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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-03-20, Page 3LOVE'S NEYEBIB. ♦ Young eh% Faces Her.Bweethegrt and . Shoots Ulm IJuwn—Bays ne Vowed iridollty and Gave Ser the Platel as a pledge. Peop1Q who were badly passing along • spring street near Oroeby and other's, who, kB ooderound`the "doorla'ot the big•tenements or by eaw a dramatic shouting `ii'ffrey this nornioi , says. New 'about 8 30x.0 eI oke a young York Italian, well built and swarthy, and who looked a little better off than the ordinary laborer, name, along on the eastern sidewalk from down- town. When opposite Nei. 70 Spring street a woman appeared about ten feet in front of him, eo suddenly that it was not know h'es, o A,. � riu��lrbtg.�`ti'�'"�iy `ninri� from a neighboring 'tenement hall- way or had been foilo'wing him. She was very young, little more than a girl in appearance, and was good looking. She• swept aorose his path like a women nerved by fieroe, paeeion. Her eyes fairly blazed upon him. Some words passed. hot with meaning, but not clearly heard b The lr n r e_hk .uy one. t7ifl8 s stir-e-ffildilial-Pe back as' it to fly. At that moment, however, the young woman drew s revolver and fired. Again, sgein,and a fourth time, without lowering her weapon, she pulled the trigger. The man 11 to the sidewalk, wounded and gaspin . The crowd pressed around, and some one knooked the weapon from the woman's hand. Others seized her and held her till a policeman came. She etrug- gled until exhaueted, shrieking out male- diotione upon the victim of her wrath. An Ambulance from -St. •.V-iixoent'e Hospital took the wounded man to that inetitution The surgeon said two of the bullets had entered hie body. One hadlodged near the heart. The woman's remaining shote bad flown wide of the mark, end were found flattened upon the sidewalk. At the Mul- berry street station bocce the women calmed down and coolly admitted that she was glad she had not missed her aim. She said she was Paequeline Robertelli, by trade a tailorese, and thea her home was 16 Mott street. " The man whomyI shot," she said, " is Nio Piero." , " e is my betrayer," ' she continued, "an it serves him right "._, . - ... _ " He lives in Sullivan street, near Hous- ton street The number is 145, I think." " I hods -right to kill him, " About four months ago this man took advantage of me. We were. engaged to be married, and he broke hie promise.. ' " When I reproached him he told me he would Barely make.me his wife. " He gave me his revolver then, and told me that if he: failed tosfulfil hie promise I —mightshoot-him-deird-whenever 1 saw him. " I only did what he gave me leave to do and they cannot harm me for it. A woman has some rights." At 10 o'olook Pasqualine was taken to the Tombs court by Policeman Haggerty, who arrested her. A orowd thronged the court room to see •the girl, whose beauty made a great impres- sion upon all. She is really pretty, with blank eyes, fine hair and rosy cheeks and lips. She told her story to Juetioe Taintor, stating 'little in addition to what appears above. She said, however; that she was told yes• terday that Piero was on the eve of sailing for Europe. She believed he was going to- day, and waited all night for him in front of his home, 145 Sullivan street. He did not come home at all, but she met him on Spring street, as he passed through on hie way to breakfast. She was remanded to await the result of Piero's injuries, and was taken back to the station house. The revolver with which the deed was done was produced in court. • It is a new and rather fancifully ornamented weapon of 28 calibre. A witness of the shooting, Pas- quale Verrone, of 68 Spring street, was committed to the House of Detention. Pasquale is only twelve years old .and lives next door to the house oppoeite 'which the scene occurred._ ' OANVASSING WITH CARDS. Latest Plan of That Gentry to Secure an Audience. The " want to see the lady of the house " dodge has been disoarded by fakirs, book agents, collectors and other door -bell ringers of private houses for a newer and better method, says the Yonkers Statesman. They now piok out a route and learn. the names of the occupants of the moat deeir. able looking' houses. • They then ring the bell, and when the servant names to the --door irgaire`it-Mrit. Blank is in. it she is, the bell-ringer presents a neat card eon- tainin bis or ber name, and patroniz• inglyt: " Present this card ; I will wait." That this new form of annoyance is mor exasperating then the old one is explained 'by the faot that it not only aeourer an audi- ence with " the lady of the house," .bat frequently compels " the lady . of t he house " to undergo the tedious process of making her toilet in order so leoeive the visitor, whoae identity she, cannot sus- pect, and whom she cannot refuse to see for fear she may be guilty of breaoh of etiquette. • A Fast -Talking Parson. Two hundred and forty words a minute, four words everyeseoond, is a rate of speed which seems almost beyond the power of articulation, yet was the measure of the torr of eloquent exposition and appeal pour d forth in Si. Paul's Chards last Monday by the Rev. Dr. Phillips Brooks. Try to equal it reading from a printed page in a conversational tone, and then imagine the immensely increased difficulty of the task in a large ohnroh, before a great congregation, and without the gelid•. a.nme even of a written --note. The business men, for whom the service was especially designed, had been assured that she die. course would be short, and so it was in time, for it was finished in 25 minutes, brit the report made by two stenographin reportere, of the Journal's regular staff, covered 6,000 words, and !lave the extraor- dinary averages with which this paragraph opone.—Boston Journal. ._To:rimy 'V°hiet Sort oP l,tee.i)±1( eke r,ro °stied " doctors," pa'' Pa—Cho kind who practice what they preach, my eon 1 The.Oregon Legislature has reseed an Act prohibiting profanity. The proviso ought to bo that eiaewalke shall bo kept •e rieiereefeiee-a-ndesnow.. . .sees.. THY OHINAiIAN Ili OANALA. How He ICludes the Vigilance of the Ona - tome Officials. Every Chinaman who leaves Oa takes -a oertifioate whioh shall'Prve as passport when he returns. He may out a certificate when he does not mea lases the oS�ant 'y�.. - .He, may .lake, -one, w he is merely going to smuggle himself our border, and never means to go bac the Domipion. Or he may take a oer ode when he We made all the money needs, and is on his way to China to hie days there, atter years of that lux one idienees which the average lab counts upon obtaining in China from judioioae investment of $2,000—theenn nada hie tlike. n to hen- over k to tilt. he end ori• oyer the ♦ NFW OiV$a T'OIS LOOK-JAw. The Treatment a Japanese Discovery— How It Is ISfeoted. The Berlin correspondent of a eyndioate of provincial papers has had an interview with Dr. Hitaesto, of Tokio, a Japanese dootor now etudying at the hygienic inatj• mate-there,who•profeeses to have discovered I method for the inure of look -jaw. This mire ie beeed on a principle somewhat similar to that of Mr. Hankin'e cure for antbraz. Yet it is different in some im- portant partioulare. Dr. Kitasato first renders an animal impervious to teteenn , and then injects the blood eernm of that animal into animals suffering from the die• lie's ease. In order to renderRan anim�a^ll inaeee- v,� :... y..etle,., ,is:.rees ,G^essaS:�°�iiNii�`I �1!eiti—°' shill '301 bacilli of teteptie, , and followe thie injection with injections of trichloride of iodine, whioh he repeats at intervals of twelve hours. After tour days tree animal, whioh under ordinary circum- stance would have died from lookja w, is not only cured, but rendered impervious to the disease.. The blood eerum of each an ani - m._ had hpAn Innn.l lam. Ot r9T:-4Q jtt id p ee+,►Jn,e_tli , t wl�ri`z%;e,-TM.•.-P.Vf. .,..-., + ,<a�•�ti L''., .:,te •�„ i.�'� Rt�"�'� `i`n itnly tiiliesinti oer`ttitinites are demanded by men who mean to return. At all events, these oertifioates, whioh are pan - ports to Canada, and indirectly to the United States, have a money value. They are eold in China. They oan be parohaeed openly to -day in the streets of Hong -Kong, like ducks or chopsticks. There they poa- sees a flaoleeting value, and have been ntreeseseseezae they are let go at a lees pride than the $60 they are expeoted to save in the • avoidance of the poll -tax, the Saotnations being gov- erned by the demand at the time of the departure of a vessel, because -only so many uncertified Chinese laborers may take passage on the steamers under the Canadian law—one to every fifty tone of - the ship's burthen. Of those who parry oertifioates and of those not of the laboring °lase se many as anomie may oowe. It is to guard epithet trickery with the certificates *bet the customs officiate as Victoria and Vancouver have all that they oan manage. When a Chinaman enters the office of the collector to apply for a certificate, several men are called in—the interpreter and a olerk or two. The China- man gives bis name, age, plane of birth, and other particulars of value in identify- ing him. Be is asked to step upon the platform of a measuring machine, ends as is in nee in our army and elsewhere—an upright pole marked off into feet and inohee, and fitted with a eliding rod that gives the man's height when it rests upon hie head. .All this the Chinaman perfectly oo'mprehende ; bun what he does not know 15 the desoription .of.himself -that- the men around him are going to write down in she big Government book alter Whets gone, a `description whioh takes in his general ap- pearance, the peouliarities of his feetnree and limbs and shape, with notes of every -ewer or pit or mark upon his hands,• neck, fame and head. And yet, in spite of these preoaations, Chinamen who go away • from Canada looking at least 40 years of age, return Appearing to he only ? ;—and_othere who measure Tie feet and nine inohee when they depart, Dome bank in is few months several inches shorter or teller than when they sailed for China. They are new -comers, with the certificates of other men, of oanree. The silent spanning of the features of applioants.for certificates does not pass unnoticed by these shrewd and intelligent people. The manner in whioh they endeavor to make themselves appear like the persons whose oertifioates they carry shows this. They frequently go as far as to 'disfigure themselves for life in order to save the $50 and to bear out whet they judge must be written in the onstome book spinet the numerals that mark eaoh of the certificates—whioh, by- the- way. contain no word of desoriptions of the men who take them out. Whilel was in Victoria one of these trioketere arrived with a great soar burned in hie forehead, a out disfiguring one cheek, and a " deep pit learned in his neck. When questioned and proven to be a fraudulent fellow, be confessed that he had never been to Canada before. The cross-examination each certificated Chinaman must undergo in the British Colombian custom houses before he is allowed to pees into the country without paying the tax is very .searching. He is asked what oily he worked in while in Canada, and then he must name the prin- cipal streets in that oity, some of the names of the merchants there, and also the notable peculiarities of the town ; what sort of looking things drag the railroad oars ; what kind of machines are used to pat out fires—a hundred questions cleverly devised. In spite of all Ibis, the customs officials frequently have to admit that they oannot tell 'syhether they are being imposed upon or not in especial' oases. Doubtless many Chinamen slip through without attracting saepioion. The men who sell the oertifioates accom- pany the sales with descriptions of them. selves, and with a great amount of the information they acquired of the looalitien they -were familiar with. As to the general facts about Oanoaeian life, there are plenty of men in China and on the ships to poet the immigrants fully. Every three weeks, when a ship arrives, the Chinamen wish oertifioates are questioned, and, several are found to' be the purchasers of the oertifi- oates of others, but not one Chinaman has yet been sent back on this account. All ,that Canada wants is ber tax, and if any Chinaman caught at this trickery, laoke the $50, he finds his ' countrymen in Victoria or Vancouver willing to advance the money to him. -From the "Chinese Leak." by Julian Ralph, in Harper's Magazine for March. Not Exactly Aristotelian. A tall 'man can't help living long.. A millionaire has laege will power. A novel industry—writing romances. An affair of the heart when it is a trump, Howe sewing machine agent's toaet— Conjngel love is not j etre. There is a great deal phonograph. Snspendere ought to in weather. Is it proper to speak a paradox ? It doesn't hurt preserved in family of baok talk in the sell readily in brae - of two physicians as a mieNionar his treats. -- Picked up all around. th —An economical bartender asn maks BOBBBT FUROU8ON. Brief Sketch of the Man Who Was the Inspirer of Hobert Burns. Robert Ferguson, whom Burns aoknowl. .edged_as..hie.master, was born in 1751 in Cap and Feathers Close; the site ot which ie.,now severed- by -.the, .buildings ekanding= on the east aide of the North Bridge.. He went to a small school in Niddry's Wynd, and later .10 the fire' High-eohool, and before he had reaohed the age of twenty- four he died in the. pauper lunatic, asylum called Old Darien House, whioh was de- mo'•ilrl at or:weary later. A tablet on the comparatively modern bailding, No. 16 nrieto Place, states that there the .e. dlam,..w ��] &-",-- , d' y/L ,.r.?1�.r,�yia: vt.r.'.'�a'i.. ..1`�':1'L�.•.F'..aur,.aS3',f9'iie`�Yevi��+''.t:id7.�:� ac, many obildren of genial, Ferguson's conduct reflected but little credit on his dam, and be was a relentless enemy toward himself. if not toward his brothers and eiders. 'He abandoned the studs of medicine because he fanoied himselfafflict- edwith every disease of which he read the itris description, and no doubt he :cited° in a mad•huaee from fear h. ''"�' a c...� is taverns and hie dubs in Edinburgh more easily tharl®10 any of hie homes, except the last one, and wherever fun was rampant and gin cheap, there was Ferguson to be found. He would often, as he sang in his " Caller Oyster," To Luckie Middlemist's loup in, And sit fu' snug Owre oysters and a dram o' gin Or haddock lug." A favorite resort of Ferennia's, where wit sang and glass he'd flee the power o care, that wad herniae the hour," was the Cape Club, which met at the Iele of Men's Arms, Craig's Close (265 High street). In Craigs Close is still to be seen the broken- down •and neglected sign of the Cockburn tavern, in front ot a broken down and neglected tenement, about half. way up the close on the east side, with all of ite flashes of merriment gone this many sesvear. Standing as it does "between the back And front tenements," this may perhaps have been onoe the Isle of Man. Still another of the inne rto whioh Ferguson went to get bis Dares and pother laid " was Johnnie Dowie'e tavern, in Liberton's Wynn, whioh wee later a favorite resort of Burne, 'sad which hit --been_ dubbed '-The -Mermaid of Edinburgh." I; was among as the Burne Tavern . in the.''.last yeare- of- its existence, and was long one of be arohiteoteral lions of the Old Town for Barns' sake; but when George IV. Bridge was built both tavern and wynd were swept way, and, like everything glee assooiated ith Ferguson in life, no trace of it is left. There is even no absolutely authentic por- reit of him known to the collectors and_ he—beet; Yf-'thi 'meal; homely, of the eon• emporary ,deeori`ptions of him represente ion as being very smelly and delioete; a the in -kneed, and waigled a good deal in alking."—From " Literary Landmarks of dinburgh," by Laurence Hutton, in Harper's agazine for March. e-QONCHNTRAVION• OF 'WEALTH. In his Forum article on " The Ring and e Trust," Rev. Dr. William Barry quotes egel's remark that reason governs the atione of the world. You cannot, he says, nt baok the band on the cloak: All man. ind are drawing together into a oonfed- aoy whioh may be checked or thwarted, ut whioh has already united Europe and merlins and the Isles of the Sea into a anseatic league, vexatiously disturbed om time to time by tariff disputes, yet rming one great republic of commerce. apital has no oo,untry ; it is unpetriotio d cosmopolitan. And whereas formerly bold by the Ishmael principle of every an's hand against his fellowe, it now finds' at it is a good deal °beeper to buy up mpetitore than to eat them up. We may ace the development of great industries, the houses of universal provision, and of nets of the first magnitude, by the fail - es, bankruptcies and enioides of smaller en to whioh they hese led. But the stem, though utterly without oompas- n, looks rather to the absorption of each an to their rain as individuals. ee How to Get a Handsome Husband. e s' s omplleie are. Rankin's method for the dire of anthrax is to obtain from rate directly the peoaliar ohemioal product whioh . seouree for them immunity from pertioular diseases, end, after cultivating and preparing it, iojsot- iug the extract obtained into snffrring animate. Both diecoveriea are based, how- ever, upon the law of antagonism postu- lated by. Sir William Robert Grove in a 'edam at the Royal Institution, and illustrated as far as baoterioloey is con- cerned in a paper by Mr. Bankin, con• tribated 10 the British Medical Journal, entitled " The Conflict between the Organ• ism and the Microbe."—Pall Mall Gazette. The Household .Prize. 