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The Sentinel, 1882-04-14, Page 7
4t>tPliica leconnG: of the Tine bay Trait "Si et fn a Stow Britt., TUE SSPEGI7LATICvE IttAlatiA, B says: front. Winnipeg dated April The Montreal and sioni�t� Termitotradeur- e arrived yesterday and arefflow the city.The is charminga. The Great. Westeru, excursion, with, 1,000 ,emigrants, is expected at 6 this- evening. A men named R. J. Shepherd; late of Brockville, committedsuicide-last night by hanging: himself with a rope ou one of t trestles of theLouise Bridge.: He was,ag d *bent 00 years. The corpse is iu the morgue. An inquest wilt be held to -morrow. A man named: David Midione fe an-eugine-on the Manitoba &.So thwet ern • Railroad- yesterday afternoon beyond Headingly; and being run over by thetra', was;: horribly-mutil-ated.. ` He duly survived the: aecident two hourta leaites..a. wife- and fancily in Shakespeare,. Ont. • .The alorthwest corner of Saskatchewan ,avenue and; lir street, Portage la- Prairie, has been purchased by J. A. ittle- for the emit of $17,500.:: Besides •the pur chase money IIr:_ Little will: expend an the=property- over 335,000 int a solid -brick. block • Ur. McCalffe, Mayor of Pembroke, Ont.,. has;. purchased the id Portage e . church, • -0 standing there snowed in. The me in.it happening, to see the maw, shouted him. The sudden transition from despair jo was too much for the poor man and hie fell senseless. They carriedhim Mand t awed off his frozen clothes. His feet, hand and faoe were badly frozen. • TEA_ TABLE` ,G©S$Ip --Biz tittle are i new: long.. os plumes. rich Manilla bonnetawil be chosen hoses for" ass • —Sunflowers: are embroidered on parasols. Dried -.rose leaf'" "is a. tint of throu1h ashen gray. —The fashionable color in dress good that of an old oak chest. --A girl's -dress -is -of -dull old eastim with bands, bows and, sash f black vel --Six: Nation Indians . have: taken brick making. =-A. man pretending to be aa agent of- Toronto & Ottawa Railway hirbdcs200 1 near Berlin at> -$1.40. per day to workr 1ze railway. When: the time arrived eaye for work -the jokercould not be fou -Only a trifle over- five weeks' to th of May,_ and then glorious sunshine --t —back in the bush—old logs ---mud tier __$nake�sard nes--pickles blue can --damp grass -gingham umbrellas—so throat d`octoet bilk. =Thenew "Encyclopedia . Br .� mni akes` the remarkable statement tea hat " elief in the appearance of ghosts s no ore widely spread and more firmly' h among the educatedolasses than it haabe centuries."' o Methods t la Prairie, and three- adlotuing,lots 'f from_ Thos., Ferries ior.$1O,000-. t . A meeting of the Official Board of the' ;1$ Methodist Church, Portage. la Prairie, m ✓ -decided to increase Rev. W..J. Hewitt's salary to $1,200. _ for R. S. Bradley & Co. 'sold an improved farm four mile& from the Portae, consist- ; M ing of 180 acres', a t the rate of $82 per acret to an eastern; buyer. Riddell Bros., of Emerson , , Have sold their farm on the Boyne River district, Consisting of_ 4,640-: acres-,_ for $51,041, or at ' the rate of 31.0 peri acre, to Spender Red- , ford, who was the purchaser. AMONG- THE cgURC Pre.bygeilan _ : Hume.. Abalone. .- -A �, ' hIi.p .Lyaeis's- Setari;�--.4-pipcls7' LedT-)ndien •Donrersiono It is expeoted that Archbishop Lynch will not -return home until June nett 'Rev. Thos.. Trotter,- formerly of Berkeley Street Baptist Churoh,Toronto,hasaocepted a. tall to Ingersoll • ` The ' oongregatioti of the . -Methodist Church, Paris, have petitioned Conference to send,. as the. next Paris minister, the` Rev Dr. Williams w The trustees of the Metro Toronto, propose' to mike aeffort o rs ink • 030,000' bysubsoription to reduce ;the.debt- of the-ohuroha T4s ' - The Hozne Mission Committee of the Presbyterian Church in Can e district] have made the follow ng awp►ter . ments for the Hamilton .distrix : D IL Ramsay, H. C. Howard, D.ougald Currie,J.. H. Simpson.. re et to he' en The announcement has been made in .Baptist • circles `here that the quarterl meetings of the Home Mission Board, east and -west. will be held, the former at Mon- - `trealon April.2lst and nd the latter at'�Pood- e € t stook on" the 19th instant.: r It A. committee; and