Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 21 Nov 1901, p. 6

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LPre.pa.r,ed from the finest Selected Cocoa; ani distinguished every- where for Delicacy of avour, Superior quality, and highly Nutri- tive properties. Sold in quarter- `poude tins. 1a.be11ed'JAMES EPPS &rUo.,.1..td., Homoeopathic Chem- ists, lpndon, England.` f-BARV.EAKFAS"1` 404:3 stjppmn. ASTHMALENE BRINGS INSTANT RELIEF AND PERMANENT cum: IN ALL ems. THE MOST ~u1'nrr|ous and perhap you needfa new sfove. If you want comfort with. a good re vou should cal and see our ASTHMA CURE FREE! 'i-'"6 ran ya YEARS F ac-Similie of Genuine. SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE ON RECEIPT OF P(')S'1".-`xL. WRITE YOUR. NAME AND ADDRESS PL.-XINLY. W RELIEF. uu.u vvu.u Luv. bun-.u,_... . By and by a passenger engineer named Frazer came to live at the I:Iill. He was `a man of 28. good looking. good company and free handed. He knew Jim well. and hesoon got ac- quainted wlth the wife. I threw my- `selt-'in Frazer's way one day and told him what public gossip said and left iteto him whether he shouldn t` stop be- fore` the home was wrecked. He laugh- ed in contempt. When I became indlg-. nant, he became deant. and the result '- was a light in which I battered him up until he was in bed for a week. Old pp Jim was sure to hear of the row, of course. and the day afterit happened he `looked at me in a queer ways as we _-took our `engine out or the stable. I felt sure he was going to speak about }- the ght. but be checked himself after ` e-`toward ortwo. Hebad not only been ' ibld about the scrap. but what had; led jg up to it as well. and there `was only one of two courses for him to take. He tness and let him attend tohis own do- a estic . aairs or take _it for,gr'ante_d `t;l}f!_it.:f;I.{was'.aeting in a friendly spirit` ` some , put upon` his, gnard.e--fo_rg9;vth e .f-31.-; `-9*-Whenthe remained slln i`:.`?_AI' lintv`. sf `%dODted': the yiatterseqi:ie- it p -31..)-:1".-`I".--. *._|.3-A .4... `A pp. `Ayn "5-`[3 53.-xn7nst`_either_ bid me mind my o*i;vn.busl-- SOLD ALL DIRITG-G-ISTS_ .There is nothing like Asdnna-lvne. It I,rin_-,9 mstant relic-f, even in the worst 02159.4. `ix um-. when all else fails `The-Rv. C. F. WELLS, of vnxu r:a.:r,.g 12 says; "Your trial bottle of .\.st}nna1e*m- !'\`L'I`i\' ;n~nnnr` nnvu]:f;.nn ' I 4.n.vnn.O- full I:4.n `Inn #1. .1. m._,... ...... l.l\lll.Il\4 ... -..,........;..., in `gnod condition I cmnxut frll you how th full I feel tor1he goml d-rived from it I \\ slave, chained with putrid sou-11n'0m and 3m for .ten years I despaired oI'<-.\:e1- M-in'.' HI I saw your advenisenuant fm'1h<:- ('1`.H- f dreadful and tornnentxng disensx-, Asthxuu. thought you hz(1overspukm1 \'nul`. -:1`. vs `rm solved to give it a trial To my u.stmi.~hn the trial acted like a cluunx. S:-ml Km-1-. 1-LL`; bottle. AVAJII J unvn, iv n K!` . DFS TAFT Bans. Mi~:n:cn'r:_L`u , . Gentlemen : Your Asrhin:n1mie is an "".'o'x' 1 _1m=dy for Asthnm and nv F vs-r, nnel it -posltion alleviates all trmibie-+ wlxich mm with Asthma. .ltVSl1CC0-SS is aistoiiisliiiig uml derful. `I ' `n ' 1,11,. _, _Y__.. 1 KLUIIILA. . ' _ After having it Cfll`t`fl1UV anally /. d, um : an .<`.::. that Ashnm`.e11e contains no opium. :mn~yhin- . c'~'1oI`0fQI`m or ether. Very truiv _\'m11's, REV. M.OR1HS ' l`:`\,'H.\'1.1".H -mzv. nR.AMo'Rr=ns, WECHSLE `Bu.LbbiofthcCong v.-.11 1.-m-1.- ` ' V .\'Ew Yank, J. n 3, ..