v "v.â€" " Don't cry. little Hope.” aid he Iohly. “ I'll take you home." " What undo Mr. Gmbby all ma wick. ed!“ said How, vi In; her eyes. “I did autumn go glqgny gum." .. - ,,,l,AA L- Inn-“u an «M u- ....._. ___--, Bu: tiy the felt come one touch her md 100 ad u :0 find wmmn Bnnn‘l kind 1m clone to cg. _ -- u .. . >Ah‘_ " I don't bulievo ho nits know what 110‘ m flying." matured Valium “ He has been very much worried that than papen, {or they run) worth a large mm of money.” "I did not how “at," nabbed flops : “and 1 an no mubont mrpin-whoek. I 13:10 them .11 myult to give no Cousin y." . “ Reva mind," aid Wimun Bums. coaxing]: ; “don't cry. but jump on my nhouldcz. mdl'llfindyou tom-own :- uequwinthomld. unmetmcggn. mucumm. cam: “macaw-MM" dainthhdnn mans-u Wm. M: “mam: “Why. sow-heroin.” waned . “WMGSIKKOM W Amt the (my and KI and. Our enterprising axl ambitious friends in ‘ the rat hue. of lute yarn. run any with 1theideuthnt Montreelinapre good nixed oltl town, doing: My trade, at alter All only tributary when compared with Toron- to. The name notion: are beginning to pre- nil in Winnipeg with resin! to Toronto and the older provinces general! , and al- though 1 think it more than like y that the name misapprehension will account for the illusion in each we. I do not will: to ex- hibit the nntnre of the illusion by a fine un- nlyn'l, but merely note that the Illmion ex- inn. That such a. notion is an illusion I do not think man candid guitar! irogn the west would don t alter spending n week or two among the wholesale house- of Montre- nl. The difference in capacity and mang tude would in these we: be np t at a glance. It has been frnm the air ’eet days ,, ,_ A ._ _-__.AM' u: a 7m: COMXZRCIAL amorous of Canada, and its position as the hem] of ocean navigation, and as the had of the two great system of railway in Canada. will, I .am inclined topredict. always maintain it in that dignity. Besides these advantages it meson inherent industrial advantage in ving to feed its manufactures a native p0 ulntion who surpass any community on this continent for frugality, ind‘ustry and , ‘1._ um wuuuuuu u.- "â€"n""‘ar perseverance. With this power alone Mou- treal could hold its own (or many a year. It is surely nothin but these qualities that enable the French [hoot factories of old Que- bec city to export to the farthest ends of the Dominion on terms. in many instances, better than the great Montreal houses themselves. To any that the total exports of Montre- al are about 340,000,000 a year and the imports about $45,000,000; and that over 700 vessels arrive during a season, of which more than half are steamers, may give A (:xxzimr. IDEA or run conusncs of the city; but I do not go into figures and generalities. I prefer rather to flit about from house to house, and give detached bits of information which will interest the reader without leading him to suspect that I am detailed to make a revision of the census re- ports, which, by the way, a good many down ‘ ierc think necessary. I happened the other day. to require a rubber stamp, and having seen some adver- tised by James Lee 3: Co., 517 Laseucheticro street, I dropped down there. This is the Montreal Novelty Works, which are now Ketty well known over the Dominion. aving got my rubber types and stampsâ€" which I might say cost about one half what Iwould have had to pay at any of the other rubber stamp dealers in the cityâ€"I took a. look through the works, where I saw a variety of things ornamental, too bewilder- ing to enumerate, and all at prices which ,,4. .._--.-..-. u 15"“ A n wznz As‘toxxsmxaw CHEAP. There is the breech-loading shot-gun for $3.90, the printing press for $3.50, the spy glass for 81, the health batteries to wear as a protection from disease for 50 cents : and watéhes of many ntyles and grades that seemed to me marvelloqsly .cheap. ncvulyu uv u". Inuu-n . -..-..-,_, Meeting Mr. Lee we fell into conversation which drifted naturally into the natal aspects of the trade, upon which I as 'ed if his business was not cculinrly subject to auspieiou on the part 0 his customers. 1 n L- _....I:...! II no “A“ “ Not so much," he replied, “ as you I might think. By advertising nothing that j is in itself a fraud. and by being consistent in my treatment of all, 1 have often in the , end made friends of those few who, through misapprehension, have denounced me as a fraud. The other day there , ocs'lreda caseit point. A lady fromâ€"â€" sent to“ the Life of Christ. I forwarded the copies paid. for, but in a short time got a note asking wz-n' 5:33? HAD sow mil-xx SENT On saying they had been sent, and mention- ing the day, she wrote to say that she had never got them. I then sent another lot, and still she claimed that she had not re- coiVed them. It migh: have been my time to grow suspicious, but I sent a third lot. In a. few days she wrote to any, that she had received the last lot, and the missing lots as well, and was so leased that she ordered twenty-five more or her friends. Of courts, as I keep a strict record cf all pnrnels mail- ed, I would not always make goo-.1 e defi- ciency. That would not be just. to myselt‘ : but I have to judge every such case on its merits, and it is not often that it does net end to the satisfaction of both parties. There are often cases, however, where through ignorance or carelessness, the part- , ies give an imperfect address or none at all, and rum: 1 A)! STUCK." “ Are there many such cases!" I asked. “ See here,” said Mr. Lee, as he proceed- ed to an immense rack, with four or five hundred compartments, and pulled down a great package of letters, riled away in order. "All these have occured during the past few months." .u e, 1,_,1 Au w “an. u.