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Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-09-11, Page 7r A THE ABEB FENS IN CANADA, rhe Oonnteee Takes in the Toronto Fall Fair, An HESE THINGS ,THAT BURPEISE iiEB. 1341141° 1DUL,'ti4 R..bi ' 1141119heer Acrobats nail Horse uacin S mat tete Programme—The People she stet—alit Lordship sanessities -to the Cocfiiiluy (Froin "onward and Upward " for July.) made most valuable reports on all they had seen, for the use of those wanting full and reliable information. Some of these tenant - farmers were present at the Toronto Fair the same day as we were (on our second visit), and we saw them going about every- where making notes. And now I bane a confession to make. Sir David and Lady Macpherson, prominent Scottieh residents at Toronto, had been good enough to ask us to ag arden- r . Pat Y where . we might meet some of the leading citizene. I grieve tcenalt.fhat.la -tweenlingerfng'too long eat the fair and our want of knowledge of Toronto geography, w -a only art i-ved alter most of the pa,i•ty hhad left, and so we missed a great pleasure. What a rash prolui to I-made.last month American chess•board Toronto is a fine city, laid out on the Ilieve I promised to escort you, to some of etWen the wide streets and he detachebut d the well-known autumn fairs of Canada, and houses, with pleasant gardens all round now that the time has come for me to fulfil theni, it• occupies a large space, somewhere my promise, and I have begun to tooku rt,}? i ,, — .. „. ,,,.,• 0„,„ s pattAa fi•�t�$i:`Y '7 a itg S 1 "an0.rY 1` 'l a � a ts, and those who int n'•'�'�"'�'it�57�';iits have almost a mind to throw you over. For ; mean to see its sights and pay visits must, bear this in mind. how can I do justice to all that we saw ? It Our drive to Sir David .that evening occupied is one tiling to be guided and another thing nearly an hour, and our apologies to our to guide. But it is of no -use making ex- kind and Hospitable hosts were very sincere. euses. I must just do my best, so come Their house is a beautiful one, full of, trea- .along, to begin ' with, to the greatest of sures, and it stands in the midst of charm - Canadian fairs, in the. Queen City of inggrounds. • Toronto. And we had to feel ourselves But I have told you nothing yet of our •quite familiar with Toronto for ' i eaesaaseeseseeet e, not only communicating with .nearly •every .other house in the town and thus Savinhilt having also communicat on interview, Toronto on the one side, forty miles east of us, and Londrn on the other, about thirty miles west. (. es. London ; I mean what I say— London n the Thames, in the County of Middles . Look in your geography books -and you will find there is more than one London in the world, and when you go to Canada you will learn always to explain which London you mean—London,Englancl, or London, Ontario. But, indeed, we have found ourselves that the more youthful of the two Londons has already made its exist- ence known in the Old World, for when we were in Italy last year, and wanted on one occasion to send a telegram to London, we simply addressed it to London,without add- " England. But a messagecame back to ask whether it was London in England or in - Canada that we meant !) But our first real personal acquaintance with Toronto was made on the opening day of what is familiarly known in the country -as," Canada's Greatest Fair."' Here every autumn congregate thousands and thous- ands of agriculturists, fruit -raisers, manu- facturers and pleasure -seekers. The fair, goes on for 'fortnight, and is held in. grounds of acres of public land specially •set apart- fo the purpose for two months in the year, and on which handsome buildings -have been erected for exhibition purposes, and ae maintained by the .Exhibition Committee.. These grounds are found too small now for the exhibition of Now for a�peep at the_..London fair,.and- alt the atoek.. that.... is brought from then both you and I must have a rest. A all parts of the Dominion, not to speak of bad cold unfortunately prevented me from the agricultural machinery in which Canada accompanying Lord Aberdeen to London, as excels, and the specimens of manufactured I much wanted to do, but he came home 'goods of every desceiption, from pianos and full of praise • of the bright.,,appearance of onggnn , a nd down rtoeally the beautifuumbl st articles leshoof this young - city of 35,000 inhabitants, hold.necessaries. And not onlythe useful which goes coby the name of ".t the hereof was provided for, but the ornamental, and.tCity," l account of the great number broad the amusing also were given