consisting of Dr.. Wild, Mr: tl s Mr. Thomas Elgar, was no apponted this week -to' ' g _ I%confer ' e mittee•appointed •by, the 'Congregational ion Union of Canada respecting the admi n • of 'Bond Street Church, Toronto, to the 14 Union, The conference will be held on the 48th of April. - . - he A'century ago it -was -customary for men „ to sit at -the pew. doors -in-ohurch• armed with guns in order. to - keep out intruding' Indians.. The'. extent ' to . which this -old. custom has gone out of fashion. is indicated by the fact that t n•little Indian boys have been received by Baptism- into: the_Presby terian Church at Carlisle,: Pa. They' are from Capt. Pratt's: training school for Indiana at that place. -Thirty-five-Indians in all thus made. profession of Chris- tian faith at Carlisle. Rev.: &fir. Wiisorl, Church of. Bagldud clergyman at Nelsonville, sold hishemp- :stead and pre-emption; 320 acres; located a `mile or two from Nelsonville, and on which there is a, geed d welling hcu. ge,.for $12,000:. Three Dare Ina Blizzard The -passengers _ou the- train from Brad- ' don to Wiuuipeg which stuck at Reaburn, for three days last • week h.ad an exciting. time. According' to the Winnipeg Times, the main consideration was food -and fuel; which were•found co be exceedingly scarce,: as there waslittle or no provision aboard the train. There were 150 passengers. Dr. Beers, Mr. Charles Gibb and one or two' others:of.the more active passengers set to work to: organize foraging expeditions, and, . luckily, there werea couple of farm houses; convenient at which Mood and other neces. saries were obtainable; even if large figures. had to be paid for thein. - Water was very scarce and resort had to be had to melting snow. Two dog trains aboard were utilized by the foragers -,to bring a supply -of provi- cions from Poplar .I'oiut on Thursda3r even - Mg. -Fuel-began to get; scarce of Friday, and this teemed to intensify the earth. To save wood the. last couch'was.aba Ana f —There is a- dearth of school teachers anitoba, and therefore several Toron sachets, who are disgusted with their 'small salaries, intend going there in titi spring. It is -said that high salaries are ofered teachers in the Prairie Province: • --If you awoke cigarettes you will be glad to know that a little boy was arrested New w York: the other day for picking ,up cigar stumps and oldtobacco quids. When the magistrate asked him what he did with them, -he said he sold them to a man who'. made' cigarettes with;theni, a . --`The London World:says':" I hear that, under the auspice& of the Prince of Wales and Sir Charles Forbes, there is to be a re- turn made to the deux temps waltz in HEM of the trots temps, Sir Charles, 1 know, claims the. doubtful merit of, having -revived' the polka; but I question whether he will ever be, able to regalvanize the dertz temps. with iter long straddling step." • —There had been a seeming coolness between the: lovers. • One day •Emily's schoolmate ventured to refer to the subject and- asked her,` " When didyou see Charley tot?"" Two weeks ago tonigh." "What was he. doing? " " Trying to "get -over: the fence`" ":Did be " appear ` to bemuch agitated?" " So -greatly," returned Emily, " thatit took all the strength of papa's new bull, -dog to hold him." - . Ho little step- do I hear in the: hall ; Only sweet little' laugh, that Is all. No dimpled arms round my neck hold me light,. I've but a glimpse of two eyes very bright T- ; o Tittle hands a wee face try to screen ; ndoned $aby'isi hiding; that's plain to be seen. " where is my precious; I've- missed so all day ?" Papa, can't bud reed" the pretty.lipp say. , • „Dear me, I. wonder where baby can be I ' .Therrl:.gaby and not to see:. Not in. the parlor, and; not on the stairs? Then crust peep under the -sofa and chairs:" The dear little rogue- is•now laughing outright: Two little arms roundmy neck clasp me tight: Home yaill indeed be sad, weary and Ione, When papa can't rag you, my darling, my:own. he passengers crowded. into t two passenger cars and utilized th ions front the abandoned coach in beds at night.. -On .Friday event was again g.