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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1892-09-09, Page 6•••• ...„, • • L. J cola& LINE ItRAIRD. PRETTY NEW DANCES. KURD BY- A TROLLEY, .. _ Two Young Man Unshed to Death in Allin111/. CAR BAD TO BE PID orr ram BODED. An Auburn despatch gays: ,William Smith and Andrew Kirker, each about 17 years of age, met horrible deaths this after- noon. They were enjoying a buggy ride out Owasco street and passed a train on the electric railway a few rodsnorth of Melrose. A short distance further south they met another train. Their horse had become frightened when they met the first train and when the second train was met. he shied badly, throwing Smith and Endrer out .of the buggy on the sails in front of the motor car. The motorman was powerlesa to stop bis train and the young men were crushed to death. Smith's face was badly mangled and one of Kirkefs legs was broken. Death was instantaneous. Smith resides 'in this city and is ,a son of ex -Policeman Frank Smith,. Kirker's home is in Port Byrcn, but he drove a delivery wagon for a tea store in this city. The car was in charge of Conductor George Wilson and Frank Weeding was motorman. It was running about six miles an hour. Mr. Wooding, the motorman, was so overcome that he wasconveyed to his home, where two doctors were summoned to attend him. The car had to be lifted from the track lat- fore the bodies could be released, after which they were placed on the side of the track, where their remained for two hours pending word from the coroner. Mow English Methodist Delegitea Astounded Waskington. Tharc ic wolimu at the Deapiaiaes camp_ A Saratoga Master of Ceremonies Wirites electing this year who figured in an inter- Upon tho Latest. Fadsin tho esting episodeoat Waahington as recently aa lest Gettelas. =ate ;- AL Poetry of Motion. Smith. She follows the honorable calling of an evangelist, says the Chicago Evening News, and her features are of the purest African type. It was the occasion of the great Metho- dist Conference. Methodists from the world over were gathered in decennial con- cb.ve. There were men prominent in five continents. Among the English delegates was Mr. Henry 3. Atkinson, Conservative member of Parliament for Hall, England, a brilliant, wealthy and eccentric man, one of the moat picturesque figures in the House of Coris- mons. Needless to state he stayed while THE RACQUETTE IS DEAD. T LAST the racquette is dead. Dead as doornail. And, as M Dickens would sa "that is very dead, indeed." For twelve years this dance has raged with more or les* fever and fervor in polite society, becom- ing every year more popular with the lower ')classes and less popu- lar with the very re- fined people. It is a very vulgar dance. For children there is no special auggestiveness about it, but when grown people slide and kick, elide and kick, slide and kick without any of the poetry ot motion or grace or movement it be- comes vulgarity—vulgarity simple and pure, if such a thing can be called so, "The military" is another thing that is on its last legs, so to, speak. Perhaps you may know 'the military" by the name of "Dancing in the Barn," or the "Kentucky Jubilee." Bat whatever name you may call it, it is " the military " still, and it is sure to have the vulgar little forward kick which characterizes the dance. Properly speaking, the "Kentucky Jubilee" and "Dancing in the Barn" are the names of pieces of music to which the military schottische is danced. But these two dances are nearly gone, and from their duet and ashes arise two or three very new and very pretty dances, which are worthy to chain the admiration of dancing masters and scholars as well as those whose main pleasure consists in -looking on while others dance. ,:r", 0 - TM: NEV., MESCET.. in Washington at the beat hotel and after the manner of wealthy Englishmen vent money freely. There were also among the delegates ea nnreher of colored representatives fronethe African Methodist churches. Unfortunately for them, they found a strict color line in Washington which debarred them in many instances from entering the same hotels and restaurants as their brethren of lighter hue. When the fact became known that ven- erable and good men were denied, food by reataarant-keepers because of the fatal color taint, a great outcry arose among the English delegates, who erred perhaps a trifle on the other side and were in dan- ger of matting too much of the colored brethren. vor .1 1.1961tAC121 CALIIINAL. atetpinalwhici be7h elifferecrtYAk uailyvin:wedn' 3L P.. dogged as a niton and eccentric as T.pe gelemeeemetatinsitugglierGrunds.rer MillaPPre" the restaurant and hotel men. He quietly arranged a little dinner party at the A Rome cable says: Great excitement Arlington. To this he invited two has been caused by the dismissal of Cardinal Flnglialin minister; two