Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 16 Jun 1887, p. 7

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I .'â-  rOKTUXK-TELLIS Q. gjfcsof XecruiDuocy lu Old lu the Doings ot Miwbath'ii Wltcheaâ€" Mysteries and Superstitiuus of the Bliusk Art. 'One â€" two â€" three." " What does that mean ?" " YoQ must hold the tea-cup aloft and /gwirl it three times in order to bring the t8»-groands into a fortune-telling shape." " Oh, it is a c^«e of ' well shakieii before >taken.' " "Is it?" " Yea. A fortune that only oovered the 'bottom of the tea-oup would be a very mninterestinK one-" " But here are ' AJps on Alps ' of tea- .groands on the side of my cup." ' " Bead me my cup of tea, Sybil of fate ; Tell what it holds for me Of love or hate.' " * This," said the sybil, describing a circle in the bottom of the cup, " is the course of trae love, and it runs smooth. This tri- angle of black specks is a wish. This black â- â€¢qoare is a letter. This flock ot birds means good news. Here are money and a â- flnrprise." " What is that thing on the side of the â- cup?" " That is an anchor of tea leaves. It is 4be symbol of hope." " Here is a visitor in my cup," cries one. " BUe it. If it is hard, it is a man ; if it ia aoft, it is a lady." The long tea-joint is fished out and proves to be soft â€" so the guest will be a X^y. The gifted member of a company who can read the tea-cups finds her hands :fall. No guest is so dignified that she does not evince son e curiosity as to her future. Sometimes the mildest-maauered one finds a gallows iu the mystical dregs. When the leaves have no shape, but are maased iu a dark pyramid, it is a "badfor- tone." Occasionally the distinct shape of .ft ooffin can be traced. Then an entrancing ahadder runs through the entire group. The plot thickens. The interest deepens. The tea-leaves become important factors in the happiness of a household. Experts in forecasting events find rare things in the geometric lines of tea-grounds, and it has become the fashion at tea gatherings to read aloud each cup in turn, some ladies even declining to leave the table until the cup is read. It is not as sociable a social custom as palmistry. A man who despises the tattling of a tea cup has no aversion to having his hand held by a pretty girl while the lines are read. But as men are not, as a rule, given to tea-drinking, they 'Will not grope after futurity in tea leaves. But the tea cup oracle is a very harm- leos, inexpensive form of destiny. Its present popularity is doubtless owing to that secret craving after the supernatural which marks the age. II gives expression to an almost despairing wish to see the coming to-morrow. And in response to this demand come the soothsayers, astrologers, seers, clair- voyants, seventh daughters of seventh daoghters, and others who predict future events. There are secret sessions where the flower and chivalry of the best society attend, paying a fee that ranges from $1 to $8â€" just from curiosity, you know ! What to learn 7 The secrets of the past, present and future. There is always some lucky hit â€" lacky for the fortoae- teller. The most ot people who have lived to any age have friends coming from a distance. Many have relatives who die and leave them fortunes. Young people are usually in love with some one of the opposite sex who ia either dark or fair; and a journey IS imminent iu nearly all conditions. Crossing the water may m>ian going over a ferry or a running brook as well as the BBIDK8 or THE MAD KINU. Traffic Ending of a Strange Mauia Auiong: the Maidens of Bavaria, A curious feminine mania is called to mind by the recent tragic news from Munich. Two young ladies of that city â€" Baronessesâ€" have committed suicide by drowning iu the Starnberg Lake, at the very spot where the mad King Louis drowned himself last year. The names of these ladies are familiar to all who have been admitted to the best Munich society. They were sisters, aged 23 and 26, and were famed for their beauty. Their family is a very noble and wealthy one. The mania to which they fell victims had its origin fifteen or sixteen years age. The young Tting was then at the height of his romantic fame. His ideally handsome likeness was to be seen everywhere, and everywhere you heard talk of his poetic melancholy, his romantic spirit and confirmed celibacy. Naturally he became an object of intense interest to sentimental young ladies. Presently, among the other absurd tales that were told of him, there went abroad the story that he spent most of his time iu wander- ing about his kingdom in disguise. He haunted shady lanes and romantic spots, seeking for some fair maiden who should be his chosen bride. Well, this silly tale was believed and set thousands of hearts to fluttering. Each maiden wondered if she would be his choice if he chanced to meet her under the lime trees. And she hesitated to plight her troth to her village lover until she should have had a chance to meet the King. So it came to pass that in the village of Bertoldshofen, in the romantic mountain region of Southern Bavaria, the maidens formed themselves into a sort of sisterhood. They pledged themselves to each other not to marry until they were sure the King had passed them by. Each was to wear his likeness constantly next her bosom, and each was to choose for herself a secret bower where at eventide she should await his coming. A more foolish scheme, probably, never was devised by the silly brains of love-sick school girls. But more than a score of Bertoldshofen maidens entered into it with the zeal and devotion of nuua. The fame of this sisterhood spread to other villages. But the mystic quality lies in the fact that the person telling all those things is an announced seer â€" born with a caul, like David Copperlield, and having intimate re- lations with the world of futurity and the poweiB of mystery. No matter how ignorant of the civilizing influences ot this life the inspired fortune- teller may be, how cheaply gotten up, or with what sordid circumstances environed, professors ot all the sciences are willing to kneel at her feet to learn the secrets of the past, present and future from her occult knowledge. A new mythology would be a boon to society in its present condition, when every- body is looking tor a sign. The crowing of the cock was op omen of ill to Peter. It heralds a visitor in these days as well as a change iu the weather. It you drop the soiasors, a fork, or a pen, and the point sticks iu the floor, somebody ia coming. If your nose itches you are going to kiss a fool. If your left hand tickles yon will handle a sum of money. If the right hand, you will shako hands with a friend. If you first sea a visitor in the looking- glass it is a sign of misfortune. Two spoons signify a wedding ; tea-spoons are understood. But those signs of necromancy are as old as the doings of Maobeth's witches, whose weird incantations are practiced to this day. Indeed, a Shakspeare fortune- telling book would not bo a bad enterprise. It would give a higher tone to tho soothsayer's art. It might be called " Easy Lessons in theHoration Philosophy," and serve as a text book in supernatural lore, with a motto by the second witch : lly tbu pricklnu ot my thumbs Bomuthiuti wickud this way oomos. * What Carried t'apa Through. Hero is a little 5-year-old we have heard of who believes that prayers may bo answered, and suggests tho method. In her evening prayer she said, a tew days ago, take care of papa on his journey ; and if there is an accident and tho cars catch on fire, rain down the rain as hard as you can thunder it."â€" Auuusta New Age. to towns and eities â€" nay, to Munich itself. Kustic wenches and the petted beauties of princely palaces alike caught tho mad disease. Within a year not less than 10,000 young women, all through Bavaria, had taken upon themselves the " vows ot Ludwig " and wore waiting for their King. In time many of these girls imagined they had been seen and passed by by the King, and, thus freed from their vows, ac- cepted humbler husbands. -Others grew tired of waiting and broke their vova- ^till others waited and waited iu vain, until all other suitors had passed them by ; and they are waiting still and will be waiting all their lives. But as the ranks of the origi- nal sisterhoods were thinned new recruits were added and the " brides of Ludwig" were still counted by thousands. It is esti- mated that there were no less than 7,000 of them at the time of his suicide. When the news of that tragedy became known they forthwith put on mournitg and called themselves " the widows of Laawig." Many ot them took solemn voWs of life-long celibacy as a token of faithfulness to his memory. Among these latter two ot the most devoted were the young Baronesses ot Munich to whom we have referre<l. They constantly wore the deepest mourning, secluded themselves from all social pleasures and drove them- selvea into confirmed melancholy. Every week they went to Starnberg and threw garlands of flowers into the water at the spot where the King was drowned. Finally they determined to share his fate. They arrayed themselves as brides, even to don- ning veils and orange blossoms, rowed out into tho lake to the spot where he wae drowned and throw themselves into the water. Their bodies were found next day clasped iu each other's arms and with por- traits ot the man King ruext their hearts. â€" Faris Letter to Chicago Tribune. A VKBV ANCIENT COP. After Two Thousand Years He Still Poll* on to His FUufc. According to the latest advices from Italy a discovery of a most important character has been recently made amid tho ruins of the buried city of Pompeii. While workmen, employed by an American speculator, were plying their picks with that subdued accent peculiar to natives of Southern Europe, they by the merest chance knocked the scuttle off the roof of a building which subsequectly turned out to be a bake thop. It was a two-story and basement brick edifice. On the top floor, which was plainly but neatly furnished, were found the petrified bodies ot the baker's wife and two children, one appar- ently about 12 and the other about 8 years ot age. In the parlor, which had an extension looking out on a small yard, the speculators came across a lyre, something which looked lik^ a baby carriage and a box full of ivory disks, some of which were colored red, others blue and still more white. In the basement, ot course, was found the oven. It was about four feet high, two feet in width and six feet in depth, and, according to a calcula- tion made by an eminent anti>iuarian, may have been capable, when in its prime, of turning out 347 Pompeian loaves an hour. The baker himself, poor wretch, was with face down right near the steps leading into the street. In one hand be had a policy slip and in the other sixteen demads, prob- ably all the money he had taken iu that day. One of the gentlemen conducting the search expressed his opinion that if Pompeii ever had boasted of policemen, there must be the ruins of one in that shop. Curious to relate, he was correct in bis surmise. After a lot ot stone crullers and adamantine pies had been shovelled away, the honest workmen turned up a regular old fashioned " cop." His clothes, which ages ago had lost their elasticity, consisted of a sort of Mother Hubbard tunic, cut slack in the back, a pair of full, regular made straw socks and a brass hat. The gentleman haa evidently taken off his sandals, to give them a chance to dry, for they were found near the ash pit of the oven. His club, which had a lot of spikes and a piece ot scythe stuck in it, was lying on the counter, as was his belt. Glued fast to the mouth of the deceased was a curious vessel, evidently of tin, and which must have been nearly full of some liiiuid, when nature stopped the clock and the policeman ceased to swallow. Experts, who have examined tho contents of this vessel, say that could they be again reduced to a fluid state they would closely resemble the modern beer cf commerce. The remains of the departed officer have been buried, and above than a atone bearing this in- scription, " In death they were not parted," has been placed. â€" Brooklyn I- a^iU. THE QI.TEKN'8 DONKEY. A Bather Novel Present from the London Costerniongers. The costermODgers of London have be- come imbued with Jubilee enthusiasm and have decided to present Queen Victoria with a liitt on the occasion of her coming celebration. " The Jubilee Moke," a sym- metrical, vigorous and well-groomed donkey, has been chosen as the patriotic sacrifice. The donkey's pensive, drooping attitude, its thoughtful eye and the traces of nervous strain displayed indicate that the creature is conscious of the sudden greatness thrust upon it. The donkey is in every respect the friend and companion of the London costermonger. He draws the costermonger's cart and carries his burdens. He is usually known to the fraternity as " Jerusalem." The Queen has already received a present of a pair of lions from the Olympia Men- agerie and some rare cats from Crystal Palace. When she receives her coster- monger " Jerusalem " it will be necessary to make some additions to the royal mews. In the Spring. For eight months the best-natnred-crea- tureiu-the-world had held undisputed sway in the kitchen and its environs ; but toward spring tho mistress began to take account of stock. "Bridget," she asked, " where are the pots and frying-pans?" " Pots, ma'am? audits good for nothing they are ! Every family as I Uves with iu the winter always gets new pots in the spring." " Bridget, I can not find the kitchen dishes!" "Dishes, ma'am? and it's in the ash- cart they are 1 Every family as I lives with always gets new dishes in the spring'." " Bridget, what have you done with the bed and table lineu ? "It's positively iu rags!" "Bags, ma'am ! What could you be ex- pecting after the cold weather? Every family as I lives with always gets now things in tho spring." " iiridget, whan I walked through tho kitchen last night there wore hundreds of roaches running over the floor and on the tables and shelves. How could you let so many bugs live in the house ?" " Roaches, it is, ma'am? and you haven't any at all! Bugs always comes out iu tho spring. Every family as I Uves with always has as many running in the day- time as there is at nights." "Well, Bridget, I think yon had better get a new home." " And I'm thinking so myself, ma'am. Every family as I lives with in the winter always get a new girl iu the spring." â€" Puck. She Broke the Engagement because she saw that he had ceased to lova her. Her beauty had faded, her former high spirits had given place to a dull laaai- tude. What had caused this change? Functional derangement ; she was suffering from those ailments peculiar to her sex- And so their two young lives drifted apart. How needless, how cruel ! Had she taken Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription she might have been restored to health and happiness. If any lady reader of these lines is similarly afflicted, let her lose no time in procuring the " Favorite Prescrip- tion." It will give her a new lease of life. Soldby druggists under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers of perfect satisfac- tion in every case or money refunded. See guarantee on bottle wrapper. ♦ They Don't Wear Pants. " Mamma," exclaimed a precocious New York boy, " the policemen of Boston don't wear pants." " Gracious !" exclaimed the scandalized lady, " you don't tell me." " It's a fact," persisted the boy, " they wear trousers 1" â€" Life. In the spring a woman's fancy lightly turns the house inside out. When it is all over she goes to the country to get well, or in moto extreme cases calls in tho doctor. Fighting Savages, Advices from Sierra Leone say that native warriors under three chiefs invaded tho British settlement of Sherbro and Sultyus, pillaging and biurning villages en route, tor- turing and killing the native inhabitants and taking 300 prisoners. On entering British territory the marauders divided into two forces and tried to capture the French factory at Balymot and an English factory on the Manoh Kiver, both of which were stocked with valuable merchandise. Mr. Burnett, English Agent, at tho head of native laborers and police, desperately resisted the savages, who were compelled to retreat after the third attack, leaving many of their number dead. They besieged tho station, however,for three daya,wheu the gunboat loorious arrived on the scene and landed a force of marines, who (luiokly put the savages to flight. The attaches of tho French factory repulsed the attack made upon thorn miaideu. OooU News frviu the Prairie, Mr. Robert Gibson, son of Mr. Andrew Gibson, of Beverly towndlip, and son-in- law of Mr. John Dickie, of Puslinch, writes a very encouraging letter under date of May 11th, from whic'h is extracted the followmg : " Wo have had a very fine spring this year, and have just got through seeding. I started to sow on the 2nd of April, and was delayed about a week by snowfalls and frosts at night, but since about the 20th ot April we have had most beautiful weather, UaVi* sown dOO acre* of wheat and 30 acres of oats, and now (at time of writing) it is almost all up, and looks nice, as we have had several fine showers this spring. Wa live nine miles south ot tho town of Virdau, Man., one of the most promising places on the line of the C. P. K., which is surrounded by a country well adapted for general agriculture or dairy purposes. Oak Lake, a beautiful sheet of water, lies seven miles to the east of us ; it contains an island of about 000 acres, mostly covered with oak timber. On a clear day wo can see the water of this lake ({uite distinctly. Our winters out here appear to be long, but it ia because there is no break iu them. The ground usually freezes up about the 1st of November and winter aeta iu in earnest about tho Ist of December, generally lasting till the Ist of April. On tho whole we aro well satisfied with the couutry and our Western home." Mr. and Mrs. Gibson are colonists of the right cast, possessing a goodly share of both industry and iutelligenco. The Timks congratulates them on their enterpriao and proapority in tho West, and the many friends of both throughout tho townships of Borvely and Puslinch will road with plea- sure of their well being and success. The One Weak Spot. The great trouble with American journalism is that the mon who know just how a newspaper ought to be run are, un- fortunately, engaged iu some other business â€"driving stage, digging postholea, herding •heap or acting as deputy sheriff.â€" Burnet {Tex.) Hero. A man in Hillsdale county, Michigan, haa offered S5 reward to any parent who will name a child after him. After the Uoueynioon. Two young wives are talking ot their husbands, " You can't imagine," said one, " what a stupid blockhead Charles is 1" " And Henry !" ejaculated tho other. " Why, his head must bo made ot wood, or something harder, for platoa and dishes break on it with aa little difficulty as the sea upon a rock." â€" French Fun. Tho Sanitinian says that the well- known rain-water taste is duo neither to roof-wood nor deposits nor to flying particles of dirt, but to the absorption of aerial gasses. Any water exposed to the open air will aonuiro tho same taste. Do not meddle with business you know nothing of. A Highmoro (D. T.) man who tears cyclones has anchored his houas to tho earth with long half -inch iron rods. Grand Rapids (Mich.) men and boys catch fish by lowering into tho water small loops of fino brass wire, with which they lasso heedless perch. A general gopher hunt by tho residents Wadona, Minn., resulted in tho killing 2,300 gophers. Ninety million pounds ot soap are manu- factured in Buffalo every year, which causes tho Milwankeo Wiiconiin to reflect that, " No one who has ever visited Buf- falo would suspect it." It Might be Worse, "No, sir," thundered the old gentleman, " I have made up my mind that my daughter shall never marry a man who plays poker." " She might do a great deal worse, sir." " Impossible ! Poker has proved the ruination of thousands ot men, and its victims never recover from tho Infatuation. She could never do worse." "Excuse me, sir, but I'm sure she could. She might marry some fellow that thinks ho plays poker." 'The old man thought it over. â€" Wathing- t<m Critii. It's Always Um Wair. "Didn't I tell you so?" said a gentleman to an acquaintance whom he chanced to meet on the street; "it's olwaya tho wav." "What's always tho way?" inquired a mutual friend of tho two men who hap- pened along juat then. " Why, just this," replied the first speaker ; " you see Smith, here, the last time I met him he had one ot the worst coughs you over heard. He com- plained of a loss of appetite, of night- sweats, of low spirits and other unmistak- able premonitory symptoms of consump- tion, I told him to get a supply of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery at once. Ho did so, and look at him now! Did you ever see a healthier looking man ? 'Tbo 'Discovery' has snatched thousands from consumptives' graves. I knew it would cure Smith. It's always the way." A Wild KUItur. A Rockland newspaper man was wild last week, and when last heard from was hunting with a gun for tlio typesetter who upset his finest sentence, " the well trained and cultured voices of tho choir showed to tho best advantage iu the anthem ' When morning purples all tho sky.' " The choir were horrified on the api>earance of the paper to find the title ot their star piece to be " Wbea mourning puppies fill the sky." â€" Bangor (He./ Commercial. ♦ Supposed If urder in tho Northwest. Robert McLean, a settlor at Whitewood, N. W. T., was found dead on the Indian reserve on Thursday. Ho is believed to have been murdered by Indians. From the indications McLean never made a struggle after tailing. Ilia oxen were together in a slough about fifty yards from where ho waa found dead, and hia waggon waa partly loaded with i)olea. " Lookee here, mister, I ain't complamin', but this 'ore moosic stool you sold to my wife, we've twisted it roun' till we've twisted off un'a 'oad, an' not a ha'porth o' toon can we get out ot 'un." Elder Frederick Wii.lum Evans, the leading spirit of tho Shaker community at Mount Lebanon, N. Y., ia about to visit England to expound tho doctrines of tho Millennial Church. It is his intention to aail on Juno 3rd. llo will visit Glasgow. Manchester and several other of tho largo cities, in tho company of Dr. J. M. Peebles. Special interest attaches to tho viait to Manchester, as it waa in that city Mother .Vnn, tho founder of the sect, was born. It ia about a century smco she left England for America. A faith doctor near Richmo&d, Mo., has secured a largo number of patients whom ho trcata by hanging mink-skina about their nock.i and tolling them to feel sure that ho will cure them. Seventeen destitute families, comprising 75 persoils, arrived at New Yorkf rom Ireland on tho steamer City ot Chester. They claim to have received letters from relatives and friends in Massachusetts reijuestiug them tocometo thiscountry. Thesolotters, they say, were confiscated by the Secretary of tbo Killarney Emigration Society, who gave them tickets to their destination. They are now at Ward's Island as paupera awaiting the action of the Emigration Commiasiouer. Ucut and Cold ia a nevcr-tailingcauso of diseaae. At this season of tho year neuralgia, toothache, and a host of similar disoasen are rampant. The great question, then, is to find tho quickest, aureat and moat economical aomedy. Polaou's NKunuNK exactly fills these re<]uireuionts. It ia prompt, efficient and most economical, for it exceeds in power every known remedy, and is aaicheap as inferior artiolua. A 10 cent aamplo bottle will give every person a chanco to test it. Largo bottle 2m cents. A workman inavinoyardinNapa Valley, Cal., committed suicido the other day by jumping into a cask of wine and drowning. Wo ought not to bo too anxious to en- courage untried innovations in cases of doubtful improvomout For a quarter ot a century Dr. Sago's Catarrh Remedy has been before tho public and passed through tho severest test and ia pronounced the most reliable remedy for that diaagrccablu malady. Thousands of testimonials of its virtues. oOconiisiwr bottle. By druggists. Tho "infornal machines" received by Inspector Byrena, Capt. Williams and tho British Consul at Now York on Saturday were fuel cartridges manufactured iu Troy, N.Y. Tho cartridges aro filled with mineral cotton and aio perfectly harmless. When aaturatoil with kerosene oil they are iguitoil and uaod for kindling Area. They were sent aa a joke. I have much pleasure in recommending McCoUom's lUioumatio Ropellant aa a remedy e>iual to ita claims ; at least I can so testify from my experience, since I was cured by it ot a severe attack of inflamma- tory rheumatism.â€" EuwabdIsviso, Smith- viUe, Ont. Tho treatment of many tiiousandt ot casea of those chronic weakiiessi'S and distr'.-asing ailments peculiar to fcinolug, at thi- Inviiiidr Hotel and Surgical Insiitule, Buffalo. -N. V., hiia afforded a vast experience In nicely adapt- iiiif ajid thoniughly testmi? remedies for the cure of woman's peeuhur iiioladiee. Dr. fierce'* ravorlle rreacrlptlon is the outgrowth, or result, of this tfreat and valuubjo eipericnce. Thousands of testimo- nials, received from patients and from pbysi- ciiins wh^) liave tinted it in the more ugRrilp vated and obstinate eases which hud baffled their sltill, prove it to bo the most wonderful remedy ever devised for tho relief and cure 01 BUfferiiiK women. It is not recommended as a "cur«»-all. " but as u most perfect Specific for womau's peculiar uihuents. Aa a powerful. InTlKoralliiK tonlCt it imparts BtreOKtu to tho whuie system, and tu the womb and its appendatses in particular. For overworked, worn-out," 'â-  run-down," debilitateU teachers, miUineia^ dressmakers, seamstresses, "thop-KirlB, " houM- keepers, nursinii mothers, and feeble women generully. Ur. Pieroos Favorite Pn-scripUon U the greatest earthly boon, being unequoled as an appetiziDg cordial and rt>6toratlve tonic. As a soothluK aud streuKtlieuliic nerviue, "Favorite Pr^-senptluu " is une- aualed and is invaluable in ailuyinK and sut)- uing nervous oieitability, irritabibty, ex- bauBtion, proitratii^m, hysteria, spusms and other diJBtreilSlng, nervous Bymptcms eom- m^ alr nttendanf upon functional and oriranic. disease of tbo womb. It induces retreshina^ sleep and relieves meutoi anxiety and )k. spondenoy. â-  Dr. Pierce's Farorlte Pre*eri|Klon I* m. lesitlmate medicine, eurefuUy compounded by «u eiperleueed and skillful physician, uud adapted to woman's delicate orgaalzation. It Is purely vegelablo in ita com|>ositioo and perfectly harmless in ita effects in any oondltlou of tbo system. For morning sickness, or uauseu, from whatever cause arising. Wi«jL stomach, IndlKestion, dya- Sepsia and kindred sympti'nis. its use, m small oaoft, will prove very benetlelal. "Favorite Preaorlpllou" la a poaia tlvc euro for the most coinplloate\l and ob- stinate cajses of leueorrhea, excessive flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions, prolapsus, or folliag of tbu womb, weak back, 'â-  female weakness,' anteversion, retroversion, bearlng-diiwn sensations, chronic congestion, Infiainmation and ulceration of the womb, in- Uammation, pain ami tenderness In ovaries, accompanied with " iiiteriioi heat." Aa a regulator and promoter of funo. tlonal action, at that critical period of change from girlhood to womanhixid, "Favorite I'm. scription ' is a perfectly safe remedial agent, and can produce ouly good reeults. It ia equally eincaclous and valuable in its elfecta when token for those disorders and denuige- munts iiicideut to that later and most iritical period, known as " The Change of Life. ' "Favorite Preacrlptloii," when token in oonnei*tion with the use ot l>r. Piereo'a Golden Medical Discovery, imd small laxative doaes of Ur. Pierce's Purgative Pellets i Little Liver P".li8>. cures Liver, Kidney and KIndder diseases. Their combini>d use also reiuovea bln<Hl taints, and abolishes cauceroos and scrofulou:* humors from the avstenj. "FaTortto Prescription" is the only medicine 't women, sold by druggists, under a poalllre auarantee, from the mano. faolurers, thatit will give satisfaction In every case, or money will bo refunded. This guaran- tee nn" b<vn prin»'.I ci tho bottlo-wrapper, and lali..'~..j carried ou» loi many years. I<ar>« bottlea ilOO doses) 91>ti?, .ir six bottloa for «5,00. For large. Illustrated Treatise on Diseases of Women iVK) pa^i-s, pniwr-eovered), send tea cents in â- itauips. .Vddri'ss, Worid's Dispensary Msdlcal Issociation, «e3 Main St, Bl;TFAI,Oii N. T. D C N I,. H 87, I COKE Firs ! WftPII 1 »«V . .11.. I ,10 llXl IDPAtl rilflel) |.i «â- .•(â-  11 em (Sf « tinio Aiiil U*^a tiavin tHriii iviurii itcaili I iiir«ii « r*dlc«l eur«. I hAvaiiiMtallifxIlM'Axoi KITr K^LKP^V or P ALU mo JilVKyiKS»it\U»'louK alutl). [ utirnlll Hiy rvi^ivdy to cure tho Wiir«t I'Mflft. ItcrauM nlliri* ii \> t«lle>l I* DA i«*a»n for not now r*c«lvli)c * cura. .^«i<il at i>iic« lor » iTMtlM «nj a Vr>>* BottU al m^ lulalllNr r«'tii*.ty. Olv* K«f>r<>M aiiit )*<i«l4)0)c*. II co»la vou tioittiix forfttrteL an.) I will I in- v,.u. A>Mr^M UH. tl «l, KO.M. BrancH Office, 37 Yonge St., ToMto. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIENC CONSUMPTION. 1 have* pt)«iltver«nietl>- for tlio alxivotlUraaa ; hy Ua nan thoitMnJa odaitpi of the worat klii.l ati^l nf Uhik â- IaHilin« have been oar^-l. luileed, •<> itrotiR In mr faith In lu •miacy. tbat I wt'l ncml TWO B»>ri I.Ks PURR, tacather wtth a VAlAUHI.It I'RRATmK on Ihli 4iB«M« to aav •iifferer. UIvb o»i>r<'M inil P, it, a>lilr»>a. OH. V .\. rtl.OfUM, Branch OfBce, 37 Tonge St., Toreato f ^ .L'lMb ^-t

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