Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-06-26, Page 3TX,17.
• V.
Stigmata.
Ten thousand anxious children waitini pined,
. . And, pining, TeamedYoe liillef ifilifdill-their
own --
A playwound where they might etill drink in the
wbd
And sniff, the flowers, and be let 41013e.
Rua riot on the sod and breathe new life
Into weak bodies wasted by the strife
For bread and shelter ; so they pine, and yet
They're asked to wait for mke of etiquette t
•A gallant soldier. to whose manly deeds
A tdul 401412t*XY hes borue evidence,
'Whose *tile brain has given birth to seeds
- - -Whiell--allef- yield harvests -rich in -coat
defence,
Strolled from his quarters. in undress, one day,
His mind intent -on other things than play.
Plays diers, and the like -a martinet
la
Axres 'him for eake of etiquette!
" Ill fa„cea tlioli laud." to hastening woes a pray,
Where etiquetYeie arbiter of men,
Where clothes accumulate and "men decay"
And the sleek dude's the weightiest citizen 1
Where offieers, sworn to a duty plain,
For just one laggard's seeming_SalutrefrAlri
„,,e-mtreeem,-ThedeerceeeereeenateeteeeltetasiirieleerielPilebereeaeteereetteMe
_
crave.
Their hearts to brighten and their lives to save!
New York Wold.
The Tennis Queen.
Vow the blossoms all are going,
Soon the rotes will be blowing.
Indications that the etimtner time is here here,
here.
And the wandering_ wind carsulaska
he had not heard the interruption," ib is
mesees dutyto listen, to submit, to keep
illenoel"
"There pee the door -bell," observed
Afre. Miuklebem ; "will you go, Motu?
11 ie-Bridget'e evening out."
"
My wire," commenced Mr.
bridge, " would never have asked zue to
perforin eco menial en office aa—"
He atopped abort u a loud, masculine
iroiceievas-heard in the entry -below leire
"Joe. Job Partanbridge hoard -here -
Yes f Ob, all right ; tell 'em to bring the
trunks, and you, hackman, a dollar's enough
fare. you'll get no more out of me.. Clear
out, and let's hear no more of your grumb-
ling. Bo he's here, ie he ? eetetty eitmee
I've had after him."
Mrs. Miokleberry looked up at the blanch-
ing countenance of Job Pantambeidge in
surprise and bewilderment.
eee'eteieezeizetrtleieieZeelUiteeaVireileffUfgeee
ble be 2" she said. "Bluely there is some
mistake."
" N -no!" gnat)] Mr. Partanbridge, with
°battering teeth, " it is -my wife.'
" Mrs. Partanbridge? Can a be pm-
sible 2" and hospitable little Mary Maisie -
berry dropped her work and haetened to
greet and weloome her. new guest, the
Of the tennis -playing summer girl so dear,
dear, dear.
Oh, we all of as adore her,
We would bend the knee before her
In loyal admiration of her grace, grace, grace ;
For we love her, lithe and lissome,
To her finger -tips -we'd kiss 'em
if we die 't feel she'd surely slap our face,
face, el.
Sbe is cha! ing in her natty
Tennis Buie; all the beati-
tudes seem weak to that young man on whom
she smiles, smiles, smiles.
Exercise is her cosmetic,
She delights in sports athletic,
And at night she often dances 'thirty miles,
miles, miles.
-Somerville Journal.
"MY WIFE."
"She's a very nice woman, my dear
Mickleberry, a very nice woman, indeed,"
said Mr. Partenbridge, sagely; '‚but you
allow her to diotate too much 1 For in-
etance' my wife should never tell me not' to
smoke in the parlors on account of the our -
tains! "
" It due turn.!ern 3rellow," observed Mr,
raiokieberry, thoughtfully.
" Gra ted -but what becomes of your
conjugal periority ? And then you didn't
buy thee. tier lot beoause she advised you
not tol _ het is_a __woman's _Judgment
worth in Matter Of humus like that,
Miokleberry!"
" Mary knows -more then half the men
going," parenthetically warted Mr. Miokle-
berry.
"Excuse me, Miokleberry, but yon don't
keep her in her place! Don't the eoripturee
expreasly soy that the woman is the weaker
veseell I should like to eee Mre. Patten -
bridge venture to oppose me."
Mr. Difokleberiy looked admiringly at
hie big friend.
"How do yon manage it, Partanbridge?"
be questioned, a little timidly. " •
"Tao*, my dear fellow -tact, dignity,
supremacy 1 I wenldn't have mentioned it
if oireumetances hadn't pointed directly to
the fact, but you tire getting henpeoked;
.Mickleberry. Everybody notices it. You
mast gather np the mine of domestic] man.
egement-you mast snort yourself."
Mr. Miokleberry laughed.
But what is the nee of asserting my-
self ?" he asked, jocosely. "Everything
goes on like olookwork at home -Mary
always meets me with a smile -she spende
the money seneibly, and never coke me for
an unneoeseary cent 1"
"Does she tell you how she spends it 2"
"Not alwaye, kout—"
Mr. Partanbridge interrupted hie friend
with a groan.
" Oh, these women, these women
should like to see my wife buying a silk
dress, as Mary did haat week, without first
mutating me."
• "But she had saved the money out of
her houeekeeping funds."
" Then, my dear fellow, it's a sign that
you give her too much money/ for house.
keeping. Out her down -draw the purse-
stiinge a little tighter."
Mr. Miokleberry looked uncomfortable.
" I -I should herdly like to do that, Par-
tanbridge."
"You'll never be master in your own
house until you do."
Moses Miokleberry went home and told
his wife all about whet Partanbridge had
amid. Mary laughed and oolored, but the
wee a little angry withal.
" I wieh Mr. Partanbridge would mind
his own business." 'said ehe. " I'm' tired of
hearing about • my wife.' She must be a
poor. apiritlen eoncern."
"Partanbridge is a memo! greet ability,'
eaid Moes gravely.
" Fiddlesticks ! " said Mrs. Miokleberry.
"RA regular hen.hussy-s thorough -going
i les Naiecy 1"
I'm sorry you tel so about him, My
ear," said Moen, " for he doesn't like She
place where he is boarding now, and I told
him be mi eh* occupy our ewe room for a
few days."
" Oh, I've no objeotiore to that," said
Mre. Miekleberry, coinposedly. " I'm
always glad to entertain your friends, my
dear, even if they are not the most agree-
able people in the world, and I dare say I
can get along with Mr. Partanbridge for a
few dive,"
" You're a little jewel, ray dear," said
Moen, and he , forgot all Partanbridge's
ineinnatione at once.
Mr. Parienbridge came, bag and bag-
gage, and took porienei0/1 of the " spare.
room " in the Miokleberry Mansion as
importantly as if he had been the Grand
net*. And thenceforward " my wife"
Nfon, figuratively speaking, to trample
Mary Miokleberry into duet.
" My wife" Speni money ; " my wife"
went nowhere ;' " my wife" would Bomar
out off her hand than go to a wpman'a
rights convention; " my wife" Was not
literary, but, spent her days doing bonne -
work and heir evenings mending stookinge.
She held her husband in salutary awe,
never spoke when she waen't epoken to -in
short, knew her place.
"And how did yon manage it, Pertan.
bridge ? • asked Mr. Mickleberry, once
again, in the admiration of his soul. ,
Mr. Partanbridge waved his hand loftily.
" Miokleberry," said he, "there are some
Shirtge that 04114 be eepreeeed in wade.
" Fortunately 1" put in litre. Miokleberry,
who was awing away as vigoronely an if
every With wae an unuttered protest.
" And," weal oa Mr. Partanbridge, en if
THE NEWSPAPER,
And What People Think They Have a.
Bight to do with It.
a Wine Ohaniberk editor of the New York
Werki, in hie "Arena" article on "The
PhiVeireY ot .the. RPM". Pan thenhivelry
of the public toward the newspaper is_peou-
liar. -The public would appear to -believe
that anything it aan coax, wheedle or ex -
tor* from the newspaper he fair salvage
from the necessary expenditures of lite.
Recently I lietened in amazement to the
Rev. -Robert Collyer bout at a Cornell
Univereity dinner of having beguiled the
newspapers of the oonntry. He told bow
he had sohemed and got money to build a
.learedgeneetee-Miteetseeti=e-eerceedielF.
not maze is very clear that the civilized
members of hie raoe clamored for the new
edifice, but he made painfully apparent hie
ideas of chivalry to thepreee.
" In this' matter," he began, " I have
always been proud of the way in whioh
worked the newspapers.' I succeeded in
raising the money, beoauee I coaxed the
'a. I I be • 1: th _me T 7-notte
'04110filreitiMitentil ng
an. well-trained wife of the doughty Job. e aci-age ion an its
Mrs. Partanbridge came intthe room pastor, and got them. printed. Then I
o
with the tread of a giantees and the 'sped hurried round with the eubsoription listand a oopy of the paper."
of an Amazon. She was a tall, large
woman, red-toOf abuse this was all aid good -
ad and reeolnte, with the
faint hade of a mustache on her naturedly, wee meant to be fanny, and was
supper
uttered from a publics rostrum with an
lip, and a deep voioe, like that of a grebe- utter obliviousness 80 the mental obliquity
dies, and she wore her cloak as if it had that a momerWe thought will diadem. It
been a mule overcoat, the two sleeves lef4 upon my wind numb she mime
tied around her neok, while her sailor hat
would have been a snug fit for her hue-
pression as that once made by hearing an
band. apparently respectable man boast of having
stolen an umbrella out of a hotel reek.
She eat down, at Mrs. Miokleberry'e Later in the evening, when the reverend
Wien, with a force that made the chair gentleman occupied a Beat near mine.
oraok end tremble in its every joint, and
thrust out her feet. asked, with ae. much naivete es I could
"Pull off those rubbers," eaid she to command, it he had " worked " theplunibers, the architects, the masons, the
Job, and thehueband promptly went docarpenters and the bell founders. To eaoh
on hie kneee to perform the behest. "Not of these questions he returned a regretful,
so rough -you're as (alums), as ever, 1 Bee
and now tell me why you didn't send the
money for me to join you before ? ' Despite hie apparent innocence regard- bud-ing•' 1-1 the purport ot my inquiry. I doubt if
couldn't spare it from my this gentleman would have boasted that
nese, Druailla, my dear," etammered Job,
growing scarlet. he secured hie clothes for noshing, that
Hang up my cloak *0 dry -and get me
he wheedled his drops from his butoher, or
"
a footstool for my feet m
comended Mtge „,„.,ed hie- groceries from the shopkeeper
•
Partanbridge. "Look sharp about it, too 1 at the earner of his street.
Well, I borrowed $60 from DemonUnder. And yet, he spoke with condesoeneion of
mon ,Under-
hill, the editor and hie, means of livelihood!
ill, and I've oome over on my own hook. Theoretically, the editor ie the public's
I'm tired of being poked away the beeke mutton. -Men who know • him bowie of
wee" while Yeeile Phving tbkr'fine. city their iefinence with him, and over him.
gent, and I'll not stand it any longer ; be-
sides, I wanted to attend the Woman's They 'climate his polioy for him -or say
Suffragethey do, whioh, of courseAssociation, and I'm a member. of thing. Men who never saw ,
ie him oleim to the same
the Sedleyville branch of Female Rights own nim. 'Strangers, usually introdueed,
Advocates. You've got a nice house here, hek h -as
questions about his personal
ma'am," turning to Mre. Miokleberry. "1 affairs that would be inatantly resented in
might hue had shone° of my own if Job any other walk of_life.
Partanbridge_had-used-cornmon-eense in
business affairs, and listened to An experienoe of my own• will illustrate
e my advice
e
a little." .. wheti mean. Al. a country house, near
Philadelphia, I was introduced to a re-
" Drusilla, my dear—" interposed Mt. speotablelooking old man. In the period
glance at bine.
Partanbridge, but hie wife darted a leonine following dinner, ae we sat on the poroh to
nioke, this stranger interrogated
" John Partinbriige, will you hold your enjoy a e
me in
tongue, and speak when you're spoken to?" had peneed for the most offensive way. When he
breath I gave him a dose of
she demanded, tertly.
'
"Certainly, my dear, certainly!" his own medicine.
"Then let's have a specimen of it. As I WHAT RE ASKED.
was saying Mrs. Miokleberry-Job,' go I hear younre an editor?
downetaire and look in the big -handled Do most newepapere pay ?
baeket on top of the trunk in the hall, and How much do editors earn?
get me my handkerchief and the oamphor You began as a reporter?
bottle with the little wioker-osse round it- Does 11 require any education to be a,
as I was saying, that sort of thing is just reporeer ?
about played out, so far as I am concerned. Do you write shorthand?
Job hasn't no more wit than a yellow dog gh? Used to ?
when he's left to himself -yon know you Please write some.. Let's see how *
heven't Job, so you may just au well leave looks?
off opening and shutting your mouth like Carious looking character!), aren't! they ?
newly landed fish --and I mean to be boss How many columna can you write a
myself, Job -l" day ?
"Yes, dear." Do you write by the column?
" Bring me the rocking -chair -now What ? Don's write at alt.?
move the (Kneen so she fire won't shine in How strange 1 -and so On.
my eyes'. And get a hack early to -morrow
T
morning, and see that I am furnished ' I ASKED.
I' am told yWHAyon are a hatter ?
money; I want to do a little shopping."
"Yee, mrIs hat -making profitable ?dear," said Job Partanbridge.
How "much does your business net yon
"And be ready io go with me at 11 so
the suffrage rooms. I must render the yearly ?
report of the Sedleyville branch." • Grew up in the trade?
Yes, dear," assented the husband. Yon can "block a hat while I wait "2
"
At this stage Mre. Miokleberry inter-
Yon oan handle a hot goose?
rupted the orders of the commanding gen. Could once?
Plenum *Eike thief hat and show me how it
oral of the Partanbridge division by a tray
containing tee, toast and other feminine ie put together.
!t
refreshments. Mrs. Partanbridge received Have een a great many queerly shapedhts in your time, no doubt?
them with a contemptuous sniff.
" My good lady," said he
Poe, many hate can yon make a day?
ehe, " dare, Do yon work by the pieoe ?
say you mean well, but I don't feed of mob
elope Job 1" Ah ? Don't work any longer? Supposed
" Yes, Drueilla 1" every hatter made his own hate 1-and'em
"Go round to the nearest restaurant and Cin•
get me a bottle of Dublin etout and a dish The editor may be to blame for *hie sort
of stewed tripe. You'll exotise me, imesm,e of thing ; bub if eo, ha good nature is
responsible. He endnree more than other
to Mrs. Miokleberry, " but we all have ons
little ways, and this is nerne." men. He is often worried by the troubles
Away went Job Partanbridge like
of other people; but he never has been
an
weaned from she milk of human kindness.
arrow fleeing from the bow, and soon re. weaned
may be overeperenaded, he may be de.
turned with the required dainties, off whioh
if
my wife" supped sumptuously. (mixed, end editors have been fooled, like
judge and jurors, by the perjaredowffidevit
" Take my %binge upbtaire, Job!" said
Mrs. Partanbridge, when elle had eatiefied of apparently honorable men-bdt he still
her cravings of nature. "I've had along continues to believe in msnkind.
The chivalry of the polieinian toward the
day of travel, and I goose I'll go bo bed
early." • press is comprehended to 1 nicety by every
If ever mortal men looked cowed, men who has served as 8 newspaper oor.
wresohed and dismal Job Partanbridge did respondent at Washington.
the nexThe average congreepmen thinks it clever
e • morning when he made hie sp. to deceive a newspaper editor or oor-
pearanoe a% the breakfast' table. Mrs.
iokleberry could not resist one little respondent. He believe° they are
misohievons hit. to be " need," whenever poesible,
for the congressman's advantage. A oor-
she eaid, " upon the excellent manner
" I congretulate you, Mr. Partenbridge," respondent is to be tricked or o5joled into
lit
praising the statesman, revising the bad
which yon have developed your theories se
to conjugal disoipline." English in hie speeches, " Baying the coun-
Mr. Partanbridge choked convuleively try and -the sppropriations.' All the
over his coffee. charities require and demand hie aid, and,
" Hneh 1" he cried " Binh she ie I am Relearned to say (knowing se I, do
coming 1"
what 1 hollow mockery Immo of the alleged
" Who ie coming ?" charities molly are), generally get she
" My wife!" assistance They ask.
The chivalry of the press toward the
Bat, ale 1 hbw differently be pronounced
the low, magio words from the way in public is unqaestionable, The editor keeps
awake nearly all night to serve and the
which he had spoken them 24 hones ago 1
Mr. and Mrs. Job Partanbridge lft the facie are nee altered because in best eerving
e
Miokleberry roof that very day for a hotel the public he served himself.
handier to the "Woman's Suffrage Bureau," Joneneliem, I regret to say, ie often
and that was the lest Mary and her hnebend epoken of a9 a " profeseion," and while we
ever heard of "my wife' or her humble may accept the plebeian word "journal.
lave, the devoted Job. -Helen Forest innl "
, as describing a daily labor, I sin.
Graves, in New York Weekly.
oerely dears to enter a prot t against He
deeignstion. as a profeesiore It seems
entirely proper to me that this word be
-The following quaint matrimonial relegated to the pedagogue, the chiropodies
offer is taken from a Mauritius riewepaper : and the barn -storming actor who eo boldly
A e*amp,cellentor, the poaeeeeor of n col- assort a right to Ito nee.
'Mien of 12.644 &ramp, Wishes te Merry a The making of the newapaper is a.
lady who is an ardent oolleotor and ampere meabstiioal art. It 'nation very little how
moor of the blue penny stamp ofillanritiae, 'mach intelligence -*or genius, it yon prefer
Waned in 1847. the word—entere into its production, the
ft5
Children
ler=
Enjoy IL
soon
ULSIO
blIsPilinft as palatable as milk.
of..4litti,,trittlts,,p.7-4 is ik%
im
OT
e and so
A MARVELLOUS FLESH PRODUCER
It is Indeed, and the little lads and
lassies who take cold easily, may be
fortified against a cough that might
prove serious, by taking Soott's
Emulsion after their meals during
the winter eesson.
41 -
SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville.
inter -dependence of the en called " intellec-
tual " branch of the paper upon its
meohanioal adjuncts is eo great that it can-
not be maintained that the mannfaduzed
article offered to purobasere in the shape o
a newspaper ie,the product of any one lob
of brain tiesue. Of what value are a hun-
dred thousand copies of the bees newspaper
in 'hie land, edited, revised and printed, if
its oiroulation department break down at
the tardiest moment ? And what about the
newsman ? Who DWI say that he does not
belong to journalism? He's to the service
whet the Don Maack is to the Medan
hone. He's the Cossack of journalism -
our Cossack of the dawn 1
Scotch Masons in America.
A daily contemporary, in an article under
the above heading, aye there are no better
stonemasons in the world than Sootohneen.
Many of them, the writer sdde, divide the
year between the United States and Scot-
land, and while earning the highest current
wages at home always execs full union
rates in this country. They begin to come
here -as a -rule about -March, and remain
until the cold weather sets in, when they
know , that no more work is possible
until the vex* .year, and ooneequenely
hie themeelves off lo Scotland to
we whet; is 'to be done there. Stone -
manna' wages in Amerioa are on an
average about double what they ate in
Scoeland. JuetJaisbity and neighborhood,-
where wagee for this olase of labor are
higher than elsewhere, masons get $4. for a
day of eight hours, and at this rate is isnot
diffioult for them in the coursed a Beeson
to make 8650 or 8700. Their board need
not oome to more than 85 per week, and as
the return trip from Aberdeen only costs
about 850, many of them are able to take
some hundreds of dollars home with thorn
at the end of the season. Many Botch,
as well as English and %than, granite
cutters also divide the year between
America and Europe. A large number, &
perhaps a majority, of the brownstone-
outters are likewiee Ade but as their
Work can be carried on under cover all
through the year moot of them take np
their residence here altogether.
In Training. •
There are a good many in active training
for aquatic sports who will do well to read
She opinion of„Mr. William Beach, a olutew
pion oarsman of Australia, who says : " I
have found St. Jaoob'e Oil of greatest ser -
viae in training. For etifinese, cramps,
muscular pans and soreneee, it is invalu-
able. I alevays keep a bottle with me. It
cures rheumaidem.' This is standard
authority for athletes,
Earmarks.
An authority on physiognomy, writing in
the Illustrated American, says that, of all
the features common to human beings,
none is more characteristic then the ear.
" Ite families where it is impossible to trace
the elightest likeness between different
members in other respeots, the ear has
betrayed the relationship and established a
doubtful identity. Health, refinement and
temperament are olearly defined in the
size, color and shape of the ear, and it is
certainly worth remarking the amiability
of persona whose lobes are straight and
grow into the cheek withoni the ordinary,
upward onrve of divieion."
A Fight Between. Giants.
Both deeperate, both determined 1 The
King of Medicines in bonnet with the King
of Maladies ! Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery against " Conenmption 1" It is
not the struggle of a day, but the first
blows are the fatal blows I' In its early
stager!, Coneumption (whioh is Lung -
!mobile) will yield" to this, great Remedy !
This has been proven beyond a doubt by
innumerable Bannon!, Acting directly
upon the blood, ite scope includes all
scrofulous affections, " Liver and Lung
diseases. As a blood -purifier and vitalizer,
it elands unequaled.
Bishop Knight, of the Protestant Epie
copal diocese of Milwaukee;hae suffered •
stroke of psralyeise but is expected to
reoover.
The_Couthae, eioneeetle.
The servant of the future will how
everything her own way, says the Texas
Siftings, welfare something Is done *0 obit*
her mad oareer. In the year A. D. 3,000
the family will probably esteem it a favor if
the cook allows them to eat with her-
The offioe hours of the 000k will be frera
8 0'010011 in the morning until 3 o'olookiu
the afternoon, in families where they haVr
-dinner-elt o'clock; and- from 11 in --the
morning until 6 in the afternoon, in
families where the dinner ie at 6. The
000k will be allowed to set the house tor
the meals.
No 'moiling will be done on Sundays,
and there will be three fiunclaye in every
week. When the cook leaves the will be
allowed to write out her own credentials,
fly144,919YAKJOK-P*17,-"#T04-, 0,,,,IF21413-7n7itra==iiae
INLIMLLI•
•••
.•
Growing Popularity of Dancing.
Just ae was prophesied a few weeks ago
smart women of the New York set are de-
voting time and attention to dancing as a
fine art. A graduate of one of the fore-
most schools of danoing has been engaged
to aerie% ari;t• •
4miollaarillom•••firalm.I.Ltifiloaas
EigeltrAT o
physical oulture. Girls who are expert in
the gymnasium and at football, and who
have borne ridioule on a000nnt of their
manly mueoles and out-of-door tuba, will
soon be .prepared to rout all critics and
prove themselves as sylphic in graoe as
they sesuredly are Amazonian in pluck and
strength. Renard] in the British Museum
has cettlod, beyond a doubt, the superior
antiquity of damming to all the arts known
to men.-Illtutrated American.
Origin of Coal OIL
Of the origin of petroleum the Baltimore
Sun nye : "Geologists and other soientinte
hold that it is of animal and not vegetable
origin, and comae of the fat of the animals
whoa remains were, ague ago, oovered with
sediment and 'woe subeeenenely solidified
into Laudation° and other kinds of stone. The
geologies' conditions of the ocourrenoe of
petroleum Bugged iie animal origin. Engler
prodnoed an artificial petroleum from
animal fate."
" VarsaUllity Tilleitme
New York Herald : MoGuire's father
was an Irishman and hie mother a Ger.
nian."
"Great heavens! What don he drink 2"
"Oh, 1We an American -anything."
The great Treasury value at Washington
covers more than eequarter of an sore and
is twelve feet deep. Recently *here was
$90,000,000 in silver stored there -an
amount that weighed 4,000 tons and
would load 175 freight oars.
At North Almon Sunday a couple who
were united in -marriage in °hutch before
*he regular Beryline went at once into the
ohoir and misted in the einging. -Lewiston
Journal.
-Dr. Bluenose -I have jest learned that
the president of the Theological Seminary
has been .dismissed. On what count was
he convicted 2 The Reverend Dootor
Reddicue-They found him guilty of
thinking.
-Public opinion appears to be gradually
circumscribing theneefulnese of the aloft -
keeper. The Indiana Knights of Pythias
recently followed the example of the
Meanie and Oddfellowe' fraternities in
outing him out, and now so wicked a *Own
as Cincinnati has deoided that he can no
longer be permitted to serve me a juror in
the Cirouit. Common, Pleas and Superior
Connie -Rochester Herald.
D. C. L 116. 91.
5114C1313S4)11
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CREAfiliEmEDY
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RHEUMATISM,
Neuralgia, Sciatica,
Lumbago, Backache,
Headache,
Toothache9
Sore Throat,
Frost :titesp Sprains,
Bruises, Burns, Etc.
Sold hv Drim,,rists and Dealers evo7yWhere.
Fifty Cent9 a bottle. I/ireetionsin
11 Languages.
THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltimore, Md.
Canadian :Depot: Toronto, Ont.
Th,":. BEST COUGH MEDICINE.
SOLD B7 AllUtliM"
•
ItIS‘1111V11,100, SUREt"
* CUR
qv, 'iii EDITOR ,t--Pieaso inform your readers that 1 have a positive rein,
f, no rued disease • By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been oermamettr:v
glad VI send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any oi your reaaer# WI.) -Ty
•0.1"), 4 ey will send me their Express and Post Office Address, Respectfallv, T3 A. Sh.c*r 1
,stet. illioot Adelaide St.. TORONTO. ONTARIO.
I CURE FI
If THOUSANDS OF BOW
GIVEN AWAY YEARLY.
Wben I say Cure 1 do net
merely to stop thein/or a time, and
lave them return agan., MEAN A RABIC/it CUBE. 1 havz made the dtsease Of
grokleRav or railing Etickrieits a hie -long ftt.dy,. 1 warra.ot my remedy to
Borst cases. Because others hare failed Is no eeason for not now receiving scare. Sei
gfte for • treatise and 4 Prete Bottle of my Ir%faltIble Remedy Girt
• Peat Office. It tides you nothing for a trial, and It will cure wou. Adresseeel•Baral
On. ariasseer Onto* ISO INSIST AOSSAIDIE STISSET, wortoure.,
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