Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 5 Mar 1885, p. 3

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

THE LADIES' COLUMN. At a meeting of toe N.tunal Health Society, at the I'arke* Mu-wutn of Hygieue io London, recjutlv, Sir Robert II iwliuhim presiding, a paper written by Mrs. Priestly WM read on some " UUMMD D Angers in the Home." She advocated the periodic*! iuipaotion of cellars, their eorupulous oleauliiidBe and ample ventilation. There WM o(tn a plague epot in the cellars and basements, the thought, of our houses which WM never thought of, and which gav* forth ia<iidaoa> germi, destructive to lite when onoe they found a aaitable eoi iniide tbe houe or the human body. The house ahoold be troatec M a faithful servant. It would either be a friend or enemy, according to the amoDot of oonuderation or neglect it r**eiv*d. Lei them give it daily cure, wash and tend it, avoid obscuring the ligbt by jorenuK the windows with too numerooi folda ot laoe, drawn ailk bliodi and hsavj eurtaina, wbipb WM to eboke tbe bouie hi pressing on its windpipj. The windows should be opened wide every morning, eo that tbe house oould have ao air-batb ; the air abonld be cleaned if poaaible, and oare should be taken to drink clean water by having tbe flltera cleaned regularly, and |M| of all, court and welcome the sunsiine A W*>r*l at i ^^^ in tbe country, where there ara'graM plot* for whitening the olothei.tbat prooeea might be dispensed with, but it la necessary in tbe eity, where tbe clothe* grow yellow, or in the winter when tbe graaa ia covered in tbe country. In old time* tba bluing WM what it even now pretend* to be, indigo. This ia the beat snbsta>no*, M it doea not injure tbe clothes, bat none ie offered a* bluing, though tbe indigo might b* purchased and nied for tbe purpose. Solid and liquid bluioga oooiiat of " Prus- aian blae,"a oomponod containing iron. II used oajrefully, it makes a good thing, but il used oareleaily it it without doubt tbe oauae of ao many myateriou* iron nut spoti. An alkali, and even soap, will deaompoa* Prussian blue, and if clothe* are not properly rlnaed before being put into the water containing the bluing apola ol iron nut are liable to be found where the aoap till remaina. Ultramarine blue ia weantifnl, but not soluble, and the little particle* are apt to nttle in the clothe* , and are difficult to remove, except with hydrochloric acid. 80 tbe aataet way ia to buy indigo, and uae it in the old f aahion. in beg. Jet and bead* in general are favorite adornment*. Short aleeve* for evening drtmae* are very abort, for the moat part being mare etrape. Wire moll tie* or a plaited flobu with laoe trimming* are both becoming and dreary. White neck lingeh* i* again aaking for favor at the hand* of tboee who follow 3loa*ly tlie email (ancia* a* tbay com*. For morning and afternoon wear tbe favorite colon remain much the same, brown in all ite variation*, dark blue, Bordeaux. Meohlio laoe i* moat n**d on tbtee attractive neck-arrangement*, although oriental laoe mil bold* it* own M a prttty and becoming laoe. t The tight-fitting nnderaleev* i* often ot " the tame color a* the ve*t and trimming*, while tbe outer aleeve ia of tba prinoipal material ot the dreaj. bong aoarfi of fine ailk mull are edged witb a frilling of aome fine, delicate lac* or footing, and are graoetully knotted at the want and tMtaned witb a laee-pin. Tbe white muff ha* hardly been attempted ret. In Paria it i* a general favorite, and i* luipended from the neck by a white ribbon, either matching tb* ooe- tum* or tbe trimming. In hata the brim ia moderately wide and the crown iaipretty high, the trimming being principally plaoed in front in the shape of bow* of ribbon, bird*, wing* and oatriob leather*. Cbemiaettc* and plastron* ol tulle, gauze or embroidered orape are mo*t fashionable fer evening