Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

York Herald, 29 Sep 1876, p. 3

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\V A nameless grave, indeed, with not even the number or the sex of its Unfort- unate inmates specified ! The slab bore the date of but a week or two subsequent to the catastrophe, yet spoke “ of lapse of time." How impossible, therefore, to discover new whose bones bad mould- ered beneath it into dust. His Lucy might be there, or she might not . It was one of the few tombs that exhibited no trace of care; but a tuft of violets, the sweet breath of which betrayed them, chanced to be growing at the edge of it, and Derrick plucked them, and placed them in his bosom. He seemed to feel certain now that she had come ashore somewhere; and why not here? How solemn and still it was! The very air, though odorous and fresh, seemed full of the‘presence of the dead ; and Ralph’s thoughts were with them; so he quite forgot the purpose with which he had visited the little Village, light after light in which was being quenched beneath him, for it was growing late. “ Bless my soul and body, what's this 3’” He glued his face into the church win- dow for upwards ofa minute, and when he took it away again, it was white as the marble font that gleamed within. Had Ralph Derrick seen a ghost, that- he slipped down from that window-sill with such excessive precipitation, and stood beneath it with his hat ofl', wiping his cold brow ? “ Am I awake or dream- ing ?” murmured he, striking himself a sounding blow upon the chest. “Was the brandy at yonder inn so strong that it has drugged me ? or has this moon- light, as some hold it does" been stealing away my wits '1 or has the subject of _1_ny thoughts suggested names of which I had believed no record survived ?” Once more Ralph took his station at the window, and this time did not leave it until he had not only made himself master, although with pain and difiiculty, of that part of the inscription which had arrested his attention, but had even transferred it as well as his position per- mitted, to his pocket-book, word for word: Some sacred words were added, but they told them nothing more concerning those three persons, namely his lost. wife’s father and mother, and himself. Ralph Gaveston. aliasDerriek, had been gazing upon his own memorial window, set up to commemorate his death more than .thirty years ago ! RALPH GAVESTONE, Am 22, WHO PERISHED IN THE SAME STORM. Who had done it? And who the means ? And how was it that he and the Meades were associated together upon yonder painted glass, and yet not .she who was the only bond between them ? Why was not the death of that sweet saint maid mention of in a place so fitting for its record, and where its own unworthy name had found admitt- anceâ€"not the one which had stood upon passenger list of theNorth Star? Into his perplexed and wandering mind there came some half forgotten tale, heard from he knew not whom, of some Scotch laird who, gifted with the seeond-sigzht, {areeives a funeral pass byâ€"-â€"the cofiins orne by some relatives of his, and fol- lowed by troops of mourning friendsâ€" and marvels that among the woeful crowd he does'not recognize himself. CHAPTER XXVIIâ€"(Contlnued) Notwithstanding that Coverton Church is “ gritty,’, like all the rest of the archi- tecture in that locality,and presents the appearance of an ecclesiastical edifice awathed in sand-paper, it is by no means pppicturesque; while the spot on which it stands can compare for beauty with any God’s acre in England._ It is more than a hundred feet above the level of the village, and commands a glorious view, which would be a complete pano- rama, but for the steep wooded hill, which protects it from the bitter north, and assists the genial climate to make a flower-garden of the churchyard three parts of the year round. Even thus early in summer, had Ralph’s visit been paid in the daytime instead of the night, he would have seen it bright with bad and blossom, for almost eyery grave was itself a littie parterre, tended by pious hands. Poor wasted human forms, but not‘ seldom dearer to others, than the handsomest and healthiest, often come to Coreton to prolong