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Flesherton Advance, 5 Jun 1884, p. 7

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. l*reaey aad pate aod Ured 8h* alls ID her Miff backsd chair. White the blowing iuuimsr saa tUunM iu ,,u uer toft brown hair . And tbe Intl. brook without. Thai aha heart through tht opan door stoeks with its murmur cool Hard boucu ao4 dusty floor. It seemi an an.lleu round Orauiiuar sold A, B, O ; Tbe blackboard and the surai, Tbeilupid geography . Wneu from t-aciier to lutlttJia Hot out of them cares a ttraw Whether ' John " U In an y ' o**a Or Aansas in Umaba.. Kr Jtanjv'a bare brown feet Anaehiug to wadu in theilream. Whan the trout to bis lurin< ball IMiall leap with a quick, bright gle*ui Ajad hn ieachr> blue ey stray To the Hower on tbe deal hard by. Till her IhuuifUU bave followed her eyst Wuh a half uuooDtciout si^u Her heart outrun! tbe clock. as the tiiialUibiiir faint, iweet scent. Bat when have time and heart Their rnauure m uaieon bleat f for tiuia will hum or lag, Uke your shadow on the grass. That linger* f ar behind. Or HIM Lou you lain would | liar, patience, rentlees Jim, The itrMui and 0h will wait , And (whence, tired bine eye* Oewa the winding r ad bj the gall, Undo- the wlllu* ihade. Bauds some one with f reebsr flower. , tars to your book! again, And keep love fur the af wr hours. 9IrsB*rtee the ... 1 oanna think o' itberdaya, Or ling thu suuxi u gladnesi ; Na morrie th .cut oau drive awa* Tbegbaittly ahtdei o' aadu Ilk bird upou tbe l<*a!y *ree. Ilk mouieut fleeting f tat. Ca'e tomy uiin 1 aud jo, r me wr The mem'rie* u' tbe pasu Ma inockiDR bird, like tbat I hear. Holt warbling on yon tree, Im boonie bcoum uugs, uJ 7*1 It sadly brlngi to me The bitter tbucuu u ither rears. Whrn m UiatauM lang tyua, tlttn aaag to me tueiougu so dear. Her little baud m utiuu. I ken tbe flowert are b loom in DOW. That bloomed to iwaotl) thca ; I ken tbe pebbly brookleta flow Hull lhr<> tb* .ilonl K leo . 1 kea toe birdi aro bu il Ji ug nests Amid the y How whin ; la g%et me turn at oau id at death. That all i* uot ai thin. Tne bluahing daily bloomi the Mm* Tne mueay brae* adornin' ; Th* (olden sun, Hill frae tbe Raol. Proclaim* tbe eomtu' mornin' . Bst aba, wbo iu tboie hapuy days. Mad* life ao *w**l and lair, ew alee|i* beucalb th* uiottj bra>a*. As' left ine Ion* and sair. ThemookiD* blrj'i tweet toag to-day, Brocbi tear drop* to my 'ea Wltn luochia o' liner brifbMr Jajra, fat Iver gun* fra* me. We swear our love ihould lait thro' lift, | By ilka bum and tree ; Asa 'ore 1 w*d forg*t my troth I d ley me down and dee. O. A. Cutter, in ttn Chwa#o iMMr Oo*jn. ciaim* ntMLT miui. . > fW rVrlrr- rl UK II la rial. Dr. Joseph L*idy, the eminent anatomist and President of tb* Pennsylvania Academy of Natural Boienoee, baa written a letter to tbe Philadelphia 1'ime*, in which he say* : " I have always been an advocate of cremation on sanitary grounds, and I believe that it it were adopted in thickly populated communities it would promote their healthiness. Ordinary burial it the easiest and most *o jnooiical mode of dis- posing of tbs dead, and when removed a proper distance from human habitations answar* all good purposes, but in oitiee and in contiguous position*, where), from tbe accumulation and decay of bodies, th* air and water become liable to pollution, it is bettor to dispose of them by cremation. Many dneasee bav* their source and others are greatly exaggerated and rendered more fatal in crowded communities by the decay ol dead. exore- mentituus and wast* organic sub- stances. These are rendered thoroughly innocuous by burning, and thia mean* to destroy them should bs employed when it can be readily done. Fire is tbe great purifier. Cooking food in a great measure secures ut from many parasitic affeotioua. If we could with a* little objection treat the water we drink and th* air we breathe n th* *ame manner we would greatly diminiih our liability to disease. My expe- rience bis led me no regard oiemation with agreeable feelings compared with tboae produced by the reflection of rotting In tbe grave. I was glad to loam tbat my honored friend, Or. Grout, mad* th* provision he did. Mid I look upon it as a last good act o a good life. Il U an example I wish to follow and I bop* many other* may do likewise. Tbe objection mad* to or etna tioo, that It ii a heathenish custom, i* abeurd. In cremation and ordinary burial tbe ultimate result i* the lame. In oae it is rapid, tbe other alow, combustion. In both proo* sees the material of tbs body endure and, according to Chrietian doctrine, await the Omnipotent cell at the last resnr- fr r mlon ! I rrr > According to the Journal de Liegi, tbe forgery of bank notes goes on aa merrily as ever, one clever asl of operators being in a position to split into two, new note* tbat nave never been folded. Blue ink, which was adopted by reason of th* difficulty in- volved in reproducing It by photography, ia not now relied on ao much by bankers abroad ; scfui* of them hart recently taken another mean* of defeating the photographic forger. This ii no other than the employment of an invisible actinic ink, of which no tract can be seen on the bank paper nor upon th* imig* on the foousaing screen. As noon, however, as yon come to develop y mr plate bearing a reproduction of the bank note, tbe word " forgery " appeara in b jld lettera right across the negative. Ths Cokmifi and India says : " A woman named Uarrlel Cleaver bas been struck dead by lightning at Evan* Creek, Htoiiey Piuob, near Mudgee, Nsw South Wale*. Hhe bad just covered up her sew- ing machine, and had one of the needles in her hand when the electric fluid penetrated the slab* of tbe hut and killed her on the pot Th* needle was twisted in all direc- tions." Within two months the House of Lords bas had two Roman Oatbnho accessions he Karl of Abmgdon and Lord North both; converts. CURRENT TOPICS, BALACLAVA, although its nam* will b* evor famous ID history u associated wub th* famons light cavalry charge, baa mtnerte remained ma . unimportant towo. II is, however, now beginning to develop re*ouroe, aud bidi fair to became a taahionabl* resort for iuvalid. A medical commission visiting it last enmmer bM reported very favorably on iu sheltered position and climate. A KKTUBN lately published in the Journal OffleM sbowi that tbs uufavjrable oondi- lion of Frauoe as regard* the iaoreaae of population ii more marked than ever. A* far as tuob inoreaae ii dependent upon tbe augmentation of births over deaths, tbe population 04D DOW double itself bat onoe in 267 yearn. In reality, the doubling Ukee place more rapidly, owing to an increasing number of immigrant*. It 11 ooee in 105 years. Tin London Medial Timet believes that the sympathy expressed for criminal* tup- poeed to eufier pain on aoeount of the con- tinned action of the heart after tbe neck ie broken in banging, ii miaplaoed. It cites tba recent triple execution at Prague to ebow that the heart may puleate for a quarter of an hour tiler deaths wbiob are shown to be instantaneous. Many cases are recorded where tbe heart's action has continued for a long tame after complete decapitation. FAUIONULJ weddiugi are expensive enough in (but country, but in India they are even more BO. There a fashionable welding mstos unlimited hospitality to all tbe country round during the several days of too festivities. At tbe wedding of tbe Baa of Cutoh:) 4,000 were fed on the first day, 37, 000 on the aeoond and 36 000 on tbe third. Much a oostom iu tun ouuotry would be warmly welcomed by tbe poor, but in a majority of oases it would make tbe groom 1 ! tavingi of a lifetime look frightfully indisposed. TBI Canadian (lutitt poiuu oat that though only eight years have passed since Canadian phosphate was tint pot on tbe market, and the trade then was not thought to have a gnat future before it, tbe demand for tbe article has grown so rapidly that last year DO less than 1 .'.000 tons of phos- phate were ibipped from Montreal, and tbe shipment tbii year 11 expected to amount to 21,000 tons. It is, moreover, a more concentrated phosphate tnan any other in the world, and there is every reason (jr be- lieving that the trade will continue to de- velop year by year. Av interwting pine of news come* all tbe way from South Africa, and it is that a diamond wnghing :MK carats has been un- earthed at tbe Kimberley Mmee. This stone is only a trifle imaller than tbe cele- brated I'm gem, which was sold in 1717 to tbe Hegent Orleani for 130000. Tbe London Stindard. in ooa*menting on tnis find, point* out that no suob price could be obtained tors stout now, and attributes the depreciation in diamonds to tne in- creased supply from tbeee mines. It is not generally known that diamonds have be- corns comparatively common. I other countries beside* England flowers bait not lacked their followers "Charge for tbe golden liliee," was ever a potent war cry among tbe chivalry of France. Tbe (Jiyllo Illanco of Florence in it* days of evaneeoeut greatness, the red and white lilies, more bloody even than tbe English roets, of the Guelphs and Obi be line*, the linden of Prussia, tb* mignonette of Saxony, and tbs appropriate sugar maple of Canada, are all badges of more or lees universal acceptance, wbile tbe violet has been tbe selected symbol of tbe two aiigbtieat empiree Ibe world has seen the autocracy of tbe sword of tb* first Napoleon and the universal sway of art and literature iu auoiaut Athens. THIKE will be a vacancy for a maid of honor in Queen Violoiia'i household in consequence of the marriage of tbe Hon Victoria Baillie, who, io accordance with tbe neual custom, will receive a present of 1.000 from Her oiijesty. A list of can- didates for thane posts is always kept, but there are vry few names on it just now. Wben the Ijaeen and I'.iuo* Albert visited Taymouth in 1-ua. Lady Breadalbane's niece* went away for the period of tbe royal sojourn, as neither of them wa* anxious to be offered a court appointment, such offer, of course, being practically equivalent to a command, and refusal being resented at a piece of ingratitude. A Bun-mi Parliamentary return just i**n*d shows the number of electors in Oreat Britain upon tbe register now in force. Tbe total is 2,660,444 in England and Wales, 331 261 in Scotland and 330.156 in Ireland. Tbe largest county constitu- ency in England and Wales is Middlesex, with 41, aw electors; tbe next being Booth- weet Lancashire, with 30,624 ; the third Rontheast Lancashire, wi th 28,738 ; and the fourth, tht southern division of the Weet Riding, with 27,625. Tbe largest borough constituency in England is Birmingham, with 68483 electors; Liverpool baviag 61,316 and Lambetb following with .">5,58 , but Ulangow is th* largsst in th* United Kingdom, with 68,OJi. Ins national monomeM at Washington, when finished, will be tbe loftiest structure in the world, by about thirty feet. Tb* towers of tbe cathedral at Cologne, ju*t finished, bave a height of 624 feet and II inches ; tower of St. Nicholas, Hamburg, 473 feet 1 inch ; ojpola of Ht. Peter'*, Rome, ni'j feet 2 inobee ; otthedaal spire at Btras- burg, 4i;'> feet 1 1 inohei . pyramid of Obeop*), H, i feet 6 inches ; tower of St. Hyphen's. Vienna, 443 feet 10 inches; tower of Hi. Martin's I. tudabut, 434 test H inches ; cathedral ipir* at Freiburg, 410 f*t 1 iuch ; cathedral of Antwerp. 404 feet 10 ioobe* ; cathedral of Flomnoe. BOO feet " inches ; St. Paul's. London, 865 feet 1 inch ; cathedral, tower at Magdeburg, 839 feel 11 inobee tower of the new votive church at Vienna 114 feet 11 inches , tower of tb* Kathbaui at Berlii, 888 feet 8 inches , to wen of Notre Dane, Paris, 2.1 j f*et 11 inohee. Of American troolares, tbe Washington monument, Baltimore, is 210 feet ; Banker Hill monument, 2*1 feet Trinity Charon, New York, got feet; St. Patrick's Cathedral, N*w York, to be 330 feet. A c >BsroMDBNT writing to Notei and Queriet from Lincolnshire. England, say* : ' I am told that in th* villages near here confirmation it oansidered a safe cure for rbeumatiem, and that, consequently, old peraons are in th* habit of presenting tbemtelve* to tbe Bishop from time to time, a* often a* they can get an opportunity, to receive the rite. Tbe following stary wa* told me lately as a fact, though I cannot be responmble for it* absolute truth. The present Bishop of Lincoln, knowing of tbi* belief, wa* on one occasion almoetoonviuoed that be bad already lately confirmed a oar- tain old man who presented himself among the candidates, and therefor* be sent Arcb- deaoon K. to ask him. Tbe Archdeacon went up to him, saying, Have you been confirmed before?' but tbe man was deaf, so be bad tj repeat hi* question, add- ing, Tbe Biabop tbiuks be ban confirmed you before.' But tbe old man was, or pre- tended to be. still unable to hear, *o tb* Archdeacon upoke again in a louder tone . ' Tbe Bitnop feele sure be has confirmed you before.' Then tbe old man, Leanng at laat, and being perhaps a little nettled, re- plied gruffly, Tell un he'* a lee'er,' witt which unique aniwer tb* Archdeacon was forced to be content.' i M.I n m . l . . i m, >,. in. \ A V.MII Thai 11.14. S/JOO.OOO.OOU. I stood tbe other day in tbe vault of tb* formidable fortress of iron and masonry on Forty -second street, where last year the richest nabob in tbe world looked up bis 1200 000,000 io stocks, bonds and other securities. It is one of tbe most redoubt- able work* of defence on tbe American continent, though you may not be entirely certain of that by surveying tbe building from tbe ontsids. Its fauudaliona were blasted out of tbe rook ; tbe front wall is five feet in thickness, and tb* eide and rear walla are three feet, tbe materials ued be ing pressed brick with brown-stone trim- mmgs. Tb* beams, girders and main pillar* are iron, incased in fireproof material. The doors, window frames and minor partition* are iron, marble and glass. No wood it to be found in the structure. Tb* great vault is 36x42 feet, of wrought iron, steel and Frank- Unite iron, is imposing in strength and proportion*, and is situated on the ground floor. It* four outer door* weigh 4.200 pound* each, and bav* every effective and known improvement in defen- sive device*. A rnsaaiv* wall of masonry surround* tbe ironwork. Tb* vault, which is burglar, fire and water proof, constitutes a distinct building in itself. Tbe armed watchmen who guard the buildup day and right are under tbe (trident discipline, their nourly movements being recorded by an electric clock connecting with various poinu on each tl x>r of the structure, and there are also wire* running to polio* bead quarters and th* offices of the district tele- graph. In on* earner of thu great vault, behind heavy iron bars, are tbe heavier iron door* of tb* works containing tb* Van- derbilt securities, which sen be opened only by skeleton keys bsld by tbe owner alone. I euppose that a hundred men in this build- ing, with Q ailing guns, could easily defend it sgainsl a mob of 100000 assailants; it could be reduced by nothing lee* than tb* continued play of heavy artillery. John Swinltm. i. .. u t i 11.-. rl I* Krap- 111- I .-. .. An Oakland, < ' *I , telegram eay* : Lloyd Mnjors wa* hanged here this morning for the murder of P. Henowden iu March, 1883. (ij Monday night Majors over- powered bis two death watches and tb* jailer aad reached tbe street door of tbe jail, whin he was encountered by two fire- men, attracted by tbe noise of tbe affray, by wboui af ter a struggle in which hie arm was broken he was captured and returned to jail. Up to th* last moment lie pro teated bis innocence. H* said to tb* brother of the murdered man. "Yon may draw tbe life-blood from my arm and with tbia pen I will write my innocence of all connection with tb* crime in my own blood." Mere l H,I i| mir lion, > IBJ move. Miss V'alhe Case, Principal of La Hierra Pablio School io this county, is responsible for tb* following bee story : Recently on opening tbe stove, in which then bad been no fire tor several days, ahe wa* eurprieed to find that a colony of bees bad taken possssiioo of it and bad commenced to make honeycomb. To get into tb* stove tb* bee* bad to com* down th* chimney and pipe, making the turn of two elbows bsfore reaching tbe bottom. Tb* bees, on beiugdistutbed m. their work, attacked the pupils vigorous! v and drove them out of tb* school bouxe. Tbe school mistress escaped injury by fanning the bee* industriously with her pocket-handkerchief. Tbe bee* were at lait thoroughly subdued by being smoked out and killed. St. Uernardiiw Index. Valet* *>l fflaew? I ..,n. d The way to keep money is to earn it fairly and honestly. Money *o obtained is pretty certain to abide with its possessor ; but money that i* inherited, or that in any way comes in without a just and fair equivalent, ia almost certain to go as it came. Tbe young man who begin* by saving a few shillings a month and thrift- fully increases hi* store every coin being a representative of solid work honestly done stands s better chance to spend tbe rset of bis life in aft) uenoe than be who, in his baste to become nob, obtains money by daibiug speculations, or tbe devious means which abound in tbe foggy regions between fair dealing and fraud. Tbe only way to make the mas* o man kind nee the beauty tf justice i* by showing them io pretty plain term* the consequence of injustice. A traveller ia the back woode met with a nettler. near a bouse, and enquired," Whose bouse?' " Mog'e." "Of what built T" "Logs." ' Any neighbor*?" "Frogs." What i* th* soil?" Bogs." "Tbs climate?' "Fogs." "Your diet Iloga." FEMININE FANCIES. Borne of the EooamtrloiUeej 01" Fashionable* L,adie>. Small curl* are fastened with bamui silver buttons. Dark, rieb, plainly denned tolors areoem- ing into fashion again for parlor carpet*. lied room windows are bung with Bwise curtains edged with lace and looped with gay colored ribbons. The new gauze crape i* a lovely material for millinery purposes, and much used in white, pale pink and blue for bjuuats for evening wear. Madra* curtain* in a mixture of i ithetio shades are more used for vestibule doom than anything slae. Visits of condolence oan begin tbe week after tbe event which occasion* them. Per- sonal visits are only made by relatives or very intimate friend*. Whit* stockings are coming in fashion again for children. Moss green and almond colored plaids vary popular at present. Nearly everybody has some sort of a gray gown. Palest bin* i* titentlvely used In tbe decorations of fashionable bad-room*. Hall lamps of cathedral glass are exten lively used. Gold bracelets are very narrow, and may be a mere card upon which bangle* are strung, or else made of lapped coin -shaped piece* of nugget gold or of linked onains. Kor (tout ladies th* side panel* are still used upon skirts, and the space between in front ia filled in by a lengtbwiae fan pleat- ing, or else by two large box pleats that may be double or triple in their fold*. Ladid, it ia said, prefer to dust their own costly brtok-a brao ratbtr than to trust It to careless hands, and us* small bellow*, which are as luxurious as brass, leather, plush and embroidery oan make them. But what, one might ask, becomes of tbe dust after it has been blown from tbe brio- a brae? Card* of congratulation are left in per on, and if tb* ladies are at home the visitor should go in and be hearty in his or her good wishes. For such visits a card sent by post would, among intimate friends, be considered old blooded. It must, at least, be Isft in person. Quaint feather tana are much io vogue. On* shows a peacock with a proudly spread tail and jewelled bead, and another an owl with crafty eye and outspread wmga, springing with life-like action from a uiok of natural wood. Tb* old splint straight- backed rocking chair has undergone sort of apotheosis tu llueu. crash, paint and embroidery Large leafed pumpkin vines and flowers are the ornauieut. Th* drawing i* carefully done and tb* form* outlined in green and yellow. Tbe tint and ahadiog are then put in with thiu waabee of paint, and tba final touches ire added in green and yellow rib bone at th* corners and at the top. One of Reelferu'* itylitb design* for draperiie nearly conceals the I >wer ikirt, and consists of a soft puff (ailing below tbe belt in tbe back, beneath whioh are two very full broad box pleat* that fall to tb* bottom cf the skirt, ami indeed form its entire back. Tbe front is then a deep apron that opeus with trimmed revere on the right n Je to show some pleatings of a lower that extend from tbe bell to the foot. Inn is suitable for any flue woollen dreee, and tbe revere are nearly covered with row* of soutache. A novel ues of embroidery and plush is found io a psdeetal on which elands a basket of flower*. Tbe pedestal bas tbe top, base and upper and lower parts of ths shaft covered wub red silk plush. In ths centre it a band of black wrought iu irregu- lar zigxage of gold with flower* and foliage in *ilk embroidery. While abort woman delight in tbe un- broken lengtbwme pleats in their skirts, Ibose who are tall have row* of tucks or braid put on before tbe pleats are taken up, or eles they get their best effect by having Irom three to ten gathered tlonnoe* acroaa tb* front and aid* breadths, while tbe is covered by the long drapery of two breadth*, wbiob now, though mad* of tbe ricuea! aatin, may bav* three wide tuck* acres* it at tbe lower end. Tb* ooat slev* I* preferred to all others, and is high on the shoulders, but not a* full there as il was worn last season. Boarf drapery, plain turn up oufl< of lace or velvet, and the puff tbat imitates undersleeves, mad* either of lace or of mix, are th* trimming* moet used on dressy sleevee, while for simpler woollens many row* of soutache art pnt on quite straight around tbe close wrist, or els* to imilat* a square cuff. Kor the front of th* basque a fancy pre- vails for following tbe curving outline* of a /. mave jacket with drooping lace, headed by a velvet band, and ending in a rosette or ribbon bow. When this i* not done, tb* ttbirred front of tbe drees good* ie used in vest shape, or there is a vest set in, or elss ths dress i* eut away ic V sbaps or In a pompadour aquar*. and there is a ohenn elte net in which may be of tb* drew ma- terial or of laoe fully gathered, or it may be of plain embroidery or velvet. There is unually a revert of some kind outlining thia guiiiipe or chemisette, and tbii ex- tend* back t) tbe nboulder seam, and aometime* crone* back of the etaudiug collar. A striking novelty for chair baokn, and for tbe mantel hanging of a boudoir, Im a strip of guipure d'art over crimson satin. Ibe lace being richly overwrought with lowers in colored silks. A band of eoru land-made lace is wrought with traceries of gold thread, and is laid over maim aatin for the border of a small drawing-room table. ^ A - 1. 1 -. >,-.,,, IM .. " Arabella, you do not doubt my love .'" " No, Alpbouso, why should I ?" " Listen then . I bav* taken a solemn vow and you must aid me in It* fulfilment.' With my life ! What it it ' ' " I have solemnly sworu to eat no io* cream this season, Arabella." "Ah, Alphonso, you (ball net find me lacking courage. I will aid you to keep your vow. I will eat it for both of vs." f'i Chrvniete Tr If graph. Modesty and dew love tb* shad* ; both sparkle in th* light of th* earth, only to ascend to heaven. Loaasrtiiu. A >* I * atiM t Wredt a C. P. I On Wednesday the Oensiral Saperin tendent of the C. P. K. (Ontario Division) received a telegram from driver George Johnson, of tb* construction train, stating that two f*no* rail* and a quantity of larg* stones bad been placed on ths track about a quartsrof a mile weet of Agioeoort. The train, whiab carried about a hundred employees, ran into tb* pile, but tbe pilot of the engine cleared tb* obstruction. As if in good luck, th* train instead of backing a* u nanal was running sngioe first. If the train bad been running backwards tbe flat oan would havs surely been throws from tbe track, and under tbe circumstance* what might bav* been a catastrophe was avoided. Selective Smith took the matter m band, and ywterday be luooaeded is bringing the matter home to a young man named John Little, who works for a minister at Agioeoort No reason what ever oan be assigned by th* young man for men an act, but it ia understood that he i* mentally affected. " I could but lev* tb** when I saw thy face," confessed Lilla Cuabmao in ons of her peculiarly psoaionate Bonnets. Neat time, I. ill*, we'll wear a veil and hide our charms. Poeta, we find, are a* fair and frail as tb* majority of womankind; a handsome, intellectual face and proud and stately form always susoeeds in getting away with them. LYDIA E. PINKHANT8 * VEGETABLE COMPOUND.* * . , IS A POSITIVE CURE * 7 - . I or a.11 ( lhe*r PeJafml < o P l.lni. u4 * * \VraksriM* ma < to or heM * . * . 'FKMA1.K POITLATIOV* . .'. Ir it i. . t HI iiTiRKLV nil wourr rw or *] ALS C'iiwrLAiin. AIL Utiaui Taoi.-Bi.aa, ln-1 n ITI rs 1MJ I I . rKITI'IV K! I !.. 4-.D |>|*J rLACEMSMT*. AKD THS 11 v.l^rll T HnHAl. WB4K-1 . wn rTin I.IUT AHAITI* re TIM; IT 11 1 i.i..i>t A*D untt Ti MOM rajoa/*Tit I rim- iv t\ r kin T TACT i>(TKu>rivT T* rvi'. - i r.' >. rnoi - Hi HOHH TMSIIIUI-USPM* M.I -i-Krom sv rrs i as. e e e A lr in .\i- KI\T\. KLATI-HII-T. nsirrw^TS IN., r..!.- Tim i. kST. *M> itsiiavsa Wsaa- M - . r ; M ttri M >. H IT.I UIOATWII, HBU-' TKJLII .,. l.INri..i I'-I1JT,' >>raci<ia *-*i, |MIHMB*I. s e THAT rFt is.* >F Hr \uiNi, 1^ s . r .11,1 7*Ani, \ . .n AMI 11*. Kii^i- i HUH n> ir i -> a* IT "III AT ALL TIB N' rm AIT II U.kltWo^T I Mi* ALL UIST- JTH TVS LAWS THAT S*-lT n iii'-.-r i- - 'I.I I Y r-.R Ttini r..iTiMATl KAijsu i r hi-? \ AM mi. ILXLJKT cr I-AI.N. AJIV TBAT IT l-'t- Al I. IT ! IJI. To !,. TU.)|-AIII0 LAl'IKS CAS ULAIM T TK-Tirt 1 . m . * FOB TBS i i UK >'P KuiscT < "truAniT* is IITIIKB I*KS THU HIBIIIT I- I V - 1 J., A--CD. I V1>IA K I'lNKIIAH-S TKI.ET4BU (MBI^UHB to ,-. i.r.^ . I.nn. rrw (1 Mi Ixllr. Tar (a, ir^Mrt. - hrnall, po*ie-i peat. a r> of I1IU or I/*-os>* iv-lpt at prtnai above, mn. . M.. t ..... BUI, '.nil.. inu-..i rr*r*>an BI|x U<|. rir,.fl.U-iiTlA: r A V '.r,,l , - , 1 1^ .llh..ul ITI'IAC i II l.~ Thr> . ut. I -t.,.,1 n ll tfUttj ..I Ib* Ur.-r ...!.'. |.r I- i. 9. m. i.. 4:1 - THE ONLY VEGETABLE Loss of Appetite, Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Habitual Costivcncss, Sick Headache and Biliousness. Ptioa, 91. pwbottU. Sol4 by all Dmrrtea. EYE, EAR KHD THROAT. DR. 0. 8. RYER80N.L.R.O.P. B. R . Leolurar on in* Kjre. Kar aod Throat Trinity alixhoal OolIeK*. Toronto. OcullManl Aurlat to the Toroatn Oeneral Ho|MieJ. late llnleal Ai-leUal Royal LooJna Oi>b 1ei<ttaJ. MiwroavM'a an,| Central I ruroat ami Mar Hnepltsl. alT Ctmrob Toruuto. Artificial Human Kyea. I CURE FITS! llnr uJ Ih^n b" I'., "i f.'ntii ,ki > t ,! fdl i in-ui.- i >! ' - MM KMT ,. KAI I IVii MI'S* "<""' " *<< I mrr.rtm; t-m~l. 10 ! lh* II--., M iMh.r* h.. !*'e |."r"*'l"iilT * I - " " "'* "'f lrlllpl r*mM*t- <ll K|Kw *nn / * o-fl^* Ik cv*u y*a botblng f * T'*l. "! I "' -'" ) ' l.u.. l>, k J KiW . rMrltl. KwTor. KHl AIH.IHHEIJ 1R(19. (.11111 All kin l! of r tin r*ir*M-. tia. rnli.i. Taitew etc. Tat. Ku Oanien (npplled. t !- l. Mllrlirel. K) OolUirne aweel Toronto AGENTS WANTED TO HELL \TKHINAKY MKHICINKd. Allrww w>thsUiu|<.l>K. W II. VlahON to, Marahall Mkah. U.I! YOUN6 MEN ASSA Bn.t > t or n.\u.*>uid 10 (n.T*tiAeT Hrldpf*rvir r Karft :*ere Mleli . < Ik to seer's a Haalnrs uoatitui or Htwioertao >'D isblp al th* HPKNC1E 1 ULM BUBINIH OOUMOB OlreBlanfna

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