-. Some of these were comic epistles indeed, and for ludicronsness oi orthograph com- pletely discounted anything Josh illings ever wrote. George Ross wrote: Please send to George Ross, the magic nail, and in- structions for using, and the book called the “ Art of Ventriloquism," but as George ior- got to mention whether he lived in Muekokn or Grand Manon, he was left to chew his own nnils, nnd talk by means of his mouth and lungs as usual, and not through his stomach, as it is said Ventriloquists , do. A maiden of New Hamburg wrote . " Please send me :1 dress for n girl 9 yenrs old, price 25 cents, the number 3339 â€"sond it directly.” But, as the fair remit- tor omitted her name it could not be sent. Another customer, writing from nowhere in particular. bursts out indignantly in this style : “ Sir isent you on order for an opre ehsne and loekcl i sent Ono dolor and twenty five cents, and have rccievd nothing yet you have had pcnty of time. \Vhy in 1!â€" dont you send it." Rather oddly he gave no signature even in this, which was possibly his second letter, although he may have thought the identification sufficiently clear when he explained at the foot that m: was "A ogx'rnxsux." Ono correspondent from Springfield encloses 75 cents for n doxzn packages of stove pol~ ish, but gives no name nor province. An. other sends 10 cents for a dancing skeleton but gives no name, Yet another encloses ‘21 cents iornporeel of songs. The letter has no dots. no nsmc, no post office, and no province ! But the vagueet of all is the case when somebody (on appeared from its t mark from Brandon, encloses 60 cents with no letter It all ‘!_ _ uflnnnns -t h. n Wlul uv unw- -‘ There was more that a hundred of such can, yet considofing that I single dny’. orders mount [fluently to 400 loner- it. h mfierlnl tint so :0" (Shake. occurmrhm o m nmcu m to corn- once. figma difiicnlty in the dictum which it mum out on the novelty brain“. by 7 ._~ _. -..~ . nun-n: v m“- Mariam.“ “\Vhinhluhhit! Shmn'IdIu-uned Minuet" toad th- whoh blind Mi. ”'1 did“ hug pm,_pi_a_co 9v “Edwina macaw-mus Alma! ms, no mean tor tho SI“. ramble Raw-gen of Cholera in mm. Km and W mung. neemposed bend Poll-uh; the Atmw‘ phatâ€".1 Terrible State of mm". The :itnntion between Ciiro and Port Snid in one direction, and Alexandria. in 1 the other, is deplorable, and m surely be ‘enggernted. The extent of the cholera. l plague owing to the Government precautions in not exactly known; but the statements ol those who escaped iron: the infected dis- tricts, and whose very presence is shunned by almost everyone, reveal a terribie state of nflkira. There are scarcely enough well native: to bury the deed in some of the com- paratively isolated vil es along the Medi- temnenn and in the low ile Delta districts, between Lake Menzaleh and Lake BOXIM. Deaths are announced at Elhnrg, Shirhin. and other points. The numbers are not stated. There is not believed to be a single foreigner in the district except a few sell" sacrificing physicians, English, French, and Greek, who besides risking their lives stay under very discouraging circumstances, as they can secure remedies only with difficul- ty and are met with undcrhsnded opposi- tion by native doctors, so called, who are the only ones who collect any fees, and their presence is everywhere resented by the le- Haaamunwnfl cal officials, since they alone are likely to ( give any information of the extent of the epidemic, while the Government by most strenuous efforts is striving to keep every fact out of sight. TWO foreign physicians have already sacrificed their lives. Dr. Laird, aScotchinan, acclimated, and Dr. Ernst, a ; German. Many terrified English and French ‘families, a great part of whom have had clerical or other Government employment, are also there waiting for remittances to en- able them to return home. Several English English officials have endeavored to hide. The natives b‘me the whole matter on the English for having failed in pzesence of abundant warning to prevent the outbreak of the disease in the first place. The con- tinuance of infection is, however, due to the habits of the people, the filthy condition of the villages and the dense ignorance of the natives. The atmosphere at Manson-a, where Hamondyi, the famous Arab physician, died, is said to be absolutely fetid. The dying are left alone in the houses, friends and rel- atives fleeing, and tlu ir lodies have remained unburied for days. Dead bodies in some cases have rotted in the sunshine in the streets of villages deserted by all except the dying and the convalescent, while many of the latter were helpless and starving. Any- thing likc a grave has been unthought of for a fortnight, and in the low delta ground where water is found at a depth of two or three feet the trenchrs haxc been dug so shallow and filled so full that the first wind blew away the covering of sand, or the first . rain washed away