135 Adelaide street weal, Toronto, Ont. " Your reliable preparation, St. Jacob's Oil, has proved a benefit to me in more ways then one. I have used it for quinsy (out- ward application) with very beneficial re. suite, and for a ease of rheumatism, where its action was ewift and euro, and a perfect oure was performed. I consider it a remedy to be prized "in every boueehold." Tsps. PXERDOD;, with Johnson & Brown, _ -- Paper Wheels. Persona who baveneverbad any business with a railroad except to ride on its oars occasionally, have an idea that paper oar wheels are entirely made of that sabetance, This is a mistaken idea, as the only portion made ot paper is the inside or filling of the wheel. This paper is held in place by steel plates whioh are bolted together through the paper. The tire ie then put en and—the-wheel-is `th ished:— Orcourse there ie. a goon deal of work included in the making, but this is the sum and snbetanc�e of a paper wheel. There are several sizes of paper wheels made, for instance, 42 -inch wheels, 33 - inch, 30-inoh, 28•inoh. and 26•inoh. The last two sizes are locomotive track wheels. Some roads use paper wheels exclusively ander their passenger equipment and cast iron ones ander their freight equipment. These paper wheels are made by a Chicago company,. Tires :for • paper.wheels are made in Europe and in this country also. The weight of a 42.inch paper wheel is 1,150 pounds, and an axle 350 pounds, so that the weight of a pair mounted on an' axle ie 2,650 pounds. There are two pairs on' each truck and two tracks under a oar, so that the combined weight of the wheels and axles placed under each .oar is 10,600 pounds. The valve of a pair of 42 -inch paper wheels is in the neighborhood of $150, the tires alone being valved at about $56. The wheel oentre is worth about $17 itself. Good Sense ! Disease is largely the result of impure blood. To purify the blood, i5 to inure the disease! As a blood•purifier and vitalizer, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery stands head and shoulders above any other known specific ! Its power in this direotion is nothing short of wonderful. Guaranteed to benefit or cure in every ease, or money refunded. Reciprocity Under Foot. A dory just started will give Congrees- man.eleotJere Simpson, of Kansas, a wide reputation for repartee. While he was at the Capital at Washington Monday a pretty woman thus addressed him: "Is it tree that you don't wear eooke, Mr. ' Bimpeon ? Won't yon let me see, please ? " " Madam," replied Mr. Simpson, gravely," I'm a be- liever in reciprocity. Do ou w:ar aookai If yowl a ow me yours '• i show you mine !" —New York Standard. erm S'yru Here is something from Mr. Frani A. Hale, proprietor of the De Witt House, Lewiston, and the Tontine Hotel, Brunswick; Me. , Hotel men meet the world as it'comes and goes, and are not slow in sizing people and thing's up for what they are Worth. He says that he has lost a father and several brothers an,c1 sis- ters from Pulmonary _Consumption, and is hi,nself, frequently troubled with colds, -and he Hereditary Often coughs enough tel make him sick at Corisumpt:onhis stomach, When- . ever ILC ]las taken a cold of thi! kind he uses 13oschee's Gcrl inn ,`-un n, rind it cures him y to he shot in ,..'�; two 1•emenadee with ode lemon, but ilea "-l•I' I's: - tight sq°ietrza. I t i , i, --First roan I:our wife and ttry wtifn dart aeon to ,et on very well tnt:etber. , - lI Second mere -Well, it's rindonhted,y ray' • wife's feint. Piro man•—lt'e nothing of i ' +11 the sdrt, sir. My wife is entirely is blame. +' "•r1 tel i I 'le that it .ti t0.' iia' And after a few more angry words they rro- Om-te--blows, ; !ere is a matt who l;ln c'r' of lu•tig ti'ou- ;,:1l 1h,'rcforc he most th;• if '0iciilc he used.. t'i'1'lif�ll .' l.i ten ! " 1 1'Qlve;_i°1\'i,ed, I presume, ;1 hundred different per - 1:c' They disco tt-ith is thelest cou.gll syrup kct." t t a w t 5 t b li w E M th 11 n p k er b A fr fin C an it m th 00 tr of tr dor m sy 510 th " When'er some lucky Indian maiden Found a red,ear in the busking, ' Musks!' cried they altogether; ' Musks!' you shall have a sweetheart— You shall have a handsome husband." The handsome man always admires the beautiful woman. Then simply make - yourself beentiful. Remove all blotohes, pimples, " forked eigne of turkey traoke from your features, by the nee of Dr. Pieroe'e FAvorite escription,--a-tonin to - the nervous, circulatory and procreative systems.., Its use brings roses to the obeeka, and sparkle to the eyes. Take it, and you will, like the Indian maiden, find a " red ear " in your good health, en omen of fptere happiness. Guaranteed to give satisfaction in every case, or money paid for it refunded. Prof. Lie°breiott, in a lectiure.before Berlin physicians yesterday, presented oases show- ing the rapid improvement of,lupus under treatment with oantharidate of potash, He dilated upon th'e,necessity of extreme Dare in preparing and using the remedy. A troop of °rivalry and -24 (addle econte are stationed in a line 25 milr)e long acmes the Cherokee strip, Kansas, to r•j:iot . all settlers.' The arms and ammunition of " boomers " will be oonfi Boated, and all houses and stationary tents burned. A Marseilles dietilleey'°oompany bee been obliged to suspend operations owing to the inability to. stand the duty of three francs On maize. The closing of she distilleries will raid the pork breadore in the; vicinity, whonee the maize refuse in feeding their brge. A ORIIAT •*Chit. A eneoeasful Man Tells Why He Succeeded The fact that suooess is mainly due to hard work has been ex_presaed. in many different ways, says "Youth's Companion," but one of the beat was recently employed by „ y cry=.aaaoeastnl, t+. drumlxler; _ or 90111. menial traveller. He was talking with a oompanion, 4. rather lazy fellow, when the latter exclaimed "-I declare, Jack, I can't understand why you always suooeed in selling eo many more goode'than I do !" " Pet tell yon why it ie," replied Jaok; " bus," he added, it's a'trade word, and you mustn't give it away." p,7 Yr ii.3:iiirseie eaia'P'� lass "S if'."C `�E �'''rt'Gai til l°3-Iq iaiii •/moo'^- was the answer. " Well, then," said Jaok, impressively, " I summed bedtime, when I'm after busi- ness, I wear out the soles of my shoes more than the eeet.of my troaeel's." " Duke a Mote of It I Read it over and over again, spell it out mind, that Dr. Sage's Catarrh Reme y ie an infallible euro for °bronco catarrh of the bead, with all its distressing oompliostione, Impaired taste and smell, offensive breath, ringing noises in the head, defective hearing, nose and throat ailments, are net only re. lieved, brit positively and permanently cured ! This ie no fancy of the imagination, bus aehard, solid fact, proven over and over again, and vouched for, under a 'forfeiture of $500, by its manufacturers, the Worldbe Medical Aseooiation, Buffalo N. Y. " A word to the wise is sufficient. School Board Wisdom, The trustees of a school honee near Mon- tioell'o, Ga., the ocher day adopted resolu- tions to the effect that " that big hickory near the lett hand of Ben Sill Aoademy is dead, end that if it should fall on any of the children between their 7th and. 17th year, and near the small of the baok, they would surely die ; therefore, that we. hire an unbleached American to raze the aroreeeid hickory tree to the ground."— Boston Globe. A Rueejan named Frisea, residing in the suburbs of-'Beriin, has been arrested 'oil: suspicion of havingg been concerned in the murder of Gen.-Seliverskoff, who was shot, ' "" -. it was supposed, by a Nihilist named Pad- leweki, in Paris on Novembar 18th laet. D. O. le L 12. 91 CURES PERMANENTLY heumati CIATIG,A Qck:AcbeS allAche IrE� � LGuiii• aL. iT IS Prig rr�Es7: rn' F-+: U:E.' 'F'OR TIIE BEST COUGH MEDICINE. SOLD DY DRUGGISTS EIPERYWREBE, CC'NS,`U•N1;PTA O•N;:. �. cn Bermuda Bottled.;. "You must go to Bermuda. If you do not I will not be responsi- le for the e0nsnryuenees,' ' But retort--Ican a.Foi't1 'neither the time nor the money." "Well, if that is impossible, try NOF PURE If ORWECIAN COD LEVER OIL. i sometimes vett ii; t'airmuda Bot- tled, and many easee of CONSUMPTION, ff Bronchitis, Cough , or Severe Cold 1 A'ave CURED with it;, and the tadvi,...ire is ' hat, the most sensi- tive stinenieli c:rsi t:ra:^ It. Another tihing which rtrniiaaRflrtrls it its the stiniulai in:. Inie pre.—.'is ice; of the 1s^t►l,osl,liiia••, 'l:a' ''. it contains.. Foil will I1:,1 it II t' gait at your Druggist's, tri ld7rYGtr•'r . rapper. lie sure you get- flu a eielinc.' )TT .S .li ''.V'uE; (Belleville. TO TIIE FDITOR:—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy, a°)eve named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been nermanentiy 1 snail be glad to send two bottleqs of my remedy FREEto any o, your reaaers wnb nav sumption if they will send me their Express and Post OlSce Address. Rcs ectfufv, T... $1. �tt1,1S.. 'RR Vertut Adelaide, rt.. TeiROPNT0. ONTARIO. p - fililDSANDS OF BOTTLES MEN A 'AY YEARLY. When I say Coro I do not m $lave them retue n again. 5 FA IsA N A RA D t C,9 1 C rU R Ey t1 have me de fthe disease of Fl Epilepsy or rolling Siclins•es a life-long stl.dy. I warirsint may relnedy to Cure tvot st cases. Because others have fai'ed is no reason for not now receiving scurf?. Send. ones for a treatise and ?Fee Bottle-of..my-IrtfocHG-rirte- bias sed'�r-. dirt=+ hxprers a Von officr it costs yon nothing for a trial, and it will ture'x'0lt.Aridrtt�stt.,.¢i„.67,y-irotn5•p--_ %tae f eetelt..-�.1!sIill.;neeteem'neeera-sv.". ei�: tu teerneieourftal' it„''+PQRONttla :.. il4' K ' ftz`r. Oie' e ...wr' Y,a"•, arm