wear. They are al*o made in gold laoe adorned with colored embroidery representing flower*. Be far there i* no great ohang* to not* in the out of mantle* ; they are either worn very long or very abort. The oloee-fitting jacket i* suitable for young ladiee, the favorite material for tbu garment being velvet, atamped or plain. White boa* and muffler* an now worn by tboee who are not afraid ol adopting Parisian fashions before they ar common. The** whiti fur wrap* eel off tbe com- plexion and give a bright finish to a dull oos tame. Angel aleevss are need on house dresses M wall a* on ont-of door garments, and tbe tight nnderslMve U often of different mate- rial from that of tblong, loose outar one. Theaa aleema are, of oonree, lined, and very good effect* are made by the arrange ment of color. The newest and prettiest house jaokata are made ot pale bine roae or poppy red satin inrah, laid in pleats do*n the twiddle of the front and back, and trimmed on tba entire edge and fronts with gathered blaok thread laoe. A aaah belt of red velvet ia worn witb these, or it may be merely in front. The abort round skirt divides honors with the train ikirt, tbe latter being essentially adapted to married ladies. Trains are generally made of nob, heavy material*, auoh M velvet, ottoman, brocade, terry velvet, etc. Plain materiali prevail for traioa. The following ia tbe deaoriptlon ol an elaborate evening gown seen at Worth'* : Fonrrean akirt of pale rose-colored terry velvet veiled witb Bilk tulle embroidered with pearl*. Thrown on it, at about tbe height of tbe knees, an immense spray of pink rose* with foliage. At the bottom ol the aklrt a trimming of nilk fringe mixed with pearla, ol moat striking illoot. Low bodioe forming an immense train of nob brocart ; ground, .- green witb a large floral deaign woven in .'ver It is whispered that tbe frban i* to be revived again, not in tba unified form which had its little day a abort time ago, but in the huge towering arrangement wbioh waa wont to decorate for a oyole of fMbion the beads of our grandmother), , but I think that we of tun last quarter of the nineteenth century are bee mining much too advanced to seriously adopt any new fashion unless it omen provided witb good reoomtoeudstiona from oomrcon seo*e. Another revival in Paris i* the old-time ijown made with a demi-traiu and worn long in tbe bouse. Ii u mad* of olotb or velveteen. A aweet little fancy dress for a child intended (or " Mary, Mary, quite con- trary," ha* the bodies and akirt both trim med with lilver bell* and cockle shells, alo silver. The "oolumbijea" all io a row ere dollies sawn on round tbe akirt at equal interval*, their ojstuiuae narmon umg with tbe tint* of the dree* itself. Another pretty on* i* made of pale pink nun'* olotb, with a novel garniture of fan* ia wall ft jwer red eilk. A serioe ol fan* oompoeed of plaiting* of thia material ornament th* akirt, plaoed with the wide part pointed downward. A smaller one fills in tbe front of the bodice blouse (aebion, and a tiny one trims the top ol eaob abonlde Um .11. o The newest dancing aboea are made ol glovs leather, the *am* color a* the toilet they ivre worn witb. For evening dreea on* naturally choose* colored kid. Black and brou/v ehoee are no longer considered elegant. Everybody knows that furniture of mahogany and rosewood that hM out- lived aevsral generations is much hand- somer than that made from new wood. But it hM an added vain* M mere material. An article mad* from the old wood will retain it* integrity in all it* j nnts ; its shrinking day* ar ovtr. When striped etookinga are washed and ready to hang up to dry, turn them wrong side out ; this will prevent the color from running on tbe right side and spoiling the itookinffa. If watted in water that ha* a little ox gall in it the colon will not fade or run. It i* a obeap liquid t j have