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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1890-12-05, Page 3r . TERRIBLE IF TRUE. General Booth, of the galvation Army, on the Sweating System,. THE PRETTY GIRL'S FATE. The lot of a negrese in the Equatorial forest is not perhaps a very happy one, bat is it ea very much worse than that of many a pretty orphan girl in oar Christian capi- tal ? We talk about the brutalities of the Dealt Agee and we profess to shudder as we read in books of the shameful emotion of lin pitrlIHm H18 IDESTI•d'Y. On the Verge os! the Oa11oWa He Saves Ma Mother's Feelings. The repent death in ()spade of Mrs. Sterling, mother of Charles M. Sterling, who wait executed atYoungeton, O., for the murder of Lizzie G roinbacher, has unveiled wo an incident th t oarred shortly before. concerning is execution. His mother came here from Maxwell, Canada, a$d though he had left home when but a lad, with maternal intuitions she recognized him. When brought to hie cell, Stirling, without the quiver of a. _he_ ' htei of feudal euperior. And yet muscle, said dam T am not n madam , �r r min , a .s.- -R.AI e,- --v 4 . �o�� � re e nes aiYr � _lie �'b theatres+, in our reatanrante, and in many other planes, unspeakable though it be but to name it, the some hideous abase flour- iahee unchecked. A young, penniielse girl, if she be pretty, is open hunted from pillar to poet by her employers confronted always by the alternative -starve or sin. And when once the poor girl has consented to buy the right to earn her living by the 4 *..^ th�n_abw is treated as a slave and an outcast y e ve have ruined her., Her word becomes un- believable, her lite an ignominy, and she is swept downward, ever downward, into the bottomless perdition of prostitution. But there, even.i mnnioated the lowest depths, maim - amenity and outcast from your eon. She implored him to recognize her, but he refused, and she returned home halt convinced that she wee mietaken, To his counsel Sterling said: " She is my mother, but I could not break her heart by telling her that her eon would be hung. Seep it secret until she dive. " Her death the past week caused his of silence today. " It wee the most dramatio eoene I ever witnessed;' said Mr. Anderson. eI heve seen all the tragedians of the past quarter of a century, but none that compared to the scene on that occasion. The he mother,me -every line in her face showing t intense suffering, and her heart nearly broken, while the eon, knowing that the trnth would kill her, stood like a statue, his faoe showing the pallor of death, seeming her that ehe was mistaken. Suoh intensity of notion was never produced on any stage. ' It could not be." -Cincinnati Enquirer. LI • N(1 UP TRH TAWAS. SALVATION ARKS FUN111H*L. PI al BQo1h propoeeo to provide work d for the poor and noemplo�'ed. ++ peppy Bill" Cooper Buried With Mill - and been ff CoorEn.—Promoted to Glory. Major. Cooper. 1 the Salvation Army, went to Beavon at, 8 Hp tees that he (+booing of the peopiP the farm lands, and orowding them into aitiea, hap inteneified poverty, with its reegitant increase of wickedness, and he e' mine to remove the �viotimm back to th lend. In his scheme, the farm colony' wonld Consist of a settlement of the colonists on an estate in the proovinodeefi in the culture of a hioh they nd employment a obtain (support. " As the rase from the isometry to the city has been the Dense of ranch of the distress we have to battle with, we peopose to find a eubatential part of our remedy by trans. .�.u.�. o t mea v..t � i>e- .. ,>tA re .k. t r o . ��. _�,;a-�,-rte;. aE', �p� ,: leo country-that ot o4 , sin dt�ie r.c� r� . , z ; ,rte. , v.iii tike Garden.' ie, book again „ Happy Bill."The remains lay Garden.' Here theo process of rforwar arlor of hie late reeidenoa at 86 Vananley tion of eIme iter would be carried forward street, in a plain black oaeket covered with by the same industriol, moral and religious funeral flowers. There was a Dices from methods city, have ecilalready been commencedthDee hie wife and children, and pillows from the ino this r an • that inknowledge: ge t „ Canadian staff" and "Commieaioner and forms of labor and ' knowledge of Mre• Adams." All about .the house and in agriculturemwhim should the colonist willont it were massed the soldiery of the Army. obtain employment in this country, for e The•fnnerai service was conducted out of ,..._ts•� i„m tar pursuing his fortunes , , , , . • , e bay