their full lace. stres planted e, given the well -laid peeps f Trotting races, the Wild West show—� er- Lrndo I have. youbut sle of P London and its slirroundins, but must leave formance after the manner of Buffalo Bill, you to imagine the rest, as I cannot give a with cow -boys and wild Indians and buck- personal report. ., But one thing jumping horses, and side performances of all you. I can telly kinds—were all to hand for the diversion of Just after monthly left Canada, a very spirited little 'a those who were not interested in the all- started in London, calle 1 f"r women was absorbing agricultural work and prospectsDaughters." "Wiens and of the country. And in spite of the vast yuIf ever youn,i to an hil I concourse of people assembling-daily(it is advise you to' take it ct and meanwhile I hope to give' you extracts from it now and reckoned that 300,000 visitors attended the again. And now, good -night, ladies, and , fair each -week) no disorderly conduct or gentlemen. I hope, that myinefficient unseemly language are seen or heard,.All a guide to the agricultufairs will yas not strangers are struck by the good behavior prevent you from allowinga to conduct of the crowd and by the evidence it gives of he high moral tone prevailing'in Canada, you to the Falls of Niagar , and then e and which, amongst • other results, shows Canada's capital, and then we must hie, itself in a popular agreement that no intox- away est' But now 'once more, good night. kitting drinks shall be sold on the grounds during the fair. Lord, Aberdeen had the igen We Rear About, .. honor done him to be• asked to open this vast exhibition, and to give an address on the occasion, and it was on this occasion that we first visited Toronto, and 'that we were first brought into contact with a ' Canadian crowd. The opening ceremony is • somewhat a trying one, for it takes place in the open air, the speakers occupying a plat- form afterwards given up to' acrobats and jugglers, and having to address a vast crowd in au ainpitheatre opposite, with the racing - ,course intervening. The ordeal, however, was safely got through, and the audience were very kind and appeared satisfied. ,But 1 wonder whether you will think me a very -conceited wife if I whisper that not only I, but a great many other people, thought that .speech of Lord. Aberdeen's very good and very wise. mus return to our Toronto Fair, rr Y a e good fortune to be fellow -passengers across t Ie Atlantic with the Lieutenant - Governor of Ontario, Sir Alexander Camp- bell, and he had proved the best and kindest of friends, both as regards bodily and mental.wants, for as to the former, he had made us free of his private provision of tea and butter, and Devonshire cream, aid as to the latter, he told us much which enabled us to feel that we knew a good deal about Canada before we got there. I do not know what he will say to me, but I cannot resist the temptation of reproducing, for your benefit, a photograph of himself which he gave me. Ile, has lived a long life of public usefulness t.o .his adopted country, and we count the friendship with which he honored us as one of the solid gains which our trip to Canada brought us. And now, he and his daughter, Miss Marjorie Camp- bell, took care of us in their pleasant Gov- ernment House, and through their kindness. we made other friends—amongst others, Mr. Mowat, the prime Minister of Ontario, and the Speaker of the Dominion Senate, the Hon. Mr. Allan ; and we renewed acquaint- ance with our fried, Mr. Edward Blake, one of the leaders of the Opposition, and a well- known orator and statesman. Then Sir Alexander drove me all around the city next morning, and showed me the new and the old parts, the Queen's Park, and the different colleges and schools, and the beau- tiful University buildings, which were in large parts destroyed by fire lastyear. They still presented a grand appeatance, and I am happy to say theyare to be worthily restored. .and I feel I ought to take you round the dog show and the poultry show, and the •lioney show, all of which' were excellent ; • and then I .ought to. tell you of all the' strange ,krielements for sowing, and reaping, and biitlll'mg, and digging, and I do not know what besides ; and then we ought to - .see the roots and the vegetables, and the Jules Verne and his- wife live in a de- magificent show of fruit; and- then we 1 lightful villa in Amiens. • • All his writing is •ought to stand-in.the ring and see the Here- done in a bit of a turret -chamber, through fords, and the Shorthorns, and our own,: which boom every hour the chimes of the Aberdeen -Angus cattle being led