for a little their painful lives, until they flit away like shadows; indeed, if you read the grave stones, you will find three out offour are ‘ records of departed Youth. The newly , Married pass their honeymoons at the, pleasant little village, and those who ave been sentenced to death by the l Doctors come also thither, and a strange ‘ and touching contrast they afford. The low large moon was flooding the sacred place with its soft radience, so that the inscriptions were as plain to be seen as in broad noonday. From knoll to knoll, each roofing sacred dust, Ralph wandered not unmoved; for he too had lost a dear one by untimely death, and even now was looking for the place where haply she might lie. He would have felt it in some sort of comfort to know that her bones rested beneath the rounded turf, rather than in yonder shifting deep, although, beyond the wooded village with its scatted lights, it lay as motion- less at present as a silver pall. No less than thrice, he came upon the tombs of those with whom he had been a fellow- passcnger on board that doomed ship so many years ago. Upon a huge recumâ€" bent sIab, which evidently roofed the remains of more than one person, were engraved these words: “Beneath this stone are laid tnc bones of those who were washed ashore from the wreck of the North Star, but whose remains, from lapse of time, or other causes have not been identified. ‘ Requiescent in pace.’ ” nu) RACHEL, ms mm, mm 56, nnowxnn n am, Sun. 14, Li). 1832. AND ALSO 0F 'MI‘RK AB B BY. FRANK MEADE, AGED 66 1N MEMORY OF For a moment of ecstacy seemed to : possess this worldwearied Wanderer, ‘ and all the noonlit scene to assume an aspect altogether strange, such an earth and sea, however beautiful, can only show to the pure and hopeful; then a sharp thought pierced his brain. She imight have been alive when she caused that window to be set up, and yet not now. He knew that those gorgeous ‘eyes kept their bright colors for many a year nndimmed: supposing that he al- lowed five years (in which, by the by, ‘Ralph was very near the truth) as a reasonable to have elapsed between the shipwreck and the time that this mem- orial was erectedâ€"and in less time, how was it possible she could have saved the money for such a purposeâ€"athat would still live more than quarter ofa century betWecn sts erection and of the present time. A quarter of a century l a gener- ation of human life! Time enough to die, to marryâ€"but no, his Lucy would never have done that. This window,‘ showing so tender a regard after such a lapseof years, was evidence in some sort to the contrary ; and since he him self had never forgotten .her, and only now, after a lonely lifetime, was medi- tating another marriage, he felt no ap ‘ prehension upon that score. No; ifhisl Lucy was alive, she was still his; and free to welcome him as of old to her loving arms. The only question with which he had now any real concern was, whether he still lived? Henceforward it would be his whole business in the world to find this matter out. And first, she must certainly have been washed ashore alive; and somewhere in tlfise parts. Who, then, so fit to give him information upon that point as old Jacob Forest who had lived in Coveton all his life, and at that time, in the very cottage on the beach whet-Blah hepheww now resided? So Ralph Derrick (for, like every body else, we may still con- tinue to call him so) took the path that he originally had intended to take after all, notwithstanding his marvellbus disâ€" covery, and made staight for Jacob’s dwelling on the hill; no longer with the intention ofwinning a bride, but of re- covering a long-lost wife. Some men are great on excusesâ€"they can give you a. dozen where one is all sufficient, or they will persist in offoring excuses when nothing of the kind in ne- cessary. Our friend Job Tofiit, was a man of this description. And he wu a polite man, tooâ€" ainfully polite. “Beg your pardon, sir,’ he would deferentially say to the man who came nigh jolting him over. An English contemporary snggests that the health of sailors and the comfort of life on board ship would be prompted if the practice were introduced of eating the rats which swarm