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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1909-9-23, Page 3GEIS HIDDEN IN FLOWERS BOUQUETS CAN BE ASADB YEII$ VALUAl1LE, • Florist 'Telfa of Vostly Flower Gine t, Artists- E1rd is Orchids. Bouquets, said a fashionable flor- ist recently to the correspondent of a London, England, paper, can be had at any price you Like, and we've supplied them from $120 to $2,600. Of courto the last figure 'could not be in the cost of the flowers, but in the magnificent holders and the "concealed trea- sures" which many a bouquet con- tains, A few days ago I received an order for ten -guinea bouquet and a note to the effect that the writer would call later with some little trinkets which were to be "concealed" among the blossoms, CONCEALED JEWELS. We got up the bouquet all right, and • Just when it was finished a gen- tleman arrived and, after /dm/r— ing the beauty of the nosegay, un- buedened himself of a number of email packets which, on being open- ed, revealed some magnificent specimens of jewellery. There were rings bracelets, collars, eta:—all very beautiful and costly. All these we concealed" among the flowers, fastening them to the blossoms by invisible wire When completed, the bouquet showed no trace of the jewellery it contained and certain- ly did not look worth the $3,Ouu which was the value the purchaser placed upon: it. There was no pat ticiilar romance attached to the ppresent, as it was merely intended for the man's wife in celebration of the fifth anniversary of their wed- ding. ACTRESSES "WISE." Most bouquets intended for popu- lar actresses, and singers now con- tain some "surprise" in the form of a piece of jewellery, and "profes- sionals" have become "wise" to the fact and take the precaution of ex- amining well any presentation bou- quet before placing it in avase. We made a very beautiful bouquet of orchids the other day for a prima donna who is well known at Co- vent Garden and one which, I have no doubt, gave ther considerable pleasure. There was no concealed Jewels, but the holder -was made of solid gold and encrusted with gems. This holder was fashioned in such a way that it could be utilized as = a parasol or umbrella handle, and I believe itis now serving that pur- pose very successfully.Its intrin- sic value was, I understand, $1, - GIFT FOR AN OPERA STAR, A pretty little bouquet was or- dered the other day, and one that was by no means costly. It•llas the advantage, however, of - being unique, The flowers comprised or- chids, roses, narcissi, and maiden- hair fern. In the centre, and con- cealed by the blossoms, {vas a dain- ty little cage containing a singing canary. The little creature sang perpetually, and when the bouquet was presented to a famous grand opera "star" it burst into a glori- ous "riot of sweet sounds" that abarmed the recipient far more than a costly piece of jewellery would- have done. We have made several such bouquets, and they have never failed to give.sa vast amount of pleasure. ETIQUETTE ON SHIPBOARD, Woman Can Not bo Too Careful of Own Dignity. ++444-++4-++++++444-4'+++ - RARY'S GREAT DANg1CR DOMINO HOT Wt3ATl1BR' /Wore children die during the hot wether than at any + other time of the year, Diar- nceea, dysentery, cholera in, fantum, and stomach trou- t tiles come without warning, and when a medleiee is not + at hand to give prompt relief, + the delay may prove fatal to t the child, Baby's Own Tab- Ilets should be kept in every home where there are chil- dren during the hot weather menthe. An occasional dose of the Tablets will prevent deadly summer oomplaints, or cure them if they come un- expectedly; Mrs, 0. Moreau,. St, Tite, Que., says: "My baby suffered from a severe attack of cholera infantum, but after giving him Baby's Own Tablets thetroubledis- appeared, and he regained health splendidly." Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25cents a box from The Dr. Williams' MedicineC o.' rock i B vllle Ont, A VOUNO FOLKS ..... W3Gdt1tT.491p THE CHICKEN-RANOR. It was an exciting time for Mile when the incubator carne—almost as exciting as it was for mother, who had been wanting for a whole long year to try to raise some chickens. Father just laughed about it, but they did not change their minds, Theyboth were sure e that nothing could lie so interesting as to see a, flock of fluffy yellow balls chasing about in the pen that was going to be bolit. Milo had never seen any baby chicks in all his life, but he had heard about them till 4. he was sure he would know one if -0 he' should meet it anywhere. One day the whole lovely dream suddenly name true. Cowboy Jack and "Shorty" went away early that morning, and when