Democratic Sentinel, Volume 21, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 September 1897 — Page 3
The Women of Thibet.
Miss Taylor, a young English woman who recently returned from Thibet, and Is now gathering missionary recruits for that mysterious country, says that men and women who understand medicine will be most successful In that field. The knowledge of drugs, she adds, among the natives is almost equal to that of the English themselves. The position of women, according to Miss Taylor, is higher in Thibet than in any other country of the orient, save perhaps in Mongolia. In place of polygamy, so common among the Mahometans, polyandry Yules in Thibet, a woman being married as a rule to all the brothers of a family. In consequence of the nomadic character of the people, usually one of the husbands is at home at a time, the others being absent in more or less distant parts, sell Ing the products of their lands. Women In Thibet, Miss Taylor asserts, are never punished—a fact to which she attributes the saving of her life on several occasions.
Shake Into Your Shoes
Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting feet, and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It’s the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Alien’s Foot-Ease maws tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. Try It to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. By mall for 25 cents, in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olms«ed, Le Roy, N. Y. The great painter Razzi filled his house with all sorts of animals, and taught his raven to cry “Come in” whenever there was a knock at the door.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
Is taken Internally. I‘riCe 75 cents. Losers are always in the wrong. Baldness is either hereditary or caused by sickness, mental exhaustion, wearing tight-fitting hats, and by over-work and trouble. Hall’s Ilenewer will prevent it.
SUFFERING WOMEN. Sow Many of Them Have Quietly Obtained Advice That Made Them Well. My sister, if you find that in spite of following faithfully your family doctor’s advice, you are not getting well, why do you not try another course? Many and many a woman has quietly written to Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., stating her symptoms plainly and clearly, and taken her advice, which was promptly received. The follow--41 A ing letter is a pretty strong confirmation of our claims : U./ /vk // V- had been Ihwy sick for six Hr A months; one doctor vßwf 1 me i ML xM would have * lr\\ . \X to go to a * I \ \ \ ' hospital Il\ \ I ' before I Would get well. I had female troubles in their worst form, suffered untold agonies every month ; my womb tipped back to my backbone, had headache, hysteria, fainting spells, itching, leucorrhoea. “ My feet and hands were cold all the time, my limbs were so weak that I could hardly walk around the house; was troubled with numb spells. I have taken four bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, one bottle of her Blood Purifier, one package of her Sanative Wash, and am entirely cured. I have not had one of those numb spells since. Can you wonder that I sing the praises of a medicine that has cured me of all these ills ?”—Mrs. Louisa Place, 650 Belmont St, Brockton, Mass. .
asm POMMEL BKe£P^ot^rideran^addle l, per-Ite3SES fectly dry In the hardest storms. iWBEr Substitutes will disappoint. Ask for 1807 Fish Brand Pommel Slicker— I ___ it Is entirely new. If not for sale in -.SBB’I y° ur ,own - wrl,e for catalogue to A-J-TOWER, Boston. Mass. jaßiaMMf'ysrT’g—lai CURES WHERE aLI ELSE FAILS. kg Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use fJS Sl2 to 535 PER WEEKrSr Parties preferred who can (jive whole time to the busifcees. Spare hours, though, may be profitably employed. Good openings for town and city work as well as country districts. J.E. Gutord, 11 ch & Main Sts., Richmond, Vs. ENSIGNS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHN W. MORRIS, WASHINGTON, 0.& Law Principal Examiner U. 8. Feniion Bureau 3 yrs. la last war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty, ilaea n ITCNTP H. B. WILLSON A CO.. Wash rOlrrai D.C. No charge till patent ■ Wl ■ ■ll ■ w*obtained. &O.page book free. RrffiiilW 113 VP JAS hi! U Ibpl kll MSilpl I■ ! S
The Blue and the Gray. Both men and women are apt to feel a little blue, when the gray hairs begin to show. It’s a very natural feeling. In the normal condition of things gray hairs belong to advanced age. They have no business whitening the head of man or woman, who has not begun to go j down the slope of life. As a matter of fact, the hair turns gray regardless of age, or of life’s seasons ; sometimes it is whitened by sickness, but more often from lack of care. When the hair fades or turns gray there’s no need to resort to hair dyes. The normal color of the hair is restored and retained by the use of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. Ayer’s Curebook, “ a story of cures told by the cured.” 100 pages, free. J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.
A Cat that Dives for Fish.
Most cats are afraid of water, but the tabby mascot that sails the seas on board her Majesty’s ship Pallas is an exception. This cat has more of the habits of a muskrat than of the animals of its own kind. From kittenhood it has had a marked fondness for water, and improves nearly every opportunity to swim and dive. Like all cats, it likes the flesh of fish, and does
not wait for the cook to serve it It has contracted the unique habit of diving off the side of the vessel whenever it wishes a fish dinner, and seldom comes to the surface without a good-sized fish in its mouth. It hunts its water game in much the same way that an ordinary cat hunts mice. Crouching on the deck, it peers over the side, ready to spring when its prey swims along, and then dives with unerring accuracy. This distinctively sailor cat is the pet of the officers and crew, and is regarded as the ship’s mascot. Its fame has spread throughout her Majesty's realm, and crowds collect to watch its antics wherever the ship goes into port.
Current Condensations.
A vein of lime rock ninety feet wide has been opened in Maine. The owners of the quarry are assured that it Is of the best quality. At Boscoreale, among the remains of the Roman villa now being excavated has been discovered an inscription referring to the worship of the Eriperor Augustus. Business men in Toronto are trying to devise a scheme to make the annual exposition in that city permanent. They think Canadian industries have reached a point which warrants such a step. It is said that a hypnotist in Utah lias begun a series of experiments in the territorial reform school at Ogden looking to the cure of kleptomania and kindred mental conditions of children by hypnotism. He claims that the suggestions given in the hypnotic state will overcome criminal tendencies. It is not generally known that associations of German soldiers who served under Napoleon I. have been celebrating the victories of the grande armee at humble little banquets in Mayence ever since 1816. The German authorities never interfered with the veterans, but in France, under the monarchy, kindred associations were outlawed and their members persecuted as conspirators.
A 10-centime piece, about 2 cents, was found by a porter at a railway station in the north of France. The man carried the coin to the station master, who thereupon registered and forwarded it, with a report, to the office for lost articles, which then communicated with the police commissary at Paris. This functionary sent the parcel on with a fresh report to the prefecture of police, by which it was also registered, and there the 10-centlme piece will remain a year and a day awaiting a claimant.
In southeast Louisiana, on the Southern Pacific Railroad, a syndicate of Northern men has purchased a large body of land and will engage in farming on a large scale. The land was under water, but has been reclaimed by scientific draining. It will be put in rice and sugar. The land is 100 miles north and south, and twenty-five miles east and west. It contains 1,500,000 acres. The fencing cost $50,000. The plowing is done with steam plows. Thirty acres are plowed in a day with ‘.lie labor of only three men. Horses are only used by the cowboys who herd the 16,000 cattle on the place. There are many places in Philadelphia occupied by business firms which furnish a standing puzzle to the community. Take, for instance, an impos-ing-looking haberdashery on Chestnut street. At all times the window is filled with neat neckties and the finest kind of hosiery and linen. Yet no one, as far as the general community is concerned, ever saw a customer enter the store and make a purchase. The store is Itself a fine property and is well located. The same firm has been there for years, and how expenses arc met is the puzzle. Ascertain restaurant in the heart of the city hgs an apart ment set aside for ladles exclusively. The room is quite large and richly car peted. The furniture is of the best, and the linen and crystal-ware are of the finest. A colored waiter stands with towel across his arm at the end of the room, but no man, so far as can be ascertained, ever saw a customer of either sex eating there. It has been conducted in the same manner for years.
AT LOVES COMMAND
BY CHARLOTTE M. BRAEME.
CHAPTER XV. When Beatrix entered the grounds, she saw three gentlemen all waiting for her . —the Huke of Heathland looking quite sure of her, yet vaguely expectant; the Prince de Ferros with his dark eyes following her sadly; and quite apart from the others, Beltran Cnrew with a lotus lily in his hand. Lady Rayner was there, looking veryfragile and very lovely in blue and silver. Beatrix felt greatly relieved when Lady Rayner joined her. The two ladies made a beautiful picture standing under the green trees—Lady Rayuer, so fair and fragile, v ith her golden hair and sweeping train of blue and silver; Beatrix, like a picture by one of the old masters, with her dark, splendid eyes, her richly colored face, and her trailing dress of white lace and scarlet silk. Every one admired them. One by one the gentlemen left less lovely women ami gathered round them. Beatrix longed for one word from Beltran. He stood leaning carelessly against the trunk of a tree, with the lotus lily in his hand. The duke, on her right hand, suggested a row in one of the pretty pleasure-boats; the prince, on her left, was trying to persuade her to join the croquet players. “Go with the duke, my dear,” said Lady Lennox. "I am sure a row on the lake will be very pleasant." Beatrix knew well that if she went upon the lake with the duke there would be what she wished so much to avoid —a love scene. She turned to Lady Rayner. “Will you go with us?” she said; and Lady Rayner, seeing the distress in her face, consented. Beltran had bided ids time. When the boat touched the green glittering banks again, he was there to help Beatrix. The duke, whose wooing had made so little progress, looked angrily nt him; but a loaded cannon would not have checked Mr. Carew. “Lady Lennox fears you will grow faint, Miss Lennox,” he said. “I promised her to show- you where to find some ■trawberries and grapes.” The duke angrily turned round. “Will you introduce this gentleman to me, Miss Lennox?” he said, and Beatrix complied. With a look of mutual defiance the gentlemen raised their hats. “Mr. Carew will permit me to remark,” said his grace, “that I am quite capable of attending to the requirements of the ladies whom I am honored by escorting.” “No doubt,” returned Beltran, calmly, “but a monopoly of honors, your grace, is hardly fair. The sunshine has been on the lake; permit it now to brighten the land.” Then, bowing with the air of a prince, he offered his arm to Beatrix, Lady Rayuer looking on with an amused smile. Beatrix turned with a bow and graceful words of thanks to the duke. “It was very pleasant on the water,” she said. “But I think mamma is right —a little fruit will be very refreshing. Will you come with us? Lady Rayner looks tired.” After that he could do nothing but ask Lady Rayner to take his arm and follow them.
“Who is this gentleman?” he asked, half savagely. “Carew? I do not remember to have heard the name. What Carew is be, Lady Rayner? Do you know?” “He is the son of Mrs. Carew, the great artist; she is painting Miss Lennox’s portrait —and a very beautiful picture it is.” “I understand,” said his grace, in a more satisfied tone. “I do not think it quite in good taste to invite artists and people of that class everywhere, though; do you?” “That was a bold stroke,” said Beltran to the beautiful heiress. "I have never attempted a bolder. How angry the duke looked! If these were the ‘good old times,’ he would send me a challenge.” “Why should he? I have surely a right to please myself,” rejoined Miss Lennox. “I was tired of the water; it made my eyes ache; and the sun was very warm. I am quite content to be here.” The reason of this was obvious; for Beltran, making what he considered a still bolder stroke, had contrived, by turning down a shady out-of-the-way path, to lose sight of the duke and Lady Rayner. He found a pretty seat for Beatrix under the close drooping branches of an old cedar tree, and after a short absence brought her some strawberries. “This is like being in a green, silent city,” he said. “How beautiful this old cedar is!”
. “Yes, Miss Lennox, I like this Fairyland of ours,” he said. “So do I,” said Beatrix. “It will seem quite strange to go out into the garish light of day.” “People do as they like in Fairyland,” remarked Mr. Carew. “I am going to be very presumptuous; but you have perfect command over me—you can kill me with a frown if you will, you can frighten me so terribly with one cold look that I should never have the courage to speak to you again.” “I do not think that I shall ever try to frighten you,” said Beatrix. “You have not yet heard my •request. Miss Lennox. As 1 sit here, the odor of those roses you are wearing comes to me like a message—a sweet message full of hope, full of promise. lam going to ask you if you will give me one—just one—the little one with the green leaves, which just touches the white lace you wear. Will you?” “Yes,” she replied. Her face burned like flame as she unfastened it and gave it to him. He looked up at her suddenly. “Have you ever given any one a flower before?” he asked. “No,” she replied simply. “Then I shall treasure this one,” he said. “Miss Lennox, here is a lovely little leaf —kiss it, will you?” She took the flower from his hands and did as he requested. “I did not think that I might presume so much,” he said. “You are not angry with me, Miss Lennox?” “Why should I be angry?” “But it is the first you have ever given,” he said; “that makes it priceless.” Beatrix smiled and answered: “I think we had better go back to ev•rrdav lite again, Mr. Carew.”
CHAPTER XVI. Peter Lennox hud left the arrangements for a dinner party to lus niece, and “Prince Charlie’s” daughter had not acted with her usual transparent candor. "Write out a list, Trixie," her uncle had said. “You know who should meet those learned men far better than I do;” and Beatrix made out a list which included Lady Rayner and excluded the Duke of Heathland. Mr. Lennox had not noticed the omission, nor did he think of his grace of Heathland until the morning of the dinner party, nnd then it was too late to rectify the oversight. “Why, Beatrix,” he said, with a face of dismay; “we have not asked the duke!” “No, uncle, we have not,” she acknowledged. “But why did you forget, Beatrix?” he asked, somewhat surprised. “I intrusted all to you.” “I did not forget the duke, uncle; but I thought that for once we might reully do without him.” I’eter Lennox looked at his niece—he could not understand her. “I should have thought that seeing him here would have been a great pleasure to you,” he said; “but then I never did comprehend or understand women, and I never shall.” “I am not a woman, uncle," she rejoined; “I am a girl.” Miss Lennox went early into the drawing room. She wanted to be there before any of the guests arrived. She felt an unaccountable shyness at the thought of meeting Beltran again. She longed and yet feared to see him! She was impatient for his coming, and yet wished to run away when he did come. She hoped he would never talk to her in that strange way again, yet she garnered each word in her heart. She sat looking at some photographs and talking to Lady Lennox, yet all the time was listening intently for his footstep. She would have detected it 'amongst a thousand. Presently his name was announced, and the proud face of “Prince Charlie's” daughter burned with deepest crimson; then she grew deadly pale, so pale that she was fain to hide it for a few momenta over the photographs, until she fancied it had regained its natural color. Very quickly, however, she rose with her usual proud, careless grace, with the harmonious movement peculiar to her, nnd returned his greeting. She raised her fair face to his, but the dark eyes were dropped, and did not meet his own. During the evening Beltran was very attentive to Lady Lennox, who had a sincere liking for him. Fortune favored him—he took Beatrix down to dinner; and ICvirry osr glvan his attention to them, he would have seen how very secondary a matter dinner wus to Beatrix and Beltran Carew. The scientific gentlemen had to leave early—they were due at a conversazione at some hall—and several other gentlemen, Peter Lennox included, left with them. Lady Rayner had to be present at a ball given by one of her husband’s relatives. The party dwindled until Beltran remained alone with Lady Lennox and Beatrix. Lady Lennox looked fatigued. “You are tired, mamma,” laughed Beatrix. “It is of no use looking amiable, and saying that you are not tired. Those scientific friends of Uncle Peter’s have kept your mind on the stretch for hours. Y'ou have entertained them well, and you shall rest.” In hcr caressing, loving fashion she made her mother lie down upon a couch. She ordered a cup of tea for her, and found her an amusing book. “My dear,” said the gentle lady, “you make me quite ashamed. What will Mr. Carew-think?” “Never mind Mr. Carew, mamma,” laughed Beatrix. “He makes quite as much fuss with his own mother." It was a pleasant home-scene—the placid lady on the couch, her affectionate daughter anxiously solicitous for her comfort; the handsome man, so tenderly attentive; the room all golden in the light of the pearly lamps. Beltran read for them for some minutes, and then Beatrix looked up at him with her finger on her lips. “Mamma is asleep,” she whispered. She drew the lace shawl round her face and head. “I need not excuse her to you, knowing that you love your own mother so well. My dear mother is not very strong; she needs much care. She has had great sorrow in her life.” They sat quite silent for some few minutes—perhaps the same thought was flitting through the mind of both, that it was a home-scene. Then Beatrix looked up at him. "This is dull for you,” she said. Lady Lennox stirred, and Beatrix held up her finger in warning. “If we must talk,” she whispered, “we must leave mamma. Come out on the balcony and watch the moon rise.” She took up a rose-colored scarf of Lady Lennox’s and wrapped it round her shoulders; and then, drawing aside the white lace bangings, they went out on to the balcony together. “What a sweet summer night!” said Beltran. “Tell me about the ■ summer nights on Loch Narn.” They talked so happily, so easily, as though they had known each other for years. Beatrix forgot her shyness. She only remembered how clever he was, how like everything she had dreamed that was noble and gifted in man. After a time she asked him about his profession, and he spoke, of it to her in a simple frankhearted fashion that delighted her. Once she gathered a spray of jasmine that lay near her hand. “How beautiful the color of that leaf is!” she said; and he bent over her to look at it.
The fragrance from the scarlet rose in her dress reached him. He could not account for the madness that seized him; he bent his head and kissed the white hand that held the spray of jasmine. She did not rebuke him; that appeared somewhat strange to him. The little hand trembled for a minute in his clasp, and then lay still. He dared not trust himself to speak; all the hot, passionate words that seemed to surge from his heart to his lips were driven back relentlessly; so tempted, so sorely tempted was he to clasp her in his arm® for one moment. The
impulse was ■trong; he trembled as he resisted it Just then there was a sound in the room. “Mamma is awake,” said Beatrix. He bent over her and whispered hurriedly: “Tell me, when and where shall I meet you again? Be kind to me. The time is approaching when it will not be so easy to see you.” "We shall be at the opera to-morrow evening," she said. “You can come to our box.” In another moment Lady Lennox drew aside the white lace hangings and looked out with a smile. “What considerate children!” she said. “I ought to offer many apologies to you, Mr. Carew; but you are so kind that I think I need not utter them.” They bade each other a cordial goodnight; but, when Beltran said good-night to Beatrix, he did it with a heightened color. Miss Lennox stood quite silent; the dark eyes did not meet his, but her little hand rested for a minute in his warm grasp. If Lady Lennox had been one degree keener, that “good-night” must have told its own story.
CHAPTER XVII. Beltran saw Beatrix at the opera the next evening, where she sat with the Duchess of Elmslie in that lady’s box. But the presence of the Duke of Heathland, who was also there, prevented any tender intimacies. On the following evening one of Beltran’s professional acquaintances—a persevering, stolid young barrister of the Temple--said to him: “I saw you at the opera last night; that was the beautiful Miss Lennox you were with. I saw the Duke of Heathland, too. Are you taken captive, Beltran ?” “1 have the greatest admiration for Miss Lennox,” he replied, haughtily. "Take my advice and let it be nothing more than admiration,” said the other. “I was afraid it had gone further than that; and with the golden prospect of success that lies before you there could be no greater evil for you, my dear boy, than an unhappy love.” "There is nd thought about love,” declared Beltran, haughtily. “Even if there were, I do not see why it must be unhappy.” "But I do,” opposed his friend. "Miss Lennox is heiress of Erceldean; she is the niece and heiress of a millionaire. You have nothing but whut you earn by your own industry. There is no similarity between such lots. The world will say strange things of you if you appear as the admirer of a great heiress.” Beltran Carew sat in his room alone that night. Hd had never thought so long or so seriously in his life before. The few careless words that his fellow barrister had spoken had pierced his inmost heart. For the first time he realized the difference in the social position of Miss Lennox and himself, and saw plainly whgt the world would think of him—how the world would judge and calumniate him. She was the heiress of a millionaire, he was a barrister struggling at the commencement of his career. “1 wish I could make her a princess or a duchess,” he said. "For the first time in my life I envy the rich man his title and his wealth. »I would fain be a prince —I would fain have a dukedom.” Then he thought to himself that, after all, the grandest honors, noblest titles, were those a man won for himself. Ah, if he could but win them! “So I can,” he mused, and he stretched out his strong hands as he threw the hair back from his brow—“l have the strength and the energy; but then I could not ask her to spend the best years of her sweet life waiting for me. It would not be fair, it would not be just—l cannot do it.” There rm. only one thing for him to do, but he decided upon going to see his mother before he did it. (To be continued.)
USEFUL DOGS.
Perform Many Service, for the Miner* in Frozen Alaska. Dogs liave suddenly become more valuable than horses In this sectloin of the Northwest. This state of affairs results from the great and growing demand for doge to be used Ln hauling sledges In the Yukon country, Alaska. While thousands of horses for which their owners cannot get $3 a head are roaming over the plains of Eastern Washington and Oregon, good-sized dogs are twinging from sls to S3O each In the local market. At Juneau their value Is double what it is here, and on the Yukon River a good dog brings from SIOO to $l5O. To the Yukon miner the dog has become what the reindeer is to the Laplander and the pony to the cowboys of Texas and Mexico—a beast of service and a most valuable one. Every steamer sailing for Alaska for three months past has borne northward several dozen dogs destined for service in front of heavily laden sledges. They are taken by boat to Dyea, at the bead of salt water navigation, and there put Into harness to assist In hauling outfits and supplies over the Ciiilkoot i»ss and down the farther slope to the series of fresh water lakes forming the headwaters of the Yukon’s tributaries. Up to May, when the ice breaks up, dog teams slide over the smooth surface of the lakes with surprising rapidity, considering the loads they liaul. There are portagee to be made around, dangerous rapids, and here again their services are Invaluable. Arriving at the central posts, such as Forty Mlle or Circle City, both men and dogs take a rest. In most cases the dogs are put Into harness again for the trip to the diggings. The sledge dogs are too valuable not to be well taken care of where that is possible. Their owners’ first thought in this respect is to obtain plenty of food for them. Their food consists principally of fish, usually salmon, caught In the Yukon River by the natives. An ordinary dog will eat daily two pounds of dried salmon, which equals seven pounds of fresh fish. At Forty Mlle last winter dried salmon sold at from 20 to 50 cents a pound, and bacon that was fit only for dogs to eat. sold for 37% cents a pound. In some of the larger camps on the Yukon dog boarding-houses have been established, where the animals are properly cared for at from $6 to sls a month, according to tbe season and the price of dog food.—Forest and Stream.
He Was Ready.
A truthful and humorous explanation of success Is given in this little dialogue from Puck: Isaaesteln—Veil, you vosn’t oud ven Fortune knocked at your door. Cohenetein—Mein friehdt, she didn’t has to knock at all. I vos holdin’ der door open valtln’ for her. When you pray don’t forget those who treat you despltefully.
Venom Inhaled with the Air,
And Imbibed with tbe rater of a malarious locality, baa still a certain antidote. Experience sanctions conddence In Hostetter's Stomach Bitters as a preventive of this scourge. All over this continent and In the tropics tt has proved Itself a certain means of defense, and an eradicant of Intermittent and remittent fevers, and otber forma of mlaama-born disease. Nor Is It less effective for kidney troubles, constipation, rheumatism and nervousness.
India's Big Towns.
India has 2,035 towns with an aggregate population of 27,251,176, about one-tenth of the total population. Of these towns twenty-eight have over 100,000 Inhabitants, forty-eight more than 50,000, and 556 more over 10,000. The largest are Bombay, 821,764; Calcutta, 771,144; Madras, 452,518; Hyderabad, 415,080; Lucknow, 273*028; Benares, 210,467; Delhi, 192,579; Mandalay, 188,815; Cawnpore, 188,712; Bangalore, 186,300; Rangoon, 183,324; Lahore, 176,854; Allahabad, 175,246.
Try Grain-O! Try Grain-O!
Ask your grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-0, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink without injury as well as the adult All who try it like it GRAIN-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha and Java, but it is made from pure grains, and die most delicate stomach receives It without distress. Onefourth of the price of coffee. 15c and 25c per package, sold by all grocers. The armor of the fourteenth century was so heavy that a fallen knight could not rise without assistance. My doctor said I would die, but Piao's Cure for Consumption cured me.—Amos Kclner, Cherry Valley, 111., Nov. 23, '95. When a man begins to raise tbe devil he always lowers himself. Mrs. Winslow's SonrHisa Hvsur for Childrsn testbins i sottena tbe turns, reduces inflammation, ellaya pain, cures wind voile. SS cents a bottle.
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1997 COLUMBIAS and HARTFOROS THE THE SHIHE OFF IE OTHER WHIES Enamel that wears and does not wear out—that is Columbia / f enamel. It gives that lustrous, // lasting and unequalled beauty to // \\ Columbia and Hartford bicycles. Our secret process gives us this \\ A // advantage. ■ \\ ByjTumbias STANDARD OF THE WOULD. $75 to all alike. 1896 Columblas, »60. Hartlords,*so, *45, *4O, *3O POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. If Columbia! are not properly represented tn your vicinity, let us know. Carrie. You wouldn’t think I would give Ripans Tabules to a child like Charlie, would you? Elsie. No, indeed. He could not swallow one, and it would be too powerful. Carrie. They are all right for him. Of course, he don’t need ona very often, and I used to give him a quarter of a one, afterwards half, but now he takes a whole one and they seem to be just what he needs—once in a while, you know—not often. Elsie. And he swallows it without any fuss ? Carrie. Yes. He don t mind it at all—but I can’t swallow one, though. I’m the only member of this family that don’t take Ripans Tabules.
Harvest Excursions! AUG 1 AND 17 10 t,,e Fann redans auu. O AINU »•» of the West. NorthCCnT 1 A Ain '7l we, l *hd Southwest, otr I, I ANU Zl, Round trip ticket ; win r i tn be sold on dates named OCT. 5 AND 19, •»»•'o.. b & ’ tlons and at many Eas tern points at about half fare, goad for 21 days. Stopover allowed on going passage. Ask your local ag>nt for particulars. GO WEST AND L' OK FOR A HOME. A handsome Illustrated pamphlet desc ibiug NEBRASKA sent tree on application to P. S. EUBTIB, Genl P»sa. Agt. C„ B. & Q. K. R., Chicago.
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«CURE YOURSELF! J &h»?? e ,r lD fo fl ;ase mtatioDs or ulcsrationg if in ucO u l mem hr a n«a. Painless, and cot astria- , gent or poisonous. Sold by Drogriitt. or sent in plain wrappar. ... ms® —- Vi ..y —,i.; in c. N. U. » No. 36 -in WHEN WRITING tu advertisers PLEASE SAI '' yea uw tbs atfrcrtbeneat la thia pafcr.