-ttiug searce,. but one passengers struck a barrel' of p Some fish neat Vie, depot, which: we subservient to the wants of the pas. The storm had' abated cousidera Saturday morning, and but for .th dation of the employees, through- c work and hit lttfe. food. the b 1 might have beau, raised.. Finding i ire this dilemma,: A. G. Sttephens, tit . master, made an appeal to the pass - for help. -The ruqueet Was pro responded: to by seals, 57 persons • these, too, note the most etra�twart m the train, many of thee. latter rerun their seat ar-ently: contented,: their fell'o .-pasasenl;er,s were digging • out. - Amongst those who took aha • theia Voluntary- labor were Rev. What Smith, B. A., of Loudou,-.Pngla.nd� • in his sig hours, acid Re -v, A. 11. And anotherctergynian; who did good" eye among the see*. _ These fifty-. volunteer- -shovell_ers cleared Som -. yar s of blockade by 4 p. tn. ou Seta • A i4asant feature -about the whole se rendered is that a bill; was presents C. P. R. authori`tieYs for $60 for work which has: been- acknowledged, and amount. has been: - ordered to :be ha 'over to the Wi:uripeg Venetia,: Hosp The passengers aggregated '300 hours' among ,all who took; part-- in the se -The relief train, with two engines an •- snow plough;, which, left here on Sat morning "in charge of Supt. Lynskey,. not arrive: -at Reaburn until 10 p. m. E .tual�ly, a clearance -was effected and Wi peg was reached. - There were only h • dozen`female-passengers on the train. -resolution passed reflects severely on - . authorities for being se lax in the ma . of atd:or proper supply of provisions fuel Four men,. rather than and .the fatigue and anxiety, hired a team. f a. fat`;ter for .$4.0 cud - drove to -'rump Four"othermen named Jinxes Johnston, Strathroy, Ont.; Donald Kerr, of Selki Thomas Kennedy` and Thomas Jasper,.. Oak River, undertook to•foot it to the. ci and started down the track on. Frid morning They, -however, did not succe in gotta* any farther thou Rosser, next station, and 'Jasper, one of th number,: had a; -narrow escape with his lif shelter in. a shanty into whi they were forced to go, owing to the fury the storm, lie rr,'iruother. of the party, ha • his face badly frozen, They were brougF in by train yesterday,;.and Jasper is now i the hospital. - Here i''s an incident of the lateVblizzard related: by the: Brandon S`un On Saturde morning last, in,- the face' of that terribl, storm,, a: young': man, whose name I diel not ' learn, started from the: spruce: bush for his • home,. about. twelve miles :distant on the. . plain, with a yoke 'of oxen: and: a load of wood. He lost his way, and -being' unable • to get his oxen further r turned them. Ioosp and struck out alone. ' He spent all. Satur- "da,y,. Saturday night and until near -noon on •Sunday,. fighting for his: life sin that awful storm. ; On Sunday Morning he struck' the railway and followed it east, • and et fast reached the west switch at this station. ConduotorA.`Hoag's: caboose was he other O Gush- making ng food of the ork and amade sengors. bly 'on e cca- onstant lookade- in e road. engers inptly , and en on- ing. in while there ud ja ton B. dent arson, clition: : seven e '300 rday. rvice d then done; the nded ital'.. work rvice. d 'a Satin did yen - If nni- ea A the Iter and ergo roma egr of rk of- ty, ay eel. the the fe. ich of --There are now 11'7 miles of streets of all kinds n Toronto, as follows : "Macad- amized, x0.92; cedar and •,gravel, 7:44; cedar block. 245; wooden block, Nicholson, 2:06; stone 'block, :03; graded only, -5a45 ; opened or laid cut only acid no work done, 4.�0. -The length of sewers' now laid down over the entire city amounts to 74',12 miles, I wish you'd fretfirif needle, And iind niy fixable too= 1-Ints such heaps of searing I don't knovi what to do. I'm hungry -as I can be ; • Ifyou hasn't pretty large ones You better bring_ rat fres --An old merchaot seneihly says.: .a It- is better te pay it fair premium to a sound company than to take out a •policy with a pooricompany at cheap rates, aud on the Jeaditig ziewspaper of a city at higher rates journal. I• had- rather hive an inch of ,..-The innumerable • jewel robberies io Englaed have . led ;to the invention of a a..