Newspapers / The Wilson Mirror (Wilson, … / Jan. 4, 1888, edition 1 / Page 2
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BREATHING UXDER WATER. An Explanation or a Famous Diver's Remarkable Feat. JThe length of time during which a person can live under water without the. aid of any diving apparatus is a ques tion in dispute among , scientific men. Some travelers have told marvellous 6tories of the natives of Eastern coun tries who were able .to stay ten or fif teen minutes under water, but there can be no doubt that these are absurd exag gerations. It is well know that the or dinary divers for coral, sponge, and pearroy8ters do not remain under more than two minutes, and the "men-fish,' who exhibit in the museums, do not ex ceed two minutes and a half. v The doctors differ in 'their .opinion as to the' time at which death' comes in drowning. Some say in three minutes, others in five, but none set a longer time than this, except the drowning per sons faint, when respiration ceases. A Frenchman, named Iiacassagne, has been for some time studying this sub ject, and the results of. his experiments and observations are given in the Revue Seientipjut. The man upon whom he experimented was a famous Hungarian swimmer named James, who, among other exploits, once swam from Calais to Dover, and had remained underwater for four minutes and fourteen seconds. Before diving, it was observed that he first expelled all the air from his lungs and then took a long breath. After he had been under, water. for. a minute his heart beats became slow, irregular, ' and feeble. After two minutes and thirty seven seconds there was a rush of blood to the head and his eyes appeared sunken. Still he continued to breathe and regularly at the rate of twenty res pirations a minute, while at the- same time the observer noticed that the ab dominal cavity diminished greatly in size. M. Lacassagne believes from this, and from the fact that James was continually swallowing his saliva, that, in drawing the long breath at first, he walloiced a quantity of air, and that the ordinary respiratory channels being closed, he takes into his lutfgs the air contained iu his stomach, and from thence again taken. KOmfiwliaf.Tinriflfiil infn lmirre That is, in other words, he makes of his 6tomach a reservoir for air, a fact, which, remain for such an extraordinary time under water. This process which the diver performs instinctively and mechan ically, M. Lacassagne believes can and should be learned by all swimmers, as giving them a far greater endurance under the surface than they now pos sess. . . 1 Joke on Cabby, )itt you ever try to play on a cabman that old joke of the lost sovereign?" It's lots of fun. A friend of mine tried it last summer in London, and succeed ed, too, in spite of the rather ohestnutty flavor of this practical joke. . its took a tt : 1 J rf ...t y r. .i -growier jiour-wneei caoj alter mia jiight at Piccadilly circus to go to his loagings out in Bayswater. Remember ing the staleness of the "lost sovereign" dodge, he thought it would hardly "go down" with a bright and cunning Lon don cabby,-but resolved to try just for the fun of it. Just as they came in front of a public-house a few doors from his home the "fare" stuck his head out the window and ordered the driver to' halt. "I say, cabby, I've dropped a sov. in the straw on the bottom of the coach Just pull up at that 'pub' till I run in and get a match so that I can find the coin. VI "All right, sir,'' said the cabby, and pulled up opposite the door of the. tav ern. My friend alighted and had taken scarcely three steps in the direction of the "pub" when lo! Mr. Cabby whipped up his horses and flew away into the foggy night, carrying with him (as he supposed) that sovereign snugly con cealed in the straw. The gentleman, having now reached his lodgings and without expense, smiled a smole "like unto the neighing of all TattersaU's," and wickedly gloated over the brilliant success of the ancient . sell. Kansas City Times. He Started. A rag-peddler who was driving up Gratiot-ave. yesterday had reached Hastings street when his horse balked. The usual number of smart Alecks were soon on hand with their advice, and one suggestion after another was tried in vain. The horse could neither be pulled nor pushed, and as he was blockading traffic the crowd began to crow very rapidly. "What is it ?" inquired a boy of twelve who pushed his way into the circle. "Balky horse," answered some one. "Where's the owner? Here, you man, "No, he doan' start oop." "Wait a minute." The lad ran up the street half a plock , and pulled a handfull of hay out of a bale at a feed-store, and when he re turned he cleared a space in front of the horse, stood off about five