in tbe bouse, and oan be bought reasonably at any slaughter-house, or of the butcher, if you ask him to sav* them for yon. Chieken Soup for Invalids. Take all tb* bone* of a ohiokeu, oraok them and stew them down (or many Lours with tb* dark meat of tbe oaroa**, using the breaal M a broil or atsw, as tb* invalid prefer*. Fiavor tb* broth delicately with a bit of thinly-cut lemon peel, and some sweet herb* tied in a piece of muslin. When oDld this eonp will be a delioat* jelly, and it ia sometime* pre- ferred by invalida in this form. Whsn the soap ia wanted th* jelly hM only to be melted down. Of course all fat most be eliminated from the soup. A IIHJ i BUS*] Wlia a in.i.r Belle I !> llu,u .- n.i. A smooth, well-worn ring, whieh Mi** Elusbeth C.Hyde, of Milton. on- the Hud eon, M. Y.. wear* on one of her finger*, ha* a curious history. Among a band of Huguenots who were driven from Frane* 300 year* ago on aooonot of persecution for their adherence to tbe Proteatant Church WM a newly married couple full ot courage and religions seal. Tbe bride wore on her finger plain gold ring oa wbiob was 1 engraved her name, Elisabeth. Th* hoop of old gold, a mere shadow of what it waa ones in weight and siss.haa been bequeathed from generation to generation, always bringing with il ita record, and always going to a direct female descendant named Elizabeth ol the Hogaenol bride who lauded on the hoepitabls abores of America two oentnhes or more ago. The present owner, M it* Hyde, daughter of Capt. James Hyde, ia one of tb* seventh generation. Tbe ring was given to her by an aunt, lately deceased. This Hugusnot beirljom may be considered 1 3 be one of the oldeet relic*, wbioh baa been almost in daily nee, ol the lauding of tb* French Protestante. Many of the leading families along the Wallkill Valley, in Orange and I'iater Counties, are direct denceudaiita ot tbe Huguenot settler* th* Dutoh Reformed Cnuroh at New Palti wae founded about 300 years ago nil they are all proud ol their descent, but of rings like Misa Hyde'* they have oon*. Many year* ago, in oonscqusno* ol a commercial panic, there was a severe run in a bank in South Wai**, and the small t armors jostled eaob other in the crowd to draw out their moaey. Thing* were rapidly going from btd to worse, when th* bank manager in a fit of deiperation suddenly tMthought himself of an sxpedisnt. By his directions a dark, having heated some sovereigna in a frying pan, paid them over tbe counter to an anxious applicant. 1 Wby, they're quite hot," said the latter, ae be took them up. " Of course," WM the reply ; ' what ela* could yon expect ? They are only out of the mold. We are coining them by hundreds M fast M we oan." " Coining them," thought the simple agriculturists ; " then there ia no fear of ihe mooeiy running short." With thia ,heir confidence revived, the panic abated, and tb* bank waa enabled to weather tb* storm. ( is>e < .a t ri<-u,. The Canadians apeak disparagingly ot .he boats used by Liord WoUeley's expedi- don in ite journey up tbe Nile, and declare that they wer* decidedly too frail for snob aerviee. In polling them over the oataraota t frequently happened that their stems would be torn put, and during tba ascent of the river thirty boats wars damaged so tbat they ware no longsr nt lor use. Ten >f the royaiirvn party were drowned in the S'lle, two others died ot fever, and two were killed on the railway in Egypt. Tbe Janadians complain of tbe sever* heal ot he olimate in the Soudan, and say they suffered a great deal from aore eye* and >lietera. They speak in gratelul terms of th* manner ia wbieh they were treated by the British otnuer* attached to the expe- dition and express anguinb at the fate of General Gordon. The I . ' ...... i i. , , i . . M Mrs. Winki-It'a a perfect outrage, Mr. .Vinks. The idea of inviting those gentle- men to dinner wbeu