HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-09-04, Page 7AN ,APPALLING DISASTER.
Probably Fifty Lives Lost at a' New
York Fire,
'A 'GREAT BUILDING WRECKED
a Iysterlous -Explosion- -The Rush to
Pseape-Sad Scenes -Digging Out Corpses
-A Ghastly Sight.
A Sul ay night's Now York defipateh
. gives th�eJ} following details of the explosion
disaster reported on Saturday : At 12.30
o'clock yesterday an explosion occurred in
the five -story brick building extending from
N.RatietCaseliseakeerelavetesselitleins
a moment a frightful rumbling noise was
heard, and the whole front portion of the
walls collapsed and fell outward in a pile on
the street. It ie believed that 50 lives were
Lost. in the ill-fated building by being crushed
to death under the debris .or burned by the
fierce fire that followed the explosion and
collapse. About 50 people escaped from the
building with their lives Al!
InVtri"qr Iola o e ci y were
summoned to the scene, the police reserves
were called out, and the wildest excitement
prevailed throughout the city. Up to 5.30
o'clock in the evening only six bodies had
• been dug out of the ruins. Only one person
was taken out alive, and that was Mary
Haegner, 93 e rs old, who was found under
two feet of de vis near the edge of the side-
evaik...She ha been sitting with her siliter
Anna, who was younger than herself, on a
doorstep, and when the explosion occurred.
started to run, but was pinned under the
' falling mass of wreckage. .Anna was dug
out dead, as was 5 -year-old Johnny Gibbs,
who had been with the little girl. The fire
burned fiercely, but the- firemen by heroic
labor got the flames under control within an
hour and a half, and began the work of dig-
-ging at the rains for the bodies of the vic-
tims. Ambulances were summoned froin
several hospitals, and the dead waggon
came from the morgue. The work of the
searchers for bodies was kept up all•night,
and will be resumed to -day.
DIGGING OUT TIIE BODIES.
Tho first body was dug out of the wreck
jest two hours after the explosion. It was
that of little Mary Haegner, who was alive.
Her father, Frank Haegner, is the janitor of
the building,I Park Place. When he
heard' that his c dren were crushed under
the Heap of brie and debris he was crazed
with grief. As the firemen -lifted Mary out
of the debris and held her up in their arms,
the little one saw her mother at one of the
windows opposite, and exclaimed : " There's
my mamma.?' A cheer went up from the thou-
--•-sands of bystanders: • The child -was found
-•----to-be-uninjured-exceptfor`slight"confusions,
although her clothing was coated with dirt
and blackened with smoke: Her miraculous
escape is due to the -way in which some joists
fell, forming a sort of arch, which protected
her from the falling brick and stone. Mary
. . said her little sister and the boy Johnny
Gibbs, who had been playing with her, were
lying near by. She had heard Anna groaning
and crying. In ashort time the bodies of the
other two children were dug out As the
many streams of water drenched the burn=
ing pile of ruins the flames subsided, and
the firemen of the life-saving brigade were
enabled to get to work. They could only
-dig for the dead, however.
RESCUED, IN acme.
Roundsman Taylor, who. was passing
near the scene of the disaster when the
explosion occurred and the walls began
falling, ran to.a hardware store in the next
block, and securing a dozen axes, distri-
buted then among the by, -staplers and fire-
men,who cut a hole in the side wall of No.
70 Park Place, through which 17 psrsous
crowded. They were . all bruihed and,
blackened, but none of them fatally it.ijured.
Dominick Barker,, took in the restaurant of
A. Peterson, was at work in the kitchen in
• the basement of No: 74. He escaped as if
by a miracle. He said be was standing at
the range when he heard 'the expltrsion.
The next minute the whole building seemed
to be falling about hint aud he was knocked
to the ,floor. Finding that he was not
' hemmed in by the ruins, he groped through
a hole in the wall, sad finally found his
way into the basement of the building on
• Greenwich street, •through which he gained
the street. •Two othere who were in
the basement est•aped through the same
opening with the cook. A. ,W. Lind-
: Bay, proprietor of the type foundry
on two upper floors of No. 74 and 76 Park
Place, is said to be a bier her -in-law of Ins
Spector Williams, of the poli, e department:
Ile -employs itle-mt-twenty gi'hs.' They el
escaped by means of the lire eseape. Mr.
