HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Advocate, 1887-07-21, Page 7Don't PfeP909.
Only don't propose te reel I really like you so;
Wo suit each other charmingly, at hall or feast,
you kriow.
Wo one hrightea for each etbe; beet the revel's
careless hours;
Wo Due father Iron eathethorethlthoueloineet's
page ng flowers ; , •
We ever beat can gladden life's river as it flows
Through sunny beds and quiet, --but I hope you
PToPoso,
No voice !suits mine as well as yours in gay duet
OT aong.
No other ATLI can guide me safe through the
polka's whirling throng.
No other laugh re-echoes half so merrily to
mine,
No other hand so tastefully my bouquet'a flowers
emu -tenOe ;
None save me half so cleverly from beres--my
deadliest foes;
I cannot do without you—oh! I hope yeti won't
propose.
Why will you talk of sentiment? You :lover
used to talk
Of aught but fun Or 110/28011804 in long quadrille
or walk.
Why will you sigh? I really like your ringing
is.ugh the best.
Why frown at me for lingering with another joy -
one guest?
Why will you talk of hopes and fears? Why
hint at friendship's close?
You never used to tease me se—ohl I hope you
won't propose,
For you know I would refuse you—I must love
before I wed;
What should we do together when the summer
sun had tied?
And then we must be grangers—must pass each
other by
With Rustling cheek and distant bow and cold
averted eye,
Why doom our gay companionship to so dolorous
Close?
We like each other much to well—I hope ,you
won't propose.
Lot us still be smiling when we part, and happy
when we Meet;
Lotus together pluck the bloom of the dowers 0
our feet.
Let us leave the deeper things alone, and laugh,
and sing, and dance;
And filet a little now and then, to speed the
hour, perchance.
Oh I there's a deal of pleasure in sunny links like
those;
Don't break the rosy ties just yet—dear Charley,
don't propose:
LoVE TAUGHT HER,
jolin Ramsay was working on ,form,
. careless, loose dres disp1&yin td acV
° vantage his tall, muscular figure. A broad
atraw hat shaded his handsome face. The
hands that guided the plow were strong
hands, but whiter and more delicate than
finch pursuits usually allow.
Daisy lisle sat watching him. Her dress
was print, but made with flounces on the
akirt and raffles on the wait. She wore a
jaunty hat, covered with puffs of white
muslin and bows of blue ribbon to match
the spots updti her dress.
The face under Daisy's hat was gloomy,
not to say cross. A very pretty face, bui
not pleasont, having a petted, spoiled -child
front], and a brooding discontent in the
large blue eyes.
Presently the farmer drew near her, and
taking off his hat faniaed himself with it,
atopped his horses while he leaned indo-
lently against the plow.
"You look deliciously cool under this
great tree," he said. " And—hem !—very
much dressed for 9 o'clock in the morn-
ing !"
"In a 5 -penny calico 1" she said, con-
temptuoasly. "It is too absurd for you to
be plowing and hoeing and ixiilking cows
and doing the work of a laboring mah.
thought when you came home from college
You would do something besides work on a
farm."
"And let the farm go to ruin? That
would be a poor way to pay my debts."
"Your debts !" she said, looking aston.
ished. "Do you owe debts ?"
"Certainly! You and I are both very
heavily in debt, Daisy. I think whenAunt
Mary took us in, poor little orphans, I her
nephew, you her third cousin, all the money
she saved in a life of hard work was apent
upon our education. Do you know that
she has nothing now but the form, and that
to take her away from it would probably
shorten her life I"
"But you could send her money if you
were in the city in some gentlemanly occu-
pation,"
" Perhaps so, ten or twelve years from
now! Tooday I propose to work this farm
and seethow many bushels of corn I can
raise on it."
He took hold of the plough -handles as he
'spoke, started the horses, and left her, her
eyes full of angry tears.
"He might as well have paid what he
meant,".ppringing down and' starting for
the house. "He thinks I °light to cook
,and Make butter and work like a 'servant
girl, When I have studied sohard and.tried
to,inalte rriyself a lady, that he Might nof
be ashamed of me."
As she drew near thehouse the sting of
John's words penetrated more and more
through the crust Eihe had drawn over her
heart, until a fresh stab met her at the
door. Looking in at the open door she saw
a white head bowed in weeping, a slight
figure shaken by sobs.
Quickly through all the selfiebness self-
reproach struck at the girl's heitrt, ond in
a moment she was on her knees beside the
low chair, her arms around the weeping
woman.
"Oh, Aunt Mary, what is it? Oh, please
ory so ! Oh,what has happened ? "
Why, Daisy, dear"—through sobs that
would not be checked at a moment's notice
don't mind me. I'm only tired, dearie ;
only tired." .
Could she have struck deeper? Fired!
At 70 housework does become a Weariness!
At 70 it may seem as if one ought to rest,
while young hands end active feet take up
the butden. She was very tired, this pa-
tient old woman who had given her life's
work fot others, first for her patents, then
or an invalid brother !lastly for the Orphan
'children, with such innumerable acts of
neighborly kinanese as only the recording
.angel of good deeds knows.
Well might oho be tired! It Was new to
her to be caressed, to have tender hands
lead her to her room and lobsen her dress,
a tender voice coax her to lie down.
"Now X will darken the Window," Daisy
said, "and you aro to rest. Sleep, if you
cart, until diluter tithe."
n Bet, Daisy, pit catmot make the din-
,
" I willItry," woe the qffiek reply, arid
Aunt Mary Subniittea.
Washing the,potateee, shellingcr eas, fry-
ing making coffee,. all allotee thought
to be busy, and. Daisy gighingly put aWay
some of her day dteatna over her homely
tagke.
"1 Cermet hen lady," site thought, "and
John won't be & gentleman, but I vi1I try
td pay my Elate of the debts."
Pet an ft Plele arose aeci large 004
i'Pre4 before 8h0 ))0,gen to Yfe,th, BIM
was rather astonished asn
, er kitchen
&dice progressed to find herself happier
Shan Rho had been since she returned home,
When John came to dimer .11e wa
astonished to find Aunt Mary "quite
dressed up." as sbe billable/4Y said, in a
clean print dress and white apron, harden
old face showing no sign of heat or weari-
ness, while Daley, with added bloom and
bare white arms, was carrying in the
dinner.
"The new girl at your ,service," she said,
saucily, as iine pulled down her sleeves.
"Dinner is ready, sir."
But her lips quivered an he bent over
her and whispered, 1, God bless you, dear
Forgive me if 1 was too hasty this morn-
ing,'
John said but little as the days wore on,
and still found Daisy at her post. It was
not in the nature of things for Aunt Mary
to tilt with folded hands, but it became
Daisy's task to inaugurate daily naps, to
flee that only the light work came to the
older hind, to make daily work lose of a
toil and more pleasure.
And the young girl herself was surprised
to find how Much she enjoyed the life that
had seemed to her a mere drudgery.
John, bringing to his task the same Will
and brains that had mined him through
college, was inaugurating a new order of
affairs on the farm, and made the workpay
well.
Once more came a June day, when Daisy
sat in the fields and John stood leaning
againat the fence beside her.
Four years of earnest, loving work had
left traces upon both young faces, ennobling
them, and yet leaving to them all the glad
content that rewards well -doing.
Many hours of self-denial both had met
bravely; many deprivations both had borne
well. Daisy wore a black dress, and upon
the hat in John's hand was a band of crape,
but through a sadness of their voices there
yet rang a tone of happiness.
"You love me, Daisy ?" John had said to
her. •
Have I not loved you ?".
aninvered.
"And you will be my wife? Darling, I
have long loved you, but after Aunt Mary
IVES stricken down with paralysis I would
not ask you to take up new duties. Now
ghe needs you PO longer, and youlshall leave
the farm whenever you wish.
Leave the farm 1 Oh, John, must we
lea e it? I thought it was yours now." •
`rSo it is."
"And you have made it so beautiful, ES
we' as profitable! Oh, John, why must
wellleave it ?"
4' Only because I thought it was your
wish."
"It would break my heart to go away. I
love my home."
And John, taking the little figure into a
close embrace, wondered if any city could
produce a sweeter, daintier little lady than
he held in his arms.
Late Scotch News.
Admiral John Elphinstone Erskine, late
M.P. for Stirlingshire, died in London on
the 23rd ult.
A marble bust of the late Professor W.
E. Aytoun has been presented to the
University of Edinburgh by his sisters.
On the 13th ult. Widow Aitken died at
Ecclearnachan, aged 80 years. For long
she had been in receipt of parochial relief,
and after her death a box containing £36
in notes was found in her coal eellar.
There were special services in the East
13. P. Church, Haddington, on the 191h
ult. in celebration of the• centenary of the
death of John Brown, the author of the
"Self -interpreting Bible."
In celebration of the Queen's Jubilee the
Victoria Institute at Renton, Dumbarton-
shire, was opened on the 18th ult. by Mr.
Alexander Wylie, of Cordele, amid much
rejoicing on the part of the inhabitants.
At Aberdeen Circuit Court, on the 24th
tilt., Alexander Finlayson, writer, was
sentenced to fifteen months' imprisonment
for forging a bill of exchange and a letter.
In the Huntly wife -murder case, Alex.
Stewart, tinker, pleaded guilty of culpable
homicide and was sentenced to twenty
years' hard labor.
The strongest volunteer regiment in
Britain is the Queen's Edinburgh Rifle
Brigade, 2,340 enrolled; next is .2nd
Glamorgan (Wales), 1,990 strong; next 1st
Lanark, 1,579; then about half a dozen of
equal strength -4th Manchester, 1,255; 2nd
BoMerset, 1,253,; 3rd East Lancashire,
1,251 V 1st 'Warwick; 1,2.19 ; and lit `Mina.
barton, 1,213.
On,the 18th pit. the. monument erected
in Muirkirk'Cemetery by Mr. Howatson, of
Glenbuck, to the memory of the Covenant-
ing martyrs of 1680-85, was formally
landed over to tho authorities of the parish.
In the coursa of the ceremony. Mr. Howat-
son also made a gift of a fund which will
provide a bursary of £27 a year to aid
talented young tnen belonging to the parish
in obtaining a University eduCation.
A correspondent writes that Her Majesty
had a narrow escape the other day. She
was sketching in the grounds at Balmoral,
when a rival queen, hotly followed by het
anbjects, settled on the royal bonnet. The
Queen, with Much presence of mind, quickly
removed the too attractive millinery and
threw it from her. A gardener quickly in.
tervened with a beehive, and succeeded in
inveigling the audacious insects into it. The
Correspondent always understood that He
Majesty's royal grandfather had a bee in
his bonnet, but it was evidently reserved
for Queen Victoria to out -do George'. the
Third by havinga wholeswarin of bees out.,
side her'e.
He AccePted His Mother's VerglOn.
"Mamma,' said a young hopeful on
Clinton avontte yesterday," what is a gone
sucker 2"
"A gone sucker, my thild,' responded
the fond mother, rather plizzled, " la a very
bad boy."
That night, when the clothing of the
little fellow had been removed and h� woe
engaged in his lomat sepplicittiOn to the
Throne he said:
"And oh, Lord, bless papa, mamma and
Me, for yon know, Lord, I'm a gone
Sucker.!L.13roo1ilin Standard.
1llnfnentEfeientist—" Th e planetary in
diciitiond give • &iteration that there Will be
no fain for the next three; daye." Man
With it Minion (tanning With iof
mii,
i)drtority)---,, There Will bit taii
n, Sir, n
lies than tviSiVii inatite A.nd there Wee.
„
She had taktinQed hot fleuribeei arid het 8t" B e 6°?1'.
„
4TMEIZI.ENZ
Wo_Ten 1019 Ntree_r Irreeeerl end Smoke
Tobacco—IOW zele: Ptheaelud Pets Vp
Iti•r 111"4.1e1VI
T11C "Arnroz• Weil= Pr zol'icht,
The we MPLId user*P(4betZifilial iii9e5Y:Le extreme
and ap griteeful as fawas, just dark enough
t() be more picturesque than white women.
They have a coquettish, foscinoting man-
ner which wield do redit to a l?arisian
belle. And yet their ore chaste by incline -
tion and enactment. No white stronger is
allowed to sleep on shore. The men are
marvels •of symmetry, though they eat
little animal food. Then are, however, in-
solent, overbearing and in other ways ob-
jectionable. Tonga -taboo means the
tabooed or altered land, and "Ko Tonga
laau" ("1 am a Tongese") is as proud a
boast as " Civis Roman= " of old. To
sprinkle a dirty main .With patchouli and
swell himself out in the rnispion-house is
the joy of the Tengeee masher. The coun-
try is so fertile that they need work but
little, and the hardest labor imposed on
them is to pay the taxes of the King and
the contribUtiOns to the missionaries, by
"(horn they are or were ridden, in copra,
oil tortoise shell or coin They °Mimes
put their horses and crops " in the plate,''
generally in remembrance of soine dead
grandmother,
WOMEN WU° mar yarn rirS WEED.
Tbe French housekeeper delights in her
afternoon cigarette. The senora of Baree-
/One loves in the evening to wrap her blank'
Crepe around her head, end while gently
puffing her long tobacco cigarette cast
heart -thrilling glances from her balcony
above the walks at the wights below. While
the German frau is fond of her cigarette, or
even cigar, and the Russian wife la not far
behind her in her enjoyment of the weed,
and even the Japanese, Chinese, Tartar,
Dutch and Soudanese wives all like to let
tobacco smoke curl from' their pretty
mouths toward the sky, the Italian signora
is, perheps, the meet", passionately?' fond of
'the diang;Thin cigar ot'. the country called
the "Virginia." Iti,no uncommon sight
of it summer aiming to 80015 party of ladies
sitting in'soma cool terrace overlooking the
sea on the Carnpagna;while the music of
their velvety language keeps tune to the soft
gnashing of the sea against the rocky shore,
and send rings of smoke from their fragrant
cheroots.
mitS. CLEVELAND USEs THE DiJun.DELLS.
, (Albany Imam al.
It has been remarked that Mrs. Cleve-
land possesses exceptionally -strong wrists,
and is consequently able to endure the pro-
longed handshaking of public receptions
without over -fatigue. Her strength of
muscle is attributed to her persistent use of
dumb -bells. She is said to be quite a gym-
nast, and owes much of her graceful oar-
riage to the thorough command of her body
given by calisthenic exercises.
TIMBERS ON WOKEN IN TEXAS.
(El Paso, Tex., Inter Republica.)
Married women at Eaofman are said to
frequently take in the sights in male
attire. A young girl at Dallas was sent
home by the police while masquerading in
male attire. A Wacogirl was photographed
in her brother's Hinting suit for fun, and
the picture has raised a pretty scandal.
Marion Biggs, a Cass county farm boy, has
turned out to be a farm girl. She wore
trousers for a year before discovery.
WHERE EVERYBODY CABBIES A BABY OR SO.
(Tokio letter in Buffalo Times.)
Like China, the principal produce of
Japan is children—a very great variety in-
deed it does produce, too. They are of all
patterns, very numerous and almost always
very small. It really seems to a foreigner
that every boy and girl in Japan that is big
enough to carry a baby has one of them
strapped on her Dellis back. It is often
hard to say which of the two is the younger
baby, the one being carried or the one car-
iying, they are so small. But the carrying
of these babies is not limited to the older
children entirely. Fully one-half, if not
more, of all the women seen about the
streets or houses are also carrying babies
on their, backs. They carry them thee in
the street, in the temples, in the stores.
Everywhere you are confronted with a
cheerful pair of faces, one behind theother,
loitering about for the amusement of' both
—often at work, too often visiting Mende.
But this ever-present baby is like its par-
ents, very quiet and contented, now and
anon cooing and dozing. '
• . .
Isamien cablegram.
A. Hartford Man whose wife was ping
abroad, asked her to telegraph him a word
or two lotting him know of her safe arrival
in New York. In a few hours he received
the following message, 4, collect
" Dnm Geonoe,--Arrived here safely at
fifteen minutes after 6. The train was due
at 6, but we were delayed fifteen minutes
while en route. HO a perfeotly lovely trip.
Don't worry about me, I'll get along all
right. And take geed care of yourself.
Be so careful about taking cold this damp
weather. Remember that you ate to keep
on your flannels until the 15th of June.
Be sure and have the house open and aired
as often all one() a week. Remember whet
I told you about your socks and Shirts.
Don't forget to keep the basement door
locked. Write every dity. I'm sure I'll
have a lovely time. So good in you to let
me go. You must come over after me in
August. Forever and ever yours, MAME.
An hour later Marine was pained to
receive the following to her timid or two"
"Don't cable anything from Liverpobi.
I'm a ruined man if yon do. Gomm."
Senator- Boyd's- Cat.
Senator 13oyd catight a Tartar yesterday
in the person of little Atisa Clarke, a maiden
of 7 years or thereabouts, in Miss Adam's
department of the Victdrut Sohool. Some
blaok-board drawings of anitnale we're being
examined, and tho Senator, turning to this
little Miss, challenged hor to draw a cat
and make it ory. She accepted the banter
on the spot, and in a feW seconds produced
a fine eat With green eyes; a ribbon on its
neck, h notitll from, ite mouth with " mew "
insoribedo and underneath written "Pitr.
Boyd'a cat," St. N. P., Sun.
A.ccordingto a sttitement issued by the
Denuty Minister of riniOnco, tho not debt
of the Dominion ab jun° 30t1I wait 6225,026,"
762. The total reeentie for the paet fiscal
year Was $33,830,146, leanieg a surplus over
expenditure of $2,456,435.
•••4•WwwwwwwWwwwwwwtot
. . .
A DES ISATIS
Deler4tI90 of BitukY laergeet the "Kul'
ue. Dierderer•
Morgan, one of the four men
arrested for the tinirder 9f Detective Mil-
ligan near Cleveland, who was supposed to
be M the woods near 're,n1tfort, was sen-
tenced at Toronto to emit five years in the
Kingston Penitentiary for shooting at a
policeman. He made a boast that HQ per-
son could hold hien, and the boaet wen not
an idle one, because he escaped after serv-
ing a year with the avowed perpose of kill-
ing the -policeman in question. After the
murder ot Cleveland • it was heard that Mor-
gan was at the house ole rich friend named
Williams. The officers then sorrounded
the 'Williams residence, and as Siteriff
Lynch quietly ascended the steps Mon-
gan was seen through the screen
door reclining in an easy chair.
Little children were in the room and he
was examining houquets that they carried
in their heeds. Rushing upon him without
a moment's warning, Sheriff Lynch tried
to pinion his arms, but quick as a flash
Morgan slipped one hand into his pocket,
and without removing it fired three shots
before his hand could be caught by the
others, who were upon them. lie struggled
desperately, and but for the quickness of
James Connor, a perfect Hercules, who as-
sisted the sheriff, undoubtedly there would
have been more than one death before he
was shackled. Two self -cooking rein:avers,
of 44 calibre, were taken from his pocket,
one smoking. Sheriff Lynch was shot in
the fleshy part of the thigh, the bullet pass-
ing through and making a very painful and
serious wound. The other bullets grazed
the hand of Connor, one of them drawing
the blood. That some one wasn't killed by
them is a pure piece of good luck. It is
altogether probable that Morgan and his
pals will dance with ropes around their
necks before they are much older.
" One of Herrmann's *Tricks.
* Of' the elder Ildritriann; the conjurer,
who died recently; the London Thnea says ;
4, Tall and thin, With a mustache and chin
tuft, like Napoleon III., Herrmann could
by a contraction of his facial muscles so
alter bis features as to be unrecognizable':
But his most surprising performances were
with legerdemain, and his fondness for
practical joking made him delight to ex-
hibit his prowess in public places where he
was not known. In a restaurant he would
ask the waiter for bread, and when the
waiter arrived with a plateful of mile
Herrmann would mildly reprove him for
absentmindedness in having brought a
plateful of walnuts. Row the rolls had
been transfermed into walnuts was the
conjurer's secret."
Jubilee Jugs.
The Prince of Wales originated the idea
of the Jubilee jugs, which, to the number
of 85,000, were distributed to the children
in Hyde Park loan week. His Royal
Highness was much struck by the distribu-
tion of rough brown cups bearing the
Imperial cipher in relief, with which the
Czar commemorated the marriage of tbe
Czarovitch ; and tbe productions of Messrs.
Daulton'which cost near sixpence each,
are great improvements on the original.
The ground is of polished cream -colored
earthenware, and the two portraits of the
Queen (1837 to 1887) are artistically
executed in neutral tints.
To dream of a ponderous whale,
Erect on the tip of his tail,
IS the sign of a storm
(If the weather is warm),
Unless it should happen to fail.
Dreams don't amount to much, anyhow.
Some signs, however, are infallible. If you
are constipated, with no appetite, tortured
with sick headache and bilious symptoms,
these signs indicate that you need Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. They
will cure you. All druggists.
Mr. Chapleau expects to leave for Paris
on the 23rd inst. to undergo another
operation similar to that performed two
years ago. He states that no decision has
been made yet regarding the Quebec guber-
natorial chair.
Everybody Ho 1 Ho I
Read this carefully. If you or any friend
are suffering from any kind of pain, internal,
local, or external, try Poison's Nerviline;
the.sure pop pain cure. Nerviline is .one
orlhe most .elegant combinations ever
offered to the pulilie for 'the relief of Pain.,
Pleasant to take, powerful in effect, sure in
results and cheap because the strongest,
purest:and most certain nein -remedy in
the world. You can test this great remedy
by going to a drug store and buying a 10
cent sample bottle. Tryit at once.
"Isn't there anything you would rather
have than a dish of ice cream ?" he asked,
as they emerged from the theatre. "Yes,
George; two dishes of ice cream," she mur
mimed softly.—Washington Critic.
When all so.called remedies fait, Dr.
Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures.
The Liberal Association of New Bruns-
wick has passed a resolution cordially gym.
pathizing with Mr. Gladstone " in his efforts
to bind together in closer union the subjects
of Her Majesty."
In this age of iinitationil the public want
something real on which they can depend.
Numbers of people offer to make affidavit
that they were positively cured of rheuma-
tism by taking McCollom's Rheumatic
Repellant.
Two Wore tniraculous cures are repcirted
from St. Anne,Que. A young woman named
Monte was completely 'cured of a paralyzed
leg. The other was a young girl named
Gauthier, 13 years of age, whose sight was
almost gone; she is now completely cured,
The reet-Office Department at Ottawa
have suggested to the United States Post.
office that adVantage Should be taken of the
Sunday train service betWeen Mentreal and
i1ew York for the despatch of Ruropean
Mails arrivnig on Saturday evening and
Sunday.
B1004 Will
There 4 no ileeatien *beet 4---Ijlood will
tell---esPeoiallY it it be ian *Pere blood,
llOtenear eroPtions, piniPles and bens are
all pymptoms of Etta =PPM bond, due SO
tbe freProPer eotMe Pf the hVer• Whel4
this important Preen fails to properly Per,
form its function of purifying and *one,
ing the blood, impurities are carried, to all
Parts of the ,sYstqm, and the symptonuf
above referrest to are merely evidences of
the fittliggle of Nature to throw off the
poisonous germs. Unless her warning be
heeded in time seriouesints are certain
to follow, culminating in liver or kidney
disorders, or even in consumption. Dr,
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will pre,
vent and cure these diseases by restoring
the liver to a healthy condition.
Mr. Gironard, M. P., le likely to be the
andge of the Court of Claims, and Judge
Clark elevated to the Supreme Court.
elSENYIEWasa AMINMEMIMIONIMOIMIla
pm'
•(10
xercesTksOrfgisI
,...,LITTLE
romk.a%kve LIVER
lbUtIA.S PILLS.
BEWARE OP IMITATIONS. ALW4781
POR DR. PIERCE'S PEDZETS, 01$
ZITTLE SUGAR-COATED .P.T.LZS.
Being entirely vegetable, they op-
erate witaout disturbance to the system, diet,
or occupation. Put up in glass vials, hernial,
eally sealed. .Always I resh and reliable. As
a laxative c alterative, et purgative,
these little Pelleta give the moot perfect
satisfaction. t.
PK HEBEI
Bilious,' Headache,
Dizziness, Coustipa.
lion, Indigestion,
Bilious Attaelts,and all
derangements of the atom-
ach and bowels, are prompt-
lyrelieved and permanently
cured, iby the. use of Dr. ,
Pierce's Pleasant Pargative'Peliaiis.
.In'exPlanation of the remedial power of these
l'ellets over so groat a variety Of 'disci:ries, it
may truthfully be. said that thelreantion upon
the system is uniVereal. notes gland or tissue
escaping their , sanative influence. Sold by
druggists,25tentsh vial: Manufactured at the
Chemical' Laboratory of Wormu's DispsamAnY
MEDICAL Assoc/Allow, Buffalo, N. Y.
•,t
$500 REWARD
is offered by the manufactur.
era of -Dr. Sage's Catarrh
::04Chronic Nasal •Catarrh which
Remedy, /or a case or
,theyseannOt euro.
SYMPTOMS OF „CATABIIII.--Doll,
heavy headache,. obstruction of the nasal
passages, discharges, falling • from the head
into the throat,- aometimts profuse, water!,
and aerie!, at others, thick, tenacious, mucoui,
purulent, bloody and' putrid; the eyes we
weak, watery, and inflamed ; there is ringing
In the ears deafness, hacking or coughing to
clear the throat, expectoration of offensive
matter, together with scabs from ulcers; tbe
voice is changed and has a nasal twang; the
breath is offensive; smell and taste are im-
paired; there is it sensation of dizziness, with
mental depression, a hacking cough and gen-
eral debility. Only a few of the above-named
symptoms are likely to be prevent in any one
case. Thousands of eases annually, without
manifesting ,hclif of the above symptoms, re-
sult inconsumption. and end In the grave.
No disease is so common, more deceptive and
dangerous or less understood by physicians.
Ily its mild, soothing, and healing propertieS.
Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures the . worst
cases of Catarrh, "cold inh*,
te heads
Coryza, and Catarrhal Illeadaelle.
Sold by druggists everywhere; SO cents.
461.Intold, Agony from Catarria.”
Prof. W. HAIISNEIts the famous mesmerist.'
of Ithaca, N. Y., writes: "Some ten years ago
I suffered untold agony from chronic nasal
catarrh. Sly family physician gave me up as
incurable, and said I must die. My case WillE
such it had one, that every day, towards sun-
set, my voice would become so hoarse I could
barely speak'above it whisper. In the morning
my coughing hnd clearing of my throat would
almost strangle me. By the use of Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was ft wen
man, and the cure has been permanent."
“Constaaily Hawking and Spitting.",
THOMAS J. Basnino, Esq., 2902 Pine street.
St. Louis, Mo.., writes: "I was a great sufferer
from catarrh for three years. At times I could
hardly breathe, and was 'constantly hawking
and spitting, and for the last eight months
could not breathe through the nostril. I
thought nothing could be clone for me. Luck-
ily, 1 was advised to try Dr. Sage's Catarrh
Remedy, and 1 am new a well man. I believe
it to be the only sure remedy tor catarrh now
manufactured, and one has only to give ft a
fair trial to experience astounding results and
:a permanent cure,'. . .
Three Bottles Cure Catarrh.
„ .
ELT RonniNS., Bunyan 0.. Columbia Co..
Pa., says: "My daughter had catarrh when
she was llvo years old, very badly. I so.w,Dr.
Sage's 'Catarrh Remedy advertised, and! pro-
cured a bottle for her, and soon saw that it
helped her ; a third bottle, effected a pernus-
nent cure. She is ritow eighteen years old'and
sound and hearty:
IJ N L. 29 87.
30n CASES OF CONSUMPTION
x...7 CURED WIT 14 OUT A FAILURE
Address W. L. MILLER, M. D.,18 East llth St
N, Y. City.
CONS 11'110N.
15.,,.positive romody lor the alove mom ; by Re use
theusando of estees.of the worst kind awl of long standing
have been cured. fudged, is strong Is my (445 1. Ito
entrAcy, that 1 will mend TWO BOTTLFR FREE, together
with • VALUABLE TREATUBS on thla Maass go gay
seirerer. 01 re express and?. O. Address, tio
DR, I'. A. SLOCUM,
Bra:10110Mo, 37 To.ngeSt,'rorsato
DUNN'S
BAKING
POWDER
THE ennft'S RFS T F1?),FBIP
I CURE FITS !
„„.n 1 nay Oure I do slot Malin Merely to Map theat tor
and then have 'them return again, Ipnan 5 radical
mire. have made the dimalie of F yrs, EPILEPSY or PALL.
'IRS SICKNESS a lifiniong etudy, I warrant tiny remedy
80 ,1411 the worst costa. Berens° othare totvo thi fed i,,
rekson for net hew *eceleing a cure, Send at oiler, for II
treatise and A Brea 1404140 54 my Difallfbie fOhltslY• Girt
Xxrireat and Nit Odles. 11 COCA yeti- nothink for 51r4.5
and I will cure yOu. Ahrteeee De, If, G. Retry,
Branch 011ice, 37 Yollgo St.11'oronte,
'IVJE.A.X1ACJII‘T MagazthE3
FOr lirgO Or aniall gnme she's. Tho strOngest 45154105 rite toada, Perfect
oteontoy Ourenteed, end the only ebeautely Bete Hai at Cha riituket
13ALLA121) GALLtrer, 6iN511Tt510 ANTI¶'Altdt.l' 1104 vsrivor_la Meeoweed, Seed (orCatafogite. MARIAN PIKE A.Ithlta CO, NCO/ eiaveit, tonal:
BEST IN D!
THE
WORL
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