Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 24 Apr 1890, p. 7

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

 RUTH. 'otrie, g- another Portioci" luck et«- jjlte I iant ' r- soul, ' escaped ten,JJ '^^o^ what's ;(«r. ' "" ite •^^t memories.^ ^^' "is quarrel Tf^ locked up "f e friendships ^«ne wonuni., "'^e^ty dressed y lovable ;,oman (U.p and that •hip 13 but Uttle " c'lier. innocence, ~i)j the principal It to interest- ore painful than St kinds of argn- gowl substitute le best that has e men more eon- Lod:e. wo pieventives remorse.â€" i/i- careful of their ten injure them ard. )ut youth is so Amene Hmu- ihed, bytherob- statute, but the DuHos. me. i of clay thy breath n-ay (1 in death " speaks, •istian dies breaks, tive flies. below, dom blest, F woe •est "â€" sing, in high, "g ky. ar dust, the skies, 'ise ipet calls â€" e of clay JNTGOMEBT. ;ion. fast weddinj it was a good )le before hiin lemnly, "yon rtantstep in e," answered irou're taking, plied Mary;, better wait ence, 'chim- eeing his f** I more cheer- lid and import- happy tto*' each other. x)th replied, that yo«n»g ,whe intn^ age to tuDW !t. hasthe«»? heWord«Bd was* tinge mceiB*^ vwrit** circ for •*• ssss OF THE PAE HOETH. ,imz TUms* fo"»^ *â- * '»« WUd» of plttt»" g^„isl, Columbia. e are a fc"" '^rv curious things about ?7j! Columbia rivers. Everybody knows ""â- 'thev do"' in ^^i^ -v^Tong direction while '•" revo""" For instance, the Peace and 'j^^^^rsist "in going to the Arctic Ocean, ^f .:J^c' ff the Rocky Mountains and the jT^ of nature while the Columbia, Fraser, only consent to travel sea- I jjter i-'fii'ig ill *^'^s opposite direction ^^e bumireils ol' miles. But they also have ' peculiiii- ways of making ice, quite op- ^7 J^ to thut luid d'Avn in the text books. f*!|,e Skeena I iiave observed the the rive ice m .rnin to torni m tiie river bed among the V I'lers i» g"il'ules, like a mass of fish '"' v.iu -iften. grovs-ing until the reef a-*Tir â-  lef.-ht t-auViei--:"-- the siirface btit more often li"tiii^ aw.iy in large jjieces and floats off ;;^^jr!Lam. bearing pebbles and €»-en â- ifiul'.lfrs l"r i""^^ iiiile:?. I have seen the .if^rin Dfceinber entirely covered with this WjD'I i'-»-' '•b'iit, the globules being the size 'peaiSU'i cohei-iug like loose snow. "iTiei-e are r.ir.ny natural bridges on the -vers ?-'-*f' " " Kicking Horse, three !,jle5 belfw Field station, there is a rock v^rj.l.fe. in a *l"te formation, vv-hich is inclin- I'i 50 as to pi-esent sharp cages, very un- jl^asant to walk ttpon. Every observant i-eni-'or on the Caua:lian Pacitic Railroad (as noticed the. snow bridge on the Illecil- pviaet. but there are records of ice bridges j^o. I think I h:ive heard of one on the H.j.-iwth'.-o Kiver.. Vml of the Siickeen a niar- ivHdus .story is told. There i.5 a great gla- ier iu-*endiiig out of the high snowfield to •iie niirtli. and this in ancient times flowed -iL'ht :ic„ro.ss the valley, meeting a lesser ice jireaiii from the lieights opposite. The -tickftu rill wed under the ice in a tunnel, and at very low water the passage was too -T.all i-"r it, although the water must have i.een banked up into a lake at the spring freshet. Xow. the Si'jane Indians of the upper val- !tv r.sed to regard this tunnel in the ice as l-Ading to the •â-  sweet by and by." They '.vere therefore very anxious to avoid the place. IJiit or.ee the tribe was encamped not far ilidvethe glacier, and there was a very old ;iian and his wife with them who were too inean to die because of the expense of giving a funeral feast. They were very rich and of i;i. use, and iiad large appetites, and their relatives at last consenteil to part with them. Tilt y were therefore set adrift in a leaky i-anoe and e;insigned to the current, and all the jieo])li' rouseious of self-sacrifice, stood III! the bunk and watched the canoe vanish into the tuiiuel. and felt good. Xow, the â-  il.l peojde Were very frightened and squealed ,1 i:iio(l derd. but wlien the blue shadows of tlie iee elo,ed over them they thought they were ul Iii'lians. and liehaved accordinglj' jj'es' n'.Iy t'oe old lady thought it was getting IiL'iit. And became curious and looked about iitr. Tiitn she kiciced the olel man and a.