you kuew the house waa full of company. Wby, it will make thirteen at table. Mr. Winks Surely yon are not aupar- stitious about that. Having thirteen at table won't worry me in tbe least. Mrs. Winks-Well it will when yon see bat a small roast the batcher sent. They lay that hate are to be very faabiona lie this spring, quit*) taking tb* place of tb* >onn*t, even for visiting. THK -toil AtVF. '.il< I hrri- I onnill* BU4 Tw* 4 III,. I,, Oul.rl. t ruBOslAMl. All the counties and cities in O-itario bave been organized by tbe Sootl Act sup- porters except Wellaud, Wautworth and Hald'.mand, and Hamilton and U.tawa. A c invention is being arranged for lialdi- inand, and tbe temperance people are getting ready to organise in Victoria county. So far ths Bootl Act has been adopted in 64 o lunties, and defsated in 11, the total number of contests being b-V The aggre- gate voU polled in Ihe 6.'. oountiee and cities wherd the Boott Aot waa submitted is a* follows: In favor of tbe Aot, 109 549 ; against tb* Aot, 71. 918 ; msjjrity for the Aot, 37,497 In 28 of th* 47 counties carried, tbe Boott Aot ie already io opera- tion ; in 11 of them it will go into operation on May lit next, and in the remaining 8 it will be brought icto force on May let, 188 A < b ool U1..1, r . Breach *>l ! r i.. Caee. At tbs Leeds Ataizae last week before Mr. Justice Lapes and a jury the eas* of Liwis vs. Widdison. an action for breach of promise to marry, was heard. Tbe plaintiff was Miss Augusta Annie Lewis, aged 'l<> years, tbe daughter of a farmer and Dnderviewerat High Oreen, near Barnsley, snd tbe defendant waa Jibu Widdison, master of tbe Board Bobools at Btamland, near Balifax, and formirly at Sheffield. Mr. Pigby Bsymour, Q C; and Mr. Fen- wisk wsre counsel f jr the plaintiff ; and Mr. Ksrihaw appeared for tbe defendant. In 187B, when the p'.siufJH waa a pupil- teacher at High Green, the parties first met, and a strong affection aooo afterwards rose up between them. No set engage ment, however, waa com* to until October, 1882. Taking advantage of Ihe plaintiff birthday, tbe defendant wrote to her on th* j.d October : "My own darling Annie, Here I am ones more. What a world this is ! Wnat a ohange from last night to this tims (9 SO p.m ) Really, dearest, I havt been wishing tbat I had not been over to sse yon. For wby T yon might ask. Not because I bave not enjoyed myself, but simply because it will be such a long lim* before I see you again. Take vsry great oan of yourself aa vim* goes on. I am sure I nsver saw you look better than wbsn yon wsre making a little pastry on Saturday night (laughter) and I am tur* I never fell mor* happy or prouder of yoa than I did then. What is dr**a, after all .' Jutt aa the poet says, ' Tb* mind'i th* standard of th* nan,' ao iti* with woman." (Laasjhter.) On the Sxnd October th* defendant sent tb* plaintiff a ring ts a small token ot his 'sincere lov*." In ths letter accompany- ing tbe ring tbs detindanl wrote : " If evur a heart beat real stsrliog wishes mins does to-night. 1 oan safely say I never fell to bave so much lov* for yon as I do to night. Ws have often heard of people'* love growing oolder and colder, bat ours, I can conscientiously say, has been quite the rivers*. I oan safety say at Isast, I think so that it was ths first Monday ia July, 1M7U, when I might term that oar lov* took root. Fiona then till April, IttaO, I felt I wantad something to make my life complete. I, bad always a longing , I could not realize what it w until I became ooaioiou* that there was a true heart yearning for my lov* and I tor hers. (Laughter.) Blaow tkten visiting you and receiving your l*tt*ra< have been the brigntjAst parts, and aa *t-n roll on I realize more fully tbat hi* without you would be nothing but a blank." (Renewed laughter) Defendant after wards went to th* plaintiff * boms and offered her marriage, and tb* partial became actually engaged on the let Decem- ber. In a letter to tbe plaintiff, the defend- ant thua pbiloaophiwd : " Ah ! th* lit of December baa com* ! What a strang* story it tella witb it* advent ! Wbat i* truer than tb* proverb, Time and tide wait lor no man.' IIow horl life i* ! I am sure th* last f*w year* ino* I nnuhed my tim* have paaeed with lightning speed, and yet, after all, I shall have to say, as th* poet put* it 1 live for those who love me. For those who've proved me true. For the beaven that sullea. aUj e we And walls my oouiiug loo. Hoars ot laughter.) Again, on the 8ib December, the defendant tan* delivered himself : " Bom* one* mor* ! Fancy being at bom* ! Through a *oow*torm quit* a new era in my long lit* ha* been opened. Jutt imagine a man among the moor* about tie re ! Wordsworth s has* would be very .ppropriat* : Bo faint I am tueee tottertnf feet N. more my iMble frame oau beat, Hy linking bean forgets to beat. And drifting snows my loBb prepare "Ah I only two weeks morel bpeed, peed, oh, time ! Bpeed quicker in thy career ! I would not oare about being snowed up if than was only a friend or two to keep me company." (Laughter.) Writing on tbe 4th February, 18*3, ths defendant says: " I waa vsry happy to see yon look ao well, Annie. 1 am not saying this in any spirit ot flattery, but I believe' aay it in a spirit of pride when I say you look nicer every time I see yon. (Laughter.) Tsa; what oan make a man bappy ? Solomon aay* rightly, ' A virtuous woman is a crown to her husband.' How man / jaen have been drawn tram tb* snares of worldly pleasure and amusement ti sublimer thoughts, and how many men owe their happiness to th* lov* of woman." (Ltngntar.) In ths following August th* defendant's letters be^au to cool down, and bs told the plaintiff be was tickle and unworthy of ber love. Finally be returned ber letters. Mr. Seymour said thedefendanl had been trained at tbe college at Westminster, and that he was now earning only JLlSO a year. His pro* p>cts were good. Bis father had substantial msans, aud the defendant bad also expectations from his utiole. Tbe jury eventually found f jr the plain- tiff, with damages 160. For a man to leave more to hi* sons than to bis daughters, Bays Labouohere, is ths climax of testamentary folly. 1'be former oan earn money, but tbe latter dud it more lillioult to do so. If a distinction be made, the daughter, therefore, ought to have more than tbe son. It is more than sutpeeted that very many ot the inake-bitee oausing death in India are caused by parents desiring to put an end to superfluous cffaprmg in a manner which danii discovery of guilt. CBATTKB I. I was takes sink a year ago With bllloui fever." My doctor pronounced me cured, but I got siok again, with tarnbl* pain* in my back and Hide*, and I got o od I Could not move ! I shrunk 1 From 228 lb*. to 120 ! I bad been doc- toring for my liver, but it did me no good. I did not expect to live more than inree month*. I began to use Hop Bitten. Directly my appetite returned, my pains left me, my enure system seemed renewed as if by magic, and after using several bottlee, I am not only a* sound as a sovereign, but weigh more than I did be fore. To Hop Bitters I owe my life." Dublin, June 6, "91. CBArTIB n. UaJdsp. Mass FID 1 WHO. OeDtleuieu- I suffered with attacks o f siok headache. Neuralgia, female trouble, for year* in the moat terrible and excruciating manoe'. No medicine or doctor oould give me relief or onre, until I used Hop Bittern. Tbe first bottle " Nearly cured me ; " The aeoend made me a* well and strong aa when a child, " And I have been so to tbis day." My husband was aa invalid for twenty years witb a serious " Kidney, 1m r and urinary complaint, ' Pronounced by Boston's bast pbysi Incurable " Seven bottles of your Bitters cured him and I know of the " Lives of