HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-06-12, Page 7gEV. lLUY00 FRAM J 118Tl1NTIN0PLB..
Ills Impressions or the Turkish Ospltal-
Watching the Sultan Go to Ohku ,cb-A
Doomed Nationality. e
' Dear Sir, ---04 Wedneediy, very early -in
-he-morning, eve -got in here, and -we are to
remain in this great centre till Monday
p. m. The population ie somewhere about •
million and n .half ; lees, I presume, rather
Oak more,. Tuve _bridges-croea- ----the-
•Golden Horn ; they are not oonepiououe
for their beauty as to oonetruotion ; but
they Quit the purpose exoeedingly well. The
more modern of the two,the Galtate bridge
wee fabated in Britain, oak planks and
all, brotelat eves here ready -mads and ,cat
up to the) admiration and eurpriee of the
Turks
The part of the oity we inhabit is termed
known as Stamboul, across the Bosphorus,
(Scutari.) I never eaw so line a situation
or looation for a city in my lite. '
No wonder the Bear has hie greedy eyea
on this roaster position, and no wonder the
Lion roma himself and stretches out one
paw when he perceives hie majesty of the
north looking this way. The eights here
e ave a site of the old Seraglio, the
mosque of St. Sophia, the sublime mosque,
the mosque of Aohmed, the famous mono.
lith, the seven towers, eto., eto. On thio
aide the Horn we have the Galata Tower,
the Palace of the Sultan, eto.
This a. m., about 10, we started tor' the
palace to eethe great man go to church ;
he goes ever • Friday, the Mohammedan
Sunday. ea exemplary on hia part l Bat
I am assured that he is obliged to go.
Well, we drove'*o see him go, and would
you believe it, there were hundreds of visi-
tors as minions as we were. Wo were
allowed the privilege of waiting in a cer-
tain appropriated plane for the advance
and passage of Hie Majesty, by permit
from the American Consul. For two
mortal hours and more I stood
on these Scotch' lege poeeibly
I ought to say, "iimbe' -to . see the
real live Sultan on hie way to ohuroh.
Thousands of soldiers lined the streets and
guarded him everywhere. He is Doming 1
Look 1 There he is 1 But look at the
minaret ! See that man out on its balcony.
Listen 1 " Allah is God and Mahommed ie
hie prophet t
The Sultan by this time is up ; there he
goes 1 Very like any other men. careworn
a little in a esranoe and anxious looking,
-`but as a wli mite human ... i i -..
Ab t
� omen and ortdinary.
p 50,Pbel' believe. But
oiemy note ie long
enough. Cenatantinople is a magnifi-
cent pity. I am enjoying my visit im-
mensely, not altogether beoauee of the
eplendor of the place ; for there are many
signs of the very opposite of splendor. In
'Stamboul, on Thursday, we pawed through
- - -great-patches-of--it-devoted-to-stagnation,-
retrogreseion, wretchedness. This king-
dom surely, notwithstanding the _ gloss on
sections of it, is smitten at its heart, and
ie elowiy succumbing. The Turk appeata
thoroughly devotional, but he is furiously
superstitious and wofully -benighted-the
unspeakable Turk, ae Carlyle termed
him !
The dogs : I have not epoken of them ;
they were a nuisance in Damasous ; they
are worse here. It the dog enumeration
and that of the eoldiere walk deduoted from
the population of this city it would be very
considerably . reduced. One . good, Living
Hon, I imagine, would well nigh disperse
them all -soldiers and doge, I mean. Even
a rampant beaver would scare them badly.
The Golden Horn, above the bridges, is
oonepionouely dotted with men-of-war and
torpedo boats ; guess the signi1 oance.
One hopeful, cheering sight we perceived
in Stamboul ; it loosed like the out-
shining of the sun on a gloomy day -Bible
Hoose. Thie book, I Am setiefled--the
East yielde indiepnable proof -ie the one
only uplifter of the natione.
May 9th, 1891. - M. F.
e
A NNW sMAUTY.
It is More than akin Deep,
Before one of the New York working
gide' clubs Dr. Louise Fiske Bryson
recently, gave an address upon " Beauty an
s Means of Health." While aoknowledging
the impossibility of any protracted happi-
ness without virtue, and the maintenanoe
of beauty's fine edge without goodnees, the
-doctor-affirmed-that--systematic- efforta -to-
be beautiful will ineare a fair degree of
health, and that happiness is the beat eafe-
geard against vioe.