out, and ; cathedral bells. seeming very much at home ; and the ! Mr. Gladstone is now giving Sir John Clydesales, too, and the roadsters, and the j Millais sittings for the portrait of himself wonderful jumping horse, " Rosebery," I and his grandchild, which the artist is re - who cleared the 7 ft. jump easily. Besides i painting. there are the Manitoba exhibits, and those EX -Senator Reagan, of Texas, a hard - from the Northwest and British Columbia. .headed, practical man of the world, . got it . And there are the birds, and, the insects. , from an old negro that it would bringhim and the snakes to' be seen. Well, what dol you say to oing through all. these shows• rli•fortune to put on his left shoe first, and g r never once in all the years that have sped and my pointing out the merits of each exhibit ? has he failed to give the right foot prefer - If . you were wise you . ence. ' would not absolutely trust yourself to U. S. Secretary of War - Proctor, who is any knowled a on all these subjects, , to bo the successor of George F. Edmunds even though ad the benefit of being shown ' as -Milted States Senator from Vermont, is all by our mot kind friend,"Captain Mac -f roaster, Vice -President of the- Fair. But I a priding, active man of affairs, immersed even if you would, I am afraid} you would up to the ears in railroads marble quarries, not•care for a whole number of he maga- money re. other projects for accumulating g money rapidly.s zine to be devoted to Canada, which would be the result of your rashness, and if you or Barrows' Luck. any of your frieiids want to know more in Barrows was always lucky." detail about the agricultural resources of ;' What's happened now'? " HighCanadCoammiss oner for wuld advise Canada, 17 Victoria to write to the li You know that $500 watch the boys street, London, S. W., and ask for some of gave him ? the reports on Canada made by the' British ' " He succeeded ^rtt-farmers, who went out last forIIucceeded ie 'selling it the other -n the invitation of the Can. 14y" day '^�rernment and visited every ' —As much as $10,000,000 is invested in - oountry, and who have baseball in America. `Emperor William has a• sandy beard. Emile Zola is usually about nine months writing one of his novels. Dr. Hinkle, of Americus, Ga., has a piece of chinaware 791 years old. Dr. Taylor, of the Broadway (New York) Tabernacle, is paid $16,000 a year. It is noteworthy that although James Russel Lowell was born and bred a Unitarian he was buried with the service of the Episcopal Church. ' Major Frank McLaughlin, who turned California's famous Feather River into a new channel, says most of the big enter- prises in his state are now managed by Eng- lishmen. Mark Twain is at a ix- :- ude sr ea men or writer' • cramp. His hand has given out from overwork in signing checks and making deposit accounts. IN ANUIt.A.D-11A.PUILAI. Wonderful itaIns of the Palace. One of the most noteworthy buildings the " refulgent" city was the Lowa-Mab Paye, or the Brazen Palace, erected King Dutugemunu in the year 142 B., C Itstood upon one thousand six hundre granite pillars, and vied with eurroundin bagobas in height, rearing its ninth stor two hundred and seventy feet skyward ..contained;--ene---thousand—oYo-rmiEriee fo priests ; its roof was of brass, and, accord Ings to the Mahawanso, the walls gleame with resplendent gems ; the grea hall was supported oli` golden, pillars resting on lions, and in . the centre was an ivory thorne with a golden. sun and a silver moon on either side. Several times the Brazen Palace was razed by iconoclastic- iuved l , fry 'tif>;i`re&t;"ey the 'zealous a� adherents of the new faith, up to the latter part of the twelfth century; when the capital was re- moved to Pollonarua. From the upper stories of this magnificent pile the priestly occupants could view thetfar�extending city, and look upon six great dagobae, all within a radius of little more than a mile, and Lifting their huge white domes as high as some of the lof - - Great Brazen. of a - by d itg ,1, t ear the palace ; and according to the native- arch- ives, ives, rested on a platform 500 feet square, its glass pinnacle glittering in the sun 270 feet above the city, its base surrounded by marble statues, and its outer walls mounting elephants of masonry with real tusks. In the north, befoud splendid pavilions of king' and queens, loomed^the great Jetgwanararna Dagoba, with its twenty million cubic feet of masonry. The beholder.. at the palace had only to turn his gaze in the direction of the rising sun to look upon the greatest of the relic -tombs, the Abhayagiria Dacoba.— Froni "The City of the Sacred Bo -Tree," by James Ricalton, in September Scribner. EARLY 11EE:$CIILOADING CANNON. Curious Old Gun Brought to America. Cortez. rt is a matter of common belief, says Washington correspondent, that brea loading rifles for small arms as well as heavy siege guns and naval armament w invented/during or immediately preceedi our late civil war. This is one of the gr est of popular errors. In the naval museu of this city there is a breach -loading cann which :was brought over to this cou try in the sixteenth 'century Cortez, the invader and conquer of Mexico. This . breach -load' cannon remained in the possession of t successive Mexican Governments until du ing our Mexican war it was captured Alvarado. This cannon has an inilentatio in the breach in which a hollow flat iron - laced. d ,titre_of.-battle-a-linesoftrtill ists extended from the caisson to the canno and eacli man would carry a cartridge whic would fit the hollow tube in the flat iron As the gun was fired from the breach •th flat iron was- lifted out; a new cartridg replaced,. the gun again fired, while eat soldier .presenting a cartridge woul rush immediately to the rear, pro -cure another and follow in line. Thu it will be seen that well nigh '30 years ago the gun makers of the old wort conceived and carried into effect the ide of rapid firing 'breach loading field pieces The . idea was evidently not properl developed, for no improvement was mad upon this gun until the year 1858, when John B. Floyd, at that time Secretary o War ` of this country, improved the old Cortez gun by changing the flat iron into the form of a cylinder, acting upon a hinge, the cartridge to be dropped into the receptacle df the cylinder, dropped back into the breech where it"was clasped, thereby enabling the gunner the more rapidly to load and discharge his .piece in time of action. It was well nigh 300 years before L<his improvement was made. Women Who Can Wear Blue. The question of the becomingness of blue is one that is continually arising, says Mrs. Mallon in the Ladies' Home Journal. Napoleon blue, a grayish tint, is only adapted to brunettes, and the peculiar shade of blue which is sometimes called sapphire, sometimes called robin's egg, sometimes called electric blue, is also best suited to the ladies''lith dark hair and clear, dark complexions. • These shades are very apt to make a blonde look colorless. A pure blonde with clear eyes can always wear baby blue in the evening, but if she wishes the whiteness of her skin and the blueness of her eyes and the yellow of her hair to be, brought out most effectively, she will. chose rose color. All the dark shades of blue are suited to her, and she will be wise r chooses them in preference to all other shades of the color. by a ch - for ere ng eat. m on n - by or ng he r- at n is er= n h e e h d s 0 d a Y e f r a There is no truth in the reports that the poet; Whittier, is dangerously ill. His health is as as good as it has been for the last year or two. He is now with his friends;, t$e Cartlands, at Newburyport. Perils of Modern Life. Contacts with electric wires, railroad accidents, broken car and elevator cables, explosions of bteam, natural gas and chemi- cals, poisons in adulterated food and drink, aro a few; but tall these dangers combined dei not kill as rapidly' as slow and sure Con- sumption. The death rate, however; from Consumption is being yearly•cut down since Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. 1., has given to the world his celebrated " Golden Medical Discovery," a cure for Consumption and Throat and Lung troubles that lead to Con- sumption, if taken in time and given a fair trial. The time to cure Consumption (which is nothing more Or less than Lung -scrofula), is in the first stages. A cough generally sounds the alarm,.ancl you should take the " Discovery" at once. There is a time when it is too late. . About Averages. The average weight of a skeleton is abo.0 14 pounds. The brain of a pian is twice as large as that of any other animal. ' A man 'breathes about 20 times in a minute, or 1,200 times an hour. A man breathes about 18 pints of air in a minute, or upwards of 7 hogsheads in a day. The average of the pulse in infancy is 120 beats per minute ; in manhood, 80 ; at 60 years, 60. The average weight of an .Englishman is 150 pounds ; of a Frenchman, 138 pounds ; a Gorman, 146 pounds. A man gives off 4.08 per cent. carbonic vas of, the air he respires ; respires. 141;666 cubic feet of carbonic acid gas in 24 hours, equal to 125 cubic inches common air. UCH BETTR, 'plank- You! THIs l THE UNIYERNAZ TESTI- 1,10Zerof those who have suffered f om CLIIiONIO last 1ggII.TTIs, coven's, f Co LD s 0 'N4 ,DISEASES, after they have . ,'F! iii ;� �&:ti:1 tr•!�� d^IYPOPHOSPHITES —Of ILiene zaaad IT Is ALMOST' AS PALATABLE S MILK. IT IS A WONDERFUL FLEW PRODUCER. It is used and endorsed by Physicians. Avoid" all tr•rottRt[one or- substitutions. Sold by all Druggists at SOc. and $1.00. horse A LO'i'ER OF SENSATION. 7 ant Cranston as Told About in the Dau,. dos "Danner." The hero of the recent drowning fake.has been written up in great shape by the Dun- das Banner. .Among other things it says: The Hari lion Trains had an interestu g paragraph about the drowned bank clerk, and showed .how he had insured his life in an accider}t,_company_ ior41f,000--for,--the- benetit of his mother. The TiMts was right in this, as he really did insure 1i1ife, And. told one of- the other clerks in the bank where the policy would be found in case anything happened to him.' . But -when the policy was looked for it was not there. The statement that 'the body has -not yet been recovered" is also perfectly true. Nobody about here has yet set eyes on• 't 'A_ :, tR ..s., , ,.r _ t r. y� �.... . ._vr.��tt t �- t3ilt� 4 Lid do y� Ll'ii Aal3� lien an d ermen around St. Runes have not taken it out of a' , --_` water f the raging ,wt. Lawrence. It is supposed that Tom :sea inghis bodyaround with him and that itw tl not be recovered until he returns•to Dundas.• ' " Tom has had several episodes of late. He fell out flu o s canoe and was nearly drowned ; he won $2,000 in the St. Leger race, havin drawn a .1 e. liuntorists Met. Au amusing story is told of two of our best known American authorswho are both in Europe at present—Charles Dudley Warn and l'lark Twain—who live near each o er in the picturesque old town of Hartfo d. One day Mr. Warner called for Mr. T vain to take a walk with him. Mark declin d the invitations ..1 Mr. Warner in- sisted, but to no purpose. Finally he said (and very likely had planned the story before, knowing how loath Twain is to walks) : " You should go ; it is according to scripture." • " No Mark -the -perfect -man chestnuts for me. Where isyour authority ?" replied the author of " Innocents Abroad." " The fifth chapter of Matthew, verse the forty-first," was the answer,. coming with, unexpected -promptness from the lips of Mr. Warner. " It reads thus : ' And whoso- ever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him, Twain.' " Mark went. —Chicago Neve. Treble and Bass. "Twinkle, twinkle, little star How I wonder what you are.' 1 In treble sweet piped little Grace. "Catarrh, catarrh, catarrh, catarrh; What a horrid pest you are ;" Growled dear papa in lowest bass.•' When papa reads •thjs, he will learn how to get.'rid of the pest. By its .mild, healing, antiseptic,, and cleansing properties, Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures the worst case&_ Thin infallible -remedy -does uut,slike the poisonous, irritating snuffs, " creams " and strong caustic solutions with which, the public have been so long humbugged, simply palliate for a short time, or drive the disease to the lungs. It produces a perfect and' permanent cure of the worst cases of Chronic Catarrh. " Cold in the Head " cured with a few applications. Catarrh headache re- lieved and cured as if by magic.. It removes offensive breath, loss or impairment -of the sense of taste, smell or hearing, watering or weakness of the' eyes, and impaired memory; when resulting from catarrh. Only 50 cents, by druggists. , Look Out For Wrinkles. " The summer girls are going to cons home in the fall wrinkled like hags," said Madison avenue oculist, who sat in the.san at Spring Lake and 'eyed the belles and•bu with a field -glass." " I know just what . I'm talking about, he continued, " there is no protection fo the eyes under those rick -rack straw hate, and the gauze -covered parasols aro as good as tissue - paper. If ' you will take the trouble to observe you will find that all the fashionably dressed women on the bedeh have to squint like sailors to see where they are going. " Now that makes wrinkles gather round the eyes, across the nose and forehead and frequently about the lips. They don t come in pairs, but in companies 'and, what is worse, they come to stay." .i ., i I,. ;0,e, a wee ;'....or two ago by taking something in mistake into his interior ; he mislaid the key of the bank safe and rt took much time and trouble to open it, and now he has been drowned, or at.least he seems to think he has. If he had really been drowned' it would have been a good stroke of luck to have got the $10,000 insurance, and would have beaten the horse- race ticket, but Tom couldn't have drawn the money himself, and insurance compan- ies do not hand over the hard cash until the insured person is real dead." —A man fishing at'Jersey, England, was caught by the rising tide, and a boat had to put out to rescue him. The next day the Magistrate sentenced him to eight days hard labor " for the trouble he had caused.' "Can your little brother talk now?" " Yes ; he can say some words real well." " What are they ?" " I don't know. They're words -I never heard before." The potato disease has appeared in the flooded districts of Ireland. - D. C. N. L. 37. 91 V Iti®RA-CUBA —FOR— DYSPEPSIA roa— HDYSPE 'r....r•• HA AND ALL l4' STOMCH TEOUBL1 S. At Druggists and Dealers, of t;entbymait on receiptof25cts• __._J,5..bo.2i :s -.l.00) in stamps.-----...— Canal Depot, 44 and 4>i =aid St, Toronto, Ont 0 Atria r aka>'�, ,l 1,4e ta�.fl^y ;4• d Cures RHEUNIATISS@101, ds NEURALGIA, SCIATICA. LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, SOIiE THROAT, FROST -BITES, SPRAIP.S, EF.UISES, BURNS, Etc; r t cold by Druggists r'iri rs Everywhere. Fifty Cts. a Lottie. 1�; _.: i:r 11 Languages. . Malan DEUOO. 41 u;.f /,; ?' -- •,,,.3 Ft.. Tcri to.Olt • Little Johnnie, on seeing a skeleton for the first time, exclaimed, " Why, but they skinned her mighty close; didn't they ! She looks worse than Aunt Jane did, before ma gave her that bottle of ' Favorite Prescription !" " Aunt Jane " was so com- pletely worn -out, by prolapsus, periodical difficulties and nervous prostration, that she was a constant sufferer, day and night, but Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription acted sopromRt a and fn.verably_upon-th: uterus and other organs, that she .- suffers no pain at any time, and her general health was never better. As a remedy for all female weaknesses, as a strength -giving tonic and quieting nervine, "Favorite Pre- scription" is unequaled. Guaranteed to give satisfaction or price ($1.00) refunded. .Cause and Effect. Mrs.' Solomon—George,- I shall need a new pair of slippers this week. . The soles of these old ones are completely worn out. Johnny Solomon—Papa, I shall need a new pair of trousers this week. The seat of these old ones are completely worn out.— Puck. —In London the omnibus fare from Charing Cross to the end of the lino has been reduced to a halfpenny. This was rendered possible by reason of the receipts for adver- ments on the back of the tickets. —The oldest newspaper in the world is the Pekin Oa�ettc�, a pamphlet 7:} inches long by 4 inches broad, consisting of about 20 t pages, bound in a yellow cover, in which fah in it has existed for 1,300 years. A person wounded mast die within a year and -a day to make the person inflicting the wound guilty of murder. \Vhat the summer girl is complaining ' about—" People, people everywhere, but not a man who flirts 4" LEARN Penography; it pays; beats Photo- graphy ; fine sampile 10e. BAZAR, LUCAS, O. YOUSRD, RLA,Sfor YOU e treatment. 1s Our a ?ethic, rrunedy .called the CREWE EP4CLitik F PRECRIPTIOI , it ta,ex'tra• ordinary au Glees in curin;*, :,penratornce. , Night Los es, Ncrvousnels, weak Parts. The result, of In- ' dleerollon. It will Invigorate and cure you SO years success a guarantee. All druggists Bell it ' $1.t0 per box. Gan malt it t:eeied Write f r sealed letter to•. Eureka Chomica• Co.. .Datrti1t. Matt. I� Send at onca for a Fees; BOTTLE and a valuable Treatise. "flus remedy is a sure and radical cure and is pr•.rtcrtly harmless as no injurious drugs are used in its preparation. I wdi ra:rant it to cure EPILEPSY OR FALLING SICKNESS rn severe cases where other remedies have failed. My reason for sending a free bottle is: I want the medicine to be its own recon. nendation. It costs you moth- REs--certain.ing fora trial, and a radiancure • Yost Office. Address: - H. G. ROOT M.0., 186 West Adelaide Toronto, Ont. tares Nervous Weairtatsa 1.11.1111 wear, r'.:•/: 311.13 POSITIVE HEIIRAIREMMIT 4,?..r.,..,... '4'4' t erre Urinary Inset.argor, either ...-,, 4 '1"..'" Prier each Remedy Two Dollars. In acre with ,Ittrif.g. Rnorrnotia Sale. 43; IM R A NT EF: 111 in rR RR. eter-Sealecl, pamphlet Me -Beat. Easiest to UseartdCheapest.. Sold by druggists or sent by mtUi.50e. ANS sNADU Beware of Imitations., NOTICE OF LA B WATITS Sitl REM * CURED TO TUE -11:11ITOTI :—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. 13y its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I sliAll be glad to send two bottlek of my remedy FREE to any of your readers who have con. h1.8.• 186 West Adelaide at.. TORONTO. ONTARIO. snMpllon if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. Respectfully, T. &SLOCUM,