Loading...
Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-01-16, Page 7�:;•:'4,6401, :fir �. �.. BITTING BULL. Adirondack Murray's Estimate of the Dead Indian. A Great Historic Character -A Beer and a Prophet. " Everybody is well satisfied at hie death." This iaAke etentenga I reed thief morning' in a great Amerioin journal touching the murder of the great Sioux prophet, Sitting Ball. I say murder, for murder it wasand murder it was intended -to be, unleee all the reports sent eastward for the last month have been lies. The land grabbers wanted the Indian lande. The lying, thieving Indian agents .w anted siieuue touching paes thefts, and ImRittWt to,00ntiM,..... 01,0$ lb e. �„fi tilegdccieli glom °t7eeir people among €he Indian police wanted an opportunity to show their power over a man who despised them as renegades, and • whom, therefore, they bated. The publio opinion of the frontier—the outgrowth of ignorance, credulity and eelfieh greed—more than ate vented to a plan to rid the country of one who while he lived, so great was he in fame and in fact, mast forever stand ae a reminder Out of all these and other causes peculiar to the condition of things there localized, some accidental and deplorable, others per- manent and infamous, was born, as Mil- ton'e. Death was born, from Satan and Sin,. the plot to kill him. And eo he was murdered. His death is ead enough. It would have been sad to many of, ne who knew him as he was and admired him for what he was had he died in peace amid the remnants of his people and the mourning of hie race. Bat killed as he has been in obedienoe to a conspiracy and ae the outcome of a plot to make an end of him, untried by prooeea of law, proven guilty of no orime, unconvicted of any overt act, we pronounce hie killing a crime and his sadden removal in the • manner and substance of it an outrage and .a murder. THE GREAT MEDICINE MAN. I knew this man ; knew him in relation to hie high office among his people and in hie elements as a man. As to hie offioe or rank I honored him. He filled a station older than human records. As a man I Admired' him. He represented in person, in manners, in mind and .in the,heroiem of hie spirit the _highest_ type of a. raoe whiob.in, many and. rare virtues stands peer among the nations of the world. • As to hie rank or official, station, we whites palled him' Medtoine Man. It is a name that, does not name. It is and has been from the beginning of oar interooureed with the red raoe a de- lusion and the source ;of delusions among even the scholarly. A word of truth as to 4 aver of few words, but suave and low voiced, In momenta of aooial relaxation he wail oompanionable, receptive of humor, a genial hoot, aw pleasant guest. In his family gentle, affectionate and not Opposed to merriment. When sitting in council hie deportment waea model; grave,. deliberate, courteous to opponents, patient end kindly to men of leen; mind. I suggest that our Senators oopy After him. ELOQUENT/ND PROUD. In pride he was equal to his rank and raoe, a rank to him level with a Pope's, and a raoe of she. oldest' .and bravest. in the world. Of vanity I never saw one trace in him. I would couple the word with Glad etone or Webeter as quiokly as with him. He was never over -dressed. He wore the insignia of hie office, as a king hie robes, or a judge hie gown. In eating he was tem. perste; from spirituous drinks an abstainer. His word once given +E>se.a true bend. He was a born diplomat. Nettie ever fathomed �-- •-�,i�"`>s�`�seesUISTa-I,AzsM;;rii,�,��.'-"iern`'i�`�"lifoie"�''c;c�. hour when I knew his heart was hot with wrath, but neither from eye nor lip nor oheek nor nostril nor sinewy hand might one get hint of the storm raging within. There was no enrface to him: He was the embodiment of depth. Was he eloquent? What is eloquence ? Who may eay—who may agree to it ? Men tell me that Mr. Depew is eloquent,' and 41.4 A7..... g 1.o„ this : ..When the Frenoh first mingled with the aboriginals of this continent they. found in eaoh tribe a man honored of all, in many respects greater than the greateete war chief.- Ot hia.rank there was -no -doubt. Of his functions only one was apparent ; all others were hidden. They wero oonneoted with the religious rites and mysteries of a mysterious people. The one function of his high offioe that they could apprehend, the least of them all, as we now know in fact was this He was the physician, the healer -of hie people. Thte they oonid see and understand end hence in their ignor- ance of hitt real office, of his nobler func- tions and rank, they named him the medi- cine man,' and this misnomer clung to him and hie office and has been perpetuated, blinding all eyes and hanging a veil of darkness between no and true knowledge. But to the red men he, whom the whites in their ignorance misnamed the medicine man, the physician, the healer, was the prophet of the Great Spirit to the tribe, the seer of God, as Samuel was to the Jews, holding the relation to the war chiefs that Joshua held to Moses, and holding to their religion and its rites the same great rank and office as the High Prieet among the Jews held to the Temple. The man Sitting Bull was a war prophet, riot Ever chief, to his people. The seer, in the line of seers of a raoe, beside whioh, ae to antiquity, the Jewe are but mushrooms. What was the misnomer', a joke, a term of contempt to ne in our ignorance of fact and ancient things, to the red men—for the term Indian as applied to thein is aleo a misnomer and a proof of fourteenth cen- tury ignorance—wee a rank above all ranks won or bestowed by the tribe ; an office above all earthly offices, 'connected and symbolia of the highest truths and • deepest myeteriee o! their religion. TOE COUNSELLOR OF CHIEFS. Hence, by virtue of hie office, old onotem and tradition, this man, Sitting Ball, was counsellor of chiefs, the Warwick behind the throne stronger than the throne, the oracle of mysteries and of knowledge hidden from the, mass, hidden even from ohiefe, to whose worda of advioe and anthority,alllietened ae to the last and highest expreeaion of wiedom. ' Such was Sitting -Bull as to his office, as interpreted'and nnderstood from e stand- point of knowledge of the religion, the tra- ditions and the superstitions of his people. That he was faithful to his high offioe all know. That he was, in fact, counsellor of, chiefs, that as Joshua did to Moses, eo be in hour of battle upheld their arms till ,the sun went down Ind the battle was lost or won, lei all who fought his tribe declare ; that the gods of hie raoe' found in him a high priest faithful to his tract .none oan ever deny. He lived and he hes died a red man, true to his office and his race. ' That leaf of laurel none vein deny to hid fame— not oven hie renegade murderers. Bat no office, however great, is as great as the man if be filla it greatly, and this man Sitting Bnll was greater es a man than he was even as a prophet. I met bim often ; I etuding him closely as one of intelligence studies the type of a race—I. may add of a departing race and I knew him well. And this 11 say of him. He was a Sioux of the Sioux, a rod man o! the i ed men. In him, his raoe, in. phyeigne, in manners, in virtue, in faults, stood incarnate. In face he was the only man I ever . saw who resembled Gladstone --- largo 'featured, thoughtfully grave, reflective, xeposeful When unexcited. In wrath his countenance was a collection of unexploded or exploding. thunder• tithe fawfnl embodiment of Meas. :melees passion and power. in conversation ho. was deliberate, the in front of them when their Mir. Cate e speaking. I have read their words. Their eloquence is not that of the great Sioux Prophet. Here are some words of his. You can compare them with your orators' best : "-Yon tell me of the Mohawks. My fathers knew them. They demanded tribute of them. The Sioux laughed. They went to meet them, 10,000 horsemen. The Mowhewke .saw them coming, made them a feast and returned home. You tell me of the Abenaznis. They -are our fore- fathers, and the forefathers of all red men. Thew were the men of the Dawn. They oame from the East. They were born in the morning of the world.' The traditions of my people are full of the Abenaznie. They rooked the cradles of our race." And again— " What treaty that the whites have kept has the red man broken ? Not one. What treaty that the whites ever made with ne red men have they kept ? Not one. When I was a boy the Sioux owned the world. the sun rose and set in their lands. They gent 10,000 horsemen to battle. Where are the warriera to -day? Who Blew' them? Where are our lands ? Who owns them ? What wbite man can say I ever stole his lands or a penny of his money? Yet they say I am a thief. What white woman; 'heti ever lonely,` was ever when a captive in. milted by me ? Yet they say I am a bad Indian. What white man has ever seen. me drank ? Who has ever come to me hltngry and gone reefed ? Who has ever Been me beat my wives or abase my chil- dren ? What law have I broken ? Is it wrong or me o ove my own T1W 1 ` winked in me because my skin is red ; because I am a Sioux ; because I was born where my fathers lived ; bemuse I would die for my people and my country ?" And -again.: " They tell yon I murdered Custer It is a lie. I am not a war ohief. I was not in the battle that day. His eyes were blinded that he could not see. He was a fool. and he rode to his death. He made the fight, not I. Whoever tells you I killed the Yellow Hair is a liar." - A MIDST SINGER GONE. li1adame Stewart Passes Away Singing of Her Loved Native Land. Mrs. Walter Bruce (Madame Stewart), of Bruce and Patrick's Balmoral Choir, died on Tuesday morning at the' home- of her cousin, • Mrs David Bruce,. No.. ,265 North May street. It will be remembered that Mis. Bruce turned suddenly ill at the concert given by the Orkney and Shetland Society in. Farwell Hall on Deo. 17th, sad was unable to finish her part of the prQ, gramme. She was taken to the home of her relatiye and it was not at firet thought that her illneeswas ao serious, but on Sunday it was considered advisable to telegraph Mr. B,rude, her husband, who was in Pittsburg, and he arrived here on Monday. Deceased, who was but 33 years old, was a very popular eoprano of Glaegow, and her untimely death will be Ifxourped by a Seobland and America. A touching incident in connection with Madame Stewart's closing honre, was her pathetic' singing of the old Scotch song, " The Bonnie, Bonnie Banks o' Looh Lomond." Her mind was evidently .tra- velling book to the loved -heather hills of her native land, of whioh she had often sung so sweetly, and it was with tear - dimmed eyes that those wilfo smoothed her - the sweet singer as she thus feebly breathed her farewell song : " You'll tak' the high road and I'll tak' the low road, And I'll be in Scotland afore you. But me and my true love, well never meet again On the bonnie, bonnie banks o' Looh Lomond.' The funeraltook place on Thursday, a large gathering of friends following the remains to the elaoe.of interment in Rose Hill Cemetery.—Chicago British -American. Some Things. Worthy of Attention. , In order to call attention to the great care neoeeeery before burying the dead, the following extraote from a medioal journal are given namely, five signs of death : First sign—Cessation of circulation and respiration. Second—Cooling of the body from 99 degrees to that of atmosphere, usually in 24 hours or less. • Third—Rigidity, which begins in about nix' hours after.. death ; after some houre there ie again relaxation. Fourth—Resistance of muscles to galvan- izetion. ' Fifth—Mortification, whioh generally commences about 40 hours after death, and usually shows first over the'stomaoh. Physicians should always see the dead person before giving a certificate, even in cases where they have been in attendance just before death. On the .authority of a physioian it ' is understood that in embalming a alight incision is made •first, before going on with the proem, whioh seems a necessary .sefe- guard. -The attention of mothers and nurses ie called to the danger of covering infante' heads too closely, lest they should not have sufficient air to breathe freely. The Scot and His Flag. The following. taken from a Scotch paper of the year 1866, will be interestingreadiug now : " Dr. Norman McLeod said : The first thing I eaw on entering the meeting to -night was the flag -here (pointing to the Union Jack) Yon know that is the flag of our country. Very well, that is the bravest flag in the world. (Cheers.) It is the flag of the finest country on the face of the earth. (Cheers.) There is. not a country in the world—and, I , have been in many— like it. (Renewed,oheere.) I have been in ever so many and I never eaw more beenti- ful hills, more beautiful lochs, more beauti- ful valleys, than these in our country. And there is not a town in the whole world to be compared .with Edinburgh. ((Moore.) 'There is' not a donritry 'iii'the' World" theft has more be ntifnl songs ; and there is no mueio that will make you laugh, and greet, and dance, equal to the old Scotch mesio. (Cheers.) There is not a country on the face of the earth where you have more Gospel truth—where you have such Sab- bath eohools—where there is a clergy more earnest in instrn—to Ing young and ol-d1in h0 fear of the Lord. What I'have to say to you is, wherever you go on the face of the earth you are not to forget that flag, and you are notto disgrace your country. Over the whole .world- there_. are. Sootohmen. I have preached to Sootohmen in Russia, in Sweden, in America, in Egypt, in Turkey, in Italy—there is hardly a plaoe where I have not preached to Sootohmen; and these generally have. been an honor to their country, •except when they take to drink, and then they beoome the biggest black. ua=ds on the fao0 oft earth. (Laughter nd cheers., Becoming Dangerous to Live. Are we, safe nowhere from baoteria, some one inquires, no even when we are . sealed up in a vaonum in'a glass vase ? Not con- tent with showing ne that horrid 'monsters claw and fight in every drop of water we drink, eoientifio gentlemen have now been microscopically overhauling a hailstone and finding that an 4nfinitesimal speak of the ice contains no"lees than 400 to 700 of the baoteria, says the Scientific American. They may be the germe of smallpox, scarlet fever, leprosy, naughtiness and crime. Not even ioe will kill them, for they thaw out and wriggle ferooionaly. The invention of the microscope revealed wonders to man, bat it has made life a burden to nervous people. Nothing is free from mien -oboe any more, hothing is pare, except the benevo• lent motive of one, Hays the same inquirer, who lends a friend $5 when lie never expects to get it back again. A McAllister Drew. Excited Lady (at Atlantio City) -Why isn't something done for that ship in die - tress ? Why don't memo of you— Life Saver (hurriedly)—We have sent the crow a line to come ashore,' mum. Excited Lady—Of all things l Were they waiting fora formal invitation? The average W lleeiey College girl weighs 114 pounde end is a trifle over 5 feet 2 inches in,height. —" Oh, Dome off the perch," mentally exclaimed the cook as the busied herself cleaning the Bottles from the fish. Miss Constance Fenimore Woolson hen settled for the winter at Cheltenham, England, where. alto is [acid to be engaged n writing a novel. N WSP.PSB ETHIV$. A group of newspaper' men dined to- gether at Providence, Rhode Island, the 'other • night, and, naturally, they talked shop. Some of the points brought out in the, disoueeion will interest the general reader. For instance, there is news and news. The story of. any orime.is news, bat indeoent and purely eeneational narration or "padding out " with ahooking details ie not news. The newspapers ehonld give " all the news," but it .eboald be genuine •and decent and nerved with regard for pub- lio morality and ao as to afford right in, etrneeion upon onrrent. events. The re- epeotable newspaper ' will not emireb its oolmmne even for "filthy mere." There:le a eensationaliem which ie proper, but it is born of real events, not of reportorial inter. pretation of them. The appearance of the one in the newspaper column is legitimate. The ase of the other finde no excaee, save in a desire for a notoriety whioh cannot be ..l, ..,�rr.dQar hp!. .......v.1°�.ltt,se• ,,., w.. -,_ .T,�,~w..�,!ix!. �-•�1±� !!nd sttraoive. As a novelt�► i * e believe the decent sentiment �oYi' t ° Witt toiadalotiinli iril ri i 'n`i irel� • + i .'"' "';e'''''""```'moi public will agree with the viewe advanced shirts for the men and white flowers for above. There is news, that ie, reports that the women being the only relief. New oo;ne to every newspaper offioe, of actual Yorkers adore doing uncommon things-- evente that • is not fit. to be laid before the they ought,to try a Nice ball."—New Yo,* general public. These events may be Time& crimes of a partioc,Ilarly malodorous nature • or sooial eoandate, the publication of whioh What Shall the Harvest Be ? will bear more heavily on the innocent than1Why 1 What can it be, bat suffering and upon the guilty and with whioh the general l sorrow, disease and death, if you neglect BUD AND WHITN. An American Girl's D rlptien of a Collor Ball"" ai1"Pries. " I wonder," said a young woman who had resided abroad foir two years and halt just returned, "that New York does aoo ltt_tempt s coder ball, such me are fre- quently given at..Nloe. 1' attended two there, one red, the other white. The red was the more brilliant, itut the white was exceedingly beautiful, too. At the former the men appeared in red satin coats, white aatin•breeobes and recd Bilk stockings and shoes. The ladies wore whit° with .rte k�csee. All the decorations and hangings v�ere red, lamp shades and all, and t sapper ornamentations were all of the same bright color. At the white ball every- thing was white. The men woreArkita of white satin, with white oboes, and the ladies, of coarse, white dreeses and flowers. Both were givers by the as : wQ Dave Potts' Wife. Boston Herald: We were sitting in a small public hall in a town in Connecticut, waiting for the lecturer to appear. There were about 300 people present, and, at a moment when everybody was quiet, a man marched up the centre aisle, mounted the stage, and turning to face the audience, he asked in solemn tones : " Is Dave Potts in this 'ere crowd ?" Silence. " Is Dave Potts in this 'ere crowd 2" continued the speaker in loader and more solemn tones. " Dave Potts is 'ere," said that in- dividual, as he stood up. " Air anything wanted ?" " She be," answered the Man on the stage. " Year wife has been tooken, and wants you." " Tooken with what ?" " Fits, and the wuae kind, and two women was a rubbin' her when I cam away. Go hum, Dave Potts. Yon hain't no bizneas crouching around a literacy entertainment, any how." ' And as Dave walked out the man came down and took a front emit with the air of an orator who had won a prize. suppression of such reports is in the inter- est of good morals and cannot harm any respectable journal.. - Among the etrongeet pointe madeon the 000asion noted above was that of Taloott Williams, of the Philadelphia Press, in criticizing the personal and impertinent features of some modern jonrnale. The practice ,of invading the homes of the people and prying into affairs that are essentially of a purely private oharaoter is an outrage upon the rights of the indi. vidnale concerned. We refer, of course, to oases in whioh the consent of the parties interested has not previously been secured. If a lady desires to have her entertain- ments and attire and pereonal affairs written up for the press. there can be no serious objection to it providing the work is done in a proper manner. But the key -hole society reporter is an unmitigated nuisance and ehould be promptly kinked off the front stoop of a house where he is diaoovered parrying ; on his olandeetine operations. Some Plain Talk. ' " Anti -Bazaar " in Montreal Witness : SIR,—The bazaar season is now set in, and • methinks 11,20X,itness,,_. Star and.other,oity, papers deserve a vote of thanks for the free notices and graphic deeoriptione . of them, and we should thank our oily fathers for granting the' azaare exemption from taxes, but, above all, thanks are due to.the fancy goods dealers who so patiently aooept the position and give their wares.te there noble charities , a all the taxes hes ' ed on them and pay you good gold for every line in paper. All through the dark, damp spring, the hot dry summer and oold,bleak fell the dealers " have been patiently waiting for and looking to•the holiday trade to help them take up a note, reduce a heavy ,stook or:oover lose of dull times, hat just as their hopes are getting ripe the bazaar vulture sweeps. down on them end all their hopes, ripe or green, are swallowed up.' Ten thousand dollars, they •say, wfe taken at one bazaar, but how maoh will be teken-thitawintere through --bazaars in our . so -palled Christ -like churches? Would ii' be too, much to say $50,000? On all this there is no tax, no wages, no rent, often no cost and all profit. To whom does this amount rightfully belong ? From whom is it stolen? How mnch harm will it do? How much good ? How much will Christ. accept, bless and use for hie own glory ? A few dealers may close their doors or be sold out, but this is nothing.; no one cares ; the °hut -Chen and military clubs have their right 1 Mothers who would scorn to let their, daughters serve in a store for an honest wage, deck them out like harlequins and plane them behind a 'counter to preside over soap bubbles, ice cream or throws for over -valued artioles, or presumptuous poli- tioai toole "—and think they are doing God's work or a noble charity. If high- toned chnrohea ..and military olubs. have come down to the level of charity—then we have reached our best days. Easy Washing. Soak the clothes in the ordinary way night before washing. When ready to wash passolothee through wringer. Then put. in the boiler 2i} pails of water, It bar of soap, about 1 oz. of paraffins wax, which oan be had in wholesale drug stores at 15o. a pound. The soap and parafine will dis- solve while the water is heating. The clothes may then be put in. When the water bode after the clothes are put inenote the time and continue the boiling one-half bony, after whioh take out olothes and rinse them in hot water ; the dirtier pieces will require rtibbing, the others, not so soiled, will not need the rubbing. The process of bluing ie oonduoted in the ordinary manner. Paraffin° wax will not damage the moat delicate materials, but rather the contrary ; delicate tissues are preserved in the same for years. The above prooese is not only a saving, of labor, bat also prevents destruction of clothes in the ordinary' process of rubbing. This recipe is not for woollens. How to Buy'a Cote., Before you buy a vow find out all you can abont the man who has the cow to sell. If he walks np to the cow and pats her, and the vow takes it as a metier course, it is a point in the (low'e favor. If the cow needs a little coaxing before she will allow the mate to put his hand on her, 11 is pretty strong evidence there has been some "fun" between vow and men. It is (limply this If the cow is well treated she will do better than if roughly treated, and lf yon bny a oow that is not need to kind treatment yon have got to overcome her distract before Yon oan get her to do her beak. - JJ The Czarina's obin has began to double :end her girth is greater than of yore. .' Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. If outsells all other remedies. Sold under tondition that it must either benefit or ours the patient, or the money paid for it will be promptly returned. It cures all diseases arising from deranged liver, or from impure blood, as biliousness, "liver complaint," all skin and scalp diseases, salt rheum, tetter, scrofulous sores and ewellinge, fever sores, hip -joint disease and kindred ailments. Landlordism in Scotland. In this great, gray valley not one hundred families are to be found. AcrosQ the seventy or eighty miles from sea to sea there are justtwo estates—that of the Chisholm- of Chisholm, and Kintail of Ross -shire. These cover the strathe-and: gleno, reaohing far over upon the mountains: to the north and south ; and from 600 to 800 equare miles of land are poeseeeed by those two , families. More than one-half of this is enclosed as game preserve, and is controlled through rental as such by on. man. That means that down through the last koentury thousands of people, who, through the inherent rights of olenship, had precisely the same original rights to lands they 000npied as had the heads of. china themselves,. have been driven irons their homes, that one man, able toe pay £10,000 per year in rentals, £10,000 a year in the expenses of hunting lodges, game- keeper and gillies, and as much more in ligitation could Dome here once a year and hatcher red deer, and those' reddeer ' as tame, from the abeenoe eet_htunankindmildeved cows that stand in crofters' byres.—Correspondence o Philadelphia Star. Carry the news to Mary, And, pray, be not too long, , For she is fast declining, And, surely, 'twould be wrong - not to tell her of Dr. Pieroe'e Favorite Prescription. We de want Mary to know in eome'way or other, that thio world -famed remedy will cure her beyond any doubt 1 It's just the medicine for young woman- hood, and thoneands has it bridged over that perilous sea. From every State, from every oily, from nearly every neighborhood in ' this broad land, comes the grateful acknowledgment of what it hue done and is doing for our daughters. The only medicine for the dis- tressing and painful irregularities and. weeknesees of woman, gold with'° positive guarantee to give satisaction in every cage, or money refunded. In other words, sold on trial f u - A Murdered Person's Bye. The Department of Justice at Ottawa has ordered the, purchase of photowioro- - graphio apparatus, to coat about $250. It 1 Ie claimed' that the retina of the eye retains - for a certain time the image of objeote last seen, and in this way if the image left on a murdered person's eye oonld be photo- . graphed the result might be the picture of the murderer. -A Vienna scientist -has -Bud- Deeded in photographing the visual image on the retina of a beetle's eye.. Mrs. Amelia Barr, the story writer, is said to make more money. than does the Chief Juotioe of the United States. • Ie it a Home Bird ? Albany Argus : Here is a tariff problem. An Arizona cow strayed norms the border into Mexico and gave birth to a calf. Mr. McKinley should determine whether it is a pauper calf or a hom'' industry. ~ The beat pictures so far taken of the moon show that parallel walla, whose tope are ne more than 200 yards or so in width, and whioh are not more then 1,000 or 1,200° yardsapart, are plainly visible. D. O. I/. L 3. 91. 1 AS4 L14. 1ci.� 1'6 .risTIIMALSNB r1, ■—rREonever fails; send tuyour address, we will mail trial WO BOTTLE ,. THE ON.TAFT IROS. M. CO„ROCHESTER,N.Y.FREE f ti it,.. t>� 3r ho it by I 'took. Cold, , I took Sick,' 1 Best, Easiest to Use anti Cheapest. - Sold hydruggises or sent by ma11,5 e. E. T. Lr. ., o, y, ar. r.: ,. Pa., s i 1 5 I take n•' , . • ) ' , X 1.,_.1, , I:'. y Rest, AND I AM VIGc,'.:•,y'• ,. ,,,L'G11 TO TAKE ANYTHING I CA::: I..'.'i” MY HANDS ON; p irttiilg, tot 2:7o, :OR SCOii,'s ' Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oi 1 and HypophosphitesufLimeandi1. ? ,oda NOT ONLY CURED MY {neln- ft lenit .09111N nEItaTt toll BUT BUILT 1.0 111 SIE UP, AND IS N..1 CUTTING FLESH C,r. ,;r7 (BONES I3 AT TILE KATE ;' I' 1 ` A DAT. Its, 'FAKE 1T JUST 'I' ', A ;.1 DO MILK. 1't Scott's Emulsion i. I. ,t n P Only In Salmon color wrappers. :+.'i,1 by all Druggists al 50c. and shoo. - SCOTT L'c)T VE, Belleville. i�NSl��11P ,'�tlt l.•A'. 47'r TO TITE EDITOR:—Please inform ,your readers that I have a positive remedy ic(A h above named disease. By its timely use -thousands of hopeless cases "'ave been permanent:y cc1'h1r I shall be glad to send two bottle's of\my Iremody FREE to any of your readers who nay gumption if they will send me their Express and Post Offioe Address. Respectfull". T. A. SI." M.C.• 'SR Want Adolnidc rt.." I+'ORONTO. ONTARIO. 1•h. ‘,.10414.17,1.0 -'l C ,1r1'. if * i lit:��; ,,� 1131SAPJIS OF BOTTLES E V.MEN AWAY YEARLY. save them return again. I MEAN A R A D i C A 1. When I say Cure I do not meal ®merely to 1hstoave mp, thaemde forthe ad isease timet and of tl iW C U R E. Epilepsy or Falling; Sickness a life-long study. I warrant My. remedy to Cure Worst cases. Because others. l uve failed is no reason. for not now receivfdg a cure. Senda QQnce for a treatise and a Free Dottie of my Infallible Rcmcdy. Give Exp rQeq u i)ost Office. It costs you nothing far a trial, and it will cure on. Address'—trii, O. *e t Q, ,i3e. Branch Office, 186 wEi' ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO. .ft y -'•afi- f• 1, 8