Evening Star Newspaper, April 30, 1896, Page 14

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THE EVENING STAR, THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1896-SIXTEEN PAGES. 13 SOCS SSSSOS HS OS OOH9SVOSSOO — This Last Day of our fiscal year shines upon this vastly improved store. Our tailoring mission is only beginning to be clearly manifest. If we have done well by our patrons they shall see that, not content with the past, we have something far better in store for them in the future. In almost all cur plans, our point of view differs from that of other tailors because we can largely forget ourselves. This modest and careful statement indicates the principle that is at the bottom of the kind of service we strive to render to all our patrons. Now is the selling time and our large expectations are shown by our unstinted preparations. Take a look at our window and see the magnificent range of su ings in checks, mixtures, stripes and overplaids—worth $i8—and which we'll make to your special order for four days for - O13. Mertz and rlertz, Price Makers. 8 cs) 2) 2) @ © S ce] © © © 2 O8SO6 ENED © @ MORE in any of the acts forbidden by this stat- ute. UNIVERS TY NOTES. nothing in Betting Was t this act shall be con- strued = Catholic Untersity. Benning Course. ; TAHA anak Se CLINE GR visa ‘Though it has not been definitely decided There was another day of ft offering a purse or premium at who will take Bishop O'Gorman’s place at ing at the Benning track y | trials of speed of animals or b 5 the university, it is generally believed that the bett was unusually | them. Rev. Dr. Loughlin of the archdiocese of aii ea kas aa On | ny son or persons Philadelphia will, for a time, oceupy the ns, corporation o aie i he atten, she ng in- Violating the provisions of this act | Chair of ecclesiastical history, until an terest in th: could not | on conviction thereof, be fined not] alumnus, who will be selected and sent have Leen more favorable, the track | than one hundred dollars nor more | abroad to prepare, is sufficiently fitted to - fastest of the mee The stake | than one thovsand dollars, one-half of | take charge of the course. was the capital, at a mile, for | Wh oe peta fon ehe. itor ane Rev. Father Aiken, who is preparing in -olds. nor more than one year in quik Evrope for the chair of apologetics, will Wakis Shakespeare Iw 4. All acts or parts of acts inconsistent | come to the university in the fall. He will scratched, and Bennett's Roundsman was | with this act are hereby repenied. occupy the chair which iden vacant mildeds tan the Hist o£ staxtevss He andsin- ‘This act shall be in force from Its pas-| since the resignation of Dr, Joseph Pohle in rmission were about equal in the betting, | $*8*- Ce Greene of the a fh 2 to I. The latter led until about an Sheridan Handicap Wei, has just completed he’ benunine of the eighth from home, when Dc t brought ‘The weights for the Sheridan handicap | third volume of his Pittonia, and the man- Roundsman up and beat o ptour by a 4 sal an. | Ufctipt Is now in the hands of the pub- length, he three in front of Intermission. hase, to be run Saturday at Ben-| itsher. He has recently ordered to be ‘The race was run In 143 1-3, the fastest follows: The | to the univ us his gift, a coll ss eee ee 2 2: Mill Boy, | of beautiful magnolias, which will be mille of the meeting. The winner carried Liv; Golden | t0 beautity the university grounds, a¥e Y paren Hea ays € daevector 40: Chevy Chase, retown University. of Hayti Firebrand, 135! | sess pibsceren ree contest in elocution will take long: mm him a_ slisht ml + to 5, over Hanwell, The ©. AL ©. Bowling. t is manifested in tennis this ext fh demand at 7 to The third ar t series in the cocked | handsome courts have been laid “the journes, but stopped | ht bowling tournament of the Columbia ¢ y the men are practicing, iretch, when Tinge, ria-,| Athletic Club bowled last night, the | The Glee and Banjo Club is practiciag for euceutl as A whole Wothing extra. S @ public concert, which they will give the hh close a total of 1. | iniddle of Ma 2 long . and Stokes third,| Mr... P.M an, the Journalist for the Hanwell ! Athletic Association, has been obliged to re- sign his position on account of press of work. and Fowle, 65. us and t second rac © two-year-olds, and they ABOUT BULUWAYO. Howard University. der in the slow t = : The Theological Lyceum Society met on * 4 nner being at 1 to 5 e Kraal, It | Wednesday to discuss the question, “Re- Four “Lin the hat aimile, and I Hotels. solved, That the iminister should be unde- the 4 to 5 > Brisk led from start to| Prem the Pall Mall Gazette. nominational.”