Io-o Pill.- Talk on 'M II CO...- unl Bland-cu and The“ CI...- vâ€"u vauv' .- -__~ will?» .11“. you}: {110. in the oongntuluflon mVuuo-w-vwâ€"“w _.__,,,_ V though hi- oomponionl moy be rudy enough to follow his sample. ouch flutter. ins himul! “not he in to be the hoppy oxoopï¬on to tho .hovo prediction. yot mutimoniol bliss. 3pm 1mm uoh ono'n own om. loop- bud“ to ranch. , 3 I_____A__- L- .Aâ€", ku vâ€"v. Thet mmlege, no ï¬tted by netnre to con- fer heppineee on menkind, often turn. out n lunenteble failureâ€"e huge minuteâ€" neede unruly be eteted ; but mutiny in iteel! oonteinl ell the elemente to the â€curing of that quote of heppineu dlotted to mortele here below. Beety meninges ere generelly predicted hiluree. end though they need not meet:- euily turn out no. yet. it nnheppineee fol- low each note. where so much in left to ohenoe. it need hudly enrpriu ‘e‘ny ene. But meny merri es which ere not buoyâ€" where courhhip extended over even yeereâ€"do not confer on those so united that heppinese which westondly hoped for; ney. often, hi! to bring even contentment. but are rether e heevy yoke. which is at ell times irkeome. and often .elrnost unhea- eble. Feiling to Rule discovered the true disposition of each other is one cause why there are so meny nnheppy unions. The ï¬rst class of meninges mey be dis. missed with whet hes been seid. but surely in the second there must be errors of con- duct, the removal or toning down of which would lead to greater hsppiness then in meny cases preveils. In I. well-“sorted union. the ï¬rst year 0! merried lilo n generelly the most trying. Either psrty msy stsrt by ex ting too much of the other, forgetting st lilo is e real and eunest business. end thet time ought to he more proï¬tehly employed then in dweys melting tender speeches or indulging in e flushing fondness. These expectsh'ons or tendencies ere sure to result in diesppoint- ment and venticn, but they erect-tore thet will be quickly got over. The kindly tone and tender look in ell intercourse. the con- etent endeevor to please end tity. end the ever read; sympethy. ' only be ized es e truitejo! a. true affection. end received in loving sympethy by a. kindred sentiment. “You will on] to?“ It once. ill be dl your {1b, in tho you; The ohms. o! meoneu which is 0mm noticeable otter wedlock seem- to be one o! the causes of unheppy merriegee. There is, and qnqqeetioqsbly ought‘to be, much , #A;- L__ â€",..__ {tamer freedom of manner: between has. (1 and wife than between lovers; but as unquestionebly there 0 ht not to be en ebeenee of respect for other’e feelings. opinions}- even emwhete, where such may |,A,LLÂ¥2 ’_L-_IJ -Lnâ€" L:n Vru-W-w -_ ---â€" -_- ~~7~ ~ - - exist. The hueb'nnd 'ehould show his respect for his wife’s judgment end cym- ï¬zwy. by expleining to her, st lent in out- ' e. his busineae “hire or professional prospects. Nothing will wound 3 wife more then e ontoloeenue. though it be only np ent. of her nympethy; end many e w -meening huehend.auxioua to spare his wife ennoyeuoe. or it my be pain, will nine a. feeling of distrust in her breut by hiding from herthe ceuee of his irritability or preoccu tion. The wife. on her pert, should len interest end sympathy to the discussion. and never effect or show indif- ference. Life cannot be expected to be free from ones, or every-dey eflein to flow elweyu smoothly. A man in business, or ens-god in proieesionel duties, will ï¬nd A- â€"â€".._â€" -_j -hâ€"A“ v. wO-D“ __ ‘_V-V, much to try, much to worry shd unnoy him. In molten“ tlio irritability. or u lent a. feeling of lgnguog. will cling to him , AL A..- 2- ‘ in spite of himself; and where there is a want of proper sympathy between husband and wife, on arriving home. instead of the aï¬airs of the day being talked over in a. way calculated to smooth the milled temo‘ per. it not restore cheerfulness. the wife’s mdiï¬erence or his own areleeanees other anxiety may seal hie’li and leave his irritability ready to bre out in reproachee on the most trivial occasion. His wiie's temper is sure to suffer. and pride is ever ready to step in and widen the gulf which this habit may soon enough render all but impassable. ' 0! stubbornness, standing on one'e rights, end such like. nothing need be said. Their effect in every-dsy life will prove the evil consequences of their presence in s house- hold. How many an unseemly slterestion‘ wouldbe avoided by one petty being ehle to refrain from indulging in reprosoh end calmly placing the um: in dispute in its true or best ight before the other! Eu- trsngements end distrust: might never uiee could husband and wife form the hebit of yielding cherished pleeeures to the unexpreeeed wish of the other. The went of this self-discipline ie the bitter esuee of many e mstrimonislseperstion. ALIA A,__|: we.“ u. â€".._l .â€" __ï¬_,,i Sympethy onoe broken. unloveble quali- ties are not elow in developing them-elves. Oynioism is too omen eï¬eoted.md meeting indulged in. to belie the tubing of the heert; end thus become epperently enoh rominent ï¬nite of ohueoter um belie! fn better quhlitiee ie well-nigbh; impossible; for u it in much meiel' to lieve in ep- peerenoee then to arrive at 3 knowledge of the true motives of the motion} of others. it. we ere judged nt our own ehomng we heve little reason to complain. It is well for e young men to remember thet elter merriege he eennot retein the freedom of e bachelor with the beneflte of e eettled home. He hes eerieue end reepon- eihle duties to rlorm ;.hee to eeeure the comfort end we â€wing of the women who hee confided her heppineee to hie oere. to eeek her eym thy end conï¬dence. to evoid neglect. or e seeming to prefer. much more the preferring. the oompeny of othere to here; to contribute to her intellectuel oglture. tiiboeehee her dburdedne. end in 1.1" t inge to er gui e en eup rt. 0 must beer in mind thet the mm?“ thoee who were hie compenione in youth end eerly menhood muet now be enjoyed et hie own home. end thet the hunting for leeeure in hie former heunte will leave e eerth of it at hie own lireeide. Dutiee.‘ professionel or bueineee getherin e. will eell him ewey often enough. but 0 thoee eheenoee no reel wife will oom lein. Pleeeure pertiee which ere uneuiteb e lor hie wile ere equelly unenited to him. In all things. though not in ell plecee, ehe ie hie oompenionâ€"the oompenion ol hie joye. of his eorrowe.of hie hopee end of hie Ieere. â€"A young hay shin down hot book in Magyhon aha rad in Culyle. “Hour; A,,_ u “Silly over.†DIAS-ll. In]... i}. not bittyâ€" and um Will moot o! the tuhionohle New York girle. now lhet epriug he: come. teke 3 three mile well ev nae mornina irom; end to end 0! Geutr Perk? No. The will not. ‘ - Why not " Become moot teehionehle New York girl- ue nol now mode to go on toot. Why so 7 Become their urtifloisl heelr ere too high end their reel heele. toe- end enhlee too week toioerry them no in. How will the get through the perk? They will he ulod through ihe perk]: prenoing needs in covered corrugeemhi ehsll hoop the man's importinent rays from dun-cm their oomgleuon Whet glee would e en do, it _they el- u‘...’ â€".-.. v... -._.__-, l Wh telee would die sun do it they .1. lowed it to shine upon them a. little ? It would get into them end so through their shins into their blood ad from thence into their delicete end lovely bones; It would enrich their blood. tone up their nerves. s on their muscles. stiflen their bones on June more electie their “31% impoor“. he! 1 girls tr Ito ew one as 1 et this needed tonic into them which the orb of dcy is rendy to give without money sud without price? By taking pills end powders st 05 per doctor's visit. * How msny out of the thousnndsol young ladies of leisure in New York could hove been found walking in Centrel Perk yester- duy ? Perhepe flity. How meny on horsebeok 2 Perhepe 100. Where were the reet? . They were et home. breething meybe sewer gun. or eerpet end brie-three dust, or they were on Broadway. or on Four- teenth street breething “ 8t. Petrick'e Day in the Morning " duet. or they were shop- pin in close. etnfly etoree. bmthins dry 3 dust. or they were peaked in air- suntted street cue. breething ell aorta of m ‘ ‘ \ A O , 9,. ALA Whet any be seen on my ï¬ne thy in the public undone of View md Berlin ? There any be seen my elegently dreued Indies sitting for 110911: ‘under the , 9LL2__ -â€" And then? And then, at 4 or 5 o'clock. they dine nt mother gerden in the open air, while a lnrge oroheetrn fours through trumpet: and huglee end fldd on and flute: music into their em, nnd nll nhout visions of flower-I. ehrubbery. trees. etetuee end fountains ore poured into their eyes. while they leisurely place the foaming Columbooher or Pilener. with the nourishing knlhfleieoh or wiener eehnitzel, within reach of their digestive apparatus. And how do they look ? They seem robust and healthy, and the bloom on their cheeks looks as it it had ertuck in and had come to stay. And why are they thus robust and healthy ‘2 Because they live so much out of doors and breathe pure air. and pure air is pure life and pure food. Well. what is the matter with us that makes 800 people die in one week in New York? Maybe it is because. as Dr. Hamilton said in his lecture the other night. that “ science does not keep pwe with civiliza- tion." and maybe because our closely built. crammed together civilization, knocks down more pins than it sets up. and sends so many of us_to Greenwood “W" “U W In. mvn‘v r-â€"â€" v_._ end nude 30 mm of us to Greenwood Cemetery.which, uring the put year. according tothe nnnunl re port. has shown such cheering end greti mg evidences o! prosperity through the e e of the nerrow hon-ea prepued for All the living. â€"New York Mpï¬ic. No regiment from New Hampshire ani- tered more in action than the 12th, and a narrower squeak for lite than that at Capt. â€"bnt better known as Elderâ€"Dursin ie not often recorded. In one of the many engagements that the 12th participated in he waa struck by a bullet, which literally bored a hole through him jut above the stomach. He fell amid a heap of killed and ‘wounded, and was leit for dead on the ï¬eld. ‘A column 0! the enemy advancing With a quick stop moved directly over the ground. and. as they were marching by. he wan barely able to make a motion euï¬oient to attract the attention of a Confederate captain. who stopped. looked at him pitm ly. and 'aaid: " Poor fellow. you are ed through. I can't help you, but I'll at least put you out of the way of further harm." e0. uniting the action to the words. he took him tenderly in his arms. carried him some distance one side. , ___2AI_ and placed him in e eittin| posture. with ‘ hie bmk egeinst e tree. hill eeved hie life.†he wee shortly etterwerd found, treated for his wound. and ultimotely re- covered. The surgeon said that had he had his breekieet that morning he would ee- anredly hue been killed. Thirty-six houre' abstinence. being short of retione. hed contracted the etomeoh end eeved his life. 80 the elder lives. endil the life of the en- nuel “imbueâ€"Manchester (N. 11.) Mirror. a. “lawn vv-Dwvuâ€"â€"vâ€" _._.._ es Russian Minister of Foreign Aï¬eirs. Old ego and poor health hnve had e. stubborn men to conquer. but have triumphed. He is 84 years old. nnd has been in active ofï¬oiel service 58 yesrs. beginning no Secretary of the Buseisn Embassy at Lon- don in 1824. He served es Minister at nearly everï¬ Europeen court. and represented uesie in the femous Vienne ‘oonierenoee o! 1856. In 1856 he became {Foreign Minister. Elie grenteet single not A -1 ennn ..‘LAS-n gt now an Empty Clo-uh Save! a bite. ;§;°'Bï¬u‘ib'15'3iicnï¬i 3! 1870 setï¬ng at dofltnoo the trusty o! 1866. which closed the Orimoqn wgr. 11.2 than opened the AA_n:-L ‘l iuu uluuvâ€"u u-.- â€" -__.. vny for the Russoll‘nrkiah conflict of 1876-'77-'78. ending with the oolebntod Berlin Conference. where were gathered the grotto“ diplomuh of Europe. Gortsohu- kofl mnubonnkod with Bismarck, Dia- mli. Andmay 3nd Gumbo“... â€"A menu» nya thst few people know am in bud sou-om: honey is :pt so he pois- ‘ onoul; thus. in when flowers are source. the :00: no ohligodto author it from poiuonouu Gwen. Von Monte hu gone to Switzerland. ma rumor say: he in examiningb the pulses in the Alps through which z o 'meh will hug to go in one of certain milieu-y poul- PRINCE Gonncnnogrllu tinny; rpaigned AI! or in the sunshine. sowing, knitting or Will .50 Walk 0 It is not gonad] known that the ombnlmod had at lint Oman.“ in aunt. Some low not; since. nt any rule, 0 it was aid to be pom-ion 0! Mr. Borneo Wilkinson. 0! Sovenonh. Kent. It was then in good prmrvntion. nnd in phynologlonlugnoot mounted seven! MA.-- I...â€" nL- Inn-nth etriki peculieritiee. Thne the length. trom _t e loreheed to the heck o! the heed. in quite extraordinary â€"- fer greeter then in ordinegy men. The toreheed or lrontel portion. in low. but very broad; the orhitl of the eyes ere ver lerge. the cheek-bones end the bri go of the nose ere high end the lower jewhone. which is ordmerily curved. ie ehort, etreight end formingeright engle with its peint of insertion. The heed ie one indioeting e hrein (which in but en inetrnment of the mind) of greet eotivity end greet cepeoity. corresponding with the remerk of Cromwell’e Secretery, who eeid thet " it wee et once eehop end e etore- house." From its being embelmed. euch fleeh ee remeine on it ie of the coneietenoy of herd brown leether. The eyebrows meet in the middle, end between them \vee e emell wert. now worn eweyâ€" one of thoee which Cromwell. when eitting for his portreit. ordered the painter on no account to omit repre- senting. ea hie duty wee not to {letter in eny wei. but peint whet he new exeotly. In life is complexion wee fresh. end at the one known ee eelmon colored. The‘ heir, which wee of e feirieh or reddish tinge. he: mostly been out oï¬, end the beer-d in now eteined brown by the embelm- in fluid. end drewn under the chin.where. when it wee exposed on the top of West- minster Hell. it wee tied oloee to the epeer-heed which hed been run through end mounted on it. Severe! teeth remem end the e elide, but the hrein wee removed during t e embelming proceee.â€"Dublin Times: Time, 2 p. m. Boone-Oath Garden. Enter R. 0. Antoine Pommeret lending a huge bent, followed by seven oomrndou snob loading 0. bent. Both been and men were among. passengers on the steamship Chnteau Leoville, from Bordeaux. Custom-house oflioer nppenring from L. neonate ï¬rst ruï¬nnâ€"Hold on, you‘ll hove to pay _duty_o_n those bears. ~ Â¥______- _- “Al. w- ‘â€"J -â€" Antoinelhfe 'no got 20 monaio, so you take 20 hours. Ofï¬cerâ€"No, no! Don't lens the ore:- turea hgre; t_h_oy will eat usgp. . 77L IiL- "31165514251 on}: iny Eill‘not out like no cannibal. No nonunire for frighten ; 20 animals are perfeotmente tame. See I pug 9y hang In no mguth. L I-.._- ‘an ru â€"..-â€" -_ ..- _-._-__ 6Eoerâ€"No, no. You emnot leave them here; we have no plaoe for them. Take that}: ugaiy‘frgm here. 9.1 ‘I._:_ -:-LL III-VIA: '- u- --v_ ._v_ .. , -. The eight Frenchmen with their eight beers then marched in single ï¬le into the rotunda, end efter the neme. age. birth-i place, deetinetion end oooupetion hed been teken. they ï¬led out of Ceetle Gerden up Broedwey, towerd Buter street. Pedee- triene eeemed only too anxione to give them right of wey. end either eroeeed the crowded thoroughfare or took refuge in the doorweye. Pommeret eeid it wee ebenrd thet enybody should be frightened et the enimele. es they were perfectly teme. They were not to be used for exhibition. but would be employed in. the Went for drewing emell eerte. ea they had been 1treined to do that workâ€"N. Y. Tribune. 0! Queen Viotona'a Journey to France the London Worjld says; '_' $110qu â€$9 strictest rivacy characterized the embark- ation of or Majesty in the royal yacht Victoria and Albert, yet the Queen showed that the recent attempt on her life has not in any way rendered her nervous. When cheered at a public railway crossing at Portsmouth Her Majesty rose from her seat in the saloon carriage and bowed her acknowledgments from both windows. Since the death of the Prince Consort the Queen has positively refused to be received with royal salutes. The run from Portsmouth to Cherbourg was most enjoyable. the water being almost as still as a millpond. Her Majesty and the Princess Beatrice promenaded the deck and spoke to both oflicers and seamen, the Queen. when in her yacht, showing a dis. inclination to ceremonious Observances. While Her Majesty was in the pavilion a pretty little bird flew on to the quarter- deck. and after eating a few crumbs. thrown to it by the Princess Beatrice and ‘ one or two of the ofï¬cers and members of the royal suite. went forward and made friends With some of the crew, returning tothe pavilion. where it was caught b command of the Queen, who sent it bao in the yacht to Windsor Castle. proposing to keep the bird as a memento of her -1---_..a “lanolin †pleuaï¬t voyage.‘ The ship Airlie. of the Dundee Clip r Line. arrived in the Tay the other ay from Calcutta with aloud of jute. Captain Foreman reports that on the 28th February the shi encountered a terriï¬c gale, which lasted our days. For an hour and a halt the vessel lay on her beam ends, and in order to save the ship the master decided on trying to allay with oil the violence of the sea. which was running mountains high. A number of bags were ï¬lled with 'oil. and the bags having been perforated. so as to allow the oil to escape gradually, were towed for forty-eight hours to windward. Captain Foreman reports the experiment to have been eminently snooeuiul, the water in the immediate vicinity of the vessel becoming "quitesmooth." A big mountainous wave would have been seen bearinï¬ down on the ship. and when about two sh ps' lengths or so [rem the vessel. when it came amon t the oil. it would suddenly lall. Had t not been for the oil experiment. the captain is of opinion that ii the vessel had not altogether foundered. she would have had her decks cleared and sustained considerable damage. Rev. Dr. 13mm: the Brick Precbytcrim Church. New York, who in about to romrn to London. has just received A plenum farewell it from his pcrishioncrc. It taken one orm o! o purse 0! over 86.000. contributed by members of his congregm “on. Pee-flu- lteome Plus-gen. OIOMWI I‘L'I new Queen Viola-In Travels. uflcd ï¬re-dai- oulu the anu. III ‘0. Illullon- u to Winnipeg Wago- PAPER CITIES, 8PEOULATION, BLIZZAROS Five hundred pox-son- bol to Mill- brook. Potexboro'. reconuy ch 10: the Northwest. There is ogre“ deenh of eohool teachers in Menitvohe. end high eeleriee ere oflered to quelifled toenhen. Meme. E. O. Gurney. of Bunihon, ere doubling the «peony of their were- nouee in Wumipeg. They ere importing e number of briohmeking meohinee. Mr. Welter Buohen. lete of Durhem. recent! sold his term there and eterted {or Menito . Before reaching there. how ever. he lost the Hence 0! his reason end bed to be detained in en uylum et St. Paul. A privste letter lrom Emerson. Man" says at s tunersl A few dsys ego. during the snow blocksde. the corpse wss pushed or drown over the snow for nesrly two miles. to reach the cemetery. as it was impossible for horses to get through the drifts. A Winnipeg report ssys: Mr. R. Brown sold east hell of section 25. township 11, rungs 22 west. sud south hell 0! section 35. ‘township 18. rungs 23 west. end northesst querter of section 19. “Miw' rm†west.st‘5 sore.cs.sh.to . W ' m Welksr. o! renttord. Also resold for Mr. Walker east hell of section 92, township ll, rouge 22 west, for $6 per sore. to Mr. J. Hutcheson. Woodstock. Also sold lots 750 end 751 Pritohsrd street to Mr. J. Boy. of Listowel. for 8400 each. Thirty men, with teams, have arrived at Winnipeg from the woods twentyeight miles north of Whitemouth. where the had been cutting saw-loge for Stubbe’ m' . The cause of their breaking up camp was want of provisions. For a week previously to their starting for the city they had had only flour. molasses and tea; and for ï¬ve days they had had neither hay nor oats for their horses. The hay which had been used for the men’s beds was all devoured; also the refuse which had been lying around the yard. when the party left the camp. The men say that another camp. twelve miles inorth of the lace where they were work- ‘ing, will hrs up soon. Mr. James Gillies. stoneentter, late of Toronto. writmg from Winnipeg. says: Carpenters in .Toronto will be thinking they will make their fortune here it they come up and get the wages that I see stated in the Toronto papers. I read in one yesterday that ters were going to strike for $7 per ay, but that isall stuff. as they have given up all ideas of striking. as thereare too many of them here just now: The rates 0! wages going now An I, n_._‘_..__1 n-1- are : good carpenters, 83; hummer end sew men. 02.50; stonecutteru. $3.50 to 84; bricklayers. from $3 to $3.50. These will go up once the buildings get started. storers got 82 to 82.50. Board runs from 85 to 87. Some boarders hsvs to put up} with a. good deal of inconvenience. Two young fellows I know hsve to sleep on s stretcher. and they are the only ones out of fourteen that are shove the floor. The rest hsve to do the best they can in s room of shout 12 x 12. which hes notbeen swept out since the house was built. The boom in town lots hes burst for the present. The suction rooms ere deserted. and few ssles ure reported. Intel-preter- who smiled [tau-a Bull- w-y Lahore". A desp‘ateh from Fort Plains.N.Y.. says: Four hundred Italians who have been working here on the West Shore Railroad congregated around the Zeoler House. where the contractor is stopping. and com- menced stoning and ï¬ring into the house. The Grand Army post die the rioters. but not belore they 'd considerable damage to the Zeoler House. None of the inmates were seriously injured. Some of the Italians were shot and wounded by the inmates. Today we have this telegram from the scene: One of the Italians concerned in the riot on Saturday was fatally wounded. 'I‘en others were hurt. Many ofï¬cers and citizens narrowly escaped,and several were injured. The trouble is attributed to-Rose and Chase. interpreters. who were given money to buy food for the hungry Italians until the pay rollswere made out, but who, it is alleged. pocketed the money, told the Italians that they would get no pay. and advised them to kill the contractors. Rose and Chase escaped. The Italians threat- ened vengeance on them. Arrangements have been made to feed the Italians until they _are paid. No further trouble is The your 1882. with its Mondw Christ- mee.hu already commenced badly. Its long list of life And property destruction nearly everywhere in anything but cheer- ing. The outlook for a. healthy semenâ€" nlter such a seasonâ€"is but a forlorn one. whilst. us we regurd it. the agriculturel outlook is of a. still more formideble chor- ear'ed. sober. A premature spring bee never done e good turn yet. but meny e bed one. epidly growing vegetation under the in- vigoretmg heet o! the epring inn is a. joy- one picture when eeeeoneble. but when this is in progreee in e. period which experience teaches us he: to be followed by froety and generally nnfevoreble weather. the picture, on the ccntrery, becomes a nod one. U CAN BE CURED. . THE PLOT OF RASCALS. “MING HEN anemon- an. mm. mm 'w ON THE PRAIRIEB. V cm BE cunso. P- D D. M0“10|:fl1~33flmn 8L.Buflalo,N Y» has: 29293.2 -. .myma Vennor'n Promo-flex lions. A FATAL BIOT. It you nut @01on 'l‘ologn by In 5 tow mambo. at! be no In dam Vulumno Bron. hoof: PRINCIPAM LINE And Ill BEST poluu In lawn. Nebmkmmuourlï¬u- m. Xew Mexico. Admin. ‘1‘ um um! Tens: CHICAGO fy'épneedeu‘! UnlveralrT Kc {Rioâ€"{tâ€"oiillgrd Railroad In the or! {1.1me if: lie World tot I“ clue: of â€gym. KENSAS CITY Through "7 11cm: via mu ‘ Celebrated Line to: sale at. .11 once: the U. s. Ind Cumin. AQ\ FOR SA 7’. : POTTER. PancEVAL Lowau. 3d Woe mm 003‘! lancer. 0a. m. an Chicago. In. chic-co. J. "arson. Age-c. as Front street Eon. Toronto om. HHAHFUME PflSIER PRESS. ONLY IN mm A FEW YEARS. And well Adsptod fox-“£31m!“ mm run-har- {n : mnnm n posters in I. conn oflco. ' Thobodotl’rou 3 33346111011“. Then on three rcllen our form sud four distributing mum with Press. The Pros oon 81,!» when new. For puticnlul “dull TIMES PRINTING 0009 MILTON. 0M. INSTITUTION (ESTABLISHED 18'“ 4 QUEEN .TBBBT EAST, TIDBDN'I‘O NERVOUS DEBILITY, Bhoumltinn. I‘m. Bani. flour-1%: Pudnis 3nd ul Liver md Ohm Gom‘f mints modntely xellovodu: drum.- nous? (Ensidngy using thm BELTS. ND! Circulars and Oonmlhtion FREE. ELEL' TRIO BEL? A Skin of Beauty is a Joy Forever. DB. 1'. FELIX GOUMIJI’S ORIEIIIAI. CHE“ llfl MGM. BEMHIFIER terfelt o! elmnu name. The team mb 3' ‘9"? “‘d â€ï¬ï¬â€™ï¬‚uԠâ€a: “'1‘ 5:03": on _: “ I you use maul ‘ Gounod/a Cream' at the lemma 1 all the Skin preparations." One bottle III II six months. using it every do . Also Poudre Bubtlle removes superfluous 11 without injury tothe akin. M‘glMï¬BiT. GOURAUD. Bole Prop. 48 Bond . I e For solo by all Druggiete end Foncy Goods Dealers throughout the 0.8. Oenade end Bu- mpe. mBewu‘e of hue Imiutioue. 01.000 Rowen! ï¬n- meat end proof of any one selling iho um. In..- â€"_ .... It is u um. um! Bflootud mod for mm... wm ’ Nervoumon lam Lona! Brain Power. Bun Frustration. NI; 0 â€" â€1....--I “IA-In...- Alli. Nervou one. "I nun-â€" - Loeool Brain Power.8ox Bomtrprootntlon. Nliï¬t Sweetie. Bmflonrm Mao MminolWooknooe Gwenorol over. It re In Roman Waltzing. uvongmmohdedlnoo Ieeï¬sue one ntoebIed Breln end Boetoroe u doing 'l‘one end V to tho Enron-ted enmflve no. 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