The difference in appearance between.
one woman and another, it was elated, is
more than ary6I ing eine an ailair of style
-that beauty ofbeauties eo hard to define
and s
o easy to recognize, whioh makes the
frl of no ^rx colors ieil; .49 Q
�rnei""Yine'rnone foo per``i`eeit;
infinitely more attraotive than other maids
of faultless curves and•innumerable strong
points not cemented by *hie magio quality.
Style may be defined, for want of some-
thing, better to express it, as an attractive
manner of holding the body, a firm, grace-
ful way of doing things and of moving
about. It is the visible- sign of inherent
A Bundle Worth $191,000 -
For two honre yesterday afternoon a
package of 100 West Chicago Street Rail-
way etook certificates,reelh $191,000, went
straying about town in the pooket of a
oolored man, who picked it np on the
street," says the Chicago Tribune.. " In
the meantime officials of the company and
the police were making frantio efforts to
trace apd recover the lost package. It had
been given to a messenger boy with orders
to deliver it at the Home National Bank.
While creeping Union street the boy
stumbled and fell. When he gathered
himself together end went on the paokage,
was left in the street. Soott Jaokoon, a
colored man, picked up the paokage end
put it in his pocket. Some one noticed
the action, and later in the day Jaokeon
wile traced to hie home. He readily gave
np ttee package, Baying he intended keeping
it Wig until he discovered to whom it. be-
longed."
2119,
The Sinful Sleeper.
Inest United Presbyterian Church
at Kirrieinuir the other Sunday afternoon
the minister wee calmly preaching hie
Hermon when a modern Jenny Geddes,
infuriated at one of the mole members of
the choir being asleep, hurled her Bible at
the head of the delinquent from the gallery
where she wee'sitting. The Bible missed
the sleeper, but struck the shoulder of
another man in the choir, who °farted np
amazed. The minister beaame pale,
paused in hie disoouroe, and exclaimed :
" What's wrong 7" " The Bible strnok the
wrang man," ehe Dried, rising np in her
pew, "although her friends vainly e►ttempbed
to hold her down; "livens meant to wauken
the einfn' sleeper."
A Late Dental.
Aft a aline') of twenty-five years, Rev.
Fate Walter, a Roman Catholic priest in
Waobingfon, makes a\'statement to the
effeot that Mre. Surratd, who wars hanged
for complicity in the assassination of
Preaident Linooln, wan innocent. He
muerte that it a reprieve of ten days had
been given her innocence would have been
proved. But President Jobneon refaced
thio, and she was hanged. The priest has
taken a long time to make this known.
Others have contended . for the woman's
innocence, but faith, little efffect.titnon_ the
a000pted verdlot. -
-Old Parkrioh-Should I let you have
my daughter, do you think you are able to
keep her dr ? Young mit& doabtfally-
I'll do all I oan, sir : but 37.11 know *hie is
Chicago.
come of long, deep breathe and the use of
many muscles. Tho prayer of the New
York child, " Lord, make ne very etylieh,"
when viewed aright, is recognized se an
aspiration based upon sound woientili
prinaiplea and worthy of universal com-
mendation.
Proper breathing is *he first artto oalti•
vate in the pursuit of beauty. The lunge
have their own muscular power, and the
should be exercised. The chest must be
enlarged by full, deep breathing, and not
br macula; pollen from without. Inflate
the lunge upward and outward, as if the in•
flation were about to lift the body off the
ground.
Hold the shoulders on a lino with the
hips, and stand so that the lips, ohin, chat
and tone come upon one line, the feet being
turned out at an angle of aixty degrees.
It is wrong to make the bony structure do
most of the work in keeping the body nu -
right. The mueoles should hold it in posi-
tion.
In walking, keep faoe and cheat well
over the advanced foot, and cultivate a
free, firm, easy gait, without hard or jar-
ring movements. It is impoaeible to stand
or breathe aright if the fee* are pinohed.
When oorreot posture and breathing are
interfered with t
hei
or
onlati n i
o s impeded,
pe d,_
and' deleterious eabstanoes in the blood
tend to make the complexion bad. This is
one of the many evils of tight aheea.
To be well ahod has a marked influence'
on style. The feet symbolize the body in
their way as much ae the hands. A
clever ehoemr.her says that in a well -
fitting shoe the human foot feels like a
-duck's/oot--in-th ud: It ie-lrelirfirmly
in place, but nowhere oompreeeed. Nothing
can- exceed -the -vulgarity and hygiene"
wiokednese of a shoe that is manifeeltly too
tight.
Next to the search for etyle pure and
simple as a means of ` health" the - care of
the oompexion end the cultivation of the
right kind of expression are of great im-
portanoe. Tae fires ie largely a matter of
bathing and the general hygiene of the akin,
while the - second -a good expression -is
best aeoared by the constant preference of
higher thoughte over Iower ones. This is
the essence of intelleotual living, and is
fortunately with reach of ne all.
For Tall Ladles. ;
If you are tall and- your height annoys
yon, have a plain skirt eligb*ly gathered at
the aides and tightly gathered -not plaited
-in the back.- Get some silk two or three
shades darker than the dress and make a
seven-inoh knife plaiting. Cato)] i* down
inside, along the centre with a running
thread of button -hole and sew on the very
edge of the skirt. This is not only a
graceful; trimming but it easily made, it
floats prettily with the motion of the
wearer and will take jaut seven indica from
the stature. The little woman will do well
to ignore it, however, ae any dark band or
trimming will give her a eluded appear-
ance. Have the plaiting, if you like, but
keep it the flame color ae the material.
A group of three three-inoh bias ruffles
put on with a very narrow braid ie pretty.
These millers may be edged with ribbon
velvet of finger -nail width. Another fanoy
is the butterfly flounce. A deep flounce
of lace is sewed on the drew, and
caught up in five places with bows of
ribbon or velvet. Thie ie very new, but
only appropriate for house wear, .the
carriage, or the piazza of a eeaaide hotel.
Perhaps the prettiest ruffle of all is a bias
one, aix inches deep covered with a flounce
of white or black marquioe laoe the risme
width and the two flniahed with a heading
of stiff brocaded ribbon two inohee wide. If
the material ie lace, gauze, net, organdy or
the like, the ruffle oan be made of old rose,
orange, peaoh or cardinal silk, and, aeon
throughthe flounce of grenadine indistinotly,
the effect ia very pleasing:
Don't Demand the Farah
If you go to the ooantry,eaye The Ladies
Home Journal, don't look for all the oity
conveniences. There ie a vague idea that
country people pay little or nothing for
many *hinge ; therefore the stranger
expecte a great deal for a small expendi.
Jure. While it is true that the withal cost
of living ie mnoh lees on a farm than in ,
town, still there are items of expense -
greater in the country, City improvements
when grafted on country life become ex-
pensive luxuries, just as irreproaohable
oream, butter and egge are the most costly
items of city housekeeping. We would feel
jnetly hurt if some farmer folk boarding in
our New York home °honld expect a large
tennis court, gnantitiea of flower, fruit and
rich milk, without seeing that these made'
a drain upon the household flnanoe°. So
exercise a little common sense yourself.
George Explains.
New York Herald : Ethel What dill
yon mean, George, by telling Mand that I
woe a chestnut ?
George -I -I -i referred to your beauti-
ful head of ohe"tM'tnnt hair.
-" Things are coming my way to.ni ht," .
remarkedthe ea* ,so be gsoed- pensively on°
the heap of old boo*s, lumpo of cold, tin
eine"; doe with whioh he had been pre-
oented.
-Amy--I am sure that Charley loves
me. Ethel -What makes yon so aura l
Amy -Although he doesn't say °o, I oan se
that he hates all my relatives.
MOW- SUBIPNWS ARE I[,ADI,
Nos Cast in lgouldi as Haw People Sup-
--sew.
Many people suppose that rubber sh-
are made by. noshing *he materiel
running lb into moulds, pays the Denver
News. Such is no the oaks.
The manufaoture of rubber ehoee 10 not
very much' different from the manufao
-tare-of leather shoes: u They- are made on
lade just the game, but instead of being
sewed they are Demented.
" We get most of the raw material from
Routh Armies," esid a drummer. " It is
about the oolor of molasses and is of a
spongy nature.
" First it goee through a oruehing or
rolling prooeee and comes out in rough
late'lad's: ` Then ri le taken into a compound-
ing room, where it is mixed with a com-
pound and vulcanized.
" Atter that it ie out up into email
pieces, a000rding to the parte - of shoes
which we wish to get, and ie afterward
fitted onto lasto by the workmen in the
same manner that leather ie.
" How mnoh ore rubber is _contained
per Dent. The best Para gum posts 95
oente a pound, so you see rubber boots and
shoes cannot be made for nothing. In
the smallest rubber shoe made, there are
about four ounoee of pure rubber, and.
from that to probably- four pounds in s
pair of rubber boots."
" Old rubbers are ground up, lining and
all, into what we call rag carpet and it is,
used for insoles.
" The work is nearly all done by hand,
and in the factories are employed young
children, men and women. A bootmaker
gets 20 oentsa pair for making them, and a
good man can turn out from tiny to twelve
pairs s day.
"There are between fifteen and twenty
rubber boot and shoe faotories in the
country, with a total capacity of over one
hundred and fifty thousand pairs of boots
and shoes a day.
"There are four faotoriee having a
oapaoity of over twenty-five thousand pairs
eaoh, and one whioh has a capacity of
40,000 pairs. It ie a mystery where they
all go to."
/SLQNNREST OF HUSBANDS.
An Australian Hair -Splitter and His Newel
Point in Law.
Since the "good old days," before snob
marital questione as "Ie Marriage a
Failure ?' or "Husband and Wife," ewer=
oieed our minds, the marriage service hae
been found on more than one omission to be
out of Mooch," eo to esy. -with modern
views of ` " rights," whether , mare or
female. _ Only the other da y___we_had_._an_
easmple oa bride declining to commit
herself to the " obey " clause, but it has
been reserved for an Antipodean spouse to
plead that the marriage servioe binds a
haeband to provide for his wife only till
death do them part, and that hale - conse-
quently not compelled to defray her funeral
expensee.'
The legal luminaries .of Australia, how-
ever, didn't take that view of the cape. -
Lady's Pictorial.
The Wire's Obedience.
Whole denominations of Christiane have
dropped the word " obey" from the mar-
riage eervioe. The great Roman Catholic
Church never had it inserted, and even in
the Episcopal Church it is 000aeionally
omitted -I. have personally known several
instances ; or when retained, it is con-
stenily explained by the parties con-
cerned, or even by clergymen, se a thing
to be taken with a mental reservation.
Two things have contributed to this--
the
his-the constant increase in the number of
women who earn incomes of their own, and
the vast progress of the higher 'education.
Either of these experiences very soon ex-
pands the wings of a strong feminine
nature, and a return to the chrysalis is
thenceforth impossible. It ia out of the
question to give woman equal education
and equal property rights and yet keep her
in the prostrate attitude she 000apied when
her earnings belonged to her husband, and
when the law denied her the safeguard
palled "benefit of clergy " on the ground
that it was not sappoeable ehe could read
or write. -T. W. H., in Harper's $afar.
Worth Striving For.
Good News : Relative -And so you have
graduated ? Did ` you take any of the
prizes ?
Fair Student -No, but I got the blggeet
bouquet.
The Three tee.
New York Record : This ie what a
woman says : " Some women are born
fool's, some achieve folly, but the most of
them marry fools."
The Cigar in the Slot.
New York Prem : Undertaker, to Ameri-
can youth who le lighting a oigarette-
That's right. You smoke the cigarettes ;
we do the rest.
" It took me fiveey ," said a married
man to a New York Teribe writer," to be.
espeeb way' for
give my wife so
come oonvinoed.that the
me to run my house was
mnoh money every mon* Ii to spend no she
eaw fit. I think that I he saved at least
25 per oent. by this plan never have anyv
large bills Doming in no at inopportune
times, for my wife pays as she bays. My
house is better equipped and better man-
aged than it wao under my old system, and
furthermore my wife hao a private bank
account, to whioh she adde a little every
month. I world advise every man who hes
a praotioal wife to try the name soheme.
It'e an immense relief, not to speak of the
suing." -
-In this age of keen competition a man
meet advertiee and advertiee wisely. He
mast give the same attention to hie=adver-
tieing as he does to hin stook and °tore.
An advertisement forma an impreeaion on
the mind of the reader and it means a
great deal to -•the advertiser that that
impression be a favorable one and that
•it be 'fully ,sustained in ills estaabliabnlent.
-Ex.
, Mise M. G. MoOlelland, the Virginia
novelle*, is of middle age, tall and °lender,
with iron -gray hair that she wears parted
.over her forehead. She ie a genuine South-
ern woman, cordial and kindly of manner,
and a rapid and prollflo writes. •
`German
u
-The -majority of well-read- phys-
icians now believe that Consump-
tion is a germ disease. Ing other
words, instead of being in the coir
stitution itself it is caused by innu-
merable small creatures living in the
lungs having no business there and
eating them awa as caterpillars d
i6"i.wms u"iitFut;vm�!au
ur, iJ
e "vres - o`1 sees.
A Germ
i'IlZ a w*ST PARASOLS.
