ee — eee ee ee . re a = eee “THE DAILY EXAMINER, - - ~ - (Continued from first page.) tory of that movement is to describ the most memorable chapter in the history of the Church of England. It is to tell once more the well-known story of Latiw er bidding Ridley play the man; of Cranmer expiating a mome weakness by a martyr’s heroism ; Jewell, in great Apology, demonstrating the the Reformers with the Scriptures and the Prim itive Church ; Baxtez and Howe, in a later age, proclaiming the same message ; in the last cen- tury, Wesley and Whitefield, outside at last (but never in hostility to the Church), Romaine and Toplady, Venn and Newton and Cecil within raising a needed protest against the utt deadness of the age, when the have no function but to discuss abstract questi of religious evidence, and to inculcate outward morality without experiencing or communicating one spark of that love to God and the n is } which alone can generate it Who but will thank God for the work of th men, a glorious page in the history of Chnisti anity? But, while the excellence of that work needs no proof, we are not blind to the dangers the exaggeratic ms, and the defficiencies which sometimes followed in its train. For that is inherent weakness of human nature and hu intelligence, that rarely can we grasp more than one truth, and sometimes only but a part of it. Just as, only in the rarest instances of gen —to a Homer, a Dante, or a Shakespeare, the whole world of human nature has been revealed; so in theology, agreement ot nan ONLY TO A FEW CHOSEN MINDS has God given that wide and sober grasp, that calm and still zealous energy, which preserves t the balance of seemingly antagonistic truths, th need for freedom and the need for faith as the source, holiness as the resuli of life in Christ; above all, and in all, the teaching and the practice of charity, ‘‘¢#e very bound of peace and of all virtues.” government ; Now, the dangers and shortcomings which f lowed in the train of this movement were not wanting. The intense emphasis laid upon the need of a professed and personal faith, led some- times tea carelessness outward or zation, to a neglect sometimes of f religion, and often, alas, to the hypocritical followers, who profess lips what was utterly absent from their Mere voluntary assemblages of Christians, gathered quent personag though often, for a time, the centres of real spiritual life and hedp to others, are transitory, depending on the life, an times on the character and teaching of one man. ahrunt wel wa nearts. ¢ : . | round some ei some And so an- other party had arisen in the Church, not dis regarding the great fundamental teachings, but believing that the faith of Christ needs an out ward organization, in order that the posit of revealed truth may be preserved in- violate, that al! things may be done decently and in order, that the existence of the Church should not depend on the life and strength of individ- ual ministers, but should freak ce- have the aid, und God's spirit, of those organic he Ips so clearly re- cognized in St. Paul’s epist! : Titus. Phat this party has also a n work, it is impossible to deny. it their ranks, at the beginning of the that Robert Nelson and his friends established the first great Missionary Society for the Propa- gation of the Gospel in foreign parts, as also the sister association for promoting Christian Know- It was by their efforts that irreverence in divine worship was gradually removed, and that, now, every section of Christendom recog nizes that to worship God in a neglected buildin and with slovenly performance of the Church's ordinances, is not a proof of a spiritual worship, Timothy and ' ' »ble record of good was from last century, ledge. r > but rather of its complete absence. jut here again, THE SHADOW IS FOUND WITH THE LIGHT. Ignorant followers, zealous without discretion, un- able to exercise the true balance, made all Truth and all Holiness to consist in obedience to authority, and performance of rubrical ordinance. Che outward sign alone was magnified: the ele- ment of personal faith in the inward and _ spirit- nal grace was ignored. And so, from one side as from the other, came bitter words of recrim- ination: **You are not