Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 17 Apr 1884, p. 7

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

The stack Bei" Should folk oouiu to see you their necrate to tell, And add, " Diuas sty that I tell't YOU uiveel', Kor il uiauuua gaaf far er than you, you maun ken. Or [there's nae uyin' how tbe bit matter may en' . Ae for me I uiayesy it would iDjare inesair To be mixed up Io ouy sic wrtlcue.1 affair ' If o' peace, joy aud pleasure io life you are fond, J ust send them at ouce to " the back o beyouj." It's a wooderfo' place " tbe back o' beyond." There are uuoo queer (ulk st " the back o' be- youd ," Wbea olasher oume near me, 1 oaona count out. Aod I feel unco glaU there's "a back o' be youd. " Wben folk wi lanii tanguee come to your or on . Aiad delve you wi' elaven 'bout fols that tbey ken. M.' what tbey eat. drink aod bow they are drese'd. While tbey in their hardships are irly up prees'd. Bow they naw Mistress So-and-so gey late at nlcht, And bow ihe gae-l on, astl waa lie a like licht. And tell you they're sure thai o' ilruit she Is food. Just t.ll them to gang io " the back o beyoud.' It's s wouderf u' place, etc. din freeos, as they're called bonuie freeoi., I oftthiok- OOSD* in just to see you an' rest for a blink. Heuiu to adviae you about your affairs, Though, of eoune, they aye say, It's use busi- ness o' tbeu-i ; Bat they think thU or tbst 'boat you or your wits, As In riiun 1 about ways try to kindle op strife If vou want Co bae peace, rreeni. I give you u bond, Yoo must send them, quick march, to " tbe back o 1 beyuud." It's a wouderfi; place, etc. 8boaldttpplen>oomelD wl'sdrsmjoyuur bouse, AD' ask Jk>u to join in a Jolly osrouaa. An, l.eet you b frujbtened thai suuie day they'll eqoeak, Tbey prouitite that of it tbey never will ipeak ; Don t liiieu, I pray you. Io ocbt o' their crack, Kor nae guid eau ooine, rraeuii, frae ouy aic pack , Joet tell them at once tbe blue ribbon you've donned. And so they may gang to " the back o' beyond." It's a woudertu place, etc. Aye keep the stracht road on your journey tbrouib life. For dangen are near and temptations are rife ; Deal justly an' kindly wi woman an' man, An' try aye to do a' tbe guld that you oan , Let truth be your watchword, an' acorn aye to lee. Wi' freen an' wi' nsigbhor aye itrtre to agree, Snow gentle and simple that o peace you are fond. AE send inarlers a' to " the uaok o beyond." Ifs a weuderf u' place, sic. RKV, K 8. Bowie. my i \- i i u i on h i - a> ">''" ""! i ,m. a II in- Z>ree*makere and milliuers are busy as bee* " with silks, satins, velvets aud laces getting ready for Ksster Sunday. There are a number of changes in dress goods, a* well as innovation* in models aod the of! unte. Skirts are worn considerably fuller i alonaisos are still favored. This graceful tyl* of dreee n generally considered equally Mooming to tall and short utures. This Karment u draped considerably high oo UM bipe. There are two separate cute, called Marie Antoinette and tbe Pompa- dour. Tbe sleeves are full and huh at the shoulder, a style that is greatly favored in Paris. A stout figure loots best iu a long polonaise with very little looping. Al the oack the draping u disposed in loops graduating in depth. The burnous drapenee are very effective. All wool plaided fabric* are once more .'ashiouaole and a* sombuted with claio coods of the same buss, and those that are 'avored are marine blue and dahlia-red, Karnel and olive, with white neatly mixed .u. Among the latest changes to colors ttsre is one new tiot that is called Nana Sahib ; it is very like a dark tan, a*n in a Ktrong light, and at otber time* it i* very nearly a blus gray with a tanlik* shimmer. Th* Nana Sahib cloth has a tine uord. This goods is all wool, and combines nicely with all tbe nob brocades and velveteens, particularly with the nonpariel " velve- teen. Fil a-fil is a new kind of drese goods that is sure to nnd favor. A dress