Some of the New 8nnahades Things of
Arathetio asan$y.
Such is the beauty and variety _easel is
the new. parasols -that we return' "to the
theme. A new style shows rows of bla*
velvet ribbon alternating with rows at
broad insertion of bisok lace, either plalol
beaded-- with jet; - or with gold or sily� - F - _ _ __ .. -----
beads. In these" elegant psraeols the
broadest row is Been above a full ruffle el
edge-laoe, and et the top is a small ruffle of
the same with a knot of ribbon. The
handle is fluted and in metal, and hu •
large bow of lace and ribbon.
In blank net lined white lilac, blue. Nile
green, red or light blue, psraeols of bladr
ne
o t� beladeqlinichretar
asaaf
o r v 'c+'J►tl4i .� v�,'..`'j..-p .r'-rixU. .. 'T'viFr.5sx7
The phlegm that is
coughed up is those
Disease. parts of the lungs
which have been
gnawed off and destroyed. These
little bacilli, as the germs are called;
are to�_s1} thy.
m
silk, have a row of gathered ribbon above •
very deep flonnoe of matohing lace. Them
ie a bow of black satin ribbon at the top,
and eight tiny rosettes of the eame nee
dotted about over the net. The handle fa
oarvedand of wood,, and hae a knot at
ribbon, which ie mnoh need, as also is silk
cord, with taeeele of floes and • old
The paraeole in striped Bilk or maths
dieplay blaok and white, black and gay.
Mao and white, blue and white, and red
with Dream or white,, or ecru with brown.
light green with blank or dark red, and
bine with a darker Mae.
Spotted parasols show all these tints,
and have the epot in velvet in some eum-
klee. Others imitate a woolen fabrio and
ava a curious, shaggy spot. Pongee
parasols and umbrellas are oleo shown,
nor hae the Japanese shape disappeared.
The gayest of all effeote is seen in the
.brooaded material of whioh Boma paraeoh
and coaching umbrellea are made, and
which introduce eo many different colors
in the pattern that they oan be carried
withany dress, a point in their favor which
scams to have reoommended these imported
examples to the notice of many pnrohYers.
-The Domestic Monthly.
naeye fly are very touch
alive just the same, - and enter the
body in our food, in (the air we
breathe, and through the pores of
the skin. Thence they, getinto the
blood and finally arrive -at the Tongs
where they fasten and increase with
frightful rapidity. Then German
Syrup comes in, loosens them, kills
them, expells theta, heals the places
they ztleave, and so nourish 'and
soothe that, in a short time consump-
tives become'germ-proof and well. 0
rialimmerr
Who Owns the Prescription?
The gneation as to whom a physician's
preeoription belongs hae never been seri-
ously raised in *hie country, as by general
nee the druggist who makes it np retsina it
in hie possession. In England, however,
a preeoription ie always understood to
belong ' to the patient ; and the British
Medical Journal, in a recent article on the
subject, declares that *he claim has never
been made in England that it belonged to
any one else. The Journal pointe ont that
a phyeioian may, and often does, prescribe
perfectly Well by merely giving verbal
direotione-to--be-obaerved--by--hie- patient;
and that when these directions inolade the
nee of any, particular drug it ie ,usual to put
them into writing, so that a mistake may
not be made. The act of giving a written
presoription doee not, however, affect the
right of property in the piece deeper given
to the patient. -Philadelphia' Record. ,
Gallant Brans Climate.
On a pretty girl saying to Rufus Choate
" I am very sad -you -see," he replied, " Oh,
no ; you belong to .the old Jewish eeot ; you
are very fair--I•see 1"
Nothing adde so mnoh to the beauty of a
fair girl, as a clear, bright, healthy com-
plexion, and to seonee this pure blood is
indispenaible. So mady of the eo•oalled
blood.purifiers gold to improve a • rough
pimply, muddy akin, only drive the
serofulone humors from the surface to some
internal vital organ, and disease and death
is the inevitable result. Onthe contrary,
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
strikes direotly at the root of the evil, by
driving the impurities entirely out of the
system, and with a fresh stream of pure
blood flowing through the veins, nothing
but the softest and fairest of complexions
can -result.
To Olean a Pipe.