in most ships. There is really no reason why rats should not be eaten as well as rabits and sqxfin'ele. They are clean feeders. and extremely particular as to keepin their bodies free from dirt. Rats whic have existed in the hold of a grain-carrying ship m he . tooth-one ' 4 Job was once drawn to service on a jury, 1nd at the same time a. neighbor of his, Peleg Wimbleton, had also been drawn. When the court came to be open- od, only eleven jurymen were present. l'olcg \Vimbleton failed to put. in an Apâ€" pearance. The sheriff summoned in vain “Your honor," said ."l'oh, rising in his lace, and addressing the comt, “Mr. , imblcton is a near neighbor of minu, and I don’t think you can depend upon him. if you want this trial to go on, I guess you had better find another man in big plane." “Mr. Toflit, is Peleg Wimbleton at home?" “I think he is, sir." “Does he send an excuse for not up- pouing 1‘: _ wu- “I think he does, your honor ; I think you may put it down as a. fixed fact, and rub his name out." “Ho-w l” demanded the judge, Iternly ~â€"“not depend upon him ’I Dues ho abâ€" sent himself I" " “I don't know as he’s sent one, your honor, but, to my certain knowledge, he has quite a number of ’em. In the fire: place, if your honor will please to listen, ho fol! down off his barn~beam this mom- ing and broke his neck.” "Broke. his neck 1" “Yes, your honorr-ahort of. And in the next placeâ€"’ Job Toflit bowed gracequy, 3nd re- sumed his seat. The judge regarded him stornly for a brief space, but de- tecting nothfng marvellous in the calm and placid face he turned to ‘the shag“! and éave directions for nu plying “the lato _l_’_eleg Wimbleton’l p on. tho "Hold; Mr Toflit. The excuse {I nui- fioiom." . Nay, who upon earth could have wished thus pioust to perpetuate their memory except Lucy hernelf‘? How she could of had the power to do so, in so splended and enduring a manner would of been of itself sufficiently mira- culous, but that that circumstance was swallowed up, like Pharaoh‘s serpents, by the still greater miracleâ€"â€"the fact gbat she was among the Living I Surely, thinks he, he should be there, to to shew respect to the common friend de arted, whom he must have known so we 1, though he misses no remembered face. Then on a sudden it strikes him that he himself must be in the coflinâ€" that it is his own interment of which he is the Witnessâ€"and his heart fails within him because. he feels that he has had his warning. and stands indeed with the shadow of black death. Why Ralph should think of such a tale in such a place may perhaps have been easily accounted for, but once rememhered he applied it with lightning speed to the subject in his mind, but only in an in- verse sense. The reason why his Lucy’s name was not upon that mystic monu- ment, where those of her parents and her husband were glowing in purple and gold, must he that she herself was alive. SUFFICIENT EXCUSE. TO BE CONTINUEI‘. Eating Rats. i‘ If grease, fat, or main, which I“ commonly employed to make soap, are lgated with an excess of common salt, i'mmonia, and water, a soda. soap separ- ates, leaving chloride of ammonia in liquor, together with the excess of am- monia and salt. This reaction is the consequence of the great solublity of ammonia soap in ammoniaeal water and the insolublity of soda soap in water containing more than 1; per cent of salt. The ammonia at first unites with fatty acids; then the sodium in the salt ex- change places with the ammonia in the soap, forming, as we said, a soda soap and chloride of ammonia. It is essen- tial that there be an excess of ammonia and salt present in order that the reacâ€" tion take place. One hundred parts of grease requires 15 to_ 29 parts of ammon: The proper care of tools is 0.1qu h attended with an important economy. In smnll establishments this seldom receives due attention. A: a rule, a. tool belong: to’ anybody who happen: to have it ;con- aequently, no one is responsible tor n. It is neglected, abused, mislaid, brokon, stolen, or worn out before it has random ed half the service it is capable of per- forming. In some shops the time of on man, and sometimes two, is constantly lost in looking for missing tools and put- ting them in order for use when found : old a. great deal of capital is wanted I] the premature destruction of tools 'whith, with proper care, should have lasted for years. In all manufactories there should be a place for tools not in constant on, and some one 5116mm charge 0! them. A very good system, which ] found always to work well, provides fo: the charging of every toolto the man “4 iug it. When it is returned he receives a credit for it which balances his account with the tool department. For tool: added to his individual kit, such as files and other implements supplied by em- ployers, charge is made and no credit is given until the tool is broken or entirely worn out, when a. credit entry is made, with date, showing how long it has been in use. Such a record induces men to be careful of tools, and by inculcating good habits in this respect, leads to econ- omy in a direction in which waste and extravagance are easily overlooked. - In, 20 to ‘30 parts salt, «Ind 200 to 300 of Water. ‘ \ M, ~â€" A Sawdust can be converted into aliquld of wood, and afterwards into a. solid, flexible, and almost indestructible mass, which, when incorporated with animal matter, rolled, and dried, can be used for the most delicate impreuions, as well as for the formation of solid and dur- able articles, in the following matter: Immerse the dust of any kind of wood in diluted sulphuric acid! sufficiently strong And he told the ahoemakera if they would help him to a. shop and forge, he would make nails for them. They fur- nished him what was required, and he went at the work in earnest, He made better nails than had ever been made be. fore in that section. He took appmnti- cos, and enlarged his shop, and in time Von Koben’a nails were demanded on both sides of the mountains. By slow but sure degree: he rose to opulence a! a manufacturer, honorod and respected as the founder of his own fortune. And it all came, as he was proud to tell his chil- dren in the after years, from his having learned a trade in his youth. Who would throw away a hard full of soap ora. box of hard soap? Were it not otherwise useful, it would be of great value as a. fertilizer, if spread, in its raw state, about our fruit trees or berry bushes. But, after being dissolved in wat~ er and passing through the wash-tub, gleaming the imperceptible element of the best manure from solid linen, its fer- tilizing power is vastly increased. In- deed we may almont say that the average soapauds from the kitchen and laundry is worth more thm the soup that produce: to aflect the fibres, for some déys; th; finer parts are then passed through a sieve, well stirred, and allowed to settle. Drain the liquid from the sediment, and mix the latter with a proportionate quan. tity of animal offal, similar to that used for glue. Roll the mass, pack it in molds, and allow it to dry. “Come, Master Conrad," said the nail- er one day, in a jolly mood ; “why not Be! the world an example? Show them that the sun of a. rich man can learn a tnade. Who knows but that it may profit you one of these days 7” _ t, Time passed on, and Herr von Koben died, leaving his great wealth to his son Conrad. A me years thereafter the armies of Fmderick came sweeping all through Silesia, and Conrad’a inheritanca was gone. In poverty he wandered “my towards the mountains of Bohemia until he came to a. town where a» host of uhoemagers were at a stand for want of Innis. Shoes were in great demand (or 'fi'ze‘soldiem, and a. great price was offered for nails. “ Here,” thought Conrad, “ is my opportunity. Let us see how my trade will serve me.” Not far away lived Herr Von Kobon, a wealthy land owner, whose son, when not It school was wont come to the nailer'n, where he would by the hour and watch the bright sparks As they flew in showers from the mg‘mg uni}. I'he old story of the uncertainty of riches and the importance of learning a. trade is brought to mind by the follow- lngzâ€"Karl Frostem, the old nailmaker of Lubun, =11 Silesia, was a jolly, story- telling man, who sang at his work, and whine busy hammer made merry Eusic. Jvu uuu v; uuvuw um :- rw... . The youth fell in with "2119 hfimor of the thing ; and pulling 05 his fine jacket he