window through nn ' ei more' , '" ' ` " m se frdm whin ti e Daggs some, other land. From the farm, the city, there oan be no question that large nnmbere, reenaoitated in health and character, _� = ld be restored to friends up and down t - oonntry. Borne would find employment in their own callings, others would settle in cottages on a small piece of land that we should provide, or on oo•operative farms, which we intend to promote ; while the great balk, after trial and training, would be passed on to consti- tutethe our foreign hird oleos -namely, the Over -Sea Colony. " All who have given attention to the subject are agreed that in our colonies in South Africa, Canada, Western Australia, and elsewhere there are millions of sores of useful land to be obtained almost for the asking, capable of, supporting our surplus population in health and comfort were it a thoneand times greater than it is. We propose to seonre a tract of land. in one of theme oountriee, prepare it for settlement, establish in it authority, govern it'by equitable laws; mist it in time of necessity, settling it gradually with a preperel people, and so seonre a home for these deetitate multitudes." His plan inoludes workshops and labor yards, where the destitute oan earn food and lodging. If any,man in England can make a huge colonization scheme a enemies, General Booth is the man. Emigrants, imbued with a religions idea, made. the desert of Utah blossom into a doll garden, and what has been done before oan be done again. God, she is f nearer the pitying heart of the•one tree Saviour than all the men who forced her down, aye, and than all the Pharby wheees and Scribes who ile ile the a fiend eh wrongs a areaperpo by ti- trated before there eyes. The blood boils with impotent rage at the sight of these enormities, callously in - dieted and Silently borne by these misera- ble viotims. Nor is it only women who are the viotims, although their fate is the most tragic. Those firms whiqh reduce 'sweating to a fine art, who systematically and deliberately defraud the workman of hie pay, who grind the faces of the poor, and who rob the annakehgreat pro. and who, for a pretence, fesaione of public Spirit and philanthropy, these men nowadays are sent to Parliament to mak 1, ws for the people. The old pro- phets a them to Sell -but we have changed all that. They send their viotims to Hell and are rewarded by all that wealth oan do to make their lives comfortable. Read the House of Lords' report on the sweating system, and ask if any African slave system, making due allowance for the superior civilization , and therefore . sensi- tiveness of the viotims, reveals more misery. -General Booth. The salvation Array ars practical, bu av- ant followers of the missionary apostle who baked with righteous boasting, -'t 0, .death, where ie thy sting?" They tarn a fuuerai into,* triumph, and form a line ot.battle about the ooffin of the fallen eoldieri' Wednesday afternoon the Toronto ' Army " corps bairipd with a curious mixture of military honors and hallelujah zeal tbe body of itliajor iaoopei�, who wWz and who s Ilton ly stationed in H m Japan's Climate. Sir Edwin Arnold says of the climate of Japan, in the December " Scribner's" : " Really it rains far too frequently in this otherwise charming Japan, and one oan indeed scarcely expect any permanent dry weather except in autumn. Every wind seems to bring rain•olonde np from the encircling Pacific to break upon the ever- green peaks of Nippon ; while in winter,, so great is the influence of the neighboring Arotio circle, with its cold currents df air and water, that Christmas in Stu -Shin - which lie in the name latitude as the months of the Nile- sees the tbemometer sometimes below zero. Except for oertain delicious periods of the year, one cannot honestly praise the climate of Japan ; but it has .certainly divine caprices ; and when the sunshine does unexpectedly come, dur- ing the chilly and and moist months, the li ht is very splendid, and, of a peculiar One, . ' mmnaer—day_s_t r' — _,hinge_,(+(+ IJ¢htning. So long as women will be foolish men will be deceptive. One day I sat behind a octopi° .on an Ohio and Mississippi train, and it wasn't ten minutes before 1 discovered that the girl was a village belle. who knew nothing of the world, and that her Dom. panion was a traveller who saw in her a viotim. Several others noticed them as well, but it was hard to see how anything could fie -done. ate professed-great-admir-- etion' for the girl, and she blushingly, queried : " But how do I know yon are not a mar- ried man 2" honor that " Oh, but. I assure you on my I am not." " Where do you live?" " In Louisville." " And you have neither wife nor chil- dren ?" " No;' • At that instant the conductor name in with a telegram and palled oat the address. '" That's for me,"'said the man in the seat bearers and placed upon a couple of sup- ports. It was noes wrapped in the , red folds of the Army banner, hiding entirely the sombre blaok of the coffin. At its side a light platform was put np in au instant and Col. Young sprang upon it and set the party singing with barracks vim : There's a butter world, they say ; Oh, so bright. Commissioner Adams led in prayer, as did several others, interspersed with sing- ing, after whioh Capt. Walton spoke of the faithfulness, zepl and Christian courage of the deceased. And all the while through the triumphant mnsioand the brave words, the widow sat at the open window and sobbed. The procession was formed somewhat slowly in the windy street, the casket being carried to the " gun carriage "--a red cart of simple oonstrnotion,; with neither Bide nor top shelter. This wee drawn by four white horses covered with red hongings, on the sides of whioh were the " arms of tbe army, bearing the usual motto, " blood and of the coffin were the flowers e e andtheg ed awrepPiety oap of the deceased. the advance The procession was led by guard ; .then followed, the colors draped, the staff band, the commissioner and male staff, the female staff, female field officers and female cadets, the gun carriage bearing the casket, beside whioh walked the pall- bearers -Brigadiers Spooner and Philpott, Major Bough, Staff•Capte. Walton, Beatty and Fisher. A second band, Mra. Cooper ,and_femily in a carriage, the soldiers bed rear guard of cadets tolt'weu• was interred in Mount Pleasant Cemetery with the Army service. Staff Officer Southall, of Hamilton, . attendei the funeral. The officers from this station were present. The aeaUrliWON ♦LIEN. rinelple Upon 'l7Yhieh the siihilhts Slew Sellverakoir. The Foyle Eelair says a Nibiliet commit. tee.11e that if Sophia G•uneberg, who wau arrested Rt• St. Psterebnrg'-*ior-having bombe in her possession, was sentenced to death, Gen, Beliverekoff would be killed as soon t hereafter aA possible. The woman was sentepoed to be hanged last Monday, andfi1 shooting of the general occurred the day after. The name of the Pole who iesuepeotedot murderiog Gen. Seliverakoff is Padlewakp. not Podleeky. A person resembling PadleW- 4><s er+,seed the Belgian frontier on Tuesday night. th the den cel i na re or to n sr P Dr. ap� 33ron , A �a et very golden. The Sarcastic Telephone Girl. Lewiston Journal: A " telephone girl" who knows euggests these rules for people. who nee the telephone : " It you have a telephone in your office or store ring up ' central' and then go and wait on a ans- tomer.--BAlwaya_apeak� in an undertone in order to.make ' central ask wbi► yon wast: 'It she doe not heir you tell her to 'wake np' or ' take the cotton out of her ears.' Pat' in re a storm and be sure not to our take it out again again but go around to the central office and offer to liok tho whole telephone company for neglect of duty. Take your time in answering your bell, or, what is better, do not anwser it at all,bnt in about half an hour ring up and ask who central has forgotten dwho� t wand ee. She mad if has nothing else to do but remember. A Woman's Easy Time. Baited from the effect"' of a si behind en ha,�m-- o' Grin. �b ��' v " �" wound, that the bullet entered be ear, and that the phot was fired at a dis- tance of from Bis to eight inohee. Muneraf eervioe for the 'murdered general will be held to-Inorrow. The body will afterwards be taken to Russia., The Value of Silver Coins. ahead. It was handed to him, and he was mull- ing se he tore it opened. Next moment he fell forward in a heap, and rolled into the aisle in a deadafeint. Halt a dozen of us, including the girl, read the diepatoh. It was dated at Indianapolis and read ; " Your wife and baby burned up with the house last night. Come at once." It took us a quarter of an hour to bring him to, and it was half an hour later when he left the train. He had forgotten the 'girl wbo shared his peat, and she was crouched down and crying like a. baby.- New York Sun. The Turf. MRWM. RENAME MAKES PURCHASES. At the eel° of Mr. W. L. Scott's horses in the Panorama building, New York, on Thursday, the two-year-old chestnut colt Bolero, by Rayon d'Or -A11 Hands Around by War Dance, was bought by Philip. -Dwyer-for-$35,000,:.being the highest price ever paid in America for a two•year-old. All the horses sold well, the record standing in this shape : Twelve two and three -year- olds, 563,050 ; average, 55,254. Nineteen yearlings, 534,100; average,, 51,637. Grand' total, $94,150. Grand average, 53,037. Mr. Hendrie, of Hamilton, preeidept of the Ontario Jockey Club, bought Verestile, b. o., two years, by Rayon d'Or-Valleria, by Glenelg or Virgil, for 5900 and a yearling bay colt by Zerills-Underanst, by Brown Bread, for 5575. Charley Boyle bought a couple of yearlings for Toronto parties ; Rabellise Grass Belle,le, oh. f., bby War. Da one, Rayon 5750, d'Or -and Queen, bay f., by Uhlan-Queen T., by Great Tom, for $400. The highest priced yearlings were : Entre, oh. a•, by Rayon d'Or -EU& T.,,by War Dance, far whioh AP.. Walcott r b. o., byAIgerineaBorde65,500laie, band Bordeaux, Brown' Bread, for whioh J. E. Macdonald paid 55,150. Two other Rayon d'Or oohs, Marine and Coxswain, fetched $3,500 and $3,050 respectively. That r The dollar of 1804 is worth 5100. - Those of 102 andDollare dated 1839 1 a836 re valuedoosti0 t 530. Those of 1851, 1852 and 1858 cost 8491 each. Only four of 1804 exist and one is worth 5500. Those issued in 1836 are rated from $10 $50. - Half -dollars of '1794, 1815, 1851 and 1852 bring $5 each. Those of 1797 are worth 550 to 875 ; of 1796 $75 to $100 1796 and 1853, $30 for 1823, $50 for 1827. Not . Fair on Georgie. Harrand Lampoon : Little Georgie-- Mamma. where is the world's fair going to be held ? Mamma -In Chicago, dear ; why ? Little Georgie-Oh, nothing, only while I was hiding under the sofa last night 1. heard Charlie tell Grace to oome over to him and he would show her where the worldust going's fair to peep outand gee to be lwhere when d, and I was the gas went out. Silver quarters bring $7 for 1804, $10 for He Didn't Forget It. A wife recently gave her husband a sealed letter, begging . him not to open it till he got to his plane of business, says the Sheffield (Eng.) Telegraph. When he did so he read : ",,:I am forced to tell yon something that I know will trouble yon, •but it is my duty to do so. I am determined you shall kI now, the result be . what it may. e n for a week thatit was ooming, but kept it to myeelt until to -day, when it has reached a crisis, and 1 cannot keep it any longer. Yon must not censure me toe harshly, for you enlist reap the result as well as myself. I do hope it won't crush you." By this time a cold perspiration stood on his forehead with the fear of some ter- rible unknown calamity.' He turned the page, 'hie hair slowly rising, and read: ' " The coal is all used np I Please call and auk for sometis°methodo be sent ,hie afternoon. you would not I thought' by forget it.'"' He didn't. Oswego Times : Married women would do well to paste in their sorap books the following ntatistios relative to woman's work : In one year a woman gets dinner 365 timee, w,asbes the dishes 1,095 times, gets the children ready for eohool twine a day for 180 days, gets the baby to sleep 1,460 timee and makes about 300 calla. Who says a woman has nothing to do? • He'G� ub. Brooklyn Life : Ab, good morning 1" said the early bird to the worm. " Looking for job?" I can do for That'a whet. Anything yon?" " Yes, you'll about fill the bill, I think." 1 He Took the Sint. Washington Post : " Do you know," she • aid, " that clock reminds me of yon every Ala me I look at it. Do you notice anything -me about it 2" that I " Why --no 1 I really can't say do," he replied, as he drew nearer, ex- cept that it doesn't go." He got red in the face and in :a few momenta vanished. An Exception to the Rule. Lawrence American : Prison Warden (to now prisoner) -We always like to assign the prisoners to the trades with whioh thto d re most familiar, and shalt be happy in your owe. What is your trade? Prisoner --I am a commercial traveller. He Was Cute. Sbe Was Cuter. As sly as a fox was he, and she As soft as the dainty dove, And so he wro.e her a bushel of notes That spoke of his deathless love. Bat bewrote them all with eieg ink' Adthus she had be fading It she hadn't, in fact. photographed them all As fast as they were received. Why She Didn't. Mey'a Weekly : He -I begin to think She you pater youes might knowthatthat s� impossible ? Why, he hasn't a cent to his name, °Inviolable Secrecy. "I'll tell you something," remarked Miss Bleeoker," on the dead quiet." " Very well," replied aline Beacon -Aires%, of Boston, " I will remember that it ie on the deceased silence." ' The Motto Suited Sim. �ifarrg-fd011ey -I heir. yvfiet Am that Too Much. Wickwire -I hear. that you and Mudge had a little difficulty. Ysbsley-So we did. He called me a pig- headed jackass. I'll stand a great deal item a friend, but I want it distinctly understood that I'm no freaks. THE tramp question we have,always with ns, but at this season of the year it forces itself upon the pnblio mind with greater persistence than at any other time of the year. In thid'oity various plans have been tried in dealing with these men, but none seem a satisfactory solution of the problem. The homes provided for them of course give thein shelter for the time being, but the police oon>lplain that the more kindly they are treated the more of them gook into the " oity with the result that crime increases and the public suffer in conse- quence. Canada might learn some legions from an experiment whidh was begun in Germany by a benevolent clergyman in 1882 to give relief to vagrants in exohange for work. The stations are styled Labor, Colonies, and last year 21 of them admitted 6,231 persona. If a tramp refugee the work provided for him at a colony heis turned over to the civil authorities and disposed of according to law. The system has already reduced vagrancy -and mendioanoy in the Emfiire, and hos diminiehed indisorimi• nate almsgiving. The work supplied at the colonies is farm labor, reolamation of wastes, forestry or trade. They a e ung - ported solely by , private After 14 days the tramp is paid moderate wages, and from them is deducted the cost of clothing and other articles he may u Besides the colonies there are a thoneand "stations" where wanderers have tempo - ;tory relief, always in return for work. The promoters of this partial charity -hope that a penniless wanderer seeking work shall be 'enables' to travel from one end of the land to another without begging, and they are not without hope that he will perhaps attain to an appreciation of the advantegee of honest and regular labor. It is objected that thia system enoouragee aimless wandering, and produces a plass of "Colony ro nders and bummers." Cer- tainly, it hail not yet euppressed the tramp ; but it ie steadily working in that direction. More 'than That. New York News :. " Sharp, what ails you ? Yon look as if yon had lost fifty pounds of flesh since I saw yon last." Fifty pounds 1 Don't mook at a man's misery. I have lost 800 pounds of flesh. I bet a Jersey cow on Scott." " Had His Choice. Buffalo News : Mother --Johnny, I see that your little brother bas the emaile piece of cake. Did yon give him hie ohoioti ne I told you to ;do 2 Johnny -Yee' m. I told him he could have his choice, the little piece or none, and he took the little piece. you gide have formed a temperance eooie: Amy -Yee, indeed. Our motto is : " Thai lips that touch beer shall never tamth mine." . Dopey -That lets me in. I drink nothing but whiskey. In Darkest London. 'Boston Journal : In London last year 500 children under 10-years-of—age were . arrested for drunkenness. The silk manufacturers of Germany have been completely crowded out of the European market by the euperior oheap- ness and excellence of French stuffs. The German wares are now ohefly exported to South Ameriot. A attempt at euioide, off the summit of the(Aro de Triomphe, Paris, was made on k`'ri'day by Lonige Fomeyrol, a' tee oher and -. jtiet as she was getting over the parapet she was stopped by the guardian. She said : ".You are very cruel. I wish to put an end to my sufferings. I shall do. so still." She is the daughter of respectable tradespeople, and is suffering from an in- curable malady. - The United Stetee Rolling Stook Com- pany has been placed in the hands of a receiver, Mr. A. Hegewioh, president of the company, being selected for that office The liabilities are given at 53,816,000 and the tweets $6,053,000. This company is one of the largest, it not the largest, builder of railway oars in the world, and has planta at Hegewioh, Ill.; Decatur, Ala. ; Anniston, Ala ., and Urbana, 0. The planta are all to be kept in operation. . Prof. Holden, of Liok Observatory, is said• .to have discovered on the moon par ilel walls 200 feet thick on top and about 1,200 feet apart. What they could. have been for ie not aurmised, but it may as well be conjectured that they are walls a9 that the lines on Mare are canals. • At the recent festivities commemorating the centenary of the foundation of Odessa, a race on velocipedes was on he programme. Thie gave great offence to a priest named Sawelkoff, who preached a epeoral sermon against' this innovation, whioh he deolared to be " the devil's sport." Recent information gathered by the Ger man forestry commission aseigne to the pine tree 500 and 700 years as the maxi- mum, 425 veers to the silver fir, 275 years to the larch, -245 years to the red'beeoh, 210 to the aspen, 200 to the birch, 170 to the ash, 145 to the alder, and 130 to the! elm. The Salvation Army has money and property in the different countries where at is established valved et 53,213,000. The trade effects, stook, machinery and geode on hand are valued at . Some idea of the trade dee rtmen6tmay lbe gath- arfrom nnets the fact every year they to the feroll male 000 army 0otdiere. Smaller oheoke are the fashion in Wall street now. A large band of armed Indians have armed the Upper Missouri River and are heading westward to join the Sioux at Turtle Mountains. Thkransoontinental Railway Amide - tion he' decided to advanoo all freight rates on Peclfio Coast businean 10 per Dent., oimmenoiog Deo. let. One of the greatest problems of the f4iture is thought to be the transformation of carbon energy into light upon the same principle that the glowworm and fire -fly give their light. 4 Mo. G. A. h 91Farm' hass beentitled " Mortgaging the pre- sented'to the National Gallery in Ottawa by the Royal Canadian Academy. The Department of Jnetioe has appealed to the Court of Appeals of Ontario , from the judgment of the Chancery Divisional Court in the important constitntionsl oaee of The Attorney -General for Canada vs. The Attorney -General of Ontario, whioh involves the question of the power of par- don, declared by. the Cheineery judges to rest with the Ontario Government regard- ing cffenoes • over whioh the legislative authority of the Province eittends. The question will ultimately pome before the Supreme Court. Lord Salisbury attended a council at Windsor Saturday, when the Queen signed the Speech from the eTf cPone, which is to be read on the opening. DCN L. 48. 90. FARM FOR SALE. FARM CONTAINING 100 ACRES, 11 70 acres cleared, situated lot 93. 4th con cession Township Ancaster, on Bra.ittord atone road, 10 miles from Hamilton. Enquire W KAVANAGH, 993 King west, Hamilton, Ont. In England and Wales' out 26,954 of food samples -which were recently analyzed 3,096 were found to be adulterated. This is equal to 111 per cent., a peroentaao lower than in any previous year since 1888, when itlwas under 11. There aro more pnblio holidays in Hono- lulu than in any other city in the world. In Victoria, Australia, briok•Iayers and masons work but seven and one•half bourn per day. I took Cold, I took Sick, I TOOK 1 SCOTT'S 10-1 i Y take I i:arsyi seat, AND I AM VIGOROUS ENOUGH TO TAKE C ANYTHING I CAN LAY MY HANDS oN; (, getting fat too vox Scott's `Emulsion of Pure' Cod Liver Oit' and Hypophosphites of Lime an soda NOT ONLY CURED MY Iii ip- leent Consumption BUT BUILT ME UP, AND IS NOW PUTTING FLESHON Ne9Y BONES AT THE RATE OF A POUND A DAY. I TAKE IT JUST AS EASILY AS I DO MILK." Scott's tmuislon is put up only In 'Salmon • ) color wrappers. Sold by all Druggists at 50c, and $1.00- SCOTT & BO WWI?, Belleville. Plso's BA:tunny for Camera is ti.e Best, Easiest Co Use and Cheapest.. tan, • Sold by druggists or sent by matl,S0o. E. T. iiazeltiao, Warren, Pa., U. E. A. .SNS ISIITAItqlst. ,%.„,0 TO THF, EDITOR :—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remeGy fe k its timet use thousands of hopeless cases ape ad have yoen ur oermane nave above named disease. Byy 1 shsumpt be glad to send two Ettles r my remedy tionnifR theywilliAdola dG their^ EgORONTQ. ONTARIO. ess. Resyoctfulrlr, T+ A. 8 THOUSANDS OF BOTTLES 1 GIVEN AWAY YEARLY. When I say Cure 1 do not mega Fell t71 r ` l" Vilmerely to stop them for a time, and them tlavo them return again. 0 Fill E A l I A RADICAL C U En. 1 have made tb dI to ie of ,l "Epilepsy or Failing nickname a life-long study. I warrant my, GivedExeter(+ (+tit Worst cases. Because others hese failed is no Infallible Raason for not w receiving* a cure: Sen Once for a treatise had a Froo Bottle of ley Y_ Post L'. Office. costs Office, 188 WEST ADELAIDE will cure TORONTO.s; mtouti ti