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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1890-10-17, Page 7• THIO LATE CANON LIDfON. •a14 Extraordinary Gifts as a Preacher and a Story -Teller. In his early days the late Canon Liddon was vehement in his style of preaohing, and he depended very -little upon his manu- script, speaking extemporaneoaely, with an impressive action. He . femme, however, gradually to write more•andmore, although he had all the special gifts of a speaker, lllf.en , eing„ x-Peeaeeett-,l tri e9? is seem -bile. `-He li d the poowe oi�1beoom• fug more epigramatio the morn, impart - shined ha. was. He was keen and incisive in bis language, and possessed a wonderful power cf irony and humor, which showed itself more in his talk than in his sermons. In the latter the saroasm and humor were very carefally subdued, but they were there all the Bonne. He would never talk about his own sermons; hardly ever referred to them. He regarded them with great humility, and had a special dislike to any praise being bestowed upon them. He was quite oonsoious of the limitations that " a sermon has. He would Bay to himself that it was only a net to catch scale, the 4 NEW QOLIaTB'. The Btrone Man from Westphalia and Stories of Lord Arthur Cecil. Herr Sandow, who, it will be Muresbared, defeated Sampson in a conquest; at the Aquarium, has unearthed in West- phalia, and brought to London for exhibition purposes, a gentleman who is henceforth to be known as 0' Goliath," This prodigy is said to poetess the following peculiarities : egsef344if" It !n . 9�?II a ?�: eft eetseet n, R: `der oton; t eh ` ring he wears on his forefinger is in circumference the size of a half-orown; he can span a foot from thumb to third finger ; he can easily lift 800 pounds at onoe;' he has never been de- feated as a wreetler ; and, finally, he is stated to have, in a contest with a mad cow, easily turned it on its bank and held it there. " With reference to the statement, that the new Westphalian strong man, Goliath,' once laid a cow upon its bank by its horns, it may interest our readers,"writes a cor- respondent, "to know that Lord Arthur Cecil, a half-brether of Lord Salisbury, onoe told me a similar incident in Donne°.' x; " i fr t,�¢, ,had strong belief in the work to be done I 5P's • behind preaching. He had himself a good deal of personal contact with hie hearers, -and a greatase of confidential letter - writing withople on spiritual subjects. % Although veent in hie gestures in hie, a-;'^1 younger days, he contented himself later on with a very quick glance round on hie audience as if watching the effect of hie words, a throw -back of his head, and an expressive shake of his -right hand. Ilia moat dramatio effect was obtained with his voice, which took a very high note. The canon was a brilliant a$ory-tellor, one of the very best I have ever known. says a personal friend quoted in the Pall Mall Gazette. Indeed, he had a special gift in that direction, and would dramatize in a moat brilliant way. He was extremely eenaitive to his company, and it there was one present with whom he was out of sym- pathy he would be restrained direotly, and people who met him thus might think him almost formal and dull; but among his in• timate friends he would bubble over. He was sarcest' slant most of all humorous. His humoras -a most refreshing, spark- ling, Burps: thing. It never paused, especially in the evenings. If he could not Bleep; and got you out in the ".quad," at Christ Chnrcb, he would ramble about till midnight pouring out his stories. He had endii1giyr keen sense o no i erliue- tione and a happy knaokot coining epithets that made you jump with laughter. This humor so flooded hie talk that you could not imagine how he kept it out of his ser- mons to the extent he did. Liddon's great gifts wore a brilliant imagination and a quick, keen eye for principles and the isenen of thing). He always saw the end of things directly, and had thedisposition to classify—perhaps too • quickly -to pigeon -hole them at onoe. He aid . not like indefinite thinge, and had a easpioion of anything that was not decisive and not clear in outline. As was said of him by J. B. Mozley, he would shy like a — —;—horse-at--.ayything__suapioioae..___He_lied_ extraordinary quick and strong affections, and was easily moved on that side, although quite immovable on the intellectual aide when once he had taken up a position. He had a very strong temper, well kept under, but be could be roused, and I have seen him in the old days become eo heated that the conversation had to come to a dead stop. There was a curious contrast be- tween his fixed intellectual beliefs and his very warm personal feelings, . the latter to some extent modifying the former. When he once. Dame into oontaot with a person he was exceedingly elastin fi ,tr Took Eight Men To Lift Her. One of the largest women on record has died in Paris, She was known as the "phe• nonrenal female," her real name being. Vioturie Tantin and her age only 19. Mlle. Tantin• was not a giantess in height, but her girth was enormous and it took eight strong men to lift her out of her chair when she used to be conveyed for exhibition to a mimic hall. The individual who engaged her found that she did not. pay her expenses owing to the Dost entailed by her transit to and from the cafe concert, so Viotorie retired from publics life and lived quietly with her parents. Lately she had an attack of erysipelas, to which she succumbed. Her funeral was the event of the day in the suburban locality •wherein she resided , and great interest was mani• fasted by the neighbors in watching the lugubrious preparations for the burial of the poor " phenomenon," whose aremainar were carried to the hearse and afterward to the grave egie the shoulders of 10 of the meat robaritlkaen in the employ of the • compan y,cf metropolitannndertakere. A. Queen Dlstributcl Candy. Gondol is a lillipntian Hindoo state in the Bombay presidency. Its area is about eight times that, of London ; it has 140,000 inhabitants, and rejoices in an army of 600 eepoya, with sixteen oannon and a squad or two of cavalry. Tho ranee, or queen of this state, may, possibly ensu ,,,,,have asked whether the maharanee, or great • Queen of England, distributed augur Dandy among the population of the British Ielee on the 000asion of her jabiiee. It is what the Hindoo queen would have done. She dispensed sugar candy among her subjects of Gonda' •t a other day, ingratitude for her recover from eicknees.—London Daily ‘. News. • 'This Can Be Understood to Suit. Bingley—There goes Skimps. He's the happiest, fellow I ever knew. Always laughing and joking. Bangley—Is he married ? Bingley—.Didn't, I tell you ho was per- fectly happy ? - " Gail Hamilton," Abigail Dodge, oon dude " a Bible talk " every Sunday after- noon at Seoretary Blaine'°. A lamentable accident occurred yester- day at Austin, Man. A young farmer named Daniel Livingstone, 25 years of age, wee engaged in stacking grain, when he cost his balance and fell off the, stank. He came in contact with a 'pitchfork when falling, and it ran through hie body. He taken home, where he lies in a precarious condition. At her debut in Oporto a woman ball- • • Yflghter, Clotilde Mejetaik, killed two belle; and a weeks later, in Lisbon, she killed two MOM, THE SECRET OY $ 7OCYSB. P. T. Barnum's Advice to the Young Men of To -day. To young men who wpnld " get on" is this world, and reach the age of•four- score years, with happiness and prosperty, there is little tnore to be said. Bat r will refer them to a study of my own rules of aetion; Briefly, I would say—Be honest ; do not spend as mach ae yon make ; don't sm• oke , resC 4 t? :d-;?ino a rth, e-eeetegir seorar.l exertions',' and do note leave important affairs to a third person ; don't have too many irons in- the fire ; do not get above. your own business, and; above all, be systematic. Advertise your business on all possible occasions ; but at- tend to it, too, and see that •your claims and promises made to the public are ful- filled. It does not pay to have a eingle customer go away dissatisfied. Nor does it pay to take money for servioee for which you do not render an equivalent. The beet working years of a man's life are usually between 26. and 60 ; but much good work is possible long after the three - were year mark has been passed I can eavestenTetatleaster time is put to some definite purpose, and, though I have numberless calls and de- mands, I enjoy a reasonable recreation each day. Both work and rest, and joy aleo, should make np the sum of a busy life.— P. T. Barnum, in Ladies' Horne Journal. Short man, is of giant physique. and enor- mous strength. He was one day walking through a field on his farm at Innerleithen," when a young bull rushed at him. Instead of turning tail, Lord Arthur coolly seized the animal by his borne and pushed him baok, wriggling and straggling, inch by inch, till he got him into his stall, where he left him cowering and trembling all over." It was Lord Arthur, who on one occa- sion, when traveling by rail, bade his new man -servant get the tickets, which the man did, proonring two first -filmes tiokete, and seating himself in the same carriage with the master. Lord Arthur said noth- ing at the moment, but the next time he bought the tickets himself, one first-class, one third ; eying the man the first - clan tioket, he traveled third himself. On the next 000aeion the servant, being entrusted with the task, took two third -claw, tickets. Pall Mall Budget. A Trifle Pessimistic. Early in the century there lived in Edin• burgh, says the New York Ledger, a well- known grumbler named Sandy Black, whose oft -recurring fits of spleen or indi- gestion produced some amusing scenes of senseless irritability whioh were highly relished by all eueept—the--follew'n—gee; patient little wife. One morning Sandy rose bent on a quarrel. The heddies'and the eggs were excellent, done to a turn, and had been ordered by himself the pre- vious evening ; but breakfast passed with- out the looked -for compliment. " What will you have for dinner, Sandy ?" asked Mrs. Black. " A chicken, madam," said the hue- band. " Roasted or boiled ?" " Confound it ! madam, if you had been a good and considerate wife you would have known before thie what 1 like !" Sandy growled out ae. slamming the door, he left the house. It was in the spring, Wand a -friend -who -was-present._heard._hie_ little wife say " Sandy's bent on a disturbance to -day. I shall not please him, do what I will." The dinner time came and Sandy and his friend sat down to dinner. The fish was eaten in silenoe, and on raising the Dover of the dish before' him in a towering passion the former oalled out : • " Boiled ohioken 1 That's it, madam 1 A ohioken boiled is a ohioken spoiled 1" Immediately the cover was raised from another ohioken roasted to a turn— " Madam, I won't eat roast ohioken !" roared Sandy. " You know very well how it should have been cooked. In an instant a broiled chicken with mushrooms was placed on the table. " Without green peas 1" roared the grumbler. " Here they .are, my dear 1" said his wife. " How dare yon spend my money in this manner ?" " They were a present," said hie wife. Rising from his chair Sandy clenched his fiet and shouted : " How dare yon receive presents without my leave ?" Eat Before Going to Bed. Most students and women who are troubled with insomnia are dyspeptic, and they should therefore eat before going to bed, having put aside work at least an hour before. If they are not hungry they should eimply be instructed to eat, and if they are hungry they should eat whatever they want. A glees of milk and a bisonit is sometimes all that can be taken at first or mashed potato battered. If possible, the night meal should be taken in another room than the Bleeping apartment, and for mon in the city it will be Ponied advantageous to go out to a restaurant. efore eating, however, a bath should be taken, preferably cold or cool, which should be given with a eppnge or stiff brush, and the body thoroughly robbed off with a coarse towel afterward"—Sonterville. Journ',al. A Salvation Reform Scheme. Gen. Booth's new soheme of social re- form is being matured and the general will soon furnish the public with full details in a book called : " In Darkeet England and the Way Oat:" Having reformed the drunken, the violent), and the starving and degraded poor, the general proposes to draft them out of the slums to home colonies. When they are transformed into honest citizens they will be °hipped to sal- vation ooloriee beyond the seae, where the only tax will be one on land, as Henry George propene. In this eoheme of social regeneration the religions part of salvation is optional. The general . has many new ideas to follow. Hie very latest scheme is a salvation matrimonial agenoy.—London Star. — 1 '5=2,4=1=00.5=000 ra=000018=EIMMIMINIM5115000211115110ffil. BRUIN NAILED TO A TEEN. Ass ue as a Great Many Bear Storks and' Certainly Original. Everett;Paxaon, A. iudolph, Will Morris and Jnline 40060, brother of PitY Treas- urer Jewel's, returned to -day Irene Yellow• stone Park where they had been flehing, hunting and' loafing for five weeks. They are as bronzed ae Indian,), and as fruitful in yarns as sailors. They killed carloads reeereaszereaseelemeieteleesesseseeeetewtee east. As to large game, many bears were Been, but the gang fought shy of them. Julius Jacobs, however, had wonderful adventeseesesteith a hear, whioh is worth recording. On horeebaok he rode some distance from the Damp, and got away from hie oompanione. 'Tether- ing his horse_ to a tree in the dense forest, he oast his eagle eye around for game, and when several rode from his horse he descried an immense )?ear glaring hien fall in the faao. Jacobs wasn't loaded for bear. If he had been, it wouldn't have been a simple and ordinary bear story. The bear wasn't very troubleeome, but TROUBLE. IN CHILL: A Revolution Impending Whish Will, #E ' Fierce and Bloody. Senor, Java Barotti, of Santiago; Chir, e who hag jest passed through New Yorks has been a mennber of thetChilian congress and is well informed on matters along the ' southwestern Pacific coast. " We are going to have a revolution ha Chili, and that before ver Ion " said he, " w•�u��'�u�•,y,a,,t,�„c�� t�rdr-i,;ur �eyni�tr3l�ti'tttiu�wttk+. turn but to be a very bloody one. There are a great many people in the United States interested in Chili, for there he a large amount of American capital invested down there, yet there is a phenomenal amount of ignorance afloat about our country and its condition just now. The truth is that a bitter contest/ has grown up between the president and Congreea, and unlessprompt means are taken to settle matters, bloodshed will be the result. The chamber of deputies has passed • laws which practically oat off the supplies ,of the Government, and the President has home Fast Telegraphing. Buffalo News : Daring the Birohall trial at Woodstock there was come remarkably expert telegraphic work done. John Hall, manager of the local offioe of G. N. W. Telegraph Company, made a request to headquarters for the swiftest men in the employ of the company. He was given Archie Peden, Dan Urquhart, W. Graham, Thomas Allen, 0. W. MoCall and Fred. McClellan, who proved themselves thor- oughly capable of meeting a great emer- gency. To Manager Hall and hie excellent staff the News is indebted for very prompt and effioient service, and it is a pleasure to hereby give them publio credit for their speedy and scow ate work. On Monday, the lest -and greatest day, these men sent out 115,000 words between 10 in the morning and a little after midnight. This would make a;$ont eighty solid columns of the News. ()lithe same day the C. P. R. branch at Woodstock sent out 80,000 words, and the wire at the depot was aleo,kept at work, reakin• ov.r 200100 wo de wired from. Woodstock on Monday, or about 130 columns of the News. It was great tele- graphic work. Danlap's cable alone on Monday took to England over 30,000 words of the speeches. The Toronto morning papers and others not too far away were enabled to save telegraphic tolls up, to 5 o'ol'ok in the evening, sending copy by ex- preea, or the number of words wired would have been mach greater. Execution at Glasgow. On Tuesday, Sept. 24th, Henry Devlin was executed. in Glasgow prison for having murdered his wife in Shotes in- Jane. He beat her to death with a pair of -tonga._.The_priuoner was much excited on Monday night, but paid great attention. to the ministrations of Father Clifford, who was with him till 10 o'clock. After that the felon could not Bleep. He paned up and down his cell, and if h'e dozed at all it was only for a quarter of an. hour. Father Clifford and Mr. Alston, the governor, saw' the condemned man at 6 o'clock Tuesday morning. At '7 o'clock Father Clifford said mase, an altar having been erected in the lonely oell, and while the prison bell tolled, his reverence administered the Baorament. Devlin refused breakfast. He sub. mitted quietly to the pinioning and walked firmly to the scaffold. He was pale. Asked by Baillie Grab.am if he had any request to make, he said " None." Death was instantaneous. In fact, he had hardly touched the platform when the lever was drawn, and he was launched into eternity. Reporters saw the body immedi- ately after the exsoation. What Women Ought to Know. What attracts a man is one thing ; what will hold him and command his respect is quite another. A woman's smile, for example, attracts a Man ; bat an even temper retains him. A pretty gown attraote a man ; the knowledge that it was inexpensive delights him. A pleasant manner attracts a man ; brightness of brain holds him. A knowledge of how, when and where to be a little .stately attraota•-a'- men ; .an_ appreciation of the folly of frivolity wins his. respect. Genuine Generosity. First Beggar—Why didn't you tackle that lady-? She might have given you something. Second Beggar -I let her go because' I understand my business better than you do. I never ask a woman for anything when she is alone; bat when two women are together yon can get money from both, because each one is afraid the other will think her stingy it she refuses. This pro- fession has to be studied like any other if yon expect to make it a enooese.--London Tit Bits. No Cause for Borrow. Ethel—I am' so sorry your father has failed in business. Isabel—Oh, don't worry. Mamma owns everything. He Goes to Church. Woggsy-How do yet buy your mesio ? Boggey—Like my wood, by the chord. Woggeby—I prefer to get mine like my note paper, by the choir. .0110 Mr. John H. Shnits, owner of the Park. ville farm, N.Y., has (told ont. His 110 horses brought $150,000, which makes an average of about $1,366. While this aver- age is large for so extensive a sale, it is certain that the horses sold cost "Mr. Shulte far more than they bronght, and that he is deoidedly disappointed by"the result.. The famous stallion Panooast was knocked down for $3,750 to Ben Johnson, of Bardstown, Ky., and will return to the bine grass region where he was- bred. He ie probably as cheap a horse now as he was the reverse when Mr. Shnite paid $28 000 for him. The moat important sales of the day *ere as follows Nehnshta b m, Stamboul...., r..., $0,100' Gold Leat, ch m, bySidney . 4.600 Sally Graham, br f, by Nutwood 4,300 Nut Pan, br o, by Nntwood 4,300 Pancost, b a, by Woodford Mambrino, 8,750 Madeleine, b m, by Hambletonian700 Sanford, b e, by Piedmont 8,350 Susie, D , ch m, by Alcyone 8,100 lssaquena, br m, by Pancoast 2,850 Mise Collins, b f, by Bon Fish 2,600 Vornotte, b m, by Manchester 2,500 Stella, b in, by Elootionoor 2,600 Of tho above Stanford oomes.to Canada, having been purchased by Mr. Ht F. Pierce, of Stanstead, Quebec'. - is estimated,that $20,000,000 annually haft been flowing to New Orleans to feed the great Louielana lottery ootopue. WhAnf41791. 2.4 • , pkq .oa to. ,,,. ,.—r >_r - woni` a vanoe a ew paces toward him. If he advanced toward the bear the bear would ehow his teeth and retreat a few steps. Thus, with considerable manoeuvring, about the same relative positions were maintained. Jaeoba searched all hie pockets for a suitable weapon, and finally found a tenpenny nail. A bright idea seized him, and he oarefallydrow the bird shot from his gun and loaded it up with the tenpenny nail. !'he bear was standing with his tail against the trunk of a tree. Jacobs took careful aim, fired and nailed the bear's tail fast to the tree. The bear was now unable to ad- vance towards Jacobs, and he retreated in safety to where his horse was tethered. Arrived at this point, another brilliant idea struck Jacobs. He took his riding whip and returned to the scene of the ad- venture. He began flaying the bear with the whip, in spite of the bears howls and protests. Finally the hide was so loos- ened that the bear jumped clear oat of hie ekin and made. his way into the woods with yells of distress. Jacobs calmly drew the nail from the tree, flung the skin over his ehoalder, mounted his horse eiad returned to Damp. Unfortunately, while the ettravan was crossing the Jefferson River the bearskin tumbled off and was lost. Jacobs. however, still has the tenpenny nail and can ehow it. —Anac on A Terrible Indian Experience. In a land of leeches you should think twice before wading in water. Otherwise you may emerge with a shaggy covering of jet black. Something like this has happened to two British warriors in India, Privates Speed and Davie, who, having left Bareilly for a day's sport and lost their way, were fastened upon by the leeches in the pools, which they had to erose bare -legged. The two soldiers wandered about hopelessly for nine days. Bareilly is near the jangles of Nepali, the favorite home of the tiger ; bat before the nine days were out Davis and Speed would have given a year or two of their lives for theht of an honest wild pig. It is a marvel that 4lintwo diff nob die of hardehip. The heat in upper India in July is simply terrifio. Yet the two sur- vived it, exposed to 'the sun's rays during the day, sleeping, in the open air at night. Not a village did they come across, not a human being, for the whole region was submerged by the yearly floods. They began by catching butterflies and . they finished off by being found nine -tenths dead -beside the metals of a railway line. The first solid food they had .in nine days was two "chupatties." A ohupatty is a wheaten, Dake, not unlike a Scotch bannook. There's nothing about the restorative " peg," bat doubtless it came in time.—London Daily News. . ' Not Quite What He Meant to Spy. Le Journal Amusant tells of an awkward compliment : Ho—'Pon my honor, madam, I should hardly have known you ; yon have altered eo muoh. She (arohly)—For the better or for the worse ? He—Ah, madam, you could only change for the better. Greater Than a Boon. " Yon are very proud of yourself, I think, ohappie." " Yee, I consider myself a boon to man- kind." " Greater than a boon, ohappie—any a baboon." A Murderous Committee. A. Constantinople cable says : An Armenian advocate has been aeeaseinated in Stamboul by order of the Armenian revolutionary committee, who suspeoted him of betraying them to the Porte. Many arrests have been made in Stamboul and Pers. She Was Tired. New York herald : Theatre Hat Joke— What is the editor packing away so care - rally in that box marked, " Handle with Dare" ? Plumber Joke—That's the summer girl. She's been need so much this season that she's positively worn out, bat with oarefal nursing it is expeoted she will be able to resume her place onthe staff by Jane next. Two Roman Catholicpriests from Earope,hired by Bishop Ireland as teaobera in the Catholic College at St. Pant. Minn., have been detained at Philadelphia under the oontraot labor law. Vese ernment moneys. on deposit in the vari- ous national banke, and as this sum amounts to about $7,000,000, the Presi- dent and his advisers feel financially pretty safe. But the Congress will de- mand the deposit of this money in the national treasury, subject to the lava made by the representative of the' peo- ple. 'the President• is a hot-headed„ stubborn and brave man, and has the army with him, but Congress has public' sentiment almost unanimously in its favor. The whole strife would cease if the President would choose a new cab- inet, the members of which would be in accord with the majority in Congeal. But the President will not do this, and before long the world , will learn the re- sult. There will be bloody oivil strife, and he will be dead or driven from the oountry, or iia absolute diotator."—Neto York Star. The Emigration from Ireland. Emigration from Irelana e>ill continues at the rate of over. 70,000 persons a_year., There was, however, a drop from nearly 79,000 in 1888 to 70,477 in 1889. The de- crees() is principally m the emigration from Ulster. The loss of population there by emigration is less by 4,500 than in 1888. There is in Connaught also a diminution of -peer-two-yhereerara c—flue—nhmboreof-emiee grants. Leinster emigrants numbered It little over a thousand fewer than in 1888 whereas Munster emigration is nearly stationary, 27,404 last year as compared with 27,719 in 1888. That province, it will be seen, furnishes by far the largest pro- portion of emigrants. Nearly 80 per cent. of Irish emigrants are between 15 and 35 years of see when they leave Ireland. -- London Daily News. . Spent on Cosmetics, Miss Kate Field, who has been Baying some pretty sharp things to her sex and about her sex, thinks that the Woman's Christian Temperance Union might well expend some of its surplus energy in re -forming- the -women -_of Amerioa _who spend___ _ .... $62,000,000 a year for cosmetics, most of whioh are made of zinc oxide, calomel aid . • similar poisons. " How," she asks, " Dau women vain enough to paint and dye their hair bring fcrth children stalwart enough to resist temptations that lead to all man ner of vice, inoluding drunkenness ?"• Dr. Blakeley, Minister of Education for Manitoba, is ill with typhoid fever at his mother's residenoe, Cherry Valley, Ont. —" The world owes every man a living and none bat fools collect the debt. In Central Park, New York, on a flee faLL afternoon ae many as 2,500 °addle home are ridden. There are 113 places in the United States named after " Mad Anthony " Wayne. D0NL. 42, 90. N THE BEST COUGH MEDICINE. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. tiN CON,SUMPTION' SCOTT'S EMUi.SJ0R,i DOES CURE t CONSUMPTION in its First Stages. Palatable as Milk. Be sure you get the genuine in Salmon cblclr wrapper; sold by all Druggists, at 50c. and $t"oo. SCOTT & BOVINE, I3cllevilie. let 1 -THC SAMOS OF BOTTLES OWEOWEN AWAY YEARLY. mg When I say Cure I do not mean merely -to step them for a time, and them have them return again. ! M E A'N A n A D 1 C A 1. C u n E. I have trade the disease of Fits Epilepsy or Falling Sickness a life-long study. 1 warrant my. remedy to Cure the Worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at Qace for a treatise and a Free Bettie of my Infallible Remedy. Give Expreti and dost Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will cure you. Address c—tile efts thOOT4 M.C., Branch Office, 188 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO. ONS INININIMENIERECIEBNININUIMEHreRl.1.73=TIMIRIMII TO T1111 1CT)ITOR i—Please inform yrmr renders 1 -hat 1 !lave a positive remedy for t$ above named disease, Ey, its timely use thou• auct4 a, I015.(a,®a4 cases'•ave-been permanently cured. I shall be glad tosend two bottles of my remedy S REE to any., your readers who have ee* sum tion If they will send ane their Express and Post Otxcke Address Resoer:•fuily. T. A. 81.000111‘ VI. . 580 Wes Adtelaldn CYr.a VORON'Fq. ONTARIO. - * 't Xi tt 1 e.