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Woodville Advocate (1878), 15 May 1884, p. 3

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received toeeperete from the respondent. There we no ieeue ot the muriege. end heving left her, he had bed from thct time no communication with her up to the pre- eent. 0n the eeperctiou ehe resumed her former life. and she wee now and had been for come yecre living with a betting men. The petitioner. who hed loet ceete among his triende, went to Australie otter the rceperetion end obtuued Government employment there. the duties of which he diechcrged in e menner every way creditâ€" ehle to himeelg. Circumstances heving orieeu which ut on the alert thoee who were noting or him. inquiries pursued under greet diflicultiee led to the discovery thct when the respondent went through the ceremony of mnrriege .with the petitioner ehe hed livingehue- bend. who wee in court toodey. It wee tound thet on the 6th of July. 1863. she wee merried at St. Mungo'e Catholic Church. Glgegow, to thetmmen. whcee neme wee AN ENGLISH NOBLEMAN INVOLVED Thin wee perhepe the meet extreordinery oeee ever trled in the Dlvoroe Court It wee emit hy the Eerl o! Eaton. eldeet eon o! the Duke 0! Gretton. (or e deelere- tton of nullity o! merriege ,on the ground thet when he merried the respondent ehe hed e hmhend ellve. To this her enewer wee thet the men with whom ehe hed gone through e ceremony 01 merrlege before ehe merried Lord Button wee e merried men with e wile elive when thet ceremony wee ormed. end lhet. therefore, ehe wee not y merried to him. end wee free to merry when the heeeme the wile of Lord Benton. Mr. Rune“. in etetlng the eeee for the titioner. eeid thet his client wee the Hon. emee Henry Fluro . eommonly celled the Eerl o! Eneton. e wu the eldeet eon of the D030}?! Grelton. In 1870 his tether “George Menby Smith." He weeeeom- meroie treveller, end on the mmiege oeetifioete he was demibed ee 0. “ bachelor,” ehe being described ea “ Kete Welsh. epineter." The ten ndent. heving been media e County urt. seemed to have eworn that her husband. " George Menhy Bmiih." hid “fled in the London {or Anetreiie end gone down in we. ehip, end. eingulu'ioeey. on inquiry it wee found that A person with the initiele “ G. M. Smith " hed nailed end gone down in thet ship. Ii {would be conclusively pgoved, The Most Extrurdlnuy Cm Eur Triad In tho Enlhsh Dlvowo Coum. Dec-Ila! nun-uni (cumuluuâ€"A Denali-bk no". wee Lord Cherlee Fitzroy, brother of the then Duke otGrelton. end the petitioner weethe Hon. Jemee Henry Fuzroy. In thet yeer the petitioner made the ecqnein~ terms of the reepondent, e conrteeen. whoee meiden neme wee Weleh. but who et thet time wee known ee “ Kete Cooke." ehe heving edopted the letter enrneme from n men with whom ehe hed lived. end who wee connected with e circus. Hevinu formed reletione with her end vieited her for some monthe. the petitioner went through e ceremony of manage with her nt 3 perish church in Worcester on the 89th 0! Key, 1871. the witnesses of the tour- riegebeingen ‘oflicielotthe church end n cchcitor nomad Froggett. In the me:- rlege certificate ehe deecribed herself a Kltc Which Smith, widow. The petitioner wee entitled on hie own account to £10,000 at the time the ceremony wee gone through. end thnt cum he settled on the reepondent. Frcggett wee trustee o! the settlement, end he subsequently medc ewey with the trnet money. The petitioner and the reepcndent lived together ofl end on up to 1875, when the titioner'e merried life. which bed throng out been en un- heppy one. had become intolereble. end he rceolved to concrete iron: the reenondent. howiver. am he was not :he “ G. m. Smith" who 1nd muried the teapondem. bntu‘dfr. Goo rgo Muslin Bmi‘h. " More mmuktble still, it has teen dlBOOVOI’ed thet the George Menhy Smith who hed merried the relepondent hed eleo teken ship for Austrelie. rem letters end photogrephs in the possession of his mother he hed been treeed to New Zeelsnd end brought home. On his return he went to the house in which the respondent wee living eno there identified her. but she suggested thet he wee not the Smith to whom she hed been merried. hut e brother or some other reletive o! thet person. Whether she would rsevere in thet suggestion ‘ he did not ow. hut et ell events she put lorwerd this issueâ€"thet whether or not he wee the George Menhy Smith with whom she weut through it ceremony of merriege in 1863, the person with whom she went through thet ceremony hed then a. wile living. end that. thgrelore. it wee e pnllity: Lord Emma. onmined by Mr. Murphy. Q. 0., and he was the petitioner in this one. und ho had made the ncq nuintmoa or “ KIN Cooke " in 1870. Ho hvod with her more going though the ogromon} 0! mar- tinge in ‘1871. He was than 22mm! she aid. he thought. um she was 24. [is named £10,000 on her. Difference: none buwoon mom. bad he want :0 Amtnlin in 1875. Ho filled A Government uppoimment thugs. sud "391%ng 91in opnpnyjq 18g. Oroef'xemlned by Mr. lnderwiokâ€"He bed known the respondent elx monthe before the mmiege. She wee living in Iont liar Sqnere. He leernt from her thet e bed been previously men-led. She never informed him thet ehe hed roe-on to believe the men ehe wee merrledto bed been merried before. but ehe eeid thet she believed he bed gone down in the London. Prongett. the solicitor. mode ewey with the money gbiob jltneee bed settled on her. He believed Frame“ inemnted some inquiriee etter the marine ebom Kne Cooke'e former mum-Re. but not betore. Re new 3 eertlfleue of the am mevflege 0! 8mm; ehe due of the eerufleeee wee the as»: de oh'lnne. 1862. Wnneee we met tied at oreeeter. Froggen wee present. He believed the! Froggete went to Birming- hun end myje inquiriee ebput lye preflqug 1868 when he untried tho mpondont no loan! um his “the! 1nd a ton of inflicting 1m. Ooolo Io: nmy. nnd upon .0 Fromm. than. H. To his knowledge no loner onmo m bl- wife from " Mary Ann. Smith." to reconfirm bond! to be doom limb, 8m an wits. Ho hollow! um 0.0m nanny 8mm: wu muting o of them mfinlontmnt F on did no. kl! _him um 1011‘. wife wu lvlgg l_n IIIIIOII 0F IATIIIOIY. in com 1‘50th In 3“. mandra- n which hor wing! mm: wag pm; It n which ho boll-M Emmi In. um. It was .3 Wattord. no no: thus addnu from his Iolioiwr. Ro-uunincd h It. Rationâ€"Eh wile was described in mun... mun-m .- I " widow." Ho [mold It In “to: his muting. he not [tom Emmott the corti- aoato o! Smith's first 1:1 He Ind only seen Smith one. a hi- it. until toâ€" dsy. Tint It: then he 3nd Smith wont to tho mpondont'. home that Bunth might idgtify hog: George Mnhy Smith. exnmined by Mr. Run-ell. enid he mived 1mm New Zedend in Jennery. 1083. A gentlemen who eene to him in New Zeelend brought him 3 letter end 5 photogroph. end told him hie expeneee to thie country would he peid. In 1863 he wee trevelling in Glnegow torn Birminghnm house. ~ He then not Kete Ooohe.whoweein court. She told him she had been living withemnn nemed Cooke. who wee connected with noirous. end thet he hed been unkind to her. Wit- ness merried her on the 6th of July, 1868. It fit. Hugo’s Cotholie Ohnroh. Hie hther'e nune wee John Aehwin Smith. end his mother's meiden nune wee Lippett. He end Kete Cooke “Quoted in five monthe. During thet period the didnot live heppily. Belore going to netrelie end New Zedend in November, 18“, he lent new Kete Cooke in September 01 thnt you. In either 1870 or 1871 he wrote to hie mother trom Auehlend in the none 01 “ George Johnson." When he home home hie mother was living at Wnttord. Recently he wentto the house in which the ree nd- entwulivinggndidentiged heath“ _ng Oroee-enminedâ€"When he went to iden- tify his wife he looked et her only for 3 minute, end not sword was spoken; he st onee identified her; he did not know thet his address hed been applied for by the respondent; he did not merry: women nemed Johnson; Msry Anne Smith had sons; his tether end mother end himsell lived at one time st Mnry Anne Smith’e house in Birminghem; she had n little perty. which by deed wee eettled on ereell; he never got nor tried to get eny of that property he returned from Glee. gow to Birming em in 1864; he did not to the pleoe his wife hsd lived in; he d d not go beoeuse he hed heerd in 1863 thnt she wee deed; her friend hnd told him of it in A house et Birminghnm; he did not remember the nune o! the street; he did notgo to see his deceased wife's eons; he had seen enough of them, end he hnd no int_e_ree_t in her property. _ the em oooeveion on which he new her niece 1864. He won merriedto a person nemed Ann Smith. whoeefether’e neme wee ohnaou. on the 8thofJune. 1862. Before he muried KeteOoohe he wen informed thot his previous wife was deed. This wufrom 3' friend of hie first wife in Birmingham, Thin‘ wen three month: before his eeoond men-ringer He did not remember the name of thet friend.- She wee e femnle friendofhiefint wife. He eepmted- from his flret wife eight months after their mmiege. end never uw her After. He hud not the elighteat doubt shot the women sitting before him in court we: the Knte Cooke whom he muried m 1863. This wee the oeee for the titioner. For the reepondent. Williem enry Johnson wee exemined by Mr. Montegn Willieme. He and he hed hed.e eietor whose meiden neme wee "Mery Anne Johnson." She wee merried to e men nemed Willlem Smith, end they hed {our children. Williem Smith died in Jennery. 1858. Alter thet hie aieter eeme to him et Hollowey, heving three ehildren with her. In 1861 the re- turned toBtrminghem end lived there. He went down in the entnmn of 1862 end found thet ehe bed in her home George Menhy Smith, who hed been exemined to-dey. Witneee knew thet th men hed et thet time merried hie eie r. In November, 1866. he received e oommnnioetion thet hie eieter. Mrs. George Menhy Smith. wee dengerouely ill et Ed beeton. neerBirming- hem. She died on nne 9th. 1867. Wit- neee wee preeent et the deeth. end with hie eietsr Phillie went end registered the de'eth. the oertidoete of which wee now in court. Mr. Inderwiok here informed -the court thet the respondent. heving new bed a opportnnity or ‘ the witneee who hed just given evidence. e admitted thot he won the George Menhy Smith with whom one went through the ceremony of mer- riege in Joly, 1963, - ' ~ to George Meelin 8mm: in June, 1861. He let: home for Plymonsh on Jenn-:11». 1866. end euled in the London torAne- mun end wee loot. She. eehiewidow. chained in ehie oonrt edminieention to hie eehte. _ Mary Ann Smith. exemined by Hr. Boe- eell.eeid ehe wee 83 yeereold. She wee merried to George Anhwin Bmlth in 1827 She hed nix children. one of whom we George Menby. He went to Anetrelle in 1864. He wrote to her from Anohlend in the name of George Johnson. She now identified ee her eon the George Menby Smith who hed just given evidence. Phillie Johnson. -eieter of the lent 'wit- neee, corroboreted the testimony of her brother. The Presidentâ€"It in now edmitted thet the George Honky Smith. whom weheve seen in the box. in the poreon who wee lew. fully mottled to Mery Anne Smith. widow. on June 26th. 1862. It ie {nether proved thet he went through the ceremony of mer- riege with the reepondent on July 6th. 1863, he not being then in e poeition to oontreet e lewtul merriege, become or Inn wile 1!er Anne Bnnth being olive. Kete Welsh wee then tree to merry. but she wee not lew- tnlly merried to George Mnnby Smith. becenee he hed e wife olive.‘ The jury et once tonnd thet George Menby Smith woe lewtully menied to May Anne Smith on June 96th, 1869; thot Kstey Welsh wee not lawfully mmied to the eoid George Monh Smithy on Jul 8th. 1863; thet me eeid me Manhy mith wee dive on no, 29th, 1871. end thot the titioner and the teepondent were let! my! merried on Mt 29th. 1871. The Preeident end this woe e finding for the respondent, end he diemieeed the peti tion with cat'sâ€"London Tim“. “ Don't.” aid Tumult. " don'b throw um may." " I". only a: old allor‘l hill) " You. hm WI pdd."â€"Bouon Pool. “ You." add the trump, manually my huh» on. mo of! wish 0 mm .Ind It wu . dul of monoy. too. .1 ongh I didn't h no u tho “mo." ‘ 83rd: Ja'nb 8mm: aid she was untried uyo: The proprietor o! the 8b] tnvorn. In the vicinity of tho Btmd. u' the effects 0! on nhooondina [0030: lo: non-poyment 0! root. Among them m n box containing twolvo pounds of dynunito outridgeo nnd gun cotton. The lodge: in wall known - sad the polioo m panning him. Tho mtg-id on wore not: no on mod in toy pintola. o polio. ottnoh littlo importonoo to the dis- Dciy. Egen end Mecdonneu were or- nigced et Birminghem to-dey on the chem o! tx'eeeon-teloni5 Dely wee deflect. Meedonnell dejected. ely naked why he wee brought to Birminghem to he tried egein otter hie commute! on Thnredey to unit the Cheater eeeinee. The prosecution replied thntvelter the chem wee pre ered epic-t huh et Liverfiool enough evi enee hed been brought to 'ght to justily hie re- move! to Birminghem on greeter oherge e. Detectivee enmnnded the prieonere in court end there were others outeide. The prisoner: eeemed to feel their poeition keenly. eepeeielly Egon. When the detec. tivea described how they hed trucked Egon end [My since October the two exehenged Tl. IICQINGUA. .YHAIII'I‘I-Io aigniflonht gluon. ' It nppouod from “I. evidence shut rior 22 “are“! .09va i9. Bing-19¢ 9,- Fm _“'° W? “3:8 “£11339“?an beam underutbe a are orm. preoeu one wereteken to WWW. Dply} was arrested ehonly before the Birming-‘ hem election ounpeign 01 Lord Rudolph Churchill end 00!. Burneby. ' It is believed the bombs found in his possession were intended to be_exploded among oempajgn It is true thct n cold drought in denger- one. Dr. Angus Smith, the greet English suthority on nir. anys: "It slnys like u sword." But impure eir is no hetter'; end it one causes pneumonie, the other erentos consumption. Bringing air through the turnsoe fines is oil very well. provided it is taken from o pure source of eup y. But if, so in most cones. the cold sir x of the turnnoe ends over 3 dump. dirty area ndjonning one of our unswept end filthy street, the supply is for trom wholesome. Dr. Loomis end other specinliste long since inted out the bed efiects of New York not upon the humcn lungs. yet the dusty air iron our streets is sucked into ten thousand lurnsoe cold-air boxes, and is the chief lung food of our population. Because this air hes been wormed It does not follow thnt it is whole- some. It is perfectly easy to prevents drelt by raising the sash A few inches and plscing n nnrrow board in the space below. so thst the cold oir will enter between the upper_nnd lower sesh _nnd be deflected Town Hill. which were “dressed by the Hamlin o! Bdinbury and Mr. Jose 11 Ohunborhin. loner- were received b t_ e uqohqritiop oonhjpigg Quat- th.’ yup- towerd the ceiling without causing any enuoyence to persons in the room. There ere e number o! patented devices for the same mmflut the arrangement here desori can'be adopted by an one st the cost of e lewcente. Thechie difficulty about ventilatingrnoet dwelling houses is that there ere not sufioient meens of cerry- ingofi the ion! end heeted air. It provision is supplied (or doing this. then plenty of fresh air will leek in through the window oesings end creche, as most of our houses ere not tightly built. Greet benefit mey be obtained from open fire places. which to the asthetee. are coming lergely into use. All fireoboards should be ebolished. preertol ventile- tion has been celled one of the lost arts; it indeed it ever was an entirely developed art. In our modern houses end flets. with their masses of upholstering end decoretion toobstruot the sunlight and prevent free circulation of eir. end with the meny sources of impurity, suoh es oookin . wesh- ing end plumbing epplienoes. end s ll more the gashghts and steam hosting epperatus. the neoessit for attention to ventiletiou becomes dai y epperent. The almost uni- versel prevalence o! oeteyrh. end the worn out, weeried look of Americans which Her- bert 8 ucer noted. me be justly charged to the d ventilation 0 our houses. end it is time our people should teke hold of the matter promptly. - Burle- ol the [Ad]. Folks. El comm TILL. Mr. Longwords addromu the Sunday school: mu. Rubia Wooh, of Guy. only 7 yam old. rad the New Tutmont wrong]: and numbed it in three dlyl botoro her 73!: birthdny. and hid nova: “waded school a as) .â€"Portland, Mm. Prue. " I will repent my question. Whet in the oetenaible object of Bundey uhool in. etruofion ?" Little boy up in fromâ€"“ You, air I" A I"! DIHNI‘HON. - Tuoheh“ Kory. spell mideflne ohm." _ '_' Ayn, e-t-o-m. atom ; moon. to go end " In tho antenna "the door tried to flee ' collolm gnay gonna fleet?" .. “gives me grout loweâ€"nhomâ€"to be will: you to-duy. ohll mind Ihm glnd to spank a. few simple words to you. Now on my 0! those bright little boy- md girls 99]! me whnt j! the outeqqlblo object of fish nonnou “an m'Ohio physician is propu- lng 3 media.) luloon {atom-two bombs. It uppom llkoly to bound“ 1! the ammo union puma their pro-on. oonm. Yet an amino“ physloim told hll baron. in I noon! Icahn. am 5 «mm of u good medical on” m in Mom from uncut-nu: technical terms. It II III. M31111; 1: 0 {Avon ‘ho long words. 80;:de ”booth-traction ?” "" How in that. May ‘2" " Why. We what they say to dogs, you knowâ€"' It ’em.‘ " qmto." ' Dela silence. A 1!! Bs‘nré-fl $911629. W Bovonl In (In wuvo wildly y. " Well. W11 lo. whnt is it '2” “ Plath. mm: W. it Qh I than.“ math: Tho Ifyilgdolpyg Agedc'ga} 1391mm tn- ey 1m to Blow Up Ward Pomâ€"uplodvu loud n 333 WILL DOUB'I'LIII 913 round. “OTHER 000!) on. The iguana!) van remindad Ventilation An extreordlnery etory in told in Bowel: court oilolee. end ha been uteiledb Sputtnellete. on to the wane w in- dnoed the Queen at the lest moment to elter the urea gemente {or PrinoeLeopold'l funeral. It in enid thetu ehort time be- !ore htedeeth deneiou with en intimete 1110116.:lndyofDeniehbilth.ofgfl eonnl heeuty. end the wife of en E peer. he wee rallied h her upon hie unwonted abstraction. H enewer wee thet hie eieter Alice had none to him in the night.wernedh1mo!nneppronehingodem- ity, and told him not top trouble. for ell would eoou be well. The Roy e1 Duke. like hie mother. the Queen. eeeme to hue eooe tedeupemetnnl vieitetione a reel. end _ e tel}! the my he '0le preter. it anything heppened to him. to have a mili- tary funerel. He: ledyship, the recipient otthese condolences. wrote n letter to n high court oflicinl. telling him the story. end he leid her communication hetore Her Majesty. At once the Queen ordered her dead uon's desires. expressed in life. to be fulfilled. Hence that chmge It the lest moment which led to so much perplexity end inconvenience. “ Whut in the chug. ngdnn thin mm?" ukod an Ark-mu Judge us the prisoner was phood before him. “ Killing tn editor. your honor." h " Him. w the editor a. resident at the Concerning the heat in South Anstrelie six weeks ago, the Port Auguste Diepatch hes the following paragraph: " Lust Sun- day willbe long remembered as e any of speeiel suffering in Port Auguste. end lather north the best seems to hove been even more intenee.~ We are informed the! at Yarn, near Mount Arden Station. native lsrks and megpiee in flocks naught shelter Ind water in tnrmers’ honeee, numbers of them exgiring after the thirst had been quenohe . .I'BP'E" oeee a_t9uehing_epieode occurred. A little girl. with pennikin and teaspoon in hand. was seen surrounded by little feathered sufferers. whose wents she edminietered to. gently caressing those who survived. weeping over the defunct, and burying their bodies with tender cure. Mr. flodehod, of _Port Augpetn, lo_et_ two vulne- State ‘2" “ Yes. your honor." “ Whet hove you to eey, prisoner. con. cerniog thi- very serious chuge? Are you guilty or not guiley ‘2" " Guilty, your honor; I murdered him in cold blood.” “ Well," said the judge. “ thereienothing left .for me to do but sentence you. The crime of murder in this State is becoming much too common. You are chewed vim kilhn en Antenna ediwr. to which charge you 2 ended guilhy. " Yes, your honor, I do; um! I don't one it it coats me 850. “ Prisoner." responded the judge sol- emnly. “ you no fined $200. and abnfloom~ mi_tl_:ed ugtil “no pmoum is quid." ble dogs (in the nme‘day find in the aims locality, through heat alone.” mcvnl of the St. Thomas riotere to the Woodstock ail. Jcilcr Corbett. of Kingston. hue instituted another suit agninat the County Council to recover heck eolnry, which wall be carried to A higher court in order to procure A set- tlement of the question of the power to reduce njniler'e celery by nOonnty Council By In mam Mae and bmnohee It reaches Chicago. Jollet, Peoria. Ottawa; La Salle. Oeneeeo. Mollne and Rock Inland, In Illlnole' Davenport. Humane. Washington. Keokuk. Knoxville. Oekaloona. Faltflfld. 0” MOM”. W0“ ”MR” town city. Atlantic, Avooa. Audubon, Harlan. Outhrle Center and Cannon Blunt, m Iowa; cauwn. Tremon. Cameron and Kan-an cm. In muourl. and Leaven- worm and Atohleon In Kannae, and the hundred. of oltlee, villages and town. intermediate. The “GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,” he It le familiarly called. often to travelen elI the advantagee and comforts incident to a emooth flack. eefe bridgee. Unlon Denote at all connecting polnte. Feet Ilpreee Twine. compoeed of COMMODIOUI. WILL VINTILATID. WILL NIATIO. FINILV UPHOLITIRIO and RLICANT DAV COACHES. a line of the MOST MACNIFICINT NORTON RICLININC CHAIR CARD ever built 3 PULLMAN'R leteet deeigned and handeomeet PALACI ILIIPINO CARS. and DININO CARS that are acknowledged by preee and people to ho the FINIST RUN UPON ANY ROAD IN TNI COUNTRY. end in which euperlor meele are eerved co treveiere at the low rate 0' CIVINTV-IIVI CINTO IACN. TNRII TRAIN. each way between CNICAOO and Ihe MISSOURI RIVIR. TWO TRAIN. each may beuveen CNICACO and IINNIAPOLIB and 81'. PAUL. Being the Great Central Lino, afford. to travelere. by reason of [to unrivaled z graphical position, the shortest and beet route between the last, Northeae‘t and Boutheaet. and the West, Northwest and southweet. A New and Direct Line. vie Ieneoa end tenukee. hee mentiy been 0 between Newport lean. Richmond. cinolnneti. lndienepoiie and Le I'm end council Iiufle. It. Plui. Minneapoiie and intermediate pointe. All Through Peeeengere carried on Peer Ilpreee Trelne. For more detailed Inrormetion. eee "an end Poidere. which may he obteined, e0 well ee Tiokm. at eil principal Ticket 0mm in the United .tetee and Canada. or a It In literally and etrlict'ly (rue. the: It. oonneoflone are quot the ptlnolpal line. , at road between the Atlnnuo and the Pacific. vla tho (amou- cHIcAco, ROCK ISLAND . PAcIFIc RN.- 3- Rs. ‘35“!!! mo :8 unacobAmfzo wmf'ru: GEOGRAPHY or THIS couurnv. mu. ‘ 8:: av mmmuo 'rms IMP. THAT 1m: The prisoner than swoono'd sway. Inspector“ O‘Iieilly__hu adyiqed tymp- Ila was Willing to Pay .50. Woo-Prove d non'l Mun-gov. A PM" ’l‘cll Um. ALBERT LEA ROUTE. n.‘ "all". CHICAGO. imih‘thetr Weight in Gold- was mooninmwrm MEDICINE In: no- onrod for itself numpeu'nhnblo {amo throughous the world for tho nmzviation and cr“o of mod MI to which humani‘; is half. lacrosse the secretory powers of the Liver. Ibmoo the nervous systour and thmw into the circula- tion the urost Elemcuts tor sustaining and re- pdring o tame. Thousands of worsens have testified that their use alone they have been restored hot] and stre h. after «way other means h prove. unsucce ul. ’ will be found invaluable in ex ery household in me cure 0! 0pm Sores. Hard Tumoun. 1 r BAD LEGS, OLD WDURDS, BOUGHS Golds, Son Tux-oats Bronchitit, and all dilation of tho Throat and Chest, us also Gout Rheum“ ism, Scrotum, and every kind of skin some. Monumental only at Professor HOLLOWAYB' Establishmvnt, '48 New Oxford St. (Into an 0': lord St.)1'aondon. and sold at Is. 1).]. ‘25. 9-1.. 49. (11.; 128., 223.. tad 33:. each Box and PM. mu] in Canada. t 36 cents. weents. and $1.:o cents. and the larger since in. proportion. 33‘ CAUTION.» -I have no Agant in the United States, not are my ‘uiwiiciuos Eoid there. Pub chaser: should lhuuluru low: to the Label on the Pots and Boxes. If tho address is not 633 083019. i‘trethlondou, they are emu-is: s. “.4 (51w Wnnflvme gamut: J OS J. CAVE, PROPRIETOR. IFFICE â€" 1mm swam", Woonvxm om. 12093.33:th Conthan Pmlflvo. II a. Ida. Inn. and W mwdwonnwin Childrenoiflm wonm Pownnns. I. 81'. JOHN AND OINTMENT. STORAGE and. BOWELS, 00:" T'k't "I 9100' r A.‘ fl "1

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