donned a leather a. ton, and went to the anvil. He was a right, quick lad, and when he had once attempted to make a nail, he had a pride to make it well ; and so it come to pass that ere long he could make shoe nails as deft- ly and as well as Could old Karl. Iawdust Converted into Wood. " The Value of a. Trade. can mm SALT-3 Care of Tools. éhai-ge o! Mark Twain recently tried his hand writing up a distressing accident for a local paper, and this is how he did it : Last evening about 6 o’clock,‘ as Wm. Schuyler, an old and respected citizen of South Park, was leaving his residence to go down town, as had been his custom for many years, with the exception only of a short interval in the Spring of 1850, during which he was confined to his bed by injuries received in attempting to stop a runaway horse by thoughtlessly throwing up his hands and shouting, which, if he had done so even a single moment sooner, must inevitably have frightened the animal still more instead of checking its speed, although disastrous enough to himself as it was, was render. ed more melancholy and distressing by reason of the presence of his wife’s moth- er, who was there and saw the occur: rence ; notwithstanding it is at least like- ly, though not necessarily so, that she should be reconnoitering in quite anoth- er direction, when incidents occur, not being vivacious and on the lookout, as a ' general thing, but even the reverse, as iher mother is said to have stated, who is (no more, but died in the full hope of a I glorious resurrection upward of three years a o, aged 86, being, a Christian wo- [man wi hom gums, as n were, poor in 5pr0perty in consequence of the fire in I 1859, which destroyed every solitary -_thing she had in the world. But such lie life. Let us take warning by this solemn occurrence, and let us endeavor so to conduct ourselves that when we lcome to die we can die. Let us plan our hands upon our hearts and say_ with earnestness and sincerity that from thi. day forth we will beware of the intoxi- kcating bowel. I O “ N 0,” said the bysfander, dryly, “he met with his sad accident by jumping over a. shed.” r i‘ What,” screamed the other in amazement, “did he jump over a. shed rig'hfjrgm th_e_ grognd ’1” u. u u c"‘No,” replica the wag, “he jumped right {mm a. gnule'e lmgf.” 7 OAS the carriage rolled away the crowd dispersed. I When the boat stopped at the foot of Market Slip the other morning, a. boy with a broken arm was borne from the cabin to a carriage. By the time he wan comfortably pillowed in the vehicle, one of a crowd of excited peeple who were straining every nerve to catch a glimpse of him, frantically yelled : “ What’s the matter with him, eh 1" “ Broke an arm,” replied a bystander. “Gracious !" said the first man, “did he £9.11 from 79: hpusg top ’I”_ Somebody dropped some quicksilver on tho sidewalk in Main street to-day, ,and an Indian tried to pick it up. First lhqmade a grab at it with his thumb and ‘forefinger, and was astonished when he couldn’t pick it up. He was determined to have that quicksilver ; so he unwaund in. handkerchief from his hat, and spread~ ling it on the ground got a chip and scrap- ‘ed the quicksilver into it. A look of [triumph shot from his eagle eye as he gathered up the four corners of the hand- lhex-chief, but it was replaced by one of honor and disgust when the metal ran 1 through the fabric like water through a ‘seive. ' Looking at the metal as it lay on the ground, he launched a vicious kick at it, and utteredthe ejaculation used by An English generation on the much from the cradle to the grave is en instruo‘ tive spectacle. Let us trace the physical fortune which any million of us may res- Iouably expect. The number, to begin with,is made up of 511,745 boys and 488,255 girls, a disproportion which by- andâ€"by will be redressed by the undue mortalit of the boys, and will be reversed before tile close of the strange eventful history. More than a quarter of these children will die before they are five years oldâ€"in exact numbers, 141,387 boys and 121,795 girls. The two sexes are now nearly on a level. The next five years will be much less fatal. In the succeed- ing five yearsâ€"from ten to fifteenâ€"the mortality will be still further reduced.â€" Indeed, for both sexes, this is the most healthy period of life; the deathâ€"rate, however, is lower for boys than for girls. There will be some advance in deaths in the next five years, and still more in the five which follow, but 634,045 will cer- tainly enter on their twenty-sixth year. Before the next ten years are at an end, two-thirds of the women will have mar- ried. The deaths during that period will be 62,052, and of these no fewer than 27,134 will be caused by consumption.â€" Between thirty-five and forty-five, a still larger death-toll will be paid, and little more than half the original bandâ€"ii ex- act number), 502,915â€"will enter or; their fortyâ€"sixth year. Each succeeding ten years, up to seventv-five, will now be- come more fetal, and the numbers will shrink terribly. At seventyâ€"five, only 161,124 Wlll. remain to be struck down, and of these 122,559 will have perished by the 85th year of their age. The 38,- 565 that remain will soon lay down their burdens ; but 2,153 of them will struggle on to be ninety-five, and 233 to be one hundred years old. Finally, in the one hundred and eighth year of the course, the last selltery life will flicker out. Suchflthen, is the average 10¢ of e million W In and mm Begs to announce to the inhabitants of Richmond Hill and surrounding neighborhood, that 110 has built a. new Hearse and commenced the FOR HIRE . Funeral Furnishings, C(1th and Caskets in every style. Funeral Furnishings supplied at A_WRIGHT & SON, CARRIAGE BUILDERS, A FINE NEW IIEARSE -V _.l ,7" a. keno iliryrérrwhen s'ome othor £01109 makol & om. , Mark Twain as a. Reporter. From the Cradle to the Gun. UNDERTA KING BUSINESS. FROM 10 TO 100 DOLLARS An Astonished Indian. How it Happened. RICHMOND HILL, ¢r<=-.r<«‘.~ CALL AND EXAMINE. Splendid material, extra value. He employs his ’own taiiors, and is prepared to W. A. begs leave to state that, although the past season has been one of very great depression commercially, his receipts have been considerably in advance of any former year. He attributes this result to the facilities be has of'buying in And has been selected with more than usual care and with a due regard to the wants of his numerous customers. W. A. calls special attention to his large stock of TO THE CENTENNIAL AND BACK. and save one-third the ' ' cost 0 aiming and get a paintthat is much P allntsomerfgnd will last twice as long as any other paint. Is prepared ready for use in white or any color desired. 18 on many thousandsbl the finest buildings of the country, many of which have been painted six years, and now look as Well as when first painted. True CHEMICAL PAINT has taken First Preminms a‘ twenty of the State Faira of the Union. Sam la card of color: .391: free. Adcvlressz‘ Miller Bros., 109 Water 8!, Cleveland, 0., or sY. Enamel Paint .An n1 ‘vv‘ 06., '103 Chambers Sn, N.Y. Is devoted to the interests of Farmers, and con- tains articles by experienced editors on agriculâ€" ture, hortmulture, thorough-bred stock, the dairy ingerest, poultry, markets, hygiene} etc. Terméiâ€"Pslfld be: anmim" advance; single copies, 10 cents. Address, This instrument is the most handsome and best Piano ever before manufactured in this country or Europe, having the greatest; possible depth, riches and volume of tone, combined with It mm brillimicy, deafness and perfect evenness throughout the entire scale, and above all a sur- rising duration of sound, the power and sympaâ€" hotic quality of which ncvur chunch under the most delicate or powerful touch; space forbids a full description of this magnificent instrument. Agents discount given where I have no agents. Remember you take no risk in purchasing one of those CELEBRATED IXSTURMENTS. If after (6) days test trial it proves unsatisfactory the money vou have paid will be refunded upon return of instrument and freight charges paid by mo both ways. Pianos warranted for Six yours Address, Theso remnxkable i strument-s possess capa- cities for musical efle s and expression never before attained, adapted for amateur and profes- sional, and an ornament in any parlor. Excel in _Q_ual_i!:y of _T_one_, thogoggb: Work- manhh‘ip, Elégant Designs & Finish, And Wonderful variety of their combination solo stops. LS” Beautiful new centennial styles now ready. Address, DANIEL F. BEATTY. STov§s_1‘0R WOOD Am) COAL, ARE YOU GOING TO PAINT ‘? Then Buy MILLER BROS. DANIEL F. BE ATTY’S LARGE STOCK 0F FURNITURE CHEAP FOR CASH. NEW FALL AND WINTER GOODS At the Concrete House. A chance The Farmers’ Advocate, BEATTY BEATTY A choice selection of Groceries, Hardware and Crockery always on hand. The highest price allowed for good Butter and Eggs. Grand Square and Upright. WILLIAM WELD. DANIEL F. BEATTY. PARLOR ORGANS. His Stock this Fall is Very Large and Attractive, Farmers’ Advocate, London, Ont. FLO UR AND FEED ALWAYS ON HAND. I‘ UBLISHED MONTHLY BY Make' Garments to order 2 A Good Fit Guaranteed. Washington, New Jersey, U.T.O. Washington, New Jersey, U.S.A And his invariable practice of' giving his customers the benefit. The Best and. Cheapest Markets, """‘ "' 4‘ “"‘ BEST IN USE! DANiEL r. BEATTY, once 1n 100 years. Selling of Room Paper at Centennial Prices. Usual stock of Groceries always on hand. Intends to give all a. Chance to all sizes, at Toronto Prices for Cash only. FALL WHEAT Is HARDY, standing the winter even superior to the Seneca or Clmvson, has a large smooth hemland me- dium straw. Its kernel and ohafi are both white. (CLAwsox) Is a. smoothâ€"headed white wheat with red chufi‘; Very I-Inrdy, Productive, and of excellent quality. Also DEIIIL, Gold lVIedal, Midge Proof, SCOTT, Treadwell, Turkey, ete.. SEED “:IEEAT. ‘ The Silver Chair WEI EAT ' FOR SEED Send for my Fall Wheat circular, Free. The Seneca Corner of Adelaide d3: Jarvis streets, P. G. SAVAGE READY-MADE CLOTHING William Bennie, PIANO 2 Sqed Store, CALL AND SEE HIS STOCK 0F Washington, New Jersey, U. S. A. WM. ATKINSON â€"‘~ and Wagon Maker, Undértaker, etc. Residenceâ€"Nearly opposite the Post Office, Richmond Hill. B’BATTY Lyman, Clark & 65: Northrup and Lyman, and Lyman Brothers & 00., ‘ who obtain them at very low prices, from J. 13'. Henry, Curmn & 00,01 New York, and this trash is supplied to unprinciplod retail vendors. who sell the some as mv genuine Pills and Ointment, which are manufactured only at 683, Oxford Street, London, and may be obtained from the following Firms, viz.:â€"â€" Messrs. Evans, Mercer & 00., Montreal. Messrs. Avery. Brown cl: Co.,Ha1ifnx,N. S. Messrs. T. B. Barker & Sons, St. John, N. B. Messrs, Elliott. & 00., Toronto. Who import them direct 1mm hero. Vile and s mrions imitations of “Holloway‘s Pills and Oin ment," are manufactured and sold under the name -' of “Holloway & 00.,” by J. F. - Henry, Curran a: 00.,Druggists, I ‘New York, with an assumed r a. d e m a. r k, thus â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"« â€"In Canada, the pri n cip it} v -= Wholesale Den- lers in these Counterfeitn are 'fHOMAS SE DMAN, CARRIAGE find Wang Maker. Undertaker, etc. The Pills purify the Blood, correct an disorders of the Liver, Stomach, Kidneys and Bowels, and are invaluable in all complaints luciden‘hl to Females. Each Pot and Box bears the British Govem. ment Stamp, with the words “HOLLOWAY'S PILLS AND OINTMENT, LONDON,” en aved thereon. 0n the lube} is the address, 533, xrord Strept,L0{xdon. _ _ A. >_ - The Ointment is the only reliable famed for Bad Legs, Old Wounds, Sores and Ulcers of ow- over long standing. For Bronchitis, Diptheriu, Coughs, Colds, Gout, Rheumatism. and all Skin Diseases it has no equal. . the Unitéd Sfintes. DANIEL F. BEATTY I deem it my flat to state that 'my Pins and Qint'lyqptfige {wit er manuhwtured not sold in HE GREATEST WONDER OF MODERN TIMES. HOLLOWAY’S PILLS AND OINTMENTI 'Irgieem'itr myrdqlt‘y‘t‘o Em?” pm 'my I’ills_gnd THOMAS HOLLOWAY .533. Oxford Street. ‘ London, April 15%} 1876. BEWARE OF VILE AND ABDMINABLE GUHNTBRI'BITS. PIANO AND ORGANS Grand Square Upright. CONCRETE HOUSE, Richmond Hill Washington, New Jersey, U.S.A. Emaiciunl. BEST IN USE". PIANO 2 do: Nervoua Debility,-or (m toms which this distress rest assured of an eflect by the judicious ’use of this most remedy. y of the hundredvlyhii; disease assumes, may umng and even m mg. v no 0 13 SOLD ONLY IN CA F. Am ms. 61). By A sum“: m PA- mx'r MEDICINE szm: a TEEOUGEOU'D TEE G ODE. Fun Directions for Use, in the English, French. German, Italian, ' Dutch, 8 amt-1h, Portuguese, Danish, Russian Turkish, ersian, mndostam. Madrnsse. Bengaiee, Chinese and Japanese Lun- guages, accompany each case. , The beneficial ofi’ocbs of the Phosphodyne are frequently shown from the first day of its admi- nistration, by a. remarkable increase of nervous power, with a feeling of vigor and comfort,ta which the patient has long been unaccustomed, Digestion la improved; the appetite increase! wonderfullv; the bowels become regular ; the eyes brighter; the skin clear and healthy. and the hair acquires strength. showing the importance of the act-20% of the l’hosphodyne on the organ: 0: nu n 1011 Fin 0.1137, the Phosphpdyne maintain! a. certain degree of activity in the previous! debilitated nervous system; its use enables debilitated organs to return to then- sound state and perform their natural functions. Persona suflering txom Nervoua Debility,-or y of the hundred lymp- tnmn whinh ‘11:“ And... -0“. a:__-.._ Aâ€" tfie lungs; liq/é; i333, ’lfiudfigy‘é: BEBE’mfi'th" "I; bestlnes with a, harmony, vxgor, yet mildneu um paralleled in medicine. The Phosphodyne gives back to the human structure, in a suitable form, the phosphoric or animating element of life, which has been wasted, and exerts an important influence directly on the spinal marrow and nervous system. of a. nutritive, tonic and invigomting character, maintaining that buoyant energy of the b ' ‘ npd Iqu‘scplsgsyss LA... “.th “Mun”... LL. , . V. fl" â€" - w-“ “Menu-«w- “1-” tom which renders the mind cheerful, brilliant, and energetic, entirely overcoming that dull, in, active, and sluggish disposition which many per: sons experience in all their actions. Business Nervous Debilfty’jfl ‘3 Sick Headache its stages Lassibude Premature Decline And an moi-Lid conditions of the system mixing from whatever cause. The action of the Phospho dyno is twofoldâ€".011 the one hand increasing the principle which constiwtes nervous oner . and on tho other the most powerful b10011 an flesh generating agent known; thrlmforfi, fl Illa-Walla" medicine for renovating impaired and broken- down constitutions. It quickly improves the junc- tions of assimilation to such a degree, that where for years an emnciuted, anxious, oedaverous, and semi-vital condition has existed, the flesh will rapidly increase in quantitz) and flrmfi'ea’s, and the whole system return a. state of robust health. The Phosphodyne acts electrically upon the organization ; for instance, it assists nature to generate that human electricity wgch renew! and rebuilds the osseous, muscul ,‘ nervqul, mnmh..-“....- “a; “Mull- “HAM”- v membranous uhdrorrgdnlc éyétems. It 0 was? on the system without exciting care or t ought u 013 _i11‘{liyid15al a? tp’ghe progess. _It mpvea UNDER DISTINGUISHED PAT. RONAGE. DR. BRIGHT’S L mg: d 0330 «no In: A - petite my 1’ Hypochondria Female Com mints Genbz‘al Dab ity Indigestion ' flatulence Incgmqit'y for Study or The New Curative Agent, and‘only Ito- h'able Remedy for Nervous and Liver Complaints. This Phbsfihutio combination is renounced by most eminent members of the Me cal. Profession to be WWW $95,“?,P9W6Y.'Â¥.'°P121!!Sh1n¢ u, A _sL,1-. H It is agreeable to the palate. and. innocent in its action, while retaining 9.11 its extraordinary pm {remiss ; and as a specific, surpassing 8.11 the known hempeutic agents of the present day for the speedy and perm unent cure ofâ€" ' - Nervous Frustration Shortness of. Breath- Livar Complaints Tremblin of the Hands Palpitation of the heart andL b1 _ Dizziness Impaired N tritlon Nols'gs in the Head and Manta! updhyokfl Doâ€" éfieTvitBHi'fi of this fibdy by’r 3&1? fifl- “2:31:33? uentiul constituents of €119 171003 an: nerve sub. stance, and for developing all the powers and functions of the system to the highest degree. PHOSPHODYNE. Protected by Royal Letters Pakim' Dated October 11th. 1809. Dr. Bright’s Phbsphodyna AMES, TOYS, ML, FOR SALE AT the H" [.0 Book Stan ' (0ZONIO OXYGEN.) at. s only) Timidi y Eruptions of the Skin Impaired Sight and Mo. In Nervoflfmmr ' Impoverlnhefl; Blood Nerxqug Debxlfi‘y.m In pression ‘ Canspmptioq (in is. first

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