eight persons In my neighborhood that have been saved by your bitters. And many more are using them with great benefit. " They almost Do miracle* ?" tin. K. D. Sieve*. Row TO OET BicaL-Eipoi* yourself day and nighi, MI loo much without eieroli*; work too naril without net ; doctor all thsiim, take all the vile nostrums advertised, aud thcu yuu will want to kuuw tow togrt *U, wbicn is answered in three words Take Hop bltMn : tar None genuine without a bunch ef freaa Bops oo tbe wblt label. Buuu all the Tile liouuooai stuff with "Uop'or "Hope" ia their nauis. A custom bouse inspector, while roaming over a steamer at New York on Monday, observed a peculiar hump on the back ol on* ot th* sailor*. lie mad* a diagnosis of Ihs hump, and found that it WM formed by lorty dozen pair* of spectacles, worth about II 50 a pair. The duty on imported spes taeles is V, per cent. Tbe goods were A* the coming of a great storm is hsr aldsd by th* display of cautionary signals, so la th* approach of toal dread and fatal disease, Consumption ot th* Lung*, usually announoed in advance by pimpl**, blotches, eruption*, ulcers, glandular swellings, aut> kindred orirr*t manifestations of th* internal blood poieou, which, if aol promptly sxpsUed from ths system, attacks tbs del.oate tissuss of tbe lungs, causing them to ulcerate and break down. Dr. 1'ieroe s " Oolden Medical Discovery " i* th* gnat remedy for this, ae for all disease* having their origin in bad blood. 1 1 improves tbi appetite and digestion, increases nutrition aud builds op the waited system. An apology oovsrs a multitude of Tb* VsHalva ! All Who bavs trisd Poison s Numuns, ths great pain remedy, is that|il is n*v*r-fail ing in pain of every description. Neuralgia toothache, orampe, pain in tb* stomach and kindred complaint* are banished as i by magic. Kapid and certain in operation, pleasant to lake, Nervilius stands at ths vsry front rank of remedies ef this class. A trial bottle may be purchased for 10 cents, a vsry small amount in any oaa* . but th* beet expenditure you oan snake, U a eufferer from any kind of pain, i* 10 or 2'< cent bottle of Nerviline at drngg' .u and country dealer*. And tbs hill sides wer* black with Success has currant vain* th* wide world over. It break* down every barrier and holds tbe key that unlocks svsry door. Prejudice, the fruit of many failures, and t he recollection of painful experience, mell away like mill before ths convincing merit of PCTKAM'S I'AIM.BBH Coss Kutu. roa, and now when thousands are willing and glad to,t**lify to its wonderful ffloieoey, go** forth crowned with tb* success that only real merit attains. Buy Putnam's Paiolens Corn Extractor, lie war* ot imitation*. N. C. Poison A Oo., prupristors, Kingston. A young chap at Tobasoo, nfuioo, offered to wad* mt j the river and kill an alligator (or 50 cents for an American traveller, and ths traveller hM been wailing four week* for him to return to tbe shore. For diarrh > k, cholera morbns, dysentery and bloody-dux, oolio or cramps in tbe stomsoh, use Dr. Pisroe's Compound Extrsci of Smart Weed. Spjcino, alto, tor breaking up colds. Ths proposed nsw Court Uouse in Toronto will cost about 1 200,000. Lydia . Pinkham'i Vegetable Com- pound i* a most valuable mediein* lor ladiee ot all ages who may he afflicted witb any form of diasaae peculiar to their **x. Iler remedies are put up not only in liquid forms but also in Pills and Lozsngea ia which forms they are securely sent through the mails. A Georgia lover walked up to his sweet- bear! while she waa busy over a washtub at a spring near the house, proposed mar- riage, and was accepted. They immedi- ately adjourned to a neighboring bouse, and the uup;ial knot was tied. Toung or middle-aged men suffering from nervous debility or kindred affections, abonld address, with three letter stamps for arg* treatise, World's Dispensary Medioa Association, Buffalo, N. V. TB> P, clr, ila ! t g. r < An uncommonly interesting experiment in surgery u now under way at tbe Mount Sinai HospitsJ in Nsw York eity. The patient is a bright little Italian boy nan Natalia Ferdo, 14 years of age years ago a kerosene lamp ei r him, and bs war severely horned on the chest and both arms. The wound in the right arm never entirely healed, but as it closed produced muscular contraction thai bent tb* hand inward until it WM at a rvhi angle with tbe wrist, and drew th* little ti tiger and thumb toward tb* palm in a claw shaped manner, making a horrible and painful deformity. A consultation was held by the house and consulting surgeon*, and an operation having for its object th* formation of a new wriat and tb* caving of th* band WM determined upon. A com plet* new whit waa mad* by grafting the arm into the flash of tb* thigh and abdj msn suooeasively, and tbs boy is now doing well. " Little Nat.' alibis attendants eaJl him, is kept in bed all the time, and fro** a raised pillow watches with wistful eyas his convalescent companion* playing merrily in tbe ward. One* in a while a tear steal* down his cheek and h* torna hi* bead away from the romping boy* aad falls asleep in hi* Borrow. Miss Heater Fields, a demented girl, of Napitr, got out of bed on* morning recently and attired herself in Bummer clothing, including a draw bat, etc, and walked a distaao* of twelve mil** before daylight. When found by ber relative* ah* was frightfully frozen. An ex weighing 4.250 pound* is oa exhi- bition at Mayiville, Ky. LYDIA E. PINKHAM 1 - VEGETABLE COMPOUND For all ' lk** Paliiul 1'ewes.laiais . . r >n I I POFt LATION.* . el IT WILL rrms t HTTBSI.V THI wnasr mu or " ALS C.'BPI AIITt. AIL. Or ASIAN TKOCKLBS,* PI ABHATITO AD I'tJ IKATM. FAl-1-IHe AD n AflBKT*. An T.n , IT >riiAL WKA HCSS. AID IS PABTin-LABLT ADArTID T9 1 n M. i or Lars. * , IT WILL DtWOlTt A BIPl Tt I TIB' II AH I AST T ATA..r f I.IT TBWDI:*. YTOI'Ali BB1H lit' Boas TUBBSIS 1IBT srtlUILY IT ITS fIS * e ' IT BiinvBm FAIHTIS**, FLATITLBUCT. ussiauii AII i RAima pimtTiBrLAiTt. AMU HBUITSS WBAS BMOPTHOr KN ITITKII lll.'ATllU. llBAB> A. HI. .Nrtll PR.nTKAT1.KI. (.IXIKAL I>UIIJTT DimiMiKx asm InansvtssL TBAT pssLma 01 W FIMIIT AM. 1<A. KA HI. I I HSU ST ITS I -I . A- iie PADS, Ir WILL AT All Tints AMI fXDl it I STSTS*. A) , " k "I.KL.TpoTnBi.i HRAl.lltl IIP 1>IKA*I AM> TUB Kf USP or TAIN, _ THAT IT I"t A 1.1. IT i I. A IH* T< IN,, TUOfSASD* ** Fill Till I till UP KlI'MT I .IMI-LAKTS 19 tITHIH III Tllll RHII-T IA t SHI KTAHSU. I.TDU r, risxiun's VBOETABLB nmroarD Lju. MM. me* IL sii b.<iM rr sa. b;mjl. p. ' . : .- T..n.l.Hlf ( > ( 1 I in J. WIHCKLER I'ATKNT SELF-VENTING PCMP FAOCBT Ths slmpleil sad belt In the mark**. I'm* AJdreei 68 Hoinson **nM sooth HaaUlo* | REHNIE'S SEEDS ar THE BEST] lllu-lritKil < .>IM|..U. for IWI ELo'. GARDEN * FLOWER SEEDS] |M4l(t-. I i. 1 i i ill' n 11 II itll W!RENNI R. U. AWARE TIUT Lorlllard's Climai Plug beawte*: a r^< Nn f<v . t MII. l.eitrflB>.ul: t . i>n<l lht LorllUnl'i <*. t. .|u*llir raatMetv*' I EVE, EAR AND THROA1. DR. 0. 8. BYEB80N.L.B.O.P. B. .. Leetnrer on tbe Rv. Bar ao.l Tbrrai Trinity Uftlioal Oollat*. Tofonio. OonllM an-l Aurlnt In tbe Toronto (tvoeral Bospllal, lata Clinical AMiiteni Royal LonOon O|>blbaln.lo Bospllal, atuurenelil's and Central Louden TBroal and Bar Hospital. 31? Ohureh HtTMI. Toronto. Artificial Human Rvss CONSUMPl ION, fR . T* OIOAW. bi HB -... MMi4lntf hAv b#*n -i* i. w , r%ii5 IllUrlff. T Amis.!*. llw - " IM IB MB, ' Tt> r. .,. ' w mm . T. A Poetry ia rampant in England, email pieta of ths Victorian era are becoming almost tx> numerou* to mention j^r D>iro tllan Ol 1*1, *< K io seorr* a Hosloi M daeatiun or fi>no*rtao V- u , maoshlc ai lie aTlfllER IAN HDHUIItiU (.<OU.lt> OsnoMnrrs*

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy