Bloomington Telephone, Volume 11, Number 17, Bloomington, Monroe County, 30 August 1887 — Page 3
MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCES.
Two Cases In England of Historic Interest. Mysterious disappearances hare been far more numerous than hasty readers imagine some permanent, some temporary. I do not allude to modern ones within living men's memories, but to some past ones of thrilling interest, and about which very many people do not know much, except those who study and read ephemeral literature. The story of the "Man with the Iron Mask" most have heard of, but what is not so well known is that though a general notion exists that this individual was Mattheole, Minister of Parma, there is very strong evidence that he was really the Due de Beaufort, with whose mysterious disappearance, in the latter half of the seventeenth century, we will commence our list. He was the grandson of Henry IV. of France and the fair Gabrielle, Duchess of Beaufort. He was a most
adventurous man, and ever keeping
He was the favorite of the fiery Paris mob, always an important factor in French government. Kidnaping political enemies was a common stratagem then on the Continent. Beaufort went to Canada with the French troops sent there on an expedition, and was never seen publicly again, having been, it was said, killed. But a rumor grew stronger and stronger that he was the mv&terious captive who was in the Isle Ste. Marguerite, where he Hung the silver dish out, which was picked up by the fisherman who owed his life to never having been taught to read. What made these rumors stronger was the knowledge that the prisoner was treated with all the honor and deference shown to royalty. Louis XIV. took great interest in the veiled captive, whoever he was, and who died in the Bastile just twelve years earlier than the Grand Monarch. But the brilliant Due de Jtfeanfort, though sought for by troops of friends, disappeared from all public gaze from the time he reached Canada. Next we will consider a very different and much humbler person, who mysteriously disappeared, and about whose disappearance as little is known now, after immense investigation, as there was 134 years ago. This was Elizabeth Canning, whose case set all England by the ears pro and con. On New Year's Day, 1753, she disappeared in Bishopsgate street, on her way to her mother's shop in Aldermanbury, then a street of small oldfashioned houses. Bewards were offered, inquiries made, but the ill-lit streets, full of ruffians, and the absence of police, made any outrage possible. Nearly a month passed, when one night a spectral figure tottered into the Albermanbury shop, in whose emaciated face and form her mother hardly recognized Elizabeth Canning. She said she had been imprisoned in a lonely house at Enfield. Two women were tried, convicted, and, under the then Draconian laws, sentenced to death. A reaction came. England was divided into friends and foes of the girl. The women were pardoned and the girl was tried for perjury, convicted, and transported for seven years; but it was a nominal sentence, for she married in the convict settlement, throve, returned home and died early. Very many
considered her a martyr; her prraciEles and demeanor were uniformly regions, modest and quiet, and her character excellent. Many controversies have been held, but of that mysterious disappearance we know just as much and just as little as did our ancestors in the reign of George XT., who, by the way, took a personal interest in the inquiries. London Tid-Bits. Kun by Half a Bun. Billy Holbert, the catcher of the Metropolitans, has quite a reputation for telling stories, and relates them in a way that is inimitable. This is his latest: 44 It was in 1872. I was umpire in a game between the Muds and Snappers at Hickoryville, on the Hog River, in Arkansaw. The Muds and Snappers and Sof tbacks used to play in Spring County and had a regular league. You see, it was the ninth inning. Tip McGinnegan came to the bat with two out, and the score 2 to 2. Well, he got aa out curve, and, my friends, believe me, he hit so hard that he broke the ball in two pieces. One half went over the fence and landed in Hog Biver, and the other half went over Mike McGintys head into left field." -Whew! Yes, it was a dandy. Well, Tip started to run around, but fell down at second base and broke his leg." "Weill Broke it square. He laid there till the boys tore a plank off the fence and splinted up his leg. Then he got up and hobbled around to third and in to home. Great Scott r "Just then McGinty threw in the half of the ball that he had found in the field and McGinnegaa was touched at the plate." What did you do?" "Nothing. I declared him not out and gave him half a runu The Snappers won the game by 2 to 2." But how's that r Why, they only got one-half the ball on him. Wasn't the other half a home rani" Cleveland Plain Dealer.
That's the Way They Did It. So it came to pass that the ladies worked. They made 47 frosted cakes, 3,000 cookies, 91 plain cakes, 12 freez--aesful of iee cream, bought 60 quarts
of strawberries, persuaded ail the pai . . .
pers to give taem long free notices, paid for the job printing with a 25 cent
tiefcet, sat up nights and labored with fancy work, and ruined their chances for salvation by putting prices on it; and likewise, among miscellaneous things, pounded iee, andwalked around on a trot, and waited on the table, and washed dishes, and got confused making change, and forgot to give the newspapers complimentaries, and spoiled their best dresses, and carried chairs and tables, and tired themselves out, and fimdlj made themselves sick; all of which, without any exception or omission, they did in holding a church fair and festival in aid of foreign missums; and the nexi day when the reporter juked them how much they
made out of the operation, they told
him cheerfully that lv close figuring
they found that they had only lost about $7.38, but that they were going
to hold another week after next, and
hoped to do a little better. And then
the wicked paper came out and said
that "the ladies who had charge of the
recent church festival report that they
cleared a handsome sum and are so gratified with the result that they will give another shortly.'' Dakato Bell. Work That Doesn't Pay.
If a man is a real man it is safe for a
woman to continue earning wages alter
she is married, but I think that there are hundreds of men to-day, yes,
thousands, who have been ruined be-
cause they were not compelled to support their wives. If a man who earns small wages marries a woma i capable of earning as much as himself, there are nine chances out of ten that he will develop extravagant habits because of the added income of his wife. If they could agree and hold to the decision that they should live on the husband's income and let the earnings of the wife accumulate as capital for a business in which they both could engage it would be well ; but their earnings would probably be largely dissipated in personal adornment, the passion for which, especially among the middle classes, is the bane of the American people. There is one class of women wageearners to whom I have given much attention who suffer considerably through their own ignorance. I refer to the married women who work in factories, or at home, making underclothing and other articles, and who supplement their husband's wages in order to cover their own deficient knowledge of housekeeping. Such women were wage-earners before they were married, and never had an oppor
tunity to learn how to manage a house, so that after marriage they have to ei.rn money to supply their want of knowledge, noi; only of cooking, but of sewing. Such womea buy readymade clothes for themselves and their children, which, of course, are not so durable as could be had for the same money if they made them themselves. Not knowing how to economize in cooking they spend more money in that way than they should. Out of 300 women wage-earners I visited in tenement houses only five claimed that they were able to make bread, and only one really did make it. Only two were able to cut and make garments for themselves and their children. I think that these women are all conscious of their deficiencies, but they do not know how to overcome them. They have some spare time, but they waste it. Their cooking is of the most primitive and unwholsome description, and their meals are supplemented with beer, which is looked upon as just as much
an article of diet as bread. New York Epoch. What the Gun Was Good For. "Yes, gentlemen, said one of the few yet unboyce tted liars of the Bohemian Club, as he finished a snipe-shooting story; "that was the most remarkable gun I ever saw. Wouldn't take a thousand dollars for it. "It's nothing to a gun I used to own," said an ex-champion prevaricator, waking up just then. "It was sim
ply impossible for a bird to get away away from that gun. It made the closest and most regular pattern you ever saw. I traded it for a fifty-acre lot. " "To Bogardus, eh?" said the other finished equivocator, sarcastically. "No, to Jimpson, the big wholesale druggist. He used it to shoot holes in porous plasters fifty at a clip. And then nothing could be heard ex cept the scratching of the other man's pen as he wrote out his resignation. The Wasp. Too Much Enthusiasm. "Teaching, to me,19 said an enthusiastic young schoolma'am, "is a holy calling. To sow i:a the young mind the seeds of future knowledge and watch them as they grow and develop is a pleasure greater than I can tell.. I never weary of my work, I think only of " "I am very sorry, interrupted the young man to whom she was talking, "that you are so devoted to your profession, Miss Clara. I had hoped that seme day I might ask you in fact, I celled to-night to but I hardly dare go on, in the light of what you "You may go on, Mr. Smith," said the young lady softly. "I am a little too enthusiastic at tunes, perhaps.0 What Men Call Business. Broker's wife. My dear, Johnny needs a new pair of shoes. Prominent broker (hastily reading a telegram) He'll have to wait. Things look very panicky. "Mercy! Is there a war in prospect? "Worse-11 "Have all the crops failed?" "Worse; little things like that can be foreseen and provided against. We may go tramping through the streets begging bread before the week is over." "Horrors ! W iiat's the matter ?" "In spite of the doctor's orders Jay Gould has just eaten a cucumber. Omaha World.
The Urcua Wild West. About two weeks aqo a Dakota farmer was approached Ly a stranger, who said : "What will you take for that little short-horned yearling out there in the Yard?" "'Bout $15." "Is he gentle ? "Yes." "Never kicks ? "No." "No danger of butting a fellow over with his head?" "Not a bit my children play with him whenever they take a notion." "Well, I guess I'll tale him. I'm agent for Bollerwell Showpoor's Anti-European circus, and we need another buffalo for our 'wild west department. By the time we put a hump on his shoulders and paint his horns black you wouldn't know your calf. I hope he'll stay gentle though ; the last one we had hooked three of our cowboys off their horses, disabled two Buffalo Bills and drove Texas Jack, theWestern terror, up the center-pole. Ho acted so we had to tie him up with the elephants, give him a coat of red paint and call him the terrible maneating joggle-wovk, captured in Central Africa at great expense and loss of life. Do you suppose the calf will drink milk? the sacred cow gives a little more than the zebra will take. " Dakota Beth Painless Herniation. It i a no longer a question of doubt although the contrary was once believed that medicines which produce violent effects are unsuitefl to other than desperate emergencies. In other words, that super-potent remedies are calculated to weaken and injure the system rather than reform ita irregularities. Among medicinen ot debilitating effect are cathartics and chela gogiiea which copiously and abruptly evacuate the bowels. Because it does not do this, Hob - tetter's Stomach Bitters is prefernble to the drenching clas3 of purgatives. Painless in itH effects, it is sufficiently active to remedy oh ron io constipation. It relieves by invigorating the intestines, and enables, not forces, them to perform the duty imposed upon thutii by nature. Promoting the secretion of bile in normal quantities by its hoalthfully stimulating offset upon the" liver, it is eminently conducive to digestion, and contributes in no small degree to keep the bowels regular.
A Young Evangelist. There is a dainty little 4-v ear-old girl in North Minneapolis who delights in intending Sunday-school. A few Sundays ago the minister told a story about a brave little fellow whose motto was: "Stand up for Jesus." It made a deep impression upon the little lady. A few days afterward her mother found her holding the family cat by the paws and making her stand on her hind feet." "What are you doing, darling?" said the mother. "Are you not afraid vou'll hurt kitty?" "Don't you know, mamma?" asked the child, as she turned her soft blue eyes toward her mother and gazed
soberly at her. "Why, Tm teaching pussty to stand up for Jesus." Minutapotts Journal. Barbaric young ladies that is, young ladies of barbaric tastes wear three or four necklaces at once. Mrrj, soothing, and healing is Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Why should the letter "d" always be introduced into a family? Because it makes "kin" kind. The Fall School.
The fall (school at Gem City Business College begins Sept. 5, with a grand reunion in the Opera House, Friday evening, Sept ft A full business course, a Normal Penmanship course, Shorthand, and Type-writing all taught by efficient teachers. Catalogue and full particulars sent free. Address, D. L. Musbelman, A. Jt, Principal, Gem City Busi ness College, Quincy, III Harvest Excursions. The Great Rock Island Route (a, It I and P. By.) will sell Aug. SO, 8ept 20 and Oct 11, Harvest Excursion tickets at Onb Fabb not Bound T&xp to principal points in Kansas, Nebraska, Northwestern Iowa, Minnesota, and Dakota; limit 30 days from date of sale. For tickets or further information, address E. A. Holbrook, General Ticket and Passenger Agent, Chicago, I1L B. W. Tansill fc Co., Chicago: Your "TansiiVs Punch 5c cigars are going oft like hot cakes. I intend that they shall be well advertised. Wm. F. H. Stxphxnso:, Buffalo, N. 7.
AJfow Effect. Chemical decomposition has been
produced by pressure in the experiments of two Uelgian chemists. Under a pressure of 0,000 atmospheres, at ft temperature of 104 degrees, a pulver
ized acetate of copper and lime was
slowly liquefied, and oa remoral of the
pressure the surface of the instrument
in contact with the salt was found
coated with copper. Knew Nothing of Business. "How much calomel did you sell to that man for a quarter?" "asked the druggist of his clerk. "One drachm," he replied. "Mercy, you'll compel me to make an assignment, t.t that rate! Don't you know that stuff costs us forty cents a pound ? Detroit Free Press. Beligion is within a man, even m he is gifted with reason ; it is associated with vow -another. chair, and with the first rjttdiabered tones of her blessed yoice.
All Used Up Strength all gone. Tired out. Overworked. Feeling mean and miserable-. Ton must not neglect yourself longer. Delays are dangerous. The downward tendency of your Bytem must be stopped. You need, the toning, strengthening,, building up properties of Hood's Saraaparilla to restore you to health, give you an appetite, and make you active, cheerful, and willing to worK "I felt good resultR from the first dose of Hood's Sarsaparllla. It seemed to go from my head to my toes. I know Hood's Sarsaparllla is a good thing, and on the strength of my own experience I have sold a great deal of it." G. H. Stbatton, druggist, Westneld, Mass. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. 61; six for $5. Prepared by O. L HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mais.
IOO Doses One Dollar. KIDDER'S
A SURE CURK FOR INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. Over 5,000 Physicians have sent us their approval of D1GEST1X1N, saving that it is the best preparation for Indigestion thMt Diey have ever used, We jave never heard of a ouNoot' i'yxpepsia where DIGE3TVLIN was tali en that was not en red. FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM. IT WILL CUR1S THE MOST AtiGHAVATKIl CASKS. IT WILL STOP VOMITING IV PUKNNaNOV. IT WILL ItKLIEVE CONSTi i'ATlON. For Summer Comp'aiurH arul Chronic Ii:irrhea. which are the -lireot result a of iiut-arf et diizeston, DJrtEHTYLIN will eflVct an immediate cure. Take DNiESTYI.IN for lit pains and disorders the fitmach; they all count from imiiu'estion. A-ik Tour drmcist for THGEMTYI.JN (price vvr 1vji bottle). If he does not have it, send one dollar to us and wo will eend a bottta to yon, rxvrexa prepaid Donor, hoaitatt to wnl your money, our houso reliable. KKtablialird twenty-live year.. WM. F. KIOUKK & CO., f mmfUcturiiitr Ch-mUts, 83 John St.. N. Y. UENTION THIS PAPER nbn w&iri iu c Tiktu.
The Poor Little One. We oft?n sea children witli ro.l eruptions on face and han ruuh, hen y nki a i! often sorea on the hox. Those tiling indicate ;i deprave 1 coiuttt'on of the uloo.L in tho growing
Ask your ehoo and hardware dealer for LyoEi8 Heel buff oners; they keep bo'jte and shoe, btraiglit
iiiro bl k I by
iia thy lo Dineovery" i
period children have ne 1 of
which TO build up strong and If Dr. Pierno's "Golden Modiua
given the blood is purg k! of it bad olomontg, and tho child's development will bt healthy, and as it should be. Scrofulous aftoetijuts ricketa, fever sores, hip-j-Miit dinoiHc, or other grave maladies and euCf.'rmg aro hwtj to result from neglect and lack of proper attention to such cades. The tight-laced woman has always good Btaying power, Boston Uuzette A Lovely Complexion "What a lovely complexion," we often hear Fersona say; "I won lr what hIio does for it?" n every ciio tho purity and real lovelinc-w of tho complexion ck-ptuidH upon the blood Those who havo eailow, b.otchy faces may make t-ieir wkiti Hinooth and healthy by taking enough of Dr. Pierce's uOoldon Afivlioal Dmcovery" to drive out the humora lurking in the system. A TOTJNa physician, being asked by a friend why he did not hang out a shingle, replied: "Oh, I don't believe in signs, you know." "Consumption Can lie Cared' Dr. J. 8. Combs, Owensville, Ohio, says: fcI have given ScottTs Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites to four patients with bettor resultsHhan seemed possible with any remedy. All were hereditary cases of Lung disease, and advanced to that utago when Coughs, pain in tne chet, frequent breathing, frequent pulse, fever and Emaciation. All theso cases hava increased in weight from 16 to 28 lbs., and axo tot now needing any medicine. " In prohibition States liquor seema to be a drug, Washington Post. Harvest Excursions. The Burlington Koute, G, B. and Q. K Rt will sell, on Aug. 30, Sept 90, and Oct 11, Harvest Excursion Tickets at one fare for the round trip to principal points in Nebraska, Kansas, Minnesota, and Dakota Limit, thirty days. For tickets and further information concerning theso excursions, call on the nearest G, B, and Q. Ticket Agent The best cough medicine Is Piso's Cure for
Consumption. Sold everywhere, L'5c.
THOUSANDS aay tliat Ely's Cream Balm cured them of HAY-FEVER Apply Balm Into each nostril.
JONES
9 Ton Waton SeaNb Iron Lvur. Hwt Bevtet, M T Bm and Beam Boi lir
Jfim tf IINBHMtTM: BINUHAJIiTON, Nfe
RADWAY'S PILLS, For :he cure of all diaorde s of the Stomach, Liver, Bowi.'ls, Kidneys, Bladder, Nf-rvous l)ineaHeH. Laws of Appetite, Hen.liiche, Constipation, Ooutivcuess. IndigtHtion, Hllinuttnes'4. F-ver. inflammation of the Bowels. 1'ilfiis, and all dcrarwmenta (j internal viscera. Purely rentable, L'onnuuiug no mercury, mine rale, or deleterious drupe. A FINK, HURK MEDICINE. Haoway & Co. Gentlemen : Your Pills h ive often warded off RfcknosN in my fa uily. I never think It safe i:o be without them ; tht-v are a fine, sure medicine. Most respectfully youi-H, HKNItY KKVWORTtf. Chebaiue, Iroquois County, 111. Whut a Physician Says of Kadway's Pills I am using your R. R. Belief and your Uosrulatinj? Pills, and have recomiueud'itl thorn above alt villa, and well n :reat runny ot tht m. I hove them on hium always, and iwe them in my prartioe and in mv own family, and expect to, in preference of all PilU. Yours respectfully, DR. A. C. MIDDLEBHOOK, Doravill6,a&. irYSPKPSlA. IK. KADWAY'S FILLS are a cure for this complaint. Tlny restore strength to the stoinaeh and enable it to perform its fun tlona. The symptoms of Dyspepsia disappear, and wit a them tho liability of the system to contract diseases. Dyspepsia of Longr branding1 Cured. D. Radway I have for y? irs been troubled witn Dyspepsia and Liver (' -lnplaint, and found but little reliaC until I trot your Pills, a id they made a perfect cure . They are the best mo i: eine 1 ever had in my life. Your friend forever, WILLIAM XOOXAN, Blanehard, Mich. Prire, in renta per box. Sold by all dru?irUt. MINTION THIS PATER wiki wbitik to aptsbtuu.
AXLE GREASE
Best In the World. Got tfae senulaiu Kw ry par U aae hnm our Trade-mark and s uirfced Frozer'a. HOLD KVJUtYWiuJijE
KiDDEB'8 PA8TIIIE&5SBSS5&
M ENTION THIS PAPKR
AtfMl
Cures Neural n la Toothacke. i
Headache, Catarrh, Croup, SQre ThrML . RHEUMATISM Lame Back, Stiff Joints, Sprains, Etniix Burns. Wounds. Old Sams smd
All Aches and Pains.
The many testimonials receired by icr
kivvu u we ciaim ror this raiu&bie renedi not. only relieves the most seTere pa id,
?3
- bV jivdv nwoav JS" -JM
lit uures rou. mars tat Idtal Bold by Druwrfsts. SO etm Song Book mailed frefe Address WIZARD OIL COMPANY CMCkEX
PAYNE ENGINES;
DETECTIVES Wanted in erery County. Shrewd wen to act under our ioatructlomln our Secret Serrice, Kiperienrenot necessary. Send KtniiiP for particulars. GH ANNAN DETECT1TK BUREAU, 44 Arcade. Cincinnati, O. "marvelous
"1
TUT IT
Mil-
0RY
II I HCOVTlItV.
holly unHkenrtiflclnl HyHtema. n Auy book learned iti one reading. Recommended by Mark Twain. Rithar4 Proctor the Self utiat. Hons. W, W. As tor. J ml ah P. Benjamin. Dr. Minor, etc. Class of IOii Columbia law ntudeuts. two clones iW) each at Yale, 3J University of Peuu . 300 at Wellesley Collega, etc. Prospectus post freii'ROF. LOISETi hi, Z:i7 Fifth Are.. New York. MENTION THIS PAPER whin w;uma vo adtibtcuu
-
ENGINES ASD BOILERS
of all Sizes.
WRITE FOR CIRCULAR AND TELL US WHAT YOU WANT Drawer 1 130, EJLMIRA, N. Y, DKAlNLtt UirHLtb- 45 Doy Street. NTCW YORK,
a m.
SIZE or
peuets:
OOO
K
i
V
LilfTLE LIVER PILLS.
$ 'Ji&VM BE WABE OF IMITATIONS ! I (TV Ov Always ask for Dr. Pierce's Pellets, or Llttlo WC V Wl Sugar-coated Granules or Fills.
iehsubu
IE
BEING ENTIRELY TEGETJiIIlE, Dr. Pierce' Pellets operate ffithonl dlatnrbanee to the yUvm9 diet, or occupation. Put up in glitis vials, hermetically sealed. Always fresh and reliable. Ail LAXJlTIVE, AliTJBBAXIYE, or PVfi.QATIVE, these little Pellets give the most perfect satisfaetloi.. ,
w Witxtah HAsncH, Esq., of Mindtn Kearney County Nebraska writes: "I was troubled with boils forthirty years. Four years ago I was so afflicted ifith. 1 them that I could not walk. I bought two bo tm of Br. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets, and look, one Pellet ' after each meaL till all were rone. Br
that time I had no boils, and have had none since. X nare ttlai ben troubled with sick headache When I feel it oominff ofcw I take one or two ' Pellets,' and am relieved of the headache9
SICK HEADACHE
Billons
1 Ipatlon,
Meaduclie9 B'lulneae, Con
tiiiioua
Hndiireal ton.
Attackfta and all deraiiffements of the
stsmach and bowels, are promptly relieved ard permanently cur b;r the use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purjarativa Pellets. In explanation of the remedial power of these PpWpttA nvflr an AfiAAt a. vs rrt.v at dfaeaftefl.
It may truthfully be ciaid ;hat their action upon the system is universal, not a gland or tissue escapiojr their annatlve influence. Bold by druggisti for 25 cents a vial. Aianufactixed at the Chemical Laloratory oi Wo:mj's Dxspbnsaht Miicai Association, Buffalo, N. T,
IBqils I 1 Cubed. I
The Best Cathartic,
tlie house all the time.
Mrs. C. W. Brown, of Wapakoneta CMs
says: "Your Pleasant Purgative Pellets' without Question the best cathartic ;
sold. They are also a most efficient remedy
ior torpor or tne uver. we have used ttn
for years in our family, and keep thesi
IFOR A CASE OF CATARRH WHICH THEY CAN NOT CURE.
SYMPTOMS OF ffjATAHBH, Dull, heavy headache, obstruction c1? the nassi passages, discharges falling from i;he head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, mrulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are weik, watery, and nflam'Kl; there is ringing in the esra, deafness, hacking or coughing to clear the throat, expectoiration of offensive matter, together with scabs from ulcers; the voice is ciianged and has a nasal twang; the breath is offensive; smell and taste are impaired; there is a sensation of dizziness, with mental depression, a hacking cough and general debility. However, only a few or the above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any one case. Thousands or cases annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave. No d incase is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, leas understood, or more unsuccessfully treated fry physicians. By its mild, southing, and healing properties, DB. SAGII'S CATARKJil HEM ED Y CUXUSS TOT WORST CASKS OF Catarrh, "Cold in fha Head," Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache. ,SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE.
Untold Agqht from Catarrh. IMMHsHHMkB
Prof. w. Hattsnvb, the famous mean 1st, of Ithaca, N. writes: "Soma years ago I suffered untold agony f i
chronic nssal catarrh. My family piy cian gave me up aa incurable, and said I must die. llv case was such a bad
that every day, towards sunset, my voice would become so bowse I could barely speak above a whisper. In the mornrng my ooiigkinjr and clearing of my throat would almost strangle me. By theuso of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a 'irelt man, and the cure has been permanent."
Constantly Hawking and SPlTTIHfi.
Thomas J. Rushing, Esq., 990$ Pin$ SkuL, St. LouiB Mo., writes: i wail a great iinJferer from catarrh for three years. At times I could hardly breathe, and waa constantly hawking and spitting, and for tfca last eight months could not breathe througsW the nofltrila. T thmto-ht nnthinsr mnU
done for me. Luckilv. I was bAvHumI tn t
Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and I am now a well man. I be Hove it to be the only sure remedy for catarrh row manute tnred, :md one has only to give it a fair trial to experfeaoe astounds results and a permanent cure."
Eli Robbing Itunvan P. o., Columbia OaPa., says: " My daughter had catarrh whea she was five years old, very badly. I saw Dr. Sago's Catarrh Remedy advertised, an procured a bottle for her, and soon mw that it. hAlnwl hf a kmu sbw.a
-- V kyvHAiu ruc :wisj She is now eighteen years old and eoune)
Three Bottles Cure Catarrh.
a permanent cure, and hearty."
For a woman to say she does not use Procter & Gambles Lenox Soap, is to admit she is "behind the times." Nobody uses ordinary soap now they can get " Lenox."
rr ll.S llnl.N Claim Aireuto t"ITZGKKAI,D
PATENTS
PILES
R. 8. & A. P. IjACETt Patent Attornflrfl.WsUilunirtnn. r n
as to ptttentabuitr TKKJK. 417 yaar experionc.
to S8 a day. HamtI worth S1JS0. KRKK.
D fines not under the hore fet. Write HrewntrS-i1ty ICemHoltlerOo.. HoIIt. Minh
ti3N T ION THIS PAPER when wmitim fO iBTMiuiu.
Dr. iraunslhdl n Ms
in a uro cure for llind,b!diajs itching friles. Cut miinnftissl
llsVVjsy Priru Mr sinH ! At At,sMrifsZt
maUed by WlLUAMS UFO. CO OieTclaad O.
CVRCS WHEftt AH CISC FAIlS. Ooiuh Syrupt. Tnstea good. 17
In tline. old by druKglsm
onun
?fo.rKh.,;no Cnred In IO to ZO driva. nov i (II mmsj
lr. J. bfeiihcuH. Lebanon. Ohio.
ma&iivm fATJUi huh viuui ty ui
IS
C. X. u.
"VCTHKN WRITING TO ADVERT 11 please ay you mw tee aavttrtl ta UOm pajstrr