preaching the pure Gospel!” said one party. ‘You are makin: the Word of God of none effect through your traditions.” ‘*And you,” exclaimed the opposite side, “*you are faithless to your vows of ordin- ation. You are despising those ordinances and sacraments which Christ commanded.” And thus, in bitter strife, the crow ning virtue of charity was lost. And worse than this. Ex- aggeration and one-sidedness have this terrible after-effect, that they generate an equal ex- aggeration on the other side. Because one side seems to neglect, on the other, the excess will be increased, and the gulf widened between those whe claim the same eternal Father, the same re- deeming Saviour, and the same sanctifying Spirit. And so there was need for another teach- ing, though not another party, to uphold the principle of charity,—that new commandment ‘that we love one another.” No doubt the ab- h rence of controversy, of mere verbal ortho- doxy, Or of mere machine-like correctness of ri aal, has caused on this side also errors as re- grett in the others. The knowledge that shia a £ Lue as empty phrases had been substituted for God’s truth has led some of them to neglect the due exposition of fundamental doctrines : and the consciousness that Church order has sometimes been made the cloak for sacerdotal tyranny. jras led at times to neglect of organization divinely approved. But still there was need for the f the ‘ unterbalancing force, and among these last, as tnong the others, the children of wisdom have been found, + Our Own century, among the worthy repre- sentatives of the first movement I have describ- : 7" ne has not heard of the character and work " wlaries Suneon, at Cambridge? Coming there W hen all reuigious life seemed dead, when theo- logical ‘carning Was at its lowest ebb, he strove against an Opposition which would have daunted the stoutest heart. Actual violence, bitter at- tacks, then contempt, nicknames—the easy sub- stitute for arguments—fell to his lot, but he pressed on, gathering around him from students and townspeople a small but gradually increasing by uly of h ‘arers for the Gospel of Christ. At last he lived to see the battle won; and when, fifty years ago, he passed away to his rest, there are those still living who remember the universal grief, how those who once had been opponents jomed in ihe great procession to the historic chapel of King’s College, and all recognized that here Wisdom was justified by her offspring. _ Nor shall we forget another figure from that sister university, which has been said to have been more fruitful in movements than in men, but still boasts a great calendar of sons who have done service to Church and State. John Keble, at Oxford, led that movement which at first in- tended to restore reverent service, and to incul- te neglected truths, passed in jater hands far beyond the intentions of its creators. But the union of an apostolical simplicity with perfect scholarship and culture, made him a figure so personally aitractive that all bitterness ceased around him--the weapon of the controversialist Ca once more r 4 : : the living voice speaks m » : *Sun of my soul, Thou Saviour dear, It is not night if Thou be near ; O may no earth born cloud arise lo hide Thee from thy servant’s eyes.” wrnom, In tact, IT wi wuld claim, as for Simeon and Kebl » also ft the heritage of wisdom. passed since he was laid to rest, am Bu ‘ sonship in years have already he is only a name to many people. obioquy, the here te) née { nor protru led 3 at last rest, cutterance than recognition. And to the younger . who came under his in who remember what they generation Ol those tt rence at ¢ uel nite tea 1 snown forth like the good priest of Chaucer : ‘And Christes way, and His Apostles twelve but first he followed it himself ;” tr ° h ° Fie taugnt ; ; tnat inhhuence Was unspeakable. Maurice was brought to the Church of Eng- land not by education or hereditary connection, but by mature conviction that her ordered liberty affords the best framework fer spiritual progress. ninister, he consecrated his life as solemnly over a monk of the Middle Ages cut ofl from the world’s temptations. Tle of the first to feel, and to excite in others, i ‘ sympathy for the poor