. Lindsay said: " The girls ami myself
were preparing to go home when the *A/do-
/don occurred. In a moment we heard a
rumbling noise, and I shouted to the girls.
We all rt d to the corner of the building,
and as we ran we heerd the Wall behind t,s
falling."
THIrILLIN P INCIDENTS.
Policeman Joseph Bock was at the corner
of West street. -and Park Plain when he
heard the explosion. f[e ran to the seen°,
andewhen he saw that rloth tagcon ld be done
fro& the front of the building be ueilt
through a basement on Greenwich btrees.,
and thence mate his way with Fireman
Vredenbcirg to the tido wall of the\\15iie tang
building. They had axes and ciowlvete
with which they (big an opening through
the wall and rescued thre e employees of the
restaurant who Ilan he•cn impthonetl to the
basement. Others co„1r 1 be reran in 1 he
basetnent, but, t hey were o he•let fact in the
euins and the flames soon enveloped thein.
TiIP' ANt,IrTIOUS Vt•II�1:A.
One man rut 11i014 incur the ;ce•ne of the
wreck came in ntact with ;t live wire, and
was knocked'l''an 1''i.tuk Burns, of the
Photo N:ngr.tving Cornlnt y, v as in an nlrpt r
window opposite the ecet,t• of the war eek,
He said he fiat heard as e•xplosinn an ther)
a rumbling soend. Then he sow the front of
the building, Nos. 08 aril 70, wabhle and
:away, and the walls fell With 'a deafening
e:Iash. As the walls began to fall the people
opposite say Many persons tried to jemp
front the windows, •blit the walls crushed
down itpon them before they landed on the
sidewalk.- , The crash was so midden that
none of the pedestrians passing on the side -
in front of the Taylor buildihg were
8
seen to escape. H. W. Detzler, who had
charge of the Art Department, of Lieber &
Mass, lithographers, on the third and fourth
floors of 7.4 and 76 Park Place, said her and
eighteen other men were at work when they
heard the explosion. They all escaped 15y
means of the fire escape at.the Greenwich
street end. Pe der,and,his mere helped to
rescue the girls from Lindsay's type foundry,
GHASTLY SIGHTS.
Meanwhile the firemen were hard at work'
on the Park Place side. Streams of water
were directed on the burning mass from
every available point. At 2.40 o'clock the
JLcdy .of e young man was taken :-from the
east end of the debris with the clothing
completely burned_.off'it. From under the
debris near:the edge of the sidewalk was
taken out the body of Patrick Slattery, who
was working fur the Subway Company.
A horrible sight was that of a humau,.arm
extended from the wall at the east end .of
the building, the fingers stretched out
appealing for help. The ash), yrl d
iitttait�r ilii='JLet'ol i4reliiea
the afternoon advanced the pplice, under.
Inspector Williams, had all they could do
to keep the thousands of people who had
been attracted to the scene from breaking
through the fire lines' Scores of men and"
women were begging to be allowed to get
inside, so that they aright see if any of the
bodies taken out of the ruins were those of
"LEAPT LONDON.
This Phrase Said to be Still Correctly
Descriptive of that wits
The phrase "Leafy London ' has oecome
commonplace, but is it correct ? Certainly
it is, answers Sir Herbert Maxwell in the
215neteen¢h Century, and he gives the chat-
lenge direct to any who are of the contrary
opinion. England, he says, is a leafy
country -and London a leafy city. And
it is not only in rural England that
trees enrich the landscape. in London
itself, grimed, fog-sinotherer!, overgrown
it is-extremel3r--di4iiiettit to Ind
a street, standing hi some part of which,
either at one end sir looking down -seine-
side opening, one cannot rest the eye on
foliage. " Gently, there !" perhaps the
reader a.ciainie, believing that he can name
a dozeg streets where not the ghost of a
tree is visible ; nevertheless, one who is con-
demned to live more than half tho year in
London has often tried to "fila h• t
a S reR ..
ifxttitt5=ithtt success. lips one who
cares to repeat the experiment will discover
that the 'same instinctwhichprompts men
to embosom their country home in greenery
has caused them to stick in a tree wherever
a courtyard or a street somewhat wider than
usual affords a chance of its growing.
A Fact at a Glance.
" I have been a great
Asthma. sufferer from Asth-
ma and severe Colds
every 'Winter, and .fast Fall my
friends as well as myself thought
because of my feeble condition; and
great distress from constant con e�b
Ing, and inability to raise any of t1,c
accumulated matter from my lungs,
that my time was close at haled.
Whe gc o tr tura a
sfeep and rest; a friend, recomnielid-
ed me to try thy valuable medicine
Boschee's German
Gentle. Syrup. I am con
Refreshing fidelit it saved In
life. Almost the firs
Sleep. dose gave me grea
AN EZ -PRESIDENT.
How an Eaglishileportler'Blundered ones
Assignmment.
A young English re rter on a New'York
paper relates one of his early experiences.
I was sent up to interview a fellow by the
name of Hayes, 'don't you know, who was
stofl mg at an uptown hotels' he says.
read
• •`•The slip I was given by the city editor
44' See tam-Preiaident Hayes. at the ---.-,-
hotel and get something about his plans in
New , York.'
" I found the hotel and sent up my card.
I was received quite . nicely.bg Sir. Hayes:
He told me what he was going to do, and
then, as t wanted to make my story. com-
lilete, 1 asked hum what he was ex -
president of.
" He told me he was ex -president of the
United States. It was awfully confusing,
do
,
»
n t you -n
)L ow dee- }rip �rA
.:i •.:. •.F:r' ..c �v 'T:.. .:' r '..�"• ,:: .�.. �. .uf•!"_rwr :�"li•If'u .-..'! 41 :...i:6'...4..y..:..'..
U
C , �L.r,._.y, .J'd__.
1
,vr44� .�.�.. ,_few 11.
L-irffit>#hrlia,n piAlntuvoly, mut-ttuere are ' so
many ex -presidents over here. "-Cincinnati
, Enquirer.
•
bodies as fast as they were recovered were
removed to the morgue, except the bodies
of the children Anna Haegner and Johnny
Gibbs, which were taken to their homes.
Up to 9.30 p. 'm. nine bodies had been dug
out of the ruins. •
TIIE BUILDING CONDEMNED.
• The building was originally erected by a
roan named Taylor, and was known as the
Taylor building. It had a frontage of abort
150 feet on Park Place and of 35 feet on
Greenwich street. It was condemned thir-
teen years ago by the building department,"
There are all sorts of theories as to the
cause of the disaster. Chief Reilly, of the
fire department, was of the opinion that a
boiler supplied by the pipes of the Steam
Heating Company had exploded, but the
officers of the company denied that their
supply pipes connected with any pipes lead-
ing 'into the wrecked building. Another
theory was that the boiler In a restaurant
had exploded. Then it was said that some
che>.nioals had -exploded in the drug store.
The moat plausible theory of all, however,
is that the wreck was caused by the shaky
condition of the building and the vibration
of the heavy presses running in the litho-
graphing and printing establishment's of the
upper floors. It is generally supposed that
there- was an -explosion -of -some kind, but
the collapse is accounted for in no other way
than the one mentioned. There was practi-
cally no mortar between the cbeieks, and
when they were looked at after the smoke
and fire had subsided they were as bare as a
board. It is said the building is owned by
Mrs. Crain, mother of City_ Chamberlain
`Crain, of this : city, „_Th_e . damage_..isehbout-
'$15 ;000 to tie building, and the lose to the
occupants will be about the same amount.
RAIN STOPS THE WORE.
Seventy-five Italians were engaged all
through last night and to -day removing the
debris- from the burned buildings on
Park Place. • Two companies of firemen
kept at their dreary task of searching
for bodies. Their efforts resulted in the
'finding of five 'badly burnod corpses. The
bodies were taken to the . morgue immedi-
ately. These were all that were recovered
up to 6 o'clock.
The complete list of the identified deadup
to 10 1►: in. is : Leonard R. Cole, 40 years,
Brooklyn ; Jelin Gtbbv, 4 years, New York;
Sarah Ann Hea•gner, 6 3'ears, New York;
Michael Slattery, 55 years, A. •
B. Peterson,
21 years, New York ; George Low,15 years,
Brooklyn ; Gustav Zeik.ler, Hoboken, N. J.;
Joel Heidrich, ;2, New York; Otto Walser'
.New York ; Charles Meitner, -New York;
Frank Hatch, 33 years, Now York. Besides
there are a number of unidentified bodies at
the morgues. •
At 8 o'clock tet -night a steady downpour
of rain stopped the work of removing the
bodies from the ruins, the nieu'being forced
to quit work end soek Welter in the adjoin-'
ing buildings. • The ruined structure, with
its tottering walls, presented a dismal pic-
ture, but all through the pouring rain
anxious watchers stood outside the. fire
lilies patiently waiting to hear some . news
that would be a clue to missing friends and
relatives. It was reported late to -night
that the number of missing would reach to
86. The total numb& of bodies taken from
the ruins up to the time the men stopped
work to -night is 17 ; the number of identi-
fied is 11. •
The Value of a 1klustacire.
Chicago Tribune : " The ' accident,
mad,•,,' paid the - young surgeon, , en -
count vin lv ae he made t', preparations_to
sew up the wound in the hp the infant had
received by falling flown a stairway,'" will
Leave a 'sear, of 'course, but twenty years
from now, when the . little fellow has
grown to be a man and raised a mustache,
it won't show a bit." " It isn't a baby of
that kind, doctor," replied the anxious but
entirely self-possessed mother.
No
Bonuses.
Mantford Expositor : The Ontario Legis-
lature has taken a i<tep in the desired three -
tion by passing a law to prevent one ennni-
cl'pality from bemiring an industry that has
already been estitl•lishedelsewhere. London,
in its proposed bonne fggrr the car shops, is
violating this law. Whether or not the j
latteeis a dean letter may possibly have to f
1,e t.estt d ; but, in any event it does not got;,
far enough. Bonuses of every description
should be absolutely prohibited.
-'there are more than 2,000 Smiths in
the London Directory.
-(lr•rri,t Britain consumes One-third of the
r
world's crop of cotltotl.
-The Opera Itemise of Paris covers nearly i
three acres of ground.
-There are 507 workhouses and 77 pris-
ons in England and Wales.
- Scarcely 720,000' days have passed
since the Romans invaded Britain.
- The late Fred' Archer rode in 8,085
races in England alone, winning 2,748.
The Wesleyan Conference, which has jest
concluded its meeting in Londone has ap-
pointed a committee to try to obtain an act
of Parliament rescinding Wesley's deed, a
under which the three years' ministerial 1
circuit prevails.
t :ti
Y
t
t
London employs 500,000 factory hands. °
Half of the surfree of Russia is forest -
clad.
Pepper cost £15 an ounce in Henry VIPs.
reign.
The average age that women marry at is
22, men 26.
A rabbit can jump nine clear feet on level
ground.
Photographs were first produced in Eng-
land in 1802.
The annual drink bill of the world ex-
ceeds £1,000,000,000.
Doctors say that the left leg is usually
stronger than than the right.
The flower trade of London exceeds in
value £2,000,000 per anrnum.
A sewing machine works twelve times as
fast as the hands.
"An ostrich's egg weighs about four pounds
-equal to forts hens' eggs.
A sunflower in alseason will produce 12,-
000 seeds, while a poppy bears 32,000.
• The third-class railway fares in Hungary
only average one penny for six • miles.
Covent Gardeu has been in the possession
of the Bedford fs.mily for 300 years.
Cashmere shawls are made of the hair
of a diminutive goat found in Little Thibet.
A Haile of railway permanent way, with
two sets of rails, takes up 12a acres of land.
Five thousand advertisements , appear•
sometimes in a single issue of the London
Times. • .
- -According -to-a-cyciing-Itper;--lilacklead
is the best thing to, lubricate the chain of a
bicycle with.
Quar-terrnaster.Genera1.
The familar proverb, " what is good for
man is good for this beast," is fully under-
stood by ail horsemen from the turf to the
farm, from the stable to the saddle. Very
high authorities on the subject of horse and
cattle ailments, concur in the opinion of
General Rufus' Ingalls, late Quarterrnastex-
General,U. S. Array, who says " St. Jacobs
Oil is the best pain -cure we over used. It
conquers pain." This department has the
custody and treatment Of army horses and
mules, and thonsands are treated.
Isolated.
•Wago We had a terrible ,thunderstorm
as I cause up in the train this afternoon.
Wooden -a -Weren't you afraid of the light -
n Wagg—No ; I got behind a brakeman.
Wooden -Behind a brakeman? What
earthly good did that do ?
Wagg-Why, he was not a conductor.
conscience, or What? •
"Conscience dothmake cowards of us
all," says thepoet. But it is just so with
the nerves. When a man's nerves are un-
strung, through indigestion and torpid liver
and impure blood, what wonder that he
feels depressed and perrous t He starts at
every little unexpected, sound ; is afraid of
his shadow, and feels like a fool. Let such
a man go to the drug store and get a bottle
of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery,
the great Blood-put'itier and Liver Invigor-
ator. -This is the only blood -purifier and
liver invigorator guaranteed to benefit or
cure, or money will be promptly rerfunded.
It cures Indigestion, ort►yttpepsie, and from
its wonderful blood -purifying properties,
conquers.all Skin and Scalp dieeases, Salt -
rheum, 'Tet Eezema Hud kindred -oils
ment.s. All blood -poison, no matter of
what name or nature, .yiel, l to its remedial
influences.
Two %'let.R.
Miss Emersonia ltusse,l:, :'rmn Beacon Hill
-Don't you thinly Mr. Bowles;' countenance
would arrest the woa'ki.egs toy” 'the .interior
mechanism of a hor oingrre ? •
Miss1
Cal nnettac.
r •' t
loue frnn
t Michigan
avenue -I don't know. But I think it would
stop a clock.-Jeweler.Y' Cirr•ul,,lr. •
The Explosion of a L•onib
startles all within le axing. So • the pains
which arise from derrengcnu:nts of elle liver,
stomach and bowels, q wekly alarm tbo••e
who experience then(. 1)r, 1'ierco.'s 1'loseant
Pellets afford a epee+l.'atel inexpensive cure.
Sick headache, bilious headache, constipa-
tion, indigestion, hil+oite attacks yield likt:
magic to this wonderful specific. Only one
tiny, sugar-coated Pellet -for• a laxative dose.
Purely vegetable and perfectly harmless.
Tho action is prompt and pleasant.
Absolutely the hest Liver rill made. Your
money given back if they do not give entire
satisfaction: The only pill possessed of such
merit as to warrant their being sold on trial.
Balking Criminals Conspicuous.
Rochester 'Herald : Rochester has cov-
ered patrol waggons, awl they are both sen-
sible and decent vehicles for conveying
prisoners.. Nothing is gained Tither for
the criminal or'forsociety l,y ni,tking crimi-
nals conspicuous •
A London shoe fielder reu•ntly received
n miler fto•n ltrr•ni.t to f tlrtr:,h silty -four,
,sirs of shoes for the daughter of the Grand
Duke Paul, a child less than a year. old.
hashing sleep, such asIhad not had
:or weeks. 11Ty cough began immedi-
ately to loosen and pass away, and
I found myself rapidly gaining in
health and weight. I am pleased
to inform thee—unsolicited—that I
ain in excellent health and do cer-
tainly attribute it to thy Boschee's
German Syrup. C. B. STIcxxicir,
Picton, Ontario."
Care of the Bair.
Very few of the young girls of this
cotintry have fine, healthy heads of hair.
Their hair has been burned by the curling -
iron, ruined by bleaches and washes, and
cut so far back on the head for bangs that
there is hardly any left for back hairs. The
only wonder is that we are not all bald-
headed instead of only having hair that is
thin and broken off at the ends.
Thorough brushing is excellent for the
hair ; but if your hair is broken off, dry and
thin, after brushing it well (morning is the
best time to brush the hair, though brushing
it morning and night both is better), rub on
the scalp with the finger a little well -mixed
sweet . oil and whiskey. • Do- not put too
much on at a time, but rub it well into the
roots of the hair. Repeat this application
every third night for about two weeks, and
your hair will become. strong and glossy. Do
not cut ofYbroken ends, but singe them. off,
for if cut the hair will " bleed," as the hair-.
dressers say.
The hair must be kept clean and free_from.
c-daiidruff 'i-fy it is to be kept healthy. The
very busiest people -women I mean -ought
to wash the head and hair at least once a
month. Always washthe hair in rain -water
or distilled water. Hard water will make it
harsh and likely to break off. ,Use plenty of
warm soapsuds with a few drops of ammonia
in it, or borax, if you prefer it.
After washing it in water, if there is
much dandruff on the scalp, rub it well
with the beaten white of an egg, then wash
it with another soapsuds water and the
d4,ntlruff will all come away. Then rinse
the head and hair with clear, warm, water,
and finally with cold water, for its excellent
tonic effect upon the hair and toavoid taking
cold. Last, rub the • scalp ,with a little
whiskey or pure alcohol, for the same
reasons.
A Summer Story.
JUNE.
Mr. Smith. Miss Brown.
JULY.
Tom. • Edith.
AUGUST.
Sweetheart. Love.
DECEMBER.
Mr. Snaith, Miss Brown,
—Life.
.. lilisquoted.
" Thank you sonny," said the grocer, re-
ceiving a $5 bill from a small boy (it being
his father's.. weekly bill.) You are a good
boy, and your father is a trump." " Well,
Charlie,":said the boy's father, "what diel
the grocer say ?" "He said that I was a,
good boy and you were a champ." Great
excitement. •
Better Than Physic.
" Why, Sharp, I'm glad to see you so
spry. You , were. quite lame when I last
rnet you."
" Oh, yes. ; . I was awfully lame then,
But that was before I got a verdict for
$.5,000 against the railroad company." -N.
Y. Herald.
Bad Begird of Noah.
Rochester Herold : The story is told.• at
Jerry Simpson's expense that in delivering
a speech at St. Joseph the otier day he
tookeulogize occasion to eulogize •Daniel' `iVehater
and his great dictionary. Somebody tugged
at Jerry's coat-tails and whispered, " Noah
was the man who made the dictionary."
The " Socliless" was disgusted and whis-
pered back : " Noah built, the ark." Jerry
knows who's who.
Inadvertant A recuient.
N. Y. Press.: " What do you think of
married life?" asked the henpecked man,
addressing the youthful bridegroom.
" Bli,ss is: no'name for it," said 'the young
husband, enthusiastically
" You are • right," said the henpecked
man, gloomily. " Bliss is no name for it."
Old Mrs. Hayseed, reading from a news-
paper -In the new play at ' the 'I'hirtl
Avenue 'Theatre, New York, the heroine of
the pieee wesrs nothing but a simple rose-
bud in her hair. Mr. Hayseed --(11, ill
The How of It.
How poor, how rich, how , abject, how
august, how complicated, how wonderful, is
man ; and it might be added, how "more
so" is vfgrnan. With her peculiarly deli-
.. -.. y. :.. 7?.. _.. ..-
superlative degree of man. Even in diseases
she excels him, having many that he has
not. She has, however, found out a grand
remedial agent; for the cure of her diseases,/
in Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription ; a
medicine suited to her nature, made fou' the
express cure of those diseases which affect
her. It is especially effective in all weak-
nesses incidental to motherhood, while it is
also a potent, restorative tonic for the feeble
and debilitated generally.
Hen Don't Admire
A selfish woman.
A • peevish woman. -
An ill-natured woman.
A woman who is continually falsifying.
A woman who talks disagreeably of other
women.
A woman who shows him she knows more
than he does on a certain topic.
A man may think he admires the manly
girl, but after all he loves the : " womanly
woman." -Marie, in Music and Drama.
The cost of an iron -clad is about $400 a
ton; this includes guns and all equipments.
William Morris, the English poet, artist,-
and socialist, affects' a singularly shabby
and unpicturesque attire. He may be seen
on Oxford street in London wearing an old
black slouch hat, an . ancient sack coat,
baggy trousers, and a blue flannel shirt.
The necktie is usually missing, and some-
times he wears no collar. But his flowing
white hair and beard make him an object of
interest to every passer-by.
-11X-C;--N. L. 86::9r-
C,��f • ; j
5TjCi
, • �'earetsi`
• Promptly and Permanently
•i�a�LT1vzAIL' gsBM,
.
Lumbago, headache, Toothache,
AT. LT 1. J L10. g A.,
Sore Throat, Swellings, Frost -bites,
Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Scalds.
Sold by Druggists and Dealers Everywhere.
Canadian Depot, 44 and 45 Ugrian St:, Toronto, Oft
DIAN' ND
VER o URA
FOIL •
DI! 3 P P A
AND -1 LL
Stomach Troubles;
11EIDtC=STIO t,
Nausea, Sour toni-
ach,•• C i cl d i'n sag,
Heartburn,, C o n st 1-
, potion, Fullness, Food Rising,
Disagreeable Tnnsta, Csorvous.-
ness.
.At Druggists Hold D.•t:I, t• , tit, sent moil on
receipt 1...1* 25 ct,. (b tx,:ts C1.U,9 in stumps.
Canadian Depot, 44 and 45 Lombard Et., Toronto, ORt
YOURODRfAIS YTO
tun -doming all o here for hmne
treatrnent :i+. our specific i'rn,tdv
eriJli•d the GREAT'LNCLIE14
PRESCRIPTfOI+i.1e ianeratrar
ordinary su nese 1n curing S wrn.nlorrhe. , Bight
Losses, Nervousness, Werth Pam,. ,. n'he i e,ul6•r of tn-
discretlon. 11 will Wei orate and cure you 30 year,
sox. a—e uttr'it eenl ell drag irIte fs r. eeled Inger t
iureka Chemica' Co.. Detroit. Mie*.
Sand at once fora FREE BOTTLE
and a vatneec Tr�t,se. This remedy is
a Burr. end radical cure Ind is per(rctJ
i,artlle-q a9 no injurjm; druis arc useJ it►
its preparation. 1 will warrant it to cum
EPILEPSY OR PALLING SICKNESS
In stere cases where other remedies have !Idled.
My reason ler sending a free !tattle is : i Want the ala
medicateto the its own recent.
,nendation. It costa you noth-
ing for a trial, and a radical cure
is certain. Give Expre t and
Yost Office: Address :
RE
11. G. ROOT M. G.,; 186 Weett Adelaide St.
Toronto, Ont.
WEAKNE.:531
tsc yJ1Irs , P c' Amur :a, loos of nerve, weak=
`` nt•.n, du y.oudrnr'•, ci5.. bum wbeh
rt(•r rngr„ a I-,nc, .•u red, by UR.
15 rl .VITAL 8EliiAEIY%TOR, /
tb :n•„uitor 2, . es! ...ro
peeini Tatieo
SCu eattll;lill �raniteed.
MI
plain eeniut psrkage, with auree.00a
!eel tut .'1•0 I o ter.. rpm ia Cala.
bleed .. irp uulinr $pecdle,.
Send j;,r tiea1e,l /i„x,ihltt.
Dr: JOHN PERCY
BOX 603, WINDSOR. ON
ThIE BEST:;; rrlr1,03.2
WCtlti .
1001413Y irro.,c�jj134I1G': A Er£2.tE 1,
P � f i
let y•y e �l b, ilf '••
t;t1., • t to
::r; . t;:." 7;7 i3.',br IIMEMmr >~ is
To '1'71 t' I'3 te'I'O111 • Please inform your renters that i have
Altrv.• ,; a,•, • ; C. •, , a positive remedy for the
PI' it ; ti:n l; ti -e tht:;ts lads of 1', s,,; ;crc ca,.ea h;;vc bet n permanently cured.
situ;1 t.i' t;!tett to. >ei:d tv.o Spines of my remedy FREE to any �f year readers who have con-
suai„Lton if they wi!) send me their Express and Poo Oflice Address, Respectfully, T. A. SI.00UM,
NI.C., 1116 Woat Adelaido,St., T011014To, Otlt'rAR,o.
RUN
-)1.x'. CURE
e •
r.
•
1