One of the newest inventions is a tiny
steam boiler with a safety .. valve in the
shape of an open tube. The idea is to fill
the little boiler with water, put the tube in
the stem of an old pipe, and hold the boiler
in the flame of a gas burner. The water
boils and the steam cleans out and
rejuvenates the pipe. This is all well
enough, but it one wishee to be oertain'to
renew the youth of hie pipe without
damaging it a goo 1 way ie to fit =a match
stiok into the etem and 1 11 the bowl with
alcohol. Let the alcohol rest there a while,
pour it out and the pipe is oleaned.-New
York Sue.
Hen That Jump
At oonolaeione are generally " off their
base." Bemuse *here are numberless
patent medioinea of gneetionable valve, it
doesn't follow that all are worthless. Don't
oleos Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy with the
nensl run of Koh remedies. It 'is way ,
above and beyond them! 1* is doing what
others fail to do 1. It ie During the worst
oases of • Ohronio Naeal Catarrh.
If you doubt' it, try ft. It you
oan make a thorough trial; you'll `
be oared. 8600 forfeit for an incurable
case. This offer, by Worl'd's Dispensary
Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. At all
druggists ; 60 male.
A St. Louis "Jack the Bicker ". amuses
himeelf kioking dudes.
Mru. OazzamLTo-morrow is your day
out, I believe, Loaiee ? Louise, who ono,
served a Beaton family -Tomorrow will
be my day ons, madam.
The smarted dancing slippersare of
white or blank satin, embroidered in gold
WO after the fashion of'a epider web,
and having a family of otnl kpidera jnet.
on the pointof the toe.
" When I see all those Italians Doming
into this oonntry," said Wilkins, " I am
impressed with one thing. " What is
that 7 " asked Banker. " That Italy meet
be getting to be quite a desirable place to
live in.
i
So to Speak.
Woman is wonderfully made 1 Bach
beauty, grace, delioaoy and purity erosions
her poaseeeiona. So has she weaknesses,
irregularities, functional derangements,
peouliar only to herself. To correct *hese •
and restore to health, her wonderful organ-
ism requires a restorative especially
adaptedlo_that_purpose.-Such-a-one ie Dr.
Pieree's Favorite preeoription-poseeesing
curative and regulating properties to a
remarkable degree. Made for this p
alone -recommended for no other 1. urtio:-.
growing in favor, and numbering
as its stanch Mende thonsands of the most
intelligent and refined ladies of the, land.
A positive guarantee a000mpaniee
bottle- a�yonr draggiat'e. .Sold on trial
The Difference Didn't Count.
Boston Herald : Pretty girl (to aalei-
man)-I want to buy a hammock strong
enough to hold up three:
Salesman -Sorry, miss, but our ham-
mocks will only hold up two.
Pretty girl (unhesitatingly) -Well, 110
matter, I'll take one.
Blonde hair is improved by being
primped a little in the baok ; in fact, any
except black hair looks better when it is
a little roughened.
There is 'a movement on - loot in the
South for the writers of that seotion to
adopt a name by whioh the war of 1860.66
may ben known. So far as oan be learns
the feeling shows the preference for " this
States' Rights war.'" There ie aleo s pprme-
position to call it " the war for Southern
indepenoe." ,
At Knoxville, Tenn., fire destroyed the
machine shops and bolt department of the
Knoxville Iron Co. Lose 1180,000-
D. 0. 11L24.91/,
CURES PERMANENTLY
tellis 1
aG elms
°4(
';�`1.ka
IT HAs 1e9 O EQ W%L.
IT IS 1171F 1 3ST
t,J Pi $e�14$1` C;' .'R1,rt ly,a
u 1%2 BEST COUGH 119EuiCiNE.
tr BOLD 57 Dst oGl"a1's I:Qimma m&
"' C;c'�
mmimmi
s�) TI1Lr EDITOR: -Please Inform your readers that 1 have a positive nem,. , y
e named disease. Ry its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have beenecnaan '.
.:.1., be glad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your readers wn.
. , ' ption it they will Bend me their Express and Post Office Address. Respectfully, T, ,d, a
`• [i: '55 Went Adelaide St.. TORONTO, ONTARIO.
CORE Fi
1 THOUSANDS OF HOT
GIVEN 'AWAY YEARLY.
When 1 say Cure I do trot
Asme them return S merely to stop them for a Om
E &Rain. I MEAN A RADICAL OGRE. I havemadethe
Epilepsy or Palling Sickness a life-long study.ewamy re
Worst cases. Because others have failed Is no reason wa.,t
for not sow receiviti
MIfora t se and a Free Bottle of my Infallible nomad
both g for at brig apd it will cure y - a
'Ifilt re. 180 TEST' AGIELJUDE STREET. ROHM.
•
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