-4'. l`.. L r11....._ 11...... ' `\I `treatment. Then sciatica, =_a of my kind ' ~ 'T .in`. J: galley}, _ -bnttwo causes, although the aj;`nfest.. themselves in ve or siy `different forms of rheumatism; Mu: cular rheumatism, in which th muscles in different parts of the bod; are inamed, swollen and painf - joint rheumatism, heart rheumatislilxi and lumbago all have their Origini the blood. This indicates a kidnen weakness, and demands a kidneg n . and shooting pain rheumatisifiulfgsgitg origin in a vitiated condition of the nerves, from a general run-down condition of the blood. In each of tile above forms and for all manifested symptoms ot rheumatism there is no medicine which `offers such a chance for cure as Merrill s System Tonic It is not only a kidne m d ' its blood mirifvincr T)`l'( 1'IP1'$;t.:1E1E.'eA [gilt e0III`l`b\`: ',:alio'Iil3 "l'lllln{!7fIf3h.VInof1';`aeeiitfwltl; a noble _ 5!! '\ie..llv'e thus. "of~vlgos- all compact. 'V '_ our duty, to our fellow men . >",,j__g` I(!.Itl lVlll' rathelito exalt our race ~ ' .\ `v .l'han our poor selves.wlth earnest hand ofen. = We shell erect our names a dwelling place Lwhlch not allages shall cast down -again; A - , Osprlng of Time shall thenhe born en'ch`hour, Which, as of old, earth lovingly shall guard To live forever in youth's perfect flower . - And gulde her future. children hesvenwardf ,, no harder the atrlle. .. --James Russell Lowell. A ` `an, .a. Axuucy u1t:_u1C1I1.ed, btlllt 9" ` ' `f ' ropertxes r1 t e S tt g1)1(1 %?: zggxrliulated uric acid. -lsen too System Tonic is . the greatest tonic, blood, bone and t1sst1e maker known, and will enrich the * d revive the starved blood; fflfgs ilrilaking a cure for your nerve atism from Whatever cause. rheuml hundred ho eless cases have flii been" curecf, and more are being cured every day. Will you try it? or sent six bottles, for $2.30, iarepaid. to any addr;-s<, b th IJERCRILL MEDICAL COMPANY, DRl (i(}l.\l`.\ IJCIL it? " iiach 50c bottle contains 50 pleas. gut-to-`take doses, and is sold `We beg to call your attention to a new and ixldispcl` ' sible article in FDR THE CURE Ur %B'ALK|NG AND KICKING HORSES Will confrol any vice known to a horse. lrI\ -l` able for breaking in colts. Can be ad)uS!_t`0 `-" `.`_ _minutcs..and,used with any harness. \'el1'C1'_`V`_ lplement. _To the progressive fanncr and hor~.~'c'-1-Hr this article is : necessity. Apply fcr smnc m. _\~'W local pom} 0: a_dclress G. T, F1s_HER` Ii l.I....~nn |c I Newtown Robinson. '] .1 A` ` . . 7 _ _MmrnV `h'38`ent fqr the Celebrated 0sh:Lw:1 C lovcr " 5 :2-lv Ai heat cash price paid for Endowment 1f'S"3j 1:107; {ix re`liab)e Companies or money 103"` ` 0}, V ' I .','-:: W n u. LYON. ,, VIUU 59'; U'I`\l'|lVl run --- 'Jv_4I,<$ttl`1'sI.v.o'st _ ".j_-I_ `do'}n_ot know what man or woman }`;ny,.(,;hu;m took into his condence.` but `it--was `someone who kept him thor- gosted. He must have reproved, - e dj{o.nc_1 ocommandeid. but the girl oth`er.oVpnly_d;e11ed. him or slyly ` ';;h-I. I Frazer wasvoless bold: ;'m'ps`, nms: AND cums. "ENDOWMENT INSURANCE .POL|CIE*.'3 AVON Sr_P.Ix(;.sf, N Y., Feb 1, 1901. w%iV9'VA:3: F ARM For: SALE- - -c1,_`_,..8n3C AT ALL DRUG STORES. 67 East 129th st:., New York City 1 1-Iv Brantford. i7onitn1n 21. 1901. FDR TH}: CURE or-` Ontario. albu- _Box 104 ulnlv \\'.L um \ I `L. \ stln M51. vHe- 'LlFE'8 `~qeMPNsai'ruo~s. Ba:-_rie. wecnd othonzht lnerveslot? Steel, Vthat -~`nnd.%hevet?blh;f,` I l we `reached Thomasvlllg .7` tof run or to iABascomb?s 'there?