HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-07-24, Page 3scions that fate was dealing hardly by him.
As he turned a corner, he tan against a
tall, haudsome young lady, who put out
her baud and caught his arm to steady
hereelf, laughing gayly : " Take care,
Nesbit !" she exclaimed, " you nearly!
knooked ane down. Since when have you
taken to. eniuhitjn se Mrs Wilfeir'a f rrl
and ' felling ' your relatives to the earth ?"
" Why, Norma ! is it really you ?" he
questioned, refusing to admit the evidence
of sight and touch unfortified by hearing.
She sheered Thorne wonderfully, for she
seemed te- bring Ytrginia aucl•.the life of
the last few months nearer to him -the
peaceful life in which nervi hopes: had
budded; in which he had met, and
known. and loved Pocahontas. Norma did
him good, raised his spirits, and made the
future look bright and cheerful ;. but, not
in the way she hoped and intended. She
had ie North with the hope of further-
ing 1` r own plans, of making herself neces-
sary rand agreeable, of keeping the old days
fresh in his memory. And she was
' necessary to him, as a trusted comrade
who had never failed him ; a clever adviser
rsra
charming friend who was fond of him, and
who had, but now, come from the enchanted
land where his love dwelt. Of her plans he
knew nothing, suspected nothing ; and the
days she brought fresh to his thoughts were
days in which she had no part.
In a little while he went West, and there
was a period of uneventful waiting, after
KISSING AND SHILLING PREACHERS.
How Able and Experienced Hen Are
Uuwlliaated.
Toronto World : The Methodist Church
is forever being confronted with the proof,
'that its system of supplying ministers is
faulty.--- d4►•weuer--thn.t-system-nay. -on- the -
whole comitare with the various other plans
in use, it is certainly far from perfect.
The it
Instance of .this occurs in, the
Davenport Church on the western skirts of
Toronto. This church has been long estab-
lished. -end once flour shed intof recent
years the congregations have Wien away;
and the collections and other sources of
revenue dwindled to insufficiency. New
pered, and the more the leading
members of the Davenport flock looked
about the more' regularly did their
eyes revert to their pulpit and their hearts
declare that a young minister must be
secured. Their especial need was a young
man, one ' who could smile as well as pray ;
who could entertain and retain the living as
well as shrive the dying ; who would be as
��Ctiii�4L�'L-��,p•YZ�S'iiv'�� �' "�l'��1`�•1� $''�"'g;��kGfii't`t
in his vigorous humanity prefer a marriage
to a funeral. This opinion was arrived at
last year,, and a memorial was forwarded to
Dr. " Pirritte, President of the conference
[and formerly a resident of Hamilton],
asking that the request be impressed
upon the Stationing Cormniteee. In the
original draft of stations Rev. Mr. Well-
THE GENTLE WAT.
How Expert Shoplifting is Carried on and
Detected.
She was a middle-aged, well-dressed lady,
and she had the next stool on my right
alongside a dry gods counter in Fourteenth
erect. 1.iva:sti4s-watela,•ng her all, but
happened to see her place her shopping -bag
on the counter and deftly pick up and con -
real a pair of kid g (wee' within its_ capa-
cious maw. One hates to meddle in such
cases, but such things are wrong, and as
the store detective was orifi 20 feet away I
went' ores and tannin whatl- has seen. 1
saw him look at the girl cleric and she gave
'him a nod 'to signify that she had also
eau ht nn it vpag fihnp1ifting,
simple, and I waited wit considerable anx-
iety to see the outcome.
" Being waited pn, ma m?" asked the
detective with a bland smile, as he sat down
beside her.
,Oh, yes, yes !:; she replied.
" Pleasant day ?"
" Very pleasant." •
" These loves," he continued, as he
at the price. You were wise to make an in-
yestmeut. I don't believe, they will sell
again at the price this summer. See that
the lady is promptly waited on Julia."
"Julia" sold her two or three bits of lace;
included ninety cents for the gloves on her
slip, and the bill was paid with-
out a word, although the stolen
erman
Here is an incident from the South
-Mississippi, written in Apri1,489o,
just after the Grippe had visited that
:alit. a fanner,,-:
those who have to rise early and
work late. At the beginning oflast
-W
of Vicksburg, Miss. , where I got well
drenched in a shower of rain. I
went home aril was soon afteveized
with a dry, hacking cough. This
grew worse every day, until I had
to seek relief. I consulted Dr, Dixon
who has t_since died, and he told me
29;'9,:.._..; .•i '.. ,.Krr.M... �•v .p,
Syrup. Meantime 'my cough grew
worse and worse and then the Grippe
came along and I caught that also
very severely. My condition then
compelled me to do something. I
,got two bottlesof German Syrup. I
began using them, and before taking,
TOOK DOWN THE CR
Perilous Ascent of a Lightning Rod on 11
)Brooklyn Church. •
Three hundred and twenty feet up in the
air went Charles J. - Kent yesterday after-
noon, says the Brooklyn Eagle. Over two
hundred feet" of the djstance was ihaide of
the steeple of St. Stephen's church, at the
corner of Summit and Hicks streets ; the
rest of tbedizzy height he climbed up by
the lightning rad from a window of the
tower, with a rope around his body, which
wArk ti hely,he aid lr is trig as •, _ - _
Lewis Woest and Stuart Cooper. Wien
he got ont Qf e4 e wh doter' many peoplo stew
him, both men and women watohed . him
-with es --unser gt- 4u—a—few—sein---
utes he was at the top and had a hold of
the great cross that has stood on that
steeple for the past eighteen years. It
is six feet in height and four inches in
width at the cross and made of galvanized
iron. It had about six hundred glass bull's
eyes in it.—worth about $1.50 each when
new—and the cross was- imported from the
the former pas�'he c'hurc'h, an s p
there when the steeple was completed. The
cross was form8rly lit up by electricity and
could be seen seventy miles at sea. Com-
plaints, however, were made by the pilots
of New York harbor that the light of the
cross &seriously interfelred with navigation,
so the light was taken out. The present
pastor of the church deemed it necessary
containing a s ort an uno strusive notice
of the granting of- a divorce to Nesbit
Thorne from Ethel, his wife.
She bore it away to her room and gloated
over it greedily. Then she took her pen
and ran it around the notice, marking it
heavilythis done, she folded, sealed and
directed tin a clear, bold hand—General
Percival, Smith, Wintergreen.Co., Virginia.
It would ,save elaborate explanations.
CHAPTER XVI.
Spring opened very late that year in Vir-
ginia—slowly and regretfully, as though
forced into doing the world a favor against
its will, and determined to be as grudging
and disagreeable over it as possible. The
weather was cold, wet and unwholesome—
sulking and storming alternately, and there
was much sickness in the Lanarth and Shirley
neighborhood. The Christmas had • been a
green one—only one small spurt of snow on
Christmas Eve, which 'vanished with the
morning. The•negrocs. were full of gloomy
prognostications in consequence, and shook
their heads, and cast abroad, with uuction,
all sorts. of grewsome prophecies anent the
fattening of the church -yard.
All through.tlle winter, Mrs. Mason had
been aiing, and about the, 'beginning of
March lie succumbed to climatic influ-
ences; 7--by--hereditary- teudeney-,.
and too to ' r bed with a severe attack
of inflammatory' rheumatism. Pocahontas
had her hands full with household care and
nursing, and perhaps it was as well, for it
drove self into the background of .her mind,
for a part of the time at least, and filled
with anxiety the empty days. Grace, living
five mules , away and loaded slawni with.
• family cares and duties of her own, could be
-of-little-practical assistance.... _
• • When at length • the news of Thorne's
divorce reached them, she warded off with
tender consideration all remark or comment'
likely to hurt the girl, and gave straight-
forward, hot-tempered Berkeley a hint
which effectually silenced him. In Booth,
the honest fellow ha& small liking for the
subject. He bitterly resented what he con
• sidened Thorne's culpable concealment of
the fact of his marriage. He remembered
the night of the ball at Shirley, and the
memory rankled. . It did not occur to him
that the matter having remained a secret
migit have been the natural result of
an teifortimate combination of circum-
stances, and in no sort the consequence of
calcuh.tion or dishonor on Thorne's part.
Neithe• did it occur to him, large -minded
man •thntgh he was, to try to put himself
in '1';h.orte's place and so gain a larger in-
• sight int)'tlre affair,•and the possibility of
arriving tt a fairer judgment. Berkeley's
. interest the matter was too personal to
admit of lispassionate analysis, or any im-
pulse toward mercy, or even justice. His
anger buned hotly against Thorne, and
when the bought of him rose in his •mind
it was accompanied by other thoughts
whichit is %est not'to put into'words.
• During Nrs,•Mason's illness, little Blanche
wasunremitiug in .her attentions, coming
over daily salt delicacies of her own con-
• coction, ane .striving to help her friends
with, a sweet unobtrusive kindness which
`• won hearty reponse from both ladies, and
caused them io view Berkeley's increasing
suited the 'congregation to a. nicety. 're-
sumab]y he is a good hand at a avedkling and
a cordial smiler. At any rate this is what
they demanded in their new parson, and
they were suited with hire. Rev. Dr. Pir-
ritte, retiring president of the conference,
was billeted for Orillia in the first draft of
stations, but the Orillia people presumably
wanted a parson who could put up swings at
a picnic if need be and go. with zest into his
sacred function of stealing first kiss from the
bride at marriages, so they sent word that
1)r. Pirritte would not do. Thereupon the
Stationing Committee transposed Messrs.
Wellwoods and Pirritte. 'The Davenport
people held an iticlignation meeting and
refuse to accept' Rev. Dr. Pirritte as their
minister.
Rev. Dr. Pirritte is placed in a mcjst
humiliating position. • After years of valu-
able services to the church he is'sent to one
station after another and told that he is not
Wanted. Last year he was exalted by his
fellow -clergymen to the presidency, and that
should, if it does not, attest his attainments
as well as his virtues of head and heart. A
system that can subject such a man to such
humiliation is a poor system and has lived
too long.
The introduction of fiddles and operatic
solos and bun -struggles and collections to
get- ito'-Church slid --collections £o ge-t oil,
again—this 'style of thing is bearing fruit
everywhere. The preacher nowadays re-
quires to be a Napoleon of finance and play
the arts of a confidence man in filling his
pews : • In hiring him the congregation bar-
gains for a broad smile and a wife who , will.
meekly be bullied by every woman on the
circuit. ' Phe—Stationing-elonm.ittee-shouid
secure a list of those churches that deinand
circus-'attrfcetions in else pulpit; seri .Arose
other churches that insist upon having 'a
minister who can turn handsprings., and has.
a hereditary disposition to shae hands..
In .this way it might save ministers grown
old i5'i the service, but none the less sensi-
tive, from humiliation• they can never quite
forget in this life.
Fresh and Vigorous:
On a fine morning and a fine road; what is
more invigorating than a spin on a cycle ?
When it comes to a race, the suggestion .of
Mr. George Phillips, Sec'y, Leinster Cycling
Club, Dublin,. Ireland, has force : " I have
found St..Jacobs Oil an invaluable remedy
for strains and bruises, and so have several
members of our club." This ought to .be
borne in mind. t'
A Few Sensible Renu:arks.
But what's a .diploma ? It shows what
you have. been. It is no passport to success.
It won't gain admission for you to a first-
class college, and if you wanted a situation
and showed it to a business man as q recom-
mendation be would put you down as a
guy ;, and you'd be one. • A dipioma.,doesif
show that your education has' left you
anxious to learn more. And unless you are,
you're not worth much; What you really
are and 'are worth to others is the
test of capacity. Goethe, the • German
poet, says : " You are:, after all, what
you are.• Deck yourself in a win with
a thousand locks ;' ensconce your egs in
attentions to he little maid ''with pleasure. 1 buskins an ell high ; you still' remain just
• They even aidd the small idyl by every' what you are." it is not. enough that you
lawful means, aving the girl' with them as
often as they culd and praising her judici-
ously.
With her winsome, childish ways
and • • impuls'eness, Blanche formed
a marked ontrast to grave, re-
serCred Berkey 11lason, and was perhaps
'better suited tthim on that account. When
their engagemet was announced, there was
no lack of congttulation' and "satisfaction in
both families. -.he general, as he gave his
hearty approbaon to her choice, pinched
bei ears and asst what bad become. of her
• objections to irginia ; • and Percival tor-
mented her una,singly, twitting her ,with
• her former wai of lamentation. Blanche
did not care. The took, their teasing- in
good part, and itorted with merry words
and wines and ,ushes. She. had made her
joutney to the tknown, and returned with
treasure.
Mrs. Smith, : her chamber, smiled softly,
and thought onruslin'and lace and wedding
favors. ,
(The continued.)
An Exbpl:e for William:
Buffalo Nees•The Queen Regent of the
.Netherlands anher daughter declined the
offer of a pule reception during their
recent visit to nsterdam, They requested
•' the city oiliciato use the money collected
for the receptit in feeding the poor. Con-
t i than
moi . 00 'over .
ttl i0 0 • t -
ec'uen
6 ,
p y
l
y
stricken creattn received presents of food
' and money anc5,000 school children were
provided with )reakfast.
No flowerinplant has been discovered
rvthin the Arctic Circle ; within the
Act le Circle ; different species have been
ell sified.
4ayor. Tloln, of Kansas City,' has been
fornally censrd by resolutions of the
bar.ers for ha•g been shaved id a shcp on
Sutnise
have gone through the school curriculum
!and are supposed to have absorbed the
I learning in the' books you were required
to° study. Henry Ward Beecher remarked
once that the first great lesson a young
man should, learn is, that he knows noth-
ing. And your college professor or'eyour
employer will estimate you all the more
highly for approaching the world of learn-
ings or business in the hunible frame of
mind induced • by such a lesson.—Drake's
Magazine:
•
•
The Proof' of the Padding.
have you humors, causing blotches
Does your blood inn thick and slugish?
Arc von drowsy,aull and languid?
Is a bad taste in your mouth, and
Is your tongue all furred and coated? '
Is you sleep with bad dreams broken?,
' • I)o you feel downhearted, dismal,
Dreading something, what, you know not?
Then be very sure you're bilious—
That you have a torpid liver,
And what you-ncod is sometRing to rouse it
and make it active enough to throw off the
impurities that clog it ; something to in-
vigorate the• debilitated system, and Help
all the organs to perform the duties expected
of them., promptly and energetically. That
"something" is l)r. Tierce's (.golden Medi
cal Discovery, the great • Blood ' T'urifier,
which its proprietors have such faith in
that they guarantee it to •cure. If it docs
not,
your money will he refunded.Big it
will. Buy it, try it', incl be convinced of its
wonderful ilowe.r. If the proof of the pud-
ding is in the eating,'t.hc proof of) this
remedy is in the taking,
Lucy Thicker, colored, .of Trigg county,
Ky., aged lQ';i tears, has cut a •Hull set of
new teeth, the old hnc^z having decayed and
(1i sap pe4rt'd.ahout fort y years ago.
Thr,
Oliver 'Wendell Holmes says that
nine -tenth?)' 'of • the medicines ,in the woifld
were thrown into the ocean mankind would
be greatly benefited,
could not, of course-, be wrapped .up with
the other things. It was only when the
lady rose to go, after receiving her change,
thae she betrayed any emotion. Then she
flushed up, grew pale about the mouth, and
as she passed ins she gave. me a flash of her
eyes which seemed to 'promise vengeance in
the future. '
"Do you always work it as slick as that?"
I asked of the detective, as she swept out.
" Not always She was an old hand' at
the business and a sharp woman. They
always make the best of it when caught.
One with less wit would have bluffed and
stormed, and I should have had to take her
back to the office and prove her a thief."—
New York Herald.
A Little Fatherly Advice.
" If ever you marry," said an old gentle-
man to his son, "let it be' a woman who has
judgment enough to superintend the getting
of a meal, taste enough to dress herself,
pride enough to wash her face, and• sense
enough to use Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pres-
cription, whenever she .need's it." The ex-
•perience of the aged has shown the " Favor-
ite Prescription" to be the best for the cure
•of all female weaknesses and derangements.
Good sense is sliown by getting the remedy
from -.you -r -druggist, -and --using._ it=whenever.
you feel weak arid' debilitated. It will in-
vigorate and cannot possibly do harm.
- French Table Talk. •
Children being, nearly always at table in
France, and conversation often being ani-
mated amongst sheir elders, they hear a
great -deal thhiit--was--never- -intended-for-
them, and.they get a sort of education in
talkativenesstymere-example: -tI1hey-muy'
make little use of this in the presence of
strangers during boyhood or girlhood, but
it bursts out afterwards when they get elo
a talking age. Itis recognized by custom
that when a family is in private every one
has a right to talk or not as he pleases,
and , silence .being permitted, the taciturn
will take advantage of it ; still, nothing is
more national in French life than talkative -
tress at meal times, even when the family
alone is present. This does at least keep up
the . national power of talking, though the
mill Ni -heels of • conversation have frequently
very little grain to grind. Talk of this kind.
has some use as a Stimulating exercise of the
lighter faculties, which in other countries
are often left unexercised. The merits'of it
are its facility of expression and its• ample
choice of language ; the defects of it, in
France, may be included under the one'head
of insufficient or inaccurate information.—•
Philip Gilbert Ilatnerton, in the Ally Foruni.
A Dainty Mateh•Seraicher.
. Take a pasteboard ribbon block and cut
two,round pieces of sandpaper the exact
sue of the two ends of the block, and paste
't]ieii-on securely. Round the centre of the
block put a strip of satin ribbon, rnd fasten
it with, invisible stitches. Then take•
velvet ribbon of . the same color and pass
round the ;block so that it will meet 'the
sandpaper at one edge, and overlap the
ribbon, with • the other, blind -stitching
together at the. joining. Fasten gilt or.
silver tinsel from the inside edge of one
strip of velvet to the other ; this should be
in iiatitation of the snares of a drum. The
tinsel may be caughttogether with spangles.
The drum is
very effective suspended front a
gas jet 'by a -half-inch wide ribbon fastened
to the drum by a• pretty bow.—Ladies'
H02)1e AIM/ a •
Lady Macdonald as an Author.'
' Just before her bereavement Lady' Mac-
donald, widow of the late Sir John Mac-
donald, completed her hist ambitious
literary effort in a series of articles for the
Ladies' Jlome• Journal, the first one of
which will appear in the August mugger• of
that periodical. Last summer Lady Mac-
donald, with a party of friends, travelled in •
her private car through the most pictur-
esque parts of Canada, and in a delightfully
fresh manner she describes her experiences
on this trip in these articles, to which she.
has given the title of " An Unconventional,
Holiday."A, series of beautiful illustra-
tions, furnished by Lady Macddnald, will
accompany the articles. '
Arsenic in Stall Paper.
I'ut a small piece of the paper into strong
ammonia water. If arsenic be present a
bluish color will be developed Since
copper gives a similar reaction, Its whist her
test moisten a crystal of ni.trate•of sidvct'
ItIfthe color be
• n of the fluid. c
with a drop 1
due to arsenic, a yellowish deposit will be
formed on the crystal—National I)rioi,st.
entirely clear of the Cough that had
hung to" me so long, the Grippe, and
all its bad effects. I felt tip-top and
have felt ` that way ever since."
Pi rite J. BRIAI.s, Jr., Cayuga, Woes
Co., Miss. tri
SPENT liER QUARTER.
The Poor- Kitty Needed the Money Real
Bad,
A few days ago, says the Philadelphia In-
quirer, a little girl—a tiny thing only four
years old—went with her mamma to pay a
visit up town. When she came down she
had a twenty-five cent piece clasped ,tight
in her fat hand. As they walked up the
street, suddenly the little one espied a most
disreputable -looking cat lying on the lower
step of a stoop. It looked sick and forlorn
and lay as . if dead. The child rushed
up to the creature and stroked
its back with soft little touches
until the poor thing opened its eyes slowly
in recognition. Then the mother called the
child away .and reproved her sharply for
making friends with such a wretched street'
cat. The child said nothing.
«'hen theygot home_ the _ motlier,.said
"Gracie, where is the quarter Uncle John
gave you ?' •
" I spent it, mamma." :
" Yeti.' spent it ! How in the world
could yoir spend it Without my seeing you ?"
" I spent it to the cat, mamma ; . the poor
cat. I put. it right down on the stoop by
the kitty. I thou
than I lista''
was getting rusty, and its galvanized iron
fastenings were becoming loosened. Kent
took the cross down. In six hours from the
time Kent began' his perilous ascent from
the topmost window of the tower the cross,
weighing in the neighborhood of eight
hundred pounds, -was lying in the yard of . .
the church.
Holidays.
The Chicago News, in the course of a
thoughtful article on the subject of holidays,
points out that it is not merely kindness of
heart, nor patriotism, which prompts men
in business or trade to assume willingly the
financial burdens,, connected with holiday
observances. It is simply a keen perception
of the working of economic laws—a realiza-
tion that the whole community is benefited
by well -observed holidays, and that the
expenses which they themselves incur are
just as much legitimate investments as the
Money expended for advertising or for the
proper • ventilation of store, workshop, .or
counting house. As the News observes in
summing up the question : " Holidays are
not philanthropic concessions on the part of
the employers. Holidays and half -holidays
are not. merely vested rights of employees.
They are also, and above all things, an eco-
-nomrc-necessity-; -and•whoever•-fails-to observe--- -- ---
them by a suspension of all• not absolutely
necessary labor, whoever desecrates them by
enslaving himself and others in the service
of Mammonrfails also in one of the highest
duties he owes the community."
thought she needed it worse Sardou, the • great French playwright,
writeia band so line_ hat_it. ahnost secs ires-
a magnifying glass to read it.
As.
L1161e; But -Lively:
Little drops of water,
Little grains of sand, .
Make the mighty ocean,
And the pleasant land."
And dropping into prose, we • would say,
'that Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are mild,
but prompt in relieving constipation, sic];
headache, bilious attacks, pain in the region
of kidneys, torpid liver, ,and in restoring a
healthy, natural action to the stomach and
bowels. 25 cents a vial. One pellet a dose,
Little, but lively.- The use of the old style,
drastic pills is an outrage on the human
system.•
'
A Steam Phaeton.•
Among the latestengineering • feats is the
the manufacture of a steam phaeton, which
has just been introduced into Paris by Mons.
Serpollet. This steam phaeton is said to re-
ssemble an ordinary phaeton and has under
the body of the carriage a Serpollet• motor,
with an inexplosible boiler and a •funnel
bent down to discharge the smoke under the
hind seat at the rear of the vehicle. It is
guided by -a single 'front •wheel, .after the
manner -of a tricycle. The tank. is capable..
of holding enough water to perform a jour-
ney of 18 or* miles ; the bunker' can fur-
(.nish fuel (probably coke in cities, as it is-
sinokeless) for running :30 miles, The
weight of this vehicle, with water and coke,'
is 2,500 pounds. On a good country road a
speed of 50 lefts an hour can be kept up,
with seven p rsons in' the carriage. • It can
be started in 20 minutes and the feeding of
the engine with water • and fuel goes on
automatically.
•
Death ofthe Queen's Piper.
William Ross, the Qneen's Piper, who was
buried at )Windsor two or three days ago,
was, in his early days, in the Black Watch ;
but he had mastered the bagpipe' before' he
entered the army, having been instructed by
an old Highland piper whose 'daughter he
suhsequently married. • He distinguished
himself as piperwhile with his regiment,
and in May, 1 854, he was appointed piper to
the Queen, and held the position• until the
time of his death. 'As a player of a "Pib-
roch " or of a " Lament " 1 -Coss was 'unap-
proachable. But the work by which he
will be chiefly . remembe°red is ,the great
" Collection of Pipe Music," the preparation
and production of which cost thirty years of
patient labor.
The coroner of Yuba County, 'Cal., fined
a corpse $50 for carrying concealed weapons,
confiscated the pistol from deceased's pocket,
and took for fees the remaining X25., of the
$.75 found on the remains.
Every influence that France can command
has been brought to bear on the Emperor -of
Russia to induce him to honor Paris with an
Imperial visit in the autumn. -
•
D. C, N. L. 30. 91.
AC S I
Cures»
Promptly and Permanently
Et ODE 'LT NZ
Lumbago, Headache, Toothache,
1V' E LY A..L G 1 A. ,
Sore Throat, Swellings, Frost -bites,
SC 1 .A. T X/0,4,
Sprains, Bruises, Burnd,.Scalds.
Sold by Druggists and Dealers Everywhere.
Canadian Depot, 44 and 46 Lombard St., Toronto, Ont
XnAnit', : ND
VERA -CUR
FOR
DYSPEPSIA
AND RILL
Stomach Trou4les,
INDICEST1ON,
Nausea, Sour Sctoml-
ach, Ciddinese ,
Heartburn, Consti-
pation,
onsti-
pation, Fullness, Food Rising,
Disagreeable Taste, • Nervotws-
neS 5. .
At•itriigriets :111,1 Ucvll, rs, or, sent 1,y inn il ot:
receipt of 2: Cts. (r b.:xcs ALO') fu :lamps.
Canadian Depot, 41 and 46 Liinbard St., Toronto; Ont, •
IglitTEAKN ESM
race pimpts, loss of nerve, weak.
nest', despondency, eta., from what.
ever cause arising, cured by DR.
PERCY'S VITAL. RODEsERATOR,
the resu aof 25 years Special ,Practice
Cure Guaranteed
Sent by Mail in small pill form, In
plain sealed package, with Rules, on
recant of'1 wo Dollars, Flquals oom-
blued sale of similar specifics.
Send for Sealed tirnrj1kkd.
Dr. JOHN PERCY.
BOX 603, WINDSOR, O•NT.
TIE BEST COUGH MEDICINE.
BOLD 87. IMONSTS lydERYWIIFAE.
is4l1
Princess May, of 'Peck, is the prettiest
marriageable royal girl in 1':uropc. She is i
the present object of devotion of 'Prince;
i
Edward of WW -ales, but tilt match is
prevented by the strong objection of the
f Queen.
She —W liom d, you etre more f cir, •lick ? l
ITe - -Is it possible yon do not k (11 now wl o 1,
love best in all this world :' Site—Yes, 1.
know ;hut next to Trim t
s�
SUREAN
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� W. THOUSANDS OF $M
' W VEBa AWAY YEARLY,
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