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The Huron Signal, 1887-9-9, Page 2!xi mums NOW i 2 In fa • XIV TReellee. "It'i the chrome sae," said Mrs pilotage. "Duet you let Lon in, my whatever you do." "Ie he au troublesome r •eked Meath• Duan. Mn Pepp$stun had lest stepped oyer tail* Mixon Cottage to burrow • set- ting of the Plymouth kook eggs, and to return the quart of vinegar she had bor- rowed the day before. For among these .imp's and kindly neighbors, who, lived miles away trod anything in the .hsps ut a does. these semebomsereial tame - actions were nut unfrequenl. Tail big hooey.uckle had jest wined out in its early protusion' in and white sweetness ; the cherries iredd.sing 0o the big tree, and monthly tees by the garden gat• hanging out in frequent peodan Mari Poppleton Mood there with checked eun-bonnet, obscuring wrinkled old fan, as it flapped to fro in the Imes*. Mi.. Martha Mizou was yuungti, plumper, mon blooming than her neigh- bor. She was as yet in the forties. They might call her an old maid, but she was uot yet outside the limits of • possible wedding nog. And Martha Mixon felt certain that .he never was intended to lead • single life. "Troublesome r' shrilly echoed Mrs Poppleton. "Troublesome is no word for it. Once admit him, my dear, and you'll never be able to get him out of your house. And such a talker ! Oh, I know .11 about it, for he sat three- quarters of an hour on my front door atop, trying to make me buy a picture of some young woman with her head tied up in • towel—Beatrilgy Ganga, or some outlandish name ; but I wouldn't. I just went on with my baking as obstin- ate as you plasm ; and whim he saw Poppleton aid the hired man coming Lome, across lots, to their dinner, he =eared out." "My '" said Miss Mixon. "What is he like? "Well, he's short and stout," mid Mn Poppletun, "with a bald head, and • shabby brown suit, and • tongue as lung as your cloth.. -line." ''I's very glad you told me about him, said Miss Martha. "Forewarned is fore- armed, and I shall be careful to keep his out." So when Mrs Poppleton had daps with her setting .f eggs and the bu of white -clove pinks which Miss Mi had given her, that middle-aged mai sat down to sew on the new alpaca go which she intended to wear to the n onage the next day, to meet Mr Tod - gilt, the missionary from Japan. For the leirson's wife hat: invited • select few to bar the reminiecnnee of the re. turned traveller, and to drink Souchong, and eat muffin -and chickeu salad with him, and Mia Mixon was one of the h appy minority. "I've always felt so curious about those eastern countries," said Mw Martha "And they tell m• that Mr Todgilt is an unmarried man, and wants a wife to go back t.. Japan with him next year " Aud as she sewed she wondered how she should like the Japsne,e c:imate. "A him -m m !" Loud and sonorous, this clearing of the throat broke in upon Alias Martha Mixon's reverie. She jumped to her feet with • little scream, and saw a man's figure .t the open door at ihe other end of the hall, where the buff and a hite honey -suckles swayed to and fro, and the yellow after- noon •unehiae streamed gra. He was short and smut. "The chronic man !" said blies Mixon to herself. Ana he had yes, he certaooly bad a bald heed. Mies Mixon could see that e s he took off his hat ; and he wore a brown .loll that was most assuredly past its days of neither., and under his area he carried a bat leather came or valise, which looked a of it might be intended for the conreyance of chrome, and for tic other purpose. Pep - dear, Mies bl. • buff were the Win ts as her her and rted nch ion sent you to Mia Mixon. Mia Mixon, den this is Mr Samuel Todgilt, from Japan." "Mr Tadgtlt's bow checked itself half way in a stare of amazement. "As-ton-Mb-ing !" said he. blies Mixon turned very rod. "W.11, I do declare," she faltered. For in SIiss Mixon, the lady who had been especially reeommended to him as a saintly and appropriate helpmate, the missionary beheld the very female who had ignumioicusly pursued him from her door with a broom when, the pre- vious day,he had stopped Woollen direc- tions as to the right road. And in Mr Todgilt Martha saw the person whom the had repealer! as the obnoxious chromo man. "I'm sure i beg your pardon,' said she, "but I mistook you for somebody she watched Iles harry through the est - des gate, without eves stepwise to Mteh it behind hoes. •' I only wish Mn. Pop- pktoo mold have teen hen, to sae how promptly I disposed at him !; But it was very aweless of nue to leers the (runt decor usbult•d. I might have had trouble in Retries rid .f the mem ; 111 fasten it now, before I go beck to week. So Mee Martha Mixon returned to her needle, dogleg the Maneillai.e softly to basalt as a harmleas effusion of bet triumph. She west over that afternoon to Mrs Bruce's, who lived to the first (arm house, half • nide away, to get bee to mike buttonholes on the sew dress. "Did the chrome man come hen T' said she. ••Today 1" said Mrs Bruce, with her mouth full of pios. "Nu, I haven't seem aoy chrome man." •'I guess I frightened hawk out u( the neighborhood," chuckled Mw Martha, •'H. was beginning his importunities, when I went at him with the broom, and chased him eut of the house." Mrs Bruce laughed heartily at the idea of her spsrrow•hke Tittle neighbor friohtooing anyone by such manifesta- tions as she bad d.scrited. "But I tell you who 1 hare sees," said she, "Mr Todgilt stopped hers to inquire the way to the parsonage." "Dear me, did her said Mine Mixon, with great interest. '.And I gar. him • glass tf my goose- berry wine and a slice of sake," added Mn Bruce. "Entertaining angels unawares." sigh - .d Miss Mixon. t)h, bow I wish it had been me. Do tell me how he looks. Is he tall 1" "No, not quite what you would call a tall man,' said Mrs Bruce; "and I think he is elderly; and he doesn't dress much. But he is a dear, godly man, with • fine flow of language. "I will meet him at the parsonage to- morrow," said Mine Mixon, complacent- ly. "How I envy you !" said Mrs Bruce, who was not one of the invited guests. Mia Mixon, dressed in all her best, including the alpaca gown and sundry bows of blue ribbon, which were not un- becoming to her blonde comeliness, went to the parsonage the next day. Mn Hall, the pareun's wife, came running ko meet her. "My dear Martha," she said. "I was so afraid you weren't coming. He's hen ! Such $ dear man ! Come right Into the parlor. Mr Todgilt, het me pre-.. sun par - "The ebromo man,' repeated Mia Mixon, as she •dtanc.d to the wombat with the resolution of a lion. "N.., we don't went anything." "Madam," said the atranter, "1 ' "No !" sharply repeated Miss Martha, Stamping her foot. "No, i say. Why don't you go sway 1" 1 bog your pardon, madam, but—" Miss Mixon hethonght hereell here of a rues which she had sometimes found eminently •oacessful in the case of per- sistent tramps. " Here, neer ' Rose '" she called, Whistling to an imaginary dig. " if you do not leave the house at one. i will set any tog no you. And then, fancying that she still din earned, in the intruder's dilatory air, an intr•ntine of remaining to dispute the peint, she caught ep a brooms, that foe tsnat.ly hung in the corner, and made towards the frost dee, in such • reso- led* msonew that the e!tromo man fair'y al There and A.d. ere !" said Mine deed, eed, es The returned missionary burst out laughing. He could hot help it. "No harm dope,'he said, "Do harm done." And fortunately bespoke the truth. Miss Mixon's genuine good sena and good feeling soon effaced the disagree- able first impression whreh she knew her broom had mode, and Mr T.dgilt's sec- ond call at the cottage was logger than his first. To make an old story short, Mr Tod - gilt gut marred to Martha Mixon. And to this day,in American -Japanese cacao. the good missionary's sides will shake as he tells how, on his first meeting with his wife, she pursued him off the field of Cupid with • broom. "Wasn't I a brave man to take her after shat I" says he. And Mn Todgilt only smiles and Says • "Jeremiah, how can you 1" By taking A yew s Sarsaparilla many $ poor ,offerer who submits to the sur- geon's knife, because of malignant .ores and scr fulou,.wellows.. might honored, sound and whole. This •edieines purges out the emulations which pol- lute the blood and coos, thesess. Mr Gladstone, smelting at Rewardero Tuesday, Aug. 30,nn a" Retrospect of the maga," said that the leading change dor- int}ahe reign was the Bytom of • repro. .sntative parliament elected by khediveet ingg.n.e of the people ruling the coun- try. Many sovereigns committed to laws bemuse they ooeld not help themselves. From individnsl personal eipareence he knew that Qesen V.etwia had given willing, beaky and mire memo to all beneficial changes, and bad made her- self the prise benefactor of the country. • fa.gMs1 ronweir. 'I had got so had with dyspepsia that i hardly eared whether 1 lived ne sunt,.. sae. Fronk A. Swim, of the Tremors NL.M ..Mee. Three h.•ttM..4 Burrdoek Blood Bitten cored him, and he Savo, 'it sow semis • ple•vur• to live " 2 THE HURON SIGNAL, FRIDAY, SEPT. 9, lie, WORDS FOR WOMEN. The Femhtte**'he Heealt b shad the Hosea .bold, (hash s la htwss -*pane MMM. Thai tial Melo Wiesen s. aWve • itlmesk fhw. bees - The problem of deeming ecooem is owe that mob& enigma have to Although good dress is not seoea.ari eapeesave, yet it takes mosey to be ly ea.00mioal. Some see says lady should monos tint the Isnot* then the good, and last the faahn in dress, maddening bar age e and "points." It is well, from the of economy, to decide upon a or style of dress and adhere to it. • limited rings of beaming colors been tined upon, it is much easier to .pommies Two OW omaroze into one and to leas up odds and successfully. A few people affect a permaueot copied from some ole picture ; se good dresses may then last for without need of change. But the gr er number of women who "study coy' dress in black, which is becoming, liked by most gentlemen, sanctioned by those artists in .ape living,—the French. Every one heard of the English lady who al io rich black velvet and antique lace yet spent less than her neighbors. acoomlli.hed this miracle by ha three velvet dresses of different deg of newness, and boning one every years. A certain New York lady al were black silk, declaring it was ch er and more satisfactory than any dress. Old ladies should certainly ad a permanent, subdued .tyle of d l uhealthy dress is away ettrava Heavy skirts, tight waists, and Lo Quinze boots bring expensive ducts bills. It lean economy to have as dresses a will meet .1l anergeoc there are then less to be kept in o and made over. A real lady would satisfied with • few things, good of t kind. Handsome lace, a fine jewe cameo, an India shawl, will last a time, and be an. t.•ONOiY HS TNT IND A good set of furs can be used altered indefinitely ; the beat oat plumes last lunger than the preset s of fancy made-up feathers. «'ash d es are by no means economical unless laundress is kept in the house. 13 'reps, and bonnets to go with all o drama save trouble and expense. t ought not to save on shoes, glove., corsets, as they should aleaj. be out and in goad condition. The baa Of a gown depends not upon its price, on its out and color ; cashmere is ow the prettiest as well as one of the ch est materials, and comes in the m besntiful colors. Whether or no general style of dress has been decid upon, the economist will always b with judgment. She will consider w she has and what she need., often pla ning one dies for several occasions 8 will avoid novelties as too noticeable her limited and long -enduring wardro and follow only the general direction fashion'. dictates. She will under•ta all the secrets of "bargains," "re Dante," and buying at the end of • sea- son when good. are "reduo.d," but .he RILL Ilavia SOY ANYTHING Wally solve ly wee - that • leg, .able cation, point main When has ends style vent years eat- econ- cheap, and nave has war ,and She ring roes five ways i•p- other opt rms. gent. ole few les ; edit be heir 1 ur life and rich tyle rese- a lack Ins. and well sty but of esp- o.t to ed 01 bat he for be, of rad me the she ter the no the ter han to ing aha are mete nes test her her 1H her feria Man dresses hand soon work sive, waste der warm satief poi* mono for • oldo to to "mad aide. gamma rely because it is "cheap", cr hecto salesman aaurea her it is just wb wants. She always gets good ma Bala, knowing:that they costa lase end, and wires preference to t d for their durability, as Scotch riots and India silks. She will French underwear with its del' d -wrought sawing and embroil garments leaded with Hamburg ed and cheap laoe, and atm will kno t antique laces last twice as long an twice as handsome as thesmod cls.. Before buying a color to pl ✓ her face, our prudent woman wi its effect upon her hand and dra conclusions ; if a vivid gfeen mak hand pale and sallow, it will hare ,.t MiLat trrg.7 came got Fact. course the woman who can mak own doiliesdoiliesares a treat deal ; ma Is are cheap, but making is not y ladies make their own simmer , but employ a dressmaker for some costumes ; in this case it is may to poled a thoroughly good woolen, even if somewhat expen- but to see that she does not choose ful fashions or recklessly squaw - her material. A well cut and made ent wean longer and is always a attain. The tailor suits of the nt day are wonderfully suitable and Meal for street wear. An ..Id suit day Saves the better nae, and se treason.blaek silk is a treaso, it i. hard.. II jest when a dr.should he • over,' experience only an 40- A thrifty yogis( aa of my m- ance never has a dress whew .'Arlon at waastn se y in hoes te Pr•- tcat. 17 g - w d sen woe 11 w es • • • her w "a pretty .Mali thi nil dresses come from the wish -tole gond s new " Velvet waists ami nook .rr•nge,newta and hasakelr- freehea p old •ether The aid ngs•hewidhstmed i• MshwsfMle Noy• ga.. keg .new uses. Apn.al, ears dreamer,' j.r- ••7 substituted fur the Areae waia under a wrap se eeu.oery, and r, is the combo nether of au old skirt aad fresh waist wader a tong gars eat Our theatre wear. Ie feet seeftway hs a theitesand little Ma* to save. &IVO meal pain of show on hand and the mei of ,clove*, giving prefereuoe to the ttselel tan color. If you eau make your own bonnets, al- ways buy the beet velvets and wear it 'event season. with • little change. Ex- pensive resting which cannot be washed i. mer. eztnr•gasf than tine lace. 1)o net wear white skirts on the street. Our seed not fear being "known" by a dress, provided it is goo4 By all meat= keep your werdrube in • filet rate repair, leav- ing no hole or rip uamended.__Oo,d Housekeeping. Ayer's Atm Cure sots directly on the liver and biliary apparatus, and drives out the malarial poems which induces liver complaints and bilious disorders. Warraoted to cure, or money refunded. Mw ledMe rf... Arrows. A writer in the Omaha RepuLi i'an re ports the following interview with an old Indian : I ezFlaine3 to him what I wished to know, and, without the slight est hesitation, he said to the venerable arrow maker : "Tell my brother all about the poison ed arrows," "Well, acid the old roan,' "first we take a bloated yellow rattlesnake in August, when he is most poisonous, and tie him with a forked stick to a stake then we tease him until be is in a great rage. This is done by passing a switch over his body from his heed to his tail. When be throttles the ground with his body and his eyes grow bright and sparkle like diamonds ,we kill a deer antelope or some other small animal and, tearing gout the liver, throw it to the snake,while it is warm and the blood is still .worming through it. The reptile will strike it *gain and again, and pretty soon it will turn black. When he tires the snake is teased again, and he is in diced to sink his fangs into the sof Mesh until all the poison has been ex tented from him and the liver i• reek ing with it. He is then killed, and the liver lifted with a sharp pole, for so dan gerous is it that no one dares to touch it. The liver is let lie for about an hour when it will be jet black and emit a sour smell. Arrows are then brought, and their iron heads pushed into the liver up to the shaft. They are left- sticking theee for about an hour and a half, when they are withdrawn and dried in the sun. A thin glistening yellow scum ad- heres to the arrow, and, if it so much as towhee raw flesh it is certain to poison it to death." I asked if Iodians .tell used poisoned arrows. "No," be replied, "no man, Indian or white man, for years past has been shot with these arrows, and they are no longer made." • rtea.ass Daly. "I feel it my duty to say," writes John Gorton, of Desert, P. Q., "that Burdock Blood Bitten cured my wife of liver complaint, from which she had been • chronic sufferer. Her distressing. painful symptoms soon gave away, and I eso highly recommend the medicine to all sugeriogas she did." 2 tra■gel MutvvAs With Tar. A farmer named Corner, of Roane twenty, W. Vs., has invented a new plan to catch squirrels, which has proven a greet success. He has a large eorn field which borders on the woods, and which the squirrels have almost denot- ed during the past mason. Having bit upon a plan, be first watched the ani- mals, and found that when they had made • raid and retired they retreated to the woods almost invariably along one particular line of fence. Having learned this fed, Corner covered the top rails of that line of /ones with tar, putting on • heavy met. This he did in the even• ing, and in the morning when he went t.r the field he saw • long line of squir- rels running along the fence toward the woods. They.aoceeded in clearing the (erose, but when they Meek the woods the leaves and sticks stuck to their feet so badly that they could not climb the trees nor run very far even on the learn. The first captors amounted to twenty-seven enquired', and within a week Corner had killed and captured over 100 squirrels by his unique device. Many person* in Pittston are using I ly'. Cream Balm, • Catarrh remedy, with most satisfactory results. A lady is reenvering the sense of smell which she had not enjoyed for fifteen yeses. Rhe had coven up her ease as incurable. Mr. Berlin hie used it in his family and recommends it very highly. A Tunk- h•nn.ck lawyer, known to many of oar iwdera, testifies that he was eared ..f partial deafness.— Pittston, Ps., Gez• eft.. boar ttaye.rve., .. t Too hard gongs do not grind rmstl. Wbo wsnfi to steal potatoes most sot forget the seek. it is not ,.and to ebn.. owomen nil sloth try minas light. I • What i. the use of • kiss unless there' bhtwo todivide iti p Who has test leek need only tit eft Ps hese with his mnoth open. Thew ere the fattest ides 'hitt fba hash Isom the Yoe into the MOIIR 505 frau the Mmts. How would you like W ails in • per- a,obulator with • tansy rug nut erectyou the vary hottest day, carer to have • drink of water given to you, and to be expected when you were thirsty or hung., ry to take sour milk thregh • lona black tube lits • gas pipe ! You eorddo'i like it at all, and neither would 1. Any setble tieing would kluk and rage, and do .verythiug that would in any easy Mill up his satanic maim,. Doctors say that with their milk babes draw in the sort ut temperameut they are going to have, and if that is au, the cuwiug roar will be • sour, nasty, dyspeptic creature I bare very old-fashioned mesa, and don'tbelieve the Lord intended babies to take their nouristment out of a bottle, .•r else he would have made • .me special sort of bottle for them Sud not left that too the ingenuity ..f man Downsouth among the ''mammies" anybody who is referred to as haring been "a b..itle baby' is boron with, and all his weekow of brie or heart for nelson. given for that son. He is regarded a the victim of a sort of original sin or misfortune that was u..t his fault. In- deed, 1 remember very well con hear- ing a wiM . old wormy, whoa know- ledge of babies was conceded to be greater than any other in Fairfax county, excuse* young mon, who had forged his father's wane and married a variety actress, io this way : "Yousee, hooey, yew mustn't jedge too harsh• ly .b de unfortunate seal ; he had de advantages of de rest ob gee family, and lackin' de mainstay what can be re- spected from him 1 He were marked crea- turefrom de day of his birth as a crea- ture liable to sin and uncertainty. He were refrained from the natural fountain of youf, an' were given over to dat beastliest of driukab!ee, de bottle." All the dsrkies about shook their heads knowingly and agreed with Aust Briggsy that "a chile which were raised on de bottle could not tie held r.countable.' —•'Bab" in New York Star. • rail Werth teuertmberlas. Mr. Js., Bennie, of Toronto, states thAt his little baby when three months old, was so bad with summer complaints that under doctor's treatment her life was des'paired of. Four doses of Dr. Fowlers Wild Strawberry cured her, she is now fat sod hearty. 2 thwart. of 4 passe* 1a Ilse Weather. The very decided change. in tempera- ture which from this time 'cwt be ex• pstienced will bring danger with them, and such changes ought to be guarded against with great cars. In Cleveland the sudden cool spell prcdoced diphtheria to such an extent that the Health De- partment has become alarmed, and (ears are entertained that the disease will be- ! come epidemic. Beware of the changes from heat to cold, and especially take care of the children. • Meltable. 1'1"I hare used Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry, and found it a sure cure for summer complaint. I was veryos sick, and it cured me entirely." Alex- ander W. Grant, Moe Creek, Ont. 2 Range 5. tat.. A Cincinnati lawyer was very fond of showing oft his classical kerning to • jury. Defending • man obarged with murder, he warned the jury net to allow public opinion, which was against his client, to influence their verdict. "Give up," said he, "all feeling on this import- ant matter, and be like the ancient Ro- man in his adherence to the truth, who in his defence, most eloquently declared, 'Amicus Cato, amicus m Plato, imam Cic- ero, sed major ventas.' " The oast morning the lawyer found himself re- ported as saying : "i may cuss Cato, I may cuss Plato, I may cuss Cicero, said Major Veritas" Sive Taiga it Chanel..That Is to ay, your longs. Also all your breathing machinery. Very won- derful machinery it is. Not only the larger air passages, but the thousands of little tubes and avities leading from them. When these are claimed and chocked with matter which ought not to be there, cannot lungs nn.t half do there work. And what they dc, they cannot do well. Call it cold, cough, croup, pneumonia, catarrh, consumption or any of the family of throat and noes and head and long obstructions, all are bad. All ought to be got rid of. Thare is just one sure way to get rid of them that is take Rchee'• German Syrup, which any druggist will sell you at 75 cents a bottle. Sven if everythng else has failed you. you may depend upon this for *main. eowly th.erfule•ne is the bright weather of the heart Pleseant, cheerful conversa- tion shoold be the rats at the table It is • breech the family of o breeddown a the e tahie and silently read the daily paper, "Or move. session /themr No "hardly ever" about it. He hasm attack of what gained* ca ne"ll "biting,- se and to smile wasimpnsaible. Yet man may "smile end smile, and he a villain still, still he was no villain, het • lain, Went, honest man, that needed • remdu y seepDr Piere.. ' !loosest evades Pellet.," white never fail to eon .hitlntem.ss and dimmed t, torpid lime, C�a •ad et►rtmie nonslip• - I TIS. Wesmaeteaw. My se, you wk a.. if the girl. are w am as they used to be. Now, that a a arrow yueetwu, and I am out prepared to answer it. As dee k.ow I always ihueght and 1 think yet, that my ni..eb- rt'. equal has sewer sseu the light of day And yet your m.rthue kms never hail her counterpart appear .•u oke stage ut lits. The girls uuwedse are for ouch interested tr Frowns cosmetic', sod the latest Parisau style of doing up their hair, ti,e latest out suit &hep. of �v their ares•re.aod th"rc head drone, which r9t8^ in the unaj..rity o< oases would put to shame the fantastic head gear of an Ia- doart chief. 'Che disfigurement of their body by the horrid bootie, their suffer- ing/, and the consequent *bo.rtnees of 1de by the tight lacing, and wearing shoe• fully oars sass hew .mall for them all 7^ porta t. the rrinerefrieer en the girls are 10 every way inferior a their Lomond predecessors. Year grand - sue never suss•• corsets, never beard tell of a bustle, always wore her shoes large enough ; her dress was plain, indeed, but she roes early, was industrious in her faints, laughed when see felt like it, sot that gangling laugh of • college bred girl who dare not laugh for fear of bunting bet aide or spoiling her mouth, but the real old fashioned laugh that would ring through the woods llke -mus- ic ; and instead of lyiug in bed at 9 a in; and reading novels, would' be up, her work all done, and away to the home, of some sack person with the necessary articles of cowfort. 01*, f•.r such girls. They are now few,and an fast becoming' extinct. I was refreshed the other day on learning of an incideut that happened not great many leagues from hen. A young lady was invited to a picnic with her young man and to enjoy the day to her hearts content, but pronely re. fused to attend in order to let her moth- er go, who was exhausted from waiting on a sick person. The tired .•other went and enj'.yed herself, and returned refreshed in body and mined. Oh, what • daughter ! Oh, what a girl 1 Would that the world had more of them. May heaven pour its brightest blessings on the gel sacrificing, noble girl. J• it Btrpea, More Nessarhable Mut, Found at last, what the true public has been looking fur then many years and that is • medicine which although but lately introduced, has made fur itself • reputation mood 10 none, the medicine is Jubnsou's Tonic Bitters which in con)uoction with Johtieon's Tuoec Liver Pills has performed some most wonderful cures impure or im- poverished blood .toll becomes purified and enriched. Billiousness, indigestion, sick headache, liver complaint, languor, wtakne.., etc , soon disappear when treated by these excellent tunic retell - clues. For dale by Goad, drucgist, Al- bion block, Goderich, .ole semi. (dT Truth is a torch, but one of enormous sise, so that •re slink past it in rather a blinking fashion for fear it should burn us.. Hay fever is a type ..f catarrh having peculiar eympt..ms he attended by an inflamed condition of the hunter mecn- braaes of the nostrils, tear -ducts and throat, affecting the lung•. An acrid e ,0 0 •e 00. is secreted, the discharge is motet - filmed with • burning sensation. There are severe spasms of sneezing, frequent attacks of headache, watery and inflam- ed eyes. Ely'. Cresol Balm is a rime• dy that can be depended upon, (.Oats. at druggists ; by mail, registered, Whet. Ely Bruthera , Druggists, Owego, New fork ly Genuine cheerfulness is an alm.tst err, twin index of a happy mind and a pure, good heart. regulatorsThe beet end bow, the best core for biliousness. sick headache. indigestion, and all affec- tions arising from • disordered Beer, are with,.u• otoepei'.n Johnson's Tonic Lirer Pills. Small in size, sugair costed, mild, yet elective. 25 eta, per bottle sole by Goode, druggist. Albion Meek, (ode rich, .ole agent. [ail "T'CATAil R H QRRAM BALI when apppplied Int. the aestrlM. will n. absorbed.effectua. l7cleangag tMeheu' of catarrhal vire canning hash$) crettons. It allay. Inflammation, pro tecta the mem bren.e of the na•s passages from *din tional colds, cos ,lately heals the sorsa. and restore sanse or taste ase .woman. Not• Ilq d or snuff. A guns.\ RNid, wore cora A particle is applied Into each nostril aged Ie •erveaeebele1..tr Price m oats at mall. regnitered. ss vest,. Circulars s : ►7 I1111217SLY wRM ttruentats. Ovinia. N.V. r h 7 WILL OURS OR REu vE D/II/N(tfif, OAbPallffy, iLUTTEA/Ne sof THE N(AR►, Amin' of f1HE STONAcly. D� 1dlEq Or TME 117V tll/OUSN(* YSTFPd/A, 1 ND18(87/p14 JAUNDICE. ERrd/PEL4, 1141r RN(Ut flEARTIMPA aced MeardwyZbei M!ni N caw T. LLWJRR 4 ga.141g .