Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Woodville Advocate (1878), 24 Jul 1884, p. 4

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Now stn Tennis is beginning. end we'll set ‘ the bells a-spinning 0‘er the netand on the green-ward with a very careful aim ; You must work. es I’m a sinner, it you wish to prove a winner. For we're getting selentitio at this {minatlng game. You must know when it is lolly to attempt I clever “ veiley," . . . Or to gile the ball when “ serving ' it an aggravating twist ; Thougha neatly-mule backhander may arouse arival'e dander, ' . ' You'll remember when you try it that its very often missed. Though your play thrown in the shade is by the prowess of the lndieh. A _ You must take your heating kindly With a smile upon your lace ; _ And 'tmll o ten be the duty of some towns playing beauty To console you by remarking that defeat is not disgrace. For you doubtless and flirtntion at this pleasant occupation ' . '. In no my asst croquet; when you re ‘ eervlnm by her side. . Iou eeri hint your tender Ieeliuq. all you: state cf mind revealing. AM. when winning “ sets " together. you msy and you've won s bride. â€"London Punch. The Rare Collection at Portrflu Pre- served ll Windsor Castle. (English Illustrated Linguine.) The collection as it now exists owes its reservetion to the wisdom of the late rinoe Consort. who. seeing these priceless histories! treasures scattered about on the wallsot the different pslmes, exposed to every hind of danger from dump. sunlight ,II A_A-AL__ .._2 'vâ€"I â€"â€"_ ‘â€" _â€"_ __ ___, or neglect, brought them all together and deposited them in the royal library. where both he and the Queen took the keenest delight in arranging them in due order in the drawers of a cabinet specially con- structed for their reception in the room where the other principal treasures of art arestored. Onelpeouliar interest therefore ofthis collection es in the fact that in near. ly every case these miniaturesremain in the custody of the descendants of those for whom they were originally painted. and in its thns‘ presenting an almost unbroken series of authentic portraits of the royal family from the time of Henry VIII. to the present day. for though photography has almost entirely obliterated and de- stroyed the art. and few new practice it. yet the Queen still remains its constant atron. and year by year portraits of mom of the royal family and others of note and renown are added in their places to continue the long and storied line. 0! the great nature and scope of the col- leeticn it may. be noticed that naturally its chief importance consists in its series of English royal portraits. This is ad- mirably .supplemented byra large and increasing series of foreign sovereigns. after whom we find the nobles and famous men and women of this country and of others arranged in classes and according todatee. The number amounts to very neuly 1.000 and the whole collection forms one of the greatest as well as one of the moat interesting of the treasures belong- ing to the Crown. An American girl he: just been admit- ted to the special school at arohlteoture m Paris.- The female members of the Connecticut Salvation Army wear jerseysmpon which is the inscription ; " Dead to the world.” Charitable ladies of London are in the habit of going to the tradesmen with whom they deal and soliciting goods for ohariteble purposes, which they present. in their own names. . . A lady at Newberry. S. 0.. the other day found a gold ring in a. potato which she out xn two for dinner. The tuber was a large one and grew in her garden, but how the jegel oeme there is a mystery. I , ,1!” A London society papers are shortly to have an increase made to their number by the issue of one devoted to marriages. the title being ' Orange Blossoms : a Marriage Chronicle and Social Review.” The new paper is togive photographs of the brides. and “ will lend its influence to the mainten- ance of the institution of marriage."_ The general tendency among Eastern nations to regard women as aoulleea animals does not aid the effort for their education. but wherever Ohriatian mission- aries and foreign influence have penetrated the neglect has been largely overcome. A lady at Plant City. Fla.. want out to gather some plums, and while picking up theft-nit from the ground was bitten on the hand by a moccasin snake concealed in the grass. Every means known was used to save her life. but without avail. and she died in a very short time. A vacation school for girls has been opened in Boston. The sessions. which will be held every day, excepting Saturday. will be three hours long. The usual studies will no! he pnreued. but house- lug. Vonrpeutry. -knittxng. weaving. "mg m clay and object: lessons to the younger girls will be taught. Dangerous to be In Large. Gentlemanâ€"There 13 some mistake in thir 8'1”}!1- _ ‘v a, .I,, Lu! :_ -II '_--- 0'â€" v--__ Gun Collectorâ€"No. air. the bill is all right _Ie is wcgyding withe met'er. Gentlemanâ€"It’s very strange ; I certainly burn“ more gas ‘uhan that last month. Gas Collectorâ€"Wh-what’a that. air? Gentleman (emphatically) â€" I say I oernlnly burned more gas man thatlan month. GM Collector (lurning ale and edging toward the door)â€"Very wel , sir, very well. Don" gel oxoimd. air; keepquiet; calm yourself. Everything will be made all rigm. I figure you. air. ,,3 j-___ ALA The collector then bounced down the stairs and ehouted for help. Four police- men reepcnded. and moving cautiously up the stain they secured the maniac and got him safely to a lunatic asylum. But little hopes are entertained 0! his recovery. ~0harlee Reede'e London pnblieher eaya thet once the novelist. as they were travel- ling together. pointed to a piece of water in the distance. and said : " That's where ()hrieue Johnston caught the herringn." He reguded this incident of his own in- vention on reality. 30 sincere was he in his work. ~_ nu. "v-u- Bishop liollmuth. Suflngnn of Ripou, England. and tormerly Bishop of Huron. unvod from England on Saturdn unor- noon upon a visit to his sons. nu will re- main in London (or some time. ROYAL MINIATUBflfic For and About Women. A 'l'rlll [or 'I‘GIIII. Bur-ordinary nary cl Mr. 8. 0. Nathan. on Autumn-I- Con-nun Danger cl Explosionâ€"Ila Docut- I’Iluulcd and In: ‘trlo-dn ”Inlandâ€"suppose II aha-In Spread! (N. Y. Telegram.) The possibility of impregnating human nature with certain abnormal physical or psychic qualities has long been conceded. In the nature of things, continued or habitual tendencies in one direction are very likely to distort or warp the system. and, as association begets or changes character or habit, so physical contact might. in time. derange or alter the physical nature to agree with the peculiarities of the active agent employed. It is, in fact. just the same as in the instance of man and wife. who. when peculiarly sensitive and sympa- thetic. gradually. as years of association roll on. become like each other in tastes. habits. manner and. at last. even in per- sonal appearance. In this way. and under the same law of sympathy. we can imagine a man working in tobacco to have his nature changed in one way. and one whose business it is to handle sulphur to be affected in another. And only in some such manner as this can we account for the tol- lowing surprising case : A menswear PRINTER. Mr. E. 0. Nathan. who is the brother-in- law of the present Mayor of a notablel Southern city, and belonging toatamilyl in which there never had been observed any . physical or other tendencies calculated to lead up to the extraordinary conditions to be described. was a printer by trade. and three years ago was the possessor of rude and even boisterous health and spirits. At that time he became inspired with the not infrequent spirit 0! adventure of the typo, and set forth on a journey. half for fun. halt to see what might turn up in the way of business. Chance led him to Brownsville. Texas, and hearing interesting tales of the excitement attendant on the construction camps of the Mexican Central Railroad. he crossed the Rio Grande and soon became interested and a worker in the construction force. It happened that Mr. Nathan had been placed in positions in which he 'had learned to handle explosives and had developed a curious taste for workoi that nature. 80, it happened that he was soon employed in blasting and became a recognized authority, consulted whenever dangerous or difficult blasts were to be exploded. At length he was appointed superintendent of a gang of 35 men. and all the hardest and most dubi- ous work was given him to manage; and as he was personally fearless and intrepid. he was always first in every operation, scorn- ing to send his men where he would not go himself. He became so reckless in the handling of nitro-glycerine and giant pow- der that the “ greasers " viewed him as havinga charmed life, and followed him with admiration wherever he went. To Mr. Nathan was assigned the task of blast- ing out two tunnels on the road, having to burrow through the mountain by the use of repeated charges of the powerful explo- : sives used. the party followmg the blasts as the tunnel penetrated into the mountain. AN EXTRAORDINARY CHANGE. It followed that the gases which were constantly collecting. and the fine explosive material with which the atmosphere be- came impregnated. naturally had their effect upon all the party. But upon Nathan this effect was astounding. Beginning with headaches. his entire nervous system became shattered by degrees, his armsi and legs swelled, his lips turned blue. and he ceased to be master of his own physical powars. Soon lllB legs refused to obey the direction of his Wlll, and when Mr. Nathan would attempt to move in one direction they would pro- ceed to travel in another. It was the same way with his hands. If he attempted to take all his hat he would find himself scratching his knee. and a blow aimed at the rock in which he worked was more than likely to reach his companion who stood beside him. There was. in fact, no unity of purpose or discipline among his members, rash one working apart and at its own sweet will. A HUMAN EXPLOBIVE. But this was not all. The unfortunate young man had ty this time become so . charged With the very essence of the pow- erful explosives he had employed, that his mere presence soon demonstrated its capa- city to create a small explosion wherever he wont. I! he entered a railroad cutting where there was loose earth lying about, or pulverized rock, the bystanders would be thunderstruca to see the tine particles fly away at his approach, while a slight, dull explosion would occur at different points. . Not only was this the case, but the marvel- lous property was exercised upon inanimate objects of all kinds. He dared not enter a store where crockery or hardware was sold. for instantly there would he the most lively commotion upon shelves and counters. Articles would leap into the air and fall to the floor to be smashed to pieces ; glass- ware, which seemed peculiarly sensitive, would fly into small bite at his approach. BUT NOT A MAGNET. It was not attraction that was exerted by Mr. Nathanâ€"quite the contrary. Repul- sion and a tendency to disintegration seemed almost to inspire the pots and pans in a hardware store or the bottles in a druggist's with mortal fear, and they would strive to fly from him in apparently abject and ludicrous consternation. He was forced to leave Mexico, and, by advice, wont up to St. Louis, where be consulted the most eminent physician of that city. By him it was at once discerned that Mr. Nathan had that rare quality of sympathy with explosives which had drawn all their powerful qualities into his own system. " Why." said the doctor, “ if I were to bring you in connection with a galvanic battery, you Would explodeâ€"precisely like a charge of dynamite. or as a spark of tire would explode a powder magazine. The worthy physician. enthusiastic in science, was even anxiousto make some small experiments with Nathan to establish the soundness of his theory. but to this his patient strenu- ously objected. Failing to obtain roliei he travelled South by easy stages. and is now in Atlanta. Us... in charge of a well-known surgeon. who claims to have met and cured a similar case in his practice. But. thus iar, Nathan has completely ballled him and the situation of the unfortunate " dynamite " man is paininlin the extreme. A " DYNAMITE MAN.” HE TAKES TO DUSTINO. Thus far he has isolated himself as much as possible from society. Naturall . his misfortune preys upon his mind. rang- erlng him uncongenial to companionship. Be occupies a room in which no small objects can stay a moment. For steel or iron his system has a profound aversion. and repels a pen-knife or a haibpin with great force. For some persons he has a visible natural repugnanoe. and it brought into his presence they seem forced to fly from him. His most powerful force. how- ever. strangely enough. is exerted upon gunpowder or dynamite. His system has become so charged With these deadly com- pounds. that it absolutely refuses to attract any more. and. on the contrary. on being brought Within a few feet of either explo- sive at once tires it Without contact. A number of museum proprietors have sought to engage Mr. Nathan for exhibition in their respective establishments. but without success ; he absolutely _refuses to he‘made a public show of. and becomes irritated and explosive on the mere suggestion. It is now rumored in Atlanta. however. that the agent of a secret organization of Irish patriots has visited him, and is meeting with more success. A sea voyage may therefore be arranged for the health of Mr. Nathan. and after a time we may hear am im in London. No one can tell exactly when the English tongue became the national language at the Scottish Lowlands. It was in mm Lothian from the sixth century; it oer. tainly spread into Strathclyde as early as the eighth. but in all likelihood did not wholly supersede the native Oymric before the growth of towns in the twelfth century. The reign of Malcolm Ceannmor saw it introduced at the Scottish Court. but there is no reason to en pose that the influence 0! Margaret rescue farther than the circle other home and her personal friends. Outside of these Gaelic alone wouldbe used both by her husband and his thanes ; but the disposition to acquire a knowledge of the favored province of Lothian would grow stronger from wear to year. although it might perhaps sustain a temporary check by the coun- ter current of Norman-French which hem to flow into Scotland from the time of David I. The Bccto-Norman nobles used French probably as long as their neighbors in England â€"i. e.. till the middle of the fourteenth century. At the corona- tion of Alexander III. Latin forms were translated into French for the monarch’s benefit; but the very necessities of their position would make it a matter of im-\ portanoe, to both the king and the foreignl nobles.to acquire some familiarity with the vernaculars of the different parts of the kingdom. The growth of hurghs and the increase of trade. through the influence of English and other Teutonic settlers. must have silently extended the area over which the English tongue was spoken. Though we have no data by which we can trace its progress from the sixth to the fourteenth century, when it first appears as a literary languge, we may safely believe that during these eight hundred years it made con- tinuous advances in the Lowland districts. and passed through the same phases of change which marked its history in the southern part of the isle.-John M. Ross. LL.D. An extraordinary divorce suit has been decided by Judge Mann, of Brooklyn. The casezwasthat of Martina Busselman against Louis Busselman. The plaintiff alleged that she was married to the defendant June 12th, 1880. by Justice Liver. One child, a girl about 3 years old. has been born to them. The plaintiff is 21 years old and the defendant 55 years of age. The complainant alleged cruel and inhuman treatment as a ground for the divorce asked. The defend- ant is a machinist, earning 33 per day, and owns considerable property. A sensational feature of the case was not contained in the pleadings. however, and quite a commotion was caused in the court-room when the plaintiff herself. a comely young woman with handsome brown eyes and a face that were traces of care and ill-usage, took the stand and testified that the defendant. her husband, was also her stepfather. Her story was that her mother had married the defendant and afterward obtained a divorce from him. but advised and com- pelled the plaintiff. who is her own daugh- ter and the defendant’s stepdaughter, to marry the latter. The strange story ex. cited a great deal of sympathy and was corroborated by several witnesses. Promi- nent attorneys state that the case is i without a parallel in Wisconsin. For a man to marry the sister of his deceased wife. they say is uncommon enough, but foraman to marry the daughter of his divorced wife is incredible. especially when the latter counsels and aids the step. In granting a judgment of divorce in the case Judge Mann took occasion to advise the young woman. in case she married again. not to follow her mother's counsel, as the latter had shown herself unworthy of having a daughter. He awarded her the custody of her child and $500 alimony.â€" Milwaukce Wisconsin. What Isa kiss? The question can only} he answered by experience; soh-imr oxcu- lando. But it is easy after a decision in the Lambeth County Court yesterday to say whatakiss is not. It is not legal ”consideration." Asurgeon in Lambeth kissed a workingman’e wife; the husband valued the kiss at £5, and the surgeon gave him an I 0 U for that amount. A month after date an action was brought on this document. but the judge promptly ruled there was no consideration and gave a ver- dict for the defendant. Perhaps the lady was in court and the judge may have been influenced by that. For even the poets admit that there are “ kisses and kisses ; " the interesting question is whether yester- day's judgment was meant to lay down a general principle or whether every case must be decided on its own merits.â€"l'a(l Mall Gazette. The English Language In Scotland. NF.“ YORK Cm Would form a fine nurture- fleld (or the cholera jun now. The Emit Inspectors on Saturday seized and con- demned 18.000 pineapples. 0.000 ooooanute 5.000 wetermelone. and 4.000 beuenaa as too decayed to be m (or food. Galt Freemasons have given 82‘.) to the Mayor for dinnibution nmong the poor. Divorced lrom ller Sleplalher. A Kins Not a Legal Uonuldernllon. P088111” US! FOR mu. new British nanutacmreu ‘l‘real Their Employees. An encouraging account of the efforts which have been made by certain manufac- turers to benefit their workpeopls appears in the last report of the (mini inspector o! factories and workshops. At a large clothing factory in Staffordshire the opera- tives, some seven hundred in number. are prowded with dining, tea and club-rooms. a kitchen. a savings bank and asurgery. A creche, or nursery department, has also been established. The creche consists of two apartments. one for a play-room, the other a cot-room. the latter being fitted with cradles, which are gently rocked by steam machinery. This. perhaps, is a use 0! steam never before contemplated in this country, but it is one that answers remark- ably wall. The mothers are charged one shillingsweek for each baby left in the creche. and a matron has charge of the de- partment and attends to the little once during the day. The mothers are allowed to Visit the creche for ten minutes in the middle of the morning and of the after- noon. The owner of the establishment has also provided perambulators. which he hires out to the mothers at a moderate rate. to prevent the arm-aching and tiring busi- ness of carrying the babies to and from the mill.â€"British Medical Journal. They are sold steaming hot on the streets of San Francisco daily. and are very relish- ing. especially to the Spanish and Mexican pepulanon. The genuine “tamale " is of exclusive Mexican manufacture. and when ready for the market weighs about half a pound. and in appearance resembles a small ear of corn, husk and all. The in- gredients of a tamale consists of cornmeal and lard. cooked chicken, out fine and mixer} _wi_th a__paste unknown to outsiders. a pickled olive or two. end the whole is seasoned with a condiment known ss"chili colorndo,” which issc hot that s red epper is en icicle compared with it. A these ingredients being wrapped in two corn hunks are secured with a string. then boiled for an hour or two. and the temale is ready to be eaten. The restaurants and saloons have them always on hand. and it is said that one temals eaten by a drunken men will bring him around perfectly sober in about ten minutes.â€"Johmtoum Democrat. Men. observes the St. James” Guam. ul- though he hed the pleasure of women’s sc- qunintnnoe (or nearly 6,000 years, is. or professes to be. entirely ignorant of her political temperament. and apparently knows very little about her beyond the tent that she was originally produced from one of Adam’s ribs. Some interesting cheer- vstions on this point were made by Jean Rsulin in the beginning 0! the sixteenth century. " Observe the result," he preached; "men composed of clay. is silent and ponderous; but the woman gives evidence of her osseons origin by the rattle she keeps up. Move a. sack of earth and it makes no noise; touch a bag of bones and you are deafened with the cutter-clatter." Mr. Thomas Kennedy, at Stamford, Conn.. has devised an ingenious. though perhaps not very effective. means for sub- duing the rebellious spirit of his 17-year- old daughter. The tather objected to her keeping company with young men. but his expostulations had no effect on the girl. On Friday last they quarrelled, and the parent in a rage seized a pair of shears and out off his daughter's beautiful black hair, giving as a reason for doing it that he :olieved it would keep her away from the oys. A few days ago a gentleman was watch- ing the graceful motions of some goldfish, displayed in a window on \Vaehington street, when his attention was attracted to a son of Erin whose clothes showed that he had but recently set foot on these shores, and whose actions betokened a free indulgence in the “ crather." The Irish- man gazed at the fish in open-eyed and open-mouthed wonder. and. finally turning to the gentleman, exclaimed: " Begorra, air, an' did yez ever see any red hirrings alive before ?"â€"Bonton Journal. Is one of the sad necessities of life. and often mark life's milestones as we travel the path from the beginning to the end. Strange to say, Dr. Scott Putnam has dis- covered a means by which old-time friends are separated and that without a single qualm. Putnam's Painless Corn Extract- or promptly. painlessly and with certainty separates the oldest and most strongly cemented earns that can he found. It cannot fail. forI’utnam’s is sure. safe and painless. Beware of any article offered "just as good.“ and take only Putnam’s Painless Corn Extractor. Duel-cum Between Won-m and Man. The first piece of money coined in the United States was neat at New Haven in the year 1634. This is inst what every sufl‘orer wantsâ€" prompt action] and rapid relief from pain. The grandest discovery of the age. the great pain cure. is Polson's Nsnvmmxâ€" prompt. poworml. pleasant to taste. and yet so pure that it may be given to the youngest infant. Try a 10 cent sample battle. which you can purchase at any drug store. Nerviline. the great, sure and prompt pain cure. The large bottles are only 25' cents. It is proposed to double the area. of To- ronto city. â€"-Americen women are said to be the most clever. active and energetic to be found ; and well they need to be. consider- ing the enormous demands made upon them by modern schools. housekeeping and society. Mre.Lydia I'LI’inlrham. in pre- paring her celebrated Vegrttble Compound had in mind all these countless demands on a woman‘s strength. and her wellJmown remedy proves every day its perfect adap- tation to women’s special needs. Trying to admire that which on do not like yaooumulama (allure an exhibits weuknesa. Check-nouns Love’s Young Dream. A NOVEL UBI‘UIII‘. Alwayn Prompt In Acllon. l’lu'llllfl will: Friends Greatly Surprised. Tau-ale. Buv-uco ol the Amy Won- Auou the Vueublco. There in more onus to ten the ravages of the blue]: onerpillm. which are at pro- ueut dovogring the} uni-Mes. “pm {my fix- peoted. Reports have reached as thst the insects. having eaten nonrl all the thistles are now feeding on all kinds of vegetables. Mr. W. G. Fonssos, one Of the old residents of this city. informs the Sun that the ester- pillere were observed in immense numbers in 1867. when their voreoity was uotsetisfled With thistles only. end they considerably damaged all kinds of vegetables. He says they never appeared before or sinoe until this yeahâ€"Winnipeg Sun. t ' WW 0| LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S‘ *VEGETABLE COMPOUND; For I“ of those Painful Complaints at; ' * \Velkneuca so common to our best “‘34 *FEMALB‘ P0PULAT10N.* . '1‘. I-r mu. emu “man“ was won.“ roan or IA“ Coxrumrs, ALL 0mm" ruounuu'xx ruxurlox nu) lem'nox. Fauna AND D mcxunxrs. AND run coxssqunxr SPINAL W N353. AND 13 PARTICULARLY mmnn T0 own CHANG! or L1". ' . ' . fi . u. ' 11‘ mm. mssoux mo BXPBL Tuxons 330! m Unans IN AN EARLY sum: or nnvswrnm. Tn 'rnxnsxor'roCmcxnovs lluuons 'rumuzmcnmm "an srxsmm' BY us 08!. , * . i . O ‘ 11' BEIOVES Fun-“93. FLATULINOY. Inn-nor- ALLCRAVING run snxuun-rs, AND ununvxa Wm- xnss or flu: Srmucu. l'r cums BLonme. 113A)- ACME. Nsnvovs I’ROSTRATION. Guam Dxnmr, Dnmxsswx AND INDIGESTION. . * . a . ' Tun rnusa op BEARING DOWN. cuxsnm P-Ant,1 Wmou'r AND Bacxmun. IS ALWAYS PBBIANIN'I'LY cunsnm'u‘s can. , * ‘ * , if . 0‘ * 11' WILL AT ALL Tums AND uxmm ALI. 01ml swucxs ACT 1:: umuom' wnu nu: uws mt. Govnnx 'rus 1'5qu SYSTEM. . Ir * i . " “-1113 mums: ls SOLELY r03 THE onlnun amuse or msmsn AND THE nanny or run. AND THAT 1r DOES ALL 11' cums T0 no, THOUSANDS or mums CAN uumu' TESTIPY. ‘3) i 'i . . O * * FOR THE cum on Rum“ Coxrum-rs m EITHER sax 'nus REMEDY 1:3 UNSURPASBED. . ' 0 LYDIA E. PXXKIIAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND In prepamd It Lynn, Mus. Price 31. Six botflea (or .6. Sold by all drugaists. Sent by mall. postage paid, Inform of Pills or Lozenges on m-lpt of prlceasabovo. I‘inkhnm’s “Guide to Health" will benmilod tree to m Indy sending stump. Louvre confidentially amend.‘ - x3 runuy‘ézhomd n» without LYDIA E. I’lmmm LIVER PILLS. They euro (.‘onslimunn. Billousucssmd Turpidity of the Liver. 25 wnia Iwr box. ' r 9 . 'I‘Ill CA'I‘BBI'I LLAB FLAG UK. Tim Von’ramo BELT 00., of Marshall. Mich. offer to send their celebrated ELECTno-Von'umo BELT and other Enncrmc APPLIANCES on trial for thirty days. to men (young or old) afllloted with nervous debillty, loss 0! vitality and man- hood. and all kindred troubles. Also for then matism. neuralgia, paralysis and many other diseases. Complete restoration to health. vigor and manhood guaranteed. No risk is incurred as thirty days trial is allowed. Write them at once tor illustrated pamphlet tree. wzsmAi unzes' caucus, u Ill nva-vâ€" vâ€" ..v --..__-_ oldest and largest Ladiee'Coilege in the Dominion Hen over 1w graduates. The building one! 8110.000 and he.- over 150 rooms. Feonlw-Five gentlemen and twelve ladies. Music and An specialties. Address the Principal, A. BURNS, D.D.. LED. HAMILTON. CANADA, Will reopgn on Sgptgmplgr 8nd. 1834. It is the .n, A- 2.. A|.A“nâ€"Alh:n~‘ ”“5“" “-- . “tam. Box 1. London. om AFTER USING. Solo Agent for U. an}! Canada. U 8. F... Lecturer on the Eyc, Ear and Throat Trinity Medical Oollcgo. Toronto. Oouliatcnl Aux-int to the Toronto General Honpltol. n' Clinical Analatant Royal London Ophthalmic Hospital. Moorefleld's and Central London Throat and War Hospital. 317 Church street Toronto. Artificial llunmn Eyes. Man I) oliy or cnnutry to take nice. light and pleasant work to their own homes; 89 to $6 a dgy easily and quietly jungle ; ”or." 730997 by Yuma; {13 n6aii§tfimrfhflifbd "5’!“de V for mph; l'looaqimldroaa BEL! "LE MFG. 0.. Phlludol ANTED, LADIES OB YOUNG Man In city or cnnntry to take nicofi. Hum. DIE; 'lrlth ommm Iron - v v â€"â€" â€" _ _. _ .â€" IVhon I an cure I «In lIuI. moan IIII'tPI)‘ to stop mom {6? ulmo ludI en have thcm r-"urn ngnln. I mean Indl- ralmre. [have made Hm dim-um or FITS. EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS n In.- lung study. Iwnrununy rvmod to euro thn wunv, .~ «4. llm‘uullo other: h-vo Inllod ‘ no reason far I: " -nv- r-w'i‘lvlng n cmo. Send It. men for a Irv-mum An A I In Ilunln of my lnfolllblo remedy. (Ilvo Rxprmn mm Just «mm. It. costs yml. numlnx for I him. :1qu I \\ Ill rum you. damn Dr. I; J Imm‘ 33 Paul St,. New York. I GURE FITS' \\ hm [My cum I uu um! moan .m-wly lu ptop “mm, . __.. .. --.Inr his. Penn. Con’sumptlon, Coughs, Colds,Wh00ping Cough and all Lung Djseasesin Has stood the test for FIFTY-THREE YEARS, and has proved itself the best remedy known for , the cure of young or old. Sum) EVER: WHERE. ELIXIR Your“; mun xâ€"umu) 'unu. EYE, EAR AND THROAT. in. G. s. BYETIEEON, L. B. 0.1). N. E DOWNS” nice 25., and $1.00 per mm * IS A POSITIVE CURE * Pt...“ mum: W m _ . ‘, Em Thousands of young men are exclalm Ins the above overly day after using ntoJ’siI‘é‘filélg‘hNan; YMMV“! the only lyrellnblo )ropnru tlon ever oflered to the u “10. A trial will convince the mos skeptical Beware of Is Imitntlons. 80m popst aid in anwm r on receiptL of price. jl_._ 05:1);- Lppe ' ,_.J-_ n.” Wonderful! Wonderfgl! . In 30. 84. Educainua or B mnoerlui’l’oi: mtuahl o SPENOlu IAN B BINEBH COLLIN! Plan": to secure a flange. Londpn. Qnt.

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