which must be a h, though sometimes it is only 2 fashion. He it was, with colleagues one in spirit, who pro- claimed that the Gospel blessing on the poor was »mere phrase. He taught prudence and self- elp to the working-man ; explained the prin- of co-operation; pressed on them the i for higher education; offered himself as drowned in the nvens ‘ ’ His voice was year 1848; it was overwhelmed by the party-cries of those who resisted all change OME thelr teacncr. uproar of the and all improveme 1, OF who disdained his pro- posals as insuflicient. But the voice was not silen nor were its words forgotten. Who does not remember the Laureate’s invitation, and yu should turn to dearer matters, »man who is dear to God ; to help the slender store, 4 ge c dwellings of the poor ; e, as lifé advances, rity, more and more.” At last came the end of combats, and Cam- ‘, the place of his first choice, received him bri as a teacher and as a parish priest. Never will those who then, for the first time, heard him, forgot that voice which made the reading of the Seriptures a commentary, and the oft-heard Liturgy a new devotional discipline. Never will they forget, who had the privilege of meeting in his house, the magical iufluence of a nearer per- i ‘ss ; those classes, almost like a family circle, in which the narrow light of Locke’s Essay was made the text of conversation that opened to our eyes the first glimpses of that true ’ philosophy— pf ] ry St nal ace ** Which is not crabbed, as dull fools suppose, But musical as is Apollo's lute.” And when, but a year later, he was taken from us, in the midst of work for the world, in the eginning of recognition by the world, it was as when the tidings came that Elijah had departed, the silencing of a great voice,—but no, that voice was not silenced, ‘the deing yet beth } DEANETN, : ; dead, 4 44nGa FOR EACH ALL OF AND THESE MEN, he Church of England has room in her wide old. She is not a sect, born out of some min- ending with some transient popularity; but a Church, built wpon the broad and firm rock of Christ’s teachings, ordinances, and promises. Those great and wise statesmen, around the throne of Edward and Elizabeth, and framed the substance of our formu- ute difference, and wao stood laries, endeavoured not to contract, but .o enlarge the Lie Chey wished to retain, if it were possible, i to include, not only ' ] ,* whole nation 5 y who were cap trove SUOVE those tpable* of grasping the full teachings of the Reformation, but those thous- ands in the North and West who had not yet ction to the oid forms, and who now found so many of the old prayers and aises, as well as the old creeds, faithfully trans- lated in the new Liturgy. Our Church admits she recognizes the three great sections I have described to you; and he is not a wise son who should desire to diminish her Catholic scope, even by retrenching some practices and some opinions which he does not share. For to what tribunal can he appeal? To the Articles? We all subscribe them readily, and ound to accept them in their simple alsense. To the Prayer Book? All ty desire in private some alter- hether of addition or abbre- “ie . a severed the ties of afie e4baViinr A viations, but all accept it loyally, and prize it as our inestimable treasure. To our — listory? There have been Calvinistlc Arch- ishops, and Arminian and High Church Arch- jishops, and Latitudinarian Archbishops ; and vho shall venture to pronounce upon any of them a posthumous deposition ? . Let us thank God, then, that all efiorts to 1arrow our Church into a sect have failed, and let us hope that all future efforts may similarly fail ! For any such victory would be, whether to the victors or to the whole Church herself, that dishonest victory, Sas victory, Of Cheeronea, fatal to liberty ; and the party which gained it would speedily feel the Nemesis of its suicidal policy. For the Church to which we belong is Catho- lic and Protestant, and, above all things, National. She claims no infallibility for herself. She denies no hope for others. Her motto is found in those noble words, the authorship of which is unknown, but which surely the spirit of God inspired: IN THINGS NECESSARY, UNiry ; IN THINGS NOT NECESSARY, LIBERTY; IN ALL THINGS, CHARITY. One last word : if we realise that the Spirit is given, not to this or to that section of the Church, but to every man to profit withal ; if we remem- ber that to the back-sliding Galatians, and to the restless and divided Corinthians, the same apostolical salutation came as to the beloved of Ephesus and Philippi; if we remember the divine blessing on the peacemakers: if we feel that to preach even truth wrathfully and bitterly poisons the very truth itself; that our satisfaction may be the Pharisee’s pride, and the object of our dislike may enjoy the Samaritan’s blessings ; then surely the seeming difficulty of Diversity in Unity, and Unity amid Diversity, will cease to perplex us. We shall welcome, we shall honor each child of Wisdom, accepting the measure of his gift; we shall ‘‘ walk worthy of the vocation wherewith we are called, with all lowliness and MeexNess, with long-suffering, forbeariug one an- other in love ; endeavoring to keep the unity of fell as that gentle face appeared. And when the professorship at Oxford was exchanged for the | quiet vicarage of Hursley, and he who had ex- | pounded the principles of the Church put forth | those Hymns of the Christian Year, which are | now the heritage of all Christians, sung by Dis- senter as by Churchman,—then men who differ- ed most widely from his opinions on some vexed {vestions felt that here also was a child of wis- | coat and they learned of him later because they oe him "rst. Keble was no lukewarm F, no temporizing adherent of his cause, noe Speak strongly and with warmth. But ‘ad controversies have left no echo, and | valne as a blood medicine. | whole pharmacopei, effects more astonishing | - | results, in serofula, rheumatism, general de- | the Spirit in the bond of peace.” The world-wide reputation of Ayer’s Sarsa- pari!la is the natural result of its surpassing Nothing, in the former years, I came in personal con rather by t from look and voice as well as from def- wchings, what lessons of truth and reality to all our hearts, when And if, lastly, I may speak to you of one with x Frederick Denison Maurice, the same Sixteen } i i t some here. doubtless, have heard or read of his early struggles, the alternations of fame and 7 age a attacks, the sufferings neither und that she ciles Protestant freedom with fidelity to the universal Church. Once in her| gold. ranks, and after dedicating himself to her work himseif| teputation for restoring the hair to hald heads was’ one | @nd changing grey hair to the original colur that | of youth. te OEE SAME D i ot oo “ Piles! Piles! Itching stinging; It allowed often bleed and ulcerate, becoming very sore. SwWaYNe’s OINTMENT stops the itching and bleeding, heals ulcerations, and in most cases the tumors. All druggists, or by 50 cents. Or. Swayne & Son, Phila- seth? fm dv remove mail, for delehia pe o we Only about two- thirds of the cavalry force of the British army ride. The Government will evidently have tv offer very liberal prizes for remounts or ejuip its cavalry with cheap bicycles, Stop That Cough, Many people neglect what they call a simple cold, which, if not checked in time, may lead to lung trouble. Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil, with Hyopophosphites, will not only stop the cough but heal the lungs. Endorsed by thousands of physicians. Palat- able as milk. Try it. Sold by all druggists at 50c and $1. (§) > —-—-- Excitement is running high over the dis- covery, near Purcell, Indian Territory of a number cof old placer mines, which were worked in past ages. Miners have taken out a large amount of —— Hall's Hair Renewer enjoys a world-wide i iiiliece ani Two thousand pounds cracked grain for sale low, by Geo. Carter & Co. {20 3ieod sidglinealiiia Robes and Fur Coats selling at cos Bruce’s tf—febi3 ‘} , mieign at PD. Ai siadeeeiiiahiediada PLANTs.—We are raising over a million V getable and Flower Plants for the spring trade. Quality better and prices lower than ever. Catalogues ready in April.—Ricuarp Burke, Charlottetown Royalty. febl2 sts Iw 4 S THE BLIZZARD HAS STRUCK US, our patrons and others in needof Coal can be supplied by calling on us. We have in Store a large leading qualities, viz. :— ge supply of all the OLD SYDNEY ROUND, ACADIA do., VICTORIA do., VALE do., INTERNATIONAL do., INYERCOLONIAL RUN OF MINE, ACADIA AND VALE NUT, All of which will be sold at a small profit. R. NeMILLAN. feb2—eod & wky Im_ her guar Schooner For Sale. $7 E offer for sale the Schooner “‘ JESSIE *¥ NEWELL,” of Barrington, built in Essex, U. 8., 63 tons, well found in every respect ard ready for sea without outlay. Carries about 100 tons coal, and makes a good coaster. Will be so'd low. Apply to MACDONALD BROS. & CO. Montague, Jan. 31, 1889—dy & wky Im RUPTURE years I have adjusted more ean ‘any man inAmerica. Valu- able Patents, my own invention, saree es, — and Club Feet tz. Rupture—I will guarantee to hold largest Rupturo without touching your hip, no straps wneteoover, waterproof. Largest stock of general See ber the great Cluthe Spiral Trusses in stock, Reliable system for ORDERING BY MAIL. we “ ; halfthe weight Spinal Instrumenisce other makes and more effective. it! aq FE FT? claim the only me- chanical system to§ straighten born Club Feet( Patented.) & Twill prove to anybody that operation F never did nor can straighten Club Feet. Send 6cent stamps for Book. CHAS. CLUTHE, 118 King St. W., i “Weakness of a of Errors or “} fry! a. How ta Falarce and I 2T&of Hany, ts im a Gay. a Be Penpe Chas. Cinihe’s *r22 Se Children cured in 2 and Adults (at least 99 per ct.) in 4 mouths, without avy discomfort to wearer, The most perfect cere satisfaction Ay mail. nade Yor each case, Orders : j uailed saine day (prepaid and registered}. Pad only one ounee, Perfect VENTITA- TION, Warranted for Five yeors. Highest Awards at Centennial and wherever axhihbited, 106,900 sold. Send Ge. Stamp for ilidsivated Book! invaluable information. —Addres3, 24S CMWELIe, 218 Kinz; sé. tiest, urcnteo, ocr Beialo, X.W. HRURKENNESS Or tho Liquor liabit, Positiye!y Cured by Ldmintstoring Dr. Hntnes aa os ~ scan given in acup of cofes or tea with tho knowledse ofthe person taking it; Gas harmless, and will effect a permancot and speed curs, whether the patient is 2 moderate drinker or az alcoholic wreck. [thas been given in thousanda g? csses, and fn every instance a pericct cars hes followed, 2 never fatia. The sysiem once impregnated with the Specific, it becomes an utter impossibility for the liquor appetite to exi F elrenlar and full periiculars address G2Lpe &PLUCIPiITC Co.,. RNS Race &t., Ciacineati,G, GRATEFUL—COMFORTING. EPPS COCOA BRE&KFAST. “By a thorough kuowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Ep has provided our breakfast tables with a deli- eately flavored beverage which mny save us many heavy doctor’s bills. Itis by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may bo cradually built up until strong enough to bility, and all forms of blood disease, than | this remedy. iRESH SAUSAGES, 12 cents per pound, made daily at Saunders & Newsom's Meat Market, Kent Street. i i i ' : “ every tendency to disease. Hundreds of - SATURI Symeroms.— Moisture; intense itching and | moist at night; worse by scratching. | to continue tamors form, which | has horses to} chance of the bargain-hunter’s life. not be missed. YOURSELP. . box of pills, Find out about them, and you § | will always be thanke : ; fal. One pill a dose. | Parsons’Pills contain jig |} nothing harmful, are # | easy to take, and} | ‘ause no inconven- the marvelous p without. Sent by mail for °5 cents in stamps. the information is very vaiuable. TO TH LOW-PRICED WATCHES. tisements. If you buy from us dealer, you WILL NOT every time. . 1 pe Our large stock of WATCH E> is YAY FEBRUARY Lhese pills were a wonderful discovery. No others }-ke or relieve all manner of disease. The information arornd each box is worth ton times the cost of a “ CHEAP ae 23, 1889. ~~ Meld them in the world. Wili positively eure Bes wemm, icnce. One box wil bloodand cure chron. ic ill health than $5 worth of any other remedy yet discov. ered. Ifpeople could be made to realizs walk i ilu: I. S. JOHNSON & ( >., 22 Custom House Street, BOSTON, MASS, oot 5 ENT AO com JOHN ” or, in fact, of any other reliable! for the Diamond and take no other swindied, but get GOOD VALUE) the last fire, and is wel! assorted. era 9) < wt af a1 & WV GT 7b = (A W A “ > we j Watehmaicer, Jewelrr and Optician, February 12, 1889--2aw & wky slaughter sal We ZU NO COMMON GOODS! and offer the ER CBNT. CAMERON BLOCK, CITY. e of Silverware. ee ee wish to clear out our Entire Stock of SILVERWARE, whole at 4 Every article stamped and fully warranted. All Spoons and Forks the Celebrated ROGERS BROS , 1847, Al. Now is the time for Bargains. Everything in the line at 20 PER CEN? DISCOUNT, eh ice. Gall early and gety our ‘ff All Goods marked in plain figares--CASHU ONLY. —-—— (0) — a NORTON & Jan, 11, 1889——2aw & wu ky atti, + rOuUY pa SEN RS CE MEE ROSAS MEE TT a ne . ‘= Pe ee z 4 er : 7 eee eee eS ea iia “Castorin is so well adapted tochildren that j Castoria crres Tote, Constipst A a ed i ad ote a BORN EEE. CHARLOTTETOWN err PSEC Ts mee ee ~ oe ee Steet 6 be tea Rao ae J SOT Serrey aN Perry! ¥ Sh me ate eebgs ts Lrecommond it as superior to any prescription ; aria i i es BigeD, and pro..ctes Gi known to me.” H. A, Arcnen, M.D., S ogesti : ; li: So. Oxford St., Brooklyu, N.Y. | Without iajuricus med.cawon, . Tas CenTaun AUT 1 CP : La CUSTOM M. S700! At above prices we have on 4 " i ERE: Heber! Ws. chap ! A DuP. pie Cet SB.OD ! hand guaranteed to give you solid comfort. ———. ™~* i me ff» mm ' : sa3, | a a | a BSD.ERAD | and make to order NAP REEFERS, Jeon iets lit T eeevenmnapeese SS OG, SEO G0, We have OUR OWN MAKE of OVEROOATS at above figures. This is the’ You have here an opportunity which should $2.00. {x] $15.00, $17.00, $19.00. Of the OVERCOATS in t — this £ e maladies are floating eround ts ready to k wherever there is a weak point. We may escane many a fatal shaft eping our- i} 2auda pro- selves well fortified with pare blk perly nourished frame.” Mace simply with boiling water and miik. Sold only in packets, by Grocers, labeiled thus: JAMES EPPS & CO., Homeopathic Chemists, London, Hngiand. febl42w = decl9—1 yr dy & wky Civii Service Gazette. a Ca 3h. Don’t forget that our CUSTO) il zoods in our line marked very low D. A. BRUCE, Charlottetown, Oct: 24, 1888, . : ine, we have only to say: We agree to give you Bona Fide Value TAI ORING DEP r YlAYS : A . Ad SURLING EE ARTME 3 a i pairons happy with good fitting carments. ol cpa. OY T ‘ e * s . FUR CAPS, CLOTH CAPS and HATS with a view to exchanging them s COME AND SEH for your Money, FOR g its >, FUR OOATS, RUBBER COATS, and speedily for Merounanr Taror. “END ADVERTISERS for SS their SHODDY WATCHES, until you see «ur stock of You may be swindled (#8 many have been) if you send money away in answer to foreign adver- not hurt in the least from: DISCOUNT. eee | - Brilliant! Durable! | Economical! | ; ge Diamond Dyes exce] al] others | in Strength, Purity and Fastness | None other are just as good. Be- | ware of imitations, because they | are made of cheap and inferior materials, and give poor, weak, crocky colors. To be sure of success, use only the Diamonp Dyers for coloring Dresses, Stock- ings, Yarns, Carpets, Feathers, Ribbons, &c., &c. We warrant them to color more goods, pack- age for package, than any other dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and durable colors, Ask A Dress Dyed | FoR A Cozt Colored iC} Garmenis Aenewed \ CENTS A Child can use them! At Druggists and Merchants. Dye Look free. WELLS, RICHARDSON 2 CO MONTREAL, I’. 4). Encourage Home Manufacture ' BEARDS EVs OF LE BRATED To BLARKING, kL (Or a ft j » & %, J The Best Leather Preservative known, ; ee j THE Subscriber oft wishes to inform the public heisthe manufacturer of the eVuUVo TMelit. a. ' 8, and gUsrantees it a ; Opener aciicie tor aarnesacs, Hoots and Shoes, &iiu weather generally. [tis peculiarly adapted tus Keeping allarticleaol Leather ta which it is japplied SOFT and PLIABLE. Tt is certain te | give satisfaciion, and cannot yos-ibiy injure the |} Leather, as it is manfactured from the best PS dene awe | aruicies to be obtained inthe market. A thor- ough application te Bo and Shees will render them perfectly Waterprvof, and Lambermen and | Farmers will neves have wet feet it they will use ,; BEARDSLEY’S O1L, PASTE BLACKING, | Parties wishing a Box can Lave it sent by mail | On receipt of 25 cen's. Special rates fer Whole | gale orders, | Why this Blackiag ie the Best :—isi, it ig thor. joughly Wate proc!; 2nd, it will perfectiy pre- | serve the Leather: 3rd. it keeps the Leather soft } and pliable; ith, beranes all whe have used it testify that ib is Jue aa recomny led Adcress your ord t ders in iiseriber,§ W. W. BEARW#-LEY, Menufacturer and Dealer in } oots, Shoes and Harness, BIKER WICK, N.S. apes af a ¥ <) ‘2 U siz : 2. oe cr LSAaSanrt tT TLE PELte wroarive LIVER a - ae te om oo + £ > oo OriLC va F: sae BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, ASK FOR DE. i RITTLE SUG AT WAYS PLERCHS PHIL#LTa, COR i-COATED FUL, 1 erate without Gistiuiba: | Being entirety ve or occupation. Prt i cally sealed. Always t La i @ Jaxative. 2licrative these little Pellets give ! satisfaction. CIRK PEANERUE ie : PLRUBUTIL, Bilious Eteadache, Pizziness, Constipaes tien, Rudigesxtion, | Bilious Attacks,aniall : derangements of the stom- ach and bowels, are prompt- ly relieved and permanently cured by the use of Br. Pierce's Pieasant Purgative Pellets. in explanation of the remedial power of these Peliets over so great a variety of discases, it | may truthfully be said that their action upon the system is universal, not mn gland or tissue ; escaping their sanative influence. Sold by ' druggists, 25 cents a vial. Manufactured at the , Chemical Laboratory of WORLD’s DISPENSARY | MEDIGAL ASSOCIATION, Butfalo, N. Y. ont $500 HR fi te is offered by the manufactur. i =" ers of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh j ( % > Romedy, for a case of i Get 3% Chronic Nasal Catarrh which i YS they cannot cure, SYMPTOMS OF CATAREE.—Dull WAY headache, obstrnetion of the nasal pul s, discharges falling from the head fut whe throat, sometimes profuse, waters ana acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous. puruient, bloody and putrid; the evca aro weak, watery, and inflamed; there is yinging in the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing to Clear the throat, expectoration of offc nsive matter, together with scabs from ulcers: the voice is changed and has a nasal twang: the breath is offensive; smell and taste are ime paired; there is a seneation of dizziness, with mental depression, « hacking cough and geu- eral debility. Only a few of the above-named syrmptonis are likely to he present ii any one case. Thousands of cases annunily, without manifesting haif\of the above syusptome ; sult in consumption, erd end in the No discase is 60 common, more decent and dangerous, or less understood by physicians, By its mild, soothing, and healing properties, Dr. Sage’s Catarrh itemedy cures the worst cases of Catarrh, “cold in the head,” Coryza, and Catarrhal ticadache. Sold by druggists everywhere; 50 cents. ‘«, i py re * 40 Crave, “Untold Agoz.* frem Catarrh.” Prof. W. Havsyer, the ot Ithaca, N. ¥., writes: “Same ten years ago I suffered untold agony from chronic nasal ,catarrh. My family physician gave me up as , incurable, and said T must die. My cease was such a bad one, that every day, towards sun- | &Ct, In¥Y Voice would become so hoarse I eould burely speak above a whisper. In the morning ; coughing and cicaring ef my throat would st Strangle me, Hy the use of Dr. Sage’s Reinedy, in thrae months, Lwasa well 19 the ¢ bus been permanent.” famous mesmerist, Cetarri ure bas nity [daw king cud Spitting.» }-. “92 Pine Stree?, a . i : “J was a great suficrer from catiarrh for three years. At times J could : hardly breathe, and was constantly hawking and spitting, and for the last eight monthas could not breathe through the nostrils, J] thought nothing cou)d be done forme. Luck. fly, | was advised to try Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, and I aim nowawetiinan. I beiieve it to be the only eure remedy catarrh now j to give ‘t a %) 4 ; , " T Sb 19CD35 A at ' t BC St. Lous. Mo for manufactures 14 one has only fair trial to experience astounding results am a@ permancnt cure,” Three Bottics Cure Catarrh. Eu: Rowers. P. 0., Cohunbtia Co., Pa, says: “My daughter bad catarrh when she Was*five years old, very badiy. I enw Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pro- cured a bottle for her, and seon saw that it helped her; a third bottle effected 9 perma- nent cure. She is now eigbtieeu years old and sound and bearty ane » acs cnr i ts