Loading...
Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-05-29, Page 7- TIM MANIPUR -DISASTER. Mrs. Grimwood's Story of the Honore She Paned Through. THE SIEGE, SLAUGHTER AND FLIGHT .."....tnnT41... ....,.. .r •••..m•• • • ..._.•..... ....._ _____________ _atzom_Lolidoliatimes4-- We have been eavored by Mita larinewood • with the following letter, received yester- day morning from her Water -in-law, Mrs. Grimwood, widow of the late Mr. Frank St. • Clair Grieeeheytoed, who wee' murdered at Manipur :7 LAICHIUR, IDACHAR, April 2, 1891. Long before thie reaches you you will ,„ 2,19P1.11-,,,RkEogrtkim!.--W441a- has liken place in Manipur, and thie is only to give you partionlare. Frank must have told, you about then Chief coming with 450 men of the 42ad Goorktute. They kept, us in the dark as to their real reasons ter corning until they arrived on the 22nd of March. The Chief then had a con- , saltation with Frenk, 1).0 deoided was sent to the Maharajah ' to tell him to nome and bring all the Prinoes with him. Frank had meanwhile told me what was going to happen-viz.,that the Government of India had deoided that the ex-Mobarajeh was not to be allowed to re- turn, but that also the Jabraj, the Prince who turned him out in September, was to be banished for It term of years to India. This. deeteion • s to be env:ennead in thedurbar, durbar, and w ii • the Prinoes got up to go the Jubrej we.. e •to be arrested then and there, and conveyed out of the place that day by some of the 42nd. For this pur- pose the steps to the house were lined with Sepoys, and THE HOUSE GENERALLY SURROUNDED. The Maharajah arrived with hie followers and only one of his brothers out of three, with the excuse that the other two were ill, and eo were unable to be present. As the Jubraj was one of these, the Chief old the durbar could not beheld without him, and that he must be sent for. They delayed four or five hours, but he would not come, eo there was no durbe.r, and the Maharajah went away under the understanding that he was to come early on the morning of •the 23rd an bring the Jnbraj. The 23rd arrived, but the Rajah did not turn up, as he said theJ brsj was ill still, and could j9 ----nottte esteee-Tlitwnt-on the whole day, and in the evenin he Chief deoided that Frank had better go and see the Jubrej, tell him of the decision of Government, and try and persuade him to listen quietly,and set in a000rdanoe. • So Frank went and otayed two or three hours, telling him, and trying • to persuade him to go, bat he said he would -noteend-the kinharej eh -ref used -to -give -him up. Frank then told him that the &poets would be sent to get him. However, he would not give in, so Frank returned about 7 in the evening and told the Chief. • A council of war was then held, and the plan of attack for the next day was made. I think we felt gloomy that night. We all dined tegether, and tried to make things as jolly as we could, but did not emceed very • well, and all went to bed early. At 3 o'olook on the morning of the 24th we all got up, I gave them something to eat, and THEN THEY ALL LEFT. Frank, the colonel commandiog, and two officers went with the reserve. A young fellow named Braokenbnry led the attack on the palace of the Jubraj. Then the • fight began. I was in the telegraph offioe sending a telegram, when a bullet came through the window and struck the floor about two inches from/where I was stand- ing. I then ran out, mind took up a position with the Chief below the office, which was made of briok, and so was fairly Wept proof. • Ballets were raining over our • heads. I have kept several that I picked up. Meanwhile the •fight in the palace was going on. Poor Lieutenant Bracken - bury went the wrong • road, and the fire was opened upon him from three sides. He fell in the first volley, shot • through . the ankle. He lay where he fell, exposed to the enemy's fire, and they made the moat of it, and fired volleys - into him. Yon on pioture to yourself what that means. Ono all that morning I eaw Frank. He oame to get out • some more ammunition, our Sepoye were running short, and that was about 11. At 12 or 1 o'olook some of the offioere and Frank came back for something to eat. I was cutting eandwiches for the others who oould not leave their posts, when a ballet crashed through the window over my head. They were attacking we and were all round ' the house, so that the roams were unsafe. . The odde against ne were enormons; Frank put their numbers down as close upon 8,000 ; we had 450 all told. We managed to drive them off