Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 3 May 1888, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

â-  L â€" Tlio New Yearâ€" to Come. Dedicated to the Internatioiiiil Council ol Womou. You mustwako ami call mo early, Call mu oarly. huHliaud doar. To-morrow'lllio tlio bajipiest timo I've kouwn for mauy a year. I'll borrow your troiiuurs, husband, AlBO your vei-t and coat, For ; am t^oing to vote, bUBbaud, Your wife is goins to Tote I 1 sleep so sound all niRht, Uusbondt Tbttt I shall uevur wako, [f you do not call nio loud Whun tbo <lay boRius to break: But 1 must (jatbvr up tbo ticketa And tbo BpoL'clios tbat I wrote, For I am Roint; to votu, busband. Your wife is guiD); to vote! Littlo Rusan shall go with mo. To-morrow to the polls. To seo ber noblo mother Put ber name upon the rolla ; So you must call mo early. By tbo rooster's morning note ; For I am going to vote, husband. Your wife is going to vote! lUy permission of Alfred Tenay-daughter.l â€" Waahtnijion Critic. What tlie Chimney Sang. Over the chinmoy tbo night wind sang, And chuutot a melody no one knew ; And tbo woman stopimd and tbo babe sho tossed And thought of tbo one she bad long since lost. And said, as her teardrops back she forced, " 1 batu the wind in tbo chimney." Ovprtho chimney the night wind sang. And <?hantcd a ujclotly no one knew ; Anil tbo children said, as they closer drew, " ' TiB some witch that iu cleaving thu black night through, 'Tis a fairy trumptJt that iUHtthen blew, And we fear the wind in the chimney." Over the chimney the night wind sang, And chanted a melody no one knew ; And the man as be sat on bis hearth below, ISaid to himself " It will surely snow. And fuel iu dear and wages low. And I'll stop Uie leak in the chimney. ' Over the obimncy the night wind sang. And chanted a melody no one knew ; And the poet listened and smiled, for ho Was man, and woman, and child, all three. And aaid, " It is (ioii's own harmony, n.'Uis wind we hear in tiie ctiiumev." â€"Brit Uarte. OURRBNT TOPICS. A SAILOK'.S LUNt; SWIU. All Might in the Ocean Without Even a Plank to Support Ulm. The name of Frank Miller, who has JDSt reached here, aaye the San Franoiaco Kx- ciminfr, on the brijj William G. Irwiu from the Santlwich IslandH, ought to be placed in the temple of fame alongside that of Leander, for he has proven that he poBseusea an amphibian capacity qaite equal to that of the ewiiiimer of the Hellespont. Miller's exploit waa out iu the I'acitiu Ucean, and therefore cannot be meaHUred as to dis- tance, but ita time was Beveuteen hours. Three or four monthn ago he left San Fran- cisco on the whaling vessel .Jacob A. How land, which during its cruising caught two whales near the Sandwich Islands. For a day or two after the killing the vessel was surrounded by sharks eager for the refuse. The vicious creatures swarmed in the wake of the vessel and crowded around ber, pop ping their greedy heads up above the waves in plain sight of the silors. The deck was slippery after the killing, and one evening while Miller was on the port rail forward be missed his footing and pitched headlong iuto the sea. Uo thinks he must have lloated, unconscious from the shock and {rom fright at the thought of the sharks, lor some time. For with his tirst cun- scloasDess after slipping and {»Uiug be looked for the vessel, but could neither see nor hear anytliiug of her. Uo know they were not many miles from the sliore of the island of Molokai. and guiding himself as best he could by the stars he struck out in the direction whicli ho thought would carry him to its shore. But he was swim- ming against the tide, and ho coftld feel that ho was making but little progress, a.tert himself as lie might. He thought of ^hu sharks, which only a few hours before had been clustering around tliu vessel, and every live minutes ho imagined that one was swashing up against him, while every bright gleam of starlight upon a httlo wave he was cock sure was the coldly gUt- tei ing eye of a huiij/ry shark, intent on making a lunch oil liim. But morning dawned and he was still uneaten, though so weak from his battle with the waves and hiii continued fright that he had not the strength to climb upon a couple of planks uailed together that came drifting past him. But he caught hold of them, and managed to sustain himself still longer by their aid. A terrible thirst took possession of him, and as the sun rose higher and higher it almost blistered his face and hands. Finally, about the middle of the afternoon, the brig Irwin came along, saw him and picked him up. His strength was ao entirely gone that he had to be lifted over the side of the boat sent after him as if he had been a baby. For and About Women. A. distinguished negro belle of Fort au Prince, Hayti, has married a brother o! William Black, the novelist. Queen Ulga of Greece is a oeautiful woman with a sweet, open face and a man- ner as chariniiig as it is simple. Jonathan Thayer and wife, of South Braintree, Mass., have lived together sixty- nine years and are ha'e, happy and hearty. Mrs. I'atti Lyle CoUins, employed in the " dead letter " ollicu at Washington, reads every known language e-xcept Russian and Chinese. A (.iiKAP hose for watering plants can be made of heavy ducking, says a corres- pondent of l''arm I.ije. Cut the ducking into strips the width needed to make the aize wanted, fold the edges together, and sew tw9 seams with a sewing machine. Then roll into rolls or balls, and boil hi grafting wax, the same as cloth for graft- ing purposes. " I made 150 feet of such hose," says the correspondent, •' to water strawberries and vegetables. I out the cloth lengthwise, about litty feet in a section, and then sowed the sections together. It wBl leak a little, but not enough to amount to anything." "John," said a sohoolmaater, "you will soon be a man, and will have to attend to business. What do you suppose you will do when you have to write letters unless you learn to spell better?" "Oh, sir," answered John, " 1 shall put easy words in them." Little Laura Jones, of Eatonton, Ga., is the latest baby wonder to bo heard from. Although only eleven years old whe has invented a plough and a grain elevator that I vor of its embrace, are said to show remarkable ingenuity ' ' ' ' Nineteen of the twenty-live waiters at the Hotel del Monte, in Monterey, Cal., struck last week rather than wear dress- coats, in which garb the proprietor had ordered them to appear. They walked out of the dining-room at the dinner hour, and their places were filled by bell-boys. Miss Helen Buschard, now a resident of Fhiladelpbia, is a Maine girl, who has made a fortune throngh the invention of the simple "over-and-ander" attachment for sewing machines. When she discovered the device she had to borrow money to pay the tirst Patent OUice fees. She now owns large estates, a manufactory and many patent rights that yield ber a la^ge income in royalties. E.'CTENSivu use is now being made in France of the unique article known as wood wool, consisting of extremely thin and slender shavings of wood, tuat are com- parable to paper cut for packing. It weighs some 40 or 'lO per cent, less than the materials generally used for such a purpose, and its beautiful appearance, tine- ness and exceeding cleanness have brought it into great favor. At a recent meeting of the Paris Academy of Medicine the report of a oom- miasion appointed to inquire into the phenomenon reported by M. Luys, and commonly called hypnotism, was pre- sented. The conclusion is that M. Luys has been the dupe of an hystericftl patient, and that there is absolutely no truth in the phenomena described by him last autumn. SuuE light is thrown upon the recent cable despatch announcing that the eldest son of Lord North had opened a butcher shop by proceedings in bankruptcy against the Hon. Koger Archibald Percy North, Lord North's second son. His liabilities amounted to more than S'Jl.OOO and his assets to S500. He waa formerly a lieu- tenant in the Sixth Battalion Rillc Brigade, but was now a .-lergeant in the lioyal Dragoons, with an income of forty-eight cents per day. Evidently the straitened circnmstances of his family have driven the heir to the title into trade. BuMK one has been collecting facts about the fathers of United States Presidents, with this result : Grover Cleveland is the only clergyman's son who has over been elected President, though Arthur's father waa a clergyman. He was not, however, elected President. The fathers of the Virginia Presidents â€" Washington, Joffer son, Madison and Monroe â€" were planters, John Tyler's father was a lawyer and statesman, and John Adams, the father of John Quincy Adams, was by profession a lawyer. Grant's father was a tanner, Hayes' father a merchant, and thu fathers of Gartield, Lincoln, Pierce, Fillmore, Polk, \ an Bun-n and Jackson were farmers. The Epping Forest Committee of the corporation of the city of London have pre- pared a report in which they say the .|ue8- tion of the deer has caused them some anxiety. They have increased in numbers to such an e-xtent as to become a source of serious annoyance to some of the surround- ing land-owners and farmers, several of whom have claimed compensation for dam- age to their crops. The Epping Forest Act transferred the deer from the Crown to the conservators to be preserved as an object of ornament, and, bearing in mind that the oomaiou rights wore ori^^iually granted partly as compensation for the damage done by the doer, they have repudiated all liability on the part of the conservators. Ik any man raali/.es more keenly than the suffering Emperor of Germany, who draws his breath through a silver tube and cannot even eat his morsel of food like a living creature, that " the path of glory leads but to the grave," that man must be ex-Senator Lolaud Stanford, of California. The railroad prince and millionaire is building a family tomb at San Francisco, which is to cost S1UO,000, and a correspon- dent writes : The mausoleum will bo com- pleted during the coming suninier, and when tinished will be a fitting abode for the remains of ono of the most successful men of the dayâ€" a railroad magnate, a million- aire and a philanthropist, who is building a university that will cost between Sl"),- 000,000 and S'.iO,000,000 ; a man who lives magnilicently. with wealth and friends and everything that makes life worth living, yet who has the groat sorrow of losing his son, his only child, and when ho and liis wife are called to another world and their remains occupy their statqly tomb, the family history will end. CciiioL's samples of naturally reduced iron have boon found on the North Saskat- chewan Uiver in the Northwest Territory, about eighty miles from the town of Ed- monton, Alberta. Along the river bank a lignite formation crops out for several miles, overlaid by clay shale and soft argil- laceous sandstone containing nodules of clay iron stone. Tlieso nodules are aimilar to others found at Edmonton, and proved by analysis to be carboaates of iron, con- taining 3-4. '.)8 per cent, of metallio iron. The Saskiitchowan seam of lignite has, at some time or other, been burnt, leaving a bed of ashes, clinkers and burnt clay, in places twenty feet thick, and now covered by a dense growth of grass and underwood. From this mass of burnt clay pieces of metallic iron can bo picked out, weighing in some cases fifteen or twenty pounds. They have evidently been reduced from the nodules above mentioned by tho heat of the burning lignite. Most of tho pieces of iron aro much rusted, but when scratched with a tile they show a bright surface. 'I'ho observation is interesting, and to some may help to u.xplaiu how primitive man ori- ginally discovered tho reduction of iron ore. TiiitKK things were sought by the ancient alchemistâ€" the philosopher's stone, the elixit4)f life and the universal solvent. The aat of these, though long known to modern chemistry, has juat been separated, but cannot be retained, simply because it at- tacks or destroys everything. This fury of the chemical world, says Mr. W. Mat- tieu Williams, ia the element lluorino ; it exists peacefully in company with caloium in llnor-spar and alao iu a few other com- pounda ; but, when iaulated, as it recently has boon by M. Henri Moissan, is a rabid gas that nothing can resist. It combines all the metals, explosively with aomo, or if thoy are already combined with some .-''..her uon-metallio clement, it tears them from it, and takes them to itself. In unit iu^ with sodium, potassium, caloium, magnesium and aluminium, the metals ' become heated even to rodnesa by tho fer when expoacd to it , manganese does the same. Even the noblo metals, which »t u, melting heat proudly resist the fascina- tions of oxygen, succumb to this chemical siren at moderate temperatnrea. Glass is devoured at once, and water ceases to be water by contact with this gas, which, combining with its hydrogen, at the same msment forma the acrid, glass-dissolving hydrotluorio acid and liberates ozone. LIFE AT THK I'ULE. The Prairie Province. A Winnipeg deapatch aays : The city lumber merchants are aacoessfuily kicking against British Columbia cedar being'nBod for block- paving instead of pine which <'an be obtained here. The pictures by Mrs. (Dr.) MoArthur, Winnipeg, have been accepted by the com- mittee of the Paris salon. No American artist has surpassed this. May lOth has been proclaimed Arbor Day in Manitoba and the 17th in the Ter- ritories. The Salvation Army will shortly bom- bard Portage la Prairie. The resolutions adopted by the Quebec Conference aro to he brought up for discus- sion in tho Legislature. Tho Saskatchewan Kiver broke up on Thursday night, and the telephone wires and ferry ropes are broken. The ice is within ten feet of the post-office door at Clarke's Crossing, bat the water is now lowering. Mr. Hugh Poison, of Kildonan East, Man., recently opened a pit containing a thousand hnshela of potatoea. Un ontering he waa nearly suffocated with the heat, the potatoes having all been destroyed. The cause is believed to have b eeu keeping the ventilator closed for too long a timo. The otiicial announcement of the com- mutation of the sentence of Thomas New- ton for murder arrived this morning from Ottawa. Nowton, on being informed of hia reprieve said, " Praise God." The valet of Lord Lonsdale returned from the North last evening. In conversa- tion with a reporter he said ho parted com- pany with His Lordship at Green Lake, north of Prince Albert, owing to the im- possibility of securing a sufficient number of dogs to enable both to proceed with the full outfit. Rev. Dr. Duval, of Toledo, O., is spoken of as the pastor of Knox Church. At a public meeting held yesterday after- noon there was a strong expression of opinion in favor of ac()uiring the land im- mediately surrounding the old Fort liarry gateway for park purposes, thus preserving the old landmark. There have been 1, '200,000 bushels of grain marketed iii Brandon this season. Notice is given of application to the Legislature for a charter to incorporate the Manitoba Southern Railway. May I7th is Arbor Day intheTerritories l.iiteat ^ieultlsb N«\v». The Earl and Counteea of Roaebery have gone to Milan. J. Proudfoot, superintendent of the per- manent way in Perth and Crietf district, and an old servant of the Caledonian Rail- way, died at Perth the other day. There are four candidates for the vacant Clerkship of tho Free Church General .\ssembly : H. Lorimer, Mains ; Rev. Archibald Henderson, Crieff; Rov. J. W. Laurie, Tulliallan; and Rov. It. G. Balfour, Edinburgh. The funeral of Captain McCall, the lato Chief of the Glasgow police force, took place on the itrd inst. 'fhu remains wore followed to the grave by the Lord I'rovoat and magistrates, several of the slierilTa, about !400 constables, and by a largo portion of the general public. The jubilee of the ministerial career of Rov. Dr. Uoratius Honar, Chalmers' Memorial Free Church, Edinburgh, was celebrated on tho '>i\\ inst. The meeting was presided over by Lord Provost Sir Thomas Clark, Bart. Dr. Uonar was, in the course of the evening presented wiUi a sdver salvor and a checjuo for i;i,000. Thu police authorities at Dundee iiave rei(Uustod the police in Now York city to search for a young man nnmed Wilham Stephens. Uo left Dundee on tho i'luii ult., and sent a note to his friends indicat- ing his intention of committing suicide. It is believed, however, that ho crossed the Atlantic and is now iu the city named. Stephens, who is altlictod with religious mania, is 'it years of age, and belongs to a good family. .V reward of CI 00 is offered for news of him, alive or dead. The statement which recently went the rounds that the last surviving servant of .Sir Walter Scott had died ia incorrect. In Kirkliill there rcaidos a woman, Margaret Thomson, who was in the service of tho great novelist when he died. At the age of II) Margaret wont to Abbotaford aa scullery- maid, where she remained two years, when on Sir Walter taking the journey to Naples for bis health, sho, with a number of other servants, waa discharged. On his return, however, she was re-engaged as kitchen maid. She is now 71 years of ago, tho mother of four children, who are all in honorable positions, is comparatively healthy and still full of " auld warld cracks." .^ Lord UulTorlu'a Movom«nl«. " Lord Dufterin's stay at Rome will bo very brief," says London Tridli, " and, in deed, it ia highly probable that ho will not take up his appointment as successor to Sir John Saville. I understand that Sir Robert Morior will certainly leave St, Petersburg in November, and Sir William White is to be his SHcccssor, ho being replaced at Constantinople by Lord Duf ferin. Sir Robert Morier will most likely go to Rome." ^ NiKns of Spring A daub of paint on tho skirt of your beat coat. The paporer leaves a lialf linished job in the kitchen. More mud in tho front hall than there ought to bo in the tlower garden. 'rho worst cold you've had since De- cember. . A hat too good to throw away and too much worn to look well. How Things Proe««d ^There Days are Six MonthH Long. If they ever find the North Pole, aud it becomes colonized, they are going to have an awful time of it. They will liave day- light six months and darkness six montha out of the year. There is a certain limit of trouble and ingenuity beyond which immortality will not go. The limit ia far enough olT at the best, but if it were night for six months on end what would become of us '.' Husbands would never go home at all. Parties would only be divided by the time necessary to recruit ex- hausted nature ; a woman would need a new dross every four hours, because she couldn't go to more than two parties in the same dress, aud it would be an awful hardship to do oven that. They would say : " Why, do look at Mrs. . She wore that same dress at the Smith's juat ten hours ago." " Are you going to the theatre now '.'" ' No ; I saw the piece already to-night." " Get up." " What time ia it '.'" " Don't know ; but I put you to bed in a iniaerablo condition six hours since, and we are due at tho Jones'." "Well, wait till [ get my breakfast, or supper, or dinner ; whieh is it anyhcrw?" "Don't remember; it is my IKith meal this season." " Don't light the gaa yet. I only saved ?l,UO0,000, and that gaa bill is getting pro digiouB. A now dross! That's the fifteenth in 17"i hours." 'Great Scott ! the metre's busted and the electric wire's broken. Where are my boots â- ' ' ' And the daylight would be confusing. A man would never know when to leave his business. Newspapers would be published just when every thing hapjiened, which would be very frc<iuontly. " ( 'ome on ; let'a go home." " Hold on; just onegame more." " We've been at it just 18 hours now by tho watch. " " Where's my dinner'.' " " Really, my dear, I didn't think it was ao lougsinco the last meal, and I've been shop- piht;'' '. ...„.:."a " Shopping ! Youcame homo from shop- ping just before 1 went out, and woke me up to borrow money for car fare." "This bonnet is worn out. 1 can't be seen on the street with it again." "JuliuB Caesar I You've only had it two houra. " " Yea; but every woman I know has seen it by this time. " " Got a lawn tennis party in lifteen min- utes, you say ,' Well, you've only ooine in from boating. You won t .see tho winter if you go un like this. No, I haven't had but three drinks since I loft home. " By tho way, John, I want yon to drive mo out to the park." I can't; I'm sleepy. I've been up thirty- six houra." '• Well, I've only seen you fifteen min- utes." " I can't help that ; you know perfectly well the photographing busiiiesd will have to t'hut up pretty soon, and I've got to make all 1 can out of it now." Juat think, however, the trying position of men who would like to get full. "Look at Mr. Jones! Well, I never! Staggering along the street in broad day- light ! 1 am aahamed of him !" .\iid all the neighbors watching lonos trying to lind a keyhole in the fence, and perhaps taking his clothes ofl' outside of tho lioor. Of course there will bo comiiensa- tion for such people in tho winter. Night waa evidoully intendod by nature tu enable the exerciao of the objectionable propen- silies of tho human, anyway. Sun l-'raii- citco Chronicle, ITCHING PU.S8. SvuTTOiKi â€" Moistore; intense itching and stinging ; most at night ; worse by acratoh- ing. If allowed to continue tumors form, which often bleed aud ulcerate, beooming very sore. Swayne'.'^ Ointmknt stops the itohing and bleeding, heals ulceration, and in many cases removes the tumon. It ia 8C)iially efficacious in curing all Skin Diseases. DR. SWAYNE X SON, Pro- prietors, Philadelphia. Sw.wnr's Ointmkmt can be obtained of druggists. Sent by mail for 30 cents. A rich Philadelphia woman, noted for her wealth and eccentricity, wc^ars a strik ing ring on one of her thumbs. How's Your Liver '* The old lady who replied, when asked how her liver waa, " God bleas me, I never heard that there waa such u thing in the house," was noted for her amiability. Prometheus, when chained to a rook, might as well have pretended to be happy as tho man who is chained to a diseased liver. For poor Prometheus there waa no escape, but by the use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets, tho disagreea- ble feelings, irritable temper, constipation, indigestion, diz/dness and sick headache, which are caused by a diseased liver, promptly disappear. Mrs. Mary D. Lowman, Mayor of Oska- loosB, Kan., has a pleasant face and motherly mannera. AimlOK at Urit-lnalltjr. Book Dealer (to customer) â€" In selecting a library, madam, you will, of course, wank H set of Dickens' works, ccAnph to. Society Dame â€" No, 1 think not. Every- body has Dickens' works.â€" /''r m Puck. London, Out,, Tiklout Abroad. Bob Murray, theLondoii, Ont., man, who ia to be tried next month for murder, is ruuning a saloon at Fort Smith, Ark., and they say is raking in dollars whore he couldn't make cents in Michigan. It is the most popular thing on tho schedule in Iron filings, alightly I the southwest to be under indictment for I warmed, burst into brilliant scintillations I killing a man. .Notblni; Like It ' I'^vory day swells the volume of proof that as a apecilic for all lUuud diseases, nothing ctjuals Dr. I'ieroe's Golden Medical I'lseovory. Remember, this is an old established remedy with a record ! It has been weighed in tho balance and found ful- filling every claim ! It lias been tested many years in thousands of cases with llattering suoceas ! For 'I'hruat and Lung troubles, Cataarh, Kidney disease. Liver Complaint, Dyapepaia, Sick Headache and all disorders resulting from itnpovorished blood, there is nothing like Dr. Piorco'a Golden Medical Discovery- world renowned and over growing in favor Within a week two children have lost their lives through swallowing toyballoona, and in neither case was tho cause of atrau. gulation discovered till after de^tb. In both inatanuea thu obatruction in tho throat could have been roniovod in time had thoao present known what tho trouble was. " If a woman iH prcttv. To me 'tis no matter, lit] fllio l)londo or lirunotte. So she lets uio loi>k at her. .\n unhealthy woman ia rarely, if over, beautilul. I'lio peculiar diseaaes to which au many of the ae\ are subjeol are prolific causes of pale, sallow facea, blotched with unsightly pimples, dull, lustreless eyes and emaciated forma. Woiiion so altlictod can be pcrinaiioutly cured by using Dr. I'ierce's Favorite Prescription ; and with tho restor- ation of health comes that beauty which, combined with good < I iialitios of nead and heart, makes women angels of loveliness. " Favorite Prescription " is tho only medicine for woniou, sold by druggists, umhr it iiosilivc iniitraiilci- from tho inanu- facturera that it will give aatiafaotion in every case, or money refunded. This guarantee has boon printed on the bottle- wrapper, and faithfully carried out for mauy years. she Unvo Ulm Back the lliuK. In a New York Court yesterday, Mrs. Linnio Von Procha/'.ka threw her wedding ring at the foot of tho man sho ia suing for divorce. ,loy in Kvory Drop, This may bo truly said of Poison's Ner\i lino, thu greatest pain reinody of tho ago It brings comfort to tho weary sulforor when failure has attended tho use of every known remedy. Norvilino is an absolute cure for all kinds of pain, internal, e.xter ual, or local. Purchase a 10 cent aampio bottle and try this "reat remedy, Nerviline, nerve pain cure. Don't forget the name, At any drug store. Do you fixl dull. Innnuid, low-upiriti-d. lit*, less, and iiidiwnbalily inisenible, bi>lh pliysi- oally and nieiunlly : experience a wnso of fullness or hUiatiiiir after eiitinif. or of "Kone- ness, " or "inptiueiw of stonmeh in tho mont- uiK, tongue eoalfd. I;itter or bad taste in inuutli, im'Kular appetite, dizzineiis. frei|iient headaches, lilurred eyesiglit, " tloatintt speeto" iK'fon- tlie eyes, nervous pnistnuion or ez- luiiislloii. irritability of temper, hot tlushea, iilteriitttuut with chilly seuiMitlons, hliarp, liitiiiK. tnuisieiit pains here and tli<T<>, eold fi-ei, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or disturlied and uiindresbiiig slit-p. t-onstaut, iiuleecnbuble loelint; of dnad, or of ;uii>enil- UK ealBimty ': you have all. or any witisiderablo number of these Bymptuins, you iiit) sutTeriiiK from that most coininoii of .Vinerieuii muladlc*- lllllous DvBpepsiii, or Torpid Livi-r, luutoeutted with liyBia-psia. or IndlKestiou. Tbo mum eoiiiplicated your disi-iiae has beeoiiie. tiM Kr<-utiT the niinilKT and ili\eiiiity uI syni|>- louis. No matter wlial siage it has n'acbeu. Dr. Pierce's Uulduii nedical DiMsovory will suIhIuo it, if tukc-ii aceurillng to cllirc- tums for a n-jiaonablo leogili of time. If not cured, enniplications multiply and t'onsump- tiiinof tile l.unirs. Skin lliseiuses. Heart Ibseaae, Itlieumutism, iCldui^ Disease, or other gmvo innlBriles are qulto nabic to set in aud, souoer or later, indiieo a fatal tet-nmiation. Dr. Pivrv<t'H Utiltleii .'nedlt-al Dla- fovory actH poweriull>- iip-'i ;tie I.nt-r, iumI iliroUKb tlial Kn-ot hlood - pu il,vin),' oiimn, c:l4iaiises the s>ateiii of all tii(»o.!-taiiitK anil im- pqntics, froin wliat*-M'r eaiist- arisini;. It !• iiulally eilicneious in aetintr upon the Kld- Miys. and oilier i-viiiioiy orKans, vieaiiKiiiK, streiigtticning', and healing ttieir diseases. At an appeli/.inif. r-esionii j\ c ttniie, it prianotes digestion and iiiifritiuii, iheiehy tniilding up l>oth llesli and streiigtli. In tiialanal distncIaK ttiis wonilcrtiil iliedleino has gainetl ,fn^ i-eiebritj 111 <-urMiK' I'rvrf and -\i:oe. ('lulls and l''»\ er, Ihiiiih Akuo, and kindrt-1 ^tweasi k. Ur Fleree'H <;oltlun Tied leal Din. 'r^i!tRES ALL HgJAHORS, • â-  â-  ! .â- 'tiiillMtii Ulnt'll. < â- '(â- rolula. >aH-rh< -• :ilv or UoukIi SUiii, Ml i.-:nisif«l hy had t>U>0(i un- I>owi'rtiil. piirifyiiij^. aiul <\ \:\ iipMi.M. tu tho iiiii. " \'\ \ I'l -.Mtrii*," .•tliiti't. ttil iliM'tiMf )>l.ii-n--l hy KiiS iS"iii< ':'i-' iiii'ih- iiin*. iir<'iil l-iiitiiiK Ult'.rs ni[»i'U\ lit .\i uinItT itM Ihtukii nitlu('iKi\ I'lspm.ihv lui-* it iiiuni- IcKti-il Us [MUvnry ill «'uriiij^ T-'II'T. lit /(-mil, ICrxHUH'las, Iti'ils. J'arhniiflcH. ^*<nâ- e Ky**". >tiiff- til'nm Siirt.'8 uiul >Wfllu ;'â- ;, Hip-j""" I'imhw, â-  Whito Sw^â- llin^^s" (m.iu.'. .»r ThwU Nuk, iiii'l UnlarK'Hl (ilandfi. Send tm • • uis m slumps ftir II im'Ki' Tt'-atise, willi i .â- U'i<t| piju<s, oi) ."^kin Oiwiiw*. >>v Hit- ftain*' aiiiuuiil \m a Tn-alise ou Strwlulitus Allivtiun-i. *« FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.'* rhtuouKlily_*:l*'anS4* it by U'^jiik' Wr. l*it'rr«'« <;«>lili^ii <TE«<li4'al DiHt-ov«ry« atul ^mmmJ iIiKi'Mtioi), li fair Hktii, tMu>yaiit spii' 's, vital slnMigtU tiiul tKKhty hi-tillli will tx' i-MLitMi^lu-*]. CO]SSIJMPTION, which i« Scrofula of<li<^ l.tiiiKN, !•; ai'riiit«l and cun'd ^ly 'hm renietly. il lalven in the eaillcr sta>;t>,s ot the dtsea-He. I'"roiii its iiiar- veloiH power over iliii lenilily iatul disease, when Ilrst olTenn^r tins now worlil-latiied rein- eilv to flic public. Or. I'lero* IbouKhl wrioiiHly ol' rallllHf it ills "Co.VSl'MI'IKlN ClUK," liut aliandoncd that iiaiiic a.-* too icstrielive for a mccliciiie which, from ita wonderful iiini- l>iiialiun of tome, or KtniinlbeniiiK, alterative. .>r liloiid-cleansiiiif, aiili-bilioiis, iieetoml, and mitritlve jiiH)pertieK, is uni-ttualed, no* im\v as a renuHJv for CoiiHuinptiou, tint for all C'liroiile DlfiCiiwN if the Liver, Blood, and Lungs. l''or Weak I.iiiuts, Spittini? i)f Ulood, Short.- iiess ot Ilreath, Ctiiouic Nasal Catarrh, llrou- ehitis, .\8thiim, ."Severe CoukIis. and kindred utl'eeiions, it is an etticicnt renuHiy, Solil bv UniKKialN, at #1.00, or Six Mottle* for »r,.{io. i?ff~ Send ten oeiils iu stamps for Dr. I'iorce'a book on Consuinption. .\ddress. World's Dispensary Medic; I issociation, UU3 main St., HUt'FALO. IV. Y. D O M L, l.s K8. Merchants, Butchers, A:<D TlUUKKHOKNBK.\LLy, Wo want a oooi) man in your locality to plok CALFSKINS l'"or us, Caeh furnlBlied on satisfactory Kuaranly AdilresiC. S. I'AUK, Hyde I'ark, Vermont, U DUNN'S BAKING POWDER TH€ COOK'S BEST FR5ENDI .'ft*.

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