they drove through the big gate that night they had b u M1 t r ncub for, brood- er, d - er, lumber for the pensend coops, and—all done up in cotton, in lit= tie square compartments, inside bigger ones lined with cork, and fitting into strong cases -eggs 1 So many there were that Milo gave up trying to count, and jumped. from "seventeen, eighteen," to e `?mutons-" The incubator was very simple - looking, just a big box on legs, painted yellow, with its name across the top in black letters. Inside there was a 'square room, with a thermometer at one side, a wire rack across it half -way between its ceiling and its floor, which was not a floor at 411, but just an ordinary piece of burlap tacked tight to all four walls. The rack did not reach quite to the door. There eras an open space next the glass, as if the makers had nob had quite enough wire to finish it properly. Then there was a ]amp fastened on the outside, and a pipe tc carry its heat into the square room,.and that was all. Mother took the book of direo- 'ions telling all about how to co everything, and began to .study. She almost forgot when it was time to put Milo to bed. Of course there were lots of im-• portant things to do. Mother gave directions, Comboy Jack and Shorty carried them out, and Milo acted as overseer. But at last all was ready. The incubator lamp was lighted, the thermometer that hung inside was watched till the mercury reached the black arrow en its glass front, the precious eggs were laid on the wire rack, the glass door closed, and—the poultry -ranch had begun. There was one thing Milo could do to hurry matters along. Mama turned the eggs every day, kept the' ]amp filled and trimmed and the ventilator just right. Then things began to happen. The morning of that wonderful day mania and Milo put high stools in from, of the incubator and sat do en upon them. At first there was not much to be seen. Then a faint sound was heard, and an egg -shell broke in one wee spot, which pre- sently grew -a little larger. A bit of a white beak carne ie sight, and something said "Peep 1" quite plain and loud. Milo almost fell off his stool at that, and manta clap- ped her hands- Slowly but surely that sharp little beak worked away, till the crack it made reached round the shell to the little hole where it began. Then a short rest, and. then the chick, tired of its narrow bed, stretched its little buff cochin logs, and—snap!—two halves of shell fell apart, and out rolled the baby. It was very limp and drag- gled -looking, but its eyes were round and bright as jot beads, and it peeped as if it had been doing it for years. Another rest, and then it began to look out of that glass door. Near- er and nearer it came, till sudden- ly it reached the place where there was not any wire, and down it went. right into the burlap below, that was as soft and yielding as a ham- mock. Of course by this tune there were ever so many others at work, each one peeping its greeting to its bro- thers and sisters, and each one joining the first in the hammock as t fast as it could manage it. 1 •If Milo was disappointed in their I looks at first he soon changed his t mind, for inside of an hour the lit- t tle'Tellows perked np, their yellow i clown fluffed out, their tiny wings d 'fluttered, and their voices—why, t the chorus they kept up was past 0 belief, Mania end Milo laughed, and cried, "Look there 1" and "Only sec that!" (:i11 it would have been hard to tell which was the happier, And 4 of cout.e papa and Nora an Cowboy Jack and Shorty and the fat cook and the twenty-seven other ranchnien and cowboys came for a glimpse. But mother and Milo sat on their stools the livelong day, with scarcely a rest, for diviner ; and when night came the wire rack was pulled with ,empty shells. while the burlap hammock {vas lull of plump little balls as soft as thistle -down. Aird by that time Milo understood that rho men who lied made the in- cubator knew how, There is more to raising chickens than simply hatching them, to he sure, but ab last a000unte the buff i POSSIBILITIES OR RADIUM. May Take the Place of Coal Som Day in the future. Radio -active are rain and snow. There seems little doubt that the radioactivity of the air in certain cases has its origin in the soil. On the other hand it seems equally ear - thin that solar protuberances and sun spots have a marked influence upon the amount of emanation' present in the air, just as they are known to materially affect all other manifestations of atmospheris elec- tricity • Radium emanation is the most intensely energetic chemical agent known. Of the highest significance aro the facts brought to light by the study of radio -active phenom- ena with regard to the transmuta- tion of elements which seems to ac- company these manifestations. There is a wonderful perspective opened up should it at some future time become possible to cause the immediate and rapid disintegration of matter. 'Thus one gramme of radium would furnish an amount of heat equaltothat derived from 325 tons of coal. If we are faced with problems of the exhaustion of our natural re- sources, of the depletion of our coal alines, there is no means of gauging the possibilities which the future may hold in store and which may surprise the most extreme lim- its of our needs. Tho discovery of radium and the phenomena asso- ciated with it has revealed to us new truths of so fundamental a character that there is hardly any branch of science which has not in some way profited by the new knowledge. MYSTERIOUS .4IRSI17PS, Folk Too Ready to Let Inlagiieation Run Away With Them. In 1709, which was quite seventy years before the first balloon as- cent took place in England, a "flying ship" was said to, have' been seen in the sky above the Norfolk fens. Several people observed it at different times and places, and one enterprising 'individual even made a drawing of it, which was re produced'in one of the newspapers of that date, Of eouese it may have been all imagination, or it was possibly a hoax, But the detailed descriptions of the .But craft, coupled with the ]iustration..suggest at least the possibility that even in those dis- tant days some enterprising indi- vidual or other' had evolved an aero- plane of the now familiar box -kite type, and was experimenting with it under cover of darkness. In 1810, again, what we should now designate a dirgible balloon, was reported to be hovering over Kent. It was said by those who pro- fessed to have observed it, "shaped like a monster sausage," and was guided apparently by means of wings, or sails, which stuck out be- fore and behind. There is some reason to think that this may have been the machine with which a cer- tain French aeronaut named Blan- chard was experimenting libout this period, and with which the certainly did, upon at least one occasion, Cross the English Channel. In this connection, t00, it i8 worthy of notice that .when the French Govel'nmellt airship La Patric broke loose from 'her moor- ings in November, 1007, and was supposed to have been carried by the wind' over England and the north to lh of -Ireland; scores of apple. either pretended; or really believed, that they had seen her in the oleltds above localities where she could nob possibly then have been having regard to the direction of the prevailing air oerrouts, Which merely goes to prove that it this age, as in all others, there exist folk who are only too ready to let their inlagination run away with them, If yen would know the giving of happiness try the happiness of giv- ing, On an ocean steamship passer gens usually talk to each other without a formal introduction, and there is no harm in this, unless you bo a young girl travelling alone. In that case you must keep absolutely to yourself, unless circumstances arise when you can talk to some older woman. Should yon be trav- elling with a party and should you make acquaintanee -s'hile on tate Steamer, try to remember that they are only passing and do not make of them confidential friends., Steam. or friends may bo desirable or'ntost undesirable. They come without references and they pass'ivitllout it good-bye. The chances are that you will never see them again, so let them go •without hearingour family history and all abouyour own trials, It sometimes happens that lifelong friends are made up- ou the sea. but this is the exception and not the rule, and, in any ease, such friendships aro cemented up- on the land. To anm up, you cannot he too earoful of year own digeit,vr_ You ran8t do nothing to make fellow - travellers uncomfortable, and, you must seek to be unobtrusive and independent of help. The confid- ing and helpless woman should never travel anywhere alone, Self- relience is one of the first requis- ites of a good traveller. NO USE. She —"Yoe are a man lifter my boort.° f u He --"'Darling!'! She--•"Ilub yon web't get it ° Pollee Sergeant -Can you give me a description of the person who. ran ever you? "01 can that, He had. on a fur coat an' an autymobile^ cap an' gaggles,"—Life. coohins were doing so well that pa- pa had entirely stopped laughing as there, and was taking groat joy in planning a ohieken-house with all modern improvements. -Youth's Companion., A BURNING COAL MINE. Eating Up Hundreds of Thousands of Tons of Coal. One of the most extraordinary fires ever recorded in history is that of the burning coal -mine at Summit Hill, ,Pennsylvania. In 1858, fifty-one years ago, the fire began. Since that time it has smouldered steadily, eating up hun- dreds of thousands of tons of coal, and burning its way deep under- ground to a plot a mile west of Sum- mit Hill. To -day an attempt, de .scribed by a writer in Popular. Me chanter, is being made to extingu- ish it. The shaft in which the fire began led into a mine that had been work- ed .for many years. Lack of men and lack of means prevented a pro- per fighting of the danger when, it started. In the early days of coal - mining much of the coal now re- garded as valuable was considered worthless, and discarded as refuse. The enormous quantities of this discarded coal bountifully fed the hungry fire. In 1862 the company attempted to make an open out to block off the fire. After an excavation of two thousand feet had been made, the work, for some forgotten reason, was abandoned. The next attempt was made six- teen years ago. Holes were sunk until cracks or open shafts were struck, and into these were poured refuse, water and wet clay, the pur- pose being to block the fire by a wall of incombustible material. More than six hundred holes were sunk, and into these thousands of tons of "gob" were forced, some of the holes eating up as much as eight thousand tons of material. Several hundred thousand dollars were spent in this work, but the fire crept round the walls and con- tinued to burn. Now, however, expert engineers have devised a scheme which it is believed will anally cheek the con- fiagration, though at a cost of near- ly a million dollars. Six shafts are being sunk into the earth across the path of the fire, the first being an open out one hundred feet long by twelve fent wide. Three e£ the other shafts will be fifty feet long by twelve feet wide, and the re- maining two will be twenty feet long by twelve wide. All are to be fifty feet apart, and they will be sunk to the coal vein, a distance of two hundred feet. • The coal will be removed from these shafts, and from the interven- ing spaces between them, a solid wall of concrete or clay, or both, being substituted for the coal. This wall will extend to the bottom of the vein in the valley, where water will complete the barrier. HEROINE AT TWELVE. At Freystrop, Pembrokeshire, langlend, a baby picked up an ad- der. Apparently regarding the rep- Ei'.e as a new toy the baby put it 0 her month, and the adder bit ier in several placesinside the ower lip. Her twelve -year-old sis- er shoitly afterwards camp upon he scene, .Seoin.g the adder still n the baby's hand she realized the anger, deetroyed the snake, and hen sucked the poison from her ister's lips, ISSUE NO. S7a-011. When troubled wit,, fail rashes, eczema, or`any skin disease apply Zain-Dolls 1 Surprising how quickly it epees the smarting and stinging ! Quickly euros bruises, :cats, ktu'tts, and Chafing sores, Zara-Suk Is made from pure herbal essences, No'animal fete— up mineral poisons. Finest healer 1 •fh•upptets nd Stores overrralters. STILL WORSE. Mr. Dolan was looking anxiously around the kitchen. "Bridget," he saki, after a while, "what did I do wid me heti" "Ye have it on y'r head, Mike," replied Mrs. Dolan, 'Begorra," said Mr. Dolan, "the nixt thing I'll be leaving me head to me hat 1" Ill fitting boots and shoes cause corns. Holloway's Corn Cure is the article to use. Get a bottle at once ,and cure your corns. SAID UNCLE SILAS: "Some wimmen spend about half their time tryin' to make themselves look somewhere near as good as 'a photographer can." "Doctor," said the, convalescent, smiling weakly, "you may send in your hill any day now." "Tut, tut!" replied the M.D., silencing his patient with a wave of his hand. "You're not strong enough yet." IIIAK,E A NOTE when you are leaving home to buy The D. d; L.' Menthol Plaster. Guaranteed to cure the worst case of backache, headache, stitches. Avoid the just as good" goods. Get the genuine. The visiting parson was giving Convict 45 consolation. "You should not complain, my misguided friend," he said; "it is better to take things as you find them." "Yer en the wrong track, parson," re- plied the prisoner. "It wer' prac- tising that theory that got me nab- bed." If allowed to roam over your house those few innocent -looking house flies may cause a real trag- edy rab edy any day, as they are known 10 be the principal agents for the spread of those deadly diseases, typhoid fever, diphtheria and smallpox. Aro other fly killer come pares with Wilson's Fly Pads. "My dear," said the professor's wife "the hens have scratched up all that egg -plant seed you sowed.' "Ah, jealousy 1" mused the profes- sor. And he sat down and wrote a twenty -page article on the "De- velopment of Envy in the Minds of the Lower Grade of Bipeds." A Benefactor to All.—The soldier, the sailor, the fisherman, the miner the farmer, the mechanic, and all who live lives of toil and spend their existence in the dull routine of te- dious tasks and who are exposed to injuries and ailments that those who toil not do net know, will find ix, Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil an ex- cellent friend and benefactor in every time of need. Kindly mention the name of this paper in writing to advertisers. It takes a lot of money to eduaay6 girls, and after they graduate very few of them are able to support a husband. The Real Liver Pill.—A torpid liver means a disordered system, medal depression, lassitude and in the end, if care be not. taken, a chronic state of debility. The very best medicine to arouse the liver to healthy action is Parmeiee's Vegetable Pills. They are com- pounded of purely vegetable sub- stances of careful selection and no other pills have their fine qualities. They do not gripe or pain and they are agreeable to the most sensitive stomach. SUSPICIOUS OF HIS OTHER.. "ma!" "Yes, precious," " , goodImo. bob these days, s ,a1n' ain't II" "Yes, net—you've been a very good boy some mother talked to you so seriously." "And you trust me now, don't you, ma?" "Yes, darling --implicitly." "".Then what do you keep the jam cupboard locked for new -a -days i" Itub (dining a quay r el)--"Vou talk like an idiot!" Wife ---"I've got to talk so that you can under- stand viol" Kindly mention the name o1' Ibis taller In writing to advertisers. ITOT A.Ift AS A POLI1SRER, The marvels of friction are in. Milts), The use of the sand -blast for polishing metals is quite a re- cent invention, and now it is fol, lowed by that of a bleat of simple hot air, It is the velocity that gives the polielling power. The ar- ticles to be treated are placed in tt basket in a centrifugal machine (Wren at a very high speed, and heated air is blown from a pipe through the basket. A high polish is thus produced very rapidly, Nickel -plated articles that have be, come tarnished ars made' bright in. a few minutes; Wet metal, fresh from the bath, needs no prelimin- ary drying, for the current of air dries area poliehee at the same mo- ment. It is only necessary to so pack the articles that the air reaches them on all eider. It may be the only way to get a good look at heaven is to. take a square look and a human one at the alleys of our eities. Do It Now.—Disorders of the di- gestive aPPartus should be dealt with th at on o before eforo complications arise that may be difficult to eope with. The surest remedy to this end and one that is within reach of all, is Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, the best Ia;,atave and seek - 'bye on the market. Do not delay, but try them now. One trial well convince anyone that they are the hest stomach regulator that can be got. ' "I am told, sir, that you said ys c. terday I ought to be placed in a lunatic asylum." "A base slan- der, my dear sir, I assure yea.. What I dict say, and I like to be OR sot, was that the keepers should never have allowed you to escape." After making a most careful study of the matter, U. S. Govern- ment scientists state definitely that the common house fly is the principal means of distributing typhoid fever, diphtheria and smallpox. Wilson's Fly Pads kill the flies and the disease germs, too. Mr. B.—"There, I've let my cigar g,' out. Do you know that it spoils a cigar, no matter how good it is, 1f you allow it to go out?" Mrs. B.—"Yes, a cigar is a good deal like a man in. that respect." A CERTAIN METHOD for curing cramp,,, diarrhoea and dysentery is by using Painkiller." This medicine has sustained the highest reputation for over 60 years. Avoid substitutes, there is but one "Pain- killer "Perry Davie' -25o. and 50o. Blobbs—"You're pretty much gone on Miss Hobbs, aren't you, old man' 1' Hobbs—"I was once. But after what she said to me last night I'm not going to pay any more at- Itention to her." Blobbs—"What did she say?" Hobbs—"10 1" Through indiscretion in eating green fruit in summer many chil- dren become subject to cholera morbus caused by irritating acids that act violently on the lining of the intestines. Pains and danger- ous purgings ensue and the delicate system of the child suffers under the drain. In such cases the safest and surest medicine is Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial. It will check the inflammation and save' the child's life. "You are Mr. Quezeen, the hus- band of the celebrated lecturess on cookery, are you not?" "Yes, sir," replied the dejected, hollow-eyed man. "I am the man she tries her new dishes on." Red. Weak, Wears, Watery Eyes. Relieved By Murine Eye- Remedy. Try /furtive For Your Eye Troubles, You Will Like Murine, It Soothes. hoc At Tour Druggists. Write icor nye Books. Free. Murtne Eye Remedy Co., Toronto. Figg—"You have seen ,Tones' wife. What is she like? Should 300 call her pretty?" Fogg --"I might if I were talking to Jones." velizsler 4 mouse* eS.PAVIN plutl;'� Mailed onmotet gyL+_°4s,/ ISend for booklet—aa The Votorinary Remedy company, limped, llax A, rs Adolatde st., >t. Tweets, ceases, Mdest and Rest The school that has had lire longest exporlence and great. COS success In training young people for good oince positions and that can secure the best results for you, is the BrItleb-Amarloan Buslnass College Y.M.O.A. BUILDING, TORONTO,, Fall Teranow' oppen. Enter any time, write far patulogna T. M. WATSON, - Plturcirm. Ontario Veterinary College TEMPERAHIIE ST., TORONTO, 0414 established 1862 taken over by, the. Provincial govern o m nt of t On oris 1000, Am latedcontrol of with the University of Toronto. ander t sren,let O c DepOctober, of A. Course of f study Coll gto (pane Int Wiese ye ribs, Course of 80,0 eOtoa Oal,00 3ooilage yearn. 76E8 kER aEBatUN 676. Osla,.darn 1 E'. A. d. til ANaLien {t.6.. 11.B•,PrlaripaL Dept. R,1 We want everyyoung man who is -anxious to prepare for a good position at a good salary to write us at once. Address Central Telegraph School, ii Gerrard St. East, Toronto. OUR HEAVE CURE cures whore other' fall. Bella on its own merits. Best of testtle menials furnished on application. Ask your druggist to get you sumo, or bend flip. cot to Your Brothers, Restoule. Price 51.40 Per package. Charges paid to nearest otp press office. None genuine without our trade mark, FOUR BROTHERS, on each packagecause. Try a package and be convinced. trhy BeevesotheScannot beled H cured byrnen* Fon? Brothers Hears Oure. AGENTS WANTED. YE. RELIABLE' 174.17 WANTED IN EVER ®• town to take orders for beat custom made clothes In Canada. Highest commission. Ser Telloriag Co., Toronto. PORTRAIT AGENTS—RELIABLE M8251 we start in business of their own and give credit, Merohante Portrait Co.. Toronto. GENTS, MAIL- ORDER BUYERS, EOiJSEJ keepers send address for free sample of s LVERULOr'Ia MAGICAL SILVER CLEANER and large catalogue of household apecialttea tlanada 6ilveroloth eo., nope. 0., Toronto. Secure the Agency Cor your locality of the only Life Incur. ane0 company meeting the requirements .of the 100781 Commission." (inc planet and policies sternal to the common sense, .and positively protect the Policyholder's 'interest. Rates lower. Terms of payment, ;easier. THE POLICYHOLDERS MUTUAL LIFE, ft'omple Building, Toronto, n I�e AHPli AGENTS MIT - CASE x- . Make 030 DEW mud antes. fish permanent business on our meant Our high class goofs sell on eight In every home, ere Quickly need up cad , opera orders come fart. Exclude° tare rttory give,.. ./2t'7 CATALOGUE, l.i1G Tug Hour SOrrs.Y ea. ilk. Dept a, Toronto, Ont. WRiTE�iv, CARPET DYEING nod Oloaeing. This 4. epecinIty with the t$fi1TISH AMERiCAN DYEING C47. Boa putioul.r. by .orL and we are euro to ,.'.lets &aggress flog tea. menu -eat. Don't fail to see our Exhibit ata the National Exkibititin, Toronto. LACK. Many a man is so lacking in the essentials of success that he isn't; even a successful liar. If your children are troubled witti worms, give them Mother .Graver'. Worm Exterminator; sale, sure and effectual. Try it, and mark the improvement in your child. A New School and a Good School New in its Lite New in its Equipment. New In its Oourao of Stttdy, New In Hs Methods at Instractloa, rrod 1n its Record. cod in it, Teaching Stag. Gard 10 its Attention to BOW eat, Omni Ya !t„ Ability to Plays Graduates. Get lou ay on Monday, Aug, 30th, oras soon thereafter es possible. R€MINGTON 3 )SINE SS GObr Ge, 269 Dolego Street, Corner Spadlna Avenue, TMORTJ, 'ONTARIO. DRIB p Dri.rg Habits New System of Treatment. Recently Discovered Rentedy shit Cures Rapidly and Permanently, Marvellous Results obtained that makes our remedy one of tine wonders of Modern ftedlalne. Patients cured secretly at their own homes against their own will and knowledge. No Stutftering, no injections, 570 Lose of time, or detention from business, no had lifter effects. 13Ei;11 Y• Jlea2',f.s`�6c. 5EA I Tobacco Fart,01 CORED Wo send by mail Etre cf rhe r t, nil? 61 lingo hook, v. Met fully ex. pina:,s oar Mnlic•n 1, 1 how the Drink, 'tobacco. and Drt,,, I1ab s tasp IA r 1 Il ti 1 cared. -Tide book is ef:•1 ill n int +,•t i ,• 'on, So do clad ohn telt what your n, r , l :,e, , e a tasolutab, .1010± and ennntle,ti l l' 0t 1t.� A lh_e I l , 1; • - . a .. q', ,ilon2renf, Canada