` patent safety case," bY • means of which, when the box is properly set, which is done by Putting a pin ni its place inside the - ease, it cannot he' taken nta„, by any one without continnotisly. ringing .a powerful alarm. bell ineide. If the bell once starts - ringing it cannot be:stopped except by the owner-, who ntsy thus make the case per: fectly safe when left in. thedressitig room. A very good invention, Rieh people ought getit. . The incandescent electric- light is to he employed'for theilluraination of the new lave courtk, London. The Pall Mall Gazette says that further. experiments with the lighting of the House - of Commons, have been postponed for a :elisioa. The Lamm.: eemplaint is made that it flickers and pee ,out just When meet wanted,. This -faiture is attributed by the Gazette rather- ina bad y . gement. .. It is not thought- that the 'experience at Victoria etation is suffident. "to eondemn the system. It it eapected that next month the Prin- gees :Boyal of Germany will be a pand- a:I:tether. "The 'Berliners are even new in a state of ell:dement ,Th un et every cannon. wafted to them by the hreem from them to. be the firet Of thole'. guns whioll- annoiance the birth of anheia to the throne. generations Of direet heirs 'to an impetial. crown will be; in exietence, an occurrenoe ay a, recent Meeting, of the Singst Presbytery a. petition was presented Rev.Dr..Kelso against the Smidayservic in Queen's' College. by ministers from distance. and of various denomination The plea, -was that stoh services interfere with the interests' of the pity congregations under the care 'of- the Presbytery.- The petition also protested . against. the .intro action ' of the English.: Church service icier in whole or in. part.- : Rev.Mr. �� 'tchell, in moving..that the petition be.. Pie tabled," said : " That while Queen's was resbyterian in origin, name and character, more Catholic insti tution could not be: ound. It was: cosmopolitan, not bigoted, wnd students of all classes -and denomina- tt�ons •werefound therein." " ' .The .motion as carried..: : - ; • The first Protestant in Chicago, so !-John Wentworth says, was a Baptist; the first brook ever written in that city was written a Baptist (!lfiT[Jo.v..;...._ � -� TRAGEDY IN A SLUM G CA O tot 6 d by 8' massae, Who_ ,: Jnmppd Train and: Lsrosraed im.elf `.; A Louisville Ky.-, deepestoh ef. last- (Thursday} night's date says : Alexander - u Wingate,.a wealthy resident of Weed - ford County, Ky., was sheadead.at::about._4: o'clock.thia morning on an Ohio ' `& Miss: . issrppi train near" Mitchell; Ind ,-by `a Man m named _ Haynes, who was crazed by [drink, and --had : no provocation for ththenishooting Mr.- -. Wingate was -.re- g home.. from a business . trip to the west,; -and was ;-in : a= .sleeping oar. Rayner = entered the . -oar labo tinder great. excitement, and said --'toe the,. porter and several passengers that he had been followed by.:: thieves Porn Sean Franciscso,' who_were bent on': robbing him. He begged -the passengers to keep his money, which amounted to only NO. The porter tried to pacify- him, . `but he- grew more desperate, and'.flourisbed his revolver around wildly. ' -The train men were either too cowardly or did not have sense en gh to wrest the revolver from him _and eject hint. from : the 'train. -At about - this time Mr. Wingate .ate trams. �13aynes. �iimm • PPed out of hie, :berth.: - ediately confronted him with se the revolver; exclaimed, "-Give -ine my., _ - i money,» and fired. Wingate threw up_ both- °'' hands, cried-" I'm shot," and sank- down dead. The Maniac- turned'-.andfired shots at random-; alien darted as a two imagers and ran out = stet the'pas= T A *Mg Prams tine 0;d Quarter:1' 1 ditty publildied-leht Year by Mr.. Themes" - imam. en' Eve in de -Appel tree, - Ole Eve got stung -by ti-biunmel-eye bee; Hems inea cat for tertylninp,- Hencir delete; oh honer de lam"! • . Chorus --,Holy, etc. I' of the oar doof and Hi jumped off the train, .vehich was runningatI wa the rate of forty=five. miles an hour. �° landed safely, walked half o, mile to a creek, stripped: himself naked into thestream_ u,,: a.;:� body . jumped Chorus—Holy, etc. malinger put on My golden 'shoe, it at to go ter Heaven to tell de newai Chorus.