Here is something from Mr. Frank A. Hale, proprietor of tlie De Witt House, Lewiston, and the Tontine Hotel, Brunswick, Me. Hotel men meet the world as it comes and goes, and are not slow in sizing people and things up . for what they are worth. He says that he has lost a father and several brothers and sisters ffom Pulmonary Consumption, and is himself frequently troubled with colds, and he Hereditary often coughs enough to make him sick at Consumption^ stomach. Whenever he has taken a cold of this kind he uses Boschee's German Syrup, and it cures him every time. Here is a man who knows the fulldanger of lung troubles ,^ and would therefore be most particular as to the medicine he used. What is his opinion ? Listen ! "I use nothing but* Boschee's German Syrup, and have advised, I presume, more than a hundred different persons to take it. They agree with, me that it is the best cough syrup in the_rnarket. M ® He : •* Permit me, Mrs Widely, to escort you home.' She : 'No, thanks ; you are too young.' He : 'Pardon me, I did not think you were so old.' There's nothing more, tantalising to a man to go home with something on lm mind he wants to scold about, and find company there and be obliged to act agreeably. 'Jenkins has struck luck at last.' ' What's he done V • Invented a fishing polp with an automotic pair of scales on it that weighs the big fish that always gets away and makes a record of it.' _. FOR COLDS, COUGHS, HOARSENESS, AND ALL Throat and Lung DISEASES. As an emergency medicine, a safeguard for children, an ever-re-idy remedy to ho J relied upon in cases of colds, coughs, croup, i whooping-cough, influenza, ancl all diseases of the throat and lungs, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral has no equal in pharmacy. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass., TJ. S. A. _t_¥*° Beware of cheap imitations. The name— Ayer's Cherry Pectoral— •is prominent on the wrapper, and is "blown iv the plass of each of our lm: t\.--<. The glory of the farmer is that, in tne division of labors, it is his part to create. All trade rests at last on his primitive activity. He stands close to nature ; he obtains from the earth the bread and .the meat. The food that was not he causes to be. The first farmer was the first man, ancl 'all historic nobility rests on possession and use of the land. Men do not like hard work, but every man . has an exceptional respect for tillage,* and. feeling that this is the original calling of his race, and that he himself is, only excused from it by some circumstance j which made him delegate it for the time into other hands. ' . \ WOOES-. "^V ace*, %«, &ss& JW ,BMI ? B3= S' S-sSKS) - xsasd &jA*2?A liS£S«/ "'•■'.>•*&.
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Bibliographic details
Clutha Leader, Volume XX, Issue 1032, 4 May 1894, Page 7
Word Count
484Page 7 Advertisements Column 2 Clutha Leader, Volume XX, Issue 1032, 4 May 1894, Page 7
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