-ke.I if he didn"t wi:h they Avere at the feast. He looked up anel found the the open again, the glacier as ;u!:e:-.i â- ;.!,oi- (.ut â- eiiin.l til' 111 •Ul and tlie world prettv much diore. cttt paddles and to go home a;ain. The ".â- ual. 1 hey got a: ]• â- les. a'.id prepared I'ld iiuai liegan to be hungry for the grease am! berries, and tliey botli determined to .•;l !ei;:ie fur ihe l!a;i|v.et, since they had as- -i-ted ai I lie funeral. Well, by dint of mak- d Lilly wfu'k. v.-hile he steered and ivc '.:••',. I advice, they succeeded in making ,( i' v.;iy u]) throiigli the tunnel and home, :e in ample time for the feast. In !.i y r.veil happily ever afterward. But â- liail v.e cumldle with the relatives, sweetest and most pious traditions een liattfcred alxjiit the sweet by and .:.'i w i.iet t! il'iW w!ii.~.' iiail ' l.V; X '.iie of these salt water cataracts are as maeh as twelve feet high. There ia a miniatare ex- ample at the George, near this city. On the Yukon River the upper waters are rendered quite clear by the deposit of all their sQt in a chain of lakes, but lower down a stream called White River enters fro.n the south, so charged with glacier mad that the Yukon from thence to the sea is too dirty for even the bottom of a cupful to be distin- guished. GrayUngs rise readily to the fly above no fishing without nets is possible be- low. Moreover, where the great river cros- ses the Arctic circle the tributaries from the tundra lands are like rivers of tea, so deep is the stain of vegetable matter from the moss swamps of the far north. Keatness in Dress. The most perfect neatness in dress is that of the demure Quakeress or the gentle Sister of Charity. They have made the cleanli- ness, next to godliness, possess a certain coquetry that is as attractive as it is quiet. The most beautiful dress in the world be- comes, when out of order, unbeautiful. And the finest lace in a ragged condition is on a par with the commonest of cottons that is whole. Neatness is one of the leading feminine virtues, and an untidy girl need never expect to be treated ^rith as much consideration as is she who is always just right. Dress undoubtedly has ;a great influence on the mind, and as the poor little Russian girl wrote in her diary "I cannot understand how a woman who goes abor.t with her hair in papers, cold cream on lu r face and a dirty gown can expect to keep her husband," so it may be taken for grant- ed that the girl whose skirt is torn, whose unmended bodice is hidden under, a fancy wrap, whose bonnet is just pinned together and whose ripped gloves are hidden in the muff, can never be quite right at heart. She is a deception in one way and she is very apt to become one in another. It only takes a minute to sew on the loose braid, not all of" an hour to mend the bodice, a half an hour to brush the American soil from the skirt, a little time to sew up the gloves and behold a feeling of security comes over your lx)dy and extends itself to your manners. Xo woman can be at her ease mentally whose clothes have reached the rag-tag and bobtail condition. And no woman can wear dirty finery and be self-respecting. Better a thousand times just have the one neat dress, wear it cay in and day out, know that it is brushed and in good order and be happy. If I were a man I would pick out â- for my wife the woman who imderstood the value of personal neatness, which is personal sweetness. " En Eoute for the Guillotine. A never-ending procession of victims pass- ed do^vn the Rue St. Honore to the place de la Revolution â€" ci derant Place Louis XV. â€" where the principal guillotine had been erected. There were gu lotines, however, in several other parts of the city, and it was no uncommon matter for a person going out shopping in the morning to meet with three or four processions of tmhappy beings pro- ceeding to execution. A well-organized i band of furies usually accompanied them. I shouting and howling insults and cries of I "Death 1" Early in 1704 protests were made by residents along the lines of route I to the