Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Canadian Post (Lindsay, ONT), 11 Mar 1892, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

; next t/zree f'zon all romzd, wer’S Pins! FRIEN J. 0» Avfi:;:°".é"flf maria-bio Experience of Gnu. u Investigated bran Alba! (N. Y.) Journal Reporterâ€"A Story of surpassing m ,N. Y. Journal. March 4th. TOGA. March 4th.â€"For some time there have been reports here and here in Saratoga county of a most kableâ€"indeed so remarkable as to een used over ple who have nation of 006 t good form to at'io“. but the invxividual all dew and over- utfh kind and pprobat’ion. at only apprecia- uses it. 00" iginbotham’c N. Y. and Brockville, Ont. The was to the effect that Mr. Chas. A. tot Galway, who for the last six or years has been a great sufferer from ing paralysis and its attendant ills. ho had beqouge utterly Powerless; of U “LY“V‘ lâ€"UUN‘U mighte'ned up {mm the hair fro: wry large p h M: wt]: 7 mmotzsa. ea y grO GOOdS, and- by all Druggists. Price: 50 cts. ORLD >0!!! £9.22 at 'OCK OP PIANO Ibest Makers and the [In uacuAIua bug n... -v a--.“ ing Journal reporter thought it his while to go to Galway to call on Quant. to learn from his lips, and the observation and testimony of his hers. if his alleged cure was a. fact or an un‘ounded rumor. And so he toGalway and spent a day and a there visiting Mr. Quant. getting his and interviewing his neighbors and ~townsmen. It may be proper to ha: Gal way is a pretty little village of I400 people. delightfully located near Little ices for the I! 0 reduce 8th I fl m... _.._. _._._. ,- _.V __V, . , . "‘ of Dr. Williams’ Pink P1113 for People. and cheerfully ve 8.38612}? to Se for publication. e 331d: My - xs Charles A. Quant. Ian: 3’7 years I Was born in the village of Galyvey. exRenting when traveling on busmess 8. lwttle while in Amsterdam. have my whole life there. My w1fe 18 a. 6 of Ontario. Up to about eight ggol had never been sick and wg-s In perfect health. I was fully 31:: tall, Weighed 180 pounds and was Strong For 12 years I was a. travel- Salesman for a piano and 91'8“ .V' and had to do. or at least 116. do. tdesl of heavy lifting. got my meals elu‘lulzaa-ly and slept in enough ‘spare '03 m ,' in count houses to freeze 5517 ompany. fly man targeath. or atleast give hnn 'â€"- "eumatism. About eight. years ago ' ' to feel distress in the stomach and at: sevesal doctors 3.11,?“ it. They ‘ was ys pas.‘ an ordyspe MW ‘2 “m gears... ‘i': . D aces. an too e “08} could hear of ithatclnilued to ,_-J We 27: M v at mast;q me to £04 next tlzreeii wahe P4 '8 to (Hem-1, I full 61¢. HER 01M "$511311 “Er Vgglzfiwoaâ€"y seemed to him, speak well of him and be over- ‘ng with surprise and satisfaction at .opderful cure and restoration to the mess of enterpnsing citizenship. for Qusut was born in Galway and t most, of his life there. Mr. Quant found at his pretty home: 011 ‘a. guns as INGURABLE. ,d Ayer’s Pins. s1 have found that for sick headache, pod by a ' rdered condition of the mob Ayer’s Pills are.tho moat re- 'mpdv.”â€"-Samuel C. mm 4 5:; are prom McadVi 9, P3. WHO uuu Wuuulc “vow-- Ielf help. had by the use of a few as o‘ the Pink Pills for Pale People. 130 fully restored to health as to be to walk about the street without the )f crutches. The fame of this wonder- miraculous cure was so great that the A __ .LL :4» Avuuu um um v-v-v; â€"vâ€"â€":. , Ian: street nearly opposxte the my. In response to a knoclg at the it was opened by a. man. who 1:: reply 'inquil'y if Mr. Quant lived there and at home, said: "I am .Mr. Quant. you come in?" After a httle neral Dreliminary conversation. 3.1} after M been apprised of the object for :11 the Journal reporter had called Ihim. he, at request. iold the story of lelf and of his sickness end terrible mas. and of the inefi’ectual treat- the hadrhadtand of higfiuaLcure B): 0“ EB eadache PLESS FOR YEARS AN IGLUDED FROM HOSPI- ”’1‘ WW md Dealer- inMedidne. rare for dyspepsia. But I continued “w Rradually worse for four years. I 503811 tohove pain in an b“: and "1d peca'ne conscious that my 1939 Seton? weak and my step “3% then staggered when I walk DR received no benefit from the use of Lfiwicines, and feelin $3 I we: Y growing worse. 11, n 3» began the use of electric [”523 and all the man difl'erent kinds 0‘ “1 auplianees Iyeoold hear of. and .h‘lndneds of donors for them. but "13,118 90 good. (Here Mr. QM“ -I -AMA prevents the hair from falling out motes a. heal_thy growth- was Tarâ€"SCAR LP. RamQVEsDANDRUFF. 7‘ ...--.--.y. w A -- " Id acted as 1;? for thngsta m " . e there I took a trio treatment. but it 03,1! .TUEA Cl]. MIRACLE. Medical. '5 Banana. for "ya ».m L W wwwuflmm Pmmwmmnu Wuwmmmumm“ Mum mmnew m mwmmmmw "Mm mm} _ m mismn memetw .w wwwammnmm growing worse. I had become entirely paralyzed from my waist down and had partly lost control of my hands. The pain was terrible; my legs felt as thongh.they were freezing and m stomach would not retain 1 and I fe away to 120 pounds. In the Al y hospital they put 17 big burns on my bmk one day with red hot irons and after a few days they put 14 more burns on and treated me with electricity. but I t worse rather than better; lost contrg .of my bowels an - AL, :-_--_ ._.LA w nun IIIâ€"V .â€"-vl â€"â€" vâ€"vâ€"v raw- me. Then! went to the NewYork hospital on Fifteenth street, where, upon examinatio . they saidI was incurable and would npt takeme in. At thePresby- terien hospital they examined me and told me the some think. In March. 18%, I was taken to _S_t P_ete_1;’s hogpitglin Allpny, WUWA, lvou wflnv- v- _. he , , water. and upon advice of the doctor. who said there was no hope for me,I was brought home, where it was thought that death would 3009 con_1_e to relieve me of ~_ _L2I- 3‘ "WP-KW. “nu-v â€"â€" â€"â€" _â€" ..... treatedb spedaliatsandtheyfmmeed mm oeomo_ tor am an incurabb. IhadbeennndertreahnentbyProf. Starr and Dr. Ware for four months the toldmetLatthgyhanoneanuhey A- L..- x'r__ v-..l. Canhdjgn LU" us.) ..- -â€"-v --___ severe. as I was so very weak, but I con- tinued to follow instructions as to ' the pills and treatment. and even 0 bet re had used up the two boxes of pills I begin to feel benefleial egects from them. y 3. 1' 2-14. _-.~mn-o mg DU 169:» mv-nv-uâ€" -___ , , ains were not so bad: I felt warmer; in ead felt better; my food began to relish and agree with me; I could straighten up; the feeling began to come back into my limbs; I began to be able to get about on my crutches; my e e came back again as good as ever an now, after the use of eight boxes of the pills-at a cost of only $4.00â€"seelâ€"Ican walk with the help of a cane onlyt walk all about the house and ard. can saw wood. and on pleasant days walk down town. My stomach trouble is gone; I have gained 10 pounds; I feel like a new man. and when the spring opens I expect to be able to renew my organ and piano agenc . I cannot ,3 mi: in too high terms of . Williams nus for Pale People; as I know they saved my life after all the doctors had given me up as incurable.” _ Other citizens of Galway. seem the wonderful cure of Mr. Quant by the k Pills for Pale People. are using them, Frederic]; Sexton, a seufi'erer from rheuma- A1â€"â€"~ mar Mnoflf. nus 191‘ Ian: vay-vw w- 7-, U > Fredenck Sex 11, a sufi'erer from rheuma- tism, said he was findin great benefit from their use, and Mr. Sc ultz. who has suffered from chronic d sentery for years, said he had taken two xes of the pills and was alrefigficured. Mr. Quant also tried faith cure with experts of that treatment in Albany and - ..., o n Lufi with no beneficial CAPUAW v- â€"_ , Greenville, S. C.. but with no benencuu results. A number of the more rominent citizens of Galway. as Rev. C. Herbert. of the Presbyterian ch E. Kelly. rincipal of the academy; John P. and arvey Crouch. and Frank and Edward Willard, merchants, and many others to whom Mr. Quanta and his so miraculous cure by the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills foi- F319 People, are well known. -_- A nan-I‘J‘lnitv 0f bearing testimony to the his Mr. Quanta, and of verifyingfihe story of his recovery from the ternble affliction from which he had for so long a. time been a sufferer: ,, -1 L‘L- -L¢vaÂ¥n€nn {a nnf. fn W â€"A despatch from San Sebastian, Spain, states that a lady presented to one of the churches there a huge candle weighing 60 pounds, to be burned durinz'Leut. It was explained that the candle waa intended to furnish light throughout the Lenten period. The gilt waa suitably acknowledged in the preeenoe of an immense congregation. and the eacristan ed to lizht the candle. , but there seemed to be some fault in that construction, as the wick tailed to remain alight. After three futile attempta had been made the ofiiciating priest, becomiog' euepicious that something was wrona, or- dered that the candle be removed and ex- amined. This being done. the etartllnx discovery was made that the interior of the . candle was filled with powerful explosives. ucoeeded in making it ggpendin; Wfiwdlbg; It is very iExpâ€"or'ciial in this age of mt mterial prom to the_ taste and cc, A- LL- that a. remedy be pleasing to the eye. easily taken. -LAâ€"gn‘h gull hadthrin fibennss. VII-I232 -r de-r HE w03723228 02 MEN AND « ‘ 2:: 912222 ”3? odineo .A -flfl‘l hill: enphemieticelly tanned the year: of d'ncre- firm must have noticed how difl'erent in the feminine and masculine paint of viewin motels. To lookon the two sides of one Adjective, honest; an honest women in a women whoie hithfultoher marriagevo'; mhoneetmnnissmnwhooon betmted with other people’s money and his own word. The honest vomit eometilnel tells lies, the honest non-onetime: inf-Into his wife. Certain virtues have come to bethe neces- thDnm-thomn‘ «Ngcuuinlynot? “WorthoMWlfld'm HMIdm’"°° 'hyymmtbfi'd nary furniture of woman’s minds; just as oertainother virtues have come to belong especially to men. Thereis nobliuking it;insome import- ant respects the average “good woman” is inferior to the average “good man”; in fact, a. man making no pretensions to saint- Au. linens will recoil from view how women Petieneernothhg loath _. charge down on my And “complaining, doth monl obstacle in the The work of both. way of whet they be- And petienoe in always lymboliud by a OCI‘AVE 1111mm. lieve e moral chase woman. for the better; and, commonly, thet min! WOUND in 8096111 313038 civilized poo- Plfln, that legislation commend: itself tel plum lees funk that men, "an when them as best which will promise the mil they are not less truthful. For the am , _-_--- -_A minr M ”m recklessly ! I know of it man of brillinnt gifts, with n greet future before him, who was ignomluiâ€" ously pushed from public life because he could not explain chu‘ges of bribery really (his friends believe to this day) belonging to his wife and not to be completely refuted unless he implicated her. He was quite ignorant of the whole business until the thunderbolt fell. This wife was as false to her husbend us it was possible to be. She ruined his career, she smirched his life. Yet, in the usual sense of the word, she, though a young. beautiful, and admired women, was ubsolutely faithful to him. on ‘ A1_A Idoubt whether she ever realized that she had done anything odious md wicked. She mbitterly grieved and mortified, 0! course, but it was for the result, not for her own crimeâ€"which, to be sure, the never called by that. name. Consider for a. moment with what can women condone public ofl'encee in their hu- buds, especially if such moralobliquity makes them prosperous. Women with :1] the medieval virtues. who would go to the stake for their religion, who keep theix u.. . marrisgo vow immulstely, will be the happy and :contented wives of politicians that deserve the pillory or financiers tbs. deserve the gallows. Now, s virtuous men could not be happy with an accomplished robber for his wife, no matter how confident he might feel that she would outwit the constable ! But a. virtuous woman quiets her conscience by not knowing anything shout business, or by the assurance that the newspapers tell lies. ukurwrv-- .._7 , Most of this nerrowneee comes simply from ignorana. Women are petty (end pettinees is nelMoor neighbor to selfish- ness, if it doesn’t room in the same house), became their minds have been chained to petty things. Women are dishonorable, because of all the virtues honor has the least commerce with the inflection: ; and the nfi'ections in women have been put under 1 kind of Strashurg goose-liver treatment for 2,000 years. By consequence, whatever virtues depend on the affections, those virtues are faithful- ly cultivated by women. So far [as those virtues go they are better than men. They do not even feel certain of the more boister- ous temptations- Few men, also, can but ‘I-_ _-_ w IIV â€"~.-_--._. It is easier nowâ€"I do not say that it will be easier shnndred years henceâ€"to imagine 3 men behaving in this Roman fashion that to imagine a woman. How many men, also, devote their live: to some science where the materiel rewards wealth at lame, u’e far below what is promised them elsewhere. And don't we ‘ ell know what their wives think of their choice! A For better women than Roenmond Lyd-“i gatelwve railed end wheedled sud bewept l v" 'vâ€"r -WV- , pain-with a. woman’s fortitude. Men gen- erally are not so unselfish as women. _.____ _____ a... .. . 9:.an ...- _- _ ,, 0n the other hand, magnanimity is a masculine rather than a feminine virtue. There are women that are large-minded. There are women that are honorable. So there are women that can be generous and even (harder and rarer virtue) just to their enemies. I only speak for the majority. LA Saxonâ€"Comm“ Wu 0! m and Wowâ€"remain. W. UHF-unw- _ v..-‘ V‘ , _ As to courage, women are supposed to be braver morally than men, and men physi- cally braver than women ; but as one re- flects on the object terror in which most women live, of what the mysterious they will say; and on the coolness that women usually show in peril, when the railway train plunges into horrors, like the recent accident on the Old Colony road, or the vessel burns on the water, like the destruc- tion of the Mississippl steamer, where the colored stewardess was the nose eficient hero on board, or during hideous seasons at pestilence, like the yellow-fever summer in Memphis, when the delicately reared gentle- womsn of the Protestant sisterhood were nurses, cooks, Washerwomen, and charwomen for white and black sufl'erers, living or dying with the same unflinching cheerfulness and courageâ€"as one reflects on these things one is tempted to conclude that it is very even guessing in regard to the comparative merits of the sexes in either kind of courage. -r .1 .A ‘lvuv- --â€"â€" v- V In simple devotion to duty, independent of the domestic affections or the religion: emotions, men are superior to women. Very typicel us well us noble is the story of the staunch old Puritan, Abraham Davenport, praised by Whittier, who on that strange day when the sun was darken- ed at midday, and all his fellow-legislstorl trembled and were for praying, rose to de- clare that whether day of judgment or not, the Lord should find him in his place, doing his duty ; and moved, therefore, that they bring in the candles and proceed with the business before themâ€"namely: “An act to mend an act to regulate the rind end sle- wife fisheries.” linens wul recon Iron: a. turpitndo in poli- tics or finance that does not stir a. Inigo! hia’gâ€"ood wife's had: It. is shocking, if one dispusionately, to view how women ‘1', _.cba.rge down on my monl obstacle in the wsv of whst they be- mum roar. warm! does not stir a. Inn- of hig’g ‘ood wite' a head: It 1: shocking. if m looks at the nutter dispusionately, to view how women ‘chu'ge down on my monl obstacle in the way of tht they be- mdomwmwmmmd somehtimom.'m‘h°y P1303 uny- it; thopegmemperontothodsyl whaling. fish Cntholioe burned the Protestenh end English Protestant- hnng the Cotholio “a flogged the Quake“. Therein no need to spank of domestic life, where there my dweyl be found nine who know nothing of their own helm nnd moi-owned nut!!! '50 mile intheirpcin: Mwflleomeuwurydfiy Mommutm Bothlovonndmthbonuth Thowdghtgivew; they are not less truthful. For the am maths negroel md wanker noes the world over lie u soon as they m .1310 to tulk. "The strong mu my lie.” up up cruel old Indiun proverb, “tho wak m -vâ€"D.vâ€" -_._ V feminine; pure but cruelly arrow, send. but intolerant. Eccleeintiee of this type, whether they hnve worn the eon-e frock of the monk,‘ the eurplioe of the Angling, or the Puritnn’e blnck gun, hnve :11 bed the me consuming udor of devoh'on, the nine self-nbnegttion, the an: supersti- tion, end the sum bigotry. Indeed, all the eo-cnlled feminine immor- elitiel and wenkneuee ere duplieeted in week or ignomt men. Moreover, it in to he oheerved thet mne- enline end famine lander-d: of mount, â€"vv â€"-'.." .. assume I. decorum today which onceâ€"lot us any in our great gmndfnthers’ dayâ€"bo- longed to women only. And women hue notion- of honor and honesty continully expanding. Alreedy there in e slight archaic flavor about the very definition the. I heve used, thet of en honest women. SteadiLy honesty is growing to be the m word for both. There is e lugs (and ever- increeaing) clue of women to-dey, who, without raining the requirements of the "I'uVâ€"v _ ___..,, conventional stnndnrds of feminine virtues, add to them the efl'ort to “see things truly and to see them whole," who are in conse- quence as tolerant, honorable, honest and fair-minded on men, yet remain simple, gentle and unselfish. The changed feminine ideal is reflected in our literature. How chnnged it is one on see by a. single instance. Tnke the ceso of 3 women’s bethrothnl. Something immod- deet and disgraceful utteches to s clande- stine love nfi'nir in our eyes; but half our grundmothers’ romances turn on the love pussgee between the noble but poor lover and the daughter of a. proud parent who forbids the noble but poor youth to spook to her, or on the secret mnrringe between the beautiful but poor maiden and the heir of a. lordly home who dues not to wed hot I 3:-â€" oinnly. But; these estimble young ladie- mortify and deceive and desert their perentl with singular calmness. But the wedding- ring held up at the end is supposed to re- concile all the mommies, and the cunnin vv-vâ€"v _â€" _7 , dwaya descend: on thé grand tableau: Virtue triumphmt! “Bless you my child- ren l” to imaginu'y fireworks and inaudible slow mugic ! Once the beet nuthors could do this; now it is left to the sensational school. A women has none other moral duties thm to count the world well lost for love. She is not expected to lie and truckle end he cruel to please the men that she loves. She in even allowed to any to him, as he hes aid to her: “I could not love thee, door, so much, loved I not honor more.” How long und for the journey thnt woman’s morality he: traveled appears ,when one consider: these thinge. The natural conclusion from all this ii that there is lees difl'erence than would appear in the sum total of morality, unsca- line end feminine, end that the difierencel in detail ere rether the result of education end circumstance then omnipotent, uneltenble netnre. Therefore the more reuon that we .11. men to women and women to men, should follow the npostle’e commandment and be “kindly ufi'ectioned one to another, in honor potion-ins one mother, forgiving on. another."â€"Octove Thanot, in Chic-(o Herold. , The Allgemeine Sport Zoitnn , in In article on caviare, 1:1?“ "The d 'acy In! only become gene y known in the luf- sixty or eighty years, but d ' tint till. it ha 9.0an a. distinguished in the estimation of every gourmet. one in “an that canine}: _th_e altofi roe of “i0 “-A‘ flow mt Russian Delicacy 15 Hull. m numbers on the scum onus ox nuns. m- large grained emigre, made from the r00 0‘ the largest lpeciee of that fish, in conlidmd the beet. "Some of the sturgeon: ' humucl 9| 3,000poundn, measurefroml mfllechn length, and yields roe weighing 800ponndl. The fish ehonld be aught lone month! 50‘ fore epewning time, while the roe is M and light grey in-eolor. A: it get! 00‘“! udderkeritheeomulmendleu mitt“. for prepering «vine; and when it in q!!!“ npe it is completely usele- for thepnrpou. The mieeeimpleone. The Meat intoL‘Ee pieces, mput who 3 or me sieve. the eoeneneu of which ii or meal slave, the oouuneu of which 1' regulated by the eon-mess of fin M which in thu: rubbed carefully Mb ’3 that it fills out. as uninjuredupoll! yhile the skin tttnchod to it remain! in “I. move. “The finer-sort ofcsvim in rubbed in“ II empty dish; it in film: may! with 317.. Here is m ascetic and hyptffial U203! if: amigo 598 on» to B“ £2 5 a £2: 5...... CAVIARE. align TWO-ROWED BARLEY find was upright, than other Model. Shippedineothonbmstzooenueuh. Hue found this Btu-lay vo‘thobost “ti-notion both for export mammogram El" unsoldscsunuckbinforexporttom hgughpplstornvho refund; good. umplooIOhovsliu-sttimu 8. Rio Wm. Geo. Lure of Hm Wm, Ohmon, John DunesJ. r. Dix InmbrouhP.s.m,Wm, Shortlfilifllan ”mmwitlutmnmdmgivowputi thomdimportodbythegommont, 11110960 mama-bushel. Samples Sent on Application. no, Frequent : Long Inlet Stretching“ North from Hudson'e Buy. horn the northern part of Hudson'e Boy, dread erotic m character. stretches for town: the pole e dee inlet, which some eerly nevigetor of t eee deeolete pole!- shoree has termed Rae’s Welcomeâ€"u if u: ' within thet ice-bound and lonely coat could beweloome to 3 person jut from civilintion! The me In no doubt ven in memory of some eeco from the film.“ ice-peeks. when the i et furnished refuge from one of the fierce storm of thet peltr "a,“ Roo‘l doom il;funed hunting be. for the grad. pols: vhdo, or “bowh " u the whdeu ed! it, writes Lieutenant Schnth i1; St.‘ Ificlgoln. This huge whnle, which is, indeed. immense in line, often nukes his home unong the great ice peeks and ice fields of the point son and n (godly quntity of theee it finds in Ron'- eleome. But these ice pecku, swinging tonnd fro with the tides. currents on wmds‘ in such 1 long, narrow inlet a: this, render nungntion u even for the stench whnling ships, nnd thgy tgenenlly make their fishing grounds 0 e lower mouth of the great inlet, when the $213331: goafioifer, if hot slny: go profitable. Occasionally, when tom ex; oeptionally good ice master in in o o whder ho duhes into the bum; mud for 3 short. crniiso;snother‘lm skillful, lured by the brighter pm a: or discouraged by a. poor cowl: outei e, ent- en the inlet and either mp5 3 rich lanes: of oil And bone or wrecks hm veueL Or he my even nape site: on imprisonment in the grip of the merciless ice-fetter: for o yes: or two longer than he had intended to '05,. Such was the (no of the good ship “Ghdiutorf’ _irom 3 y‘all-kn‘ovyn wit-.1333 , ,AA- “mun, .. vâ€" .â€" port in southeastern Munchnnetu. Sh: uiled to the northernmost end of the “We!- come,” a the Whalers call in, and, site! a most rofitable catch of “bowheeds,” Ind the i l-fortnne to remainfifirgnly bound in 4L:~ I-_- lll'lvtvuv " --.___._ 7, the ice for two years. During this long time, much longer thnn that for which the vessel had been tSix-ovieioned, the crew were dependent on o my Eskimos who clustered eround the ship. The netivee supplied then with ample quantities of reindeer, musk-ox, seal, and welrnl ment in return for small qunntitiee of mouse. end eofiee. Their companionship. too, rode a: it wee, did_ much ”to while ewe: the Europonn Paulina. In 1016 an awful famine m ed through- out L11 Europe, And agnin tom 1193 to 1195, when complete crop failures conned terrible snfi'ering. In England and France the people ate the flesh of dogs and ate, Ind my cues of cannibalism were re- corded. During the latter three yeua thou- sand: upon thousands perished from stun- drummuonmzummy._-__- 7 mmmmuo. In momma WMM-ynwhomlhâ€"m-z. Prosperity kills more men thnn Idvenity dou. HOG-G- 283308-, my!» II. M OAKWOOD PRICE 75 05MB PER BUSHEL 0F 48 L88. ‘9 -yy-u-u-vâ€" Ittnkaonlythllw‘h mm deW- , mwhoginmmdlehkoth-M WHERE WHALES ARE FOUND. DUOKJBILL lat man yieldedlio to 65 bushels per acre. fisveilsosqmtity oftho PRIZ PROLIFIO. grown from PURE BLACK m and mum PI“ for seed. :e, did muchâ€"to while an: the lonely hours of the two you: in- straw in stiffer, ad is much euier harvested 3:33:31, smoucas'rjm.‘ som°€v°°m'?mm:’a§°mmm “m not. Amnmnwmfium Boll h, All Grout-ill W J. J. TURNER SUI ERRORS OF YOUNG OLO ‘- Telophano Day or Nit)”- ' m 0‘ I. H.484); __. ..‘ on 138mm- of n! 5109519!“ WWW/FF? [Ir/mm Ira oral/[AIM Jam 1.: ”unortnaumrm III/WM!” ”my. M) 0/0: 7117': (M? amt/9:. Inflow" 5X11! 030627173: [178/6 3073: 7258 r/mctmxwvtom nmhmmmmâ€"nu. Fox-Information“ mmmm 31va a: 00 81 BROADWAY. m Your. Oldest bumqlor seem-19¢ mmg_¢qg9_ Univ-u vqu-u Avn mum-u. Lax-zest drcuiwon of any odenuflc paper in the world. 111mm mu: shag? thou: It. Week! $3.030: VPII‘M Puma Roam. new York. §ti§uti£it gmerim New Advertzsemen ta. 11m; g '00:. Scientific American L Agency for ”Whamm- m World. THE LIVERPOOL AND LONDOI mama: msumo: coup“! Wmud'm magma. alt “Mum. mum“ mmmmufluflu m an» Warn 0... m nan-mom. Y Conocoxx. â€"Iunc d dome- Au- :5. Ianâ€"mm. m WI. RJ. LeRO (In! and" Human. W Gitâ€"uh GEORGE DOUGLASS, mm 0' we: um MINERAL WATER. “twainâ€"m A";o§n:iuonâ€"no sell Singer Se ' chines and collect In the Counties of V to 40816 Bonn. and autism Apply ”1151011399 In Adam's Block) mm. M l YARD â€"Enubllsho€ 1870â€"! have m- hnndlnms ‘5“! at Gamma-pm“ man: as which I wmoeuutho u- doumuthec-nnmgm mum at all» vmo mm. M) brick tor-cola: “dun-h ..-m- "CA-m“, n.â€" 353:» be 55.53: Jiimz ‘ ohm Doc. 8. 1887â€"74-13. mm UNIflR CREDIT 8: PBU'I‘EC‘I‘IUI i s. PORTER, ISSUER 0P [AERIAGB LIGEISBI. WYJDII In”. Oat. ”. ISLâ€"1!. in: cf“ «'9 BEST Fall-2m. IOHARD BRANDON. mum-noun... JOENSAWW mmxmâ€"n mom. Isaâ€"ms. Eudo Mineral Water. SOLD 3‘! ALL DEALERS. leftâ€"63 13 r. ' York Street Lindsay. 0mm: madmadhmonhintg UNIGAL’S 1mm gun's. Han-Inga Licenses. GENTS WANTEDâ€"On pig a BARTHOLOMEW FIRE AND LIFE. SUMMER COMPLAINTS mm. FRIES :3 THE SWIM Bowel Complaints, Diarrhoea ' ‘ EUDO ’c KEEP A BOTTLE IN THE HOUSE. WILL POSITWELY CURE OLD RELIABLE 133on Amthunduuldmm; Miscellaneous! Egg-9:36.”... Prom-logo: Baum. (ht

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy