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Flesherton Advance, 17 Jan 1884, p. 7

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LEAP YEAR CURIOSITIES Am Old < uhlona whlrh Observed. A CHAPTKU FOB TUB LADIBS. Whan the nations of the earth flnl began iw measure time thsy did it in a happy-go- look; sort oi way tbat eom*liaiee got them BJly imieii ap. '1 be old Roman empe- (ort UHUIJ to hi tbi calendar 10 BUI I them salve*, each after hie own fashion. That it happened thM Bometimes tbere would be montbi in a year, sometimes but 10, Mid at one time thai* were tlve JV" that ware not in tbe year a; all, but limply served to fill ap between the end at u old >er end tbe boKiuuiuK of u w out) Tbe matter that troubled the auuiaiit calendar uj.knt. was thai tbey really didn't know a year when they caw it. Tbey would just go ou eayiog that to and no many day* made year, and tben when they found tbeauelve dropping behind, or outrunning tbe >uu, tlmy would a* the case might demaud, drop or add a few month* or daye, it *- immaterial to them whioh, and then uv* on contentedly until the necessity for an- other patching up aroM. If an emperor had a friend whom he particularly wiabad to honor, or felt inclined to propitiate any of tbe numeroue godi and goddeaaea tbat managed celestial and terreelrial affaire in those dayi they umply added a new manlh to the year, named alter tbe party tbe taffy waa intended tor, and tbe thing we* done. Those old Romane were mode*t chape, and eoowionally one would name a month after When Julia* Catsar aeenmed eonlrol ol oatters in tbe Eternal Oity be found tb* calendar in an infernal mesa. With an energetic promptitude tbat waa character latio of tbe man, he at ouoe rearranged things according to bis own notion, and auooeeded in doing a better job than any ot hie predecessors,, but in order to do this he had to mix one year up so tbat neither he nor anybody elae eoold make head or tail of il, and this period has since been known to thoee who are interested in these natters aa the " TBAB of OJ*rU*IOS," which we* a very appropriate appellation. When be bad brought hie plan iote running erder he bad whet is known as the Juhau calendar, which contained 13 montbe named aa at preeent. February had 3V days ordi- narily, but every four years bad 30. This may be called the first regular laatallation of leap year on a permanent baaia. After be bad secured tbe general management ot the earth and bad tbe title of Augustus added to hi* name, a day waa taken from February, whioh already had lees than the others, and added to August, which had been named from himself, because July, which waa named after the first Ca>*ar, bad 91 days, and Augustus did not propose to have anybody own a bigger month that he did. Having thus glorified himeelf [it ia aaid be did It to flatter tbe vanity of Oo- taviui), be was compelled to alter the length of tbe later mouth* in order tbat three long months might not oem* altogether. Though Julius Oeiiar did pretty well, be didn't quite make both ends meet. Tbe solar year contained 865 days, 6 hours, 4H minute* and 46.06 seconds, while tbe Emperor's year contained 3ti.">f daye about 11 minutes and 18 seconds longer than the solar year. Thing* ran along in thia way until 1683. when Pope Qeogory in that hue will be received, the ou*loiuary and deotnt confusion endiug in ascent It WM the state of eeelueion iu whioh mar- riageable girl* were kept in thoee daye that probably incited them to demand BXTEA PHITLLIOH raa LBAT TBAB, and they probably eeleoted that time on the strength of their knowledge that men generally ipeod about three-lout the of their earning* on tbemeelvee and the remaining fourth on their womankind, and eo reasoned that perhaps they might give up one-fourth ol their privilege* with re*|eottooonrtebip. Though tbe imperceptible encroachments of time and ouitoBi have eo changed the eooial structure tbat leap year right* are no longer neoeeeary to the fair MX. since tbey now practice what amounte to nearly the name thing in all yeare, yet the ancient traditions are not forgotten, if not observed, and efforte to revive them in some degree era frequently made. Thus it happen* that on New Year'* day in leap year some people try to have the ladiee make tbe call* ot tbe