Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 22 Dec 1887, p. 7

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V CURRENT TOPICS. Phincipu, CoNNiNQHAM, of St. Andrew's OaiverHity, says there never would have been a union between England and Scot- land if the oonditions had been imposed that the latter should renounce its uhuruh uid its law*. No one knows the exaot nature of elec- tricity, lis effects and the laws overnin^; its action are well underHtood. but what it us is still a mystery. Probably it is a mode of motion, like li^ht and heat. The lansea which produce the electricity of thunder storms and auroras are stiil a matter of doubt. Tqh human cuticle is fine, supple, tough «ad durable. It is easily tanned in the isual way, and kaepa out water, cold ami liteat. Medical stnlents are in the habit of ''inning it or having it tanned and getting utieful and ornamental articles made of it. They send it to their friends as purses, i;K>oket- books, card-cases, slippers and x>vera for books, music, footstools and hand- iMgs. 8ii thousand kangaroo skins are received *i Newark, N. J., every week. They are brought from Australia, 300 miles from the Yiast. There are twenty varieties of this animal, and the skin is worth 70 cents a pound. Parisian and tioadon shoe manu- facturers, as well as buyers in Greece, Spain, and even Australia itself, are said vt purchase tanned skins from Newark 'anneries. Thbiui are many authentic examples of l^rench history of the fancy for human skin. Many great persons have shown a predilec- Kion for that leather. Carnot, Robespierre, Billaut and many others dressed them- selves with garments made out of human 4kin. They had slippers, boots, hats, tftoves, robes, vest and breeches made out ii this stuff, and they not oivly wore them >penly, but boasted of tliem. Thk experiment is being made inChicago >f paving a street with steel rails Iti feet kO inches in length, with a grooved surface on top, so that the horses will not slip on them. The rails will be placed a few inches «part, and the space between will be filled «ith a patent composition that in said to be very hard and durable. A trial lot of 3fty tuns has beeu made at the Bay View iron Works, Mich. In I8i0 the tonnage of British shipping totered and cleared from the portH of the United Kingdom was t),r>0f>,000 , iii X'iHf) it «as 4e,3!«),000. In IHtO there was '>8 per tent. British to 42 per cent, foreign ; in f.885 the peroentages were TS and 27. The -tra of free trade haa thus been one of l^henomenal projjrass not only in in^inufac- •iaring iiiduHtries but in the twin industry >f the carrying trade. Thh authorship of the poem " If I i:)huuld Die To-night" has bun a subject .)f dispute for a long time. It was not written by Kenry Ward Beeoher, as has been supposed by aiany. The Hartford Timet says that the authorship " has been (iractHi to Miss Belle K. kimith, at present a •ieaoher in Tabor College, Tabor, la. It first appeared in the Ckrultan Union, June l.8ih, 1873. The authorohip is vouched for itf President Brooks, of Tabor College." Db. Caiuuiom Lmiiii, mioister of Bt. U lies', Itdiiiburgh, before leaving Melbourne, 'ihrew out the suggestion that Bootsmen in Atstralia should assume the responHibility if erecting a monumeDt to John Kuo.x in .St. U lies', where the reformer so often <°ihundere<t from the pulpit. The suggestion 4as fouml much favor anci is likely to tako â- k practical shape. Mr. Marshall Lang, of •xlasgow, has satle<l for Melbourne to :on' <UDue the paoific work begun by Dr. Lees. Uiui. (rLAiWKjNa, de>spite her 75 years, is >ne of the most active and energetic of #vmen The improved condition of the lottagers all about Uawardeu attest her '.nflueuoe. In the Acbools she has placed QeaoberH who instruct the childrtiii in serv- ing, cookery, t^to., and in various handi iraifts snite«t to boys , ^bu hiv» also founded «n industrial .^chiKil for boys at Clapham, vid a home for age<l and inco rabies, both if which are model oharities and under her lir»vt supervision. A N'luiiKU of Bradford, K»g., driiis have rwoeivod notii-e from their correspondents in (iermany and other countries on the con. mnent that ' Vulapiik," the new nniversal .anguage, will be used .after a c<;rt»iii date. Vtuf attention of the Bradford Ohauiber of < Jomnierce has boen drawn to the matter, l>at the Chamber has not yet determined w assist in spreiwling the knowledge of ' Volapuk." Its study has been taken up. xi a (.'.ertain .extent, privatsly, and a .ilaes viil soon bu formed in Bradford. Tbm great oottonwuid trees in the 4wamps of Teuue»B«^e ooutain veinsof clear, sparkling water, which tastes somewhat like unsweetened soda water, and which spurts forth as if under gaseous pn^ssuru when a vein is punctured. It is said to be leliciously refreshing, and hunters are in the habit of oarrying gimlets with which to pierc* the veins when they are thirsty. It 18 a point of honor with them to plug up the oritice when their thirst is satistied, so that the next comer may not be disap- Ipointed. A PowiiKR of pine ueetiles is now prepared m (iermany, and is becoming popular for ise in baths. A half pound or a pound of (she powder is allowed to dissolve in luke- warm water for a few minutes, when the bath is ready. The principles e.xtracted 40t upon the skin as a tonic and antiseptic, «nd the baths are prescribed for rheumatic o«mplaint8, gout, oertainskin diseases, and for invigorating the system generally. The ipowder is also used tor fumigations in chest affections, etc., or, as an antiseptic, a tittle may be placed on a hot shovel and carried about the room. Thk ohauoea of life are thus set down : t)ut of every 1,000 men 26 die annually. One. half of thoHe who are born die before Bhey attain the age of 7 years. The men ^ble to bear arms form a fourth of the cohabitants of a country. More old men aro found in elevated situations than iu valleys and plains. The number of inhabi. tants of a city or county is renewed every ishirty years. Tho proportion between the deaths of women and those of men is 100 to 108. The probable duration of female lives is 1)0 years, but after that period the oaloulation is more favorable to them than to men. Pavino blocks called iron brick are now being iutroduood by Louis Jochum, of Ottweiler, near Saarbrucken, Oermany. This brick is made by mixing equal parts if finely groand red argillaoeoua slate and finely ground olay, and adding 5 per oent. of iron ore. This mixture is softened with a solution of 25 per cent, of sulphate of iron, to which tine iron ore is added until it shows a consistency of 38 degrees Baume. ft is then formed in a press, dried, dipped <inoe more in a nearly concentrated sola. tion of sulphate of iron and finely ground iron ore, and is baked in an oven for forty - Bight hours iu an oxidiziug flame and twenty four hours in a reducing dame. The German Government testing labora- tory for building materials has reported favorably on this brick. The advertisement of a divine in London, England, that he is prepared to loan his aernions at the rate of 5s. apiece, or three for 10a., is our excuse for directing atteji- tion to the striking titles of some sermons printed in the British capital in the seven- teenth and eighteenth centuries : "Crumbs of Comfort for Chickens of Grace," •• The Snuffers of Divine Love," " The Church's Bowel Complaint," " Cuckoldom s Glory, or the Horns of the Righteous Exalted," "A Pack of Cards to Win Christ," "The Spiritual Mustard Pot, to Make the Soul Sueeze with Devotion," " A Funeral Hand, kerchief. ' and " Baruch's Sore Gently Opened and the Salve Skilfully Applied." Nobody in those times regarded any of these as irreverent, and they were not meant to be funny. I^D^.^^:^ on the Pacific coast in times of scarcity of food sometimes eat pine bark. Around many of the watering-places in the pine forests of Oregon and California the trees may be seen stripped of their bark for the space of three or four feet near the bane of the trunk. This has been accomplishi-d by cutting with a hat'jhet a line around the tree as high a^i one could conveniently reach and another lower down, so that the bark, severed above and below, could be removed in strips. At certain seasons of the year a mucilaginous flim separates the bark from the wood of the trunk. Part of the tlim adheres to .'ach .>urface and may be .scraped off. The resulting mixture of mucilatie- ctlls and half formed wood is nutritioiix and not unpalatable, so that, ax a lant re- sort, it may be used as a defirucu against starvation. Piuii'K.sHoK Klmslxe, of the London I'res byteriau Colltge, yet a young man. is one of the most accoiiiplished Hebrew scholars of the day. Although he does not go iufor literalism in the interpretation of the Old Testament Scriptures, he gives his whole strength to the maintenance of orthodoxy iu the ('hurch. According to him. liberal interpretation does not nooessarilv oontliut withlhe old and aci;epted views regarding t'ue great fundamental truths of Scripture and the i^eneral scope and purport of Divine revelation. Professor Elinslie, in the December •' Contemporary Heview. " gives a !iew interpretation of the Mosaic' account of creation. He sees in the Mosaic account what he calls a theologico literary device. The days stand, not for definite periods, but for achievements, and. these in agreement with Hebrew parallelism, are broken up into two sets of three each, the first set dealing with untenanted spheres and the second with tho inhabitants of those spheres. The whole narrative, he says, is a poetic dejcriplion of the charac- ter, being and glory of God. Thk new electric type- writer relieves the operator of every duty except pressing down the keys. Thecarriage moves automatically to the starting point whenever the eiul of a hue has beeu reached, and also moves up one uotch or line at the same time. But the most important office of the new instru- ment seems to be its use in receiving and transmitting telegraphic despatches. It is said at the Patent Office that the instru. ment can be used both as a transmitterand receiver of intelligence over a single wire, uo matter how great the distance may bo. The receiving instrument does not re<|uire the attendance of an operator, but prints the dei^patch automatically. The iustru- rnents at both enils of the line print the despatcli sent, and "O a safeguard against mistakes is providi.(i. It is claimed that the electric type, writer will be valuable as a local aid to business and offers many ad vantages over the telephone. One advan. tage claimed for it is *^hat no matter whether a person caliea up is at his plaoe of biisiuess or not, the message can be priuted through the medium of his type, writer and will be therefor perusal on his return The despatches printed are in let- ter form, and not an endless tape. The instrument has been christened the dyuaraot^raph. Truths in Business. Men who have company must have money. Some men carry too innch sail, some too little. Great men when analyzed usually prove to be very small men. Men trade on borrowed reputation as they trade on borrowed capital. Good intentions will not help a man on his way if he takes the wrong road. The history of trade shows that failure is the rule and winning the exception. Money moves the crops that make the great west the granary of t ne w«rld. One man isovernice and becomes fussy ; another is careless and loses his trade. The same great lesson of failure is taught in the professions that is taught in trade. One man ruins his business because be is a sloven ; another ruins it because he is a fop. Men neither win nor lose in the same way. One fails and is smart ; another wins and is dull. Talent and temper often go together. It is rare to find a sharp, bright man that is a courteous man. The merchantsof old Tyre were â-  princes, and her traffickers were the honorable of the earth." Integrity, honor and piety do not save a man from disaster if he faiU to observe the law of success. The law of success is as certain as the taw of tile tides. All must »bey these laws if they would prosper. .\ diamond with a daw la better than a (lebble without. But the daw adds nothing to the value of the diamond. ' A THKKE-TIME WINNER. ' Muruiiiu SiiperHlltioii. " You can tell a Moruioii house by tho number of doora," I heard mohiu one say as we approached Salt Lake City, writes a Miuiieapulia Vrthmit' oorrcspoinlunt. Sure enough ! There they wim.,.. two deora i-i ie by siiie, even m the amalleat iKmai-s. Some- times there were two woudsheils, or two wells ; and we saw one house that had liegun with a single room, and been lent^th. ened out room by room and door by door. That patriarch must needs look about him sharply on the resurrection morn, or he will overlook some poor wife and have her sleeping through all eternity. The Mor. mouB have a doctrine that ill the resurrec- tion the men rise, but the women lie in their graves until their hiiabands please to call them. If the liege loni pleases to be so gracious he goes to the ..jrave aide of his spouse and speaks the new name ho re- ceived iu the endowment house at the time of his marriage, which has never before crossed his lips. She answers with the name which she received at tho same time and rises. One of the most potent means >f domestic tyranny among the ignorant Mormons is the threat, fre.|uently resorted to by the head of the house, that he will not raise his wife on the resurrection morn " unless," etc., etc. When tb« Moilest Oirrs Aluu«. Most men like modest girls best. Mod- esty is discretion ; that's all. The modest girl won't let you hold her hand when there's anybody to sett ; but she's whole- souled when there's nobody looking, and gives you both her hands. I have known \ouHg ladles who would sijuee/ie your hands tenderly, look into your eyes and do every- thing that was agreeable in the most shame- less iiiaiiner before other people ; but when they are alone with you they'll sit a half a mile off and talk primly about the weather. I don't think those ^irla would make good wivex. At all events they lioii't make good swM'^hearts, and about uiarryingit is much the same as with boys eating cherries. They lay aside the liest to finish up with, but when they get to what they've laid aside they're so full of cherries that they ( an't enjoy any more. Of course there are other boys who eat all the good ones first. But it seems to iiie all rules work both ways anyway, and end in discomfiture of some kind. The only rnli. of lifv exjierience brings to is never to lose a chance for fuu when we can get it. Has HaDliui Lost His Grip ? â€" FbiloH»phieal TralniUK Deuiaufietl. The defeat of "Ned" Hanlau by Teemer at Toronto in August indicates the "end of the glory " of the doughty cham- pion. He has sustained his record with admira- ble pluck and success, but the tremendous strain of years of training must certainly some day find its limit. Apropos of this we recall the following interesting reminiscence of aquatic annals: On a fine bright day in August, 1H71, an excited multitude of 15,000 to 20,000 per. sous lined the shores of the beautiful Kene- becasis, near St. John, N.B., attracted by a four. oared race between the famous Paris crew, of that city, and a picked English crew, for 85,000 and the championship of the world. Wallace Ross, the present re- nowned oarsman, pulled stroke fur the Blue Nose crew, and " Jim " Renforth, champion sculler and swimmer of England and of the world, was stroke in the English shell. Excitement was at fever heat. But three hundred yards of the course had been covered when the Englishmen noticed that their rivals were creeping away. " Give us a dozen, Jim," said the veteran Harry Kelly, ex-champion of England, who was pulling No. 3 oar. " 1 can't, boys, I'm done, " said Renforth, and with these words he fell forward, an inanimate heap in the boat. " He has b.s.|i poiHOiied by Uookuiakers," was the (.•!), and beliif. f^vei \ ihiiig that science and skill oonld sUiiJ>-st fur Ilia restoration waa tried , but riflur teriiiile struggles of a.^ony. the strong man. the fijwer uI the athletes and rido of his couiitryinen, passed away The atimiach was anal\zed, but no sign or tra(^e of poison could be found therein, tliough general exaiiiiiiatMn showed a very strange condition of the blood and the life- i^iving and health preserving ortians cauai'd by years of unwise training. While the muscular development was perfect the heart and kidneys were badly congested. 'I'he whole system waa. therefore, in just that stale when the most simple departure from ordinary living and ex"rtion was of momentous coiiaiM|ui'nLe. Ilia wonderful strength only made his dyiiitj paroxysms more dreadful and the fatality more cer. tain. Hanlaii is now in .Australia. Beach, champion of that country, is a powerful fellow, who probably unileratanda the lia. bility of athletes to death from over, training, tho etTect thereof being vers serious on the heart, blood and kidneys, as shown by poor Renforth's sudden death. Within the past ihriH- years he has taken particular care of hiinself. and when train, ing. always reinforces the kidneys and pre vents blooil congestion in theuiaiid the con. sequent ill-etfect on the heart by using Warner's safe cure, the sportsman's uni. versal favorite, and says he 'is astonished at the ;;reat benefit. " Harry Wyatt. tho celebrated English trainer of athletes, who lontinues himself to be one of the finest of specimens of man. hood and one of the most successful of trainers, writes over his own signature to the English Sfwrling Liii . September ."ith, saying : " I consider Warner's safe cure invaluable for all training purposes and 1 outdoor e.tercise. I have been in the habit of using it for a long time. I am satisfied I that It pulled me through when nothing ' else would, and it is always a throe. time winner !" Beach's and Wyatt's method of training is sound and should be followed by all. AUtlA LADIES' COLLECSE, ST. rnOlLtS, ONTABIO. This institution which had last year th« largest enrolment of all the Canadia* Colleges for women is offering superior advantages to young women in Literary Course, Kin*- v rtH,(jommercialScienL:e and Music at I e ve 'v lowest rates. A ddres ' Principal Auitiii,B. D. The Lunge.si Wurii IU the Dlctluniu-y ., is incompetent to communicate the inex-- pressible sallsfactioii and incomprehinsi. hie consequences resulting from a judiciou* administration of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, a preparationdcsigned espooi , ally for the speedy relief and permanent cure of al! Female Weaknesses, Nervous- ness and disease peculiar to the female sei. Tho only remedy for a woman's peculiar ills, sold by druggists, under a posiliTe guarantee, to give satisfaction. See guar, antee on wrapper of bottle. This guarantee has been faithfully carried nut tor many years by the proprietors. Ofimgishness Aukniiwledged. Pttbsenger (iu crowded car)â€" Is this se»* engaged '/ Occupant â€" Don't yer see it is ? PaaseuKsr (forcibly removing bundle*, placing them on the door, and sitting down) -Pretty comfortable kind of a sty, ain't It '• Kur Auibltlous Boys. A boy is something like a piece of iron, which, in its rough state, isn't worth much, uor is it of very much use, but the more prooesses it is put through the more valuable it beiximes. A bar of iron that is only worth ir> in its natural state is worth $l'i when It is made into horseshoes, and after it goes through the different processes by which it is made into needles its value is increased to $350. Made into uenknife blades it would be worth 93,000, and into balance wheels for watches V250,000. Just think of that, boys ; a piece of iron that is comparatively worthless can be developed into such valuable material I But the iron has to go through a great deal of hammer, ing and beating and rolling and pounding and polishing ; and so, if you are to become useful and educated men, you must go through a long course of study and train, ing. The more time you spend in hard study, the better material you will make. Tho iron doesn't have to go through half so much to be made into horseshoes, as it does to be converted into delicate watch, springs ; but think how much less valuable it is I Which would you rather be, horse shoe or watchspring '! It depends on your- selves You can become whichever you will. This is your time of preparation for manhood. Don't think that I would havo you settle down to hard study all the time, without any interval for fun. Not a bit of it. I like to see boys havo a good time, and I should be very sorry to see you grow old before your time, but you have ample oppor tunity for study and play too, and 1 don't want you to neglect the former for tho sake of the Itktter.â€"PittHburg ChrUtum Advocau. sixty ThoUKHlMl t'HeleNN WtinN. " I'here is no man living," said a public school teacher the other day. ' that knows every one of the 7.'),0OO words in Webstor's I'nabridged Dictionary, nor half, nor a third of them. Nor is there a man that could define them if he were asked. Sbaks peare, who had the richest vocabulary used by any Enyliahman. employed only 10.000 words. Milton could pick out from S.OOO, but the average man, a graduate from one of the great universities, rarely has a vocabulary of more than 3.000 or 1,000 words. Right here in Buffalo there are Americans born and bretl who contrive to express all their wants and opinions in 300 words, and in the rural districts tho know, ledge of 150 or '200 words is suQicient to carry a man through the world. So the unabridged dictionary is cluttered up with tiO.OOO or more technical or obsolete words that you never hoar 111 ordinary oonvorsa tiou or see in ordinary books and news papers. â€" liufalo Counfr. Kx|ilailltMl. " My sister Calra," said Bobby to young Mr. Sissy, " waa talking to ma about your leaving so early last night." " Did she say she waa sorry, Bobby ?" whispered young Sissy. " , , •' No ; she said she s'poaed you went ' age and the ladies s hould act promptly, home so early beaause very likely your I *" " mamma won't let you carry a uijfhtkey." ' â€"A man's life may be hko an open book, I The PalHlw-TU'klliiu Oyster. On the subject of oyster eating the writer retiently saw a rhyme something after this order, entitled " How to kill an oyster :" Don't dvdwii It (\eo\) in vineKar. nor soafluii It at all. Nor cover u|) Its ulisU'eiiiK toriii witli |>u|iper like a ynU : Kilt raise it K«ntlv Innu its shell, and rtrnily holil your breath. Anil tiien. with uiwer tooth aiid tongue, just tickle it to (leatb. The Merciful Wife 1» Merciful to " Hlin." When a man comes home late at night, after working hard all the evening at the office on the books, it is mean for his wife to require him to say, " Say, should such a shapely sssh shabby stitches show .'" be- fore she will unbolt the front door. â€" •lour- nal n] Kducatuin. Oi;r lady friends will be interested iu knowing that by sending '20c. to pay post- age, and 15 top covers of Warner's Safe Yoast (showing that they have used at least 15 packages) to H. II. Warner it Co., Roches- ter, N. Y., they can get a 500 page, finely illustrated Cook H(iiiK,/rc.'. Such a book, bound in cloth, could not be bought for less than a dollar. It is a wonderfully good chance to get a fine book for the more post- -TK* Bpoch. but it ia bound to be olosed. A l^urge Kstlftle. A broad laud is this in winch we live, dotted so thickly with thirfty cities, towns and villages 'â-  Amid them all, with ever increasing popularity and helpfulness, is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, giving hope and cheer where there ia disease and despair. Wherever there is humanity there IS suffering ; wherever there is 8uf?Br. ing there is the best field for this greatest American Remedy. Coninmption (which is lung. scrofula) yields to it, if employed in the early stages of the disease: Chronic Nasal Catarrh yields to it . Kidney and Liver diseases yield to it '. If you want the best known remedy for all diseases of the blood, ask for Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and taKe no other. MakhiK Hay H'hlle the Suu 'shines. " \ ou seem to be enjoying yourself, Bobby," remarked one of the guests at a dinner party. ' Yes, " assented Bobby, with his mouth full, " I am making the most of it, 'causa after pa an' ma give a big dinner like this, it's always cold pickiii' for the next thirty days." Iliirper't liiunr. .Always Proiupt Iu Aetiuu. This IS just what every sufferer wants- prompt action and rapid relief from pain. The grandest discovery of the age. the great pain cure, is Poison's Nerviline prompt, powerful, pleasant to the taste, and yet so pure that it may be given to tho youngest infant. I'ry a 10 cent sample bottle, which you can purchase at any drug store. Nervi- line, the great, sure, and prompt pain cure. The large bottles are only 25 oents. Who Told You So '.' It is a solemn hour with a rose. lipped society bud when she begins to wonder vaguely how a mustache feels on the face. â€" hiiillliamlon l{ipublii''in. t'opular Preparalliin ! Pure, Potent, Powerful 1 Pallid People Praise, Progressive People Purchase 1 Posi- tively Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets, Properly Partaken. Preserve Physical Powers, Produce Permanent Physical Per- fection. Purchase, Prove I There Was Wire KiiuuKh. Friend (to happy father) -Hello, Jones, lot mo congratulate you. I hear you have a new boy at your house. Happy Fatherâ€" By George, can you hear him all this distance ' -i'iUHhurg Chronicle Isaiah WiUianiaon, of Philadelphia, is tho richest bachelor in the I' uitud States. His fortune of J'20,000,000 was made in tho dry goods trade, and yields him an annual income nf a million and a half. -Notice is given by Bennet Rosamond, of Almonte, of application for divorce from hia wife, Adair M. Rosamond, on the Til.' ire.u:ii,.;ii iif in.iny thoueanils of i-ase* ..' tiKist' elin.iiic weiikiP'Ssi'S ami dlstresblM iliin-nis pi.c'ullur tn fepKiiis, at the luvuilda ll"i.l .uel Suririctil lii:.iitul«, Uullalo. N. Y.. I :ia iii'iisled II MiHt e\ix iieuce in nicely adapt- 1 ;;.- iinj IlioiMii^'lil) lesiinK reiiiedlee for toe '11 . 1't woman's ptM'ulinr uiiUBdli>s. C>r. t*lvree*u I'uvorilo Prescription H Ml,' iiiiitr'iivtli. .ir result, of tliis (freut and \ ; . ,llle ..^p.-rlelU-e. 'rtloUBUlltlB of U'HtlllUV- 111.,'... ree.ivil Irnni iiatients and fi-oiii pbyal- , , i::s wlio Imve tesu-l it in the more stCKra- \.'.'',l anil olwtmute .-ases wbieb had baffled til. :r skill, prove It to tie the uioet wonderful r.iii..i!v e'er devised for the relief and cure of iiinrerriiif woiuisi. It is not reconiniended as a "e ii'<.-ail, ' hut 08 a most perfect SpeclHu for M'oiiiaii's peculiar ailments. A» a puwerfal. luvlsoratlnK toolc, it imparls smnifiii to tue whole ayscem, uud to the wi>mb and Its appemlaiva in puriieulHr. Kor oviTworked, '" worn-out,' '"run-down," debilllated teacbers. milliner*, dressmakers, seainstreoses, •'shop-nirls, " bouse- keejiers, nursing niotliers, and fe«»ble women i{>'Uenillv. Ur Pleree's Favorite Pr<'»orip«lon is the ({reatest earthly boon, beinif uiusjualed as »n uppetiiiinK eonlial and restorative tonic. Aa a aoothluK and â- ireuKitaenlng nervtue. " Favorite I'nwriiuion " ia uue- uualml and is invaluable ni uUu.vmtr and »ul>- duiui{ nervous exciuibillty. uriuibillty, ex- Imnstion. prostration, hysteria, spiisius aD<l oUier distnissintr, nervous symptoms LXim- iiionly altendaut upon fnnelioual and urKanlo illsi'ase of till' woinli. It induts-s rt-fieshin* sleep and relluvus mental anxiety and d»- spondeniw. Dr. t>lerce>a t'uv urtte Preitcrlptlois l« a leKillmale modlelne, cartifully loiiiinmnilisl bv un experienc«sl and skillful phvHliiau. and adapted to woman s delU««« orKaniziitioii. It is pnr«'ly veifeiablo la its coiuposltioii and pertectlv liarnili'ss Ui Its effi'eis m any ixiudltlon of the sysa-m. For niornmtr sleknesa, or nausea, from whatever calls'- artsiiiv, weak stuinacli, Inditrestlun, dys- pepsia and kiudre<l syinploms. its use, la small do*'s. will prove viTV benelleliil. "»'avorlte Fre'acrlptlon " Is â-  posU tlve riire for the niiwt is»iiiplieal«-Hl and ob- stinate eases of Jeileorrliea, e.\ev«ei\e dowloff, puiiUiil menstriistiiin, imiiutunil snppn^Mlona, iiiiliipsns. or fulllnif of the womb, weak back. '• Iriimle wi-aknesa,' imteversion, petroversioo, tit'iii'liiK-down sensations, chronic oontrevftloo, intliiiiiniution and iiks-nition uf the womb, in- lluiiiinatlou, pain and tt'nUerneas in ovartet. aeeoinpanied with " int4>rnal heac" Aa a reBulalor and promoter of fuao- tional action, at that critical period of ohaii«« from ifirlnood to woiuanhood, " Favorite Pre- seriotlon " is a pvrfeetly safe remedial oveat, and can produis^ only K*>od results. It is e<iiially eiHcHClous and \aluablc tn Its effects wlien tulteii for those ilisorder^ and ilerHn|p>- ments ineldeot t^i tliitt later and most uritioat period, known as " TUf ("honire «f Life. ' " Favorite PreMrriptlon." when takea In I'onneetion with the use of Dr. Kleroe'i Qolden MihIIchI Discovery, and small la.Tativ« doses of Dr. Pierce's Huiijative IVIIets t Little Liver Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and Uladder diseases, 'rbeir combined use also remove* blood taints, and abtillsbes cancerous and Scroftiluus humors from tbe system, " Favorite Prescrlptiou >* la tbe only mislielHi' for women, sold liy druKKists, uud«r a positive Kuaraiitee, from the manu- facturt^rs, that it will Kivo satlstactiou In every case, or money will txt refundud. This guaran- tee has been printed on the tiottle-wnippei and faithfully curried out for many years. Larxe boMlea i^hlO doses) $I.OO, or six bottles lor #5.00. For lar(re. illiistratt-d Treatise on Diseases or Women rliK) putces, pu m-r-co verodi, send t«0 cents in stamps. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 nuuii stn mvrwAiM, m. i; DUNN'S BAKING POWDER I CURE FITS ! Wh«oI M]r can 1 <]o aot m«*n m«r^l7 to nlopttMmi tKm ttmvftnd than h«vfl them ixtiiin itKKtn. I nn'*ii % r»dlc«l «or«. I hftT«m*a»tb(>OlM»f lit KIl'M, KfllKI'SY oiTALLr INO SIOKNK^H* Iir»-lua« r,U,.,y. I Hftnan; mv rfniMy to rur« tlia wornt cai>«t. JtocAiiia otliAin ti ve rittled !• uo reMoii Tor not now r»e«lvlnf » cure, •w'u.l itt 0:10* tor m lre«()»o unil * Proe Bottli ul my liifxMU-r <• irs'.ly. i>1t» ftxtirfiim Kikil PtMitOftlr*. I1 conla ji.u Ti.tMni. for a IrUl villi 1 >rl)i I'lif t'<ju. A<1<lt«>«ii UK. II. (t Ktx'i', Pr;miiOto,3Hunfl;eS!,.ToroDta .<# CONSUMPTiON. 1 ^avHn [Kiaid vr< r trioitHATiilt t,i •'HHV* < taftr* t>MU I Uiotl. tVli't^cy. fbkt I a I I Wltli ft Vtf.lUMI i â- nff«rrr- lHvr m,. grounds of adultery and desertion. 11 •«!> lor jirftlnrrtllM^i* ; »• iia nm • :.« •font k li»t «u ' â- â- >( Innc M«odiBC jiJ.vwJ, w «n»n« -'» rftJth In IM .i„; I Wo Ritrrrft* . " t«cMiMr I :rKn'riMK in (III* '(l«e« •• â- Â»> »nj If 111. I r* <' *iliir^»». i Branch Offlco, ^ f ong^'St, Tonata

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