feet, and extended his hand. The horse pricked up his ears, his eyes glistened, and he at once advanced and followed the boy around the corner. . "It's according to . the Jioss,'' explain- en the boy , as the crowd cheered. "When a hay-fed liorse balks he wants fire-crackers under him : - when a hoss who is fed oh scrap-iron and gravel-roof balks, a pinch-of ., hay will , lead him all over town. " "v There is one thing to be said for the brass band. It never han back and blushes and protests incompetency when it is asKeu to play. THE LITTLE SHOE. A Strange and Startling Story Ot the Vast Blue Sea. Twenty-six years ago a little child toddled from its mother's doorstep on the shores of Half moon Bay to its play ground on the smooth, pebbly beach, where it was accustomed to pass the sunny hours in innocent play, gather ing shiny shells, bright pebbles, and gay sea mosses to carry home to add to its little hoard of treasures. There was no thought of danger in the mother's mind as she saw her little one go with unsteady steps down toward the shore, where the wavelets, lapping on the strand, were throwing up the objects for which the little toddler made a daily search. The hours passed on, and at length the mother, becoming anxious at prolonged absence of her baby, .went to the door to call her home. She scanned "the long stretch of the beach, but the little one was nowhere to be seen. The tide which was at the ebb when the little one left her home had come in, and there was nothing but white sand to be seen as far as the eye could reach; A search among the neighbors' houses brought no tidings of the little one, and the mother, now thoroughly alarmed, assisted by other members of the fam ily, began an anxious search for the missing babe. The af ternoon and evening wore away, and through the night the friends and neighbors kept up the seach among the sandhills and shrubs 4 which lined the beach, but without avail. Not a trace could be found of the child. ' ' The hours lengthened into days arid the search had been abandoned so far as hopes of finding the child alive were concerned, but still the sorrowing moth er made her daily search along the beach where her baby had been wont to play, hoping to find somethingwhich would give at leasts clew to the fate of her darling One day, the third or fourth after the disappearance of the child, the mother found a little bundle of clothing, wet and torn by the waves which cov ered the remains of her little one, the body having been cast up by the sea during the night. Catching the body up, she ran with it to the little house from which the light seemed to have fled with the loss of the child. The little body was prepared by tend er hands for burial, but it was " found that the right foot of the little one was missing. It was supposed that the child had fallen from a reef of rocks which ran out into deep water and had been drowned, and that some fish or sea monster had eaten off the foot. There seemed to be no mysterv about the death, and the other children of the family were wont to listen with awe "as the mother told in the' gloaming how the little sister wandered away from home and was drowned. The children grew up and married and had !ittleones of their "own, and the grandmother' told again to a new new set of auditors how her little girl baby went out to play one day and was killed by . the cruel sea. Simple as the death of the child j seemed at the time, it turns out to have been one of those mysteries of the sea which are only revealed . by accident. A short time ap-o one of the sons of the old lady, and a brother of the lost child, picked up on the beach apiece of a large abalone shell which had been thrown up by the tide. He was attracted by the colors of the shell and as he turned it to look at the inside he was aston ished to find attached to the interior of the shell the perfect representation of a child's shoe. Even the little break in the toe, where the leather had worn away, and every detail was reproduced in the brilliant colors which are charac teristic of the interior of the abalone shell. Little thinking of the mystery re vealed by the reproduction by nature of a baby's shoe, the young man carried the shell home as a curiosity. The first person he showed it to was his mother. No sooner did she see the curiosity than she exclaimed: " ., "It is my baby's shoe! The shoe of my little girl that was lost twenty-six years ago." I he rest of the family ridiculed the idea, but going to a drawer, such as most mothers use in . their house, she produced the mate to the shoe. A careful comparison showed that the lime-incrusted shoe in the shell and the memento of the dead child, carefully kept by a loving mother through the long years that she had mourned her little one, were undoubtedly mates. The mystery of the child's death was revealed at last. Any one who knows the nature and habits of the abalone can readily understand what occurred. The little one had ventured out in the rocky reef, and in her clambering had slipped from the slimy, moss-covered rocks into the shallow water below. Perhaps nothing more than a wetting would have happened to her, but as fate would have it her tiny foot slipped be tween the rock and the edge of a huge abalone which was clinginer to the rock. The shell at once closed on the tender ankle, and the little one was a prisoner. to be held till the rising tide swept over her and put an end to the innocent life. It may be that she was thrown into the water and held by the vice-like grip of the univalve so that her agony was brief, or she may have been held until the slowly rising waters choked her feeble cries for help. " Such cases are not unknown. A few years ago a Chinese was frequently seen in San Diego whose right hand, with the exception of the thumb and forefin ger, was gone. The story told by his mates was that while hunting abalones. on the reef he had incautiously inserted his fingers under the sharp edge of an abalone shell. Before he could with draw them the shell had closed down. He lay on the rock held by the hand till the tide began to come in. Seeing his danger, and realizing that he had only himself to depend upon for aid, he managed to get out nis xnuo wjui uia left hand and by dint of hard work hacked off the imprisoned fingers and released himself. On another occasion a gentleman con nected with one of the newspapers was wandering with some friends on the reefs near Cyprus Point at Monterey. His companions had gone ahead, and as he hurried on to overtake . them he slipped in a hole on the reeLV His foot went into the mouth, as it may be called," of an abalone. To his horror he was unable to extricate himself. Fortunate-' ly the other members of the.- party were not too far away to hear him and. they returned to his rescue. One of the arty stripped and plunged into the pool, and with a large knife, cut the cartilage with which the mollusk. held the shell clasped to the rock. - Had help not been at hand he would have been drowned by the incoming tide, and iri all probability his fate would forever have remained a mystery. "" y v STORIES ABOUT WASHINGTON. The. New Congressmen and the Jokes Played on Them. Ah employe of the House has been telling me about a new Congress man from the South, who came walking into the hall, looked . around for awhile with an air of ownership as . if he had just bought the Capital and was pleased with his purchase, and then inquired where the vacant desks were: When told they were all vacant he . seemed gratified and asked how they were as signed. "Every member selects for himself,' was the reply, "Which have been taken f"j "None. Nobody has been in to choose yet." "Wa'al, that's lucky, ain't it; so I'm the first man on the ground;" and walk ing away with a satisfied air he picked out a seat nearly in front of the clerk's desk and observed: "I reckon I'll roost here," The word was passed around among the messengers and pages, and, as usu al, they were ready for a lark. A card was cut, upon which the new Honorable wrote his name, and then one of the boys shoved it in the frame made for the purpose. Next they showed him to the stationery room, where he inquired into the perquisites of a legislator and seemed greatly pleased at the idea of having so much fine letter paper and sundries at his disposal. He gave each of the pages a pocekt-knife and the sta tionery clerk put him up an assorment of all kinds and sizes of paper and en velopes, which he packed away in his desk. Then he sat down to write a let home and "tell the folks all about it." Next week he will discover what the boys were laughing at. I heard about another member of the freshman class at the Capital who dis covered the House restaurant, ordered a square meal, ato it with great gusto, and was then almost knocked out. of his cliair bv haviner a cashier's check pre sented to him. . He had previously tak en a bath and offered to pay for it, but was told that it was a free Government institution. He naturally concluded that a great Nation spelled with a big N that bathed its servants and paid men to rub them down, fed them as well, and thought the waiter was trying to humbug him. "Isn t this the members restaurant V he asked. "Yes, sir," replied the waiter. "Well, I'm a member from So-and- So." "Can't help that, sir: members pay just like other folks." Well, it all ended by the new mem ber hauling out his wallet and in a cautious way. settling the bill, but it will take some time for the idea to get through his head that while the Govern ment provides every' opportunity for its legislators to be clean, it has not reached that point yet where it proposes to feed them. The Half-Priced Boy. That fall Mr. Wilkins sold liis house and tried boarding for the wjnter. And it would have been very funny, if it had not been very sad, to hear Mrs. Wilkins bargaining for room and board for two, with a little child thrown in. He was a very small eater, she said, and could easily be fed from her plate, and he would wait and not require an extra seat at table, and sleep on a sofa in her room, so would be no trouble to any one. So he was included, like a cat or a parrot, with their belongings, and he said not a word, though he held his mother's hand, and read her face with hi3 great blue eyes, while she haggled about him. And she told his father that Harley Had outgrown his foolish baby fashion of asking questions. But he thought! Oh, deep in his mind he thought over the complex mysteries of life. One night he lay awake on the sofa bed and could not sleep. His head was hot and felt twice its natural size. Soon he began to talk. His mother and his father heard him and said: - "He is dreaming." But it was they who were dreaming. The child was waking waking in the morning that has never a noon or a night. His mother heard his last few words with an agony of remorse that came too late. 'Please, dear God, let me in. 1 haven't any ticket nor money, an' I'm eight years old and half-price. Nobody wants me. There isn't any place for a little boy without money. If you 11 just take me up there I wont be in anybody's way and I m so tired I m so tired!" His head drooped; The flush on .his cheek faded the tired little heart was at rest forever. TT.ii.t.r'a raabridred Dietloaarr. Every family in which books, magazines or lewspapers are read, and letters are written, should have an English ihcrjomry. ! ien is a whole sentence made obscure because e reader does not know or lias forgotten the neanim? of some word or proper name. How rftendoesa letter-writer hesitate over the rorrect spellinc "f ome won! whose ortno rraphical construction has for the moment, jscaped his memorvv And how often do dis putes arise over the proper pronunciation ol this or that word. All these difficulties could oe settled in a moment by the possession of a jtandard dictionary. Xowr.f e one great work which answers all requirement?, and which is the standard author.tv in America, is eb ter rnabridgtjd Dictionary, published bvb. .V C. Merriam A: Co., Sprinefie'd, Mass. This .lictionary contains over 11S,000 words, b'ing 3.UU0 more than are found in any other Ameri can work of a similar character. Jt83,CU) il lustrations cover an immense -number of sub jects. A space in itself equal to the dimen sions of a large volume is devoled to biograph ical.iworaphicnl, and Sc ripture proper names, noted nainrs aud places in fiction, frequeutly-. quoted saying?, fouud in the Latin, the Greek and modern f oreign languairea. Christian prop er names with their equivalents in other lan guages, all the abbreviation and contractions used in writing, a classified selection of many hundred pictures, covering .a wide range of torics. etc. As an educator in itself , for young and old, Webster. Unabridged Dictionary is ccrtainlv without a rival in all the wide do main of "English literature. By means of a solution and an instrument called a Nebulizer the cure of Catarrh is ef fected in a painless and pleasant manner. For Eirticularsaddresi City Hall Pharmacy, 264 roadway, New York. "RoYAii Glue" mends anything! Broken China, Glass, Wood. Free vials at Drugs & Gro. " Fob Special Rates tor advertisin in this PP' pply to thepnblUberof the paper. tip I Back and Shoulders Are the parts usually attacked by rheumatism ; and the Joints at the knees, ankles, hips and wrists ar; aUo sometimes affected. . The cause of rheumatism U lactic acid circulating with the blood, which at tacks the Joints and causes the pains aud aches ol the disease. Hood's SarsaparilLa purines and ea- liches the blood and has proven a wonderful remedy for rheumatism. "I was troubled very much with rheumatism In my hips, ankles and wrists ; In fact, I could hardly walk and was confined to my bed a good deal of my time. I was also very bilious and suffered severely. I riru recommended to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. which I did. I have taken four bottles anrt am well. I. gladly recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla. W. F. Wood, Bloomington, I1L I Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1 ; six for $3. Prepared only by C. L HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowel!, Has. IOO Doses One Dollar Ely's Cream Balm is the best remedy for children suffering from COLD IN HEAD, SNUFFELS (SAMBAS fiv'; ' If VIIVLV w-feverJI catarrh . Apply Balm into each nostril KL.Y BEOS. 235 Greenwich St.. New York. OR' MARVELOUS DISCOVERY. Wholly unlike artificial systems. Any book learned in one reading. Recommended by Mark Twin, Richard Peoctor, the Scientist, Hons. W. W. Astor, Jcdah P. Benja min, Dr. Minor, &c Class of 100 Columbia Law stu dents ; 2M at Merlden ; 230 at Norwich 350 at Oberlln College ; two classes of 200 each at Yale ; 400 at Uni versity of Penn, Phila. ; 400 at Wellesley Collet, and three large classes at Chatauqua University, &c Prospectus roT frkk from ... PROF. LOISETTE. 3i7 Fifth Ave New York. KIDDER'S A SURE CURE FOR INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. Over 5.0UO Physicians have sent us their approval of DIGEST YLIN, saying that It is the best preparation for Indigestion that they have ever used. We have nevar heard of a case of Dyspepsia where DIGEST YLIN was taken that was not cured. FOR CHOLERA IflFAIlTUF.!. IT WILL CURE THE MOST AGGRAVATED CAKES. IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN PREGNANCY. IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION. For Summer Complaints and Chronic Diarrhea, which are the direct results of imperfect digestion. DIGESTYLIN will effect an Immediate cure. Take DYGESTYLIN for all pains and disorders of the stomach ; they all come from indigestion. Ask your druggist for DIGESTYLIN (price $1 per large bottle). If he does not have It send one dollar to us and we will send a bottle to you, express prepaid. Do not hesitate to send your money. Our house is reliable. Established twenty-five years! - WM. F.KIDDER k CO., Mannfaeiurinar CbamUt. K.I Jafan ..' v MERCHANTS, BUTCHERS TRADERS generally. We want a coon man in your locality to pick up, CALFSKINS for us. Cash furnished on satisfactory guaranty Address C. S. PAGE, Hyde Park, Vermont, U. S CURITheDEAF Pick's Patikt Ivraovsp Ccsxoko EabDbvms Perfectly Restore t ho H eari n y.wbthr th i fnw U rmatti hj colds, frrn or injuries lo thm utenl Armou. IarUbU, eomlorUtblo, alwrnr la potltton. Vasic, eoormatioB. whis wr beard distinctly. W refer to tooM ring them. Writ to P. HISCOX. 85X BrwulwBT, cor. 14tk SL, New York, te U!uitiU.l Lock of wooU. FEZ2. FLORIDA and escape cokl r or cheao rates. free guide books, maps or truth about land, write O. 91. CROSBY, Franklin St., N. Y. MONTANA HKAIID FROM Hecent railroad exrenflon hire de- mlnortl trwlr tfnft ftrniin r ffitt-i-r f r and fall particulam, free, upon ''application to C IL Warkxx, Gen, Put. Agt., St. Paul. Minn. STOCK IN ."INNEOTA.-From un exclodive grain country Mln- neaota. is being rapidly trans formed into the finest stock and dairy State iatko Unisn. Cheap lands still obtainable, csnvenient t railroad. Partlcnlar free npon application to C. II. WAURE.N, G. Pas . Act., St. Paal, 3Iian. BUSINESS CENTEKS. The baildins' -f railroad In a nrr and fertile conn try rrrnlrs mrnmx new tovrns. ailordinsr excellent balne op portanitirn. Farticnlars rearardioar nc opportnslties in Montana, 3Iiuteoia and Dakota will be sent apoa application to W'ARItLN, (ieu. Pass. Agt., fit. Pool. WASTED-LADIES. In City orCoTBtry,far osrTIolkUv TnA, tettl llct, pleict work attaeir own some, fl.to t& perdsy can b qnietlr made, -work er t by mail aav dittne. Fafrirvlarf free. Ko eanvaarioF. JLddreM at once CRESCEXT AST CO, Ui Milk bt oua, Uw. P.O.BoxUZt. ij.wvtU,ii.ritt?Miiatiii;i m M f m IfflffiWl 11 1 IAVi. -. 0T0 FALL Itr?TT n Hi?::.!.: '"?! h'n k; ' I, an.i ar ,U.r!w? 1. 1 li ;i Hence; the force ofthefoom- v r.v. . i l 1 3 . t . ' ' T art pound posset's but little merit. X,,j from the start, and to-day we n-raM it i'.? Ol inose siaimaru rt-mcrues liia mui OUT tial u. iJ consuier as ansomieiy cssennal to carry in their stock, rersonal exix-ri and the Rood words of thedrujsts i England all tend to prove that each toV ndd to its sale and well deserved Signed, Doolittle .fc Smith." TaT' J .A. -W a . is nothing in trade which can ai'proacb ;! efficacy. ' ' TRADE MARK DON'T' gD!E N THHnilS! Gone "Where the Woodbine Twineth. ' Rats are smart, but '.'Rough on Rats" bevi them. Clears out Rate, Mice, Roacties, W tirt Bugs, Flies. Beetles, Moths, Ants. Mosqu-u Bed-bugs, Hen Uce, Insects. Potato Bus Sparrows, Skunks, Weasel, Gophers, eiup mucks. Moles, Musk Rats, Jack KaLU:, Squirrels. 15c. and 2jC. Druggists. "ROUGII ON PAIN" Plaster, Porosed. i "ROUGH ON COUGHS Coughs, colds, ALL SKIN HUMORS CURED BY ON "Rouh on Itch" Ointment cures Fkin I!a mors, Pimples, Flesh Worms. RinzWorm. "Ti ter, Salt Rheum, Frosted Feet, Chilblains. Ikh, Ivy Poison, Barber's Itch, Scald Head. Eczmm. 60c. Drug, or mail. E. S. Wells, Jersey City. HIPILES , Cures Piles or Hemorrhoids, Itchir.7. rrotruJ. ing. Bleeding. Internal and external ri me.:r in each package. Sure cure, 50c. Dnsti ormaiL E. S. Weuls. Jersey City. X J. Bo you feel dull, languid, low-epirited. li lees, and indescribably miserable, both j'hjs cally and mentally : experience a t-M: d fullness or bloating after eating, or of poa ness," or emptiness of stomach In the morn ing, tongue coated, bitter or bad taete a mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness, fmjua! headaches, blurred eyesight, "floating epccki before the eyes, nervous prostration or ex haustion, irritability of temper, hot fimhn, alternating with chilly sensations, charp. bitinjr, transient pains nere and there, wi feet, drowsiness alter meals, vrakefulnn, or disturbed and unreireshinjr sleep, ctinstast. indescribable feeling: of dread, or of impcLd injr calamity? If you have all, or any considerable numter of these symptoms, you are suffering Inn that most common of American inaladi Bilioua Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, associate with Dysiep6ia, or Indigestion. Tiie mix complicated your disease has become, tbf Greater th number nnd divrsitv of fvnsp- toms. No matter what etajre. it ha. rf-acbj.-Dr. Pierce' Golden ITIedlcal Discovery will subdue it, if taken according to dirK tions for a reasonable length of time. If txt cured, complications multiply and Conutcp tion of the Lunfrs. Skin Diseases, Heart Vix-v Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, or other gn maladies are quite liable to s?t in and, sooixT or later, induce a fatal termination. Dr. Pierce's Golden JUcdlral Dis covery acts powerfully upon the Liver, aw through that rreat blood - purilyinjr onras. cleanses the system of all blood-taints and ja purities, from whatever cause arising. It equally efficacious in acting- upon the Kk neys, and other excretory orjrans, c k-ansmf. strengthening, and healing their diseaw -M an appetizing, restorative tonic, it prom' digestion and nutrition, thereby buildin? cp both flesh and strength. In malarial diftneti this wonderful medicine has rain-d jrrf celebrity in curing Fever and Ague, Chill aM Fever, Dumb Ague, nnd kindred diseaf . Dr. Pierce's Goldeu ITIedlcal nit CURES ALL HUL10RS, from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to u worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum, "Fever- Scaly or Rough Skin, in shor all caused by bad blood are conquered powerful, purifying, and lnvitforatin? v-rr cine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly h'-al uE? its oenifrn mnuence. 'liepeciaiiy nas i- , fested its potency in curing Tetter. Ecxes Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Sore Eye ulous Sores and Swellings, Hip-joint D? "White Swellings," Goitre, or Thick and Enlarged Glands. Send ten eentJj stamps for a large Treatise, with cok plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amou for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections. "FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LI Ft ThoroughJv cleanse It by using Dr. Ti Golden Medical Discovery, and f. digestion, a fair ekin. buoyant spirit. , strength and bodily health will be estabia' CONSUMPTION, which fs Scrofula or the Lung, is BrrJ and cured by this remedy, if taken earlier stages of the disease. From velous power over this terribly fatal fz. when first offering this now world-f annro dy to the public. Dr. Pierce thought eTTv of calling it his "CoxstTMrno? CTRf. lllC abandoned that name as too re1""1 , A' a medicine which, from its wonderful' blnation of tonic, or strengthening. ieTri or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, r-ctrai. nutritive properties, is unequaled. not a a remedr for Consumption, but - Cbroulc Diseaaca of the Liver, Blood, and Lungs- For JTeak Lungs, Spitting of Blood. fJ ness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh.. c-hitis. Asthma, Severe Coughs, and ki1" affections, it is an efficient reme,iy. 'ilr PJ. Urugzist at $1JW, or six V" Send ten cer.fs in stamps for Dr. Fr;t book on Consumption. Addre, World's Dispsnsry Kcdical Asssciati CC3 Slain SU, DCFFALO, t A viction fonncd from the lour a:il! .t. experience of a lc-aciinj: lm li.i-:. ,.f represents in every line a m.t " H ." and valued revelation: To:, " 'j1"- 18S7. The Charles A. Vo-der ,', A men: Many preparations s.re j.h0i the public, and for a time at 1: tj...v i a Large but temporary sale hr-e, ,Va- the extensive advertising: tcr.n-.rarv minmnp noun n'aiizp t i prietors, examples are given of itunTa rTVxtM in the worst chromr" ITCH TO HI AT YU
The Wilson Mirror (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 4, 1888, edition 1
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