Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1890-10-10, Page 7A'ti ABTIAL 191U8IC TU SUPERIOR COUL TE4. The Influence of a Brass Bandand the Bag - The AutaAsetzesand Autumn Chancery Co • .' pipes In Warfare. Sitting*Open on the Dated Below. There is a popular idea that a military AUTUMN ASSIZES, 1890$14 k forthe same the band accompanies its regiment wherever it TREY GET THE BEST. -- e cial Travellers Should Not Growl at Their Hotel Fair. Let me give the travelling man who kinks spinet a weethe in paying line g f the .,. � iia tt a s 1 y fro tit o .�-.n1 . � �! If1.7"-J. r. use s *ay liitLi 1LT1mcc ucf� j� y s �u uw , 1 or rit-the -etteiViretNieeeeer-LeUeretact. entrenohments of the enemy. Althoag h, however, oar bandsmen have other duties, as stretcher bearers and sick attendants, to perform, -and our tine regimental bands are not called upon to inspire our soldiers in this -fashion, any soldier who has cam- paigned in the field, or perf gi ed arduous marches with iris' omega, ll be testify to the good effeot of martial mimic when men are called upon to pert orm some- thing beyond their ordinary danger or fatigue. • Mere and .musio are indeed old allies, and, if the effect of a drum, afife,hae trumpet, a bugle, or a bagpipe, upon tired or overmatched soldier, has been at times a revivaland renewal of vigor and increased courage, how much greater, it may be asked, would be the inepiration afforded by the blended harmony of many " Criminal....._ Monday set. 10. advice. For twenty years I have been Milton Wednesda i. Oot. 22. travelling men, pays G. D. Bail in the Hotel World, and have learned long since not to kink against hotel prices. If yon don't like ROSE, J. it go to some other house next time. Don't you know that the regular boarder is to e notel what the ewine ie to the slanghter �g ? The hog. knows not what he eats and yet he gets tat, and the hatcher saves that which but for the hog would be wasted, and in tarn he reoeivee from the swine many dollars ; so with landlord and regular boarders. a Then again, a regular. boarder gets on the good side of a bright -faced waiter girl; he sees she is attentive to her duties, neat, intelligent end attractive, and she finds in him gaalitiee which she admires and an affeotion epringe up between them ; engage - Brampton Wednesday, Oot. 29. 8t. Catharines. Tuesday, Nov. 4. -Orangeville Tuesday Nov Welland Monday, Oct. 8. Guelph Monday, Oc• 13. Simcaa Monday, Oct.20. Cayuga Thursday, CJol.23. Berlin Monday, Oct. 27. Brantford Monday, Nov. 3. FALCONBRLDGS, J. 'Pembroke Wednesday, Oct. 1. L'Orignal Tuesday, Oct. 7. Perth Monday, 0 t. 13. Owen Sound Monday, Oot. 20. Peterboro' - Wednesday, Oct. 29. Lindsay Tuesday, Nov. 4. STREET, J. Ploton Monday; Oot. 6. Neppanee ..Monday,' et. 13. •Cobourg Monday, Oot. 20. MAOMAEON. 3. Goderich ...-..Monday, Oct. 6. 'Sarnia Monday, Oct. 13. Sandwich Monday, Oot.20. Chatham. .« Monday, Oct. 27. 8t. Thomas .......:.,Wednesday, Nov. -5. AUTUMN HANOERY SITTINGS, 1890. IBOBERTSON,J. Monday, Nov. 17. Toronto BoYD, C. ;St Thomas Wednesday, Oct 1. London Barrie Walkerton Goderich Sarnia Sandwich Chatham Whitby Monday, Oot. 6. Monday. Oct. 13. Monday, Nov. 10. Friday, Nov. 14. Tuesday, Nov. 18. Friday, Nov. 21. Wednesday, Nov, 26. Monday, Dec. 8. FERGUSON, J. ' Ottawa ' Monday, Oct. 20. Brookville ..- ..........Monday, Oct. 27. Cornwall ...Friday, Oct. 31. Belleville Tuesday, Nov. 4. Kingston Monday, Dec. 1. ROBERTSON, J. 'St. Oatharines.........., Monday, Oct. 6. Stratford - Monday, Oct. 13. Hamilton Monday, Oct 20. Woodatoo Monday, Nov.. 3, Guelph. 1,‘ Monday, Nov, 10. a 1• ' e when along comes . eome ... �r _tor and " knooks his eye out," and then °buckles over the viotory l Then, again, the travelling man has a nioe warm room to retire in, where the r. b. goes to bed in a room twenty degrees below zero. The travelling man's room is ewept every -morn- ing, when the regular boarder's room getes link and " that's good enough " once a week; the same date his towel and (Meets are ohenged.'x The t. m. gets a porterhouee Mak, while the r. b. gets anywhere from the neck to the horns. The t. m.,oan lean up against the counter or sit on the desk and enjoy the smoke of oob pipes and two• for -five cigars in the mouths of town loafers who occupy all 'the available seats, where the r. b- must Beek shelter on dry goode boxes on the streets. The t. m. can be met at the office . door in the morning with a whisp broom in the hands of the porter, and receive et lashing over the back and a behind the back voluntary tensing for not " coaling the porter." Whyalt popoor, miserable, grumbling, finding, °rabid dude, don't you know that the eyes of the whole fraternity 1 of the patrons of industry are classed as? DOn tey42H-WLR " lazy bummers ?" If you don's I do. used to be just foolish enough to think I could dictate the hotel business and attend to my business ae well as everybody's else. I have linked landlords, °aimed waiters, found fault with the cook, thrown porters through windows, paid fines for assault with intent to kill, -and what does it all amount to ? I have fetohed up baldheaded, one eye gone, minus three fingers, and doomed to get around on crutches the re- mainder of my life, and all for telling a Texas widow landlady that she didn't know how to run a hotel. appeals to the tra. •lona g oriee o if `Yon Are Ifir cad• Formerly a bride only received presents from her immediate relatives and moat in- timate friends; now, every acquaintance. is expected to contribute some token of re• gard, and very , seldom fails to do so. Everyone invited to the wedding ie ex- pected, as a matter ' of course, to send a present. Formerly, everyone who sent a present thought it requisite that it 'should be accompanied by a note of congratula- tion and good wishea, but now it has be- come very usual merely to send with the gift a visiting card, on whioh ie written above the printed name " with," and be- low it, " congratulations end best wishea." Of 'course, near relatives generally write. notes. Wedding presents may be made either.to the bride or to the bridegroom-; generally the-neareet_e_lptive5 give presents both to him and to the bride".TPretrent5-msy-be_ sent at any time, from the day of the an- nouncement of the wedding up to the eve of the ceremony. It is well, however, not to be too precipitate, as in the event ot the wedding not taking place, it is always awk- ward and unpleasant for the lady to have to return her presents, which, of course, she must do under snoh circumstances. - Domestic Monthly. . 1 1 • VISITING SIA.NN.E S. Advice that Should be Heeded by pfd, as Well as Young People. Many of us who pride ourselves on our good breeding are singularly blind to what people fin vi P are>i who a (; i ae to fr fends1? ed 1 t it �Y•,�11 �I : �+.. , •:.�1.,' Ti`:'S!F�Y�.l .. 0..... f{14TF4.,.. h;rea - ,�Ai��fj!!P�A4+MK guests whom we have never met. or are we more assured as to some of the points of etiquette toward our own guests and to our own hosts when we make an occasional flatting from home. It ie melees to decry etiquette by saying that the beet manners in all cases ere those which Burt no one, eseye. Yc.stite Centeno:0e. This is erne as a general law, bat there are always Borne points whioh leave no room for experiments as to what will hurt another, and whioh yet may be settled once for all by a few rules• If you have an,acgaaintanoe who is en- tertaining friends whom she wishes you to Meet it is your duty to call promptly, and if possible offer some hospitality to both .guests and hosts. If the position is re- versed, and your friend is visiting people nknown to you, never go to see your Teiefeedeeesesseteemeeseeneree -s hostess. If yon give any entertainment for .the friend, be sure to invite her hosts also. Is does not follow that your invitation will be accepted, but if it is, the bootees must be treated as the gueet of honor and shown every deference. If, for instance, the en- tertainment is a luncheon for young ladies, she moo., be asked to take the seat at the end of the table opposite to your own. If the mutual friend is your guest, you may be sure that, if she is a woman of good breeding, she, in turn, will accept no invita- tion whioh does not inolude yon, although you may think best to decline it and insist upon her going alone. Nor will she receive visitors without asking you to j An them in the parlor -should her friends be rude enough to have sent yon no cards. Hero, too, you may excuse yourself, or, at moat, join them with such delay as to give them a short interview alone. These same rules hold good for yon when yon are the guest. Before yon go to make the visit, send word to your friends where and with whom you ere to stay, so that there may beeno idea that you ere, in a boarding house, and therefore mistreess.of rnnr ti me end enrronndin e. This constant deference to your hostess should lead Yeti to order all lettere and paokages to be addreesed to her Dare. As to the disposal of your time, when you ere visiting, no etiquette requires yon to aooept all the plans of your hoeteee, if you feel unable to do so ; but ore is needed to show that refusal meane lank of strength, not look of interest and inclination. With e, little tact on both sides, you will have many hours for your own. Indeed, a skillful'hostess will manage to Bemire you this privilege, and not make the mistake of working too hard to amuse you, and so absorb every moment of your visit into her idea- of what is pleasure for you. No greater compliment le possible than the quiet aooeptanoe of your presence in the intimacy of family life. ' regiment. " Music," we are told, " hath charms to Boothe the savage breast." Yet, there can be no doubt, this essentially peaceful art has power to excite, in an equal degree, man's fiercest passions, and while the effect of muses upon the mesa of ei battalion, or even an entire army, is wholesome end beneficial, the result is arrived at through eaoh indi• vidual soldier in all poeeible variations of degree and manner. Oae man has heard the air in bis childhood, and itbrings back the fondest memorios of a happy h cme ; some seaooiat° the tune with euccees in former days, othere with a sad -regret, bat played by the band of the regimeat, with every comrade as en audience, in instinct of clan and kindehip, of self-saorifice for the oommon weal, all are unitel in the resolve to do or die 1 A bagpipe to the uneducated or Saxon ear is not altogether '' a thing of beauty and a joy .for ever." Still, ,that instrument, to the Keltish warrior, be he Sootoh or Irish, ie a banner and a war ory combined. Neither the dram nor fife, by itself, would oommend itself to the sympathy or sensibility of the ay men ifilieseteeitletatiecremertady o meditation, yet the roll of the one and the shrill note of the other, heard at the right moment, have won many a rampart, and swept the deck of many an enemy's war- ship 1 Military music is certainly as old as o'ivilization, whioh, in men, they say, began with fire. If, in the pre-historio ages, our forefathers were distinguished from the brute creation by their know- ledge of fire and their instinct to nook something to eat, we may be tolerably well assured that one of their earliest pastimes was the imitation of Bong uttered forth by the birds as they worshipped the light of Heaven. Pan, deified by the GGreeke, came originally from Egypt, his birthplace being Mendes, whioh signifies " goat." On the other hand, Poly weans makes him become a general of Bacchus, and attributes to him the invention of the order of battle andthe distribution of an army into right and left `wen-gt -enabling--him_tn strike terror into the minds of the enemy, hence Theeexpree- sion panic. The Greeks, who took much of their civilization as well as their mythol- ogy, from the Egyptians adopted also some considerable amount of their music. Any average Eaton boy could tell ns. concerning the Polernioi, bluff and sonoriono, the Orthioi, sharp and staccato, and other. Spartan airs, played when the phalanx was about to charge, while the same young gentlemen would perhaps be very dubious in regard to the traditional air or quickstep belonging to any particular regiment in Her majesty' Service. And yet, in its tradi-' tionel aspect, the .British army is rich in music, while of military music and mili- tary composers there are no end. -Naval and Military Argus. An Anecdote of Napoleon. The editor of Gil Blas in hie last issue vouohes for the troth of this story : Napo- leon I. wee entertaining the Czar Alex- ander and the Pruesian king at breakfast ineTileit;-when_the conversation turned on . loyalty. " My soldiers obey me blindly,".said the Ozer. " And mine are anxious to die for me," added Napoleon. At the suggestion of the Prussian king a test of devotion wee agreed upon. The royal party was breakfasting in the fifth story of a building that faded a paved street. Eaoh member wee to call one of his soldiers and command him to- jump from tree window. Napoleon made the first teat. " Call the Gardiste Marcell," he com- mended, and Marotta appeared. " Will you obey any order I give you ?" baked Napoleon. ' " Yee, sire." •" Blindly, whatever it is ?" "'Blindly, sire." " Then j amp oat of that window." "But I have a wife and two children, sir. " I will oare for them. Forward!" And the Gardiste Maroon, with It military salute, walked to the window and leaped oat. " Call a private of the body -guard," or- dered the Czar, whose turn came next. The soldier name. What's your name?" " Ivan Ivanovitoh." "Well, Ivan, just throw yourself out of that window." ' " Yes 1ether," answered the gnerdemen, and he did it. , " command the bravest of my soldiers to come here," said the Prussian king,to hie servant. A six-foot uhlan, with a row of orders across his breast and e soar upon his forehead, entered. �' to ." My, friend," explained the king, show their loyalty a French and a Russian guardsman have jumped at command from that window. Have yon the pluck to do the same ?" Is it tor the fatherland?" eNo." " Then I refuse to'do it." ' Gil Blas thinks this anecdote contains a fine lesson for German army officers of the present. -New York Sun. - - A Good.Record. The Aberdeen Journal eays : " Very few men, young or old, peer or peasant, have crowded so many - important events into such a short space of time es has the young Earl of Roselyn. Daring the current year 'he has qualified for a commission in the army ;' been gazetted to one of the regi- ments of Guards ; engaged to Miss Violet Vyner, daughter of that well-known 'worts - man, Mr. R. C. Vyner,althongh at first the parents of both, were strongly opposed to The betrothal ; resigned hiscommission without ever having joined his regiment ; married his fiancee, the joint ages of bride and bridegroom being under 40, registered his raping colors ; and finally, on Saturday last, through the lamented death of his father, succeed to the ancestral title and estates." A Horrible Indignity. Spokesman (of strikers' committee 'fifty years hence)- We have deoided to go out on strike. ' President of Railroad Company=Why, what is the trouble ? Spokeeillan-Well, we don't propose to work f5te man who wears a cutaway coat before 12 o'clook.-Life. BIS BODY WAS STOLEN. Dragged Iron its Last Resting Peace at Portland. The body of the late Dr. Eberson, drowned in Portland Lake last week, was stolen from the Portland cemetery on b t The coffin was found and e n..[p/ e r...� _......,�,;,�:.�.: .t�J::. ..., .� .,.... r�-.......r�t..�---�,-,�.-.-.,.�.��T��f.:3.:�'A^.:, '^„^. .. u:j�._y..'.e.. kicked in aid oti'ieYWibar�Eal.t�,, g s. �-�s� '• several years the deoeased had been living rather an irregular life, abogt the lake. During the summer be lived on a email island about three miles from Portland. He had erected a small shanty on the island, and there he was seen by paseengere on the boats. Let Wednes- day he went to Forel -awl-, gat - prow iaioaa and after piecing them in his boat he went to get some tobacco and while doing ee a now came along end eat up hie provieione and ae he bad no meane left to get more he started for home 'quit ;dieheareened on ac- count of his loss. Later that evening he wee found drowned m about five feet of water end about ten feet from shore. Hie arm was .entangled in the anchor line and hie head, was about half a foot tinder water. It is supposed by many that h nlie inn Montrea eapeneee of hie burial. On Saturday night his body was stolen from she grave. De- ceased was a dentist, and at one time ' praotised around here. We understand de- ceased was buried without religions oere- moniee.-Newboro' Standard. It is stated that the officers ot the Irish National League in America intend resign- ing as soon as practicable after the arrival of the Irish members of Parliament who intend making a tour of the United States. Robert Greer, of Kingston,attempted eui- oide yesterday by netting his throat from ear tone with a pen knife. The doctors stitched up the wounds end hope he will live, though he is very weak from loss of blood. Eighty lace factories at Calais have been closed in consequence of the strike. At a meeting of 3,000 lace -workers to -day it was unanimously resolved to continue the strike until the manufectarere aooept the terms of the strikers. Mach as a mark admires the truth he prefers to have it' told about some other eliow. Enlisted. " I understand you are engaged to Miss "Long "t " " Yee ; my first engagement." " Your Bret." " Yes ; I never smelled powder before." Begins With a " W." Oh, what ie' her name ? I know it jest as well as I do my own. Begins with e W" Henderson ? • Yes, that's it. Just Like His Impertinence i Succi, the Faster. Giordani Suomi, the little Italian, who has easily proven himself to be the world's champion taster, having fasted 30 days in Lisbon, 35 clays in Brussels and 40 days in London, has arrived at New York. - With a mysterious air he produced a small phial of darkish brown fluid. " Here," he said, " is the secret of fasting. Thee elixir con- tains all the properties of nourishment neoeseary to support the human frame through periods of fasting. I took two onnoe0 of it jaet before my 40 days' fast, and I was as well after the fast as before, although I lost over thirty pounds in weight." According to the modern Elijah, this wonderful elixir contains ;all the nutritive properties of a six -coarse. dinner, with a small bottle coffee and liquor added., He is trying to induce the Italian Govern- ment to nae it in the army as a substitute for the bread made of sawdust and the shadow soup now nerved outto the Italian soldier. Celt,woman presents herself at the book- ing Moe, end asks for a third-olase tioket. " Where for ? " inquires the clerk. " That's my bneinede ? was the reply. The Tariff Conference report was adopted by the U. 8. Hone on Saturday by avote of yeas 161, nays 79, and a reso- lution was then passed for the final ad-' journment of Con ^" ^a to -morrow. • A petition bearing severer hnt,usa.:t: natures has been reoeived at the Depart- ment of the Secretary of State, from Mani- toba, asking that the Acts passed by the Provincial Legislature last seseicn abolish- ing Separate tiohool0 and the dnal language system be disallowed. The petition will be referred to Sir John Thompson. B. C. Cox, in Denver, Col., jail for the Murder of George Thomas, dot his throat yesterday and will die. ' Cox's wife died the other day from grief because her line - band Was confined in jail for the killing of Thomas, whom he slew in a quarrel over a settlement in which the Isom �nhu spbutc was less than a dollar. . ---- was killed Mre. Thomas was taken ill` and la not expected to recover. A Dispensation of Providence The raiLteay accident had been'a terrible One and one of the men who were-oarrying the thirty-seventh viotim up the 'embank- ment said with strong feeling : " Somebody will have to pay dearly for all this 1" -- ` The mangled passenger opened hie eyes and glared at the speaker. " The company le' not to blame," he said, feebly : " This is a dispensation of Providence 1" • He was attorney for the road. Wise in His Day. Managing Editor -I don't see why we hed so many unsold copies returned today. With three bank cashiers skipped, two murders and a double enioide, not to men- tion the leader on the tariff, I thought it was e very good number. Sporting Editor -But you must remem- ber it rained yesterday and there was no ball game. -Society. Joseph Roberge, 12 years of ago, was accidentally drowned at New Liverpool,' Qaeb., last night by his ?kif€ nneetting. John Joyce was killed on the G. T.' R. some days ago near Lensdowne. He wee a resident ofT Montreal. The causes lead- ing tip to his death are unknown. It is reported the Spanish Government is planing a cordon of troops along the frontier ntieer of Portugal in oonsegttodoe of app on - Bions of a revolution in that country. The Court of Inquiry int(' the wrecking A Back Number. Buffalo News : Mies Paesee (examining the medal of a recent graduate) -I .have a medal, too. ' Yoang Friend -Yon have ? Why on earth don't yon wear it ? Mies Passee (with a sigh) -I would, but I can't get the date off it. Glass can be out with scissors who know byow it under water -and by'people how. Jane Dettenridge, an orphan of Jamaica, has refused 37 offers of marriage. Mies Dettenridge has good sense end $1,000,000, especially the latter. -Philadelphia Ledger. Le Gaulois Gave that the English Gov- ernment has purchased a large building at Port Said and is transforming it into a barraok fortress, which they will soon oc- cupy with British troops. This will give England possession of both ends of the Suez Canal. The Western express train whioh left Montreal et 9 o'clock on Saturday morning `ran off the traok near Coteau Landing, end the engine, two baggege cera, and the, postal oar were wrecked. The passengers camped injary,, but the mail olerk was badly hurt. . All boys ander 16 will be discharged from the Edgar Thomson and the Home- stead steelworks. This order is are idea of Mr. Andrew Carnegie, who ,has always opposed youth labor. The order will affect many widows who depend upon their sons for support. Even the laziest of men oan usually see some work that' some other fellow ought to do. Between two thdusend and three thou - send of the policemen of London, are total Appointments Gazetted. The following appointments will be an- nounced in to -day's Ontario, Gazette : Robert A. Lyon, of Michael's Bay, Meld, tonlin, to be registrar of deeds for the District of Algoma in the place of Chao. J. Bampton, deceased ; Wm. C. Currie of Port Arthur, to be police magistrate in and for the said town in the place of A. W. Thompson, resigned ; Alex. C. F. Boulton, Toronto, to be a notary public for the Provinoe of Ontario ; J. W. Clarke, eif the village of Wellington, Prince Edward county, to be olerk in the Fifth Division Court of the said county in plane of J. B. Garrott, resigned ; Wm. Niel, of Alberton, Rainy River distriot, to be bailiff of the Second Division Court of the said didtriot in place of Wm. Lindsay, resigned. John Temiale was killed at Petrolea by a deep: le falling on him. - Essex Centre want' the Canadian Pacific to ren a spur to that town. Right Hon. Joseph Chamberlain is expected in Ottawa shortly. The body of a man named Seminole was fonnd on the road near Miami, Man., yes. terday. The popnletinn of San Francisco is 297, - of .the steamer Mande has decide. 1880. pend the oertifioate of the master of thesank steamer, Capt. Clark, for three month'. Isince about three and a An uuknown htle half milesfromRaci e During the meninx service at St. Paulo Wife, yesterday. Cathedral, London, yeeterday a _man named Easton, who was in the oongregatiolf twine is eA dweret recentlyilleds�in a fight there. D 0 N L. 41. 90. A NEW BOOK FROM COVER TO COVER. FULLY ABREAST WITH THE TIMES. WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY The'Authentic "IInat,rici,ged,' comprising the issues 'of 18(14,'79 and '84, copyrighted property of the undersigned, is now Thoroughly Re- vised and Enlarged, and bears the name of Webster's International Dictionary. Editorial work upon this revision has been in progress for over 10 -Years. Not less than One Hundred paid editorial laborers have been engaged upon at. • Over Si300,000 expended in its preparation before the first copy was printed. Critical comparison with Any other Dictionary is invited. GET THE BEST. G. & C. MERRIAM & CO., Publishers, Springfield, Mass. U. S. A. Sold by all Booksellers. Illustrated pamphlet free. 900, an increase of 64,031, or 27 per cent., abstainers.. Some time ago they held e meeting in Blenheim Hall to protest against the custom of " allowing-" liquor for police- men. They say they are better off -Without it. Piss's Remedy for Catarrh is the Best, Easiest to Use and Cheapest. milted suicide �y a d 1 hooing Mims e with a revolver. r• The village is in a ferment. • u Sold by druggists or sent by mail, 500. E. T. 'Hazeltine, Warren, Pa., II. S. A. t]azrt 1 CHRONIC COUCH Now !, For If you do not 1t may become con• sumptive. For Consumption, Serofuta, General Debility and Wasting Diseases, there is nothing like t SCOTTS 1 0 Of Pure Cod Liver Oil and 1 HYPOPHOSPHITES 1 or X,.imc' wzlcI goals-• t e It ie almost as palatable as milk. Fari, bettor than other so-called Emulsions. A wonderful flesh producer. SCOTT'S EMULSION 1 is pad up in a salmon color s4 rapper. Be .` so're and flet the genuine. ,Sold by alt Dealers at .GOe. and $1.09. i SCOTT & BOW \ E, Belleville. TH USA CS OF BOTTLES GIVEN AWAY YEARLY. When I say Cure 1 do not mean a merely to stop them for a time, and then have them return again., 1 MEAN ARADICALCURE: Ihave made the disease ofFAO, Epilepsy or Failing Sickness a l'fe-long study. I warrant my. rem dy to Cure the Worst cases. ' Because others have failed is no reason for not now receavin eve cure rSe1ant Itncee fora treatise and a Fre, s nettle of my Infallible Remedy. P est Oifice. It costs you rAnti g for k trial, and it will -core you. Address'-ai. dies SWOT. iIike., Branch Offiic:n. bin wr.ST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO. w4" } OtiS/41{= o TO TETE l )ITtllti-Please inform your readers"hhat 1 have a positive remedy fort!, above named disease. 13y its timely use thousands of hlt,,Icess cases ',aye been permanently cured, I shall be glad' to send two bottles of my rettledy- r E. to any o, your readers who have coat sumption if they will send site their Express and Post U8ioe Address. Respectfully, Tr -A. SLOCE%1 M.Q.. 180 West Adelaide.. Ct.. ''.O1101,41-0. ONTARIO.