the earth. Even where the rotting be its were not ni-cowrcd and . exposed they were sonear the surface as to rot under a hot sun, and allow the gases to filter to the surface, and poison the air. The Health Council to-day ordered the runoval of the whole population from the infected districts in and about Damietta, but is too late to serve its purpose. The soldiery, under strict orders, are supervising the na- tives, whom they are compelling to bury the dead. Fire is the only disinfectant, and part of Damietta and the whole of several small villages have been burned. At the former place the sick and those subjected to the infection, have been placed in tents. The hospital camp has been surrounded by a strong guard. WF' Urn-wâ€" ‘. . n .. ‘ 1‘.,,,2_ L-_ soldiers died at Damietta, a fact which the 3 b Traflic between Port Said and Byria has been prohibited owing to the cholera at the port. There is a. panic at Jaddah because of the expected arrival of five steamers from Ingin. with‘pilgrinls bound to Mecca. ,1 LLâ€" ......... .. (we. . The Sanitary Council has ordered the population of Dnmiettn to be scattered in tents. Tho infected quarter has boon partly disinfected and partly burned. A death has occurred at Alexandria which is suspected to have been caused by cholera. It has been decided in Cyprus to allow no refugees from Egypt to lam! on the Island bscausc of the lack of quarantine stations 1.. ore. T's: edeuths from cholera at Dumiottn cne day numbered 120. . . vi- 0,, _.AL-j ... Lord; Edmund Fitzmnurice stated in the hen-.3 of Commons that the Government had no intention of proposing an International Conference on tha subject: of cholera quar- antinc. PLA‘GUE STRIOKBN. v...- ".4 -.....° monstrous than the idea of the people of Europe keepin four millions or more of young men res y drilled, armed, and idle for the purpose of flying at each other's throats on the shortest possible notice and without the rcmotest personal revocation? Four millions of idle men ! ias anybody ever tried fully to estimate the horrible ab- surdity of such a state of things? Four millions of healthy, hungry men to be fed, clothed and armed, to be paid wages and afforded houseroom, with fuel, education, and all the other ct ccteras ! Who pays for all that? Somebody does, and that some- body is not far to seek. Four millions taken from honest industry, leftin utter idleness except during the time spent in daily drill for the purpose of becoming eflicient as mur- derers, exposed to all the nameless and un- mentionable temptations that ever do the footsteps of the full fed and the unempfinyed. If these fellows had all been made to work whatasum totalof increased wealth the world would have had l What an amount of more grain would have been grown, and fields re- claimed, and comforts commanded l Taxes would go down, vice would be restrained, waste would be minimised, and decency would get a chance. Let anyone think of the state of things in a garrison town l Let him try to estimate the condition of mutual and unfounded jealousy between nations be- fore such a state of things could be and then say if the whole does not present a picture too horrible to contemplate with cquanim- ity. Is such a state 0 things to continue always? Is the reign of universal peace after all a dream 2 Not if Christianity is not a fable and that it is not the meat of our readers mast stoutly belicvc. It cannot be that nations shall always continue to act in this senseless fashion and call it statesman- ship. .. nuns- munâ€"mi .5." am Alwlu'n sleen. “Hop spring! otcrnnl in the human bmnt.‘ The Italian villager to-dny build: an confidently, i! no: u imposinaly. upon the I10?” of Vesuvius u the dweller in Pompci built. before nature overwhelmed him tad his in a moment, ad. with the ”he. 0! dcau'ucu'on u uhiald. kept the ruin: ofhiacitytobo the mavelofulater use. A 36' city the: where thonm ingulf~ ed by An eulbqvnkc. Mm rebuilds in the tack of “annulmudgoesbackto his field: in we river bottoms flat my Iggy: Inlet lnundnfiog. “1‘4 __ _._,-_ :_t:-n- :â€" .. .. -._.. ___- 7 Mu: my be noble in xenon. infinite in (unifies. expat: sud adminblo in tom and moving, like an Inge! in union. in approy human like:- god. He certainty min crery~‘ wing but bun with. the n 0! u:- innh, but from the in of he ha been thawed and pnyolthodcwu, Ind Shani! no canning in humbywhichmo' whadw,homayhopeta scammed»- min; cic- which rumble in the Mali 0! end: or Phy u it: n:- hcu. llama into am under new moon! dank. Kagoshmcemmw ponko Whohju behind uponmlife bthmobohuub iâ€"Clucagofi-a. potter 1 8:. ucuuMaâ€"A giro-id: u um t. Alina! . Pqun. ol ' ‘ mph: ban anything be any more absurdly onstrous than the idea of the people of "mm kmnina four millions or more of ‘umgmtaszwphainmwwld. :rknrth's kindred shall not always sleep. The nation: shall not always weep." m the Sport of tho moments. S nndlng Armies. BIRD, 0300 Ion. Mn. mmmy nrnot a. very pretty! woman, but she did not need beanlytomke‘ hex-Wampum As ahe was a widow instead of n maid. she could look her admirer: full in the lace without blushing. As for her figure, that spoke for itself so well than my maidens coveted it, u M‘ Mudewgy wall knew. Her greatest attraction, however. accord- ing to may gentlemen uho ulmired her, .was the hone she lived in. for it belonged to her, it was in a very good street, ifi was imtafnlly furnished, and there was no man. 388:6 or.