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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 3 May 1883, p. 2

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 »r5:fcj«J-,i6ij.^ â-  â- ^-'i*"':* .^-SWWfiV'^g'^a^ m m Man -?W cbi'fi lE/ftT C^tru (*» e8 an The recent terrU^ cyclone, of which we have had brief te^raphic information, ap- pearafeajuk^e doge, a J[fi^htf,nl, amnant Jf damage. The following details speak for themselves. Wzss^.'Mifes â€" (li^tful cyclone pass- ed over thi^'pltace 'ana 'of er the town of £ea^csg»cd, use aula«bove, •i,ai»m^dJiMr yesterday. The wind for the past three days liskl beea: hiawiog A gi^i^ atkl'Mife' loweri2W|X;ipi?d#i iBdie^t«4 .t^ â- ^UnU' approach, w^ heralded by df^8 "I^JP^I^MS sounds, tne wfhdo'ws in the dwel ings si'ak- ing with violence, and many anticipated an earthquake. The thunder roared and tLe lightning flashed with alarming vivid Qt«s. Fences were torn down, and trees which had stood the storm icr years were uprooE- ed and cast 100 yards away. East of he railroad in Wesson the damage was flight, but in the western portion of the towa the destruction was awful in its character. As soon as. the storm had somewhat abated, the church bells were heard riug- ine, and people were seen rushing toward West Wesson, the rain in tbe meantime. pouring in torrents. E«achiag Feach Or- chard street, an indeicribabie sceae wae wit- nessed. The street is lined with a large number of houses, in whi„li the operative! of the Mississippi MiUa are domiciled, and here the greatest destruction occured. Dwellings were torn to pieces, and a pine forest just beyond the limits of tbe town was BLOVVr OUT OF EXISTENCE. The work of removing the dead and extri- cating the wounded from the ruins was soon begun. Calvin Reed, who lived in the neighborhood, died of excitement. The number of killed is estimated at twelve. Two or three children are missing, and 150 or 200 dwellings have been blown down. The cicapoa from fome of the dwellings were miraculous. The number of people with liroken limbs i.=! estimated at seventy-five. Dead bodies lay out in the violent rain for more than an hour alter the cyclone. The dead are nov/ ail laid out, and coffins are beir) mado for their reception. Among Iho killed iti Wesson are Mrs. Causty and her two ch Idren, and several children of ,1. K. Gibson, one of whom was found cru.shed ur.ils-r a chimne}-. Two bodies found were so mangled as to be unrccogniz- ab'i' A little boy was found in the woods, scvtral hundred yards away, uuliurt. IJear.regard. whi.;h is only a mile from here, lay in the direct path of the cyclone. The 'icene there is appalling, and the town may be saitl to no longer exist. It is, in Irnth, a mas.? of ruins, with scarcely a house hiUiuliiifr. Uptorn t,ees lie ftrewu on all sidfS. plac" sc-atlcred fjr miltfs iiround. Even out in 5 he country two miles and a half dwell- iiir;.s wore blown away. The railroad depot wa.-i i;a ried away, and not a sign of it re- miiiis. 0-1 the Xatchez and the town of Tillman .se\ oral were killed and wounded. On the Vieksburg and Meridan Railroad the town r.f Lawrence suffered terribly. The reports from other places and from the country show that the storm was wide spread and very doitructivc. Telegra|ih Jiies were blown iiiiwn for miles. At Tillwan tb' pi rty I f all kii gi pj-tly damaged. Ijja'ircgir.l is a p bouso 1 aviiig escaped. iviwrence 'iiiflffcred heavily in loss of prop- erty, hilt no lives were lost. A^idc from the b.s-cs sustained in the towns mentioned, the. lievastation of the country lylni,' in the path o: the hurrica'.nc is very great, crops, farm houses, aad, in som^ cases, human l;!c being ciestroyed. Oi;t.- yc;;ir as:o yesterday the town of ?!on- liceliu, iyin;,' .