black bishops of Ruggiero, Prefect of irmancial Affairs of the the A. M. E. Church aid. Mis. Amanda Prepaganda, and who has been looked upon Smith. by many as the probable successor of Pope The protest against the, drawing of the Leo XIII. It is said that the Pope iPinistell coke line had gone forth in the morning. ordered Ruggiero% disoriemds being can That. evening Atkinson walked with all the vinged, as a. result of inquiry, that Rag- dignity with which his stature, his wealth giero, and not Monsignor Folchi, was the and his -bang white hair invested him down really guilty party in connection with the the great dining -room of the moat select misinireatineatts„ to use a rnild term, for hotel in the ici%if Washington, with Mrs. which Monsgnor Folchi was dismissed Armada. Smith, a perfect African, on his fromtthe Papal service about a year age arm, ,and two g tremen of color behind The dienissal of Falai was brought hint. The Rnefelenen followed like a rear about, it in said, by Cardinal guard. Ruggiero.. Fole.hi arae vice -chamber-. 'Ihe manager of the hotel glanced at the lain to the Pope, and had con- party and fled in dismay; the colored ural of the Papal funds. It was alleged waiter i • grinned with ill -concealed de - that in the winter of 1890-911 Monsignor light; Southern guests scowled fiercely TV Prince Buoncom- and theta resigned themselves to the situa- and Lazzarorri, resolved, in tion. =Weave the Banco di Roma, in which It was a complete victory. For delegates the Vatican held JOAO, out of 12',000 to the Methodist Conference there was in shares, beside other securities, to establish Washington no longer a color line. &lit in Pant and London, and afterward in Rome, Bolin and New York, a 'syndicate Sir Archibald Address. of etaltholic banke, with the obiectof absorb- We restrict our notice to the cloae of his fag the fimancial sockties of Rome thatwere adof UMW, la which he presented a view known to be in a di:matrons condition, mad what could have been seen from castle rereattiretime themt°vibalitY' while at the Rock, the central and oldest site in Edict- ine/ raisingthevalueof the pre_ military and even more than suggestiveness about the racquette, bat the waltz is re- fined% and if it is made otherwise by7 the deep dip or the long slide it is because the dancer chooses to make it ito. 1 1.. J ciated aecuiities. Above all they wanted to Nave the Banco di Roma, intending, as, they eawntaani_did, entirely to reconstruct it. The asmodal arising out of the affithr has already been made public. Later investigue , tines appear -to have exonerated Folchi and implicated Ranier°. Them is great ex- ctementin chriorch circle", and it is gener- • say lbeliesed that, a tremendous scandal is awaiting dischenne. he introduced a polar scene, with bushes ' MILOONS GOING NOME. of stunted Arctic willow and birch„ among burgle. during the successive changes that have come over the face of the planet time John Drew and others of Dady's perfectly ; care a :map about your aristoeracy, u it had been within reach of the . coaiectimea taught cempany went through the minuet don't intend to go on paying for them with- , a maim Ls a few graphic touches he wort as though they were going through the ', out having them. I have been here a his hearers back ie0112the ,e,.,,,_ent time ceremony of presentation at court or any quarter, and one lord—you said he was an thic„,.,h a 1,,,,.„ „.„.„,,,„. of eareer'faineseapes, other grand social function requiring great"! earl, bat I guess I looked him out m the which-Ticicac-7haTZ;de known ta .m. irts dignity of action, some grace and much book, and he was only a baron, and an forma picture woo to substitute the mewed skill. Enliven this scene withemetty, i Irish one at that—has crossed the eepae_need and forest ei prebbiterie times alternating, rapid movement suce!'Zitectiviiej ; door- Now we Americans are not for the busy streets of Edrahurgh. Then the Oxford minuet as it will be ' e...,„,3- in the habit of letting ourselves be put on. 92 and 133, • I Perhaps you are keeping back the best for - A pretty fad in waltzing is Ailed the 1 yourself and the girls; and thinking a lot of College Welke It was first &Wight to t common people, baronets and that trash, is TILE BYE. A round dance which will be so popular that it must not be ignored now is the Rye. That is best described by saying that it hie combination between the Fameralda and the pointing of the toe. It is danced to schottische and polka time. None of the new dances are vulgar or suggestive, but are graceful, pretty and are executed to rather slow music. In all my twenty-six years' experience, and I have been teaching dancing since I was 9 years old, I have never known a season to start out so propitiously as regards the pretty dances. Yon can sit and watch the figures of the round dances and quadrilles by the hour, admiring