Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 30, Number 47, Jasper, Dubois County, 10 August 1888 — Page 3

-- naananamj tt-

ekey. and In w iMa no yen ,

tllane.

if he k SOt th

Ih'LHAXA.

"""" THI 1XHTTKN.

SI

I,' wr"mJT Tr? 0,Uia--h" t Otll MM t)M MlltN.H kr K I Vt has. -JwUcJ, wht ! HtmMM, I mmM . iit'H I wsWn Mr U.KIM . In aha oSt'Sajr BST'ii ffii )tkc a rtmk; OMri4a't VMs t iwiie inn va wu Mr. w like llfia' H wim M, Mjr awt nil . .u-ihM. "of I seaway Tio--wr tor MtewlUywi

TMt BM W. rvuk van IW MM , S

'WMa th ' ta th' mUr iMt u MeM. 'a mi; -0t liWo f' trait.

ttH,

Stm er 1!

lekM Ataxia' mush e' lt Tegi" you tk ittw" WH. J bt I W fal n iwMthrH TkM I ifcwfmt now Swi 'I

"YH, IM wim J """" S! , ftSSM tWa' , WitaKfMer Th AW. y Jake, Wwla tMKtfi! -X "T JWfciir, M 71m. BETTY'S MISTAKE. Why Hot Second Imwk Was Different from th First

Miss Campion u a little rsetlea. She had dressed for dinner some time previously and now move backward and forwards from her post of observation to eonsalt the little Swiss clock hanging the writing table for her eyes were not as good ae they had There were few people living who were dear to her, ami of these she was arnsctinir this evening the two whom

the loved btwt in the world her godtaughter and namewtke, Betty Carew, aad Colin Campion, hr nephew. She had a daflalte object in view in Wufinir these youn ieople tofrether. A In weeks before nlw had as attack JnKsfciti, iutd thi illnetu had mg JMed to her the advisability of makiag her wilt Wbea she heaa to oonatdecWw ehe mkaM dtrkto hr rayrty between e heart seemed torn aeunder. Sha omild not calmly contemplate her oldlaoe and china and all her favorite personal poeeeasione going out of the family, w&ntd Bettv to have theni.

Colin atuat of owre have tJe little es

tate, but then, too, 1m have Uie money to keep it up, for ahe did not Pa-l trw Wa MPtatiid after her

nmi a vi w v "r jo - " aeath. it lanjrth mm Idea, eeeurred to her

irlioh, if carried out, would obviate all iSculUee. Why ahouW not Colin and

Jetty marry and share her fortune equally, without any troublesome diviwoeoflt? With this thought in her mind Mies Campion had invited them to Fordo, and was now awaiting Betty's arrival with some nervousness. Her nervousness laereased when she had welcomed her goddaughter and brought her into the drawing-room for it was aeoeasarr that she should

make Betty understand how desiraWe a ftuWnd Colin would be without raising any suspicion ia her mind. "You are very tired, dear," she said, battening to pour out a cup of tea with trembling fingers. "I shall sever become reconciled to trains t are nohy and dusty. It is a pity w are ia such a hurry always nowadays. They managed better is the Uwt century, when journeys ware le in a leisurely Banner by coach." "If we were eighteenth century "dies, godmother, 1 should be at the ry at this moment for the joury trem Devonshire would have been Imposrtblti bv eoach. So I am glad

we were not born a hundred years

"If you rnrt it ia thai way, dear, so

Ml. I hope this visit will be pleas-

Mter than usual," she added, nerr ly. "Ify nephew, Ca)ln, is com-

C to-nleht; he Is going to stay for

was time.'

. "He k a doctor is London, iea't he?

have heard you apeak of him."

" I dare say. He has bought a prae tioe there," answered Miss Campion

"lie is very clever In bis profession.

d so tender and kind! It is quite

eatttlful to see him with children

ut he eeejht to marry; there is always a areludiee im favor of married

ill he marry

love?'' asked Hetty,

brown slightly. "On, , my dear, of aourse "Then yu thUk he will obediently fail la love when you tell him that he ought w, marry? lie must have his

motions under admirawe eonwm 1U would not fall in love with any

I one," aaid Miss Campion, with only a

vague understanding of Betty s aarbut he can not fall to see what a sweet girl " ;i I see," interrupted Ketty, quietly; you are saving him a great deal of unnecessary trouble in suggesting whom ae well as when he should

Colin would not marry any girl whom he eould not like and respeet," said Miss Campion, a little anxiously. 0h, no! But he is not sentimental," wiggested lletty. "The girl he marries will be a happy woman."

She will, indeed," agreed her godmother. I am so glad that you appreciate Colin." Soon after Betty had left the drawing-room to dress for dinner Mr. Campion arrived. When the first greetings were over his aunt remarked, tentatively

" I hate asked Botty Carew to stay with mo while you analiure, Colin. You

don't know Bntty?" No," said Colin. " She is a very sweet girl," said Miss Campion, nervously. Is she?" " A very sweet girl. Do you know, Colin, I have thought lately that you ought to marry? Married doctors are

Rlwavs the most successful.

"And you think Miss Betty would make a good doctor's wife?" questioned Colin, suppressing a smile at his aunt's transparent plot. She is very dear to me, Colin; I should like Betty to be mistress here when I die," she returned, wistfully. Colin kissed her and said gently: mt ithnnld like to nleaee you in all

things. Aunt Betty, but I must reserve the right of choosing ray own wife. I hold some antiquated views about marriage among the rest, that a man should love his wife. Moreover, there is the chance that Miss Carew would not be orercorae by my

many and undoubted charms. But we will let that pass." "I won't sav any thing more about it," said Miss Campion, with a sigh; but when you know hor you will understand how happy she will make Mima one some day."

At dinner Colin mt opposite to Betty, and, a he watched her beautiful, tender face, he was quite prepared to indorse his aunt's opinion of her goddaughter, though Betty was any thing

Xerer speak to ws of this agatar ad, rising from her garden ehalr, she went Into the nous aad up to her own I'IMINI. This was what it ail meant, then! How blind she had bees! She was the 'sweet girl" whom Miss Campion thought a suitable wife for Colin. She had been invited hers ia order that Colin might see if she would "do."

How grateful she ought to feel! She went down stairs presently feel

ing giad that this was her last day at Fords. She found Miss Campion sit-

tint alone in the drawing-room, look-

iuif a little diileased.

1 am so cross, my dear,M said the old lady, drawing Betty to a seat by

her side. 'Colin has rWden over vo

the Iadbrokes for dinner. It was very

thoughtless of him not to remember

that this was your last evening.

' It does not matter, godmother,"

said Botty, with gentle coldness, "I i . . .1 ! .. 1 u-ltt. vm 1

wouiu rawier spenti n wn j

Would you, dear? 1 thought you and Colin had got on more comfortable

lateiv.

" It was onlv a surface agreement,"

answered Betty, rather proudly. "We

are too entirely opposed In charaoter to

be really friends.

"You will hardly believe it, Betty.

but I had planned a match between you two. I thought you were so well suited to each other: and It would have been

so nice for nm to think of your living

here together after my death!"

And vou spoke to hira about it?"

ouostioned Betty, without raising her

eyes. " Yes. on the evening you came; told

him what I wished. But I was to meet the fate of all match-makers, you see," she added, sighing. " Colin said he would never marry unless he wore in love that he must reserve to himself the right of choosing his wife. And, as you say, dear, you and he were very far from falling in love." 'Did he say that?" asked Betty, eagerly. "Wouldn't he agree to what

you wisnea? men a w him terriblv: he is ever so much nicer

than I thought!" 'You thought?" questioned Miss Campion, slowly. " Ah, I remember now I told you that I was going to speak to him, and you believed that he would marry any one I suggested! How foolish and wrong I have beeni You .t..v, hav likod him if you had not

Atisftsav w nrefudiced beforehand,

At Art thin raieht have been

- j q ea ent!" Do not grieve, godmother," said Betty, gently. "If we have not been ?t. ia niilte mv own fault. I

I1ICUUV, " - '1 - had no right to judge him before 1

knew him."

fijetiilUfci LfckM uAiUyMn! UHT oM tmVtt mmnmmnmm 0OHHseav mnymr mmannmawin m - -

aVsorway, revealing to CaUa how taia

aad pale she had lamuwm, aad how sad

wars her eyes aad lips.

YtMt havw been Uir ho said, leak

ing down at her anxiously.

"Oh, no; I am porfssUy well aa-

asualiy well, indeed she aaewersa, aasUly, nervously magertag the sow

ers in her belt-

Yo are surprised t see ma here.

seslag how we parted," ke saia. sye-

ing her IntenUy. "We dm net even ssy good-bye."

"Have you eeroe to wiah me gooa-

hyo now?" she asked, trying to smile.

No, I have some to a yo way

you were so angry van arcentwu. You treated my proposal as if I had

intended it as an insult; you speKs to

me as if 1 wars acting a part! I don t think I quite deserved it, Ketty from

Mi HAT 0T ATOKaUUrt.

-The

toa

to aVeatl ia 1MT-4L

ahere is no

Caoka."

you!"

I It was a mistake," ee wuveree.

I thought you were acting; I did not

believe ia your love. X 1 am very sorry." 0

Betty," he said, taking her nana gently in his, "if you had believed in my love would your answer have been different?" I I think it might have been." Dear, do you believe la it nowf Can vou trust me now?" "Yes!" she said, looking up at him for the first time. JV. ' Graphic

SENSE.

JB300dp) pa(na Jw(eP(oO 1

ntet Pmeastaai naasaanastst . . . - .

lEeiaeeeel fliuawa aaaer sajM I

aaW fj&aa toat osnBmBnBnVaMMl oanm'' awaSml SJanmmnt so nmnnnmm iBmasaamm H sboald bs "Yestol, A7,777?t--a ,..t g 7 DaaaJstom " """""

msnla I Tarn air T-U. M'-l-m-J CetjaaaTKaT wTmaat! amoims: eflomd anther I ae i W'L

1 liaTl--'--

TumAis laar, a. 1 rtoa-ia

Isreoarcwoa-The saosaaetsaem m, iei eaeas sosaa,ol MUdtome. mlineMlhrfcVy

ynnt Qfg mltlh l1Ua43naV- I- JJISaa if eftn Tawaov e-y

The

at the Uaatoi

The n s! sty k to have a

t yaaaflhoaff lj SVipVXe Whan eae little girl asked

ahout the alter sees betweea aa aottve

mmW umA ae associate member, the

nmlvwas: MOae k a Christian,

the other is just going ka. There are eae aeodred aad eight Lamoraa pastors ia Dakota, feaca-

iaa-iaive laagoages. The

ehureh ia that territory is aaid to

Frotostaat ohurehes together. More than one-third of all the toertoaa hundred student ia Michigan,

HaiversHv oar a from farmers'

Ta the Interior aad West, as Ia

eld Kew Xagiaad, the road

from the farm to the eoliege

swa highway, and is well troadea.

Thomas SUrr King,

had a osaatry reiattve wae . . -a

strongly opposed his going upon tae kotore ptaUorm. After much urging he eonseated to attend eae of thelest-

Dr. King asked him what ae

thought of it- "Waal," wastaeoaeer-

iag reply, "yon wara't aau as terns aa

l taeugai ym a I A native church at Osaka, Japan, I has dedkatod aa ediaee seattag S00 (

persons, tae largest rnwa mmm

ia Jaaaa. whka was baUt entirely

Hs own cost. The same eHy

has hs

Ta

nfatt.St:S;

and

dlffer-

THE OLFACTORY

A w V'Mk SM4altt Te ftwr TMaa Atnui tae ' The following paragraph has been going the rounds of the press: M. Le Bee the Frenoh savant, sayt

that the nose te gradually losing it

power to discharge its traditional functions In the case of the civilized peo-

nle: when the sense of smell vanishes

altogether, as will infallibly be the flav. tli orean itself will fol

low its example sooner or later, as Nature never conserves useless organs, and the nose must go.' The olfactory sense is keener in the savage than in the oiviliaed man." A New York specialist on the nose, to whom thk was shown, says:

Well, Frenchmen seem to delight t- .irtn uvrOi axtravaeant state-

miit. There are men aad women of ' recognition of ttspewer.

to-dav who have the most powerful etnrrr.

sense of smell. The trouble is that it is not always educated like that oi the savage. Savages have good eyes, u,wi ears, and eood noses, and be

cause they educate their eyes, aad their ears and their noses they can hear, see and smell better that a man who doee not educate those senses. As far as the nlfactorv sense dying out is concerned.

1 ininK iae nmmm

at

the

largest Christian girts' school tae empire, with STO pupik, to the seaport of which the American Board eon tributes only the services of its foreiga teachers. jldeeae. The tendency in ir day is to worship intellect BtH, agnostics who larv ia their own acumen are eoa-

stonUy confessing tae nnuiea p 5

their knowledge. W hue mou- shm ea Chrkaiaa faith are fatt of bHteraess, thev oonfess that they themselves are in the dark. The very intensity of tWr aeeeeition to Christianity k a

theeay and In ta war aa iniiftil in thk aad

una. 4. TXaois ha atoM of tai

eertty, oshlea. high

Tnnsignmsi mirny. Her. :T-.

mr: aretnt;ta

UU later (v.U

tmm tarn aaata Aatea

nasi in

MiMatk

tacacapie were wholly

jyttaia,ttiagh

t m( Oomow-Whet

Ml HtiMMMttakMd fat a

aaaie. H new takes a yenag

aad a ram (la ens far a.

tkeforater Jram

ay

nt awt

hmvall-aV

i

th httter far a harat 1,i-r etna wioe th two W aad as aat tataae k aawaal isr aauMaw, ana mo taerfsra -aeaaajaat." Thea h aaartfcaatasaallsekasa sia eSsring ir aaaWaateewheaowast ttoblaadkagaaka JfseMl,

Y - aehindthe van ta toaar-

I Male far Bsaoam anas. (Wnatwmne ea aaatinwktaelassrairttl He w emsr aa JJrBc wW tkca jaSthe mow. ,Jj5StJ!

the drawing-room, Betty?

lo yea mean that vary handsome soldier hanging between the windows?" asked Betty, regarding Colin critically. "Oh, no, godmother; I can not see the faintest resemblance." Miss Campion hastily changed the subject, to spare her nephew's feelings, thoiurh Colin was inwardly delighted

n . 1 .

one oonaiuons

a. .a

that are not all sanitary, proouec olds aad catarrh; and when a man

has catarrh his olfactory sense. 01 course, is interfered with. A healthy civilized man who has no catarrh can

But in spite of her brave words, her Frencu mvtLfil thought so k be-

tartsank strangely, bhe Knew max, ,-nv ionle nowadays have

uitm wmtld have accepted Colin' s love . , o. a,u to the dvlllaa-

but kind to him. . w ae anderstood what he was eT- .. nuotWntr under. Imper-

DM't vou think Colin M very maon . 1 wou i hk iawerthi- . V, Ta vaatlla.

i-w r,r aiv e-raadfather in '"l T. ;. ;.7 .,, w tnt iecMJ no T'r 1 " 'xT.:"-.

11 vo r"'"- p . " .. . , ness. inouaa wtv - tlrm. a thousana aau

in htm, nau not ixsw vub kill her love. And now her life would be one long sorrow for that mistake. Colin would never speak to her of his love again-

had she not peremptorily forbidden hwt H8 walj m K savage, and can

him? He had gone away now to avoid m well M gHvage. A modher, and after to-morrow she would ern Anglo-Saxon, born simI brwight up never see him again. But at any rate , civilization, if taken out into the

she would see him once more, and then woA, Hni M.Kieeted to the same edu-

mm 0 .

Everv wood -ear ring school in jiew

York has now more girk taaa hoys, saa at the trades iastttetes, where

onlv vouag men are supposed to be learners, they are ohuaoriag foradmissioa. Several women are stadyiag

in thk city, and oae young woman has jaet completed all the carvings for bor new home. Many women are eager to show a high-backed hair or a table patterned after aa antique model. tuuLutiful eraaaneatauoa in the

earring k the work of their

.1... tk mU Uek wa the

afsctlpnnaewaa aa

eaacuy

forthfron the taoeraartr ta nw

m as aaac a an

What ishenwsayiegl

ttyycauyjoaia nk dene, a ma

forth from th

wart, ana oat at ine

are

ages

. lU4tv' frankness the more so be- """ " woous ana suojeuwu

PresenUy another appeal was made to Betty by the fond aunt. "Do you know, dear, Colin was placed first in every examination he went in for whoa he was walking the honitals?"

"Really?" said Betty, Incredulously, raising to Colin the frankest, most innocent eyes. "I thought clever people became doctors sometimes?"

For a moment Colin suspeotoa tnai she was trying to snub him, but Miss

Campion attributed Betty's rudeness to

atigue, and sent her oh to do vrj

soon after dinner.

During the next few days Betty found

numberless opportunities 01 s iignung

"You had bettor kll him so, said

Betty, with a smile.

"I mean k le Mi and I think he

sorry for having misjudged him so!

But Colin remained at the Ldbrokes for the night, f.ml had not returned to Forde when she left it the next mora-

ing for home. Betty had been right when she assumed that Colin had gone away on the previous afternoon to avoid her. Her harsh rejection of his proposal had roused his anger, and he felt too .h tn hiil W ood-bve. But on his

return to London his anger grew less as time passed on, though his love for

Battv did not diminish. Asmeuiougnw

dwelt on her so constantly he began to seek for some reason for hor unkindncfis: and the more be considered the

mattw flio mora inexplicable did her I

roquet annear. Her harshness aad

he at last concluded that some

misunderstanding must exist in her

a savage has.

will leave the savage far behind ia hk

ene of smell and the other senses. You know it used to be said that an

Iadlaa could run all day and all night.

miA aiuinrw much more than a white

man: but in these six-dny-ge-as-you

nUu. ranu an Indian has no show

whatever.

All the senses are very intimately connected with each other. That there is a dose relation betweea the eye and

the nose is shown when a person has what k popularly called a cold in the head. The eyes will water and feel weak. Snuff, pepper or any irritant

of the kind up the nose, and it makes the eyes water. Veryofton there are

nOlnii at little rrowths in the nose

that Irritate unconsciously oftentimes.

A great many specialists have found that far-sightedness is affected by the

nose, and that the removal of otootruetions in the nose will improve the eves

A circular mtUkhed by the Young

Man s Christina Association of Illinois

states that ia the State of Illinois there

annoiM vatta men between too

at sixteen and forty. At

. a

ua AM at tkaBA are oetstee oc ino

tbershin of evangelical eaureoes.

Savaral churches exkt with a sin

gle BMue member. Oae city of ,w iakahitaak k reaortod as baring bat

inu. vauwmmi who are aottve in

ehureh work: another of the so

mj. iMt4utftaMttvavaMirKa-

ia the membership of any evaageoeai

church.

a next!

jarta larth taa,l

(Waetttne

Be la

J ka

J mimrr. 0W far th

SMteBIaaanyn,"

the

"51. aa a I. ' - - tko

kast aAemm f the esyot aam-

Sarnf this meant Ta th fkas jawkh Tnihiysr k awaat that a had Tito .Utarr f hfaaff aloeMrts; aad

not m th man MrTZT - - i , 1 -

D FeHre's Plisissnsfcrsph

toe

Ami-

numpenetw uiijuumw vi-.."- . . mvwh1 to her luunil utrwt inn 1 uirer me uav uwv ne miniuro "

Tirhrthat he retained we're so at variance with her character

0 re pi -

ik first opinion as to her sweetness uiai

a ii u.mtt.ui nar i ivnm mim

oicnaracier. i" ?. : , tf . . t. ,..,ni,:n .war. -...J..-,,, t.-- i wmu-

with so miwh good temper and recetveu minawmcuna - ho ihw". , . wiitt so rniwn 1 .,j ii l.ln t make a iournev And near-sighted patients, it

is claimed, have also been oured of tlteirnear-slgWednoasby treating the nose. Where a person's eyesight k affected by growths in the nose, tomporarv relief has beea obtained by treating the parts with cocaine. What is thus temporarily aecomp'ishe by the use of cocaine, it k declared, can

utas as she saw sne coam m 1 ire iiro nj -

sent for to the church, whither sne nau moving oowrwivmr

vmK to nractice. Colin, however, ae-

r

1 I witv, sitKH vMUlnfl I I Ilia UHM1H1 IIlHt mnnu " J

1118 HUlll B iimiOT " " , . ,t,..l. Hmimement that Betty was at last com- to Devonshire a few tor. though nelled to confess to herself that her as- hk hopes of winning Betty's he were

timnte of him had been altogether small.

wrong. She felt that she could not rer He walked over to we reexorj w snect him very much, for a man who morning after hk arrival, and was

would marry any gm ior expeuiemjy shown into wie empvj u'""'" " ' , sake was not worthy of much honor; By a neat maid-servant, who told him but she would be more polite to him, as that Betty would be there in a few rain-

his conduct would not in any way meet

her.

Colin was very gratitul fo. thk

change in her attitude towrds hlm.aad a friendship sprung up between them

which on his side dceponoa into wva. Of her feelings he eoW guess Utile.

She was invariably sweet ana irans; but the fear of losing hor friendship by

.ttMnttnvin Mia her love for some

The Doc de Fettre

instrument, which he ealk a

MMMrraM. intended to indtoato

direction of any uktant

nmnhanie awte of MeaHar

tioa k fixed in a vertical pkne, and k

in circuit with a battery

phone receiver, or a Depret-D'Arioava-vanometer and a Whealetoaohridie.

Ta microphone k more or kss af

feetedby adktaat sound, according to tk. aa4e that H makes with tkesoaroa.

By moving the plate ahout until the u v a a.l

maximam eneet m eotninea ia vw aerverk eaabieto exactfy locate to direction of the sound. The indications of the telephone receiver are hgolutelr acCTirato, bet those aoWded by the gafvaaometsr are kss so. aad toil latter arrangement will require great atfteatioa of the microphonic pioto before H can be said to he of apraett-

aal nature. Thk

athlv areve of ase at sea im

eolttskos ia foggy

im. aaanathJoweruanlyi

natfM-aath ear 01 aa-

I i.iasins ""tnenrhet tM

fZiTtlMt forth! In the:

Fahaatmil,

-a? lUbalnMPhV 9. isjamjc'ss

nea, we hav a tyr f

ta

The

lymth

rs

vrhekhsb,

tahsraacte he was eniy a tyy f

M) agaiaa w kseif. aew t

"" " a . navM

af tae ana inn

I1 "1-41. tao. that k to

not of this haamngj

ait tae may

af ta

Fk "Chrlat

IBaavea), havtag BT awa far a w tBah- t:ll, )- TkiaJf th ihihaf, wahsot seoter

TkahlMdaf th

k a tr

ntAmA in a himseir. aaU nan no aim-

culty in finding th sacred edifice, which was close at hand. He seated himself just outside the door, struck by the beauty of the picture before him. The oM church was .l Aim and still, the chancel

time prevented him from putting hk kjone glorified by the sunlight, which

willba ssMMbofors kmg." said the

l lady, aoddiag her head myskrioasly. "Ok, U hs k already ia love, he Ul not need year advios, god-

"ai ho k not k lovs, my near, rstoraed Hks Campioa, hastily. 'Yoaai not think Colin k a )mltWMrtfaBlfcso4 yWMT ISMM IndanHmt

fate iato her hands. On the last nay

of her visit the longing of hk heart overcame thk fear, and he poured out all hk soul to her, not noticing that hor faea was hardening athk words. Tell me, Betty! Give me ea word of hope! Have I any ohaaes?" he pleaded.

She turned toward him then, her face white and stern, hor mouth wearing a faint, bittor smile. How well you do iil" she saW, In a harsh voice. "Do It? What do yea mean?' he naked, hk volco changing too. "Don't you understand? I lovs yon, Betty!" "Mush!" she iatorrupted, harshly. 'Thatkattlte enough. Xs, lean give

glinted through the colored windows, whik the whole building was tilled with the tew, plaintive notes of the organ. Colin sat down near the door and waited patiently UU Betty should 00 me. He heard her dktake the little boy with a kind word of thanks for hk

services saw her shut and lock the

organ, and then he waited In almost trembling expectancy while ah oaam

slowly down the sen tor at.

n4ivt" ka said, ssftiv. rising as

Dr. Caatnienl"

Yau am surnrked te see m hers,"

k mmirn Matlv. wnlkiar eat by hor

-l t-" ' "

The sua shone down oa her a she

Parsons having such oosu-acuon

ako have nose cokk, which come from a curious irritable sosesatibUity oC the aose, caused, by the pollen of different plant. Among the various ill ofeete which are produced by growths in me huh are noises in the ear, eoafasss.

chnmks catarrh of the throat, failure

of the voice, asthma, heart troaates,

stomach troubles, even troubles wnm

thaakin. To illustrate: Many opera-

.1 kaa their vetoes fail, will

ry

flrfVaUHilt & MM

o it. a --

uLnrm their VOWes irsqeey wg

almnk nasal treatment, not owy

- . , , A

ajithmahas been eBmwwtw

aut many other ohest troumes.

chronic bronchltta notaaty. so sam

,1 - tj the moot eUotinat 101 ms,

mm esneoially, whore red pimpks

Ma out all over the f aos, hare been

imm bv nasal treatment It

hard to believe, but oae man who had been troubled for year erwheAwns saiaosed to bs rheumatism in hk

1. "1 wU Uralv eared by the re-

moval of osrtalngrewttaaae aos. JK, stt JVa Ossska

Uaa was wan -a

aartom1v Eieyptkn hfnmmy Fraaoa. SLaoiam oa CaHarj. d'okom abet

I -- - a fivowsnoaa.

i aaaa wwnn OaitoBsave

pcoasrvtdU tint deal- f'c ChThW iliissm as fmm fast

career, xm MwrBm hilneis, as am a

BInaktor 1

Wagton wa k 1077 nan t praam T-T hhtj . w af eassfnei aamgat lldHK Jnawatel '''(nr'MHhaT 'Hers wwnWmno f?4f ni!! tesnr kao Jay saws aaaeox-.c.

When yea wish to iavest

ft ahsotsa "well

ana. bat adrkd-a" "assd-ap toon

in salmon, if yea want a real

aa mommy: far It as

k a great deal of frasat m aaa amnaaay

in KffTIrt.

will nay more far well-pr-

sef-ved mummies.

are watt

far their bodk whoa neianot. xae

hviaerthe

wind an their native

aaaialkt. who will re tLa are wanked and akkkd

wks treated aattl taey are

to toe days of Sesastrk are anaoaoa to tkaam. and thor find ready por-

the rich "tJirmnan

dogs," who ner qwesnsniae

r." wtraat'-t JTsnlafy.

la

tor

k iiaoidired Mlnar sold ta so

yan no heps; you katt no