the house, and divided our force°, half for the Residency, while half remained to continue T t treeett ON THE PALACE. Meanw ile all the offioere went back to their poste and Frank. The ammunition meanwhile was getting to an end, and it was found that all our foroee would be needed on the Residenoy, so word was sent to call them in. The Manipuris got posses- sion of the wall in front of the house, and • brought ont there four big guns, and com- menced shelling the house. I think the horror of those hours will last to the end of ' my life. Sheila bursting in the rooms overhead, for hy this time we were all in the oellare -that is, Frank, myself, the Chief, the °colonel, and two civilians on the Chief's Mall. The rest were trying to recover the wounded from all directions. Heavy fire went on for four hours, and at 7 o'olook the colonel and the Chief decided t t terms most bo made 'to save ne at , as we had hardly any am- munition t. The buglers were Bent to sound the " °ease fire," but for nome time the firing continued. It stopped at leek, • and the Chief Gent one of the offioere ont with a letter asking for ternie. The Jnbraj sent baok to say that if the Chief would mite ont to the gate that he would come, too, and see what oonld be done. So the Chief, the Colonel, Frank, the Secretary and Assistent•Commiseioner and one offioer all went out. This was about 8.30 in the evening, and we had eaten nothing all day. The wounded were then all heonght to the Reeidentey, and ono of the cellars turned into a hoepited. Iprey that I may never see etude a sight a sin. There 4' InehimealLoverthe plitOte *IA limterherittli he wee AIAIVE AND mese= OONSCIOuS the whole time, and in awful agony. I did what I could to help, but it seemed almost impossible to do anything. In one corner was a poor fellow with hie brain shot out on the top of hie head, and yet alive. An- other with his forehead gone, and matey where worae. Luokily, I nm rather etrong•minded, and so I was able to help 'n bathing- some- of- the --wounde -and- bandagtng them up. After this I went bo :get every one something to eat, and we bad a sort of eoratoh dinner. Then I went round the house. I can't tell you • what I felt All ear pretty thine broken, the roofe and walla riddled with bullets, and shelle buret in all of them. It was se dreadful eight to me, and I left and re- extrnalle.,,pe,,hoopilth,„,,P49k4.74.4thselek9tit,_ liVo shny° axions about Frank, eo went out in the groande to try and see it I could eee any• thing of them. I didn't see •them, so I went baok to the veranda and &eked one of the offioere to go oateide the gate and look for him, and I sat down, utterly wearied out, and was dozing off in a chair •teeeentwanae-___eeneeeeen„ d icon- efeeee. • °rear, iffiliTateWaraitr.—lirtrret thought they had hilted Frank and the others, but a bugler oame rushing in and told as they had taken them prieonere, as they would not Haien to the shameful terme proposed -which were that we were to give upour areas. I flad down to the oellar again were the wounded were. The firing wee something awful, and the shells bursting in every direction-. I 'got hurt in my arm ; it bled a lot, but wasn't Bedew]. After another two horns we MOW MEEREAD---113-241/31BEBED — The Process That _Wires the Seamstress Exactly Wb:at She Wants. The seamatreee, whether she winte No. 30 or 40 or 120 thread, knows from the number cast what kind of owing it oan be need for. When 840 yards of yarn weigh 7,000 grainy, a pound of ,cotton, the the tt r tadmakere mark it Ng.. 1. If 1,680 yards weigh it pound it is marked No. 2. oreNet 40.warreit_ wouldetake- -50- malt plied by 489 to weigh .pound. This is the whole explenation- ' the yarn •nmea- sureenent ne used by the spool mimetic- turer. The early manufactured thread was of three -cord, the number being de- rived from the number of yards to the pound, just as it is today. No. 60 yarn made No. 60 thread, though in point of foot the actual calibre of No. 60 thread three No. 20 brand twisted together. When the sewing machine °erne into the market as a great thread consumer, unreasoning in its work and ' inexorable in its demands -for mechanical accuracy, six. cord cotton had to be made in place of the old and rougher three-oord, it being much erma run,, We have selected two_or Crou p. three lines from letters freshly receivedfrom pa- rents who have given German Syrup , to their children in the emergencies of Cu17.Vou will credit these, because they come from good, sub- stantial people, happy in finding „ dos icine containing no evil drug, which mother can administer with con- fidence to the little ones in their most critical hours, safe and sure that it will carry them through: EP. L. WILLITS, of Mrs. JAS.W. KIRK, •Al,ma, Neb. I give it Dau hters' Colle e n...-yiocrw4r4.,:gaeafro44• troubled with Croup have depended upon and never saw any it in attacks of Croup preparation act like with my little dough - it., It is simply mi- ter, and find it an in- raculous. vaLuable remedy. Fully one-half of our customers are mothers who Use Boschee's Ger- man Syrup among their children. A medicine to be successful with the little folks must be a treatment for the sudden and terrible foes of child- hood,'&whooping cough, croup!diph- theria and the dangerous inflamma- tions of delicate throats and lungs. 0 DECIDED WE BIM RETREAT, as She housewas in danger of catching fire. The wounded were got out as quickly as possible; three had died meanwhile. Poor Mr. Braokenbury was dying, but we had to move him, and the moving killed him. They brought, him baok and put him in the oellar again, but it made one's heart ache. I covered him up and then left him, and joined the othere outside. We then moved off. I dodged two sheik' by running behind & tree. We went out at the baok of the, house, and had to cross first a hedge of thorn°, and a high mud wall, then a river, before we could reach the road. I hadn't even a hate and onlY very thin house Shoes on. One of these dropped off in the river, where also got wet up to my shoulder. We were fired at -all the 'way: -I lay-downein-neditoh- about twenty times that, night while they were firing to try and eeoape bullets. We left the Residency at 2 a. m., and marohed all the next day and the next night. We had to go through the jangles, as they , were lying in wait for es all over the pleas, and marched at least , 30 miles with no ,food ; that-was-the-25,On-theemorning-ofthe- 26th we struck the Caohar road, hoping to meet 200 mon who we knew were on their way up to relieve the guard. • E HAD EATEN NOTHING since the morning of the 2411], except a few mouthfuls of so•caded dinner, snatched as beet we 000l.i. We had to eat grass and leaves ; but I was too done up to ore much. My feet were cat to bits, and my arms wouldn't stop bleeding, and I was perished with oold and having got 80 wet in (nosing the river. We went on down the rod, and came upon a stockade on the road, where there were crowds of the enemy. This we had to rush, and I sprained my ankle and' gave myself up for lost; but I got over somehow, and then we ow scene men run- ning up the hill below us. Some amid they were Manipurie and °erne eaid Ghoorkes, and for some time we did not know, but fax the first time fete favored ne. They turned out to be the men from Caohar, and we were saved, but not one moment too soon. I think that was the worst moment of all. and I felt as though I must break down utterly, but food and some brandy brought me to my senses, and I was all right. We had still eight days' march be- fore ne 'to get to British territory, but though we have been FIRED ON ALL 'THE WA' it has been an easy time compared with all we went through before; and yesterday we reaohed the British territory,and I took off my clothes for the first time her ten days last night. I forgot to say that before we had been out of the Residency an hour we looked baok to eee it in flames, and I knew that everything we had wee loaf, and my life was the only thing left. There is fearful excitement here over it. People say noth. ing so awf al hae happened since the mutiny. Now it remains to be seen what is to be done about getting'back the prieonere, and my anxiety on this amount I can't express. People say they will be all safe, but until I see Frank again "'shall not be content. Of coarse, all idea of going home is done for. I am goilig down to Calcutta to get some olothee, as I am literally destitute, and then return either here or to Shillong to wait for news of Frank ; but it is simply awful living in suepenee like this, and I almost wieh I were -a prisoner too. I am feeling terribly worn out and itt, bat have made an effort to write this, and let yon have hill partioulars me I know how. - • Love's Young Dream. Love's young dream •was a very bright • one, and its fulfillment will be bright, too if the bride will remember that she is a woman, and liable to all the ills peculiar to her sex. We remind those who are suffer- ing from any of these, that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Presoriptioh will renew the hue of youth in pale and sallow cheeks, oorreot irritating uterine diseane, arrest and cure ulceration and and inflammation, and in- fuee new vitality into a wasting body. "Favorite Presoription " is the only medi- oine for women, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manntaottwere, that it will give satisfaction in every one, or money will be refunded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle -wrapper, and faithfully carried out for , many years. • A Slight Misunderstanding. Texas Siftings: Irate individual -What did yon mean by telling Smith that I had been in jeil? Calm Individual -I did, not tell Smith yon had been in jail. I eimply said yon ought to be in jail. Irate Individual (calming down) -I beg your pardon. 1 roust have minunderetood him. were °rowan of thetn ; Home mg. Poor -The Brantford census commissioner Mr. Braokenbnry was the fink, shot alligives the population at 12,528, while the over, both lege broken, both arms, bnllete• aeseeoore make it 14,490. --1.11ranall,s1,146.,9612ffitse-Anu. A diftruntife—trelireilreirry—e s t a Indeed, they were not altered for the new article, eays the Dry Goods Review, and No.60 six-oord and No. 60 three•oord were left identical in both eize and number. To effect this the six-oord has to be made of yarn twioe as fine ae that demanded- in making the three -cord variety. The No. 60 oord is made of six strands of No. 120 yarn. The three-oord spool cotton is of the same number as the yarn ie made of. Six -cord spool cotton is always made from double its numbere. Thread is a simple thing, but it is simple there are 2,000 kinds of it, and esoh kind goes through hundreds of different petit:ease& Boxing for Boys. There is absolutely nothing air the way o reoreation so benefioial in every respeot to a boy as boxing. I am positive -and I know whereof I write, for as boy and Man I have tried them all, fenoing, wrestling, rowing, swimming, riding -that no one of them has the many advantages of boxing, says a writer in " Eferper'e- Young People." As an alt round developer it is unequalled ; not one of the boy's musoles remains inaotive ; beak, stomaoh, lege, arme, are all celled upon for vigorous Garvin°. But what I consider He, beet feature in its recom- mendation for hive is the very thorough thedieitialfifon of the boy must undergo. If a lad is quick to lose his temper, boxing will one hint ; it will teach him that no one who tete his temper get the better of him will beoome an expert sparrer ; it will speedily oonvinoe him the absolute necessity of keeping 000l in entire poeseesion of hie wit° in ord r to enstsinehireffortneareles-voide-delente-The boxer who oannot oontrol his temper i praotically at the meroy of a cool, ekilfal epponent. One oannot spar ' successfully and beoome flustered. A boxer musk ever be on the alert, hie wile constantly alive, looking fax an opportunity of assault ; he most be able to mot instantly and with 000l deliberation, as distinguished from wild, undirected action. He need do no running to develop the mueoles of hie lege or his lune; these are all continuously in action UAPPY iiI01Li8l4W10144-- Whiffs of Wisdom that Clomal:n at theOnsia Windows. In mixing oake dough use cups of exactly ..the same size fax measuring the different ingredienta. If a cake (tracks open when baking 14 1* either because the oven is too hot INA ceohe she outside before the inside is heated, or elee the oake was made too stiff. wo or three rose -genii= leavea put in when making grab -Apple jelly 'will gin it a delicious flavor Beat the yelk of apt egg ind spread on the top of reeks and pies just before put. ting them into she oven. The egg make. that shine seen on bakers' pies and oaken. In flavoring puddings, if the milk ie ride, lemon flavoring is good; but if the milk is ede„-„..eeee•zmeeseeese-ee-,eee-eeeeeeete4eene-e-e-eeeeeeee.ee-eeeeeeeeeeeeeee=a-_eeeeeeeeee.e.eee.-,-.eeee Nothing made with sugar, eggs and milk ehould reach the boiling point. The molaseee to be.ueed for gingerbread is greatly improved by being first boiled., then ettimmed. • Qil-olothe should never have soap used upon them, as the lye will destroy the polars and the finieh. - L NOTES AB TO NECKWEAR. Women Should Be at P- aine to Dress their, Necks becomingly. The dressing of the neok has much to do with a woman's good looks. If she has cords and bone e below her chin she is crude to bare herself. What she needs is a yard of beads, a pendant necklace, a ruff of far, flowers or fringe, or. a oo, liar as near her ear -holes as it can be /fitted. The lines which age first draws around the 'throat oan always be concealed by a velvet col- larette, to which anything oan be ap- pliqued-beadse medalliolose-miniaturese onff-buttons, flowers, brooches and even rings. Then there are passementerie band° in every width, jeweled with mediaeval, Egyp- tian and modern effecte that are very tiy. The Medici flat collars are not naive, or a eoarf of diaphanous gauze eboorthelly arranged_and_pieroed_with ewel-handled dagger or qiiaint ornament. -New k World. Over -Activity. Full exercise of the brain is favorable to health and longevity, and prolonged brain. work is not necessarily injurious when un- attended by hurry, anxiety or excitement. Where the nerve force is limited, the effeet of over-aotivity is dangerous, but in the young and strong it is not injurious. There are certain 000upations which are very wearing, snob as bank telling and l000mo- tive engineers. Then the speculator often become° a wreck through the teneion on his nerves ; also the politician, says the New York Ledger. Take a book- keeper using • one part • of the brain day after day, dealing with nothing but figures year After year ; he becomes tired, Hatless and, after a while, incapable of work. Give him a vacation or trip to the mountains, and he quickly recovers; in fact, the other brain cells are celled into use. American business men, as they grow older, do not reduce the nerv- ous expenditure to correspond' with its natural deoline. Business and domestic troubles wear upon the nerves. Cramming in schools is very bad in its results. The brain of the ohild suffering from overetudy robe the blood of elements provided for the growth of the body. As a result, the child is stunted, although the parents may have been fine animals. The Buffalo Vernacular. Buffalo Express: Lady -Will yon sell me that pretty puppy, little boy Ragged trroin-For a couple of plunk°. Ladv-What ? • R. 1J. -He's wart two wade. Lady -How is that ? R. 1:3.-A couple of cold cane '11 buy' him. Lady -Dear me What did you say? R. U.- YOTI kin have him fax two bones. Lady -Well, I deolare 1 I will take him. Here is a quarter fax you. It will buy a lot of bones. R. • U.-Aw, rase 1 Cen't yer under - 'stand? De dorg don't go fer leas'n two dollars. What English Radicals Demand. Review of Reviews : 1. The Land for the People. 2. An Eight -Hour Day. 3. The Ednotionel Ladder. 4. A People's Parliament. 5. The Free Commune. 6. Taxation of the Idlers. 7. Pensions for the Aged. Be Would Keep It Quiet, Chicago Tribune : Yonng wife (with innocent pride) -I made this pudding my- self, Harold. Young husband (ooneolingly)-Never mind, Imogene. Nobody will ever know it bat One. The employing carpentere of Milwaukee have deoided to give no more employment to union men, and 2,000 carpentere are looked ont. With a Omit pair of boote, & " Tam o'filhartier " cep or felt 11 knookebent," girl on " rought. it " ail day and come home in, good order, while flounces and frill e and gay Imo and dainty white mns• line look limp and dejooted.-Housekeepera' Weekly. • ex A Dead Shot Right at the seat of difficulty, is accom- plished by the Imre and steady, aim of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Don't fobl around with a pop -gun, nor a "Flint -look," when this reliable "Winoheeter" is within reaohi! Dr. Beget° treatment of catarrh is tat superior to the ordinary, and when direct - times ere ressone_-bly well fellow.ederestilts in a permanent cure. Don't longer be in- different to the verified claims of thie un- failing remedy. $500 is offered, in good faith, for an incurable cetee of Catarrh in the head, by its proprietore, the World's Dispensary Medical Associatien, Buffalo, N. Y. At all druggists. IMIN.1.1.1.1•MOIMM• Who Should "Bow" First. A great deal of pommel has been talked about the question of whose place it is to bow first when a lady and gentleman meet upon the street or in any public aseembly. 11 10 very absurd to say that a man should always wait until a lady has recog- nized him. In this, as in moat other mat - tem, common sense and mutual convenience • are the only guides. Many ladies ere near- sighted ; many others find great difficulty Iin remembering faces. • _____,Theimportentething, _of -courser -is theta- _______. man should not presume. When two people meet who are really acquainted it is not the' man who ebonld necessarily bow first, or the lady-il is whiohever of them is the firet to perceive and recognize the other. • Long Way' to Get Broken. Lecture on Fools. Admit One. gentleman 'who lectured on foole, printed his tickets as above. Suggestive, oertninly, and even nerceatio. What fools are they who offer the inroads of disease when they might be oared. Dr. Pieroe'e Golden Medioal Discovery is sold under a positive guarantee of its benefiting or oaring in every °see of Liver, Blood and Lung diets:tee, or money paid for it will be cheer- fully refunded. In alt blood taints and im- petritiee of whatever name or nature, it is most positive in ite oarative effects. Pimples, Blotohes, Eruptione, and all Skin and Scalp diseases, are radically cured by this wonderful medicine. Scrofalone die - me may affect the glands, causing swell- ings or tumore ; the bones, causing "Fever Sores," White Swellings," " Hip -joint Dia ease ;" or the tissues of the lunge, musing Pulmonary Consumption. Whatever its manifestations may be, "Golden Medical Disoovery " cures it. Epitaphs Upon Printers. • The Mencheeter,(Eng.)Times tells of some old epitaphienpon printers. Here ill , one : No more shall copy bad perplex my brain ; No more shall type's small faze my eyeballs strain; No, • more the proof's foul page create me troubles By errors, transpositions, outs and doubles; No more to overrun shall I begin ; No more be driving out or driving in ; The stubborn pressman's brow I now may scoff, Revised, corrected, finally worked off. Another epitaph reads as follows Weary of distributing pi, Pressed out of life, I now mast die. I've cut my stick, myfount is sped, My ease is ettpty, as in life my head ' In fact, my last impression is -I'm dead, • They Do Not Speak Now. New York Times: Edith (who was at Mre. Dinsmore's peaty the night before) - 1 met Charley in she hallway last night, and he kissed me. , Maud (who was also at the party) -Yes, he told me so. He skid he mistook you for me id the dark. • No Object. New York Herald : Mand—It is too bad, dear, that you never learned to dance. Ethel -I was never told that it was im- proper until it was too late to learn. Oseip Sohubin, whose olever novels are having enoh a vogue in Anetria, is not a men, as generally supposed, but . a young woman who writes under that name. ,Her real name is Lola Kirschner and she leads a retired life in a Bohemian villege. Her firet book, entilted " Ehre " was written when Min Kirschner was barely 20, and for some time was attributed to an Atietrian minister. • A great sheet of plate glees that fell and went to flindere in Brooklyn the other day had a queer history. It wets about twelve feet square and wee worth $1,200. 11 could have been made in this country, but it oonld not have been oarried to Brooklyn because of the tannele it would bevel° min through. It was too big to travel on ' the canals. So it was made in the south 'of France. It met with trouble in its trip &tutus the' Brooklyn Bridge, and had to be canted to one side to pees under the passenger platform. After all that, just as it reached ite destination it was smashed. Playing on the Ruins. Texas Siftings: "These firemen must be a frivolous eel," said Mr. Spillkine, who was reading a paper. 11 Why so ?" " I read in the paper that af ter a fire was under control the firemen played all nigh on the mine. Why didn't they go hom and go to bed like sensible men, instead o romping about like ohildren ? ' D. 0. L 22.. 91 11-eti atis •;! ihv 't PROMPTLY Cures Also 2 Neuralgia, • Lumbago, Sciatica, Sprains, B ruises, B urns, Wounds, 'Swellings, Soreness, Frost -bites, Stiffness, All Aches. The Clias. A. Wolff Co., • Baltimore, Md. Canadia4 Depot Toronto, Ont. CURED BY 310 TiE BEST COUGH MEDICINE. flOLD.27 zrmaaistre TRUIPII 100 StInbili Z•1103121.WINOMMinaft CURIA it F: E DITOR:-Please inform your readers that I have a positive rerneav 1 disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been perinanentiv J ')o glad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any oi your reaaers .1 they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. Respectfully, T. A. 81.0K fa' Wont, Adelaide et.. TORONTO., ONTARIO. -77 "URE F' lifWhen 1 say Curo 1 do not . GI(iTEliiplijiWAAIYDEAFRI.T11111 1 CU „,, .„, , . t 4 s'4 tnerely to stop them fnr a time, and )ave them rehilm digtaln. IIMEAN'ADADIVAI_DUDE: 1 !lava made the disease of Epilepsy or Falling Slickness a life-long sti.dy., I warraist my remedy to a Worst cases. l3ecause others have failed is no reason for not oow receiving* care, S gine fot a treatise and a Free Dottie of my Infallible -Remedy Girt, /Post Offico It costs yen nothing for a trial, and it will cure goo. Addresse-443Fr" & letteatibli Attie* we WIES' 0ELAIDE STREET, TonoNiro. • Ate ilatitinta