made of thu material was lately finished for Easter wear. The skirt is made of the ..ory tinted til-a til ; the pleat* are laid i>-uirtb WIM, with three double box pleateat the back , down tbe front U a row of buttc ns covered with the goods. The vest is out of the same goods, but of an earn tinge, very pal*. The jacket is short on the hips and cot away to show tbe veat front. There are rows of small buttons, covered with tbe am* fabric, that run on both sides of the jacket and tbe Teat is cloned with these buttons. The straw hat that will be worn with thu suit i* of a dainty ecru ; tbe high crown i* encircled with a fold of velvet of tbe same shad* as the skirt of tbe dress , two long ostrich plumes are skilfully ad- as led on on* tide, partially oonoealinn a jortion of the crown, the end* are prettily ourlad over each otber and reel on the brim at tbe back, looking very like a bug* roeette A I . .n.u. ...x.kip i-.u.i. ,i Ths handsomest girl in Hy Ivania County Ga,, became engaged, nearly forty years ago, to John Gross, the son of s wealthy planter. Shortly after tb* engagement was announced, Gross went to New Orleans on bosioees, forgot his lady love, settled in Tex** and did not return home until two yean later. Though the lady bad not heard a word from him in all that time, the was still true. They renewed the engagement, then quarrelled, and Ore** went off again. Hs remained away until a few days ago. wben he returned to his old bomeetead to oelebrate bis 00th birthday. He found bis fiancee still waiting and promptly married ber. she bad refused many offers of mar- riage during bis absence. Three men whom be had refused became reepeotively a Congressman, a Senator and a Governor. According to a report published by the company for excavating the canal on the isthmus of Corinth, the works will be dnished by the time appointed 1. 1., in the year 1887. Th* canal, twelve milee in length, will unite tbe Ionian and .Kgean Seas, and save tbe voyage of 1 .'0 miles around the Cape ofMatapan. Southern Italy and Bioily will derive the greatest advantage from the new route. Lord Tennysou retired immediately after beiog sworn IB as a peer, without taking bis seat on either side of the House or oo the orose bencher Bat as be was introduced by two Liberal peer*, and, so far a* oao be judged from hi* writing*, hi* lympathies run with that party, the Liberal journals claim him. But il i* still a subject of dis- cussion and doubt. CURRENT_TOPIC8. Ak ordinary Cabinet Minister, soon (inks into ioaignifioanoe in England when be retires from office ; even Mr. Miluer Oibsoo. to wboni tbe penny paper* aie under enormous obligations, seeing th t no one did HO much to repeal tbe paper duty, was scarcely known by name to tbe present generation until bl* death occurred last mouth. DB. Il uii.Naixovi, superintendent of a lunatic asylum at Stockholm iotroduoed a printing pres* and some type into tbe establishment for tbe benefit of ao iussne compositor. Tbe otber patieuu became interested in printing, aud tbe doctor eooo gave tbeui a more exloosiTe apparatuii. Tbe result is tbs recent publication of tbe doctor'* book oo Diseases of the Mind, wbiob wa* set up, printed and bound by tbe patieut*. and ia pronounced a very good piece of work to every respect. It ojuiaius '*>-> pages. THE Hygienic Inititute of Munich it making elaborate experiments with wbat tbey oall Dr. Jagsr's " normal olotbing.' It oooaule in having all tbe undergarments woven in one, and tbe two extremities are digitated. The affair it deeoribed an a very unlovely woollen km. A sort of woollen bag is worn over it, and the ooat and waist ooat are buttoned up to tbe ob u No one kuowe why the ooetume ie ealled uurmal, but every one laugh* at it except ice wearer ; tbe latter u an employe* of tbe institute, and menu that hi health is constantly improving under tbe infliction. BINS*, tbe new British Jack Ketcli, wbo hanged Michael McLean, a boy of 10, at Liverpool March 12th, doe* not appear to give aatiefaction, not even to tboee whom be bangs. McLean, to begin with, de- cidedly otjeot.'d to be banged at all. on the ground tnat he wan innocent of tbe crime for which he wae to coffer. Bions wai very nervous and wben the execution wai over the governor of the jail testified before tbe coroner that it wae not done ' soientr oally." Hi* view wan that Binni " pun a rope round a man'i neck, and il's accidental if he hang* him." He gave hit victim* a <irof> too much in tbi* oaee 11 feet ,j uohee. Binns in defeioi declared that an nu victim wae a light uue he believed r "giving nim rope enough, "but tbe coroner's jury severely censored him io a verdict wbiob y : Be appears to have LO scientific piinoiple for going through bn work, aiid we think tbi* really reqoiree a scientific man." Evidently Binns muet give way to Prof. Tyndall or Prof. Huxley. At any rate Bum* miut go. BEFORE publishing hi* book Study and Stimulants, Mr. A. Arthur Keade aent circulars to a large uumber of literary men, asking about their babite with reepect to tbe use of alcohol, tobacco, etc., while engaged in literary work. Tbe writer received 132 repliee. Mr. Gladstone found that bte " tilaae or two of claret at lunooeou, the name at dinner, with the addition of a glau of light port, especially neoeeaary to him at the time of ^reateat intellectual exertion. ' Canon Farrar believed from experience that " work may be done more vigorously, aod with leee fatigue, without wine than with it." Tbe editor aays that no one of thoae who replied to buqueationi resorts to alcohol for inspiration. Thirty- four abetaiued wholly from alcohol, 27 need wuie at dinner only, 26 used tobacco. Uf the latter, only 13 smoked while at work, one chewed and one look snuff. Mark Twain required .SOU oigan a month, which be found sufficient to keep bis con- stitution on a arm basis." and Mr. rtuskin expreeeed bit ' entire abhorrence of tbu practice of smoking." \Vrra reference to tbe early life of Osman Uigma, the Suakim correspondent of tbe London Timti writee that he was origin ally a broker and trader, and principally a slave trader, in rjuakim and Jeddah, where he received a severe; Unsocial blow when, aome six yean ago, a British cruiser cap- tured two slavs dhows full of victims, oo the way to Jeddah. Oeman Digma's trade then fell from bad to worse, his bouse pro- perty in Suakisa wae all mortgaged, and be became hopelessly involved. Being of no great distinction by birth, bis selection by tbe Mahai to lead a religious rebellion u attributed to tbe accident that Usman Uigma, in on* of hie incursions far sooth for slave*, met tbe Mahdi, who formed a high estimate of his ability and of nis intluenoe, acquired through successful trading. If this history be trustworthy, passions for other objects than holiness are the key note of Osmau Digma's character and motive*, and U is against all proba- bility that he will cast hi* goods and hi* position into the broken bal- ance of battle. lie is no ignorant fanatic, and he cannot bimself believe the myths wbicbhe multiplies ia order to control his follower*. Pmr. MOHN of Cbrietiana, Norway, hav- ing been employed by the Government to investigate the efficiency of tbe protection afforded to buildings by ligbtningirods, seems to have substantially settled tbe much debated question, at least for that region uf country. His report shows that lighthouses, telegraph stations and otber exposed buildings, which were provided with conductors, did not by far suffer as much as churches, whion in most oasea were unprotected. It appears, in tact, that of about 100 ohurobes reported to have been struck by lightning, only three were provided with conductors; that of these three the first had a conductor in good order, and tbe building wss uninjured . the second had a conductor of zinc wire, which melted, and, of course, left the structure without