“ .. ... , _.,~ AL- _..:_:.._; -8 5 v v" .â€" qSo Mrs. Mnttleway was the recipient of innumegrablle nt‘wntionzln, most of which she enioy . t was 0 y when men proposed that Mrs. Mnltleway did not enjoy their society. She had been married once, and so dreadful was her miatalgm on that‘ocgmeion thst she did not intend to repeat it. A spirited woman who is nearly 30 must in. terest herself in something if she hasn’t a husband, so Mrs. Mnttleway made attempts at husim as. She invested a little money in a manufacturing enterprise, and shetook such solid comfort from examinations“ bal- sun... w..- wâ€". -.- .--__ ‘nce sheets and weekly statements that she was an rc she had a head for business ; she therefore began to make ventures in the stock market. mun...- The inc viable results followed, and the ‘ first of them was that Mrs. Mnttleway be-‘ came an enthusiastic gambler. Two or three all succeeded; for her broker, l‘latt :- 1 , won a very shrewd fellow, as even his enemies admitted ; besides, he had hopes of persuading 31m. Mattleway to reverse the decided “ no ” uhc haul spoken to him on nn~ other suhject n year or two ago. No one who is [messed of a single idea can help talking of it. to every one. So Mrs. Nettle- wny began to make the stock market a sub ject of conflimtion with her acquaintances. One of these, :2 journalist, named Barth, had known so many persons afflicted with the Wall street malady, that he recognized the symptoms in Mrs. Manleway's case at once, and did all he could to discouragef'he ledy's mania. But he did not succeed." Mrs. Mit- tleway laughed n cruel little laugh, and ventured deeper than before. \Vhen her ready money tailed to keep goul her mar. gins, she mortgaged her tenement houses; then she mortgaged her own residence ; fin- ally, she gnVc her individual uotes, which Whiston oiscounted. ‘ v u-a Ivu u.--v_.---r.. Then the crash came. “The bottom fell out ” of \Vatertic Preferred, and Mrs. Mat- tleway found herselfalmoat ennilcas. Whis- ton called upon her, nony 0 arcd to extricate her from all her dilliculties (which he could easily do. as all lxer money had gone into his own bank account), and asked in return only that she would rescind the dreadful “No ” of a year or two before. Mrs. Matcleway bent \Vhiston away sor- rowful; she had endured him only as a shrewd broker, but he seemed not to have been even that. She heard her door-bell ringâ€"could it be a. visitor? A acrvantcune to the door of her chamber, but she would not let even a servant see her face. She merely put her hand to the edge of the door and took a letter; it contained, [vesicles a package, the following : Dear Mm. Mattlewuy : uu... -...â€". -~ ._.,. I want to confess to some uutlorhnnd pro- ceedings and pray for forgiveness. I have for months been bribing \Vhiston‘u book- keeper to let me know the extent of your ventures, and have obtained much more alarmjng iufoynntion than I had expected. ___ I.» ,J' uAuu nu" ....... ..... n-.. It is so seldom that a man can be of. genuine service to n lady that I have un- speakable filensure in asking you to make use of lucloacd government bonds. of the face value of $30,000 for as many months or years as_you_1ike. , , E _ -1114. .u- V... ,.... ....-. ‘For fear you may suspect me of selfish mo- tives and persona.) designs, I shnil start; for Europe in the morning by the City of Tim- buctoo,‘ and remain abroad an indefinite time. Should you change your numc before Iroturn, please say to the fortunate man, for me. that he ought to be the happiest being alive. Mrs. Mattlewny started again to cry, but her rising apirits got the better of her rising tears,'und she went into an ccstacy of laugh- ter. Here was a. mail, inducdl Could she accept his money? She would, at any rate; but, oh I for a chance to thank himâ€"to a ologize to him for having even thought him like other men, though how could she have avoided it. when she often detected him in the net. 91 eyging her curiomuslyz nu.- .. n... ..v_ -_ “ The City of Timbuctoo l"â€"“ To-inorrow morning l”â€"“An indefinite time i" She sent. for a newspaper, looked for the mail notices, and found the steamer would sail at 11 o’clock. She called a. messenger, wrote two or three notes, tore them to bits, and final] sent the following, with orders to get Mr. h’s address at his ofiiée and follow him until {01mg : u :- uuun- n... DEAR Mu. BAImIâ€"A thousand thanks; but I cannot accept unless you come and let me any “ thank you " before you start. The circumstances will justify a very early morning calla v . y , Yours truly, FRANCES Mannswar. Mrs. Mottlewav (lid not sleep much that night, and in the morning she ast naished her cook by appearing in the dining-room before 8 o'clock, demanding breakfast and eating scarcely a mouthful. Then she ordered the Butlers opened and aired at once. and she ow to the windows so often that her maid hurried up to the room of Mrs. Mattieway‘s invalid mother and made alarming reports. The clock struck 9. after which Mrs. Mattie- way counted the moments, and looked ex- pectantly at every carriage that passed. but alas! they merely carried gentlemen down town to business. At 9.30 she seemed to be in a fever ; at 10 she was half indignant and half heart-aiek. Two or’ three moments later a carriage stopped with a crash at the 1 door, but not before Mrs. Msttleway was at the window. "I‘was he 1 Should she remain and seem to be waiting for him, or should she hurry to her room and come down cool and composed 2 She tried to escape, but her maid, who had been as close to the door as hermistress had been to thewiadow. admitted Mr. Barth so quickly that Mrs. Mattleway almost ran into his arms. _ And how retty she looked as she took boa: his baa firmly in her own 1 Much thought and little sleep. great excitement and earnest feeling, had made her face more sensitive than usual. She seemed scarcely to know what to say ; she w is so embarrassed that she forgot to drop her visitor's hands ; but she finally made a great effort and ex- claimed : . i v v-auuw . " Mr. Barth, you are the but man I over know l" “ Rally 3" said the journalist raising his °Y?_".E°".‘: ' , ,,,_ A-.. AL-..L .um mum"!- mar; ti my. Conâ€"Id 3}.th in Barth ‘tion no nvoidod what hsppencd. which was um the journalist disengtg 1 And preacd Mn. lettlcmy clue to his U, VIII UWU. " Really. I never can thank you enough. Iâ€"now um: I know gun are so good. I wish ever to much you weren't going any. 1â€"" Her voice failed. lgqt the gun pet} hi! hand: 1‘ , ,.|. L ér'ihi- " And did you think," aid the uidaw. ‘ trying :odiungtgo herself, but taking we» ell-snot commend. " that such a staunch! trick wank! be agenda! 2" “ 1 team to ban thought correctly," ex- chimed Barth. "Oh, oh tâ€"won't I punish lot this,” mum-red Mn. Hathaway. t. she never I; i. Wig a» French Command. _ ,_L._. n- ..â€"â€".-n now to Woo a Wonnn. Very rcspccgfiully, CLEiIer EARTH. ms Past Lire. Present Plans. and Wt He Has to Sny Uponn Subject ““m‘m‘m 1 (New York hints) . . Near!) forty years ago 3 young man, of I nnnsanl endowments, began to mould pn‘ - lic opinion upon a subject of vital ichr-J tonee. Like all pioneers, his early clients; were unsuccessful. but his slzi ity nod the value of his work noon won public confidence iand today there is not a village or hnmlct 1 in the country that has not been influenced by Dr. Dio Lewis. \Vhen. therefore, it was learned yesterday that he contemplated the establishment of a large magazine in this city, the {not was deemed so important that a re resentative of this paper was com- mission to see him and ascertain the truth of the rumor. Dr. Dio.Lewin is a gentleman oi sixty yearn, and two hundred pounds, with snow white hair and board. but probably the most perfect picture of health and vigor in the metropolis. lie is a. living exponent of his teachings, and notwithstanding the amount of work he has already done, prom- ises still greater activity for years to come. He received the interviewer most courteous- ly, npdin reply: to a. question said - , A- ‘V,,A \'_,L A- “ It is true I have come to New York to cstable a monthly magazine. I have come here for the same reason that I went to Boston 25 years ago. Then Boston was the best platform in the country from which to speak of education. New York has now become most hospitable to progressive thou hts, and especially so to movements on be alt of physical training. “ I have reason to know the great and abiding interest of the American people in this subject. They have come to realize that the future of our country pivots upon our physical vitality, and especially upon the vigor of our women. My new magazine will bear the title ‘Dio Lewis's Monthly.’ and be devoted to Sanitary and Social Science. I hope through its pages to in- augurate a new departure in hygiene." I l, __L_ -.. wun... _.-- __ “Have yaxfilfinét‘written nevi-F111 books on the gquect} " . ~ pu,,, “Yes, nine volumes, and some of them like ‘ Our Girls,’ published by the Harpcra, have had an enormous circulation. but the best work of my life I shall give the world in the new magazine. Forty years of skir- mishing ought to conclude with ten years of organized warfarez" .u , 3,, _eu.:Â¥__... - I'fiééfinj at; is the occasion of this new interest in health questions 2 " “It has come through summing, “hich seems the only rond tosclf knowledge. The stomach, heart, kidneys, or liver fall into trouble, happiness is gone, and then pcoplc give attentive to their health." "A In..-" ,..A. a, “ \Vhich of these organs is most Ircquuut- ly the victim of our errors?” naked the reporter. -.... . .. . . , 1- W, . A: “\Vithin the last few year diseases of the kidneys have greatly multip icd. When I was engaged in practice, thirty-five and forty years ago, serious disease of the kid- neys was rare; but now dintrcssiugly fru- qucxlti and fatal." .u . .u -, ,,,,__L :.. 1 “ To whit: do you attribute this great in crcagg of_kidney grogbleg ?_’: “ To the use of stimulating (hinks, ndul terated food and irregular habits of life." _ fl a 7 _ “Doctor, have you any coufifience 1n the remedy of which we hear so much now-n- duys, ‘ Warner's Safe Cure?” :- ,, u“. “ I have, and confess that they have puz- i zled and astonished me. The commenda- tions of proprietary medicines usually come from unknown persons residing in back countries. But I see in our most reputable 'newspapers the warmth praise of “’arner’s Safe Cure from College Professors, respec- table physicians, and other persons of high intelligence and character. To thrust such testimony aside may be professional, but it is unmauly. No physician can forget that valuable additions to our Materia. Medica have sprang from just such sources. 1 was so impressed with this cloud of witnesses that I purchased some bottles of Warner‘s Safe Cure at a neighboring drug store, and analyzed one of them to see if it contained anything poisonous. Then I took three of the prescribed doses at once, and found there was nothing injurious in it. I do not hesitate to say that if I found my kidney; in serious trouble, I should use this remedy, because of the hopelessness of all ordinary treatment, and because when a hundred in- tellizent and reputable persons unite in the statement that a certain remedy has cured them of a grave malady, I choose to believe that they speak the truth.” " But as you may know, my great inter- est in life lies in revcntion. For forty years I have labore in this field. One of the phases of my work in New England was the establishment of the Latlies’ Seminary at Lexington, Mass. My aim was to illus- ‘ trnte the possibilities in the physictl train ing of girls during their school life. This institution became before I left it, the lar- gest and most successful Seminary for young women owned and managed by one. person, in our country. I sat down to (lin- ner every day with a family of two hun~ dred persons. The remarkable results of , this muscle training amen; girls. were given in Inv paper published in the Norm Ameri- can If. view a: December. 1352. ~”‘51, Karlie-\teqilrxrithé Buncé of prevention, rather than in a ton of cure.” “ But have you noticed the remarkable testimonials of \Vamcr’s xjcmegly ?’_’ "ll-311cc, 1 established the Normal Insti- tute for Physical Training in Boston, and for tenyears was its l’residentmnl M magi r. Dr. Walter Charming, Dr. Thomas llmkms. Professor Leonard, and others Were nlnnng Its teachera, and more than {our hnn nun persons took iua diploma. and Went out MILO all parts of the land to teach the new rL’im .l of gymnastics. Anvl now the yrnru lull. to me I propose to devote to the nu vezino which I h we come here to establish. t will be the largest period cal ever devoted to this field of literature, and will p.ezaent the hun‘ dred and one questions of hygiene with the simplicity of a. child's talk. To this eml nll ao-called learning will be nubordiu Md. The magazine will he more or less illustrated. and will strive to reach a high place in the confidence and hearts of the people. In in few weeks. our first number Wlll appear, and ’we shall fondly hope for it nhcurty Wel- come." The facts above narrated are indeed most important. it is gratifying to know tlut the lifulung experience of a. gentleman who stands without A peer in successfully dem- onstrating the principles of hygiene; whusc heart has always been in sympathy with the afflicted, and who-o brain has ever been act- ive in pinning for their relief, are to begiven to the public through the page. of a maga» line. And it in specially significant and proof pmizivc of rare merit that aproprie- medicine. even with such high standing as Warner's 51h: Cure in known to lave, nhonhl be endorse-l and recommended by a man enable. wreputable 13d of wet: na- tioml renown a Dr. Dio Lewis. The gnnd outlets of disease from the 5’"!- no tbs Skin, the Bowel: And the Kidneys, Burdock Blood Bitten in the man. Me. plant» and effectual purifier 3nd health ro- daring £29}: in the world. Trill botflel 10 cents. (3‘2) An acoldcnt on the deit And Bay City m canned by n culvert giving my. Five pawns was hinted, but not. dangemuzly. Duid Tao of Ontario hid his hip sad but dightly wracked. Thad! prev-hut mind a! civilized lilo is Dyapepdn. Rev. W. Gifi'otd. 0! Both- nll,mcundo{dy ' ludlivercotn- grunt-z undated hm fife-1m. burden. a can um £0!!!le b um: battle- of BurdockBlomlBitu-n ( ) Thoma deie. the well-known pmprietor dike Em house; a! Bowmvflle, has died {tom apophxy. A W from coma-ans. I wit-u Iona Wm. Goldsmith. of Col- °°"' 0“" “mm” “m“ med than! .11!!! :- m 50!.chdeme nndwwuhuhbyanobomoot . muwmm Pdccwonu. wcmcvmm E: 3 53 E A vmux BWAcnox. What. Every Person Should Know. A man Evidence. For weak lung, spix ' of blood. weak stomach. hum-am tn um ":3. stages of Consumption, "Golden Hedi Disc‘v- cry" in Ipocific. By druggixta. When you introduce t non! lesson let it be brief. Dr. Pierce‘s"Fuorile PMfiou" por- fcctl and pennanenll ' cum dune discus“ pecu in to Iemdea. t istxmic uni nen-inn, efl'cctnnlly allyiug npd curing thou sicken- ing sensations that afiect tlm stomach and heart through n-flcx action. The luck-ache. and “dragging-down" sensations all dimp- nnder the strengthening (that; of this gran restorative. By Dragging. That is the bittcrest of allâ€"to wear the yoke of our own wrong doing. Onr Grandmothers taught their daughters the: “a stitch in time swan nine." A pill in time saves not only nine, but ofttimcs an incalculable amount of suffering as well. An occasional dose of Dr. l'ierco'a Pellets (Little Sugar-sonicd Pills), to cleanse the stomach and bowels. not only prevents discuss but ofkcu breaks up sudden attacts, when talmn in tilm. By Druggists. It is bettér to believe that a man docs pos- s_ess goqd qualitimi than to assert that ho deot. _ A Remarkable Fact. It 18 a remarkable fact. that W. A. Edge“. of Frankville, who was so far gone with liver and kidney complaint. that. his life was despaired of, was cured with four In es of Burdock Blood Bjttcrs. fit one tin .e lay {I fortnight without. an bowels. (35) [leis truly great that is little in him- aelft nn\!_thnt maketh an account of any height of honors. Ono of Many. | Mr. R. W. Carmichael, Chemist and Drug,‘ i ist of Belleville. writes in follows :-“\'our ‘ unlock Blood Bitters have :\ Lb only sulu, are patronized by.tlie best families hero and surrounding country, and all attest to its virtues wit 1 unqualified satiafsccion." (34) Good is never more cll'echmlly pi‘rformed than when it is produc;d ly slow degrees. A Pleasant. Acknowledgment. “ Had sour stomach and misurablo appr- tite for months, and grew tliin every day. I used Burdock Blood Bitters with the most marvelous results ; feel 3 lendid." (31) MRS. JOSEPH JOHNS N, Pittsburgh. Pa. The history of all the world teaches us that mmorul means will IILVJI‘ intercept gogd ends: . .. - ,1 :,,,,, h_ h h- .......... Copy of a letter received from Dr. R. R. Mnitltmd Cofliu, F.R.C.P.. &c. To H. SUTnmLAxn, Esq. anin taken Suther- land's “Rhonmntine” mysc f, I can bear ‘estimnny that it will prove a boon to per- sons who sufl'er from rheumatism R. MAITLAND COFFIN. F.R.C,P.. (‘20. Burton Court, S.W., May 17, 185 Z. Choose uhmys the way that; seems the bust, however vough it may bv. Custom will render it easy and agrefcablc. In the Hour of Need You \mnt not to try experiments, but revert to the old uml well tested menus that ull‘orded re- lluf in the past. When your corns ache don‘t take thellrstlulhzle oll'cred you. hm llnd out just the thing to unswer your purpose, \'lz.. to remorelhe lruuhlosome coma, and in do this wilhunl. 1min, und do it promptly. Putnam‘s l’m'ulms Corn leruclor has been used for many years. It hus never been known to full. Putnam‘s Extractor makes no deep holes in the flesh. hard [0 heal and more troublesmne than the origlnul dlnuomlurts. It. works nicely and efficiently. . _ . \thtevcr is becoming is honest, and whatever is honest must .11 ways be becom- mg. A Voice from the United States. I have sull’crcd for the Inst 20 years with Dyspepsia. and General Dclnility, and tried n‘nmy reml dies. but; with little success until I used Burdock Blood Bitters, when relief was quick and permanent. (33) A. LOUGlI. Alpena, Michigan. U. S. The work an unknown good man has done is like a. vein of water flowing liiddcn under ground, secretly mnlnng the ground green. 7 There is no greater delight; than to be con- scious of sincerity and self-examination. Catarrhâ€"A N cw Treatment whereby :1 Permanent Cure is eflocted in from one to three applications. Particulars and treatise free on receipt of stamp. A. II. Dixon & Son. 305 King-St. West, Toronto, Canada. He that will lose a friend for a jest do- aervce to die a. beggar by the bargain. “ A. P." 133 Important. “‘hen on visit or lom‘uNew York City. save [luggage Cxpreasngo and Carriage Hire. and stop at GRAND UNION llm‘m. oppunim Grand Central Depot. 450 elc 'unl, rooms mwd up at u. cost of one million do lurs, rctluwd lu $1 and upwards par du'y. lCuroPL-Im ulnn. Elevator. Restaurant snppllgd w ”1 t best. Home ,,,._ 2 my- ._ ..n A“ Iruauuuuuu any... n I cum, stages and elovniéJ-rfi'i'lhtul; to tilâ€"l'ilé: puts. Families can live better for loss mnnoy at the Grand Union Howl than at. any other flmwlnss hotel in the cltv. vv truth-0‘;Ingn}.-HII\}WJI')"KL Juice. (“:0 L. T[C_I£ELI. 8!. so“. lh- 1m “In. Out. _ 0U]. l)l.\'(i~i. l'h- uucl Fuunm. errorn and Phluru Findlnuu cut-rally. Trude gppjicd. “A 'l'l‘llh'w 3 mm, . a CO..'l'uroulu I on“, - HATEHIAL'I. CARPET AN!) Bulldnhx l’u atom. whole sale and mum at levy price." u! “U My]? BL WILLIAMS. I Adul- i'iiic'ésilfiafi MUS“). Student-luau cuter {rum 0cm bar until January PROP. SMITH. V. 8. Edi". l’rhmixhd. 'omlmv dollnrs. D1 mum's MAY-APPLE TONIC TI ‘1' MN cum leer Complaint and Dn- pula. Write for [rm pamphlcl, or mull 60c. 9! package. )4. MILLEIE 5L Cg.._l)xfgd9n.hu‘nt. humus mgr-um. AID mgcurlqs, (amlllcl manual «huh. W. [Minsk-r03 PAUL Soc..81 Kim: 8!. \YgsL'l‘orcnw._ Asa-nu wnpwfi- W t; TICKEI $5’:0’ao.ooo‘ DO.UUU.UU Unud ulhcr prowriy In Un- uriofur mm: by the (' A‘s’AlM \ 'l'L'iI’LANI) AGEING Y_ anll‘é)’ Y. ll Add-Aide «I. But. UTE]. PROPERTY Full 8.11.”-Vllr I u of Erin on Elan Brunch Credit um many. but. “and in town: doing but ulna“; ullsflwwry remnl {or Icmn . “lllcxchanvlor oodlumn pmpofly. 14111155 GILQZIKK 3111;. £5r*m_.....,..m_«,.m AIIKEII a: EVANS' INTERNATIONAL Boiler Compound summa- scale tram len Instantly. One fourth the first dose preâ€" vent; tulurc Incnnutlon. Perfectly Info, and 93-9 21 90.99am}? ’9‘}; fiend (or circular to ARTIFIGILL LIKES ..yn§i’n‘s'x’f“'x§5$’ hL Emu undflhup. 1’!quan 151:1!” 15:):th on. landun. on application . _Saullmion_ mtg-d. oox.w§“m.wumzuv Pun “LE- (on: m of Dam n Putt-at Iron tnnw . uhojnclu. amnion. puke". Champion looms. twlucn. :ul other woollen machlnery u. a bum-1n. 050. w? ARNOLD. 57 And 5 Veda-:1 ureegfl‘my. .NJ . "33%|"?! um §H M? 51553;. D mmrzmxwt (wanting 39d Mutable m at Almost no can. "uunnnnuun u ------ IIIIvuu-u---..., ”v, ,, ’ Lumbago, Backncho. ucadaifie. Taolhlche. Hare Throatflwoll[numfiprnlnmIII-alum, Burns. firuldn. Front "Mn. .51! ALI. 01‘"!le "0|!th I'llfifl'lln ACNE. a...“ b, umuluu lu-l Dulnnmrrvuhm. Vlfly C‘nuu bottle. mmumn In ll Luau-”I. THE (‘JLUIIJZq .\. VOGRIJ-ZR (‘0. (M u A. VOGLLKIL g 00.) lulu-uh. Id..C.5. A. - “Wu“ 1W iiiszéédcau a mom'- HmuAfigLnuu. :- mu 3:. w c u r- = s _ _ Rheumatism, Ncyralgia, Scualica, v- -1L--L- mimuwhw um. :11on mama commodlouobmu- :wdlloulad Wuuifludup with best my fix]. Andalusia-"minimum #:261qu In. good mu. m. Ammo xv. Farahâ€"nix ATA WBWA ii'ZSKSiI - _ ‘wlflc!’1£"‘h&1{r .,fld:n' '- .'I ~,. fhréwGREAT w Y MAE EEM MEfl :fi<51:â€"1 ‘PAIN. N'ifliibmvmxcgusAl:\'"’(;6'1‘.’1j|§h'k4'[0 fiFfiiTfii-iI’ngjl'mucus. syrupy .1. 110A 2;" gwxmjfi om, \Vou‘m '01P ulwlsa operation 76! this KlDIIEYS. LIVER All TRIM“ BEGINS Then In only the way "which nay Alb also :3. be cured. all thall- by moving the uu-oâ€"whmvtr It may to. The W! medical null-flu" at IL. “(fled-r. lh-I nc-rly ave“ din-nu I. can by den-:2,“ kid-on at vor. '1'. mun-u they. a: on In (it; on}! my 5! which health can b. "- _... . -._....n... - A un- In the only way by which henn- en- 5. "- cured. Hero II wher- “'ABNBII'I IAI'I (‘UKR III. ndlcved In II N IIIICII_ It ncu llmtly up.- the ”any: and llvu and by shun. then In I health! OCBMIIOI drlvu he... and pain tram lhn Inn-In. l-‘ar-ll KlineyJAver n-dUflnII-y tr-ubloq for the dhmnuln. «ll-Orin:- ofwuurn ; to- Sill-rm and phnlc-l tnnllcn generally. “-1- man ”may In. no equal- law-u ol lmpm inn-non- uni concoction. slid ION u! u sod. dornln “. u [or WABKIR'. BLIP- DIAIRTRD CURB. For IIIqâ€"by _-_11 dealers. " “EH WARNER a: co., Toronb. 011.. Iguana-tar, 13., hid-n, lag. ‘ARM FOR SALEâ€"300 ACRES IN THE Township of Wallace on gmvnl mm! bo~ tween Listowel nnd l’a‘lumrsmn : 2.") acres cleared, 50 acres hardwood bush; soil clay lonmzwoll waleml by sprln crook; two largo burns and name house : mm mxu‘kcls can You- lcnt. also school and chumhcs. This “‘1‘!“ is. adapted ollhur {or gmlu or amok; lhu growing crop “my be purchusml wlth ll. 'l‘orms rumou- ublo. Apply to W. SI’AULDING. Pulmomlnn. f”, ' "IPEIIL'w LILY lsa perfect gem. equal 1mm imported Fromm Comet; fits like u. mum (.0 lhu figure: vary slyl- ish. elegant in u penmuvu, and nmwovml of by tho most. {M U Kuus. Mumumcmrmi by __--. -Aâ€"-â€"â€"_.‘ fl}: OROMPTON QQBngoo. . {mnoufl Minnesota River Valley. unoqnnilu [or stock-mining. dnirying. and gcncrnlJnrmin r. with good water and near timber.---buttcr mu chm )er in the cm! than llomcsumds in Dukoln or Innimhn. and more rollmhic for investment Hum Government )0nds.-â€"will he sohl In great bargains during next. 60 dnys. in single [arms or lnrgcr lrncta. on terms to suit buyers. Rum chance for coi- ouica or nchzhborhouds. For lurmu. descriw Lion. &c.. address M. (.i. WILLARD, Mimknlo, b: 30.000 ACRES IN THE Minn. WELLS’ wmnnw SHADE GLASP. Used torlloldlng \V INDOW BLI N1) SHADES without rollers, plus or cords. Saves bllndu. money and patience. Looks order! ' xmd ncnl. Sand for sxunplc. ‘20 cents. ngcnta c rouluru 30. Orders from the trade solicited. Agents want- ed.“ TORONTO lfiDUSTRIAL \\ 011KB 00.. CLINTON i. Bill's" .t "“0" Toronln. om. Runnlnw In connection wlth the (lmml'l‘rnnk Hallway 0! Canada. Snlllng frntuQuubcc ovary Suturda during thu auInnu-r nmnlltmund from l’ortlum every nlmrnuto 'l'hurmluy (luring tho winter months. Hulllng dates from Quebec:â€" Orcunn. m: July. flnrnln. 2min July. Monti-ml. l-ltll " (Inlnrlu. ~lln Mum-t. Tor-mm. 2M1 “ llountnlou lllll " ltntosof mum: : Cabin, Quobm: u) Llwrponl, $50.80». 9 5, 2.30; return 890. mm. 8111. m. uccordlnu to utmunerunll hex-tn. Intcrmod Me. 310. Swemuo, 3‘21. 'l'hu «alumni and ntuturoomn in {In so steamer-H um umldnhlpn. when: but [it- tlo motlon is felt. and no cattle or nhccp unscat- rlcd on them. For further pafllmllnru apply to any Grand Trunk Rallwny Axum, or local agents of the ()ampnny. or to DAVID 79!"!!ij .t (‘an __....._._ ______vi BALL S llifllllil l’lfiESEKHMi 'fiit' mi noon roam“. DomtmonLIne of Steamshlps Wzoq‘3a05’ Fur m‘o by ll" lcndiuudcn ER“ 93‘s It cm. lmdyAucma wuutod. VunrmED 4 0 V rmo by Mull. $1.75. uoucv nLi‘uuDEJ mmvnm'mmu. m' Soul by .1! dm Wuhan-wine Mun- uncut-1min 00., rs rum. Ont. Man-n. Nonhroo holunlo mu Tannin. More ml: to select from than am the Hun- !uluren 0! Toronto oombhmd All desert Ian I! Curiae: II- n and (aux-I null. read: u'l-u up. Modern Styles, Superior Workmanship, Exquinite Finish. 1: Our Win an all fully wmnwd Ind ummwulutewmwd. ~ CHARLES BROWN & 00., American Curb“ luminary, 6 Adelaide St, East, Toronto. FINE UARRIAGES 'RHEUMMISM whip madam" ’ Emu, RHBUNA‘HII in not I men; ude {a “-1! I)»: 31h that fly); I: beg. fa! EU. "III "I ”It"! I! Hell] w “‘05" nvâ€"vv mum". s<_._m'rICA. nuxdwmsu. m And all cor-plain: o! a Illuminati: more. nuuuuA-ma u no; g entrain Emil {dim snun-zr. Tonox'ljg): (‘hc only Home In ('uuda for ALL AMERICAN MADE! IT IS A SURE CURE THE GREAT CURE FOR (PATENTED 1875.) The Strongest. Linhtont .Clmnp- ontundncst. Wllldnlhmmrk ofS man nml 4 hum-s. IFor price em. Address CHAMPION STUMP AND STONE LIFTER S. S. KIMBAU, 577 cm 16 ST]: 1‘; m', MONTREAL SOMETHING ENTIHELV NEW. By a novel nmm omnnt of film cuilml \viro le' nil. which yield» tummy to over mun)- munt n! Hm wnnrur. t m numb reflect than“ and mm- !ormhlu cornut aver mmlu {a Imam-rd. It in npprovpd by the Duet l’hyuichnm ‘uuuunz w "7.. (it-1mm! Aunxnlu. Mnntrcg! CORSET.

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