season while the gentlemen remain at home to entertain. Society, however, ii very conservative ae regard* it customs, il uot iii regard to wbom it admile within Ite charmed end abarming circle. All attempt* to i u trodao-j leap year praotioes have ended IB failure. Tbere is a elaes outside the eaored pale of what u ieU-styled euoiety ,' but, nevertheleee, quite a* good ae thai whioh sparklee in Vanity Fair, who are not o ultra formal but that they can enjoy a iittle innocent fun, and in this circle lea; year parties are sometimes indulged in, bu rarely ; and take the Tear all around, tb< bachelor'* liberty ie about as secure as in any other. Mark tc I IQl K I I a AT BOJtk. 1 1 NaieeM Tbe rd r.r Sertel home often THE PEHILf* OF HONE. 'I w mil on the) 1 I i\ flllUM of WHO MOST NEED ACC1NNT '"SURANCl The man in the ticket office said : " Have an aooident insurance) ticket atooT" No," I eaid, after studying the mailer over a little. " No, I believe not ; 1 am ug to be travelling by rail all day to-day, iowever, to-morrow I don't travel. Oive me one for to-morro*>." Tbe man looked puzzled. Hs eaid : But it ie for accident ineuranoe, and if ron are going to travel by rail " " If I am going to travel by rail I sha'n'l teed it. Lying at home m bed is ths thing I am afraid of." I had been looking into this matter. Last year I travelled 20,000 miles, almoet entirely by rail , the year before I travelled over 25,000 miles, half by aea and half by rail ; and the year before that I travelled in tbe neighborhood of 10,000 miles, ex- clusively by rail. I enppoaei if I put in all tbe little odd jenrueyii here and there, I may say I have travelled 60,000 miles dur- ing tbe throe yeare 1 nave mentioned. And never an aooident. For a good while I said to myself every morning: " Now I have escaped tons far, and so the ohaooee are juat that much increased that I halloatoh It this time. I will be shrewd, and buy an accident ticket." And to a dead moral certainty I buw ibougbOeea people grumble more than is fair about railroad management. When we consider that evsry day aad uajbi of tbe year fully 14,000 railway trains of vari- ous kinds, freighted with life and armed with death, go thundering over tbe land, tbe marvel is, not that they kill 30O human being* in a twelvemonth, but that they do nol kill 300 time* 300. rlil.it U a had thing, but Dr. Pierce'* Favorite Prescription " deaerves ita nam*. It is a certain cure for thoee painful maladies and weakneeee* which embitter tbe livee of eo many women. Of drugguts. There are some beautiful flower* are soentleae, and i>rae beautiful who are unlovable. Btmtlh NOTED BIT rvriTi JU> WO Often Ike Virtue will eaten a* well at Tie) by contact . and the public stock of honest, manly priuoipls will daily airmmiileH Bwrtu. Being entirely vegetable, no particular care is required while ueuig Dr. Pierce'* Pleaaact Purgative Pellala." They oper- ate without disturbance to tbe constitution, diet or occupation. For nek headache, constipation, impure blood, diuineae, sour smetation* from the) (tomeou, bad tats in month, bilious meat*, pain in region ot kidney, internal (ever, bloated fueliug about stomach, ru*h of blood to heed, take Dr. Pieroe's " pellets." By druggists. induce eareleBaneea ae to etiquette, the impression being that politeness and poli*i Me only needed in society, and tbat care leeenee* of manner ia appropriate to bom Ufa. All such views are erroneous. Tber ia positive comfort in polilem etiquette is aa important atnome ae abroad. Ws dialingulah etiqnslt* aa the outward expreenibn of politeness. It has M do with form* and attentione wbiob are external. A lady in society ie treated with a certain deference, which manifest* iteelf In deli- cate attentions. Children in society are treated with considerate kindness, which u always considerately expressed. Tbsre are rule* of Itiquelte wbiob relate to the many little atten- tions and formulas. These in society are 1 carefully graded, and often rigidly enforced. They u>ay be made onerous and *o oppres- sive. But etiquette is clearly defined. We do not advocate an etiquette for tbe bom* eo rigid as to be burdensome. Yet it ms be the means of teaching politeneee to children. Thoee who have an inetuiotive politeness sesily fall in with tbe rule* of etiquette. But all have not thi* luetiuol. Borne are careless, rude, selfish, inconsi- derate. Tbeee need diroiplins. To givs this ie not to lecture on the rules of good order or politenees. It muat be msulled more by example tbau precept And where the parents are careful to obejerve tbe foimi of politeness, its importance i* naturally impressed and it* rule* are speedily learned. Therefore, all deference tbal would be shown in public society should mark inter- oonrae at home. And if hueband and wife are courteous, children imbibe aud practice The export of diamonds from tbe Cape between Aug. 1*1 and Nov. 30th. inclusive, amounted iu value to leee than 15,000. I. tried hi* hand at tinkering tbe oaleu dar, and fixed up a year with 365 daye, 6 hours, I'.i minutes and 13 seconds, which has been in use ever since, aud seems to anewer tbe purpose very well To be sure, it exceeds tbe solar year by nearly 36 second* ; but as that would only make one day in 3,335 years, w* oan etruggle along with it (or a time at least. Tbe necessity for leap year arise*, aa everybody knows, from the feet thai tbe earth doee not move around tbesuniu a cer- tain number of whole daya, but node at the end ol ite journey the* it has a fraction of a day, approximating one-fourth, to dispose of ; BO, to make mattere eaay and con- vmiient for all concerned, an sstra day is lipped in every fourth year, and aa February, sinoe it wan the victim ot tbe Roman spoiler, ia worse oft than ever, it is thrown thie vagrant day much as one would throw a picked bone to a dog. IBB FAIR HEX, who, to tell tbe truth, are not alow to It. Example ie the preat teacher in thii line. Bevond thie oourteev exerts a very decided influence on character. Trained to the etiquette of politenees given a balance and evennees to character. Ite very inoep tiou involves Belt-control and ooneoious restraint. It i* with most aeooud nature. Tbe form* and rulee are acquired aud tbe habita slowly grafted on. Where this is done eo much bee been aeoomph*bed in tbe liue ol self-control that its influence extends to temper and habits ot mind, to be eelf contained A gentleman will be obeerve anything. new, eepecially if it ua bonnet, soon saw that timee bad changed, eo to *pek, and at once Bet about oouvriv. ing to turn the new order of things to their own account. Whether a general conven- tion of duly appointed delegates wae held, or an understanding wae arrived at by oorreapondenoe or intuition (intuition i* one ol the attributes of women), thi* hi*torian declines to state, though it doem. ' follow that he couldn't if be would but at all events the understanding wee arrived at tbat on any day ot tbe 866 in leap year it would be lawful for any npioeier. maid or widow to propoee marriage to the man ot her choice without loeiug or m any way endangering, damaging or otherwise afleot ing tbat feminine delicacy and reeerve which i* tbe chief charm of tbe spineter*, maid* aud widows aforesaid. It waa alao unanimously enacted that proposals made in aooordanoe with the above law must be accepted, but in practice it wae tonnd tbat thi* provision wae likely to upset the whole matter, *o it we* amruded to require that all proposals should be reepeotfully enter- tained, and where tbe union wae thought inadvisable or undeeirable tbe party asked might get out of it in the usual way of ask ing time to consider, and then declining finally in a polite not*. The mysterious part of this whole matter is, why did the gentler sex elect to reverse tbe established order of tbiuga every fourtb ytar 7 And yet, on mature consideration It may poisibly be accounted for. In the olden tirn* when the custom originated, women wsn under much greater restraint in social matters tbau at the present day. Tben they wer* kept in tbe bouse almost constantly, and never allowed to Mir out at all, exoept in tbe company ot come old duenna in the pay of etern parente, who would no more bear of an innocent flirtation than tbey would out their own head* off. Tbe maidi were not even allowed to receive a prapcaal of mar riage, except through their guardian* ; mnofe less to make one. It waa not then, aa now, when if a girl wants to marry a dude, evsn though she cannot ask him, she Huoh peraon* are spt in all emergencies. mob under all provocation and amid all trials or taste. Uenoe children thus edu- cated receive something more tbau polish. It is something to gracefully escort a lady to dinner, or to maintain an agreeable con- versation, or to show, at all time*, tbe air ol good breeding ; but the value ol it all U the traits ot mind that have been imparted. A olean person will feel clean, and one accustomed to politeness will naturally realize tbe elevation of feeling that attends oourteey. tio habite formed at home are important, and tbe habit of courtesy rank* among tb* &tt.I'hila.iflf>Mtt Call. A Brmvr ncMrh Vsvwwr. At a recent meeting in London of the British hoyal Humane Boeiety, a silver medal was unanimously voted to Mr. D. MoCulloob, a young farmer, of Cardran, Urummore, Btranraer, Wigtownshire, for a gtllant act performed by him on tbe llth November last, whereby be was inetrn- mental in saving the lives of six persons. On that date tbe barque Ennsmia was wrecked, during aheavy gale, on tbe rooki beneath the cliffs, some 200 feet high, at Oarnegavoo, where Peter N io.il. the master, and five of the orew were waabed up. Ow- ing to the tempest it wae found impoeeible to paea a rope to tbe poor sailors, and, though several penonc realiied tbe penloui position, no one ventured a rescue until Mr. MoCullooh appeared non the eoene. He at and went to bed that night without a joint started or a bone ipliotered. I got tired of tbat eort of daily bother, and fell to buying aoeideol tickets that were good for a month. I said to myaalf, " A nan oan'i buy thirty blanks in one handle. " But I wae miataken. There wae never a prixe in tbe lot. I could read ol railway accidents every day the newapepsr atmo*phere wee foggy with tbsm, but somehow they never oeiue my way. I found I had spent a good deal of money ia tbe accident buiineee, and bad nothing to show for it. My (uspioion* were aroused, and I began to bunt for somebody that bad won in this lottery. I found plenty of people who bad invented, but not an individual who had *v*r bad an accident or made a cent. I topped buying accident tickets and went tooipninug. The result wae astounding. Tbe peril lay not in travelling, but in ataying at home. I HCMT1D UF STATISTICS and was am sand to find tbat after all tbe glaring newipaper heading* concerning railroad diaaitem, leea tbau 300 people bad really loet their livee by thoee duasten ID tbe preceding twelve mjnthe. Tbe Erie road wae eel down aa tbe moat murderous in the list. U bed killed 46 -or 26, 1 do not exactly remember which, but 1 know the number wae double that of any other load. But the fact etraightway inggeeted iteelf that the Erie we* an immensely long road, and did more business than any other line in the country ; ao the double number of killed eeaeed to be matter for surprise. By further figuring, it appeared thai between New fork aud Rochester tb* Erie ran eight iiaaaenger trains each way every day sixteen altogether and car- ried a daily average of 6,000 per- eons. This is about a million in six months, tbe population of New York city. Well, the Erie kills from thirteen to twenty three penoue out ol ite 1,000,000 iu eix months . and in the same time 13.000 out of New York's 1,000.000 died iu their bede ! My flesh crept ; my hair stood ou sod. " Thi* is appalling," I said. "The danger Uu't in travelling by rail, but iu truxtiug to those deadly bede. I will never sleep in a bed again." I bad figured on considerably leee than oae-balf Ibs length of the line road. It waa plain that tb* entire road mu*t transport at least ll.uu i or 12.000 people every day. Tbere are many short roads running out of Boston that do fully half ae inuob , a great luauy such roads. Tbere are many roads *oat tered about tbe Union that do A raiDioiocs rAasdoxa BDVIXXIS, therefore it waa fair to preeume that an If bilious, or suffering from impurity of blood, or weak laugi and fear eoninmption (scrofulous disease ot the Inngt), take Dr. Pieroe's Ooldso Medical Discovery " aad il will cure yon. By druggists. emrtt tntli*T*j "-f-r-^ _mwoa cf hr Mn*BB*BS*asi le**to*al a. b)M*:j;A ' dTOlfdU> iMr work, walok ! Uta ouM C 4 Lf >r.udy, aa4 t> nfle* to KM* *U mlc-. 4*LT pout la aw, * I kntkc.il aMifUf.or Joy MnUMttKBlL V(WtU>Compoudk>t rflrlrx for food u4 Oa mr* i itrtktktrtt II wvrkt ttk* a ckam i I MOtrttj A lady wae asked tbe reason why she always came so early to eburob. Se- cant*," said she, " it i* part of my religion never to disturb the religion ol others." FRE AMONG THB AGED WE UUBNTLY nheern an aloiotl tuii^nti. in of tb* (aoetloB* ol nutrition Tb* macluary of tb body UIQ< Dearly worn out. tb* feeble *u>mah it nnabl* to Jl(*el and a**liullat food to nourun aud r*i>air lb* ihauite* frani* uid lukai* ib rllal foreti 6ucb ITIWCX bavin* fbl* IHIWW* of re*t*une uffer luuob from itreuiM of t*upratur, and uocumb *e*il7 to dl***e*. from wblcb tb*y rallriwltb .lifflcaHj for want of conttitutloual vujor Here Dr. vrbeeler'i CompoonJ Blixir 01 PboapbaM* and Caliiara u InvalQabl* Iu rxtor* lb wwl of t'vvuM. and preveDt pro*tr*tion and nunral debihly. by furuitbiuc lh liuuu of Don*, mu*ele and D*rre, Iu an Mill) aMiiallabl* form. _ _ Every man hat three character* . that which he exhibit*, that which he ha*. and that which he thinks be baa. A. A'arr. gtettajejaetlala* It iiMttti n*n pcrttoo at th rj aw Hf M4 Tt(ct. It nmai aaTtef (or ImalHiU. al .-. al Ik* iMouvt. It cw &m.< at T -* *"- katltk ky tk* *m of wM V*-waU '< at aw Voavt la Lyma, Maw. Fur X>c7 OmpJauU of tiniiMMil M abuamal lxliillt * M Vi% ftakkan't Li**r FUla/'tayv** CAXMK to la< wrU f *t tfce ean of rua.*urai aad eaekaee*. Ii ftzft kr M* UK M will a 411 Hmm. m* nmrnni --- - *" --- wuaikalw IkM fu1M ta* fll 17 Mm. It MM caty BL pv bwM> m *b f or . aaa k) MM kj AJJ tmtft TMIPM* kn at a* AJM| *C lure? wr lye* an *o perttet and *o U a plaa*or* k) u** tbem. 10 ewila. BB. DUmond D l.utiful tbal 11 Kquallj food for Jark or hhl oolort. An adverli*m*Dt says that " parlor matches are tb* only true matches for the honiahold." W* don't know about tbat. W* think some very eticfeotory engage menu have been made at the front gate, or out on the piazza. 11'Ly.il In " wboM benivoltnt fac It i'l>T w* pick up ,111 even i>rt to bare dUeovered Tbe grand elinr. to upport tbe ip'.rt* cf vbal Plnkbi-n, allowed in appetn to have dlnov Tie grand ell buuian nature." It n quit* evident tint .lie hu tbe patent an I bat eared tb* contract for making i ivrr au>! improving tb* Invalid oorp* ol Auiertoau Wouiaubixxl. Forty ctudeule in the Texas University are women. ' Neglect old friendi for the aak* nf new an. I Itxe both." Hut remember tbal huluiy Wort it a friend you cannot aiT-ri to nglct htr may relieve, but they can't cun< tbal lame back, for tbe kidnvyt are the trouble you want a remedy to act directly ou their M turn*, to purify and nu>r their hotltby coudi ttou Kidney Wort ha* tbat ipeciflo action. oooe ooncented to ellow bimeelf to be lowered over the face of the cliffs by a ingle email rope tied around hi* waist, having another rope in his hand, to tbe men below. In this position, and at the mercy of the wind, which blew with terrible force, tbe brave young farmer passed the rope down to tbe sailors, wbo were subse- quently hauled up in safety one at a time. IN rl.hr J In Ike tJaWW. During the night of Friday last a man named Gilbert Oenaaun started tor his home, aorne five miles distant from a tavern at Little Mills, near Laurenoeville, Que. Being lame and in liquor, be could not re- lint the severs cold, aa well as tbs blinding itorm, and so perished when within three acres of his own door. A mittened hand above tbe snow was tbe only mark that led to the finding of the frozen body by a neighbor. The deceased waa 60 years of age, and leavea a wife and three ohlldren. average of 3.500 passenger* a day for each road in tbe country would be about correct. There are 846 railways in our country, and 846 times 3.500 are 3,116,000. Bo tbe rail ways of America move more than 3,000,000 people every day 660 000.000 of people a year, without counting the Sunday*. They do that too tbere is no queetion about it though where they get tb* raw material m not clear beyond the jurisdiction of my arith- metic ; for I have bunted the census through and through, and I find that tbere are not that many people in tbe United States by s matter of 610,000.000 at the very leant. Tbey must use some of tbe same people over again, likely. Ban FranoiBoo i* one-eighth as populouH as New York ; there are 60 deaths a week in the former and 600 a week in tbe latter if they have luck. Tbat ie 3,190 death* a year in Ban Francisco, and eight time* as many in New York say 35,000 or 36,000. Th health of the two plaoee IB the same. Bo we will let it stand a* a fair presumption that thia will bold good all over the country, and that consequently 35,000 out of every million of people we have must die every year. Tbat amounte to one-fortieth of our total population. OHB M 11.I.IO* Or D* THEN HII ANNf AU.T. Out of thia million ten or twelve thoueand are stabbed, shot, drowned, hanged, poisoned or met simllerlv violent death in acme other popular way, such aa perishing by keroeene, lamp and hoop skirt conflagration, getting buried in coal mine*, falling off housetop*, breaking through church or lecture-room floor*, taking patent medicines or commit- ting suicide in other forms. Tbe Krie Kail- ay kills from twenty-three to forty -HU , the other 845 railroada kill an average ol one-third of a man each ; and the reet ot that 1,000,000, amounting in tbe aggregate to the appalling figure of 987,031 oorpee*. die naturally in their beds ! Yon will excuse me from taking any more chances on thoee beds. Tbe railroad* are good enough for me. And my advios to all people is, don't stay boms any more than you ean help ; but when yon have got to stay home a while buy a package of thoee insurance ticket* and sit up nighta. Yuu cannot be too cautious. [One oan see now why I answered thai A minieter in Orkney ul to pray thai all good influence* " might cleave to tbe hearts of hie congregation, and to then children'* heart*, like butter to here ban nooks!" HiTKtviLi.i Ohio. Feb. 11. UNO. I *m very (lad to lay I have tried Hop Hitter*, and uover took auytbiog tbal did me much goiid. I "lily took two buttle*, ami I would no take S1UU for tbe good they illd me. 1 rocouiuiem! tdoiii to my paticuu, ana ! tbe beat reault* from tb*ir ue*. C It MBJU-K*. il. U. Thinker* are a* noaroe ae gold ; but bi whose thought t-iubraoe* all his subject who purnuee it uninterruptedly and fear leee of oonsequenoss, ie a diamond ol euor moui lice. l.arattr. it <n . u Off < .- 1 . ii - Atk for ' Koaiih on Oougbi," for <_'oujht. CoMj Hor* Throat, U lie. Liquid. N which the grea IMPROVED BUTTER COLOR A NEW DISCOVERY. fWT . rirrml Tar* v ban fanUkl Ik* Balrrmra of AiMrtr* wk u nraltant arBV Ualnr Falrm. | f But by pUVfit and rlnttflr r*u-ml.-l r M*rvh * h*V" traprvwl la t*vr*l f>H>t* new eflkr ftkk* a** color a* |* *M< * i It Will Mot Color the B)uttrmllk. H Will Not Turn Hancld. H IB the tronaeet. Bfiariteet end Oteepeet Color Made, fW-And. Wh.lr |>lT|rr,l lOOll. to O (I thjit II U linpowll'l* t--r 'I I-- tco , j-B)lWAftl "' ' """ 4I "" i ,-..1 n>. for Uiy an liW 1 1 ir n ka.'w wbrraudluwto CM ItwilkoMri NEVER BE WITHOUT /COOICS BEST Love is a religion ol pontiff is nature. _ t.K< I I > t- OP ! \ > Nervou* Weekne**. Dyipepeta, Impotence. Bexual Debility, oured by " Well*' H*altti He- newer." !. r Good breeding consist* in having no par- ticular mark of any prolesioo but a gen- eral elegance ot manners. NWAN-M WOtVTl HVttfP tuteleai, harmleaa. cathartic ; for retline. worm*, oonitlpa- SOLD BY ALL GROCERS. Infallible. fivariahuM* Hon. 96o. _ School committeeman examining scholar : Where ie the north pole ? ' "I don't know, sir." " Don't know I Aie yon not anhamed that yon don't know where the north pole is?" "Why, air, if Sir John Franklin and Dr. Kane and Captain De Long couldn't find il, bow should I kuow where it isT" KIDNEY-WORT _ _ Tbe true way to render ourselves happy | *>oket agent in the manner recorded at tbe oen give him" to" understand quite plainly I ii to love our duty and find in it our .top of this sketch. Satiny proposition be may have to mate I plea.iire.--i~. * MotUrtU*. f T moral of this oompeeit.on is. that HAS BEEN PROVED The SURIST CURB for KIDNEY DISEASES. UBUTA at onw. rdTB- rut* i nuro m mil luand it wUl>p*dll7 ocmt Uit diM and rwton h.ltky t ,ltkj action. Ladles. and wrwaknM M It will tent pro*" aM-CTsVl- u> joui e, raoh P*la lk.. and ull pain*, all *V**^^r T ttl<l * II* poww 4. BOW) BT ALJ. DBPOOrBTtI - I KIDNEY-WORT UUUULEIItl aWftln. 1 IL ~ ~" .~.| FIT* IMMly I SHI BUT BEFORE -AND -AFTER Elerlrle M>llsiic ir* Met ** 33 Dt/t' Irtsi TO MEN ONLY, YOUNQ OR OLD "11 r H<l *r off," - >\

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