Ontario Community Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 13 Oct 1887, p. 7

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c TELEGRAPHIC SUMMAICY. The contraoturs have stopped work on the Red River Uailway antil their back claims are paid. The Bank of Loudon on Saturday began the redemptiou of its bills, a considerable namber being presented. When the deposi- tors will be paid is still a matter for specu- lation. rho three nutshells and a bean which one fakir suucessf uUy manipulated at the King- ston fair have cost some of the citizens a great deal uf money. Their experience cost all the way from $5 to $aU. It is reported that Dan Prault, who received terrible injuries to his leg owing to a draw-bar breaking while coupling cars at Amherstburg a few days ago, is dying from the effects of blood poisoning. The Committee of tlie White Cross -Guild, who have been making inquiry into the statements as to the debauchery of -children at Ottawa dnd that there is much truth in the statements made, and propose to ask assistance of the Attorney -General of Ontario with a view of stamping out the â- Â«vil. Willie, the 8-year-old son of Henry Stanyer, foreman of the Empire Oil Works, London, on Friday evening was sent to call his father to tea. The lad, when in one of the rooms where the oil is pumped into thu agitator, became over- powered by the fumes of the liejuid and ttied before medical aid could be procurde Messrs. J. Milligan and L. McGill, St. Thoma3 bondsmen for Alex. Perry, the book agent who jumped his bail, were on Saturday compelled to pry sureties of tlOO each. Perry represented the house of Bradley, Garretson A Co., Brantford, and was charged with obtaining money under false pretences by sending in bogus orders to the firm, on which he received commis- sion. The Kingston assessor is nearly through with his work. He states that the change in the law regarding taxable income will make a difference in the assessment of about 82OO,0UO, which, however, is more than made up by an increase in the assess- ment of real estate. The census does not show the increase of population to be such as it is generally believed, but it is never- theless very material. Between 3UU and 400 bouses are in course of erection. Detective Fhair on Saturday night arrested John H. Stuart, a London town- ship farmer, on the charge of threatening the life uf E. J. Harris, a well-known dentist. Stuart states that his wife was induced to desert him by Harris, with whom she went to live, although Harris has a wife and child of his own. Stuart has been looking for his wife lately, sus- pecting that she was staying with Harris, and on meeting the doctor threatened to shoot him. Henc« Stuart's arrest. The woman is over 40 and Harris is more than 50 years old. A sad case of snicida has occurred at •Chelsea, Ont., under singularly distressing circumstances. Ilinnie Allan, an attrac tive girl of 19, daughter of a respectable farmer living near the village, died on Thursday evening from the effects of poison, administered, as subsequent events proved, by herself. She was ill on the Wednesday, and on Thursday morning early medical assistance was summoned as she seemed very ill. Dr. Davis, who was sent for, on arriving found that her re- covery was impOBsible. She would have become a motlier in a few months. After the girl's death letters were found stating that she had been betrayed under promise of marriage. A fortnight ago her lover married another woman, and this had such an effect on Minnie .Vllan's mind that, as the girl herself stated, she preferred death to the disgrace which was aboat to over- take her. Four Englishmen recently captured by brigands near Smyrna have been liberated -on payment of a ransom of £750. The Brennan torpedo, purchased by the late British Government for £115,000, is to be submitted to a test in secret at Ports- mouth this month. Grave doubts are entertained among torpedoists as to its â- access. Complaints are still made of the depre- dations of French fishermen on English smacks in the North Sea. The Imperial Government are being urged to send superior vessels with electrio light to afford ade<]uato protection. There is no truth in the statement that the Prince of Wales will open the cathe- dral at Truro. While in Cornwall he will make several visits and show himself amongst the Cornish people, to most of whom ho is a stranger. It is believed that the object of the com- ing conference between Prinoe Bismarck and SignorCrispi,tbe Italian Prime Minis- ter, is to reuew the military convention be- ween Italy, Austria and Germany and to establish a central European ZoUverein. The Hygienic Congress that has been sit- ting at Vienna approved of the English method of thorough disinfection in pre- ference to ijuarantine for the prevention of the thread of epidemics. The Congress also favored cremation for the disposal of the dead. Advices from West Africa state that the British Consul has caused the arrest of King Jaja of Operbo, for secretly prevent- ing the access of traders to the interior. King Jaja ordered the natives not to do any trading* except through his agents, and enforced his order by l>sheading 150 of his subjects as a warning to others. The total decrease in the United States debt last month was »14,247,y69. Edwards' lodging house in Detroit was destroyed by fire on Saturday morning and three of the lodgers burned to death. Three men and two boys were suffocated and thirteen others partially overcome by gas in a mine at Ashland, Pa., on Saturday. Three deaths from cholera occurred at Swinburne Island, New York harbor, on Saturday, and five new oases were taken itbere. Thousands of people were turned away from Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, yester- day, when the place occupied for forty years by Henry Ward Beeoher was filled iy his intimate friend and possible suc- cessor. Rev. Joseph Parker, D.D., of Lon- don. With I'r. Parker in the pulpit was Dr. BcBchor's former assistant ana the £ resent acting pastor, Bev. S. B. Halliday, •.D. In the pastor's pow sat Mrs. Beeoher and Mrs. Parker. A report has reached Brookham, Miss., that serious trouble is brewing between negroes and whites about twenty miles southeast of that place, near Lime and Pike and Lawrence counties. About 3U0 men of each color are said to be under arms and a collision is feared. Several white men have left here with shotguns for the scene of the trouble. An unusual scene occurrea at the Metro- politan Methodist Episcopal Church, Washington, last night, when Bev. John P. Newman, in a sermon on â- ' Infidelity," alluded in severe terms to the .Anarchists. " Could any American citizen," he said, " ten years ago have imagined the circula- tion of a petition to pardon those whose hands are red with the blood of the de- fenders of the public peauo and safety? What is back of this anarchyâ€" this dare- devil movement on the part of these villains, who ought to have been hung long ago ? " At this point many of the audi- ence rose to their feet, clapped their hands, and with loud demonstrations announced their approval of the minister's words. Friday was the Empress of Germany's 76th birthday. The buildings in Berlin and Potsdam were decorated with fiags and bunting in honor of the occasion. King Leopold of Belgium, the Emperor and Empress of Brazil and the Baden Princes presented their congratulations to the Empress. The wife of the late Hon. John Mac- Auley, of Kingston, died yesterday. Mr. Smith, C. P. R. yardmaster at Medi- cine Hat, Man., was killed on Sunday while switching a train. A man named Acton has been arrested at Neche, Atan., for bigamy. He comes from Morden, and an effort will be made to have him extradited. The inaugural lecture in connection with the establishment of the new medical faculty of the Toronto University way de- livered by Prof. Ramsay Wright yesterday afternoon. A conference on Evangelistic work in connection with the Presbyterian Church was commenced yesterday afternoun in the Central Presbyteriaji Church, Toronto. Delegates are present from uU parts of the Province. During the progress of the storm at Lon- don yesterday morning the residence of Mr. K. Garner, Colborne street, was struck by lightning. Beyond stunning some of the occupants and shattering a portion of the house no serious damage was done. Wm. Rowlands, M.C.R. brakeman on an extra east-bound freight, while coupling cars at Rodney on Sunday morning had his right arm frightfully crushed. He was at once taken to St. Thomas and suffered amputation of the injured member. Mr. Beaugrand's new paper, the Daily Newt, made its first appearance in Montreal yesterday. It is printed ou pink paper, has fonr pages of seven columns each, professes to have been established as a money making enterprise, but is Liberal in politics. Mr. P. J. U. Baaudry, assistant clerk of the Privy Council, died at Ottawa yester- day afternoon of typhoid fever after a short illness. He bad held the position of assist- ant clerk for three years, and was highly esteemed by all those aaxtainted with him. The inquest on the body of Thos. Camp- bell, who was drowned through the ferry boat collision in Toronto Bay, was con- cluded last night, when the jury returned a verdict that Campbell's doath was caused by the negligence of Capt. Martin, of the Sadie, and a warrant was issued fur his arrest. The two-year-old son of Joseph Gran- tham, caretaker of Trinity Church, St. Thomas, had a narrow escape from a ter- rible death yesterday morning. The <;hild toddled into a stable where his father was currying a horse, and was kicked by the animal in the head and thrown through the door, receiving terrible tlosh wounds, but nothing more serious. On Sunday night burglars broke into the Grand Trunk station at Exeter and forced the safe open by breaking off the hinges and driving spikes in by the aide of the door, but did not get any booty, as there was no money in the safe. Burglars also broke into Hawkshaw's hotel and stole three overcoats, a revolver, a pair of shoes, a watob and a meerschaum pipe. No clue to the burglars. Alfred Jones, aged 14, a son of George Jones, of Lambeth,met with a painful acci- dent the other day. Ho was on the straw stack helping to hang the barn door, when by a sudden movement he was thrown violently to the ground, and striking the hook on which the door was to hang, cut hia back severely from the shoulder blade downwards and across. The cut was about five inches long. Armandeua Anderson, a Swedish emi- grant, aged 17, died from exhaustion and insufficient nourishment on a Michigan Central train while passing through St. Thomas on Sunday night en route toBnffalo to join his mother and sister. The -umor spread among other emigrants that tbe cause of death was Asiatic cholera, and excitement ran high until Dr. Smith, the company's physician in St.Thomas, assured them there was no cause for alarm. The wife of Charles Carroll, a farmer living on the Mount Brydges road, near Strathroy, was found on Saturday after- noon hanging in the barn dead. Mr. John Carroll, cousin of the deceased's husband, had been ploughing for his relative, and on coming in to dinner saw the bo<'^ hanging and cut it down. The woman had appar ently climbed up into the mow, attached a rope to one of the poles forming a scaffold some eleven feet above the floor, and there hanged herself. Thare was no apparent motive for the deed. W. H. Stuart appeared at the London Police Court yesterday toanswer thf charge of threatening to shoot E. J. Harris, tho latter having, according to Stuart's story, enticed away the defendant's wife. The case was referred to in yesterday's Times. Mrs. Stuart appeared as a witness for Harris. She said she married Stuart about two years ago, but finding ho already had a wife and family, she turned him out of her home, which was loft her by her first hus- band. She took Stuart back twice and then discarded him for "keeps." Harris, on being asked why he did not go and live with his own wife, intimated that ho pre- ferred t-D manage his own domestic affairs. The case ended in Stuart being bound over to keep the peaoe. James Gordon Bennett will publish a newspaper in Paris, to bo known as tho European Herald. It will be modelled after the New York Herald. The house in which Dr. Samuel John- sou was born and lived for so many years, at Litchfield, is to be sold. At present it is a draper's shop, and little altered since the ponderous lexicographer lived there. The Rouvier Cabinet is looking forward to the reassembling of the Chambers with feelings the reverse of agreeable, as ques- tions aud interpellations regarding its home and foreign policy threaten it from every quarter. The Rome Riforma says aooord between the Church aud Italy is impossible unless the Church abandons her pretensions. It would be to the advantage of the Papal See, even in its relations with other States, if it could be brought to comprehend the spirit of the age. Tho latest news from Samoa is that the Germans took King Malietoa on board a gunboat for the purpose of exiling him on account of his failure to prevent his people from robbing German plantations. King Meliotoa had previously written to the Britiaii and American Consuls expressing disappointment at the absence of their sup- port. Binns, who was Marwood's successor as hangman, has been discharged for druukei: - ness. He is travelling in Cheshire with a show which depicts an execution scene, with a chaplain, ullicials, reporters, etc., a wax model of Mrs. Berry, the Oldham prisoner, being dropped through a trap. Great crowde attend the performance; which is disgustingly realistic, and efforts will be made to stop it. The ultra-Protestant party is by no moans gratified at the election of the new Lord Mayor of London. Delieyser is a Belgian Catholic, but he promised to recog- nize officially none but the State religion, as was done by his predecessors, who were Quakers or Nonconformists. Mr. DeKeyser, who is the first Catholic Lord Mayor since the Reformation, is a capable man and clover speaker. He is known to Ameri- cans as the owner of tbe Royal Hotel, Blackfriars. Tbe first contingent of troops which Spain will send to Morocco has been despatched. It consists of 0,OUU men. The object of sending this foroe is to protect tbe interests of Spain in Morocco in case the country relapses into a state of anarchy, which is feared will follow the death of the Sultan. Eight battalions of infantry, be- sides cavalry and artillery, have been con- centrated at Cadiz and Malaga, in readiness to cross over to Morocco immediately. This foroe is under command of Gen. Lasso. Several war ships are also in readiness for active service. For some time Mormon meetings have been held by missionaries from .Vmerica in Pentonvilleroad, London. These meetings have been held in private houses, bat bills have been extensively circulated inviting any oue to attend. Une of those meetings was held on Sunday night in a small house. A crowd collected outside. Speeches were made about polygamy in I'tah and the mob forced an entrance through a window. A scene of great excitement and confusion ensued. The landlord, fearing the destruc- tion of his property, sent for the police, but before they arrived the wall of the garden and that separating it from the next garden wore thrown down, and probably worse would have happened bat for the ar- rival of a sergeant aud six eunstables. The Mormon missionaries and their disciples got out at tho back of the house. ABOTHEK WAE OLOUD. will KiiKlHml BtMiunie Involved In an Kastem War ? A London cable says : Nobody in the inner official circle would be surprised if within a month British regiments were on the march from Quetta toward Candahar. All the news from Afghanistan shows that the position and health of tbe Ameer alike are declining. Instead of bis quelling the Ghilzai revolt, as reported, it is now wider spread and stronger than ever. His gene rals are apparently no longer striving to cope with it. The Ameer himself gives very little time to affairs of State, being in a condition of great despondency over his illness, changing his doctors continually, and it is reported that he is making life a genuine burden for each us the failure of his cure becomes apparent. Ayoab Khan is said to be on the road to Candahar him- self, but all these reports of bis where- abouts are distrusted at tbe Indian and Foreign Offices as Oriental lies. Nothing is regarded as sure about him, save that he is bound to make trouble. His pre- tensions to the throne are being aided by the ;Vmeer's illness and un- popularity aud the infancy of hia son, if uot by Russian intrigue. This last is just no<v an uncertain quantity. In fact, there are reasons for believing that Russia for the present is very anxious to secure Eng- lish friendship as au offset to Prince Bis- marck's Continental combination, and is willing to abandon a good deal in Asia for tbe sake of securing it ; but there are other reasons for believing that Kussiau agents in Asia are acting inignoranceordefianceof this new imperial policy to undermine the English in Cabul. So the wliole thing is in a maze. Sir West Ridgeway, who succeeds General Buller, is absolutely without ex- perience other than Oriental. Those who know him speak highly of him, and he has certainly done good work on the Kusso- .\fghan frontier. His article in the .Vi'ne- teenili Century on the frontier ought to encourage faith in Lord Salisbury's old advice to study large maps. He believes that Russia will keep her word respecting tbe statiu lyiio. Hitherto, he says, the Rus- sian advance in Asia has been like the gliding of a knife through butler, but now that it touches ;\ighanistan it has met the hard substance of the dish. Ue scouts the idea of an invasion of India. It would be madness, he argues, in the Russian Generals, who depend for their supplies upon a single lightly constructed railroad, to leave their roar exposed to the hostile, excited raoes of Central Asia. Sir West Ridgeway speaks well of tbe peraonal re- gard aud friendship of the Russian officers and the bulk of the people toward English- men. Oecllne of Matrlniouv. Marriages increase as we approach the lowest grade where there is the least pride, ambition or energy other than animal or self- preserving. They decrease as we ascend to the grades where acquisitiveness, business enterprise, intellectual tastes, political or social opportunities, or what not, induce a larger activity in tho indi- vidual, involving the necessity uf larger preparations and resources outside of more self-support. And the reason is found not only in the unwillingness of the woman to begin, with her husband, in a lower scale of living in the household and in society, but as well in the unwillingness of the man to change his style of living to suit the con- ditions of matrimony, to deny his wife any of the advantages she enjoyed before mar- riage, or even for himself to sacrifice part of his other aims and ambitions to the maintenance of a wife and a home. To oomo at tho point brielly from another direction, a survey of the conditions seems to indicate that the tendcaicy of tho times in education, society, liabit, life in general, is to mifit women for becoming wives and men for becoming husbands. Domesticity is infringed by the multiplication of -focial, business and professional cares and re- sponsibilities, the inducements to marriage lessened in number and force, and tho family and thehome, our national bulwark, threatened with decay through neglect for more selfish individual considerations and ambitions. â€" Sprin^iehl I uion. KnRliKh Literury Noteri. Tho forthcoming life of Uev. Dr. Morloy Punshon will contain many interesting facts not previously published. Professor MaoDonald, of EdinburKh, is the biogra- pher. The details of tho five years ho spent in Canada are supplied by Professor llsy- nor, Dr. Punshon s son-mlaw. Messrs. Isbister aniiounoe tho second volume of DeanJPIunitrte's "Dante," a com- pletion of tho work ; also " Everyday Christian Life," by Archdeacon Farrar. Mr. Swinburno has ulso finished a new drama to bo colled " Locrine." " Scenes from tho George Kliot Coun- try," by Stephen Parkinson, is tho title of a volume now in press, which deals more especially with tho unrly life of George Eliot and identifies ohnracters in hor novels with persons of whom she had knowledge in actual life, and places and scenery with portions of tho midland counties amid which sho spent her youth and young womanhood. Oold aud Silver. Along hor father's field they Btr'ayod, All lleokud witli oowBiips y«llow, \ Uttlu dainty ^^old-lmirod mold, A sturdy '•-yuar fi^Uow. And tUtirb Iuvu'b cciurwj they two began, 4AI1, tiiuroy paiii lur trttauiii^c ;) And vowed wbuu tiu-v \vt*re moid aud man Tlie town should tee a wetMine. Thuir KCddBu curls w.iro lioni and blent, TUruudp'-w&ftfi uf frograuce treading ; " And oir!"thBy murmured, well uuut«nt, " "Twill be a yoldeu woddiugl" " 'Tis time," said he, â- â-  to olaitn her vow." And forth ho wont aud found her ; Hut Hhe was fp'own a beauty now, Aud lialf tho town was round her. " 1 t»ee,"u&ys ho. "you tiou't waut uie!" Thuuf;h loars were ripe (or shoddiiie. " I'm glad your eyes are (,'ood, " said Bheâ€" '* .Vh.whero's that Koldon weddiuy ';*" Ho lluiiK away, aud left her there. Biiuh liuart-soro tear drops sheddiug Aud i;oHsips (Tied, in blank despair. " She spoiled the rarest woddiuf; ?" Ho sailed the seas, he Iwat tbe Fireuch, Two score good years he tairiod, \aA then he thought. " That little wenchâ€" I wonder if she's married '^" Next week a blulT old tar rolled past, TUo gabled High street treading. Aud liuoittut gusbips crc-wed, " At lust Wn'rs like to have the wedding 1" She waited for him fony years â€" The gray their looks w- ire threading : .\nd some with smiles aud some with toars, Beheld their silver woddlug. â€" Good Woiii>B. Monkoytown is the name of a new post- ofiioe in Yaisoo County, Mississippi. LIVER PILLS. Hew Ho Got Tliose Illack Byes. Judge, to Pat, who lias been arrested for beating Mikeâ€" Well, you did pound him, didn't you ? Pat â€" Yis, yer honor. I struck him on tho nose, the ugliest part of his ould face. Judge, in astonish iiiont â€" On his nose ? Just look at his two black eyes. Patâ€" Well, he did 11 t houid shtill when I struck him. â€" Epoch. " Theu let the nioou usurp the rulo of day, Aud winking tapers sliow the buu hia way ; Kor what uiy senses can iierceive, 1 need UU revtilaiion tu believe." Ladies suffering from any of the weak- nesses or ailments iH-culiar to their sex, and who will use Dr. Piorce'a Favorite Pre- Boriptiona according to directions, will ex- perience a genuine ret>«(<i(iun in the benefit they will receive. It is a positive cure for the most complicated and obstinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive fiuwing, painful men- struation, unnatural suppressions, pro- lapsus, or falling of the womb, weak back, " female weakness," anteversion, retrover- sion, bearing.down sensations, chronic con- gestion, intlanimatiou and ulceration of tbe womb, inllammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with " internal heat." An Intoieating Diary. A. Bronson .Vlcott has kept a journal ever since he was a boy. Among the earliest entries are the following : " Went in swimming to-day. Road Plato while dryin' off and got awfully sunburnt." " To- day began kriticle study of the Greke tra- gedise, but Ralf Emerson como round and we concloodod to go after Chipmanks."â€" Uurlinijlim Free Prent. Poison's Norvlllne, Hundreds who have experienced the won- derful [lower of Nerviline in subduing pain have testified that it is the most potent remedy in existence. Nerviline ia e>iually efficacious as an internal or an external remedy. Poison's Nerviline cures tlatulenoe, chills, spasms, cholera, cramps, headache, sea-sickness, summer complaint, etc., etc., Nerviline is sold by all druggists and country dealers. Only '26 cents a bottle. Try it. ^ Two Important Uuostious for Girls. Here is a postscript to a girl's letter ; When you write next answer me in confl- uence two (juoations : Can you lace your boots with your corsets on ? .Vnd can you put on your bonnet with your bodice on ? I want to know. M." â€" London Truth. Happiness. The foundation of all happiness is health. A man with a perfect digestion may be a millionaire, may be the husband of an angel and the father of half a dozen cherubs, and yet be miserable if ho be troubled with dyspepsia, or any of the dis- orders arising from imporfoct digestion or a sluggish liver. Dr Pierce's Pleasant Purgativo Pellets are tho safest and surest remedy for those morbid conditions. Being purely vegetable, they are perfect harmless ^ â€" _ The Decline of tho Dance. Tho (lancing of our youth was really an able-bodied exercise. Tho original polka fatigued the muscloa like wood-chopping or sowing. But now these Bamomusoles have given in to costuuio. Necessity has laid upon them tliat they shall have no free motion. Samo French writer said that the waltz hod killed the dance. Crinoline and tie-backs have in their turn killed the waltz. Hifalntin.â€" Young Reporter â€" " The storm-king hurled his torn and tumbling torrents over the ruins of the broken and dismembered edifice." Old Editor â€" "What's that ? What do you mean, young fellow ?" Young Reporter â€" " I â€" e-or â€" the flood washed away Patrick MoDDagal's old soap factory." Thousands of cures follow tho use of Dr, Sago's Catarrh Remedy. 60 cents. A horse that recently fell on and killed an Indian near Garfield, Idaho, was made the subject of a barbecue by the surviving relatives of the departed redskin. BXfTAJta oe" iMiT.irioxs. azwats ASK. rOB DH, I'Ism'.K'H I'BLLBTa, OB i,nrrz,B suuAit-coATJKD pills, Beinc entlr«Ir Togotabl.-, tbey op- erate without distiu-(«uu'<f to the system, diet, or oircripution. I'lit up in glastt vial'^ hermeti- cally M-alod. Aiw-iiys fn-su unU reliable. As a laxative, alteralivo, or purgallTe; tht<eu little Pcileta t;ivo the must [lerfect sutiafactioa. SMHiiHE. BilloDS Hoadarhe, Dizzluom, CouBlipa- liuii, ludlKeation, Ulliona AltacKM,uuduU deraiiKtimi-nta of tliu stom- ach and bowels, are prompt- ly relievudand iR^riuanenlly tnired by tho use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative PoIIeta. In explanation of the reuuKliai power of tbeeu Pellets over hii great a variety of diseases, it muy truthfully hv said that their action upon the sy^ni is uuivuntal, not h Klaud ur tissue («capinK their aaimllvu iiiBuunoe. Sold by druKK'Sts, 26 o-nts a vial. Mamifncturcd at tbe Chenriual Laboratory uf W<iki.d'9 UIsrE^SAitT BliuicAi. Association, IluOolo, N. Y. $500H) is <)ticr«d by tlie manufactui^ c.rtKif Dr. Sage's Caturrta BemudT, for a t»»u «f Chruuie Nasal Catarrh which tbey vaiinut cure. svntPToms or oatabrb.-duU, heavy heatlache, obstriutiou of thu nasal passuKes, dischargt-s fallint; from the ln«d into tho thmut, sumctiinos profuse, watery, and lu-'rid, at uthcrs, thick, ttmacious, mui-uus, purulent, bloody and pulrid; tho eyt« ore weak, wsitcry, and Inllniin^l ; thor« is ringing In tho (wrs, dcafnesa, hacking or oouKhiiig to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive inatt<.'r. together with scabs from ulcers; tho voice is chansod and hus a nasal twang ; tbe hn-ath Is u(tiiiBiv>!; sim 11 and taste iins Im- pair^; tticro is a. sensation (FT dlu^iin^ss, with mt^ntui depression, a hacking ciiuRti nod ffen* i-ral debility, (^iily •\ few ul tho above-nained symptoms are likely to be i)r«ieent in any one case. I'housantls t>f iiasefl annually, without luanlfosting half of the above syiiiptoms, re- sult in uoDSUiiiption, and em) in the grave. Nw disease is so common, mure deot'ptive and dan^^roiiH, or letfs undcrstuuU by physicians. Ity it« mild, mK>thing, and lu^tiig properties. Dr. HaKc'fl i'atarrh Ht-inrtly cunw the worst i-Hseaof Catarrh, "cold in the head," Coryxa, and C'atar'-bal Ucadachu. Sold by druggtetd overiwhere; !K) cciils. <*Cii(old Agony from Catarrh." Prof. W. HAnSNEn, tho famous mesmerist, of i(/i«f<i,.V. K., writes; "Sumo ten vciirs ago I HUfTc-n-d iintuld iigouy from chruiiic nu^ (»tarrh. .My family physlt^ian gave mi- up as incurable, luid «uid 1 must die. My i-ase was such a bad one, thnt every day, tuwanis sun- set, my voiw) would N'coine so hoarse I could bar»?ly fl|»eak ntH»v4; a whieiJer. In the morninff my couKliiiiK and clearing uf tny throat wuUld alinoet stmiiK-hi aie. Ily the use of Dr. Cage's Catarrh U(.-niedy. in lhrt«? inutiths, I was a well mail, iind the cure hus been |>ermauent. " '^Couslautly Hawking and Spilliug." TH().MA».I. UtisiiiNO, Vm.\.. i90t Pint Street, St. X,oui«, Mo., writi-s : " 1 was a great sufferer from iiihirrh for three years. At times I could hardly breathe, luid was cunstantly hawking and Bpitting, and for the lost eight mouths could not tiroatho thrpUKh tho nuslrils. 1 tbouKbl imthinK «)\ild IXj ouno for inc. Luck- lly. 1 was ndvist-d to try Dr. Sage's Catarrh Romoily, and I am now a well man. 1 IkjIIovo it to iH^theuDly suru remedy for catarrh now maniifnctured, and one has only to give it a fair 1 1 iiU to oxi>cricnco astounding results and a pcriuaueiit cure." Three Bottles Cure Catarrh. Bli UoniiiNS, nur\yan P. O., Columliia Co., Pck, says: "My daughter had catarrh when she was fivo years old, very badly. 1 saw Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pro- cured a bottle for her, and soon saw that It bolpod her ; a third bottle effected a perma- nent cure. Sho is nuw eighteen years old and sound aud hearty." U C M L. 11 87. CONSUMPTION. I hav««po«ltlv«ir«uiray for ttir«l<ovedlMM« j brUSDM thoa«ftnteorcMM*rilM wont kind an < of 1od( â- toDdInc hftr* he«n rurvU. IndecMl, «u itrntiK ^>r f^lb la lla AfltoAcy^ ttut I wtM MDtt TWO BDTI'I.FS > " MC«(b«r with « VAl^AHLS TRRATTHB oa tbU dlM^* «« ftn/ •ufferwr. (lit* oipr*>M itnd P. (i Kit.lri>«a. niL T. A. siXKim, BnmdhOffiee, 37 7oneraSt,Tanito DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIEMD: I CURE FITS! Wh«nJ MjTtire 1 tio »o( niMn invralr to irtopttietQ far* UlDttAnd th«n huro ttiom rwturn «ic*1n. [ m«-Ati k ritdle&l ears. I h&v* mnde ll>«> ttlMftifol PI']-S,KPILRr*HV orFAIJU- INO niOKNKK8ft lM»-k>ni; Rtudr. I warraot tnjr rernvdv <• core the Want <-«•••. 1I»c*um nthent )]«^« fklledU tM» f â€" PD for not BOW rpc«lvlni: ft rim-. S^iul At one* fo* • trfi«ttf« »n<1 K Prf>« R(ittl»nt mr InrgUtUr- rvruodj. G|t» BK)ir*aii Aii'tl'nalirtBc*. It rosM j-ott nothtnc 'or « trtaL Mid I wiiUarB vwiL A.Mruin DK. H. O. HOOT, Br∋li(lce,37Toiii[e St., Toronto. -.»,UW.'

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