-Holyi Honor de lain' . Oh, holy, holy; honor de dahe lama • An Editor -4W smote convinced: . For years -I suffered with pietism in my 4ft Ehoolder -and . and last fall I was incapable ot.atteod- o nay duties, and lay many a eight le Str114 Wadi this thug r eon- - 4. to 4-ry the -St.- Jiteobs Oil; wrist acknowledge, with but- little tOnfidericeiiu has cOmpletelytaitonished me. The . first - application relieved the Pain *erYlitateri-- saly„ ,and -the_ otiatinged tee of only -two bottles has ComPletely carecl Me Of this _chronic evil, and that aftek the most emit- nent physicians and their prescriptiOnshad been of nO.. avail. 1, therefore, censider it a.duty toPu_hlish the &hove for the benefit of 'eh sufferers. with rheumatism . arid there this morning. His Clothes were found hanging on a tree 100 yards distant a St and they contained WI in gold a gold 1 -ani watch.,.an eipress receipt for 0400a sent r4ell from E I Paso, -Tex., to, New Salem,Ohio, and aim, a quart bottle of brandy, half full. In his 'lig ,t valise,aehich he /eft on the- train-,-,' was tiRao found a gambler's /ay out. Haynes is A fe laboring under delirium &miens at the time elude of the 'd o :--bedies -were bronglit to by• morrow. on this city,. and tin inquest will be -held to, . The Conning. Csmea. . 'That Means 87,500 miles an hour: . Of 1,456 Miles :a minntp. . In fact almost .twenty-four miles a see- otestant sermon in Chicago. on the tth y Ootober,.1825. The first Protestant luded to WaS Ws. Captain Heald Plies. ehekah Wells, of Loutsvillei.KY9.- On -the 2 rd of May, 1811, she started from Louie - b ed English horse that ever cable tO Chicago.. Aed to that horse she attributed hh preservation of. her -life, for she was .iciug it when the Indians made. their ack Open the 15th of August, 184, near. w ere the house of George MaPultintin new is, and, in their strife -to get '-possession °ATMs 41.41 NATIONS. he:following summary of .the forms of is. e ttaeted from -the reports received' at qo_ and ;Hi/171191y Gospel." o • It is rusbing alongthrough space at this high, rate of speed, making directly for this Nevris the time for the adventists to get For -if eve the long-tailed traveller earrome off his terrestrial globe of eurs good-bye to 11 plans and speculations for There is one ain of consolation in the report of an ast meter that -the co ". to be switched off when tt 'gets withtn . But then it me of the • meet teitible eclat - dents on the ' ail -oaciii. front misplaced What if the long-talied mtpresseshOuld het; ,ee The astronoiners should keep the -don TEE eleetric light han_not yet fulfilled the proinien Of its 'adveeates that- it shall be furnished cheaper- than gas. The New :York Sun points out that the Btush-Cona- Pani, -which now lights Broadway, ,Fifik :atrenuei Fourteenth -street and Thirty.' tirtuance of' the service. 79 einits.Verlainp.. per night,_ while . the gas -compamestf.Offer their lamps at 017;50.0er year; or.4.8 bent? 'per:alit:tip per. itight. 'The City has, there- fore; the choioerfor the same price, between"! one -sleet 1 g : an a little more than - gas loans; while the larger Aim - the gas lainpii -• and the greater ity ofethe light . they yield render - ore 'desirable -than the one blePtile _And every one -prepare for the fatal visi- Etransie.21iiitige In the Loud or Flowers. had seven rows of teeth,- and -weighed 790 .A• 9gden man*hat contract in deliver 5400 alligator hides to a pt: Louis. firm by May Jet. „ teeth b I g .ug' to his mastodon, which Weigh 'about tera peends; -and are eaidto Capt. Richittil-BoOth, of:Old Tampa, list. grafted in a. grape-frait tree six earieties; et he-Citruefamily. GroWing from the -same trange but beautifutanofnalyin his -flower' arden: A detail,. rose 1:deemed' on one of is bushee, and when the. leaves begin to all.from it lour imall'hut Complete roses tspearedio the centre, and nova on the end the stein where the large-roett grew may. seen- win _fully developed- roses not larger an a gold .doilsr.--norida4Usfon raptionamakes. the following impOrtant th elight, dry' °tough in the nacireing; en, On going to. bed; getting More and - ore freqpent, Wtth a more. and- Mote shi,•shortneis of breath,' -and quicknese of lse::- In fatal caeeeita average course is sible, and the sooner _rational means are- ploYed for -this purpose the- greater the nee of -suecess. The disease it owing:to irritation commencing in the throat -and 6014 to the lunge,.so that their action • nterfered with, and the _blood does not dye Baffle -tent oxygen to purify it. - The Greece,. --I swear -in thenaine cd the 'Holy g and bonsubstautial and indivisible Trinity. h S e-Cobourg and Baden --I wear. So of tugal----I swear on the Holy Gospels. ssia —I swear by God, -the almighty nu sta th Ph fie pu ab arr pos 901 che ent is i tee EDOS tiOlt tat help Saxony—I swear by Almigblivod. Setiti--I metier by one God and avith all God i Spit Genie God r this and thet other world. , n ----After swearing the deputy on the pay you ; but, if you fail, may He okiim v_ from you." ' - # Sive en and Norway7:-I -,(President or Vite-President only) stvear before God and flit to i/his oath as sure as God shall NMI 4 Swit erland.—In -the presence of Al: 11 ' In Bafraria min -Christians -omit the refer- ence. to fhe Gospel. In Holland d ' United permitte grounds is in ever tates affirmation ie optional; in nd in Switzerland affirmation is to those who object on religious e •case substituted for an oath. In Belgium tuld -Italy the abjuration tensed without Italy- theistic reference, and in France add Roumania, the German Reich- stag and er deputiesin Sweden and 11.1'or- way neit er oath -nor affirmation hi de- " Mara a, why doesn't hie Wife out his hair ?"4we the audible question of a little girl at a hotel table in Connecticut the other day as she looked. in wide-eyed wonder a ' a long-haired stranger. sitting opposite. he stranger joined in the laugh which follOnd, and . satisfied her curiosity for the tim by good-naturedly saying that he Wag tee oor to liae a. wife. A. Chicle lo. plethIng house ,lias engaged Sergt. Masa '4i Olerk at a ?entry Of $1,500 per year a soon as he is released, from prison: • A bonsespormeut brings before the Doti of the. Lancet a case of Some interest, rarit and therapeutic importance. ornnibu conductor felt extreme giddinese,` becain waY, in Sunday, February 26th, 1882. -H recovered after a feW hours, nave bruise?. He la a teetotaller, and -never had firbefore, baler a cold he bad eaten 80 to 100 grains or- more (4 two lun2ps each the _Slag of the third of a Miter ") of .camphor a short time -previous to this occurrence. Most WOricS OD materia ntedica state that in dose? of one_drachn2 riatiteacatnphot bas weakness, °Oldness of extremities, loss of consciousness and each ;death. is a matter of surprise that. thes-e cases . are so seldoin known to occur; camphor -being in nearly every houitehold. . Some' of the •teglielt. ladies of fashion are rebelling against the dieklerriakets -nrbb are mastefillly crowding: emottalakinds of Material in- meaningless shapei into one HOUS'ENOLD ACCIDENTS. ea toindUee attempt the du -- a -ties of the teilie merely to place thn I readers of thesepagett .in poissesSion of ameans With the best means at, hand. thakitcheh„ the dining-halL the nursery and -the sitting - room they are liable to happen, an4instead of - fear and Winn at -the Sight of the cut or Mashed Outer,. or bruised -or- burned arm, nr -.se-aided Buined, and after washing away the blood, {if • -required-), the injfired 13arts should be dressed' - Protiertieaite tendency -to _quickly remove ail . above ea well as in all ineseulat and otherpaina, headaehe, stiffness of the joints, etea—these: render Sr. JA:COBS OIL Pre,PnlinentlyIhe .externalaemedy now. befOre the people.; elaini is fully substantiated by the •,strengest* kindef. te.stiniony -from all classes of :people, The value of human life is so Stipteniely unpor., - -tent that anything that tenda to its prolonga'+ tien is entitled te the highest 'eonsideratida,' .Charles Nelsen-, proprioor Nelsen }Louse; Port Huron; aays : "1 Strfft13red so 'with my life,'when --seine one advised me to try Sitg -.T:scons did so, -and Reif by mufeie,1 Wee Instantly relieved, and -by- the'eOntinued.use of • the -Oil -entirely-nuted. thank beaven for: having used- this wooded -ill -remedy, feattre oRig RIC - INSTITUTION (ESTAELISHED 1874 ,NEBV01713_ DEBILITY, Ilheumatienz;". Larne Complaints immediately relieved and, perma- nently eared - by using these BELTS, BANDS - AND INSOLES. Circulars and Consultation FREE.