-ix miles south of the track cf ihia storm, was destroyed by a tornido. A cyclone passed eight miles north of CjI- uiabus, Miss., near Tibbee Station, on the Mobile and Ohio Railroad, and much dam- atjo v.-as done to houses and fences. At Cook's plaatation, en the Tombigbec River, nearly every liouae was demolished. Across the liver fourteen houses were destroyed on Dan Hutchinson's plantation, but no lives were lost. At Caledonia, twelve miles Tiorth of Columbus, the storm seems to have concentrated its fury. Every fence for miles was blown away, trees were blown down and carried before the wind like chaff, and many houses were torn to pieces. An estimable young man, while bending over his wife and crops and feocea. la people, who say that THE WALLS AND ROOF OF MI Tb« house of John Iqd ti ed. and carried away, leaving them st cdiiig un- hurt on the flooii, • I ' -/ A special to jBe^ g$^4*^ Mv^ma JSewt from Eastman, Ga., ga ys that a cycjon e uuJ u i ti DUUU lU ii ll Julliy gi Ul it ll l H i Tib e. ster was blown dowo^ hed^^-gK^KS, y iiijurefl. rv Special despatches to the Macon, Ga,., Tel- The egraph and Messenger report a terrific cy- house •â-  ' â-  ~- "" " â€" -^-id with a the ri NoH Ui^ !The _Ett!li nunlVii^i£^«littJ*y«lno4*-tie wMAifcfteff: EneraTongaaa^evereimico-. T/^aAi fcrffctured it but pronoun e AbttPir Hot^, at Str Hair^ T«l*d .OJd^ fC. Bat upon a deep ii .O0olasJe4$8t5psi4bylfii*^Vl i f^^^l'j^rZ.^ hlf a pint of gennr he 'cLarge »f °°«ft"1». against Goy lul* resalt of indal- Two brick stores, the largest in the were swept away, and the timbers Columbus Railroad, was destroyed, and town is in ruin.' and pro- Is in the neighborhood is rfect wreck, not one TRYING TO ' LLAY IIEK FEAKa, was struck on the head by a fall mg beam cners were dangei- and instantly killed ously wounded. A terrific gale from the northwest struck West Point, Mis-., accompanied by torrents of rain and the largest hail ever seen there. The Court House, Lawyers' Row, the Cen- tral Hotel, the Cotton Exchange Office, the Olympic saloon, the Henry House, W. A. Bibb's store, and Flanagan Hall were all unroofed and otherwise damaged. A barber shop was partly blown down, fences and trees were prostrated, and much damage was done. No lives were lost. A most destructive cyclone passed two miles north of Starkville, Miss., blowinij houses all to pieces and tearing up fences and trees. A negro woman and a child was killed, and tisveral whites and blacks who were wounded will probably die. All the buildings on the plantations of Dr. E. P. Connell and Dr. J. t?. Montgomery were blown away, and the com and fodder that was in the bam was Ecattered. W. H. Curry's dwelling was blown ofiF, leaving no- thing but the floor. Several fine cows were killed. The wind came from the south- west, going in a northeast direction. It struck one mile south of Aberdeen, at a place called Freedman'a Town, blowing away ten houses there, killins; ten negroes and wounded about thirty. We have hitd signal office here for a year, and have had two storms in the last month, but the ob- servers have never predicted a storm yet. A tornado passed about one mile east of Red Lick, Miss. The track of the storm a terrific clone in southwest" Georgia, attended with a large loss of .life afd prwerty. No^, Jqs number of instances there is a total loss of farm houses, residences, cattle, and ' pro duje. .. â-  Specials to the Atlanta Constitutional re- port the passage of a cyclone through th lower part of Georgia with de5|;ractiy^,j5^; suits;' Afs? V(^*'^aifetAl 'wtnd ' dnd' heavy rains all.»*«er*Ke»8Wt*it 'â- The U^tMi)fe-"*(%s continuous, an^ kept t^e nighf so litJiB that one could^re i6^)J^ kie- light. Ten(*e* and dams were washed away, entailing great loss, and many houses were blown down. A de3pa||AA[(U^tgMS reports eight persons killeaSaabout twenty-five wounded. East- man despatches report two pertons kilted. The track of the cyclone was through Dougherty coUktJr;, tt* iS^ep^iaj quar- ter of a mile •rtdfc.' Tft!lr'5ld,'0Wr Samage was done in Chattanoga by the afbqtiti. The depot, dwelMngs, and stores were dnroofed, ' fences thrcyini dpwn and trees uprooted. Reports ofserious damage to towns in north Alabama have reached here. The region of Tuscaloosa, Ala., was visit- ed by a heavy storm of wind and rain, which continued until midnight. The Black War- rior River has risen thirty feet in the past twenty-four hours, and is now fifty feet be- low low water mark, and is still rising. Hundre Is of acres of the richest lands in the Warrior bottom that have been already planted are submerged, and planters will' suffer heavy loss. A tornado passed up the Maple River Val- ley early last evening, following closely along the spur of the Chicago and North- western Railway, which strikes off from Manly Junction. The Danbury Catholic church was wrecked, three houses were blow down, and other minor damages we're inflicted. No lives were lost so far as known. A special from Danlay, Harris county, says that a terrible tornado passed near that place, carrying away many farm houses and uarns, and killing a great quantity of stock. Trees were torn out by the roots and outbuildings carried away. Some loss of liie is reported. The track of the tornado was northward through Monona and Wood- bury counties. iaTdadl^sr^J^;. creasedJuiu»««a^ep Sffante lOniKdbdbJtoE. (iflii*J£nanoii tlie'Grand,CentnalhoH at£t ^^d^^' recently twi^orfcrny elfeea. as rrSKruntiiit reached the 8i apple, Synuftes,^ "i^^^;;d\T but pronounced it IDCUIOD genuine ppipe 10 per atad began slowly Of 186?] Dr. t^B^ afterigh,|^ s*t*iD, I went, ahd was about li^ol. th^tL e^ineoiiwrgeoiv- -L' afi;ain ppented and on. by olM^' Flirting by Telephone. Among the employes at the Central office is a boy, whose voice has not yet taken on the bass tones of manhood, but is still of a pure soprano quality. He substituted for a young lady «perator one day, and in the course of his duties was seen to smile very broadly. His nearest neighbor, a young lady, .seeking to find the cause of his amuse- mo.at. was told that a bank clerk up town was trying to flirt ^ith him. No sooner said than the lady connected this particular bank clerk with all the operators in the room, and all of them took in the eonversa- tion, including the answers dictated to the boy by hia lady, friends. The uptown m^uh' er exuhed ih hia es^y conquest, and a^pdint-' ed a meeting, saying thajt when thfc jUeatrai office closed he would station him^lLin a certain doorway, lud 'diat.the fair xljlitniel might know that fce was the proper party by the nosegay he would wear in his button- hole. At the appointed time about a dbzeii of the girls proceeded to walk leisurely up street, in groups of three and four. In the stated doorway stood the hero, faultlessly array ei, with kid gloves and cane, and the assthetio bouquet. As the first group ap- proached ' he ran his ' eye pleasantly o\'fer their faces, in search of some token of re- cognition. But they passed him by, laugh- ing in their sleeves. The fame treatment was given by the next group, who could scarcely restrain their laughter at the ex- citement of the elegant young man. As the last group approached his excitement got the better of him, and he stepped iightly forward, bowing and smirking, and said in his most captivating way, "Which one is it? which one is it " Tho twirls mastered the situation sufficiently to repress the faintest shadow of a smile, and coldly stared at him without a word and passed on. When that young man attempts to flirt again, he will be likely to choose some other than a tele- phone operator. â€" Boston Globe. ;R2v. Donald Boss, M.A.; B.D., of L^ LcbiM. has been appointeifto the Facultr^l Gt Jones of Nova Scotia, has had twopjc-^ turea^iep.«443y ^§0 P^ij, 5V»iic«,|^hin.f: L' A. Senecal,' who owns 3.000, shares of Montreal City Piissehger stock, was elected a director, â- abd next nieetln'g -vPill elect him president. At the sixteenth arinual convocation of the New 'Brunswick Masonic Grand Lodge in St. John, Wm. F. Bunting of, St. John.. â- yas etecta^l 9^^ ^SJ^ J jji^ 3 f' I ' ' '-^ • UNITED STATES. Lord Mandevilie has taken a cottage at Newport, R.I., for ^he season, ,;;,..' The *dipkrtmerit of pul-lfc works says the canals will be opened on May 7. The court at Philadelphia ref i;sed to quasli the indictment against Phipps, ;of almshouse notoriety. ' " In a recent conflict between the Indians and Argentipe -troops, the Jatt* had *igh,t-' teen teiSed* ' •• â-  â- â-  A large Island at the moutk of the Atro River, C •lumbia, has disappeared during an earthquake. Costa'Rica has withdrawn from the Cen- tral America,n confederation scheme. This will probabfy kill it. ' Bolivian ^-mpers are furiously attadkiqfi; Government for remitting money f o MonterO to sustaim him in power. Eliza Pinkfton, the famous Lsuisiana wit- ness in the ehctoral controversy of. 1876, has died in gaol at Canton, Miis. ' ' A hundred vessels 'carr5*ing 4,250,000, bushels of grain are waiting at" Chicago Jer the straits of Mackinaw to open. There is a ereat inflax of inimigrants to Oregon and Washington territory. Twenty thousand have arrived since January. In the Taunton, Mass., theatre, in the duel scene of "Romeo and 'Juliet^" Freder- ick Paulding raa a sword into G6cft Datton'fe body. GENERAL. Mat Toronto, tJ^'tedlhe swelli^: by fr« incisions, and by setons, which, were c'»*"i"«f, ***^ " motiths, with tto real beh^fit. Jn Decembe J of that year I was again ^under the care or Di-8. Barhhatrdt anJ' Allen Cameron fpr three months. It continued empf^mg and fiQiflg until'March of 18B4, When, it ina closed over, I attend'ed the Grfiihmar School at Kincardine, but in June had it operated on Geo. Cairns, r o u Robert N. Ball, j "^^^ol Tnjito.es, \\ JohnB. gDW*Jei*et,Jnsp€ctor Cb „«!• â-  D. J. McKinnon, Inspector, hnZr* Robt. Little, Inspector, Acton ol E. Scarlett, Inspector, Cobourg RqbertBaird, Mayor of Kinca?dioe (J â- BeDi. Freer, High rfc: oolteaoher Ki I Dr. Bradley, Bervie, County of Brur*" My Churchwarden. „„...„._ ^. Mr. McNeiU, M. P., WiartoD iJave rejoiced in restoraTjfcnt^}! been possessed of this Wai„ v? In conclusion I beg to ref er^" well- known pa rties^ ^hg perronaUyinthe Various pW -N tangyi school acj labored Yn*"^^ WCf^ i " *â-  tlielr names may s'i!i statement an encouraging mes8ate7 apoore^n^JgdespaiiingmorJ »^^' Tarn, faithfully y^ 1 williamFt?ux Parsonage, ffi^ REFKREXCES. With Von Moltke ia ill. Ex-Prime Minister DncleriJ, of France, ii seriously ill. DiscQur£ging reports coBtinne to '!*« r«. ceived aroAi Z\]iakaid. â-  ' ' • !;•»â-  Two anarchists at Moulins ha\-eb«en sen- tenced to six months each. Signer Campos, Spanish Minister of War, has withdrawn his resignation. Sixteen workmen in a Warsaw h^ve been burned to death. oeveral times, tincture of iodme_f«r jjie JJiijnW. of Lstroying'lM -lie* »•!' ^|aS' WaJ'^K in school section No., Kinoardine; in. Feb, 1865. In about thrte weeks it violently attacked me again, a?d I was advised to go to Dr. P. R. Bhover,. of Stratford, whOi with Dr. Hyde, opened the absceas and a^)- plied iodine freely into the inner walls of the cavity, which destroyed the rotundity of the sac, but producedjno pthpr beneft}l ' iln JaMe, i l^lc. ^i ioJ^ned: agtin mott l. violently, and I was under the care of Dr. S. Secord. of Kincardine, for six montha. From that time until 1873 it was an opeui unsightly sore. I removed ti Virgil, town- ship of Niagara, and taught during 1872, trying to labor, thouc;h under intense Buffering. At Niagara I was so completely worn down that I consulted Dr. Wilson^ who said he could only prpscribe a nouri^-, ing and stimulating diet: in order to meet. the drain on the system. This kept me about, but offered no permanentbenefit. In 1873 I moved to Port Credit Public School, but after eighteen months resigned my charge, afterwards assuming charge of Glen Williams school. County Ualtoo. In May, 1S74, suffering terribly, I again went to Toronto to the same Dr. Aikens that liad treated me in the general hospital in 1803. That summer and fall 1 was greatly afflicted, and suffered fearfully during the winter of -11874-5. The next summer I went to Dr. MuUin, of BramptoE, under great auffering; He treated me very skillfully and kindly, ^vising me precisely as did Dr. Wilson of Niagara. January, 187C, I became he:d master of the Bath school. Daring a nine months' stay at Wark- worth Dr. McRae and Dr. Goldsmith, of th.it village, both operated on me, and also did Dr. Mitchell, while I was attending college at London. After my ordination on the* 18th of June, 1878, I volunteered to take the JJishop's poorest mission, and through pain- ful trial laboured on under the providence of God. I now have three fair'y good churches. Starting from nothing, I have made for myself a pleasant and desirable home. When I came to Wiarton in July 1878, I was again violently attasjsed an^ confined to bed ioi oVer two wiHSksunder ifi cace of Dr. Wig?e,"who incisedi thi!ibape*j ^iodi hy cafe I did mywork until the followi spring, wheb hid" p'ef\nde«' wef* a^^ cessary, and again in Discern ber, ist9, I Went to London and consulted Dr. JMoreiiouge, and afterwards Dr. Woodruff. Although I othcrp on aipplicalion. ijondoi People wishing thf-ir Teeth to look ._ Use "Teaberry" daily-at mo4?J 1 i;.ht; • t' reoilens i â-  It kweet'US the Breath and gums. Enhances the beauty of laugbteraaii(i â€" â€" asE " factory The False Prophet's forces have been re- pulsedin their attack upon Durnee. It is doubtful if Cetewayo will ever again be acknowledged as head of the Zulus. A farmer's son has been found-, beatea t© death outside qf Cavan, Irefttid. ' i Mr. H^moiitmd i«-repwted to teivtf accept- ed the Under Secretaryship for Ireland.^ Earl. Duffe^t.wStt *«i»iis*riit|'^Bt«4igly with the Porte upon the condition of Arme- nia. The French Government has" asked for a orpdit of 5,000,000 franca lor the Tonquin expedition. A Paris dispatch announces that Cazot has been installed as First President of the Court of Cassation. Gladsionfe«4speech in the "Hou^'^f Com- mons on the Affirmation Bill was an elo- quent oration. •♦-♦- OsE of the funniest, most aggravating typographical errors on record has just pro- duced a hurricane, accompanied by thunder and lightning, in the office of the Lynch- burg Virginian. Its editor, on glancing over a powerful leader at the breakfast table on Thursday morning last, was astoa- ished to find that he was made to say that the farmers would forget their "pantry and nursery " in the excitement of poHtic?. The manuscript read "poverty and misery." Id illustration of Lady Florence Dixie's odditios. a London correspondent of the Philadelphia Telegraph relates the follow- ing:â€"' ' Right opposite- ' The Fishery,' where Sir Beaumont Dixie resides, is the country residence of Lord Sandys, and the lawn of the latter stretches clear down to the wa- ter's edge. SomQ time ago LordoSap(Ws gave a dinner TpaJetf.'iak- *l*rei*»ine dinner Lofd Js^sf wIAwS hisTrieud^ (through.-saftAfeaJity^^totoe), wasl enjoying* breath tfn^^jdr fan the lawn in the gloaming, when a £o«Bd "of Bplaskine drew t|eur attention tomwd the jiyer, g anothec«tttefen^cbippiDg figora .emeneei (rom the water^ The naiadtumed oiii to W lAdyFlOTenfr^ whoh^gwnmabroa from The Fishery m a bathmg gown, and sent her maid around the bridge with clothes." wnat Kept HUn Oatslde. A colored man was hanging around one of the opera hDuses the other evening in a man- cer to show that he was deeply interested in SyTiiriiL" """ ^-' "'^^ CiSlh^bi'uy^o^u^efnMSea^'^^^-^ parquet circle." " Yes, sah, I knows all 'bout that, sah " was thercply. "Underdo Cibil Ri^ht' biU I ken take any seat in de house, but under looaldn'fr^ny two shingle, if hâ„¢l ^era houses W «Uni' fo^-fn cehtTapTece! ^:S^1 '^m A Farmer Speaks, Mr. Austin Jay, CopenhageD, Out. i he was so afHicted with Liver complant4 he was about to give up v.ork. The gist at Almer induced him to try Zofe with such good results that after usinfti bottles he was able to resume work as Lid Sayshft got relief fnim th*: first dose, is satisfied there is no better Liver rem in existepce. He gladly allows U5 to j n existence. t the seat m the her msf^f^ V St. Jacobs Oil gave ralief And the pain was so brief. He got up and said " I should smUe Its action did rimply surprise her. .^u. wie remedy, s WhenonoeieHRtwii fa inrt!iiWiiiijL.^»v,,t^^ H a^UH nation.,ttaT«opie a»led^^*L,i^^,;.«pdIW^Sro corduig to tEe precepla ^r^^tflr^^J '^fta*»ifet** ^r^mgtothe precepl. ^d'tao^^^ti;^: had to -J** 'sfery; ^fd'^tBat wiibt*-, fMW under' 6o4iS!«J» srfffArihg; '-Thd aWscesrS-* sumed a cancerous appearance. I assisted the Bishop in March of 1 s79 at St. James' church, Westminster, at which time mj- neck wa^ completely covered with a white cloth. I am rejoiced to say that I no longer need to cover my neck to hide my affliction, and fear no recurrence of the same. Dr. Wiele, of Wiartoa operated on me in May, 1880, and again in December cf that year. I then went to L«id9n, aa^d pp ny return I was again attacked more violently than ever. I was almost on the verge of despair, having been treated by the best medical skill the country contained as the many eminent names previously mentioned will show. When I had exhausted the skilful resources ol the regular profession, I then resorted to nearly all the patent medicines that pro- mised to cure scrofulona.andftilood diseases, but without any Cenefit whatever. When in an almost helpless condition 1 Hried Burdock Blood Bitters, I. took it for about four monliia, and in that letigth^of tiide used several bottles internally, and having faith in itg common-sense-like rational promises, and believing that if it was a good alterative blood-purifying medicine that would act upon the glandular system when taken internally.why,! reasoned, would it not. by the power of absorption, eioite the glandular, system and the setretions to a healthy action by direct ^plication out- wardly, through the medium of the skin and thus exert a double ciirative inflaenc^ I applied it freely externally with thj most astonishing and {ratifying results. Be- lieving I had mide a singular and valuable discovery, I persevered in my efforts, and they to my great joy were crowned with raccess and for the first time for years I ?? u h*°, dispense with surgical aid, which I firmly believe, I shall never requiri again for the same disease. More than two years have elapsed shice I have had any attack of the disease, and I feel as well and safe now as if it had never affected me whichaf ter more than twenty-tbree' years of terrible suffering seema alwostlilf rmir. acle to relate. I have tried Burdock Blood Bitters for one of my ohil(6ren, who wMaffliQted\?ith^ob. wrertsd withBoref, BMr part^oUy smooth dean; also my sertltori^ttdtorBwan. ed neck, and t«»f otb«^ eifflSTSi? Sh ^t T !?2iJ°«A?oVitl» in ite W fhatit^cifr«*d^ Mr. Edward Atkinson, illustratin' i| advantages of machinery, say that it i require 1G,000,0C0 persons, using the â- ^il ning-wheel and hand-loom of less tki| century ago, to make the cotton clothn by our people, which is now minufiotii Iw 160,000. •:.The report for the past year cf I Society for the Preservation of tk I language states that at the comm-ncenieitifl the present century probably not more ttel 400 persons could read and write Irittl whereae this society alone had disposeii « i. oyer -fli, 000 elementary Irish boob. IikI •publications continue so be in great deii!fl4| The number of persons in Ireland who! the old languace is nearly 030,000, *? nearly 818,000 in 1S71, although thepop3 tion has during that period dimiaisheii round numbers, by 2.')-2,000 porsocs. as pointed out, is nearly (qual to*^'*! ber of Welsh people spcikiog Wehh, "Jy only,-" -iJ^-is -obwrved, " has"f*iiister»| creased its number of Irish speaking intatf tants, but Dubli i has made a coasideriimj advance in this respect, partly fiulfilhas"' old Irish prophecy. ' "Vegetinel I Am Now I sing ir Freely in ^l I'ractice. "FACTSTELLTHEST ' 5 B.^i.TiMOur. :ilil., Ji"'"*! "Sft. H. \\. Stevens; „„^iAl â- Heretofore I have brcn ?trongl.v op?"-^^, all proprietary medicines, but. «suieri ^, ception to most rules, I feel tbat mj pm^ against patent medicines has naa J ^^j shock in the case of your '•"ktine »" been compelled to give way before taesp or evidence of facts. About two yew;=»j,. was induced togivea fairtrialotyo^'ft|jsl aaa detergent in some «""""""'*,;^aed«M oases of hereditary transmission.attenu â-  swelling of the lymphatic f?'a°d'Sti«^l carious ulcerations of bones, and cans" r^ji â-  Byphilitic taint, c.. and in j ustice,! teeii be derelict to duty did I cot tesuty " "J,,*!! value of your Vegetine. » I it ^.""Ufin the » I have found it an admirable adjuncw^i moval of the above constitutional awi" j ^i I am now using it freely in my PJ»'" nd»*» aware that lam rendering ws-scn a^^tijso* the chargeof unprofessional conduciui^, raging the rvdes of medical ethics, in w sS^Sfed e««ii Medicine. This is simP^' Facts teU the story, and I ^Sf^.^^M Vegetine Is a valuable adjunct to our ^^ Nedica. If this testimony to its t«u* re bottle,- 1 shall feel that J t»v one more i some Door sufTerer a Samaritan Yours verytruly, JAKVIS R. benefit. WILCOX» TIfE CAXCEU MKDjJl'S^g Mr. I) -?# 1"^:^ :M\fi^» Newmarket, Ont., i--- jj cow- 1 ' H. R. Stevens-Dear Sir. in'» CO** 1 ty Uiat I have use4 your ^.|2e '°e Mod j^, andron cheerfully say it did mo^ J^jjeT t.h* Hn/.fr.,.'o marliAinPS or any PtDB' -â-  the doctor's medicines or any Q uc. ^^ uaed. and I would reoommwid jtw ^^ teomWed with CVnccr or Can^^gu Y .Yours truly. THOS. 'â- 'TLye i»i« llheMlw certify that I know the » J ^kn?wthisata^em|itt^bet^e^.p^| MT '•."l â- ' .:; la THE BEST- SPBINGHEB] Yegetino is Sold By lU Di^l acm ^ted States naval for tion, has been orde .((lereoDal siafi to.M bnauoh of the Czar, kgent Wilcox, at Sai fobs to Washington 1 1 1^ better in the a slndisflB axe return ir. McCallum, Depi 'and John F. ^Ad 'Mountain^ Mi f Secretary of the Ii ttheTurtla.;^iIgp|a pians are Stifvliff" ' JA^iF. BaUeli- -Jtto^c^. Ib^tu rfac8bn,'ind a Me: ted in Sonora by th M the mountains. Kn murdered. Pro: ir,firiffin,, cashier l^'hks arrived at St. capture of Prof. â-º saw the Professor on their way to tl l^ir route the' i place where they Trrt â€" 1

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