`=~aide. ` trael: for the expressi.fWeg-couldjdo it. `with three or four minutes` to spai'e.._ Bast-om s was not even `a station, but 1 a siding half a_ mile long onthe prairie, and we must do our own switehingi For` three miles beyond "it was. a straight track. and then it went curv- ing and turning among the. hills and over a_ hrawling creek. When wehad come within" a .mile of. the siding,'I looked for J im-to begin to slow up; but . he made no move. Half a minute and he even increased the speed, and when I shouted` in his ear he waved mebaek. ` We passed the siding at `a 'cIip.of 25 miles an hour and gaining an that ev- ery minute, and as I -at last_ grabbed .iim s arm he pulled a revolver from his breast and motioned for me to stand back. '_1`he man had not gone crazy. he had not misunderstood his? orders, but what was he doing in thus passing the siding? In a run of three or four miles we must meet the ex- g press. For a second I thought of at- tacking him with a poker, but he look- _ ed overhis shoulder at me with a grim smile and motioned with his head for` me to jump. Then itvoccurred to me ` that the train had getaway from mm. 5 and I turned and sprang from the cab. It was soft prairie for the tall, but it seemed to me that I turned over and . lover 500 times bei ore*the breath was ' j finally knocked out of my body. When ' my senses returned, I heard the hiss or i ; steam and the shrieks and cries of in- ' is jured men and women, and I had stag- 3 ` gered along the track less than 8; mile when I came upon the frightful wreck. i` 3 The engiiies of the express and freight ' 5 had met head on.`and 52 people had I ` been killed and 70 injured in the awful` i ; smash. It was the most terrible raifJ 3 1 road wreck for a score of years. ! L _I_'I 15--- - _-.__._I_-.'I -...S I L\.l$b\.l 1 .\a\ann ow- Qv vvw .v v- guru-u... I helped to get old J im s crushed and mutilated. body out, and I helped to get out the crushed and -mutilated bodies of his wife and Frazer, but it was days before I got at the true facts inthe case. Finding himself betrayed, [the old man -had del`iberately brought about the collision that he might _have re- venge on the guilty pair and be wiped out at the same time. If he thought of the innocent who would suffer as well, he had no pity. He must have hated the whole world as well as those who had directly wronged `him. It was an awfulthing he did, but he of- fered his own life with the sacrice, and somehow I have always felt that, even though he presented such a cool, calm front to me. the res of insanity must have been blazing in his brain every minute after reading that tele- gram. The American an Octoroon. The average adult. American is a statistical octoroon. If the blood in the "veins of all our people, white and black, were pooled and redistributed, each person would have about seven parts white and one part negro blood. The white strain in him, moreover, is by no means purely American.- White , strains of "foreign origin, derived from 1 Germany, Ireland, Scandinavia, Can"-s ada, Great Britain and the countries! 3 of. southern Europe, are collectively ` * more powerful in his composition than , is the negro strain. - -.. .1. Aug`... .-sun}; nnnvuncnn \ l In ucaw I-II-aauv .4vov~.._ Thus, going back only one genera: tion, we find him to be a composite. the creation of widely differing blood: and nationalities. The peoples of the earth, from the Kongo under the equa- tor to the North cape of Europe, have contributed, either immediately or re- niotely, to his composition. But with -it all we nd the Anglo-Saxon _strain the dominant one. Hislpolitical in- stitutions, his laws. his social condi- tions and his mental characteristics. his powers of initiative and his inde- pendence of thought and action are Anglo-`Saxon, sharpened and intensied by fresh contact with nature `under new and untried conditions. 1 ` , ll - .._.__Ll_.l..4.. LI-log-1 IIU VV uuu L|u\-L I w u u v - a u a u - v u way It is`aist1"ange and a gratifying thing to witness, in connection with this mixture of blood, the complete domi- nance of the Anglo-Saxon strain, and it argues well for its strength 11 vitality" as well as for. the welfare the country which he occupies and governs.-Everybody s Magazine. . -House Ventilation In Bombay. 1 Mostot the new houses in Bombay have a fine show of windows on the ` outside. but no corresponding opening to allow a current of air to pass or through. , The mean annual `temper- ature is 79.13 degrees F., and the mean . relative humidity 77 per cent. The mean annual rangelof temperature is 46.9 degrees, but there are periods dur- lngt-he rains when the diurnal range ` of temperature does not exceed 2 'de-' egress, and, unless there ls .wind.-;ventl- latloh is practically `stopped because the outer air and that in 'the,bulldings are reduced ftonearly one .te_tnperature. .Wlth the-thermometer at 82,to 84 dee` : sree_s. and. theezalrgheuvily chttirse`t;l.w1th =molsture,' e_th_e_: `surplus .. he ]atf" --for ."the human escapes ,to'o* slowly} and. . muc_llf.d1sco!n_f,ortlensues: i 7As` it is `not I V ` `/athewalr` tin `an_"ord1nary . l 4 A 1` 9c:ou;-ge oflhis ~ protesslona_l_ }career,_ and took greaf pride in Ithe; collection. When. ma ` williivas `opened it was found that-he had ordered his collection of teeth -to be placed with him in his coma for _ burial. ,His heirs "fullled his comm_an_d,l and almost thirty thous- and teeth were put into the comn l` with the dead dentist. If some archaeologist of the future century shall happen to open that grave, he will-have food for thought and some diiculty. perhaps, in explain- ing the presence of so many teeth. - \ n:: .;.n it =7tl.iei.7'?:eth which. A a man is measured by.hi_s-so1i- tudes. He who ies all_ moments of isolation is as conscious of guilt as he who avoids all companionshipis palpably morbid. \Use sometimes, says George Herberts, to ` be alone. No ower comes to its full- ness of beauty or sweetness wholly by sunshine or entirely by shade. When thou hast - entered thy closet, _' says our Lord, communion is possible nd revelations will cbme.- The man who is afraid to meet himself is the man for others `too avoid.`--Chicag'o Interior. .\rt_lcial AsphaIYt. One of the chemical papers reports an experiment by which `an articial asphalt was produced, which closely resembles the natural subst-mice. Fresh herring and oily pine wood were distilled_ .in an iron retort ' and the produce was condensed in a Lie- big condenser. The experiment seems to conrm the theory that asplialt and petroleum are the proclv.ii:ts of a natural distillation, by vchicli the "re- mainsof "early forms of nninml `and vegetable life have been transformed in the heated. crust pf '.h(5 -.::.:I`t.l1, Good Old Things. Certain things are good for nothing until they havepbeen kept for a long while. and some are good for nothing until they have been kept long and used. Of the first wine is the illus-p t1-ions and Immortal example`, Of those that must be kept and used I will name - 1*hree-meerschaum pipes._ violins and. E poems. ' The meerscham is but a poor ; affair until it has burned a thousand ` offerings to the cloud compelling dei- } _-_ -. AC . 11 A ,-LlI M AR L11~'G-In.(}ookstown on Nov. 8th, 1901. . the wife of Thomas A. Marling, of a son. F;BASER-In Essa. on Monday, Nov. 11th to Mr. "and Mrs. Jae. Fraser, 1:. son. ~ SMnH-1n` Midland, on Saturday. Nov. 2. the wife ot George Smith, of a daughter. . .MAR.RIED . IRwIN'-~NOBLE--'In Mulmur. on. Wednee- day, Nov. 13th, by Rev P. N. Jones, Oliver Irwin to Charlotte. youngest daugh- terof the late Archibald Noble, all of nona--to CLU'rz--At Cookstown, on Sunday, Nov. 10. theinfant son and only child of Mr. v and Mrs. C. G. Clute, aged 7 days. R1:YNoLDs--In Teoumaeth, on. Saturday, Nov. 2nd, 1901, Mrs. Thoe. Reynolds, aged 42 years. ZoscnKr:-In Tav, an Saturday, Nov 9th, Eva J.'Zoschke, daughuer of Mr. Henry Zoachke, aged 3 years. ` ,FINNEY--At Victoria Harbor. on Sunday, Nov. 5th, W. Finnev. aged 47 years. oU_L30N-In Midland, on Sunday, Nov. 5th, Geo. _0oul_son, aged 9 months. - 'Doimn'n?-1n Midland, on Sunday, Nov} 5. ` Godfrey Doherty, aged 4 years. KILFOIL--In Toasorontio, .on Sunday, Nov ' 10th, Catherine Kilfoil, aged, 70 years. MQCRAE;-:At Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.. on ,'1`ues'dav. Nov. 12th.. Andrew .:McC`rae,` formerly of A`llis`to_n.', A` Gayl'ord--Glad` 1:1; have met you, old boy. Come up and see me some `time. V ' I -u" s ,1 PL - 4-- 'I__.`ln TL |,,1AII\.. Meeker-T-I decl-.1re- it . too bad! It 'will be impossible" for 1ne to ' come then. I've an engagement .e1se_where. so sorry. ` `ILLS: . Violins. too-the sweet` old Amati!- tbe divine Stradivarius! `Stained. like the meerschaum. through and through 'with_the concentrated hue and sweet- ness .of' all the harmonies which have kindled and faded on its strings. , ,, -1. `I. '_ I_-_L IllAl\lI\-IJ us 5 \..-.- v-- .--v -9-- --a..- 7 Now. 1?11}3u. :1 poem must be kept and used like a meerschaum or violin. 3 A poem is just as porous as the meet- schaum; the more porous it is the bet- ter. ll-mean .to -say that a genuine poem is capable of absorbingan inde-- nite amount of the essence of our own humanity. its tenderness, its heroism, its regrets. its faspirationsfso as to be gradually. stained through with 3 dfvine secondary color derived. from otlrselves.-Oliver Wendell Holmes. ' 0: Two Evils. All those stories the papers are printing about you are -lies, said the polltician s- friend. Why don't you make them stop It?" _,-_n_a n ..__.I2-.'| 4.1.- ..-IlLl..lnn I_ v`v:):1`l:1V.:'w:"ei)`lied the politician, but I m afraid they'd begin printing "W *"ufh rhvn ,.,..s1nf`_9lP_`\`, .` P-'3" a-..... -- .& ...h.u.Iu.. Swonms ON. UPPEITLAKES. A heavy ` gale blowing from the north was raging at `Midland accom- panied by -heavy snow urriea last. week.` Thenstr, Vulcan arrived Thursday with tlio aftorn cabin and .bnlwur.ks` broken rind other vessels _wer6- t'orced_'"to.'_-o seek shelter. V ` i ` Mr. -A. 1 . Robinson, for many year 8` councillor and reeveof Orillia to wnahip, died - suddenly on Monday morning. He had beeuiu Orillia onoSiturday in ` his usual huluh and hid. zzonoomplaiued `of. fooling poorly. Ho~hu_s ne.ve"r`bean_ _quite I well since he wsrthlrown. from l"9Ai`t. 8? enemidiqs-du~s=iu anon ` E,_giwaa -`1ihia``'vTh * T"; is'33=7 VIII: Mulmur. Tjmo for Thought. ;-:-- That .~`mn_e Time. BORN. Barrie is beautifully situated on a picturesque slope, overlooking Kempenfeldt Bgy, an arm of Lake Simcoe, nine miles longand from one to three miles broad. and one of the prettiest bays in Canada la summer. boats pfy daily to and from neighboring . .um.'m.- resorts and parks. The population of Bar rie is 7.ooo. Streets and sidewalks are, first class and _,handsome residences are numerous. "Streets, public buildings and dwellings are lightedwith gas or elec tricitv. ' The waterworks and sewerage systems are very efficient and provide spring water. good drain age and reliable fire protection in every part of the town. Barrie is 'a railwav centre for Central and Northern Ontario. Thirteen passenger trains arrive "and depart daily. The postal, service is all that can be desired; thirteen mails arriverdaily; there is- prompt postal collection and delivery throughout the town. There are eight schools (one Separate). em ` ploying thirty-one teachers; twelve churches, three weekly `newspapers, one commercial college, every clay is market day, machine shops. planing mills, grist mills. saw mills. marble cutters. bicycle works, boat builders. tannery, breweries. ten butcher shops, sever- al first-class hotels with reasonable rates. threeliveries, three laundries. one creamery and all other modern conveniences. tores are numerous and carry ful lines of all kinds of first-class goods.~ competition s keen and prices are as low as in a city. Telegraph and day and night telephone systems connect the town with all` places near and distant. Barrie is fast becoming a favorite resort with summer tourists. NORTHERN ADVANCE"! [WINTER with its cold + Storms is Cominggg 50.cents, _at` an drug awn, q. 2.. Hall `Medicine Go.,_ Kingston, Ont. DECEMBER 5th. BNE PIECE OF SHEET MUSIC EVERY MONTH TO SUBSCRIBERSV - ' OF mam [Subscribe "WE IWCE-"J Drugs and ' Chemicals VANILLA, for ice cream.` for instance; BAKING Powmm, for cakes. 1 One is a. drug. of course ; the other a chemica "; and -Hunrn ire IE1] nthers-SPICES of . u--.--py w----.. v. ._- .___, _--.. The best to get drugsuis at a. DRUG I STOR .. The. ruggist knows more abou_t AL-.. LL-.. ALL`... -..-;-I- |r1othe|(&itc'>hen. i `nae DOSE glue to g al'_u at is unvu e STOR ruggnst moreabout them than other people. ' We keep a. good drug-store Come and~ask.ue `aboI_;\j.,KitchenMDrugs. . . muuKMAu's%nnuG stunt i _ _q._1f>t_1zLo`p.s'rT.BA1m1ET. 5 A \\ ILL BE '1'HI' I\'EX'l` ISSUE OF OUR on and we are are prepare(l to meet V it with a. full line of Seasonable Goods such as Cow Chains, Stall Fixtures,` Horse. ' Blankets, Lanterns, Grain` Scoops, X Cut Sews, Axes and - Handles, ~ and everything for your convenience. Call and `see them ` before purchasing; x8 is drug`. 0: course ; me otner a. "cnenuml ; and there are still others--SPICES of 5:11 kinda. crea_.m of tartar, etc._.. ' i -`s-4. ` THE TOWN or Banana. UD|BmBji Both late of]; Henderson's. 1 Door East of BARBIE Emfrsn, cw-411:. W? i;~Au:~ ARE Ntzmizn EVERY DAY iniig ten` dais treatmc __a_t` all drug stores, or -~- - I"- 'Y:-uaunltun ny PRICES RIIGI-|'.l'. ' I was running on `fast freight as `re-_ man. and myengineer was a man` nam- sedcolville. He was ten years my sen- ' for and also an old bachelor. Jim was -.what everybody called a square man._ He had lots of sentiment for a plain. uneducated man and a c.ons_c'lence so " tender that he wouldn't have knowing-g ly hurt the feelings of an Indian. ` He- .,was a sort of daddy" for 200 miles along the llneand had the esteem oi. emclals and men alike. The idea that Slim would fall In_ love at his age would have been laughed to scorn by all who `knew him. and yet he not only went sott"on a girl. but made the mistake that old bachelors often do. She was a chit named Mary Blaine. only half "his age and a eoquette and a dirt. t We gured it out that there was more sym- pathy than love on his part and that she was marrying him instead of a younger and better looking man be`- cause he had several thousand dollars In the bank and would baby `her up. .1`hey were married on the `quiet one day. and for a few. weeks old Jim's face carried a look -of contentment and `things went well in his little home at (Pine Hill. .uv..~.....~w,_ ?, ,. Dn. TAFT Bnos. Mu1m;iNn Co. . - _ Gentlemen : I 'wm;e=. this testinionial from a sense of duty, having tested t1u- .smmi-1't'u eifect ot y.our As.t11nm1.ne., for the cure of Asthma, My wife has been aiilictmi with . asthma for the past 12 years. Having e_\'hzmsted- my. own skill as well as inziny ntims, chanced to see your Sign upon your windows on 130th street, Nmv York. I at Once uiimimi bottle of Asthmaiene. My wife commenced taking it about the -first of 1\`ovmbsr. I vw` soon noticed-a radical improvement. After using one bottle her asthma has dis:1,>yw.11`o-~i ;n:~ she is entirely free from all symptons. Ivvfeel that I can consistently recommend the XlI('ll'.i|'ii. toai1 who are aiicted with this distressing disease. Yours respectfully, ` PHEi.PS, M D. 'D'n. TAFT MEDICINE Co. V T ' Feb. 5, 1901 ' ". _ gentlemen : I was troubled with Asthma for 22 years. 1 have tried nunxm-mus I`:-nmliv.-. ,.but they have all failed. I ran across your advertlsenlent and started with :1 trial lmnlr-. ' have family of `four chlldren, and for six yams was unable to work. 1 am now in tho h.-.4 M -health and amdoing business every day. -This testimony you can make such use of ;1.~` vw see fit. 7 ' _ _.._._.__ on: m..:_..'.'.. -.;.n-. i Q mwn ..x 19.1.. A '- found relief at once. I have sincepurchased your full-size bottle, and I am over mun.-fnl 1_ ZTRIAL BOTTLE SENT `ABSOLUTELY FREE ON RECEIPTOF POSTAL. Do notdelay Write at once, addrgsging DR. TAFT BROS. MEDICINE C0,. N I` `nan! DI. '\`l' `T I`1IL-- `Write at .l30th St., N.Y. City. Naonal Pean 1 COAL AND woon 1 Steel-D_ven iR_a_nges` lclumzn .__j winterlsnw Far] AW av `II l They are not an experiment. and they're not too cheap to be good. "`hev will last a lifetime. Cannot `yeequalled m value, too, at the phce we sell them I III`- ` I TURNED AND SPRANG FROM THE CAB. was very extravagant in her ways and was given to fits of sulks when re- proved. ' It was also said that she` was fond of going to parties and balls and was being generally criticised. Every week for many weeks I heard some new gossip. and. while realizing that it must be exaggerated. there was enough truth to make me anxious about my old pard s happiness. I hated to be- iieve the tales. and yet I found many others hinting that the young wife was not playing a straight game with the trusting husband. Such an affair is one of the meanest on earth to med- dle with. It is none of your business jsvem ti`. you area brother, and yet you fei that it is and want to do some-' `thing. I wouldn't have had old Jim fdieeeived, and yet how could I go to , him with the gossip? -_j nnannnnniv nnnrlnnnn lOl'.. `Brick 1' 'ng'svfor Hap y Th ught Ranges. all sizes in stock;nalso all sizgs. Hinorn Wood Furnace Grates. V . - A All L2...-I- 4`: --.\.....'l L-gal 3`:-slung C... 1sn`n C`-run Q. fa 5' { urates. All kinds of second-hand stoves for sale from 32 to $5. New exchanged for old. in J. MOORE. EPPS SO0GOA' lmenise[in "wt Amer. EE;.'. ,,. ...3 .9 912.95} 45-48 Opposite American uotel.~Ba.rr1e. Ii`!!- Home address, 235 Rivingtdn street. aoou 5..-- By andvby I noticed a` change to`anx- iety. andat times the engineer was preoccupied and absentmiuded. I nev- er asked Jim or any other man a ques- tion. but through` the ' gossip of my `landlady I learned that the young wife-

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