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Flesherton Advance, 12 Mar 1891, p. 6

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Late Foreign News, SOLDIERS SWFOOATED BY DAS, 1 Village Annihilated- Canes of Buahranging in New Zealand. A new diamond mine, the deposit in which te described a* similar to that of the richest : Klrabejrly, ha* been discovered in H'-iqiiaUud West. A terrific cyclone ha* been raging in die Pacific a* Raratongm. Fourteen lives were feit, and at Aitutoki nerenty houses were ue*Lroyed. i'be schoouer Auraure was wreaked, and eight of tbe crew were drown- ed. A quadruple birth has )>ecn recorded at Cknnes. A Paris correspondent telegraphs that the quadrille of babies are described as fine boy*, none of them below the normal weight. Their mother, tbe wife of a poor mocHaoic, is doing well. The Shah of Persia intends to make an- other tour next year, and his programme include* a journey through India, and a progress from San Francisco to New York, Including a visit to the World's Fair &i Chicago, bis idea bring to return homo through Europe. The Russian Government has issued s ukase ordering all sardine boxes to be open- ed at the Customs House on tbe frontier. It appears that shoals of Nihilist tract* and proclamation* have recently been imported into Russia from France in apparently genu- ine sardine-boxe*. One day recently, in a dockyard on the Neva, sevsral hundred men complained of reduced wage* and harsh treatment. They even threatened the authorities of the yard. But in Russia workmen are not allowed to complain. So troops were straightway called in and the ringleader* marched off to prison. M. Osiris, a rich Parisian banker, who re- sid.-s at Lausanne canton of Vand, Switzer- land, haepreeeuted to that town a statue of William Tell, in commemoration of the hos pitable reception given by the Swiss to th* army of Bourbaki in 1871* The value of the tatuu is 100,000 fraoo.^ and it is'eipecttd tliat it will be inaugurated towards the end of May. The wolves are causing great consterna- tion in the interior of Russia and Finland. A few daysago, in the Government of Kittf, a young girl and her sweetheart were attack- ted by a pack of theee animal*, and the girl wa* torn to piece*. Her companion alteuip- ed to escape by climbing a tree, but fell down dead from fright. Curiously enough, the wolves did not touch the inanimate body. Tbe Tonga Taiha tribe of head-hunters, in tho island of New Guinea, attacked and annihilated a village of 40 inhabitants. They threatened to attack the Government miners at Sudest, and killed and ate a mini the Wood of Saint Rambert. The strange female ha* been seen by numerous peasants, and some of them who were not given to superstitious fancies and beliefs gave chase to Lsr ; but sue eped away from them like s deer. I'nler these circumstances the gendarmes of Sirieux have been ordered to try their luck in cat. bing the stranger, who is" probably a maniac. It has been ascer- tain..! that the extraordinary wanderer of toe woods i really ill eased in white garments, which give her a ^ii >tt like appearance. The lHxrnr*vviit SierU (Paris) published a despatch from Lheuxe (Alsace Lorraine), which states that a company of Bavarian light horse stationed there ha* just had a marvellous escape from death. During the night a gwtpipe in the barracks Iwcame sev- ered I' v H..MI. means, and the etcapc of gas rendered all i he men more or less insensible. In the morning when the bugles sounded no one appeared, and the inquiry made into this unusual occurrence only came just in time to reecue forty men, who were unoon cious. Three of them have succnml *<!, and n dozen others are still in a critical condi- tion. The half of an aaaaaim ha* been found on tbe roail between Philippouolis and Kasan- lik, in Bulgaria, and the other half of him is running about the wood*. It is the assassin, Padlewaki, who is in question- he who mur- dered General Sileveatoff, in Paris, and whom the French and Russian police have beeu uuntuig all the world over. The man .-aught for him in ever so many places has alwa>> len found to be a false Padlewski. But now thi* telegram come* from Bulgaria: " The body of Padlewski, half devoured by wolves, wa* found aome days ago between Philippopolis and Kasanlik." A serious blunder was committed at Colombo, Ceylon, tbe other day. The police at that place had been apprised in the ordi- nary way that two abscond i ng bankers from Germany bad gone in the direction of the Kasl, and might be expected to touch Ceylon. The steamer "City of Calcutta" cached Colombo towards the end of Janu- ary, having touched at Hoinbay on the way , am] among her passengers there hap to be two brother* named Marx, veal thy men who were to the fcast . act seems to have been sufficient for the Colombo police, for they promptly arrested them. After spending a few days in prison A REGION OF WOE, Seeking Gold and Finding Nameless Graves. ber of Papu A force organized for the purpu** of defence, and several natives were raptured and imprisoned by the lint ish Administrator. The little island of La Chroma, opposite the Dalmatian ooasl, which is celebrated for its almost tropical vegetation, and which wa* the property of tbe late Crown 1'rince of Austria, liae linen presented to the Domin icons at Kugusa, with an annual grant o: 2i"Hl Tin inland i* connected witli the memory of Richard Cn-ur de Lion, who, on bin return from the Holy Land, was wrcckei th. t.- lii commemoration of his escape he founded a monastery, which, however, wa* soon abandoned, owing to the constant at tacks of pirate*. Student*' duels certainly flourish in Hwit- .< i land, whilst the (ierman universities are trying .to diacournge the practice. Kit teen student* from Zurich and Basle wont over to Berne recently to encounter a mini lar number of Bernese champions, and the doughty combatants assembled at Schirnegj/ in slush away at each other's faces witb ion- l> \ ii;or, the police not atU-tnptiog to interfere. I I.- taking f the census in India caused some ridiculous errors. An enumerator in Hcn^al was told to count the families in bis particular district. Unluckily the Hindoo stance for family, Handi, in also tbe term for a cooking pot, so the enumerator solemn ly walked into a bouse, and counted all the cooking pots of the establishment under the impression that he wa* gathering important information for the census. Australasian and New Zealand spoiumen have lately been giving high price* foi thoroughbred stock, and at a recent sale a Auckland some sensational prices were ob tamed. A mare named " Mersey "was soli for 2300 guinea*, bat this was quite eclipse. l'\ tlte sum of 8600 guinea* being given b; a Sydney trainer for the famous sire " Nor denfelt." Thi* price i* th* highest evei given for a hone in th* Australasian colo- nies. During the Curewitch's recent tour in India he visited Gwalior, and whilst there shot his first tiger. The jungle was very thi. U, I. ut th Usat wa* well managed b' Major Master* and I)r Crofts, and at aliou one o'. lock a fine tigress broke near the Ciarewiich, giving him a shot His Imperia Highness It I drive and rolled over what i afterwards found to be a particularly fine liKrees. Herr Windthorst, th* German Ultramon lane leader, figures as an idol in a Chineee Urn pie near Amoy. A young German, travelling in the neighbourhood recently, entered a temple dedicated to tbe "Seven ( ieniu.ee, " and, to hi* surprise, h* found a dilapitated bust of his countryman among tbe divinities. Evidently tb* bust had been lost out of some Teutonic vessel. A fsw year* ago tb* Sbah presented th* late Kmperor Frederick with the Penian Order of th* Sun and Lion, th* insignia and etar being in brilliant*, valued at several thousands of pound*. After th* Emperor 1 * death, this star and insignia were claimed by bis widew, but tb* Kmperor William had them placed in the Honen/ollern Museum at Berlin. After more than two years of tint, iiuinn and correspondent r, the Kmpress Kredrrick ha* succeeded in recovering thi* propei ty, which ha* been removed from the Museum and banded over to her, on the in. I- standing that she holds it M an heir- loom. 10 that it can b* neither sold nor , who were voyaging for pleasure They were Germans, and this the mistake wa* discovered, and the luck- ess brother* were *et at liberty. It may be iipposed that the Ceylon Government will jear more of the matter. Cases of buthranging, or "hailing- up," were always comparatively rare in New Zealand, evi-n in the wilder days of a quarter of a century and more ago, but it is suxpris ng to bear of an accident of the kind in the >rc*cut yea of grace. One is just reported from Duneilin, however, the Kockland station, in Strath-Taicri, some forty mile* from the Otago capital, having been successfully " stuck-up" the other day. Two men called at the station, asking for work, and when an on|iort unity offered drove all the station hands into tbe house, here they fastened them irto th* bed -room. The housekeeper, who took the strangers at tint for photographer* n realizing their true character, contrived to <. ape aud slip ped away for assistance. Alarmed by her absence the two roblten took a mngle-bar relied gun and all the ammunition they could lay hands on. They then forced the station hand* to saddle* pair of horses, on which they rode away. They called at an accommodation hnnsje, whither the house- keeper had gone for assistance, and demand ed some biumly, but the owner refused them, and xhou were exchanged without taking any effect. The nines taken return ed to tin- t.iti.'ii the following day. It i* said that tli. -i.- has been no case of thi* kind in New Zealand since the early day* of tbe goldfieldfl. A Husband wl;o Never Spec t a Night Away from Home. It was one of those wild nights you tuul of in nine novels out of eei\ ten. The coltl Spring rain plaahed viciously against the pane ami the shutters rattle. I snd Itauged it* tlie tit f ul glut* of wind (wept through the deserted streets. Il wss lodge night, Inn Brother Fay con- cluded to stay at home for once, particularly ss his mother-in-law was nn her periodical inspection tour and spending a couple of days with him. With a sigh be rolled hack in the rocker, his feet in a chair and a newspaper spread open before him like a screen. Presently he chuckled and wife and mother looked up from their sewing inquir- ingly. " Rather a remarkable case," be exclaimed, looking over the ton of the paper and with a suspicious twich about the corners of his month, he rend aloud : "A model husband died recently at ( oi iimli, N. H. He had been married forty- three yean and never spent a night away from home." " Well, I should say he wa* a model husband," broke in the old lady, grimly. "Just think of it, Mary, dear, forty three years and every evening spent at home. No lodge oould coax him away from his family," she added, signitican ly. " 1'nor man, h* ought to have a monument a milo high," and *he ligbed deeply. Brother Fay held the paper a little higher and continued ; " Never ipent a night away from home. He wa* paralyzed." Without, th* storm l*at harder and onder, (s habit storm* have at such time*! while within silence reigned, save tbe suppreassd ruitle of the paper and the " *wi*h" of th* thread through the pillow case the old lady was working on. ew Ikeasasids ml Hesi Lesl Their Lives en the IslhSBM ef Panama Bally I uurral Train le Hesikey Uill Cesaelery. More men have died aud are buried and more money has been made and likewise squandered, OB the Isthmus of Panama, along, the line of the proponed canal, than on aiiy equal amount of territory in the world. Thousands of men came from all part* of the world, sickened and died under the iiitlueii.-i! of the deadly climate in a few months, weeks, or even days, while fortunes were made by a few honeetly aud in a legiti- mate way, but in numerous cases by down- right robbery, or what amounted to that. It was in 1887, the year before the final colla|/se of th< canal scheme came, that I visited the Ulhumas of Panama, says a writ- er. I there met Jack Gardiner, of Toronto. ' What brought me to the isthmus ?" he said in answer to my question ; " the same reason that has caused other men to come len the search for gold. In Canada I only earned f I'J a week keeping books in a commercial l>ouse, although I am an expert in my business. Here (I am getting 1*250 a nonth in a simple clerical position in the 'anainu Railroad Company s offices. Of course, I take the chances of being carried nit to Monkey Hill Cemetery within a few lours at any time, for neither yellow fever nor the fever which the natives call talila, meaning ' knock you down,' so sudden is t in its attack, are respecters of persons, mil chagre* fever, though slower in it* ef Tects, is almost a* deadly. THE rfNIR&I. TUAIN. "We have in Aspinwall what i* known a* the 'dead train.' This consists of three or Four ordinary box can and a locomotive, t>elonging to the railroad company. Every afternoon at 4 o'clock the train start* for the cemetery at Monkey Hill. Unless the deceased is a person of some importance the burial only take* a few minutes. The grave diggers know in advance how many graves to have ready. They don't loee much time in making them extra deep either. About three feet is the usual depth, and when the heavy rains come pouring down the sides of the cemetery hill the earth is often washed away and portions of the body exposed. You will see in msny places throughout Aspinwall, especially in small side street* and alleys, plain rough board coffins stood up on end against the sides of boose*. When an unknown man die* on the street the native policemen merely go for the nearest public coliin, put the body in it and place it on one of the railroad box oars, where n remains until taken out to the cemetery in the afternoon. Then the corpse is dumped into the grave, dressed as it was when found on the street or elsewhere, and the cotliu brought back to town for further use. A MODKRX il.ilJ.oTIIA. " It'* a common thing to find men, prin- cipally poor negroes or natives, Ivi-u dead on the sidewalk or under ihe stoops or porches of houses, in the morning, where they have lain down to die of fever during the night. No man living knows just how many people are buried in Monkey Hill Cemetery. The railroad hospital authoii- tiee, of course, keep a reourd ol the number of deaths in llinr institution, but the native city authorities keep no mortuary statistics whatever aud of the hundreds of men who die here e ery year and are buried by the city no record whatever of the burial is kept. It is by no moan* an uncommon thing for an old grave to be opened and another body quickly hear of the collapse of the canal scheme. " My friend spoke prophetically, for in the following year the final crash came, ruining thousands of poor people in Prance and caus- ing untold misery to thousands of penniless workmen on the. Uthmui who were stranded far from their own countries. To-day about all that remain* on tbe Isthmus of Panama as evidence of the human greed of gold are million* of pounds of what was once magni- ficent machinery, but now is little more than old iron, and the bleached bones of tens of thousand* of men. THE LONDON GABBY. A Cnlejsie Rprrlnea * In Wresting < lass of Bread winners. By no means the least integrating feature of London lite is tbe " cabby," as he is call- ed, the driver of the hansom cab. These cabs are so numerous that the city seems actually to swarm with them, and it is easy to believe tbe statement of the guide-books that there an 10,000 of these vehicles in the town. Of course, there is a great variety in the driven, and it ha* more than once hap- ened that the sons of families of considerable position have passed the better port inn of their live* on the box of a hansom. An American who wa* in London during the past summer encountered rather an odd specimen of cabby, a man who bad in some way evidently come down in the world, un- less mounting a box be regarded as a rise. The stranger took a oab lor a drive one afternoon and, having no very definite idea what he wished to do, told the driver to take him to some place that was worth see- ing. The cabby looked him over, apparently making up his mind what manner of man he had a* passenger, and then started off in a direction which wa* not in the line of the gentleman's previous explorations, although be had been in England a number of times and knew London tolerably well. The pas- senger poked up the little trap-door to the roof of the ;ab and asked where they were oing. " Along a piece,'' the driver returned. Do you see, sir, that crowd on the corner'" e added, pulling up; The traveller looked in the direction ndicated and saw a crowd of people gathered bout a woman who was turning the crank f a barrel organ. She wa* rather a pretty woman, and appeared strangely out of k>--p ig with her occupation. " That i* Lady Linton," he said, and by ubsequent inquiry the traveller found that in> wa* not a mere " traveler's tale," de- igned to beguile him, but that the organ rinder was really a member of the nobility ast off by her family. The hansom wa* started up again, and _ iretty soon the driver announced that they were in Chelsea- " That house," he vaid, pointing it out, is where that old crb apple Carlyle lived. Further up the street," he continued waxing communicative, " there is a funny ellow named Win-Tier. " He is a painter, nd the papers pitch into his things like lazes, aud he gets as mad a* a hatter and answers them back. They say it's great un for them that is in it. 1 You do not follow it up yourself, then,' 1 he traveller said. ' No, sir," the cabby said. " I like bet- .er to give my time to flowers. I have a place that i* pretty to look at, if I do say it, nd I've taken a very tidy lot of prizes, too, ir. I go in for chrysanthemums just now. That's the go, and I can make something help me on with tbe greenhouses and get he missis a new gown now and then." Tbe cabby who cultivated flowers for amusement and drove a casual passenger out *ee the hous of Carlyle could hardly be ooked upon as a type, but a* a variation lie wa* at least interesting. Imricd on lop of the lii done for want of room. i. .mlti me. in the Department of the *t Mneselle in France are l.nsily in looking for a woman in white, wli i link' frrqueui, l.ut flitting, visits to A Eftilroftd Manager. Ohio and Mississippi Railway, Office ol tbe President and (len'l Manager, < 'in. in nati, Ohio, U. S. A., Nov. Ift, 1886. Gentle- men : Recently while in the aet of alight ing from iny oar I stepped upon a stone, which, turning suddenly under my fool threw me to the ground with a severely sprained ankle, aufleriug exceedingly, ] was helped into the car, and my man rubbed me must generously with arnica and kindred remedies, but to no avail Reaching a station where St. Jacob* Oii could be secured, two bottles of it were bought and the application resulted at once in a relief from pain, which had be come well nigh unbearable. I was out am bout my work in three day*. W. W Pi ABOUT, Pree't and Ueo'l Manager. General Hoolh has l*eu offered seven gum an for tbe quill pen with whitti lie signet the Darken* BngUnd ' dci-.l it one, this being How many people are buried out in Monkey Hill? Certainly 8,0(10 or 9,000 ; probably I'J.OOO or I. ..(Mi, but it'* ali a matter of guess work as to the exact number. Tbe cemetery might not in ppropriately be called Golgotha, the place [skulls. TUOt:HAMD9 OF DEAD CIIINAMB*. " Hut the ground about Aspinwall only lolds a small percentage of the men who lave died on the Isthmus. The city ol 'anama, of course, lays claim to the largest numlwr of burials, but I can say without ex aggeration that the entire line of the rail mod and canal from the Atlantic to th* is a continuous graveyard. At Ma- oclun alone over three thousand five nun- In .1 Chinamen met their death in one day. That wa* 2ft or 80 years ago, bile the :*anama Railroad was being huilt, and lonji >*fore work on the canal wa* begun. Ten thousand Chinamen had been brought from hina to work on the canal. Over half ol .hem were camped at what i* now Matochin. Smallpox liro out upon them and the mor- tality became so great that tbs Chinamen, always easily excited, became panic stricken and, preferring to die by drowning, ran down the steep sides of the hills near their camp and threw themselves into the Chagres river. As I have said, 3,500 of them drown ed. HW TO MAU > BT 1 It's a very easy matter for a sharp clever, but dishonest man to make thous ands of dollars on the isthmus in as short a time as it would take him to make hun Ireds in Canada. The Panama Railroad em ploys only white men as engineer* am conductors, who have previously been rail road men in the United State*. For man; year*, up to within a short time ago, thi passenger fare from Aspinwall to Panama, a distance of only 45 miles, wa* f25. Nc tickets were sold at way stations, passenger paying the conductor* on th* trains. Thi they usually did in Colombian silver. When the conductors arrived at Aspinwall or Pan ama in the evening they would bring in the money received for fares on the trip in large canvas sacks, and if traffic had been rathe heavy on that day the conductors wouU need help In carrying the silver from th train to the company's office. It was no thought at all unusual for a conductor U 'knock down "1100 a day. Half of this h would have to divide with the engineer o his train. The company cloeed jts eyes U this barefaced robbery, if r several reasons among them being the fact that it was difficult matter to obtain experienced rai road men to take positions on the isthmus while another reason was that t he. compan was making so much money that tlie stea iugn were considered too trilling to notice The end is soon coming and the world wi Heartily. Whatsoever ye do, do it heartily an unto the Lord."- Paul. learlily ! Heartily 1 This Is the meanure ! O, servant of Ood. thou art child of a king; Then why should it not be a joy and n pleasure. Thy willing life oervlee unto Him to bring I wa-H Me gave you HlsK . unlaurelrd thj jearn may be King of Medicines A Cure "Almoft JHroottlotM." When I WM 14 years of age I bad a severe attack of rheumatism, and after I recovered bad to go on crutches. A year later, tcrof ula, In the form of white swellings, appeared on various parts of my body, and for 11 years I was an Invalid, being confined to my bed < years. In that time ten or eleven sores ap- peared and broke, causing me great pain ao4 suffering. I feared I never should get well. ' Marly In IMS I went to Chicago to visit a sifter, but was confined to my bed most of tbe time I was there. In July I read a book, 'A Day with a Circus, 1 In which were statement* of cores by Hood's SaraaparlQa. I was so Im- pressed wttli the success of this medicine that I decided to try It- To my great gratification the sores soon decreased, and I began to feel better aad in a short time I was up and out of doors. I continued to take Hood's sar- saparllla for about a year, when, having used six bottles, I had become so fully released from the disease that I went to work fur & Flint * Walling Mfg. Co., and since then UJkVK XOT LOST A SUfOLB OAT on account of sickness. I believe the dlseas* Is expelled from my system, I always feel wen, am In good spirits aud have a good appetite, 1 am now 27 years of age and can walk as wen as any one, except that one limb Is a little shorter than the other, owing to the Ions of bone, and the sores formerly on my right leg. To my friends my recovery seems almost mlraculouj, and I think Hood's Sarsapartll* Is the king of medicines." WH.I.IA* A, LXBX, N. Railroad St., Kendall v II le, Ltd. Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold bj all drucfiiu. (1; six for fs. Prepared our/ Vy C.I HOOD * CO., ApotbectriM. Lowell . Mas*. IOO Doses One Dollar think of It often. . And life In your own by His keeping and care! What thoiiKl (teeing. Th* heart that Is right holds no truce with d MI pair. 1 child of a King I Bee thy fellow* -.-around them Th* bonds, which make body and spirit to grieve ; Yet. never a ithackle of evil hath bound them, llul love ciui unfelU-r, or kindnse* relieve. Know this, la thy doing, fainl-hearted be- liever : Thenplrit of klnilnexxan.l coin fort doth dwell Mot flione in the rift U> the neotlful receiver, tiut bright in the heart of the giver as well. Jnto the Indolent, law is tyrannical ; Itnty, limnetic ; and mirvlce, a bore; Every dull deed in tholr doing, mechanical ; Labor, a drudgery : this ana no more. Phen do, with thy heart in it. unto the Highest! Hi* provident goodliest* dom&ndelh thy IH--.I 1 The earnest and zealous ones al way- are nlght-nt HI* tenilereet heart, with it* infinite n-t. Ami do, with th> heart In It, unto another! Nor wailing, ntir trusting, but doing, to-diy ; The Hplrlt of helpfulness shown to thy hrothar. Jehovuh hath promitied tllmitelf to repay : Oh do with thy heart In It I Heaven IK above thee: The grace of thy doing make* up it rewartl ! For ileticn iloun kindly, even ninncrn will love thee. And thou xhall have joy In the nill of tho Lord. LI.BWELLYN A. MOKKIHUX. * Th* KluiH. Toronto. Canadian Sleigh Song. Canadian cutters are cony and neat, Canadian horse* are graceful and fleet. Yo hoi for a ilach through the country to- night I Beneath soft glow ut the misty moonlight ' Yo ho I how the bellH of onr Kttlloplng teams Make rollic* and laugh In their front-curtuln'<! The forests that slumber, the rivers that How. lleneath the fair fohli of tho gHxtcniiiK i <>Vl Theee Allies they ring with their galloping strides Tholr hells for the Queen of Canadian brides Yo hoi how they dance, arch their neck*, ions their mane*, And taxte their bright bits when she touches the reins. What flower of beauty could ever surpass In Mwcetneiw of oul s Canadian liumt Yoho! what flr bride In net nowey array Could t-vcr ilcpln a Canadian leign I (Hi! heroes now nloeplng in classical shrouds Were fanioiu for sweeping etlierll rl.iu.l-. In chariot* golden, with charge* "f Hume; Canadian lovers do somewhat the uin. I.KIUII. "No, Georgs, our engagement mui be broken. Father has failed, you kuur." " When did your father fail ? 1 hadn't heard of it !" he sai<l, turning pale. "He failed yesterday and is very much prostrated in consequence. My whole time must be given to him now. He needs my individual .ire and attention, aud though it may break oar hearts. George, we must part forever." ' Noble girl," thought George, as be hastily rasped bis hat and with a broken In-art went out into the night. "August Flower" Mrs. Sarah M. Black of Seneca, Mo. , during tbe past two years lias been affected with Neuralgia of the Head, Stomach and Womb, and writes : ' ' My food did not seem to strengthen me at all and my appe- tite was very variable. My face was yellow, my head dull, and I had such pains in my left side. In the morning when I got up I would have a now of mucus in the mouth, and a bad, bitter taste. Sometimes my breath became short, and I had such queer, tumbling, palpitating sensations around the heart. I achea all day under the shoulder blades, in the left side, and down the back of my limbs. It seemed to be worse in the wet, cold weather of Winter and Spring ; and whenever the spells came on, my feet and hands would turn cold, and I could get no sleep at all. I tried everywhere, and got no relief before using August Flower Then the change came. It has done me a wonderful deal of good during the time I have taken it and is work* Ing a complete cure." <P C. G. GREEN, Sole Man'fr.Wocdburj ,N.J. "CV"iT>"I? P lliVCJ-. Trained nurse* are fast *utieriii<diiig tin old-time sort dcscrilied by Dickeiin. One of the latter, employed in a Southwark family, is found of large words. The mother wa* M>aiitiugof her son's neatness. " Hi couldnt lelp n," said th* nurse ; " children inhale a thing like that off their parent*." She meant inherit. WHY! The virtue* or merits of a remedy for pain do not consul in Its being as rood tor reliefs* other remedies, but In the (act that It Is better. In being more prompt snd sure, and there. ore the bent for the ip.-.'lfle purpose. U Is not an iillu catch- line that sinks* the eye tlius: ST. JACOBS OIL TNE GREAT REMEDY FOR PAIN, 18 THE1BEST. It I* the bin* ours for all aches and pain*, and It hold* THE TRUE PROOF. To this specific fact Archblakeps. Blsb- op*, 'lerg.V"*. Lawyere, Doetora, Gov- ernor*, Oenerals, Senators, Menken of Congress and Legislature*, F. s. Consul*. Arsnv and Wavy OflUwre Mayors and OttclaU, testify and unite in uylng: "We suffered pain; OTHER REMEDIES FAILED, and St. Jacobs (HI cared promptly end per- manently " For the same reason THE POOR MAN win t he less* and needs. Is not deceive* will hew* it at suy price.

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