Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Woodville Advocate (1878), 11 May 1882, p. 7

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A Mother and Child leaping Blue-acre I. Bio of Tums. Menchelter (8:13.) Courier. The lute of Mrs. Watson end her child he! nt lest been definitely neoertcined. The demiption was given a few weeks ago 01 the attack of the North Queenelend blacks upon the Lizard Ielnnd fiahing station. the brave delence made by Mrs. Wuhan end her Ghinnmnn against overwhelming odds, nnd the suspicion of the lice that the survivors had been drowne while melting, in a. leaky little punt. tor the mcinlend. The finale of the and tragedy is told by the lnet mail delivery. Mrs. Watson and her child hndeeoeped murder and outrage from the savages. but were fated to a lingering denth on 9. distant desert island. - A AL... ....|.~mnr (nllnd death on a mutant ac“... ......__. The master of e trading schooner lound three skeletons on No. 5. Island of the Hor- wioh group. and these are proved to be the remains of Mrs. Watson. her baby, and the faithful Chinaman, Ah Sam. A revolver, lull-cocked and loaded. was lying by the mother and child. The dead Chinaman was found under a tree a tow yards off. With a loaded ride at his side. There was no water on the island, and the unfortunate casta- ways had no doubt died from the most terri- ble addiction of thirst. Ah Sam had been a ared in seven planes, and the bandages owed that Mrs. Watson, in the midst of her woes, had not neglected to dress the wounds. The presence of mind and hero- ism displayed by the courageous woman are now seen to be even greater than at first supposed. The flight from Lizard Island was made, not in a hoat._but in half are now seen to be even “Ionics. ....... ..- first supposed. The flight from Lizard Island was made, not in a boat. but in half of an iron tank used for boiling dOWn beche- de-mer. The woman. child and Chinaman set forth on their perilous journey on Oct. 8rd. landed next day on a reef. and remained there till the 6th. Then they went from islet to islet in search of water, of which they could not have had adrop for at least five days. During this horrible period of sufi’ering and suspense Mrs. “Watson kept her diary, papers and account books. The extracts from the heroine's diary tell as much of the touching end of the harrowing story as will ever be known, but imagination will but too vividly indicate the closing scenes of this brave woman's life. The supply of water on hand had evidently lasted the fugitives during their earlier wanderings, but prior to the date of the first entry it had altogether (ailed. The pen- cillings in the diary speak with athetio force for themselves: “ Oct. 9-â€" rought the tank ashore as far as possible with this morning's tide; made camp all day under the trees. Blowing very hard. No water. Gave baby a dip in the seaâ€"he is showing symptoms of thirstâ€"and took a dip myself. Ah Sam and self very parched with thirst. Baby showing symptoms. Sunday, 10.â€"Bahy very bad with inflam- mation; very much alarmed; no fresh water, and no more milk but condensed; self very Weak. Really thought I should have died last night. Monday, 11.â€"Still all alive. Baby very much better this morn. ing ; self feeling very weak. I think it will rain to-day ; clouds very heavy ; wind not quite so high ; no rain ; every ap- pearance of fine weather. Ah Sam gone . 12_ _ Lea-IA nnf. can“ 11]") since the alive. buoy VUI] luuvu uv ______ ing ; self feeling very weak. I think it will rain to-day ; clouds very heavy ; wind not quite so high ; no rain ; every ap- pearance of fine weather. Ah Sam gone away to die; have not seen him since the 9th. Baby more cheerful; self not feeling nt all wall; have not seen any boats of any description. No water. Dead with thirst.” The relics were discovered by Captain Bremner.ot the schooner Kate Kearney, and over the remains he raised a mound and read the Church of England burial service. heard for the first time upon that lonely island near the Southern Cross. Subsequently the people of Cooktown sent across for the remains and accorded them a public burial. '1‘]!!! NE WEST ABI'I‘II DIET Iv. -â€"-â€" Problems Worlhv of Samuel: by Col-1 Icglnce Immune Girl-I. A man spends eighteen cents for lager, ten cents for tobacco. twanty cents for cigars. fifteen cents for street car fare, and loses 81.50 at poker; he then permits his wife to purchase a button-hook for three cents. and figures that her extravagance will ruin him in three years. What is his capital? 7 â€"‘- -4-â€" n:fl““. _ A Tovonmn TBAGIDY. w‘uwâ€" u A man hss ninety-one sheep, eighty- seven calves and thirty-five pigs, and he desires to divide them equally among three sons and s dsughter so that the daughter shall have nine more than the boys. What will be the share of each. providing three sheep are stolen. two calves get lost, and five pigs tollcw a. circus away ‘2 A lady bought some tape for eleven cents nnd some thread for two cents. and worked off at quarter with a. hole in it on the ped- dler. How much did she save to buy tracts for the heathen? It a buwhsrfcsrt going at crate of s mile ALA- .. nlflnnmnn whn It a butcher ~03.“ going at a to w 0!: IL mile trikee an alderman who is walking at the tube of three miles an hour, eieting powar of each '2 “KIWI Iv vâ€"v â€"__~, , A man gives an order for seven tons of coal and finds that he has onIy received six tone end 100 pounds. How much more is due him. and whet’ll you take to convince the dealer that he must. send it?” According to the census for this Province for 1881. the largest number of the African raoeare tohe found in Kent and Essex. more than half the entire number in the ' Province. The Chinese are nearly all found in Toronto and Barrie. The Dutch are found in nearly every count , but the largest number in Stcrmcnt an Monok; the township of Osnehruek. in Stormcnt. is their headquarters. where they number over 2,000. The Icelanders are nearly allin Mus. hairs. The Indians are prinoi ally in Algoma. Brant. Middlesex an Both. well. The Italians are scattered all over; the only places where they have congregated to any extent are Toronto and London. The Jews are con- fined almost entirely to the cities. The Russians and Poles are mainly in Glen. garry. Cornwall and Renfrew, with some in Toronto. Muskoka has the greater pro. rtion of the Scandinavians and of the wiee. though the town of Berlin hasa good-sized colony of thelatter. The Welsh are pretty well scattered. but are chiefly found in Western Ontario, especially in Middlesex and Elgin. The Germans are to be found in everyoonnty,but the greatest proportion in Waterloo and Perth. The greatest number of French are in Essex County. and next in Ottawa city. The British are found all over. Curlonltlc- ol lllc Con-In. Zuu'rn mane. The Biplorer lien; o! l- the lie-rs oi the Dark (Jamaicanâ€"Ills Harden Work o'er. Stenley has been heerd from at lest. miter the world st large had given him up for dead and almost for otten him. He is in the heart of Africa w th a. large force of men. white and blspk. and backed by hesv capitalists. engaged in laying the loan stion 01 some sort of commercial intercourse between the Dark Continent and the civilized world. Hisfloyal friend. Edwud King. the {anions émeriosn corre- L L4 L-.. .'....D Bani! your vuu runway-J ...., _-.. V, plated. He pays his men liberal wages and they work nine hours a day at something or other. he does not say what. Edward King says he is the agent of companies which have invested large amounts of capi- tal in opening up sections of Africa, and who naturally desire to secure for them- selves all the advantages which may accrue from the explorer's labors. " In a few months." he adds, “ we shall probably hear rather interesting and possibly somewhat startling news from the little camp on the Upper Congo." Barnum's White Elephant. A celebrated Yankee showman is in correspondence with Bomedech Phra Peir- aminda Meha Chulalen Kam on the subject of elephants. S. P. P. M. 0. Earn is the King of Siam and the hap y possessor of some white, elephants. whic , in Siam, are held very sacred. The showman, having conquered and possessed Jumbo, is anxious to show a white elephant, s quadruped never seen in this country, so he alleges. He is plying the King with presents, and the King, greatly pleased with his atten- tions, which taire a form 1°33 agreeable to - .u... nuenhl‘l‘mfl Kings. is promising that if he can overcome the superstition of his subjects concerning the sacred character of the beasts he will loan him one. Black ele hants are com- i man enough. and H13 ajesty of Siam, who professes to be a warm friend of : America, has been ofiering the Government of Uncle Sam a herd of these for breeding purposes. It is the ambition of the show- man's life to get hold of the white style of elephant. “ I know I ought to be satisfied with my present tame ” he says “ for, as Lord Rosemary. __the famous member of _._-L- MA mu “ves- ........ the English Parliament. wrote me, my name is immortalized on both sides of the ocean, and even the English children learn of me almost as soon as they learn their alphabet, but 1 am not yet content. nor will I be until I have given bonds to Siem's King that I will return in safety the first white elephant ‘whiob ever left Siam." Isn’t the showman mistaken touching the seeroity of white elephants? They are supposed to be as common as the skeletons which ere send to n n_ A|‘__‘_ STANLEY IN AFRICA. mevâ€" “ -_- furnish forth mbgfi family closets. .l Elli Iluv uuuuuuu beliefs has led to some funny demonstra- tions in the English House of Commons. demonstrations which, it is sad to say. are not of a sort to impress people with s high idea of the earnestness 0! their authors. Lord Redesdsle, in his anxiety to keep atheists like Mr. Brsdlsu h out o! Parlis~ msnt. introduced 5 Bi lâ€"defested, we may say. by the efforts of such men ss Lord Bhsftesburyâ€"providing that members should swear "pr sfl‘mn” thus knocking in the head his party’s objection toletting MnBrsdlsuuh sfiirm. Thenriwheg the Bradlsughites declared .- nyfih AL- finnnn-nntiun 111611 wuuu luv .1.â€"_.....°__,_, that Mr. Tom Collins. the Conservative member for Knereaborough. was an atheist in spite of his having taken the oath. that gentlemen stood up in Parliament and to disprove the charge offered there and then toaflirm his belie! in the Trinity “either 2.. m. mnrfll of the Nicene or of the 003me nus wnv u. --- _,v in the words of. the Nicener 0': of the Athanuian Creed." And the members all bunt ouc hughing with such heartinass 1.th he couldn't obtain a hearing! , AL- William L. Dayton. who goes as tbs American Minister to the Netherlsndsds a son 0! William L. Dayton. Fremont‘s second on the “shot of 1866. Tn}: _que.nti‘op of religious oaths and __-_ n-.." Jnmnnntrn. Whlle Elephunl. The blue at Vanderbilt and culls W. l Field level by a Pun-tire Bxpleslsn -â€"Ieclslls| Bsplsslve Peck-gee. A New York dsspstch dated Saturday night says: A dastardly attempt was made on thelives of Wm. H.Vsnderbilt and Cyrus W.Field.by sending them explosives through i the mails. The dangerous character of the packages was discovered en route to the st ofiloe station where they were to be elivered at the residences of these gentle- men, and so probable loss of life was pre- vented. The package for Mr. Field was posted in the general oflioe, and the one for Mr. Vanderbilt was brought in by a oolleotor. The packets were placed in a mail bag with other matter tor the up town dis- trict, taken to the Elevated Railroad station. and deposited on the front platlorm of s ear. The train started. but on reach- ing 9th street an explosion was heard. and fire and smoke observed to issue from the mail bag. When the train sto pad the bag was removed to the poet-o as on 29th street and opened. The package addressed to Mr. Vanderbilt had exploded. The one addressed to Mr. Field was plunged in a bucket of water and then examined. Jt consisted of a pastebosrd box covered with flowers and pictures. and had a small drawer in it, tromlwhicb depended a string. as is supposed, for the purpose of drawing it open, and causing the explosion. Inside was found a tin canister containing half a pound of powder. and a glass jar containing a white powder and a liquid, believed to be some kind of explosive. A sorsp of nemaper was inolosed. which was reoogni as part 3f "7,, --_._:_,. s .. theâ€"UUlâ€"WWwâ€"â€"v . TIIB PLO’I‘ 0F ASSABSINQ. containing a vuuw ,-..--_ liquid, believed to be some kind of explosive. A scrap of newspaper was inolosed. which was recognized as part of the Yolk: Zeitung. Upon soaking the wrapper several folds came apart. and on one was found, in lead pencil. " G. W. Wa- ling. 311 East 19th street." The probability is that the machine was originally directed to Walling. The fact that Superintendent Walling forbade a procession of Socialists is regarded as a reason why it might have 1been intended for him, and gives color to the theory that the Socialists are at the bottom of the affair. .... .. NEW You. April 30.â€"-â€"Early this morn- ing John A. Davenport, of Nineteenth street, took to police headquarters an infernal machine similar to those sent to Vanderbilt and Field, evidently prepared by the same person. It was placed in his hallway last night and exploded, doing little damage. The box was probably intended for Police Superintendent Walling, who lives a few doors from Davenport. , 74 AL- ne‘:t‘ {n uven a law uuvnu nu... .â€"... -_‘V Prof. Doremue pronounces the fluid in the glass globe taken from the machine intended to: Vanderbilt to be autphurio said. There is no clue yet to the perpe- tutors. Not long since a correspondent sent to sl provincial paper an anecdote of which his six-year-old boy was the hero. He says: " I keep a. shop and sell fancy goods. A gentleman came in to buy something. It was early, and my little boy and I were alone in the house at the time. The gen- ‘tlemau gave me s. sovereign. and I had to go upstairs to my cash box. Before doing so. I went into the little room next to the shop and said to the boy: fWatch the gentleman, that he don‘t steal anything -.‘ andeut him on the counter. As soon as I returned. he sang out; ‘ Pa, he didn’t steal anythingâ€"I watched him. You may imagine what a position I was in. . ,h _.._ nth... nn Inn-n luu may "use“... .. ....-_ t ..... ' l a Children’s questions are often no less embarrassing than they are amusing. as may be instsnced in the story of the mer- cenary little boy who overheard a converse.- tion respecting a wedding that was soon to take place. At breakfast the next morning he recalled the subject by asking the following question: “ Papa. what do they want to give the bride away for ‘2 Can’t \ they sell her 2" __L:L:.:.... n "Annanfnr In Duo, aux; u At a whale exhibition, a youngster 18 said to have asked his mamma if the whale that swallowed Jonah had as large a mouth as the one before them, why didn‘u Jonah walk out. at. one corner. “ You must. thmk Jonah was a fool; he didn't want to walk out and get. drowned ," was the quick reply of a younger brother, befoxe the mother could anawer.â€"â€"-Cham- \ bers' Journal. Goon Conservative Churchmen over in "‘ England will soonbe after Mr. Gladstone U and Lord Kimberley with whole forests of in sharp sticks for their recent act of dises- tablishmeut. In the Straits Settlements. with a population of 308.000. there are 749 almost 7,000 Roman Catholics. It has rl long been complained of as a manifest tl 1injustice that £3,000 a year should be spent $1 upon the Bishoprio of Labuan and the tl connected chaplaincies, and now the s‘ Colonial Secretary has withdrawn the i1 letters patent which make the Bishop a State official. and the grants to the chap- laincies will cease as the incumbents die or leavethem. Colonial bishops have not of f late years been regarded with any par- (3 ticular measure of affection. as the belief ‘ l l l I l 1 has obtained that sundry rectors of ambitious views had secured their election to such sees merely to get the title. return- ing to England to sport it after a very brief foreign tour. There are now nearly _ if not quite as many ex-colonial bishOps in England as there are bishops, and the feeling seems to be growing that that point has been reached beyond which. in the language of Mr. Gilbert's ballad, “Colonial bishops cannot go." Mr. Gladstone. however. does not believe in governing for the minority only. nor in has mg up State Churches at the expense of t a people at large. Bishops as State officials can never flourish in the Colonies. The curious enterprise is being conducted in New Jersey of grinding up worn out India rubber overshoes to make what is called “ stock." This material is brought here in barrels and is teased by the manu- facturers into new in ia rubber goods. A thin coating of fresh rubber varnish makes them look quite equal to articles of the best quality, but they are said to have an out- rageous lack of durability. Garibaldi has improved in health beyond all expectation. He recently took a drive to Monreale. near Palermo. The popula- tion filled the streets in perfect silence, but uncovered. and they filled the carriage with flowers. To a deputation of the University professors, who said. b their spokesman. that his suffering han made Italy. Gari- baldi replied that “ Italy was made by the Italians. and when certain gentlemen beyond the Alps say they made it they lie." Chlldrell’l Brunei-lea. The Alum-lulu Blade by Charlotte 1 Bun-dell. Judge Barrett. in Supreme Court Cham- bers. New York, on Saturday heard a 1 motion made on behalf of Charlotte Rams- i den in a. suit for divorce from her husband. 1 Edward Charlszamsden. for an allow- ance pendin the action of $500amonth alimony an 92.600 counsel fees. The plaintiff made affidavit that in the summer of 1857. when the youthful widow of an English surgeon who had been in the employ of the Khedive of Egypt. she met the defendant at Cologne. where he represented himself to be Sir Edward Charles Ramsden. of No. 6 Portland Place. London. They were married at the British Consulate in Cologne. She had £60,000. which he invested in bonds. and mailed them by mistake,ashe claimed. to his mother in London. Then they travelled through Europe, stopping at several gambling places until he dissipated all her fortune. hen she left him and went tolive with her mother. On his promise to reform she afterwards rejoined him. setting him up in the oofl’ee'business with £6.000. which she obtained from relatives. He seen again began a course of riotous living, associat- ing with Park and Bolton and Lord Arthur Pelham Clinton, whose practices were the subject of criminal investigation in London " "“- AAAAAA hn nflmitfipd 1"ku .â€"._ _V BuDJBUU Us vuuuuuu luvvuv-°â€"â€"_7_ , some years ago. These men he admitted 1 into his house, she says, and 1 allowed them to make use of her wardrobe 1 to masquerade as women. When he ; became bankrupt he advised her, she ‘ alleges, to advertise, in imitation of Mme. ,1 Rachel, that she possessed the secret whereby women could be made outhful in appearance. This she refuse to do. She sold her household furniture. she asserts, to pay his gambling debts, and he was finally obliged to flee to this country to avoid arrest. While they lived in London. she alleges. he betrayed her maid, and registered the child that was born asthat of his wife by the Marquis of Townshend. In September, 1881, on coming to New York she says she found her husband engaged in the coffee business, with an income of $25,000 a year. and living with two women in expensive apartments in East Forty-second street. On behalf of the defendant. afiidavits were submitted that Mrs. Ramsden was convicted in April, 1877. of perjury, in England, and imprisoned in Milbank Prison. It was after her conviction and because of the disgrace that followed that he came to America. She was unsuccess- ful in an attempt to have him indicted for bigamy in December last, and in a like attempt in the case of one of the women who lived with him. His income he claimed, was only $1,200 .a year. ,,__1 A»- n"nm cxulmuu, wan um, w..." W, "V, The hearing was adjourned to allow plaintiff‘s counsel to produce rebutting aflidavita. . The Chicago Western catholic says: “ It is indorsed by Bishop Gilmour, of Cleve- lsnd, Ohio, and by some of our most honored and respected priests throughout the coun- try who hsve used it for rheumatics with success where all other remedies failed. We refer here to St. Jacobs Oil. We know of several persons in our own circle who were sufiering with that dreadful disease. rheu~ matiem. who tried everything and spent hundreds of dollars for medicine which proved of no benefit. We advised them to 1- an an...“ A: Ohnm lmrahed ll BIOLISIIWOIII’S “VOICE SUIT. proveu UL uu Uuuvuvu .. - __ .__- ‘ try St. Jacobs Oil. Some of them laughed at us for faith in the ' patent stufi.’ they chose to call it. However, we induced them to give it a trial, and it accomplished its work with such a magic-like rapidity that the same people are now its strongest advo- cates, and Will not be without it in their houses on any account.” ‘ Mr. Joel D. Harvey. U. 8. Collector of Internal Revenue, of this city. has spent over 82.000 in medicine for his wife, who was suffering dreadfully from rheumatism. and without deriving any benefit whatever; yet two bottles of St. Jacobs Oil accom- plished what the most ekxlful medical men failed in doing. We could give the names of hundreds who have been cured by this wonderful remedy did space permit us. The latest man who has heen made happy , , IAI_ I:--â€"A-‘. I. through the use of this valuable liniment is Mr. J emes A. Conlsn, librerisn of the Union Cstholic Library of this city. The following is Mr. Conlen‘s indorsement: Umox CATHOLIC LIBRARY Aegean-10ml Cmcseo, Sept. 16th. 1880. ) ‘ I wish to add my testimony sstothe merits of St. Jacobs Oil as a cure for rheumatism. One bottle has cured me of this troublesome disease, which gave me e. greet deal of bother tor a long time; but thsnksto the remedy, I am cured. This statement is unsolicited by any one in its interestâ€"Very respectfully, Sam-um legislation in England dates from a very early period. Edward II. decreed that a butcher who sold measled pork should be fined for the first ofience, pilloried for the second. im risoned and fined for the third. and expe led the town for the fourth. Richard 11. took measures against the pollution of rivers. Henry VI. prohibited cattle slaying within walled towns with three exceptions. Elizabeth enacted that only one family might dwell inacottage. The plague in the time of Charles 11. led to many health enactments. Yet how great is the sacrifice of life in these later day oontraventions of the plainest laws of health I Tm: London Economist says: “It is more than four years since the Edison scare so affected gas property. yet to-day gas companies are actually more profitable ‘ 7- nu- ammo. nu. nnlvlarrm gun vumynuwu an. - _____ than thev were then. About the onlylarge 'freehold 3‘ properties in th a United King- dom which at t‘ a present data pay 6 per cent. are tobef ound din the stocks of {the large metropolitan gun companies." LIA-â€" .w.n- __- V, Prince Bismarck received more than eight hundred birthdei congratulations by post and telegraph t in year. He has written toanewspaper to say that he is deeply touched by these signs of respect and affection. Not long before the death of Dr. Holland he wrote to a youn corres ndent: " A literary life is a bar and di oultone; look well before you choose a life so full of difficulty." Mrs. Sarah Holstein. of Norristown, Pa.. died recently. and left agrovision in her will that no women shou d be allowed at her funeral. A Wendel-III] Substance. JA'uns -A. Comma. Librarian. at It The not 0! putting a loud pencil to the tongue to wet just. before writing. which wc notnco in so muny plc.ic one of an oddl- tiea tor which it no Ltd to give any ran-on. unless it began in the dcys when pencils were poorer shun now. ond wu continued ‘by example to the next. generation. . . u u I “4.; â€"-..-..._ has “It. 1" Dy Hump“: w um um“ av ......... A lend Eencil should never be wet. It. herdene t. e lead and ruins the pencil. This feet. )3 known to newspaper men and stenc- gmphera. But nearly every one else does wet a pencil before mung it. Thus tact. wee definitely settled by a newsmper clerk away down east. Being of a mathematical turn of mind. be ascertained by actual count that of tifty persons who came into his omce to write an advertisement or a church notice, forty. nine wet a pencil in their months before using it. New. this clerk always uses the best pencils. cheriehing a good one with something of the pride a soldier feels in his gun or bus sword. and it hurts his feelings to have his pencil spelled. But politeness and business considerations require him to lend his pencil scores of times a day. And often after it has been wet till it was hard and brittle and refused to mark. his feel. ings would overpower him. Finally he got some cheap pencils and sharpened them. and kept them to lend. 'Ihe first person who took up the stock pencil was a drayman. whose breath smelled of onions and whiskey. He held the point in his mouth and soaked it for several minutes. while he was torturing himself in ,A,L_._-_A-n‘ ‘n’ n mluuwa. "us-u uv n...- ----V the effort to write a advertisement for a missing bulldog. Then a sweet-looking young lady came into the ofiice. with hit] gloves that buttoned half the length of her arm. She picked up the same old pencil and pressed it to her dainty lips prepara- tory to writing an advertisement for a lost bracelet. The clerk would have eta ed her hand. even at the risk of a box of t s best Faber pencils, but he was too late. And thus that pencil passed from mouth to mouth for a week. It was sucked by people of all ranks and stations. and all degrees of cleanliness and unoleanliness. But we for- bear. Surely no one who reads this will r _..:_-..‘"4 (Vans- ever again menial. A Beans-r Tannmoua.â€"Articles of in- corporation have been filed by an inventive American to manufacture and put in operation a secret telephone, whereby two persons using the line can communicate with one another in entire secrecy. By a peculiar breaking of the circuit only half the conversation can be caught by any one else on the line, and then it would be only an unintelligible noise. Even the repeti. tion of the alphabet is not discernible. A conversation in .a low tone, the person standing several feet away. can be carried on through this method. The line will be in operation in sixty days. it is promised. It will make dull times for the girls at the central oflice. Gen. 0. B. Consrecx. United States Corps of Engineers, in charge of the lake survey, says that there have been, so tar as appears from his records. no appreciable changes in the mean level of Lake Erie and Lake Ontario other than those to he expected from the variations in rainfall and : evaporation in different years and series of ears. He also says that the data of the she survey ive. in his judgment. no evi- dence of un erground discharge of water 5 from either Huron or Erie into the lakes 1 below them. if there is one thing in all the‘ that allures the average when y 3 lights 0 ie eneml , me ;u p0 gndgthorou hly equ circus. The chlldreno ecity 01 seem to know of its coming by t of intuition.and prepare wee The pennies. hitherto droppe the missionary~box with cone ous rc lnrity. are new mlthi’u vert into an old come-pot i cellar corner for prospective us scmpmetal, old paper. etc.. (i stantiel service in hewn ofse: the amount of an ndmlss on fee for all that. we believe mlly . properly conducted circus as n of amusement and diversion. a happy to state the gratifying m the circusâ€"or rat or lie pro and employesâ€"experimenta iieve in ST. JACOBS 011., the Pain Reliever of the age. Hm llnrnum's Greatest Show on Em Coup's Monster Show can be in is icel CaSk'R. The former my: in e great pleasure in stating i “cons 0n. isjn_us_e by mnpy" I am firm believer m m. "Wm. v ., ,_ , everybody infigny company to keep 1:. near them.l ELECTRIC BEL? INSTITUTXON (EBTABIJBEED'IS‘N 4 QUEEN STREET EAST. 'l‘onom‘o- NERVOUS DEBILITY, Rheumatism, Lame Backfieunl huh“! sin and all Liver and Chen Comrlainu' mmodlc ly relieved and rmo- neni cured by union those;,BIcLTB, ANDB AND NSOLES. Cironim and Consultation FREE. A Bumble mon- A REGULAR CIRCUS. J uv v”. v wet a pencil. *Iouinfillc Com- uuv u- v .--7fi l I thoufiht I wmfldt that. llamm gidadl (1M0:- wo man: 0 mm preparation ever. and have had none since. in Sr. “was 01b, and I want L4-_ IA nan-.‘I om"

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