protection , the third had a wire which was runty where it joined tbe earth, and tbe church waa burned. More than one- half the number of obnrobee "truck were totally destroyed. Mr. 1'reeoe, tbe Kuglish Government electrician, states that no damage has ooourred since telegraph poles were earth wired. BAKBB PASHA is the eon of a Gloucester shire 'squire, and is 64 years of age. He entered the army as a cornet in tbe Ceylou Hide* in 18IH, was transferred to the Tenth Hussars in 1HS2, passed in the same year to the Twelfth Lanoen, where bs rsiuained until lB3ti, wbec be rejoined tbe Tenth Huaaan a* captain, and became lieutenant- colonel of that regiment, lu which the Prince of Wales was placed under him tor military education. lie went thenoe to be assistant quartermaster -xeueral at Alder shut, a position he held uutil, m 1175, the painful oirouinstauo* occurred which com- pelled his retirement. He is of tuques tioned gallantry, served in the Kaffir war of 1 i.V-' 53, and in the Crimean war, at tbe siege of Stbastopol. He wae present at the desperate battle of the Tcbernaya. aod led out of the storming partitu in tbe final assault oo the fortress. He wears a medal for tbe Kaffir war. and the Crimean clasp, aod the Turkish war medal for bis more recent nervines. Hs is very popular io tbe my. In consequence of the enforcement of tbe Scott Act in Halton tbe druggists appear to be doing a very thriving business in that county. Aooording to tbs returns brought down ia tbe Dominion Senate, there are five druggists in tbe county licensed to sell liquor under the Act. bat only three of them have yet made proper return*. These three tilled order* tor S 2 7 bottles of liquor on doctor s certificate*. Assuming tUoBo to be tbe ordinary -sized whiskey bottle, that would show that it took six teen and a half barrels of wbukey daring tbe last eight mou tbs of last y sar to cure the invalids of Aotuu. Georgetown ai.d Oak vills. 0. \\ . Pearoe v Co, of Acton, seem to have bad ths lion's shan of this trade, for itf out cf ths 40 pae of tbe report are covered by tbe return* of liquors sold by this firm. A glance Uuoagh tbeae paj show that some of tbe Acton people seemed to have been lick pretty nearly all the time, and took their medicine with great regularity. (Joe Join 8haughne**T in particular, muet have been very ill. judging from the wrest jpaoiily of 3>e>_ oioe it look tooureliim. 'She return shows that he used a bottle of whnkev daily from May 3rd to .July 12th. II* occasionally skip ped a day, but always mads op for this by netting two buttles tbe next day. Oo July 1Mb he eeems to bare been temporarily cured, for his name does not turn up in the list again for about six weeks. On August J "i th, bowev er, bs again bobs up serenely for another bottle uf rye Tbe relapse however, doee not eeem I have been so serious as tbs first attack, for from that date to tbe end of the year John maoaed to keep b >dv and soul together at an aver age of two bottles of wbiskty a wetk. .Hi-id -io. 01 i. . ,,i Jtrm. In a preface to the recently issued letters of Gustave Flaubert we lean that Flaubert had prepared a kind of diotienary of " tbe stupid sayings of great men." Some ol tbeae are exquisite. " Water," said Fene- Ion, " is made for tbe pnrpoee of supporting tboee prodigious floating edifices that w oall vemels. " Dogs, according to Beruardin de St. 1'ierre, are generally ef two colors, so that there may be no danger of con founding them with the furniture of tbe house. Tbe same author remarks that the dea skips by instinct on hunt-colored ob jeote, otherwise we might never be able to ttteol hie capture. " Sbakspeare himself,' says La Harpe, " with all his coarseoeee was Dot without reading and information.' The wealth of a country." said Napoleon HI., " depends upon lie general pro* peritv." Chateaubriand wa* ready to admit that Bonaparte was a xreet winner of bailies, though outside of that the smallest general was more clever than be " A* eoou as a Frenchman has passed the frontier," says llavin profoundly, " he enters on fortiifL soil." More mi||bt be oiled but thus will be suQioient Io show that tbs genius who remarked on tbe eingu lar coincidence that usually brought tine rivers to tbe neighborhood of great towns wan not alone in his glory. London Newt Tar nN.li Inirrtl, M.,I The Arab text in tbe 46on MadJara gives an account of an interview of tbe editor ol the Arab paper with the False Prophet. In the course of the interview Manouimefi Ahmed said What proves that I never pretended to be the Mahdi is thai I am surrounded by tb* moet illustrious sheiks of Islam and by thousands of partisans wbo, instead ol fighting by my side, would have abandoned me if I had put forward tbe elaim attri- buted to me by mv enemies. Gordon has been sent with Dou 000 thaler* to buy over my alliee as be succeeded in buying some Arab chief*. But I swear, in tbe nam* of Allah, that if Gordon falls into my bands 1 will kill him and will distribute hi* money among tbe poorer Mussulmans who fight with me." "But," asked t lie interviewer, ' what will you da in tbe eveul of tbe English arming Indians and Abyssinian* against you?" ' I hav* no fear of the Indians," wa* the reply. " Tboee who are Mussulmans are with a*. Tboee who are idolai jrs are anxious to liberate themselves from Eng lish tyranny. As to the Abyssiniaus, not one of them would survive." " And what about tbe English ?" " Tbe sun will melt them. As to myself, if I do not succeed I will perish on tbs battlefield." Sweden has a law which say* that a man drunk thrice loeee a right to vote Tbe Dublin correspondent of ttie London Trltjraph denies, upon information from tbe higneet authority, that there is any truth in the statement that a conspiracy has been disoovsred to blow up Mountjay prison with dynamite. It is believed by eminent London lawye ; that tbe sentence of imprisonment passed en Sir Edmund Yates, editor of tbe World, for a libel on Karl Lonsdal*, will be annulled by the Court of Appeal. The French expedition to Hung- Hoa ha* started. Tbe troops are massed at rjnntay. It is reported that for tbe defenee of Hung- Hoa there are assembled 3.000 Black Klagi and 18,000 Chinese troops. Herioun resist- ance is expected there. Samuel W. Baker, the African explorer is|)uoted as say tog that oamels will crofts a desert with a load of 100 pounds at the rate of thirty miles a day, in tbs burning beat of summer, and require water only every third or fourth day. In the cooler month* tbe animal* will work asven or sight days without water, and if gra/ing on green foliags, without labor, will only drink oooe a fortnight. IX I* ... A i>\\ rarMIT. l.r-d. fflalrb .Her* I k>> (If O. . r and > |u. ( fr allUg. A New 1 ork deepatob say* All Fulton fish market i* deeply interested in tbe (ueetlao whether Charles I'earsall W going kill himself or wins small pile of green >aok lie go** to John Koea' restaurant, at H; Front street, and eala egg* as if they were oysters, about as fast as a man oan opeu tbeiu. He doe* tbi* twice a day, and a cjnaiderable body uf men from tbe iah market utaud around and look at biro, tie i not fond of eggs now, but up to a day or two ago be liked loom so much tbat bs 1 of the uumber il took to satisfy Jim He Maid !n could eat <iO eggi a day 'or five days. John Koai bet that be could uot. and a match was) mad* for Pcarsall to start in on Tuesday and eat 30 ei{g* at a tiling IWII-.A a day for five days. 1'earsall '* to get 52.. if be succeeds. Be i* a good ookiog. light oomplexioned young man of kboui 140 pounds weight. lie work* in the nsh market. The flsbmen all bet oo aim. and onttide (port* have been butting against him. He hae hi* eggs soft boiled aud emptied into big toda water glasses. Three glasses bold thirty eggs The fish men jibe him while be eats. Hs doss not appear to be at all inconvenienced by bis unusual meals, aod no one doable thai he will win on Saturday. LATE*. Peartta!) on Saturday at* tbe last one pf bis 300 eggs and won the wager. By the bye, it is rumored tbmt bang* are surely going out of fashion this *pnnx. and that the hair will be worn brushed plainly back from the forehead. While bangs are not necessary for women who possess low, pretty foreheads, they are an absolute necessity for women who possess high, ugly foreheads There can be no denying the (act that when the hair is arranged prettily and becomingly over the forehead il greatly soften* the outlines of the face, and lends an additional obarm to it. It is all nonsenae for people to say that tbe most sensible women wear thsir hair brushed smoothly back from the r brows. The moet sensible women ere those wbo know wbat is beeomiDg to them. If they look well with their hair banged or curled they wear il so , if they do not they fail to fol- low the prevailing fashion, and dress their bair plainly. Tbe Grecian knot has ^one entirely out of fashion except for street wear. Il is almost impossible to wear tbe hair on the lop of one's head with the fashionable bat of the period. Very few ornaments are worn . u the hair. Th that are woro are mostly silver or amber hairj ins. American > .. srrsMlr < i.,., .... , t u.., in . .1 In tbe old days no woman wan allowed to desecrate ths monastery of San Auttustin, Mexico, by eo much a* putting her fool within it* walls. A noble lady of Spain, wife of tbe reigning viceroy was beat on visiting it- Nothing cjuld stop ber. and in ebe came. But she f jund ooly empty cloisters, for each virtuous moi.k locked bimself securely ID bis cell, aud afterward every stone lu the door which ner sac rilegious (set bsd touched was carefully replaced by new one* fresh from the mountain top before the pollution of ber presence wae considered removed. But times are sadly changed and tbe bouse has been turned into a common hostelry o.lul.O ru..l- An Ottawa despatch says The second volume of tbe census of H->1 waa brought down to-day. It gives statistics respecting the ages aod occupations of the people births, marriages, mortuary statistics, and statements of the number of churches, benevolent and pensl institutions. Tbe death rate in to* varioufl Provinces during tbe > ear preceding tbe taking of the census wss Ontario, lit? tiss;?) rer 1.000 Quebec, 1X07 do. . Nova Scotia. 1 1 M do. New Brunswick. 1502 do. ; 1'. K. Inland 1127 do. . Manitoba, IX : do.; British Columbia. 20 T, do. DH S B. BHITTA.X Mrs A 4 rule, phvui otui do not by inoir professional methods bu.i t up tbe female ooustuutiuo. ai. I Itiev x-i.1 n curr tbe JiMases lu wtm-n u is always lisule IT i.i variable i-l-mate nil Ulster nur uii|*rf<M ciTihcaliuD Bi'ocial remedies are nfMn require*! tu ration organic harmony an.l to itrsuKiLeo the enfeebled |wiwr* of womanhood, en-l (or moat uf tbote we arc indebted t ixrsooi uuuule of tbe umlfcal rtrotecmou. Among the very bel ul lhM reui>-li I aniKD a pruiniuent place k Mrs. rmknaui'i Vecetabis CoiupoJQd." I hr OplUIO. ! All Wbo have tried Poison's NiBviusr, the great pain remedy is that il is never-failing in pain of every description. Neuralgia, toothache orampe, pain in tbe stomach, and kindred complaints are banished as if by magic. Hapid and certain in operation, pleasant to take, Nerviliue stands at the very front rank of remedial of tbi* clans. A trial bottle may be purchased for 10 osota, a very small amount in ary case, but tbe beet expenditure you can make, il a sufferer from any kind of pain, is a lu or . "i osnt bottle of Nervilme at druggist*. Ta, ta; I'll see vou later," said A taking leave nf the high school girl the other evening. You mean," replied tbe latter that you will ocularly observe me at a subsequent period do you uot ?" II.. - . im VV , 1 h 1 1. II is said there it a rankling thorn in evsry heart, and yet that none would ex change their own for that of another. Be thai as it may, the sling arising from tb* heart of acorn is real enough, and in this land of t .<ht boots a very common com plaint also. PUTNAM'S I'IINLJCNK COR* Ex- TfcAcroH i* a never-failing remedy for this kind of heartache, as you oao easily prove if afflicted. Cheap, sure, painless. Try the genuine and use BO other. Overheard in a barber's shop. Modrru Elijah) who is inclined to be facetious) I'm getting to be pretty bald, ain't I ? Guess you'll have to cat my hair for about half price hereafter, eh ' Tousorial art- ist (who is equal to tb* emergency) Ob, no, sir ; we always charge double when ws have to hunt for tbe hair Among tbe sixty- nine gentlemen wbo will receive tbe honorary degree of LL.D. at the Kdinburgb I'oiversity tri-centeoary o immemoration are Profenors Cayley, Uelmbolt/ and Haeoktl, Sir John Lnb- boek, Hir Henry Main* sad Mr. Archibald Oeikit. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'8 * VEGETABLE COMPOUND/ . . IS A POSITIVE CURE .'..*' v lor all ol I hew PaJlfal < ., i,U in. - \% raaerear* M > la oyr . . FE.>1.A.LK POrfLATlOM. . ' IT KILL i t'BS ISTIBSLT Tl WOBST ' or r \l. K O'Brl.AlxTV All. O*ASJA*I TB-H'BLBS, 1 Iw rtAMATI AHI, I I- laATIKX KAI.1 IN.I AID !>' PI. A. tBXXTI, AU 1MB C-OK.HSII I-IT SniAL WSAX XBM, AMD ! rABTI' t-|.At-\ AUAI*TKU T' THK i iiAs..r ..r l.irr . . ^ T . Ir wui i'i-"'i.* r *M Ktrri TT MORA raon TM TFM.rs. r ' ts ..'- Hi V'<R*rilCllKli Uti fc.ll* ST >rlllll ST IT- I ! . . e A IT !> r- K.INTXBU. KiATiisii T. DS*ra<T< AI.I i KAI IN-, r.'ii-rim LA XT-. A*I>HI IITU W SAI , xrn nr riir x r"W * n IT . t u. Hi MTIN>.. HKA., ' A. us. KERVI.I - 1'K.i-rmri .> I.TXFKAL UBSIIITT. Uspasui'ii AMI lmiibB>rix . ., v i is PAIK, \i rcKliA!is*rTi T THAT pr.i.i.. up r i:i\., WM..II r AMU BA> k A< UK. ) AI i I KSli St IT I -r . . . S ^ IT WILL AT ALL rir- AM. IMISS ALL ri ' ri S- A' r IV HH"Nt ITH THB LAW* THAT %..ivuu TIII riii*i> ->- s * e * Sl*~lT PI r->-I 1- -"I.KI V PilSTHBLCblTIBATS HKAU>U ->P 1,1-1 v.-r A\lt THK RKUKP <>P rAl>. AN , THAT IT 1'I- VI I ir I AIM* T> INI. THofAJill <^f i .Mm- , AN ..lAiui Ts-Tiri "a . e 4< K'>M TCI i t MI .>P Kll'Ntr I ilMPLAIN - - tITBSa <BX TSIS HIMll'l I- I s-i ur k->t 11 LTD1A K. I'lMHAlIK V K'.rTAJLP. (\OHroiiro to ,.r,jr.-.l u I.JDB. Haw Pri. |L lu b-<u for S9 -- * N f.nillT l IJVKK PII.L* ltli :< I YI'U r 1-IXKHAH-i -t. AB.I D. t: N. L. let. -i NEVER BE WITHOUT BEST SOLD BY ALL GROCERS. H. DO,/ TKHAJLI U1CAX5 ELIXIR Has itood the test fur FirivTHBtK YKAKS, and Ku psm-ctl iisrlf the best remc,|y Lnown fi>r tiie cure of Consumption, Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough and all Lung Diseases > y ^ > ^ : - ! ' ' a >L :: p*r EcttU. ' ELI) EYE. EUR AHD THROAT. DB. Q. 8. BYERSON, L.B. C.P. k B. R . lecturer oo the Rye. Kar sod Throat Trinity Mwllcal O'llri;* Toronto Oculist and Aurut to the Toronto Qeosral Ho|>ital. lat Clinloal Aaiistanl Uoyal Looiloo Oputbalmir Hiiepltal. MooraneM's aod Ontraf I/codec Tbroet and Bar Hospital. 317 ctmreb Toronto BRICK MACHINES. SEND FOB DESCRIPTIVE CIB (TLAK. Prlo Lilt an.l Teetlinoniale ol Hnak Marhiuee and Brlrk Pressm. We also make tin- " Kuroka Combined Hnk and Tile alaobloe " (or bores or iteam power. I. CUOBE * BON. Woo-litoek. On i. I s I AHI.1HHK1< l-iti'>. C.1OI1 a All klads at tl fr ..M. t I hrrx , . rto. Pat. KKI Carrier* l. mtrmtm *U<-lir. ta UolUirue street Toronfi *mt\,4. < . I'.ullr .. TeJI n.i* ,-f r*M or tn rar*t Kind aaj tt long MAaJInj bA*bMB rurd In. I**. I. P.I .ir.'Oiu faili In lu iSlrt f. WIAI I i.l ~u I TWd HOTTI.1% r>BS. k> rtllr with T 41 I ABI.B TKItATISE.r, Uil. i* t at> u SuiMCsnc, , 'inr'-' 1 1' u ur^, PH. T. A. HUK.-IM, 141 T~* . St. T.rS, ll.4.i'*I io esep'e a HasltMee Kdooalioa or BwnMrlao Pen Stlri tAN B' ntmnlam tre ioa or Bw lr> *l Ib* UHLNiaB OOLLBOB VflllHC ypy lMn> l "* m enimeerln* lUUHO MCIV an.) am !*) per nootb K*nJ yur naius and IDn. \u laui|>e Io K eor. Hri.|e|vrt,Ci.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy