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Flesherton Advance, 26 Apr 1888, p. 7

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MM ( i,.I-<8 DEBAK. Her Wonderfi* t laima and Lawyer Uarsh'g KarrellouH Faith Therein. Mme. Diiin .,,r and hor woadarful control over 1 . ler G. Marsh, a well- kjaown mutroi- *" lawyer, are the talk of New York juni Mme. DiH8 i>v'ij.>rbaa oocaaionally oome to the front u, years. Her tirst a[i, aa the writer . 1370, when, a ahe appeared ,1. : where she clui hemorrhage. ' bad a bleetln charged, thou,, a mattraaa, k tors and pen feats. Amont; Ihu ; the Hahnuiiia Frenohmau un a time an luui.. afterward ma. 1 Some four >• then a larye .. aportiuH au ei. the fasceuingi.i bar of the Jell and aBked Jura for Mrs. i-'iore.. Imperial U.ji. street. " 1 au. said, " and ii> • woman, uud u. has a boy, ami L kill- him." 1 next morniug > : and told thia ..u . " Thatwomu poverty, and 1 she haB on a ^ now. Uer hr^ nobleman, aui . string of titKo .. husband wa^ n- she had such p the house thai Chairs and tai;. about at her u . over the bou>i'- . in the dark ru.i one moved to a i ordered a chiu<. 1 room, struck tii to dent it ami i breaking." These marvi . and Mrs. ila > ' Debar advertia' notice was pui i . to cull and coiisu liostro from !:'â-  fairly well, bui ii to divide. By i she was so comi big city for a number of unco in New York, so £ar ;ii.j article knows, was in t'erdinand Seef^er saya, .<: Hahnemann Hospital, ' ;o be suffering from a • .kd found that she only >uci>, and aha was dia- <c liil she had sot lire to I uuo or two of the doc- 1 sundry other curious .i<;al studeutB ahe met at lioupital waa a yoang . .Uaasaut. Shu was for uf au insane asylum, and ; .Uassant. II aijo Mme. Diss Debar, ncbly dressed woman, c.ous diamond cluster at . I- ooUar, appeared at the ^lon Market L'olice Court " Kilbretb for a warrant U Mayo, landlady of the >o. ;i East Fourteenth . uiha Diss Debar," ahe i.i ihe hoaau with this 1 > acting strangely. She L uulieve, she inienda to .varrunt was issu'jd, and laudlady waa brought in . 'US story : aiuu to my honse in great ; iiul dressed her. Why, â-  u£ my stockings right i^Daud, she said, was a . c 'Jyearold girl has a s, ard long. Her second .rust. In a little while ur over everything about 1; all got afraid of her. . u(jped over and moved i'iiere were rappinga all i,4bts appeared suddenly ^ and went out when any I 1 them. One time she iish, and it flew across the wall with such force as itli to the Uoor without A HOTEL ON WHKSL8. cared the boardurs away, l^iroposed that Mrs. Diss ad a clairvoyant, and a Uiu papers inviting people . the noted " Mme. Cag- iia." The buainesa paid â-  "gifted seeress" refused iiij time, saya Mrs. Mayo, lely under the control of the strange woui lu that ahe could do noth- ing against â- â€¢Ca..;lio»tro'8" will. Then this mild, pleasaui otjokeu and apparently sensible lady w ui on to testify to moat astonishing thi;i;;'i she had witnessed and begged to be r'.i 'ased ; ao the court dia- aolved the coniicciiou and the gifted woman went her way . LUr next appearance waa to secure thi ai r^.it of a servant girl for mutilatiug a vm> valuable old painting. The picture pruvuil to be actually worth $'J0. She had gi>ieu Mrs. Mayo aa security for board an oil paiutiug which ahe said ahe :ielectud from iiiu gallery of her father, King Ludwig, una that it waa wortli 9:1,000. Mrs. Mayo succL-oied in selling it for i'M. LIpou his death she married her present husband. Diss Ui-uar. Shu bad two chil- dren by each ul hur two husbands. The madamu is very fat and claims to bo the daughter of Lola Moute.^ and King Ludwig. She also claims to be possessed of various supeiuaiural gifts, and says she lived under a mouutain in Thibet with the adepts for a lo/jg iimc. Lawyer Luther G. Marsh, a member of the New York I'ark Board, beiieves her claims implicitly, and has given her hia handsome house in Madison avenue, where she is now staying;, with Diss Debar and Mr. Marsh. She has produced, " by the aid of spirits," a large number of pamtings of people, both famous and common, and Mr. Marsh has them displayed all over his house. He is ao completely convinced that her alleged powers are genuine that he recently asktd the Now York editors to go to his houae and investigate. They sent reporters, to his grief, and. Mme. Diss Bebar'a diagifat, who actually treated the whole matter iu a sceptical spirit. Be- 3idea the paintings the madame has furnished Mr. Marsh she has procured let- tors to him from divera great persona of other ages, all of whom tell him that the Diss Debar is no fraud and advise him to put implicit coutideuce iu her. Among the portraits ahown the leportera at Lawyer Marah's houao is one of Demos- theuep, looking as if he bad been out all night with the boys ; Socrates, with the hemlock agony on his face, and Aspasia, with an eye and mouth drawn aa it I'oricles had juat got in late from the Areopagus and gone to bed with muddy boots on. Pythagorus looks sick. The large painting of Appiua Claudius convinces the spectator that Virginia had a narrow escape indeed, bat a fortunate one, when she waa killed ; and the portrait of Plato, done by Apellos at the special re<iuebt of Mme. Diss Debar, is enough to make a reader of the I'haedo feel sick. And the infatuated lawyer, who is just as cute in a case as he ever .was, swears that they were painted before his eyes by the spirits of great artists ! It now appears that Mme. Diss Debar was really born iu Kentucky, and her maiden name was Ann O'Delia Salomon. There will doubtless bo more develop menta in the case. A Novel Eujflueerln^; Feat Perforined by the Aid of Six LovuiuotiveH. Coney Island has had its crowds of visit- ors thia year much earlier than usual. The attraction haa been the moving of Brighton Beach Hotel in Us entirety back from its rickety resting-place on the restless waves, some hundreds of feet, to solid foundations more to the north. Thia hotel haa been one of the principal featurea of Coney Island during these later years of its world- wiue renown. .\. mammotli structure at the outset, coating some $200,000, it was, during Mr. Bresliu's five years of manage- ment, largely increased by the addition of the east wing. Towered andturreted, with graceful projectiona both in front and rear, and in length measuring some 100 feet, with an average depth of about '.!00 feet, ita ap- pearance was at once elegant and command- ing. The beauty of the structure was en- hanced by a fine frontage, extending some 400 feet toward the aea, and laid out and adorned with all the skill and all the resources at the command of the landscape gardener. For years paat the encroachments of the ocean have been making sad havoc with the walks, the lawns and tlie tlower spaces in front ; and latterly, especially during the last two years, the ocean has been dashing wildly under the hotel itself a largo part of which perilously rested upon piles. In the belief, at least in the hope, that the ocean en- croachments at that point had reached their limit, the idea of moving the hotel bodily back iu the direction of Sheepshead Bay began to be favorably entertained by the manager and directors of the Brighton Beach Company. The job was contracted for by B. C. Miller ^V: Son, and as far back as October of last year Civil Fngineer Far- ciuhar was at work laying out tlie sites of twenty-four parallel railroad tracks, twenty feet apart. During the winter gangs of men were busy laying these tracks, ele- vating the hotel, fitting in on the tracks 120 new iron flat cars, each having a carry- ing capacity of (10,000 pounds, and latterly lowering the hotel, throughout its entire length and breadth, on to the cars. The tracks were laid so many feet in the direction in which the hotel was to be moved, provision being made for extending the lines to the re(inisite distance, as the rails were gradually uncovered in the rear. The ne.xt thing to be provided for was the application of force to accomplish the required movement. The weight of the hotel has been variously estimated at from 5,000,000 to H,000,OO0" pounds. This, of course, necessitated great care, and also much nicety of calculation aa to the resist- ing power of the track, and of the bed on which it lay. It was a necessity that thia resisting power be the same in every track. To move so large a mass with anything like safety, ewpecially con- sidering its great length, it was an absolute necessity that the motive power bo applied equally at all tho points of contact with the hotel. This necessity was mot by a most elaborate system of blocks and haws- ers and chains and staysâ€" the blocks, si.\ty in number, weighing from 130 to 350 pounds, the largest containing three loops of Manila rope especially made for the occasion, and weighing some three tons, being attached to the cars hi one direction, and to the great fourteen- incb beams or stays in another direction, by powerful chains. From these stays, which were planted about 100 feet behind the hotel, the ropes passed to tho engines. Tho actual force waa to be supplied by two rows of engines on two separate tracks, three in a row, tandem stylo, each engine representing a carrying capacity of 700 tons. On Monday last the ropes were tested, and on Tuesday the work of moving the hotel was fairly begun. As early as 8.45 o'clock, few spectators being yet present, the signal was given, and the six engines, with full head of steam on, began to move. The cables, stretching out fan-like from tho engines to all parts of tho hotel, quickly tightened; the ongineafor an inatant seemed uneijual to tho task ; but it was only for an instant, as the mammoth structure waa already in motion. Tho en- gines were almost immediately stopped, when it waa found that the hotel had been moved some six or seven feet. It waa a brief experiment, but it waa a successful one, and the result was hailed with joyous approval. Careful examination showed that everything had worked well, and that the huge structure, in its brief but un- paralleled journey had sustained no injury. A later attempt moved the liotol aome 21 feet. A third advance was made toward noon, and 25 feet was accomplished. At about 3 o'clock, when vast multitudes of people had assembled from Brooklyn and New York, tho supreme effort of tho day was made. The e.tcitement waa tremend- ous as the vast structure was seen to move on and on. It was a sight which had never been seen before; and wlion tho onginea were brought to a standstill it waa found that the hotel had been moved 61\ feet fur- ther.1 At this stage some 117 feet had been traversed. The work was resumed on Wednesday, and was carried on with equal success, the movement being more rapid, even with the use of less power. In four separate movements, the last three being made by the aid of only four locomo- tives, the advance ipade waa 121 feet. Some 375 feet have yet to bo traversed ; and then Brighton Beach, having resumed much of its former appearance, with its 5'.)5 foetof lawn, and lanes andlloweis will, for a time at least, be able to laugh at and bid defiance to the meroileas sea. â€" llaipcr'a i Worthy ul No Coulldeuve, Robinson â€" Brown says that you owe him ^15, Dutnley. Dumloy (indignantly) â€"I do not owe Brown a cent. I did owe him S15, but tho debt became outlawed last week. Any man who will lie like he does ought not to be trusted. The Nova Seotia Legislature waa pro rogued to-day. Yesterday morning Charlea F. Teitz, a Gorma-i merchant tailor, aged 1 "p, of Akron, O., boat hia wife's brains out with a base- ball bat and then committed suicide by drowning in tho canal. , Tho schooner James .\. Garliold has arrived at Gloucester, Mass., from tho Banks, and reports that four of her crew, Johu Goodwin, Joseph Martin, Alex. Jam- son and John Currie, while tending trawls, strayed away from the vessel and were lost. FEKOINAND DE LKSSEFS. The MurvulioaH .Mitu Who it Klylu); .Vliriut the World at Elglity-TWo. A writer in the Epoch says : M. du Los- aepa is about to visit tho Isthmus again. The astonishing activity of this man of 82 is a never-ending theme for those who observe the career of the " grand French- man," as Gambotta called him. Whatever we Americans may think of the Panama Canal, we must admit that the promoter of the scheme is one of the moat remarkable men of the age, and one ot the most sympa- tlietic. With Lamartine and Victor Hugo ho is the most universally popular French- man of this century. M. de Lesaeps gets hia wonderful activity from the paternal side, his father having been one of those sprightly Marseillais who never keep still a long while at a time. His mother was a Catalonian, and on her side he inherits bis deUberative ipmlities. Most persons who have a general idea of M. de Lessep'a career think ho is an engineer, and ignore that he began life as a diplo- matist. To be sure he quitted the diplo- matic sprvico in 181'.), so the present genera- tion may be excused for not remembering that before digging canals lie was a pro- moter of peace on land. ^1. do Lesseps' father was also a diplomatist, and at the beginning of the century visited America for the purpose of negotiating a commercial treaty between France and uur coimtry. To see thia distinguished looking and alert gentleman on the boulevard, or gal- loping along on horseback, accompanied by seven or eight of his children, no one would ever suppose that he was in his 8:)rd year, and that he had had eleven children by his second wife, whom he married on the day the Suez Canal wa.s inaugurated. A few weeks ago some of the numerous enemies of the I'anama scheinu started the report of M. de Lesaeps' death. To a friend who called at the house to learn tho truth of this rumor the celebrated Frenchman replied : " Some good souls have said that 1 was dead; you see I am still alive. (Jthers have pretended that my leg is broken. If those who started this story will come and see me I will prove to them by a well known movement that my leg is in very good con- dition." M. da I.essepa lives in the Avenue Mon- taigne in a spacious hotel that ho bought three years ago from tho Princess de Beau- veau. On the day of his marriage, in 18li',», his fathorin-law gave him 100,000 francs to invest, not knowing himself where to place them for his daughter's benetit. At that moment the shares were worth 2.'i0 francs, and faith in the future of the canal was not very strong. M. de Lesseps put the 100,000 francs into Suez stock, and in l^Ho they had produced l.'iOO.OOl) francs. With this money he bought the hotel for Mme. do Lesseps. OJslTAIilO TO THE FECNT ! A Matter of Vital Importance. The following unsolicited opinions from your friends and uei^bors, .nen and women, whom yon know and respect, ought to carry conviction to any doubtful mind. Theae words of gratitude are from those who have been afflicted, but are now well, and the persons giving them are naturally solicitous that others, troubled as were they, may know the meuna of cure. There is no reason why yon should be longer ill from kidney, liver or stomach troubles. You can be cured aa well as others. Do not longer delay treatment, but to-day obtain that which will restore you to permanent health and strength : 2M .Mac.Vali strout North, HAMiLTo.s.Can.. Nov. 2, lbn<3.â€" I hav« been sutferiui{ for ttvur twenty voars from a pain in tliu back ami uuuiiiclu ot the iioad and imUiiOBtion. 1 auuUl cat acaroolv any- tniut;. and oviirythiut; 1 atu disa«roud with' 1110. I was attou Jed by pUysioiuua wbo uxamliiod mu and stated tljat I bad oularRcuivnt u( tbo liver, and ihat it was iiupuaaiblo to cure me. They jlIsii svatt-d tbut I was suifunni^ from beart disuusu, Pitlauimuiiim of the bladder, kidney 'lisuasc. liroiic;bitis ami oatarrb. and that it waa impusBiblu for tco to live. Tbuy attended mo ior throe wpuka witbout making any improve- looiit iu my coiulitiun. 1 couiaiuuued mUiui; •• Waruor'a Sale Cure" and " Waruura SaUi IMIls.'aotiui; strif;lly lip to diroctions aa to diet. and took tliirty-Hi.\ buttles, uud bavu bad thu l)est lit licaltb uviir siuc-e. My rugular woitilit used to bu IHOIbs. Wbeu I itimmuinciul â- ' Warnura Halo Cum' 1 ,>:ily wiiubixl ItU ^)^. 1 uuw woi^li â- JlUlb^. Bdwiu Forrest's Secret. The great tragedian, Forrest, had asecw* •.vhich everybody ought to learn and profit by. Said he, " I owe all my success to ttta fact that everything I have undertsken I have done thoroughly. I never negleol tridea. ' That's the point â€" don't negleot trifles. Don't neglect that hacking cough, those night-sweats, that feeble and capri- cious appetite, and the other symptom*, triding in themaelvea, but awful in their signifioence. They herald the approach of consumption. You are in danger, but you can be saved. Dr. Pierce a Medical Dis- covery will restore you to health ond vigor, as it has thousands of others. For all BcroftUons diseases, and consnmpHon is one of them, it is a sovereign remedy. Tliat'a tlio Ouestion. Albert (who attended the funeral of a lady with his mother) â€" Mam, was sho drowned ? Motherâ€" No, my dear. Why ? Jflbert â€" What did they give her that pretty anchor for. then '.' ^o44s^^<^i> <AZ^i? T^ "St. Catii.uiim;s, Out.. Jan. 24th, 1887.â€" About six yeara aiio I wan a (iroat suUtTor from klduuy diBL'ase, and was in ini.sery ail \.\w wbihi. I hurclly bail ^trull(;tll uuoucb to walk strai^bi and was artiiaiiiod t(» t^o on the BtrL-tit. Tho pains iici-'i.sa my baok wore aiiaOHt uubtiaru- l)le, and 1 was viuahlu tu Uud roliuf, uvun tc-ui- IiDiarily. I bi'i^an Um nso of " Waruura Sato L'niii, â-  iiiid iimidii lit Olio weuk I found ri'lirf, anil iiftur takiiij; uii;lit bottles 1 was uouiploti'lv ciifodt ManiiKcT lor .Vm.ruan Expn^Ks Co. 'I'miuNTi), IM Uivi:>iun Straol.) Jjiipt. 17, 1N87.â€" Tbitiu yi!ai> i«;o lust ViiKUst my daui{btor was toki-'H ill with Hrnjlit -i discasu of tho kiduoya. I'bii bunt mudioal skill in tlio city waa tu.skuii to Lbc iitniofit. but Lo no purpose. Sho was rucked with fouviilsiona tor torty-uigljt bours. Our doctor did biH buat. and wont away sayinij the i;aa« was bopt'Iobs. Aftor aho cauio out of tho eoniulalons, alio waa vury wiiak iuid all hor liuir fflloiit. Tlio iloi-tor had left us about a mouth wliLMi 1 I'uin-ludod to try â- â€¢ Wurnere Safe C'tiro," andalti r haviiiK tukoii six butlloa, aloni; with -.uvorul lioltlua of •• Waruura Sato lllls," iisow a iitH;idod rbaliKo tor thu bottvr iu hor coudttion. Aftir takiiu! twenty iivi) buttlo< ibor.i was ai'oin- plHta i;nri'. .My dannbler lias now a aplondld liuad ot iiair and wuiuhs inoru than sbo over did bi-t"i'o. Voiir Friend CuiiiiuitteU Suicide. You never suspected it, none of his frienda dreamed of it, he did not know it himself, but it is exactly what he did, nevertheleae. Do you remember his sallow complexion 7 Do you recollect how he used to complain of headaches and constipation ? " I'm getting quite bilious," he said to you ona day, " but I guess it'll pass olf. I haven't done anything for it, becaasel don't believe in ' dosing.' " Soon after you heard of hia death. It waa very audden, and e\ory ona waa greatly aurprised. If \\^ had taken Dr Pieroe's Pleasant Purgative Pellets be would bo alive and well today. Don't follow hia example. The " Pellets " are easy to take, mild in their action, and always sure. • His Nuriuitl Coiiiiiiion. Jonaon â€" Tomaon isn't in hia right iniod, is he? Bensonâ€" Yes. Jonsonâ€" Why, he's a crank. Bensonâ€" Weil, that's hia right mind. Montgeinery, Ala., ia supplied with the beat of pure water by artesian wells. Still, They are Stubborn Things. " Facta, my son," said Old Hyson, " are dry, hard and harah things." " Don't know about that," said tho young man, softly, " my engagement to Miss Ethel ia a fact, and she's the tenderest, softest, sweet- est, roundest, daintiest little " " Shut up '." roared the old man, slamming tho ledger shut with a bang that upset tho ink. " Get out of the office. You make me sick ! Bah !" And you wouldhavo thought it had been 2,000 years ainoe Old llysou had said about tho aame thing to his father, but it was not. It waa only about 20 years ago. â€" i'rmix Burdcllc. Tho attendant physicians were much disappointed with ex-Senator Conkling'a condition yeeterdoy, aa tho improvement which they had o.\pocted did not appear. (>'i Saturday afternoon Mrs. Taft, wifo of l>r. John Taft, of Cincinnati, was struck by a locomotive on the Ohio A Misaiaaippi Railroad near Riverside and killed. Wiule Stuaiii. Two philoHOphers sat in a Brooklyn bridge car recently. Said one; "Tho waste of atoam in a city like this is some- thing inconceivable. If I had in dollars the earning power of all the ateam that eacapea and otherwise goes to waste in and around New York city every day I would soon bo one of the richest men in the world. Why, from these cars windowa you can SCO hundreds of pipes through which steam ia constantly escaping, toaay nothing of the boilers on the rivMrs and bay. The total number of steam boilers in the city is nearly 7,000. Tho volume of one pound of steam is about twenty-si.\ cubic feet. A cubic inch of water makes about a cubic foot of dry steam. Only a small fraction of the latent h>'at of .ituam can be made available in performing work. Aboutseven- tcuths of tho latent beat are lost through tho existence of natural conditions over which man probably never expect to gain control. Two-tenths aro lost through im- perfections of mechanism, and about one- tenth is all that can be utili/.eu, even in tho best engines. So, you see, tho daily waste is greater than tlio actual daily consump- tion." ♦ â€" . â€" The Evil of Cboivinc Cluveit, When I smell cloves on a man's breath my first thought ia, " That man ia a fool." lie thinka he ij concealing tho smell of whiskey or aome other vilu umoll, and he ia only advertising it. There is another reason also .vhy he is a fool. The oil of cloves, which is expressed from them by chewing them, is an active solvent of tho enamel of tho teeth. Any one who chews clovea will soon notice that it makes their teeth tender. That means that their onaniel is disappearing, and tho ne.\t step is a mouthful of decayed teeth, which all the odors of Araby tho blest can never sweeten. When will people learn that the sweetest and rarest smell of all ia no smell at all ? A yoniiK llritiahur whuBo niujie was NVV'iiiy^a Wont crazy at last, ao it somysa, 15ocau80 people would not Liidorstaud that tlioy oaxbt Tu tall him, not Wuomia, but VVoom-.. .\iiotlier whoao last nanio was Kijollys Triitd vainly to vote at tho pollys ; Itiit no ballot bo oast PucailBO till thu last Tho olurk couldn't [irouoiince Kuollya Nolca, ,\jid then a youiiK butehor named HuWoir Went and murdurod a man witli a elovoir, itocatiau thu man eouldn'l, Or possibly wmildn't. Pionouncu bis uauio properly Heovur. Thuro waa an athlute named Strachan. Who bad plenty of aiuow and bracban, And hod knock a man down, With an indignant frown, If lio tallod to prononiico bis name Strawri. A band of " White Capa " made a raid on Friday night in the coimtry back of New Albany, Ind. Tho.v viaited the house of Mrs. Jones a widow woman, and whipped soundly hor throe boys because they would not werk, but left their mother to support the family. Thon they visited William Wright, whom thoy warned to leave the State, and a lawyer from Leaven- worth who had been paying attentions to Mra. Jones' daughter. They threatened the latter with tar and feathers unless bo left for homo within half an hour. IIo left at once. The si.xth conference of tho superinten- dents and principals of tho deaf institutes of the United States and Canada convened in Jackson, Miss., en Saturday evening. An address of woloomo waa made by Governor Lowery. Twenty-two States aro repre- sented. After tho election of ollicora an adjournment took place until Sunday evening. N()bel, the inventor of dynamite, baa died at Cannes. m^^^/^ 'fe^^^'W^-^C iHAMiAii, Out.. Maruh 'i, lHf*«. â€" In 1W4 I waa coiiiplcU-'ly run Uuwu. I tiUllorod uio«t scvurei pains iu ujy buuk uiitl kidiinyB. ho Huvuro Lbat lil Liniua I wuuld uluiuut bo iirohtrattid. A Iubb uf aiiibitiuii, a ui'^at. duhiru tu uriuato, without tbu ubiJiiy ul 'luuit; ^L>, cuiumfj fruui uio aa it wurti in (irupH. Tbu uriuu wae ut a pitouliur udior and coiJt4iiut!d cuubidi.'1-ablu torui^a iimtUT. Ibucamu satibllud Uiac my kiduuyn wuro in a oonguBtud Htatu an 1 ibat I wad ruuuiu^ duwu rapidly. l''iually 1 concludud tj try " Waruor's Saio Curu," aiid in (orty-yiHbt hours oltor I bad t^uu t))u roniudy 1 vi;itlud urine tbat wa>« u^ blauk aa ink. <:<mi.aititntj quantitius ul uiu'mib, \ni4 and ^riLvul. I conuniitid. and U wan not many huiira bi'ioru my uriiio waa uf a naiural Straw color, alibuuf^b it cuutuinuJ L-oiitdderablo HoUimont. TbuiMiwjfl in uiy kiibioya -.ubgldod im 1 cuutiniiud thu UHu <jt Lhu rcmudy. and it wan but a 'sburC liuiu buluru I wtiu cuuii'loluly rvliuvud. My urlutj wau riuriual <iud I cau tnitbfnlly 4ay that I wad curod. Ci-u.r, UiiL., Jan. -T. Ks^T.â€"Kur about fivo years prnviuUH Uj iwu yiriirti tmo last IJctobcr, L wan trutibb;d with ktdntty and bvur truublo, and fbially I was cunliuod to my bud and Autforud tho mobt (.•.xuru<:iaung pain, and for two wuokH' tiino I did nnt know wliutliur I wau doad ur ahvu. My pliyeucianu Haid I bad unlarf^uajcnc uf tliu Ilvcr, ibuuffh Lbi-y «av() mu uuly touiptirttry roliof. Hearing ut tho wondi-rfnl cures uf " warnur a Safo Cure ' 1 Ij^f^au ita ubu, and aftur 1 had taken two botlltia 1 uuCicud a cbanuo lor thu buttc-r. Thu ptiina di8app(;arod and my whole syatoni suuin<.-d to iGul thu buuDlit of tiiu rouiudy. I bavu coniiniiud tiiunti " Waruor'8 Hafu Curo " liud uo uthur mndiuino BincMj. I oomudor Uio rouiiMly a firoai boon, and it I ovur I(h.'I out <d uoris â- ' Waruor'ti Hain Curo " iIxob mo all riyht. 1 wi-'iKli twouty pounds boavier now tbau uvor ljt.'l'(;ro. ^J^ ^^ "ua^ Invunlor oltlio Mapli out saw. Loai Laiico-Looth C rosa A Uiiivenwil tiausua^e. Inprejudicod people who have heard a mother talk conlidently to her only baby do not see any need in thia world for vola- puk. Wo accidentally overboard tho following dialogue on tho street yesterday. Jonesâ€" Smith, why don't you stop that disgusting hawking and spitting ? Smith llow can I .' You know 1 am a martyr to catarrh. J,â€" Do as I did. I had tho disease in ita worst form but I am well now. S. What did you do for it ? J.â€" 1 used Ur. Sage's Catarrh Komedy It cured me and it will cure yon. S. I've heard of it, and by Jove I'll try it. J. â€" Do ao. You'll find it at all the drug storea in town. Tuu .Solid for !illo». First Dameâ€" How is your huaband's bnaineas prospering.' Second Dame- -Ho doesn't iiko mo to ask him iiuestiona about his aO'airs, but 1 know he's getting awfully rich. "Think so?" " Yes, indeed. He's got so now that ho wear's one anit ot clothes all tho vear 'round."â€" Drfroif Vree Vrm. ' A Wedding Present Ot practical importance would bo a bottle of tho only sure-pop corn cure â€" Putnam's I'aiuloss Corn Extractorâ€" which can be had at any drag store. A continuation of tho honeymoon and tho removal of corns both asauried by its nae. Bowaro ot imitations. . ♦ The conference to sottlo the dispute be- tween tho United States and Morocco will meet in Madrid on May Ist. The trentmont of many thousands of cans of tliosH ehninli.' wi-«k<iei«<.-9 and distrcsslB* mlmonls peculiur to f'inalos, at tlio Invulida Hotel iinil .•<ii.T(ioal Institute, UuHulo, .N. Y., has atToplc'd a \a8t expvrience In nioly adapt- iiiji and tUorouKhly tcslinff rwinodies for tha cure <ff woman's ponilinr ninladlcs. Dr. flerce'H I'uvorlte rrOHcrlpilon !fl the outjfrowth. or rosult, of this i,'r<-ut and valuable oxporienoo. Thousands ol t.stimo- nluls, rfcriuid from patients and from r'hysi- I'ianH who ha\"»' tesLod it in thit mor>- lufK^a- \ iited mill obatinat<! cas<>8 which had ballleil thi'ir skill, prr.vi' it to bo tile luuBt wonderful rtiiiody ever dovlBcd for the rclTeT and i.uniof HUiroriiitf woiniMi. it 18 nut n-ooinnitudcd UA "curi'-all, ' but as a most pi-rfect .Specille fwt woman's pt^ciiliar iiilmcnCs. A« a potvcrful. liiTlKoratlnK tonle« it imparts stnrnKtu to tbo whole system, iiud to tho womb and Its appendnK*'S ia particular. I'or ovorworkcd, "'worn -out," "run-down." debilitated tcaubcm, niillliiuni, driMiuukers, seaniBtresBes, "shop-ifiriB,' bous»> koci>orH, niirsinir inotherw, and feeble women (fcnemlly, Ur. PIitiij's Favorite rn-BcripUon is tho ({reatest larthly boon, iHiiin nni'i|ualed US an uppott2int{ cordial and rt'storativo tfinlc. As a noutUlUK and atrenKthvuInK norvlnot "Favorlto Prfscriptiou ' is iiae- uualed and Is invaluable In allayins and 9ul>- (luinK nervous excitability, irrltubillty, oi- haiistion, pn>stration, hysteria, spasuia and other distrtJSStnK, norvous syuiptonis coin- monlv attendant upon functional and orKouio dlseubu of the womb. It indutvs refr< ahinc Bleep and rehoves mentui anxiety uud de- ajiondcnoy. Ur. Fierco'a Favorite Prcacrlpiloia In a loKltlmuto medicine, (arofully conipoundctl by an r.\ iMTieiiced and Hkillfui ])hyHu-mn, and adapted to woman's delicate organization. It Is purely vi'ifotahle in Its composition and iKTfoctly harnilt-ss m Ita lUccts in any condition ot tin- systtin. For uiorninir slcktu.-ss, or nausea, from whatever causo arishiR. wi'uk stomnch, indlifestion, dys- pepsia and kiiidrod symptoms, its use, in small doses, will provi- very IjeniMlcial. " Fuvorltu Pruiicriptlon " \% a poaU ttvo euro lor tho most coniplicatod mid ob- ^linnto cases of leuoorrheo, e.xerssive llowlnff. painful inenstrnatloii, uniiiitural suppr*-s8ionii, prohtpsiis. or falllnir of tht- woiiib, weak Iwck, • ff'iniilt' wi-'iikness,' fiiite\'i'raioii, retrovoiwloii, beftrlnjf-down s^'iisatioiiB. i.'hronic eonw«-Htion, inllarninatioii and iilcfrution ol tho wi'iiib, m- llummation, pain iiinl tindcmi'ss In ovaries, uccompaniod witli " internal heat." At u rcKulator and promotor of funs* fionnl uctloii, itt. tbat. critical pcrkid of ohoDgQ from Kirlhood to womanhood, " Favorite l*re- seription " is a in'rfo,.-tly aafe reniodiiil affent. and can produce only Kood rosults. It is eiiually I'Hleacions and valuable in its elTeots when tAken (or those disorders and drmngo- menta incident to that Inter and most critiati perirxl, known us " Thi' t'tiiinK;t! of Life." "Favorite I»ro»iorlptloiij" when taken in connection with tho use ot T)r. t'liriv's Uolden Medical Discover} , and Aiiiall liuaUw doses of Dr. I'leri-c-'s I'uriratlve Pellets lUttta Liver Pills), mires Liver, Kidney and lllaildcr diseosi^. Their combined UBt> also n^moves blood taints, and abolishes I'aiutTous ami ScrofuluiiB humors from tho syst<.'in. "Favorite l*roncrlptloii " is tho oiHy mcdieiBi' for women, «dd by druKKists, u ilder a poailivo auarautcc, from tho nanu- facturers, thatit will Rive satisfnotiou in every c-aso, or money will bi; refunded. This xuanuta too has boon printed on tho botfle-wrapper and taitlifully carri^Kl out for many yeonL E.arKe bottloN (KM dosesl $1.00, or al^ boUIoa for $.^>.0U. For Inrire. illustrnttKl Treatise on Disease* or Women (100 paKos, paper-covered i, send tea ceuts in Btomiis. .id'dress. World's Dispensary Meiiicai Sssaciatioo, 603 naiu St., BF1Y.\LU> 9(. ^. U U M U IT M8. DUNN'S BAKINC POWDER THECOOK'nSESTF?^IEI\|^

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