each one every moment more than you did the last. They grow upon you too, for they are " catchy, ' even though stately. Of course, you believe in dancing. It is such an innocent, harmless amusement that you cannot fail to look upon it with favor if you ale a sensible person. Dancing is chosen by fairy lore as the amusement of the nymphs. It is famed in poetry and sting in song. Children dance by instinct It seems as if it were the way in which nature ex- presses its happiness. And yet there is a minister who says that "a person must be crazy or drunk todance." JACOB MATLEIL —The most fashionable round dance is to be the Oxford minuet. It is an exquisite com- bination of 'the stately minuet and the glide polka. The couple who are to dance take hold of week in consequence of the cheese. hands and execute the steps of the minuet Do the society boarders, when they to the time of a mare.h. There is the same do not have enough social gravy, talk of slow stately walk as ire the old time minuet parting this day week? Would, for , ex- ample, Miss Rancher, the Cattle Queen from Blainville county, seize on Lady Mountargent, cif Ballybunion — Irish •viscount's .widow, three daughters, and a house in Queen's Gat ‘.e, -aside after break- fast and remark, " When I was thinking of coming to yon, Lady Mountargent--no, this is a serious matter of business, and till it is settled I really can't call you Aunty Mounty—you told me that you RREAXM OF PROMISE. Awilaglith dodge Says it is Not Necessary to Pop the Questton. Gentlemen inclined to think the art of love -making s safe one, so long as gushingly tender ppeeeh omits, certain specific declara- tions, had better beware. The point of law defining r., premine cf neetriege hes been laid down by Mr. Justice Mills in an unmistak- able manner. To youths of both sexes, as well as to many Of elder growth, this has been a vexed question, especially where a unit has been instituted for a breach of promise, in which, on the male side, it has been insisted that no offer was made, or at most merely a declaration of love. At the assizes at Exeter the other day the judge had before him the action against a Credition veterinary e ho had denied on oath that he ever made any, promise. The learned judge remarked in summing up : "Could anyeehuman being, after reading the letters thatjassed between them, and reading the defendant's answer, to an interrogatory, I asked, do you love me, Kate ? ' and sherrerilied, Of (nurse I do,' have any doubt that they had promised to marry ? Such a question as that ought not to have been asked unless marriage was intended." In effect he laid down as the law: "11 you ask a young lady if she loves you, and she replies that she dces, you are then sufficiently bound to be liable for damages if you draw back." So 'that there need to be no formal offer of marriage on the part of the man to constitute a promise. From the amount of the damages assessed at by the jury it was evident that as men of common sense they concurred in the views of Justice Willie, and thereby created a 'precedent which will probably be Awned in future cartes in which there may bet doubt as to the nature otthe offer made- The case in the sister county Gras deprived of the ens-. tomary amusing aspect, the parties having agreed to destroy all their correspondence, and this having been done before the rupture occurred between them, the action resolved itself, as Mr. Bollen put it for the defendant, into " dry matter of £ s d." The jury made it a matter of idt25. — Weston Super -More Herald. The Society Boarder : A New Terror. int The Spectator discusses the possibilities opened by the " Ladies of Title" who " re- ceive " young ladies into their houses "as friends" for a liberal consideration. If the practice becomes common, .ourcontemporary fears that complications may arise. It is curious, says the Spectator, to speculate upon the situation created by the presence of a society boarder paying £2,000 a year in an aristocratic home. For that sum, no doubt, , the boarder expects a very well " ran " establishment— carriage, butler, and footman, and everything else in pro- portion. If she does not get these, and if also she does not get quite as much " high- toned " society as she expects, does she, we wonder, complain? At Mrs. Todger's " the gentlemen" complained very vigorously if they did not have enough gravy, and talked of parting this day and the same courtly bowing. The minuet part proper ceases when the lady executes a deep courtesy and the gentleman bows low before her with his hand upon his heart. Then the time suddenly changes and the couple dance several steps in rather rapid 'polka time. This changes again to the slow walk of the minuet and Is followed by the rapid step as before. The two figures of the dance alternate throughout. It is really a beautiful dance. To picture mixed in the highest society and that I it to yourself recall the beautiful scene in should see at your table the British aris- " &hoot for Scandal," as it was presented tocracy at its brightest and best. As an at Daly's when Ada Behan. Mrs. Gillbert, American citizen, you mideratand, I don't which, herds of reindeer browse and the The . Alterinialt at the Great Striker& huge mammoth inake4 his home.. The dia- 11affaist itiovitehrnew. tent gleam of glaciers and ne1ds mark the line of the Highland Mo ' The A Buffalo despatch says: A Loy. named f meet scene is mere Arctic in until Jallietroal Brodericik„ who was stoamg the every hill is buried under one vaat sheet of taaalla 'arra refused t° at°,P wfreenered'eee t ice 94000 feet or more ID thicknesa, which Was fhtanY That by a gluskut 62 the r'''' me tee whole midland valley of Soar/and, Regiment this morning. .._T niniii creeps slowly eastward into the basin • home.. t Geaerall'5" tarei,eirte:avesairem: eirder— of the Northern Sea. The next epeetarie e- ne,"--7,, shows that, the familiar hills and valleys of mend no Mole awayuntil we are -"le -"-- the Lothians have disappeared and awamps and Jungles and open Leans are dotted with little volcanic conea; which throw out their streams of lava and of ashes. Before. this I took place a wide take covered the whole midland velley, and contained long lines of ' active voIcanoes, some of them several thou - they. will not be needed. We have re- cerned conummications from some of the railroad companies this morning complain- ing of tremble surd danger to their property and objecting to a speedy: removal a the • tenopat Oar military reports this Inman beg bear out the statement of the rad- leand feet in heigjaa. previews 10 tie, a ' mad companies. We are going to stay hem 1! nwide expanse of sea overapread most of 112aarramertil theEriating 173 stopped if it takes alt times. BrItain at Saari= times. Beyond this IT there is nothing but the primeval darkness, A New Ir'irk despatch says '"" and in this picture of what has transpired Walter Webb, Vice-Pisayiilent of the New in anceennve ages Prof. Geieee has roughly the stake bae ended we have tim"eNteawthtt. stated about ale we know of the antiquity York Central, said today: Kverything else isa guea° or of the eartil Our yards are fall; we have ail the men we . want ; there is no room for strikers. They cannot come back, far wider no circum- atances will ternelfeeharge a single new- mart for ars old one. Those afthe old mere who theory.—Bbstort Herald. The Process of Disinheritance. A little over ten years ago a New York were loyal to the company, though forced capital'istic paper declared that a change m cat, may make application in the regular the ownership of the land in America must way. When there is room for them they come; that there moat arise a race of tenant can retain.' . farmers on the ane hand and landlords on the other. Thia was not mid aa a warning of impending evil, but was a prediction of what the paper in question considered not more certain than desiritiale.. Re declared that the time waw thetgven ripe for the change; that the `attere reduced to the condition wher ould gladly sell, if only buyers would appear. At that time, even in the comparatively new state of &m- aw Elk per cent. of the farms were culti- vated by tenants.. To -day over 33 per cent. cf the Kansas farmers are tenants. The pre- diction of the New York capitalistic sheet is coming tree. "Like the people of older Lancia the people of America are becoming disirlerited_ While they boast as loudly as ever of their liberty, they are being surely reduced to vaisalage, for it is the veriest mockery to talk ot a man as being politically free who, is dependent on another TIM OPIUM TRADE Treasary Olifetalo Watektag for the Arrival of a Smuggler. A Port Townsend, Wattle, despatch sage: The amaggling schooner Halcyon left Vic- toria. on Tuesday with a cargo of npiara valued at *30,0001. It is at:wooed her des- tination is some point' on the Oregon or California coast. The facts were reported to the authorities at Washington by the Treasury officer; who have been keeping a sharp eye an the vessel fpr the heat month', and all the rovenne officers on the Pacific moat have received orders tO capture her if poseille. The crew, however, ID well armed, and the customs Ceopre do not hesitate to say that bloodshed will follow- any attempt to intercept the smuggler. The Halcyon is the schooner that tools $50,0000 worth of or the eight to live.—K. 01 L. Journal. opium into Hawaii a few months ago, landed her cargo, and shower/ a clean pair of heels to the crack cutters and the fastest yachts on the Pacific, A masearnstw.. view. Hannah—I have just been reading " The Last Words of Great Men." Hannah—I sup -pose most of themwere Saratoga by the cadets who originated tt, gold enough for me. because it was pretty and gracefal besides to be an alteration, ai being a little odd. On every third otn more variety in the verije fourth measure the gentleman walksetaking Pi to leave right away. two or three Tong steps while the lady con- any of those dukes I* TM* the Modern Girl ? Fashionable wife—Did you notice, dear, at the party late evening how grandly our daughter Clara swept into the room ? Husband (with a grunt)—Oh, yea Clara anal sweep into any rcom en grandly ough, but when it comes to sweeping oat a room tender diesseges ta their wives ? she isn't there. " No : they wouldn't have had any het words if they had had Wives." Business women of Buffalo have formed a elute They began with a membership of aeventy-five. Among other provisions is a claim shall be opened in any sub. "-n on reinest of ten members. • A man with a large jag stood at the cor- ner of Main and Claiton streets last night. He hailed a passing stranger and, pointing 'yen over attempted to drown. to the Buffalo Library budding, said : Wt:iy (los the waltz live ? I ‘-icause it is Shay., what makesnat keep beestiful, and even the worst danr:F:r (:34:not welkin' 'nand ?" " etre," said ehe si range r make it really vulgar. in passing, " nett .1 a. 'eenlating lihraxy. nere is a .1.4.ea%;•;eriaes, alonethe y. there's got I see a little iety have haven't seen a far -away look in times waltzing t their blue eyes, and a curly moustache, and Another novelty in dancing is the deux a regular • oid-time set of mannerly, tempse It is in polka time, but in place of ever so haughty and grand, that they the oh/ long slide atepe, or the short rapid write about m the novels, and am just ones which are taken by different dancers, dyieg • to. If you can't raise that sort, the deux temps consists of two very long well, I guess there's others that can, and slide stepa, done in the regular polka move- we'd better part. No offence, of course merit. but we Amerians like things to go slick, St4r.I.R.E. DANCES. and, if they don't, we ain't satisfied till they do. You've never had such complaints In the square dancea the moat foal:dome ble dance' will be the Combination Polka Quadrille. Eta name goes a long - way towards describing it, for, it embraces all the best round dances of the last four years, taking in also the old time quadrille figured It is the work of the American Society of Teachers 'of Dancing. The Combination Polka Quadrille re - (lakes eight people' to dance it. ° They arrange themselves into a set and begin with a " right and left" and " ladies ehain " which are repeated by the side coupIns. All then take position for a glide polka, which runs through eight bars; fleet there comes the " forward and back" of the head couples when they cross over and salute partners, just as has Imig been a popular figure in the quadrille. After this they take their partners' hands and dance the Berlin, and so the whole dance goes, bringing in the heehand-toe polka, and the Oxford minuet along with the regular quadrille figures. It is an ex- tremely tiretty thing, and next winter "you will see it at all the very nice entertain- ments. • THE Drrkt.ELCE. , have wondered, in my work, how many people know the difference between a danc- ing master and a teacher , of dancing. Let me tell you just what the difference is. So many people continually confound them that the public should have an explanation here and now. When you have learned to dance any dance, say the Combination Polka Quadrille, for example, you are a master of dancing so far as that one dance is concerned. Now, if. you can teach what .you have learned, you become a dancing teacher, but if; es is generally the case, you can only dance it without being able to teach others how to do it., then you are just a dancing master. Do you see the • difference ? The Berlin will be a popular dance along with the other dances mentioned,. and the waltz is ever and perennially aqa.vorite. It may be hopped, it may he slid, it may be dipped or it may be murdered, outright, yet t'iontinues to live, for it has a tnousand times more 1iv than the hardiest eat that • • • 9 9. 14. • before? Maybe. Well, you've got 'em now, anyway. Sorry if I've said anything unpleasant, but just you Worry round and get one of those real old-time nobles I was speaking of, and you'll find Fm all right. Get me tixedeerith a man I can see has had ancestors whie waded through blood, and you won't find me any trouble. ,A child could play with me when I'm getting what I think fair." Under such circumstances what does the young lady of title do, we wonder. It would sound like a confession of weakness, besides being very humiliat- ing, to point out how scarce dukes are in England. At the same time £2,000 a year. paid ,quarterly, is not to be despised. And even if the ordinary boarder is not quite HO exacting as this, there must be plenty of other possible sources of friction. Suppose the girls draw away the boarders' young men by their superior attractions, what happens then, we wonder The' situation is evidently full of difficulties, and on the whole we do not envy the woman of title. Better cold mutton without a society boarder than ortolanwith. That, how- ever, is evidently not the opinion of many people—witness the number of advertiae- menta daily appearing. Wonderful Things That the Blind Do. It seems as though it were only in a few suchcases of brilliant talent that there can be any real competition between the blind and the seeing; but a blind child, like one who has lost an arm or leg, may learn to make the most of what is left to him, and to that end the work -rooms of the inatitu- tion claim their full share of each day. The boys are taught to make mattresses, to cane chairs, and if they have ear and brain enough to be tuners, there are models by which they may become familiar with the anatomy of the piano. The ghat learn to knit and sew by hand and on machines; they embroider and make coarse lace, and are also taught cooking on little gas stoves. Not long ago one of them had to go home because her mother was ill, and on her re- turn she waa heard to say, half in joke and half in earnest : " It was a bad day for me when I learnt to cook, for I was kept at it all the time." • The list which is kept of the occupations followed by pupils after they leave the school gives some curious reading. One of the tuners in Steinway's warerooms is a graduate, Sind another was for years the organist of Or. Howard Crosby's Church. An insurance broker, a prosperona news - vender who owns three atolls, a horse dealer, a tax collector, a real estate agent, a floriate are alleduly recorded; but the moat astonishing entries are those of a lumberman a sailor and cook, and a switch - tender. Once outside the walla of the institution the pupils find their own level according to their ability ; but wherever they may go they , alwavy keep a friendly feeling for the teachers who have literally led them forth, so far as may be, from the shadow of a great darkness; and these in their turn are repaid for hours of patient drudgery by the knowledge that they have helped to turn auseless creature into a man or woman for Whom there is a place ,n the world. —From "TheEducationofthe blind," by Mrs. Frederic R. Jones, in the September Scribner. John Barns' Income. John Barns is bound to cut a great figure in Parliament, to which he has been elected as a representative of labor. He is a man o the people, living within the limit of £100 e year, and he will not take a penny more. This income of his is made up from indi- vidual subscriptions of one penny, willingly contributed by those on behalf of whom he toils. He fixed the amount himself, it being the equivalent of his yearly earnings before Fie became a labor reform speaker and worker. The man who, coining to power and fame, thus keeps himself " unspotted from the world " is sure to have,' as he de- serves, the confidence of -those for whom he toils. —Ex. For the earache, get 5 cents worth of dried arnica flowers' and put them into small begs ; take a pint of whiskey and keep it heated on the stove ; dip the bags of arnica flowers into the hot whiskey and lay them over the ear. Aa soon as the ateam stops coming from one bag, change it for another hat one. The tongne has probably killed as many people as the nnket. • WO, If you are troubled with hawking and spitting, dull headaches, losing sense of taste cr smell, you are afflicted with catainh, and to prevent its development into consumption,Natal Balm should be used promptly. There is not case of catarrh which it n 111 notcure, and for cold in the head it gives immediate raja Try it- All dealers. .1 Tribute. The vernacular of the tennis court is sometimes responsible for seemingly startling statements. At a recent tournament ie which one of the contestants gained several points by his " lobbing," a spectator eh - served that the player was weak in volleying. "Yea," returned a young woman at his aide," but he is a perfect lobster."— Har - per's Magazine. She (fearfully)—I don't know what I'd do if I thought you were marrying me for my money. He (soothingly)—Then, darling, don't think it ; Fm sure it will be ever so much pleasanter for us both if you don't. Even a dismissal with a cold wave of the hand contains a grain of comfort in such weatheenis this. SOOTHING. CLEANSIMG, HEALING, Instant 1.-'rrrar:eat Cure, Failure Many no -called • Ire simply symptom: • : , • arch as heaoaathc.,'. e of srnell,•foul t-'. and Evpitting, z of dehillty. etc. I' tronbted.with • • sindred synmt, 0.. . Catarrh, anl: •. time prorrnit;.? NASAL Lime, negleL ted , . . results in ry cr,ns.wr,i•ti..n a 1 .,,!•0:1:. Sold by al ••riaz•:' • •, cc: •ot, Fort o*: !r t pr•oe cents 2.11.1 '1) 1s Welreg,114: ULF3RD c Ont. . • -, /1