| Mr. Sparks spoke for the af finish, winning from Dut Kater, who | fintuwayo has become unex ly, and | firmative and Mr. Bagnoll for the negative. was well played at twos and threes, by 5 a fixe. Ienethe, he-netéen che nest Of Lo yagh no desire on its part. the center | After the debate an interesting paper wa. The un of unusual Interest to all British people. read on “The Preacher as a M event was a lechase, at | A little more than two years ago It was | bY P.¢ . ‘The offic Lafayette being made a 7 to 5] the chief kraal of old Lobengula and his | 2” G . Dalys Goll Dollar at ¥ to 1, Braiteyss | pert. Thea: the: wrepressivle: and chaplain, M. M. ks, Hellas being at 6 to 1. Flushing. ete | Hritisher stepped In, clalmed It for his nt meeting of the Eureka Club and May yssom alternated in lead | own, and fashioned and modeled it into | !he following officers were elected: Presi- until ‘ s where Hellas, | the semblance of a motherland township, | (ent, Mr. Bundy: vice pres L nleely ridden by came with @/ with most of the concomitants that go to Pept urer, ee ee eee ecuree Bib make up a civilized community. Now we y 15 the intermediate class of the de= enh Bolla jumping badly, fell at the | are alarmed with the news that the Mata- tment of music will hold its prize con- hurdls Just before the water jump in the | bele have rtsen In force, and are irr Ibly | ae Me ie Andrew | Rankin Memorial gecon? round and stunne Be | reminded of the struggles In the earller | Chapel: the contest will consist in the horse aisoy asym or me NaS | parts of this century between the white Fee Gee first announced as the ride: but Huest holding th the outlaw The catalogue is just ready for the pub- lic. There are 632 pupils form. forty-one Gifferent states, territories and countries. Columbian University, rs and the Kaffirs. tter idea of the position occupied 4 y could be obtained than was substituted, the stewards the boy, who had ridden at track, had not received a li- by Bul cense to ride on the Jockey Club tracks. | py igh the columns of its! Mrs. Mary M. Carter of this city has pre- MAUPIN ANTEBETTING Law. Paper. The Buluwayo Chronicle is a well-| sented to Columbian University the sum of printed eight-page journal, published twice | $5,000, with which to found a scholarship ‘Vext of the Measure Upheld by the 3 a brave show of | In the newly endowed school of civil engi- Virginia Court. . oan therein neering. The scholarship is founded in | ls the full text of the Maupin | ephare dee various | of her husband, Henry He « law upheld y by the nwa which de- . years a memi be angeae: tion of the town from the | Of the board of directors of the universit DO eeOne wa ly pertod to that of the sei- J. Hall Lewis and Dr. Db, K. Shute ee ee ae ne | a8 11 in their decided not to hold the commence- Ebooks: pools a fs weit rts and | Ments of the Dental and Medical Schoo! ealth their_respective de and 7. its has ari is relegated to the old, 8, who will not char nge has its good side, It for there is not the d artment » until May assembly wiul 1 clations of | nat it shall be w ons, minations for the senior class of the college begin May $ with Latin, to be fol- lowed by political economy or asse or corpora ey a Fe ee ae ee ee word that there. w Dean Monroe announces that candidates SRE aT Sch GH FOCI. eRe BOOUN) Iii. aware arosmiOke Bis for deg in the Corcoran Scientific tenement or building, or any part] ine of thie or that claus chool are obliged to have all their ex- on the grounds of any ag- a Judictal decision obtains aminations completed by May 19, Be sockation, gr association, iy. the: Spiele Sac whieh ‘2 The ©. T. M. Dramatic Club have de- Suse: bald varie. driviue or’ bidine chit oF entered was religiously acted up to.” | clded not to produce “Tulu,” but will give é aaa ape : k | yhat right have dress cloth this re- | Several fi s . escuintlon, publle (Or private BuHES OF | oti5r7 what fone rchea | The senian, at a recent meeting, y he limits of this com-| tiie with an to, one's word? question, “Resolved, That the be seit at iseonuinie advent of the lawyers, who, unlike | Marquette statue should remain within the their English brethren, are not above ad- Statuary Hall of the national Capitol.” v of selling or making | asks eg f ng their pres ould | The speakers were Mr. Parker and Mrs. ee ey ye TesUlt OF | be difficult without these gentry. And what sey for the affirmative and Me: Sa eee eo ae weary uluwayo to do with dress clothes? Biscoe for the negative. of endurance of any they dine there at a fashionable hour, cently held an election of officers, ; ing the owner. Te or are the young exqnisites preparing for Ited as follows: President, Mr. hae ¥ room, sine: a. pooth, tent. | the opening of the new opera house, which vski; vice president, Miss OE ne, Ok -eraunds,, OF Bart to be erected by a company with a cap- . M S. Johnson; secre- mit the same to] ital’ of £,0007 This opera house Is to editors of the Bee, Mrs, HAMS OF ave an “elegant exterior,” seating ac- Biscoe; editors of the 1. or trial | Commodation for S00, and to be Ii News, Mr. L. F. Johnson and Mr, Hays; a power of » of any | electricity. Modernity with a ver eritic, Mr. Donnelly; sergeant-at-arms and mal oF be ov the reon to keep. | in old Lobengula’s Buluwayo librarian, Mr. Robinson, Friday the so- or permit to be kept. lee or apy ording or reg- ch Buluwayo, too, has its clu 3 s, will hot will hold its closing exerci onsist of an address by the a numt a stock exchange as a matter of exhibited or Pas Z course, a building society on mutual prin- | and the reading of several paper: Takia of sch Mook eats OF the selling | cintes, a chamber of commerce, a cireuit | will be two medals given this year—one aking of s court, a polo club and a lodge of Free Ma-| presented to the society by Dr. Gore, for ms. True, a remnant of primitive hab-| knowledge of parliamentary law, and the ts, dating from t urvives | other, given by the society itself, for de- » and there. ay, for} bates. These medals, however, will not be re, of th S who] presented until the commencement exer- s adrift in Sth ave- | cises in June. recor i, Or purr ‘orward. to or for ary rac : ue y back unatiened to —_—-— forward. to or for seine OF eels | thes No wonder our editor calls it |The Free Masonry of the Dinnertess. i me Wer oe pan sordinary pastime.” The thing | prom tue Kansas City Star. é speed or or of en. | Couldn't be done in London; Buluwayo A stranger standing on the sidewalk in 2 . must put a stop to ft. aoe oe eaast: or for any | “One plece of gratifying news is thatethe | front of the crack hotel of Fort Scott rounds, or part ther-of, with | Buluwayo Laundry Company — “went | stroked his chin. A citizen of the town in- Paper. apparatus or paraphérna tia | ee ee en arvo wil nok have site | Stantly threw his nead forward in the at- woe (2h i teelving, Tecording or | ooportunity of getting decently clean suirts, | titude of expectancy. ‘The stranger no- Min any manner whateocuae| This is, we repeat, gratifying. Dress|ticed the Jerk of the mian's head, but = = ries DSSS“ | clothes would look Strange without the | thought nothing of it art, taking a tooth- mplement of starched shirts. Tien one | pick from his vest povise!, began to chew finds innumerable other instances of the | it. The man smiled in in imviting manner, progress of Buluwayo. Some one has be- |The stranger put his hand in his trousers com ot ort bankrupt there, or gone into liquida- | pocket in an absen a way and built a new church in 9th avenue, and had a conversazione With that he rushe tel and throwing ter, said: “Give this nm: He is a brother, he stranger, he has had my breakfast,” th “and I am supplied w the citizen gasped, “you streked your chin, you chewed a tou’ . you pulled your hand from your pocke: empty. Those are tranger into the r upon the coun- some breakfast. sry, he is a “But I have stranger protested, h money.” “Wha tion, and a shopkeeper is already holding |drew it out empty. ‘Ti: man stepped for- a clearance sale, at which enormous bar- | ward, and, extending his hand, “Ah, RU Uy gains are to be had. The Wesleyans have |1 am looking for you. Come hme." iy to celebrate the- event. Suburban resorts, too, are springing into existence, a certain gentleman having taken the Welsh Harp Hotel, at the Um- gusa river, six miles out, with the inten- CURES SGROFULA, . tion of making it a popular place fur BLOOD POISON. crickets tennis and cther eabentiaily Gat: English farmers will turn green with | signs. They informed ime that you were envy on reading the prices paid for pro-|a stranger, hungry, nd moneyless.” “No, iy duce in Buluwayo. Butter realizes from | my friend, down where I live we have no f 7s. to 13s. 6d. per pound. Eggs are to be| time to learn such nonsense. Hereafter iH had for modest little sums varying from | when I come to Fort tt I shall wear “a S 1. to a dozen, though this is some- | handcuffs.” The stranger was Bill Sapp what difficult of comprehension when fowls are only worth from 3s. 6d. to. 6s. each. Do not the hens lay in Matabeleland? And of Galena, —— see A Tramp's Ready Wit. if they do not, whence come the fowls? 3 CURES GANGER Cabbages, too, are at a premium, being | From the Lexington (Ky.) Herald. NGiel worth from 2s. to 4s. 6d. cach. Probably | A tramp asking for food at the door of the people of Buluwayo dispense with but- ter, eggs and cabbages as superfluous lux- MA, TETTER. S Bloo a certain good deacon residing near one of unless they are all. becoming | the country thoroughfares was given a weaithy. loaf of bread by the master of the house, toe with the rather inhospitable remark that Business First. From Tid Bits. Country Resident (to peddler)—"Get away out of here now, or if you don’t, I'l whistle for the dog. Peutler—“All right, ‘sir; but first, won't you allow me to sell you'a good whistle “the Bible says if any man will not work neither should he eat.’ Looking down on the gift with a shade of disgust, the tramp quickly respended: “Yes; and does it not also say that ma cannot live by bread alone?” It Js but truth to add that he re- celved a generous slice of country ham as a reward for his quick-wittedness, RARE SPRING SPORT F etait" Siaieevay Jack Snipe Are Reeeiving the Atten- tion of Gunners, CHARACTERISTICS OF THE BIRDS aC Pointers That Will Be of Service to Those Who Hunt. WHERE THEY CONGREGATE ge A big man, with a flush of satisfaction brightening his countenance and a bunch of long-billed, long-legged, gray-plumaxed birds dangling at the end of a string, swung himself off a train at the Baltimore and Potomac depot recently. His legzins were spattered with mud, and his hunting coat had similar splotches on it. He reach- ed back to the brakeman for his gun case and went ahead to the baggage car, where a setter dog was trembling in nervous an- ticipation of his coming. “What luck?” inquired one of the depot attendants. “Pretty fair, considering,” replied the new arrival. “I got eleven, but there has not been a good flight yet. It's a little too wet." Tken the dog jumped out of the car and whined his: pleasure, snifling the Dirds to see if they were all right. His master was one of the early seckers after snipe, and had been down on the marsh meadows near Wide Water, in Vir- ginia, after the first comers of the great army of “Jackies” from the south. All winter these birds have been enjoying the climate in the warm savannahs of the puth; ‘reveling in the marshes of Florida and Georgia; boring the mud of M ppi and teetering over the damp low grounds of Te The First Fligi Like other tourists to the southland, thi are now returning, and on their way north they stop at intervals to replenish their commissaries, or in other words, tll their craws, No one are coming, the orto! knows exactly when In this particu y rin autumn, A man w ‘ may beat a marsh tor days in tie ing without raising u feather, and Ph a newcomer may go over the sare und and put up jackies so rapidiy that his barrels will become, from steady firin too hot to hold, ‘The season is far enon advanced no-y to make St certain that snjpe will be found in the vicinity of Washing- ton, the big flight of snipe that Maryland and Virginia each y put in an appea The sportsmen who hunt the marshes and meadows along up- per Bastern branch have killed many, and the down-river haunts hav ed with sreat success. Ni the give up in disgust, and the very next m ing xt will probably mark bigger bags and how- more gunners. How t Hunt The jack’snipe ts an elu flight the first Ce, yard thing very like arptta wary, too. If you hay bird, and his describe: curve. a good > is ipe dog you posse a treyptye. Such an animal mrst be slow anfydrerul. A dog that ranges with fresfom and goes galloping about with his heal hs of very little serv- ice when jackies beG4in dem for the snipe’'s hearing qublites are as well de- veloped as his vill-gangethat would do credit toa Florida hotel. *@@ fate animal, who su@s an even cours and is not carried y by enthusiasm, if needed. A twelv ause gun, with akuiowledge of i rUcular kimbeiaiooting i Wespon, nd the resul ed with cartridges Io: fbout three drachmw hind it. There s' on that sort of po: Bives better etfeets 1 and if No. 12 cartridge Kind, waded with No. 13y of this chap: the gunner will be surprised at the fiprovement in the shooting qualitits of hiS gun. Advice te Novices, A novice in snipe shooting should paste the word “wait” on the stock of his gun and hang a placard bearing the same in- junction to the tail of his dog, if possible There is no class of shooting that requi more deliberate care when the game is flushed than that under considerati The bird rises with a ziz-zag erratic flight, and his motion is so rapid that iuen not accus- aw tomed to the sport bl y without a moment's though imer is not bothered by this error, however. He know that the bird will settle into something lik ev going befot i ad s until such st ves of fight be pulling the trigger. na snipe is com- paratively easy to knock down. While the marshes and meadows along the Hastern branch afford very fair sport at times, the best snipe grounds are dow the Potomac. ‘The marshes around Fre stone Point are usually prolific with them, and big bags are made around Pamunke Broad creek, 3 woman creck and Nan* ts jemoy, while Swanson’s creek, on the Pa- tuxent, affords excellent sport. If snipe are not found in the marshes gunners should try as the bird: + espe ticularly wet. Every man who goes out after snipe should register a vow to shoot at nothing else, except a huwk. The chances are that a snipe hunter now will put up many wood- cock. The latter are now caring for their exes, and in some instances their young, and the killing of the old birds means the destruction of a family. The flight of the woodcock at this time of year is peculiar, and one can easily tell whether it hi young or not. If such is the fact the woo cock will merely flutter up when disturbed, uttering a plaintive ery and alighting after traversing a few yards, It is the meanest kind of murder to kill one under such con- ditions. djoining meadows without fail, frequently prefer such a hab- jally when the former are par- —_— REFUGE U aR THE BED. ‘The Dance a Particularly Crafty Hare Led a Pack of Nine Dogs. Rabbits and hares are not particularly well known as crafty animals to hunt, but the London Field tells of a hare that show ed considerable skill in outwitting the dogs. It was a good-sized hare, and the nine dogs kad a lively race after her. She circled, as rabbits usually do when run by dogs, and then led off. She went over a high stone fence, and bothered the hunters some. Scared by some women, she turned square to one side, and the dogs overran and lost the trail for a little bit. Then the beast was jumped again. Sno very tired and stiff, but got limbered-aip and ran weil for a time. Then’she got tg a farmyard, where she disappeared and was not found by the dogs again. ies. One of the sportsme; got a letter a cou- ple of days later from the farmer, saying that his wife, hearitg something in the bed= room, went Into It fo find out the cause. Tt was the hare. It took refuge under the bed, but _was carried oyt to the lawn and liber- ated. After sitting still awhile, the animal went hopping away, ‘Waiting for another chase. It is only yhen hard pressed that animals take refuge in human habitations. ae Sipe etree Wanted—An Heir, From the Galignani Messenger. One of the most'curlous cases down for hearing in the cotirt of& chancery is the final settiement of ‘the ‘disputed will of the celebrated prima donna, Mme. Titiens, whose death occurred in 1877, nearly twen- ty years ago, Mme. Titlens was born in 1810 at Hamburg. She made her first ap- pearance on the stage at the early age of fifteen. She was nayer married, and at her death her immense fortune was left to a relative, who, however, disappeared three years before her death, and has never since been heard of. The missing relative, Peter Titjen, wasn 1873 residing in Cardiff, and shortly after that time he intimated his intention of going to South America, but whether he ever did so cannot be traced. For nearly twenty years the next relatives have enteavored to obtain the wealth on the prescmption that he is dead, and has left no heirs, and last year an order was granted that, after’ proper advertising, if he or his heirs failed to appear it should be assumed he was dead. Pother g ove | DOCTOR’ McCOY’S MONOGRAPH ON CATARRE Prompted by Numerous Inquiries of Those Afflicted by This Disease—The Treatment That Cures Catarrhal Conditions. Doctor McCoy’s Monograph on Catarrh is the response of the famous physician to the expressed desire of hundreds of patients for words of authority from the man whose treat- ment, formulated in 1883, was car- ried all over the nation by men who had been in his employ as ph cians, assistants or students, whose | practice was exploited in every city of the country with the ever familiar and original mode of presentation; the picture and interview of the cured patients. That his years of study and effort in mastering this dis- ease. as far back as °83 were not in vain, is evidenced even by the meas- ure of success of these young men who had been with him, by the fact that with the knowledge they had acquired in their brief services in his great offices, they were enabled to compete successfully with local doc- tors in cities in which they practiced. That this knowledge, effective as it seems to have been commercially, was not invariably effective profes- sionally, is not altogether due to the brevity of their training and exper- ience with Doctor McCoy, or their lack of years spent in preliminary study and practice, for it is frankly ac- knowledged by Doctor McCoy that the earlier methods which they copied were far from satisfactory to him. In other words, the treatment which they went forth to offer to the public was premature and incom- plete, as all great departures must be. THE MONOGRAPH ON CATARRH. 1, 1896.) aduated sevontecn mm of house phy tal it was with visions of ago ant v 1 Helle Haspl ecoming a doctor who | 218) Harrison to Dr Mee ski in curing deafness. perform operations, thiugs In the se Tt did not tke to discover that there we mi their Tegy and arms cut off, eat ampotations and of eutting any dt fell wever, who ne« me “ted person [ saw aft ation of «: m sore aml its various nm did the diterent were usnally overlook ning to do son nd T set ont to organs of the |. In this field [ saw first. formulated for « komt and pa Ax the until rnimlation, 1 be atures of the ¢ mutts thi the old pla as ever di word ined un reck and cone npinted The THE MUCOUS MEMBRANES. fs newb found itnin the eyelids, the throut, the eustachian tube windpipe, rhe br tubes, th 1 swallow, the ste the bowels, the tubes In the Hyer, the tubes in the kidn bladder, and either or all of th sur frome and If they to be one teristic symptom the dixe from the part 3 or xome form of corruption. ic sure mur most per portions. throat and most, and when a irritating p; ‘ought Con Atmos with th rritated, and ‘This 6 Is thus. roth thos mons in the dry w reonths, ts with Ho tubes, and. tre to the lang cols themselve the mucous membs ali fist like t which aph or line. a disease ote Spr that Is lined with Uy ucture, | CATARRH MEANS AN UNCURED COLD. wire elepho ut starts with a cold, comes from chfiling some part of the chilling exuses toon part and this produces i er and sorcny a com. and surest way to the cold alcne, Anfiamm: Just let Let i ri nd sink deep enough, and spread far and you are sure to be sick. One coll may t mean anything, and then azain it may. When you have a cold, just expose yours and eatch another before the thst cold is cured, and arother cold right on top of this, and you are for distress and sickness, and the ness that Is most Ukely to result is catarrh, If you teke cold and it rettles in the head, and another cold is added to it before it gets well, you ma take coll will have catarrh of the head. If and it setth.s in the th and ¥ cold on top of it, you will have catarrh of throat, which is tiable to extend Into the bronchial tubes and cause Bronchial Catarrh, Ii you take cold snd It settles on the chest you may eithes have Brorebitis or Pneumonia, If you contract a cold end it settles on the cov- ering of your lung you will have Pleurisy, which ns palns in the side, fever and stitches in the de wherever you take a long breath. = If you have 4 cold In your threat, and you kee taking cold after cold on top of it, may be driven up Into your ea euiache, followed by” discharging sounds heard jn the ears, or deafness. If you catch cold, and the cold settles on kidneys, you will have pain in the back, head puiliness under the eses, swelling aud ail the gymploms of Kiduey Disease. | USUAL HISTORY OF CATARRH. The history of an average case of catarch is Mke this: A’ person ts exposed, he feels a chilly scnsution on the surface of the body, be has a ug down his back, he sueeses, a Ilttle, the nose feels stopped | It then gets sore, there ts a sense of fulliess across the front of the bead, or there be headache, Now the bones feel sore, he ts | ish, fecl like eating, and when | tires for the night he fs restless. He can't breathe | throush his nose, aut, ax a result, «leeps with bls | mouth open, When he arises the next: morning he is not a bit refreshed, but aecturily more thread | than when he went 19 bed. ‘Toward noon the nose is likely to dise first, a w material, then mucous, or, my: a little Bowl. His bead is row clear, but toward night | it stops up again, and hy interval while trying at this stage no harm will result, Catarrh of the Throat. Likely, however, within a few days he takes more cold and has another chilly sens#tte He} shivers a Hittle, or amay sneeze some more; again his bones ach im he notlees that hin head fs not much stopped up, snd that ean breathe be hough the nose, ow, however, the throat he Catarrh of the Stomach. ‘That catarrh frequer th: the throat downward Into the That the result of such ex and thar result from an- frow Catarrh of p of to nter or longer back part of wake up a sa dey ving int wretched nh it filled with annos . in ae ght previous to ind Hawking in the Morning. zetting out of bed in the me and the upper part of th 2nd mucous, wile hy ing in the aight, and wh in the va Atte his thro: collected tl upon to ¢ whieh be d Tn son ™ of breakfast, or result nd ne begins to feel dry and husky, and be w; clearing it all the tine, He feels as tin vere a borschalr In ft, or as though there was something which, if be could oply get up, would give Instant relief, He is irrhtabl on retiring may soon full asleep, but wakes up n | Those parts | with a perched sensotion in the throat hot and feverish. His throat is as dry us a chip and he wants to swallow all the time, and. the tion of swallowing causes pain In the turoat @ fooling ward noon he is some better, and bet ' @ spit up mucous. This means th: Sirtied In the nese, has @rept ab extends from the has catarch in th dhwase Is stil ens ed wow no more Catarrh and the Vocal Cords. chances are the patient pays ne a rol in the bead and throat: «uch has and by N wit duu out t Ming chitly again, finds that he a hap attempts to speak he is husky. He goes to bed, passex a rest + And when he gets up the next monitng invumd for a while he finds that his Learseness hie tty t toward cvening bis voice becomes h when he Tin awake has crept de ther ing fo readily as In the ewrlier sta: Catarrh of the Windpipe. nm Wkely flent will ge he feeds ehttly aml won't allow shoot Intervals during Ox pla mt is isa Httle nigh breathin Ibis cold y uray i cold baa « enut ital 2 ad he hae deve 1 eatarrh, Bronchial Catarrh. Abont this time a wet spell of weat have ¢ on, and after werting Lis sitting jn a draft with wet clot to bed feoling wrete with ah ing hot and feverish, or be may slight cbiil. He i restless, tosses a tantly anmayed by that gets worse and w dry and sore an it were racking wrong! of oppression or welslit pain or soreness by the bry worse. He now notices tht the cough brings up 4 tough, sticky material that is. very rats, and It takes a very great dea » bring up a very stall quantity of 1 His condition rematne about the san rial that ix mixe eenish-Low at the HAS Most Wretel arises in inorall ocenrtyd invalid nn frum arch has by 1 aly yurssaas to give its mare an « fe swaward and 4 if unchecked, it will in Catarreh att branes. 1! sore Rpt ealss torn open and zets a The ulcers and membranes lining th because they a If you have a sore | ms well of tt won't hen! nd the sore ravens process. pit quiet It using It, and the is of sore up yet Hing Mp sray Took’ matte tial, or hy is ts and persons. trou Catarrh of the Lungs. often the a bronchial tubes. A cold is tak there are more chilly, er gets dry again; it is hack tient gets out of bed in the chest while dressing he nor ts severe, When in this that toward night Lis body beeomes warm, Mis face is flushed, and as soon as he removes the clothes from his bedy, and sume ity articles of ¢ He mises n great the cough, 8rd may” spit up litte . towhen’ pressed between the fingers gl adually xets a little Worse pretty good, and is then Ted to is Bet Wun ahaa believe Unt b notices that hi weaker, Ures casil) in taking cxercis aneans Uutt into the Ui waded the Catarrh in the Lung Cells. When catarrh has rm ed the lung cells it can go no decper In the chest. end of the road that is branes upon which jit Hives and feeds. gradually Invided the deepest parts of passages, but finding no new tissues tos: along it is checked in its onward march, but docs not leave the system. Catarrh rarcly leaves the yetem = onnless driven out by proper treatment en it has invaded the lungs It settles feed on the tissues of the Inng cell sults. This wleer eats in the mu; then In tie bronchial tube, thén tuto. of the tung, and a cavity forms in th fs the history of all these cises of °y stairs. All a its final a lungs themselves, a Ik sumption, a disease so common and so climate. is not the Stomach. Du cous that has been pou in taken into lowed ns Worst fentare of the night meh 4 out | > poured eh Catarrh most an Food Like Lead in the Stomach. There ts distress felt after eating, at Fool } diewsivd, faye sin tke tun veh, Men wh te " Causes Heart to Palpitate odin t ing from Catarra of th Causes Sick Headache. corto t “a Ly known by Lite and fail Impermanency of Cures. ne fact mere i am Th Joseph Sskes, 1214 9th st. nese -enelcobeyecne eee nw, testifies te Dr. MeCoy's skill in heauneeetated CONG aN eten Ge eee treating disease of t ances Ce ar . coanstit sensitive mosed aud " | tee 18 eAprare anil Now he | ing deafness, | all of which suff Tt is my atu for treatny kK yeid expasure and Chose « disease. If, by " that pr your mode then 40 4s is skills ment is. 1€ you wish to live i to the ‘period that Nature MD. at Mccoy, MoCOY SYSTEM OF MEDICINE 715 13th Street Northwest. | Dr. J. CRESAP McCOY, Dr. J. M. COWDEN, Office hours,9 to 12 a.m. S p.m., dally. toS pam, 6 tq Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m

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