unillotincs th A Modest, SensitiTe Wbmaa often shrinks from consulting a physician about functional derangement, and prefers to suffer in silence. This may be amistaken feeling, but it is one which islargely preva- lent. To all such women we wotSd say that 'â-  one of the most skillful physicians of the day, who has had a vast experience in curing diseases peculiar to women, has prepared a j remedy which is of inestimable aid to them. I We refer toDr.Pierce'sFavoritePrescription. j This is the only remedy for women's peculiar i weaknesses and ailments, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manu-' I facturers, that it will give satisfaction in ' every case or money refimded. See guar- antee printed on bottle'wrapper. It takes a Derrick to raise a laush in Oil City. Don't hawk, hawk, blow, spit, and disgust everybody with your offensive breath, but use Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy and end it. One lialf the world doesn't know how the other half lives, and it doesn't care particu- larly. With groans and sighs, and dizzied eyes. He seeks the couch and do'wn he lies Nausea and faintness in him rise, Brow-racking pains assail him. Sick headache But ere long comes ease. His stomach settles into peace. Within his head the throbbings cease â€" Pierce's Pellets never fail him Nor will they fail anyone in such a dire predicament. To the dyspeptic, the bilious, and the constipated, they are alike "a friend in need and a friend indeed. " Collars in Queen Elizabeth's time were ruff on the neck. We notice our friends, the Steele Bros. Co., Toronto, are offering choice English hea-vy two-rowed barley, (Canadian gro'wn), at $1 per bushel free on cars, Toronto bags for same 20 cts each. This is an opportun- ity for all enterprising farmers to procure a aupply from these reliable seedsmen. New oats, new wheats, new potatoes, new plants and bulbs, are offered in their 1890 cata- logue. It is the largest, the handsomest, and fullest in matter and illustrations of any we have yet seen. Canadians should be proud of a firm of such enterprise, energy, and high standing. The Catalogue is priced at 20 cts. which may be deducted from the first order sent in or they will send one lb. of Banner Oats by mail prepaid, or five packets of vegetable or flower seeds, and the Catalogue included, for a remittance of 25 cts. It will. pay every amateur gardener, florist and farmer, to send for it. Court ill- banc â€" sparking a female tel- ler. C. B. U. â€" Mr. Thos. Bengough, founelerof the Canadian Business University aud Short- hand Institute, Public Librarj^ Building, Toronto, has associated with him Mr. W. A. Warriner, of Jamestown, N. Y., who will take charge of the Commercial department, as teacher. He is one of the most original teachers in America. !Mr. Brooks has no further connection with the btisiness, to which Mr. Bengough gives his personal at- tention as manager. There is no such thing as a really happy selfish man. Man was not made to live for himself alone, and if he try he finds himself out of his native element. There is no higher FRONTO CUTTING SCHOOU Sdentaflc ajid renaUe systems taugrht, wherebv itylisbj perfect-fittihg garments are produced. Send for circular. S. CORRIGAN, Prop., 4 Adelaide St West, RI7 ^*^^^Pii2?, Banking, Penmanship, UIA. bhorthand, Typwriting.etc., at Canadian Busme^ University Shorthand Institute, Pubhc Labrarj- Bldg. Toronta Circulars free. Thos. Bengoug h. I'.Iai ager. F Flintâ€" I'»""'^='»P'^t' Strongestand Best fcnut Fence for Farm, Garden, Orchard or town lots. Prices from 45c. per rod (IGift.) Send for price list. Toronto Ptekrt Wire Fence Co., SSI Klvcr Street, Toronto. S10.00|ML^ •otiiHBaBdwabMt AfBdf T.IL auufWu n Borrowers MflNKY ^^"^^ loans and church loans at ve .BLU11J3X low rates, and smaller sums at Si, 6i per cent according to security. i3srvEsa?o:RS Toronto busificss and house property yielding 7, 8 and 10 per cent, to investors and 100 per c. to SPECULATORS. J. Latimer Kerr. Grknviuje P. Kleisbb. 4 Ktnc street Kwtst, Toronto. SucoesBOTs to A. E. Mutklkr Co. Offioa established 1879, by Mr. S. H. Janes. Increase in population Toronto 1889 over 1888 (assessors' returns) 80,380. i-i m ;il ENGRAILING '^â- jlL.JONES. ,, ' Ill'ustrativcXv-WOOD-ENGRAVER, .•PURPQSES.r'^^'.TQRCWXOrCANADA R^^nfT pniHTiNG ?K2SLC.FELL*C~oJ3VlClOI()A^f0R0NTO STONEMASONS WANTED (Both Cutters and Builders) in Toronto at Xew Biological Buildings, also at New Parliament Builaings, Queen's Park. Wages 32^. per hour. Apply, JOSEPH YORKE, " Jarvis St. Wharf, Toronto. .•It ' ' r 1 1164 4VEEN STREET E.4ST. Please mention this paper. Address WSALET, BOVCE A CO., 158 Tonge Street, Toronto. Send for Catalogue. THE ALBERT TOriET SOAP COY'.^ as the largest sa r of any Toile^ Soap in the cour ry on account of ca uni« formly ex allent, delicate and frai^r* rant guaJit iea. eiTTING MACHmE Send for Illustrated Catalogue J and this advertisenient'with your iorder forourXew i^T.tSRlBIiEU and we will allow \ou $10 PEEMIUM DISOOimT j Address a lOreelmaii BrGS.,"M'fgrs, CEORGETOM-.V. OAT. RECORD KEEP llNtHIS !iat sen.sun-e persons were st,:!^ of Hfe than to live to do good,â€" [Rev, beginning to avoid those streets, and that j_ g Stebbins. this did great harm to their coirimeree. They therefore petitioned that the rotites should be at least occasionally changed. Later on another request was made to tlie National Assembly concerning the nnhealt'ny condition of the Place de la Revolr.tion, literally steeped in blood, which emitted a horrible and dangerous stench. Strange, however, as it may seem, many of these exectitions, notably those of impor- tant personages, were attended by great numbers of apparently respectable perjple, and the Moniteur contaiiied many adver- tisements to the effect that "So-and-so hires out chairs to witness the guillotining glasses. Duval is shocked when he records that during the massacres of September "on ilansait en banlieue." In fact, the gay and volatile nature of the Parisians could not be wholly suppressed, and some by no means badlynntentioned people made a sort of fete of the tragic eveiKs which were per- petuallj- occurring. â€" The Saturday jReuitu: I'-isi auior.g tlie natural wonders of it i-; McKen/.ic Passa^'e, a little to till V, !.â- â- , ward (if Kingcome Inlet. It is a ' ii.is!!! ;ii.iiut si.\ miles in length, 'leading to ilii- has(.' of ;ui i.Siilated and broken peak, .i-.tK)." it(.-t higli. Tlie v.'alls are vei'y close '"gcthiT. Vertical anl snow crowned. The .-i;ii r.cver shines in this awful, gorge the v.ijBir frou! its witters hangs dark and bitter ii'ld. r.uinovcd by any wind, and no living I'lin^-iuteis its, .solitude. I find but two re- rrvrds ft. this place having been visited by vii!ti- men. â- ^liircely le.-s wonderful is an inlet tribut- ;;iy tn Diuiit^ Canal, and the scene of one of t!ir must important events in Canadian il;^t'•Iy. It is thus described by Vancouver: '"Tin width t)f the channel did not any- wiif; t- excecil three-quarters -of a mile its .^'lOics were Iwiunded by precipices much :niiM- perpendicular than any we had yet â- -cti! (luring this excursion and from the "-iiuiits of t!ie mountains that overlooked it. pariicularly on its northeastern shore, tin !â-  fell several large cascades. These /u If extremely grand and by much the Uiirtst and most tremendous of any we had cvit livlield." In conclusion of along des- Jivipii;!-.' he named the place Cascade Chan- '-l. Tv.-.i uinntlis afterward arrived there the :.'ii atcst of Canadian explorers, having been t:;e tir^t man to cross- North America. Much thviatcneil by a large body of Indians, hefor- tititil himself on a rock for the night, and the next day mixed some vermillion and US' ',se and painted on the enormous moim- t iii wall the foUov.-ing words "Alexander M Kenzie. from Canada, by land, the twen- t\ •eecnd of Jtily. one thousand seven hun- 'ire.l anil ninety -three."' And in his record tiie explorer says that as he stood on the ii'.ks a native spoke to. him of Vancouver. â- ".At siime distance from the land a channel "I'lned to ns. at southwest by west, and, l"'itit;ni.' that way, he made me understand ti".t Maculxih came there with his large Calir.e."" La T'erouse, the great French explorer, '.r.crcd Lituya bay under the shadow of the t. Elias alps, and said: "I suppose that ti.is is t'p.e most wonderful place in all the wi.ihl." This bav, entered by a very nar- row aperture, was shaped like the letter T, j ^^^^'j;;^;;^ ^^^^.^^^ â-  'â- '.(-â-  iie;;il o* wiiicn was a fathomless abyss, ' sttrrounded Viy mountains of from two to tiitie miles of vertical height. Glaciers broke off the summits of its walls, forming ^u^h ej^^^ces, and did not faU to put them an Ky cornice from which ponderous masses ^^^^^^^ ^j^g ^^^^^^ gj^e of their account with ic!l at tunes into the sea with a crash, that j^^^.^^ j,^^ ^j^j^ ^^^^^^ ^^^j^ j^^^ ^^ ^^^^ Ksoi-u.led more heavily than the loudest fueling, and would have been genuinely snr- ui-andcr. fne tides surging out of thi» .^^^^ j^^ ^^^^ thought that he had done oausc an overta,!!, and a party of officers thing worthy of admh^tion. Hiswretch- hemg out mainly on pleasure, one of the ^^^^^ 1overty-stricken surroundings were boats wa.s caught m this and overwhehned, • ^^ j^.^ a^rfectly indifferent accident of this with the loss of all hands. nuickly-iwssing life, and counted as nothing. .^ome of these tide sluices are vep; danger-. ^^j^J[t;^^^^ heart's desire and was ous, and many lives have been ost m, them. I waiting for death.â€" r«wpfe5or. -^ great puzzle they were to early travellers, """ " Wi ' » who found cataracts of sea water pouring I n 4.\.- x i, t *♦; into manv of the inlets. They are explained ' It is an exoeUent thin« to diew Tntti I'v the existence behind them of large basins Frutti Gmn after the me^ ^d «»du^e fiUed bv the flood tide, the outlets being too secretion of niore saUva. Sold by aU l^g- small for its ready escape at the ebb. Some gists and Confectioners, 5 cents. AU Men, young, old, or middle-aged, who find them- selves nervous, weak and exhfiusted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, I resulting in many of the following symp- toms ilental depression, premature old age, loss of vitality, loss of memory, bad dreams, dimness of sight, palpitation of the heart, emissions, lack of energy, pain in the kidneys, headache, pimples on the face or body, itching or peculiar sensation about the scrotum, wasting of the organ?, dizziness, specks before the eyes, twitching o: the muscles, eye lids and elsewhere, bashfuliiess, DR. NICHOLS' -: FOOD OF HEALTH :- For C'hlidrcu astd Adalts. Invaluable for Indij^estlon and ConstipatiOR. FRANKS CO.. London. Encland, Proprietors MoxTRE.\L Office, 17 St. John Street. Dr. T. R. Aliin-^on. L.R.C.!^. LoRf'.on. -avs:â€" "1 like Dr. Nichols 'Food of Health' very ihr.ch and find it of great dietetic yahie in iiiiiay dis- eases As ii breakfast dish I prefer it to oat- meal. For the rej^ulation of the bowels it can- not be surpassed." Send for siimple FREE. THE CO^fBOT CARRIAGE TOPS ASE THE BEST KNOWN Their incre»,sing popularity is a proof of thieiz superiority. Be sure and get a Conboy top on your buggy. POHD'SlMET at I WE WOtWER OF HEALING! 5imE3 OAT/iHEH. HHST7MATIS1I, ITEIT- RALaiA,S0S3 THS3A?.?ILSS, WOUNDS, BUEilS, FEMALS CC25PLAI1ITS, AND HBMOBEHAGEI 0? ALL ZINDS. Vssd Internal';; Externc.ri' iVfce»50c.$l41,r PCNS'SSZTSACT CO. NowTorkLondfln STANDARD CHOPPING M1LI.S» USES8ESTFRENCHBURR MILlSISNfcS of, say, Louis XVI, or Mme. Roland, or in- deposits in the urine, loss of will jiower, deed of any conspicuous person, at so much tenderness of the scalp and spine, weak and an hour. " A contemporary engraving rep- flabby muscles, desire to sleep, failure to be resenting the execution of Louis XVI- rested by sleep, constipation, dtiUness of shows us- a crowd of well-dressed people, 1 hearing, loss of voice, desire for solitude, ex- comfortably seated in their chairs, placed i citability of temper, sunken ej-es surround- on a high and well-built wooden stand, ed with leaden cikcle, oily looking skin, and not a few of them are using their opera etc. are all symptoms of neivoiis debility How to Die. I was in Oudh at the time when a very rich Hindu â€" brother tothe famous Prime Minister of Xepaul, Sir Jung Bahadur â€" ariived in a dying state at the sacred city of Ajudhia. Though stricken with mortal sickness, he had made the long and painful journey from Ne- paul in order to die in the holy city that gave Rama birth, and which is to the Hindu what Mecca is to the Moslems, and far more than Jerusalem is to Christians. On hearing of his arrival the English magistrate at Fyza- bad went to see him, the day before his death, as it provtd to be. He found the Rajah lying on a low wooden bedstead, such as is used by the poorest natives, in a bare, mud- p'.astered little room, ha\'ing neither window nor a single article of furniture except the bedstead in it, and with his silver dishes and drinking vessels spread about on the mud floor. To English eyes it seemed truly a strange and comfortless deathbed, but such a view of it would not have struck any of the Hindus present the dying man, they would have said, had all he -needed, and God was gracious to have let him live till his journey was accomplished. I know of no Western parallel to this scene. Princes and nobles in the Middle Ages have voluntary privation, and courted physical pain bj- way of an expiatory or at least meritorious act, but we know that they were keenly alive to the full merit of that lead to insanity and death unless cured, i The spring or vital force having lost its tension every function wanes in consequence Those who through abuse committed in ignorance may be permanently cured. Send your address for book on all dieases peculair to man. Address M. V. LUBOX, 50 Front St. E. Toronto, On. Books sent free sealed. Heart disease, the sjinptoms of which are faint spells, purple lips, numbness, palpitation, skip beats, hot flashes, rush of blood to the head, dull pain in the heart withbeats strong, rapid and irregular, the second heart beat quicker- than the first, pain about the breast bone, etc. can positively be cured. No cure, no pay. Send for book. Address M. V. LUBON, 50 Front Street East, Toronto. Ont. A. P. 4f)8. I took Cold, I took Sick, I TOOK SCOTTS EMULSION RESULT: I take My Meals, I take My Rest, AND I AM VIGOROUS ENOUGH TO T.\KE ANYTHING I CAN LAY MY HANDS ON; fctting Tat too, for Scott's mulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil and HypophosphitesofLimeand Soda NOT only cured MY IllClp- ieiit Consumption but built ME UP, AND IS now TUTTING TLESH ON MY BONES AT TIIE RATE OF .A POUND A DAY. I TAKE IT JUST AS E.iSILYASIDO MILK." Rmtt's Emulsion Is put up only in Salmon c-lor xrrappers. Sold by all Druggists at 50c. and SI .00. SCOTT d- BOWNE, BelleviUe. â- â- â- TaDC* mCC lOOD aDioIntelrlKe to nnnanaa Wilrat* riCt. evgoods. Wittaamllwoonftand. o canadtan Wateh Co., Toronto, Can. CANCER •Ml TOMOR SpedaBM. n«t|ilt»l. No kniCg. Ba#k Crao. a H. MClIICaABL, H. D.. Ifo.3ia(gvaSt.. BiiaUo,K.Y. Sever Fciliog St. Leon Up to three years ago Dyspepsia, that horrible sensation, -WTetched pain and choking. The very thoughts chill me. A friend got cured with St. Leon urged me to drink. I did. The choking lumps got softer and softer. I was cured and remain in the best of health. St. Leon Water will cure when all other mixtures fail. George G. Wilson, Victoria Square, Montreal %P: EW-C'-RpaiiTFOPn ' .HOUSANDS OF BOTTUb QiVEN AWAY YEARLY. Wheu I say Cure I do not aea4 merpJy to stoD them for a time, andtbea have them retnra agr^Q. I MEAN A RABICAI. CURE, I have made the disease Of nta» Epilop«y oo* l-alling: Sickness a life-long: study, I vtfarrstn^ my remedy to OwrOtha worst cases. Eecause others have failed is no reason for not now receivinjr* sore. SaoaaS once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of ay Infairijaia Remedy* I CURE FITS! utV8 Post Office, it costs you nothing for a trial, -uid it will cure you. Address t- M.C., Brameh OCAce, 186 rWEST ADELAinC STREET, TOSONTO. 'A i H 'I â-  t? 1 1 ' ' I TO TUK SDITOB:â€" Plesw iafonn yoor laadan tfaat I ham a poiittfa-iKaedy te- Oo above named disease. By iH timrljinr fhrniiiwdi nf hnpnlOTi raict h«TC bcut pmnmuuiift meJ, I ahall be clad to aend two bottles of my remedy PRCK to any of your ceaSara irito bav cao S^w«w5t7AtfSiijyai£.'TKromtLmm^^ «M»ectfan#.T.ii.tfco«ui% w^

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy