Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1894 — Page 5

THE IXDTAXA STATE XTT.Nr,, TVEDNESIUT MORSTXG, AUGUST 22, 1S91.

THE MAN FROM GRIMSBY.

' Cfthercld folks of the bleak little seaport, Andrew Copley dwells most vividly r my memory. Aa prosperity is gauged bt t'ort fct. Bed e, Andrew the owner. -of t'cena' half-dozen fully equipped fishing I macks was accounted a prosperous man. i recall him now his kindly face, tanned Lnd netted; hi wrinkles; his long hair, grizzled thla many a day: his stubbly gray beard ibis llijhi-blue eyes.bespectacled tor reading yes, ther he mta. Many is Iba ''crack" I have had with him; yet Jtherö was one story he chose to leave '"buried in silence and thAt. his own. 1 .hever dared broach the topic, albeit I lntivardly burned wltU impatient curiosity. One day, however, the history became tnine unsolicited. Some remark I chanced 'to let slip anent his lifelong bachelorhood ca.used an infrequent far-away look to fettle upon his eyes. "We were walking up th.9 steep, cobble-paved "street" at (the time, paet the limewaBhed front of the 'Trawlers' Inn." to the higher "ground, 'iTrom which the old Norman church tower 5cept ward over the slumberous village. "Why ha'e I never married, say ye?" old man exclaimed, after a long spell f f fcllence. "Like enow, ye'll hear afore long: an' I don't pee wh.t should stop me rfro' tcllir.' ye mysen, if so be " HurJrledly stepping into the roadway. Anulrew whipped off his broad-brimmed hat land stood motionless. Turning int" the (sanded. Ian that 7.lz-?a jrgcd past the 'church, we hud well-nlsh Jostled two lJiv-p:iced women, the younjrer of them about lifty years of re; the elder, twenty years or so n!dr. It was the latter that attracted my marked r-vrard. for it V.us toward hr that Andrew held his down-l-nt head. A wan, frail-looklr. .creature she was dr--sod in black, with A close-fUtin.. oU-fasM-med bonnet tied tinder her ohm in a b..w . f broad b'.a'k ribbon. Ilr nair. sn. ;hel evenly up -a Jit f.rehr-d. s.-.lmmei.d silvery as the r.ew-ehtinieil fo-ui. i.i t.a-- b..y. She moved italtlnjly, even hli ihr aid of an oaken ptaff and the ht .pin;; arm of her com- i pardon.. V ithdrawi v.u; t-r aim. she paused in Iho pathway an 1 p..;r.!vl her sti- k ib- ward the i.;iie-i. eded . Id fisherman. In ; thin, quav.-i iiiK to.,...-, if tti- worus were said oy r .'.t. m.n- beim; no vchetienre in h.r iu.vU.ii. e. she trkJ: "Ali, : 2 knaw yc- I k ;aw ye. Lau vi , fr nu Spvakir. rrv ic,:." i;h ;;o roere pa.v ?ion than if -he .v.-.v r . .-. .tie. i :n .? oul-If-'s formula. oe u.hi.-d: "I'lirc ye. Andrew 0;-..y: It o..s a lie! Curse ye for't" "Come awa'. the other woman pat in tvaxinly; "come tl ee aw.V home, then." Unresisting:, the old !.."- allowed her- ' pelf to l-e i-d .iv..-.. Tu. aas-'', it all. A.ifirew did n.; s;d , : m , l,L; .-;."h! tlv?re With doffed hat. h-. h... .1 a".d his ; tnane .f rr.y r;u:.;;;, in tNe r-e::e. V.'e had lofi the rhu.vn ,)'i..:ul. ti; . u ieih'ätted lane. ti:t- a.;;: ,.vv -ton Jüle that ka-ve upon the ile'.d.s. we i.a. irav.-ised fco,!f the n-..K'.ii of the in: a low.- Ir.eintelves '. -f v. h- -.t, '. -Ye asked nie tow V.'.., I n -ver in ur! r":." said he . l;ov. I--, --'i US his TV-! ' If 1 s.dra ltun. i. -utter. v: l:i'Tt ;-. ii -s r,v, r tt late;- i.. tet it f..- ; We 1.:;; n is Ii;.- ! -i.jl." :i uj n h.s li.t-s;iry. I'it e- ."lii.i i e li.n to f !', -w o his e.:aei . 4ipl., wiil hl- .; i- ns r. n.l i.-; i. .'es. : :i '''. ni Ii:i;t . I" t.n.u. aid, t i:- !.. " ..! -t." s.f.v tit to : ie;l fj.-t.- v Iii, i lMii ' ".i; r 'ri i. i r, i venure to : ? ;Ti r rny w n !'.;. i 1 il. '..i.ii a fail ..wi-o-n tury. i'ort , v .c I.z i. ih'.e jr s.-.it ; r iff nef -aalst'::p. 1 !-;' d Cotta- , J .lani-d at th.- i ot tno s!'-.ii,'::"tliiir uisj .in :.',! v Vi it i-' i .-.: w:; .' .rt'i li :er imiTverreo:s has displacd or rebui.t i.. st ' i th v:- .-ne-storii-d dwHlint;:-', and rilled : n the s:ai--. tut the o:d "Trawlers Inn" O'.k.s ss ii lo.k-'l fifty years hr... ' It l' b,a-i some te:i pa-es from the foa. ..y. Iii' srin'.r'jd f.;n-e thus obaintd r-'mz hichly favm-t ' of b.unxer : knd rss!;s. The .served an i.iential purpose' h i far baek us the oide.-t A little k.iot of fisher-folk, men and 'omen, foje,- thvred thre one Wednesday morning, to await the arrival of the Morperlrnl letter-carrier. Twice a V.eek, on "tfineday.s and Sa'iurdayts, he XruJiTl the ten mil-- to deliver hi bleaker pa'ka?e of letters. lie always raade his way first to the "Trawler.," bhere it had income customary for the bopulace Uiose who did not expect letters alike with those who did to assemble nd waylay him. In that manner lhe canny souls got news from the outfide world without being put to the expense of a postal fee, whilf the official vn his part was quit of his letters all the pooner. On this particular morning, . owe ver, the eajety of the frroup was under echpse. They talked together in hushed torua, full of concern, every now tind thtn referring a question to the tronzed, middle-aged seaman in their fiiidst. "An ye're sure ye've got the rights ' t, Jake?" queried a bip-faced woman, vhose skimpy petticoats showed her am- ' de brogues and bhapelew ankles, "it'll all f las if she hears o t." "Oh, I'm noan mista'en not me." anwerel th eaman posrriveiy. "I seed i!m mysen i' (Jriindby not three days ack, an' I eard it read out i church ;he second time o' axin' it were last Sunday." "Poor m.ild pir maid! An hr fewitin' fr him her as patient an' lovin fcs onybody could wish. Ah, them men Hthem mch!" ' Whilj th frowsy oM crone was shaking her gray locks over the ierf;dy of Jnanklnd, s.ie tole a fidt-1 ng bxik toward the window-bt-nch, against which jtnlrew Copley thn a well-set-up i öung fell jw of four-aiid-tw nty was ;odi!y leaning. "Ay. but he takes on badly wi t." f'.e said, Jorklng her head in Andrew's irectlon. "I'm main sorry for him, too. Jie al'aya were sweet on her, ye knaw. In' I do believe she'd a had him If that :an fro Orimsby hadn't come this .ay wi' his pert, weel-favore3 face." 1'uther tattle wns nipped short by the fcrpearaneu of the letter-bag. In all there must have been close to a dozen J --iters a goodly batch for Port St. '..-de. It was one of the last which thf ifstmaäter held arlant to catch the fijrht. "Miss Kellett!" he called out .h-ezily. "Why, that miin be Hilda." exclaimed cne of the bystanders. "Slie isn't here, ye'll ha'e to take It up to the house." "I'll save ye the walk," said Andrew, ;pi.ping forward. "I'm bound that way to' 1 11 see she Rets it." "Ion't tell her o the goings-on o' that primsby chap," cried the fishwife betvT'i rnention-d. "It'll drive her clean ilaft. (!nseience sake, Audrey, don't Xell her tint." During the period we are dealing with Jducatloti at Port St. Bede was at Ivoefully low ebb. Not twenty people In the whole th.rp could write their jiames or n-eugnize them wht-n penned; few could fad anything but "print;" rwr still were able to puzzle out Written characters. Among this community Andrew Coj ley was reckoned a 'fine sfholird;" and by virtu of that eputation his servb-ew were In frequent lemand by tho v.ho, having passing te-d of the 'i'arnlng," (ham ed to be In the bad books of the i-fctor or the Wesleyan minister. With tli "gammer" Injunctions f, fholng In his ears. Andrew strode lulrkly toward the eottaT M-curi-I bv Hilda. Kflbtt and her widowed in,.il,..r"M is.-4 K'-llett, p..rt St. l!de," said he, J furtively scannings the superserlptlon. ( 'It'.j from that S'-amp, as I live. An' j row belike she ll ha'e me to r 'ud It to i her." Sliw-kefiiiig his puce, he added i grimly: ".Shall I tell't to her shall I? J Jt'li kill her, say th-y. an' they're right ', It will." II.- f liiff.d lhe letter into- hi. Jacket J ljJtAi x-4 Lcfvir hm can abreuat faf .

the cottage. Rapping- a tattoo on the door, M lifted the latch and as was the custom walked straight in. A slim, fair-haired girl peeied into the room from a side door. "Oh, It's you, Andrew," she said, coming forward. "Ay, it's rne. I cam Just to ask how your mother Is today." "She'a a pleoe better this morn; but she rested ill last night. Nellie an' nio sat up wi her most all night; but sh's dropped off asleep now. Tak' a chair, Andrew." Andrew perched hlmsela on the edge of the nearest rush-bottomed chiir and fumbled hesitatingly with hi3 cap between his knees. "I was down by the Trawlers when the letters came," he said, after a strained interval. "There was one for ye. Hilda, an" I made free to say I'd bring it. Here 'tis." "For me!" and Hilda's eyes brightened as she stretched out her hand. "Then it's fro' Ben, isn't it, Andrew?" "It's tfce Grimsby mark," replied Andrew shortly. "Then it must be fro' Ben. He said he'd let me know as soon as the brlj got back to Grirrusby. An' how 1 trembled for him all through that storm o' Monday. Hut he's safe this shows he's safe, Andrew." A plaintive look of alarm crept. Into her blue eyes as Andrew, never answering, kept his gaze clamped to the floor. "This shows he'a safe!" she repeated quaverlngiy. "I'll tell ye straight out. Hilda, what they were sayln' over at Morperland yestcrdiy. P'r'aps that letter may contradict it all. but there was a d?al o' n.i'ty tnlk about the Vampire as how she'd gae doon i the " "lte:.d it to nrV cried Hilda, thrusting the missive Into his hand. "Ye knaw i can't mysen. Head it, Andrew!" Taking firm grip of his lips. Andrew opened the letter and glanced at the signature. "It's noan fro' him." he t'.d. "It s wrote by Peter Worsley, the skipper o' the Vamrire." "Not from Hen!" exclaimed Hilda tremulously. "He Isn't, he isn't .lead?" Andrew nodded. "Drownded!" he murmured huskily. Clutching at her throat, Hilda sank in. a a chair and hid her face in h?r palms. Presently she laoked up. her lips pallid, her eyelids scarlet. "I can bear It now, A-drew," she said. "Read it all to me." Ti- epigraphy of th? Vampir?'. master must have been nil but Illegible, Judging f:':n the difficulty Andrew had in deep ;eiing it. He read slowly, humming r.n ! hawing through the whole epistle. Here is the gist r.f it. In the recent lv ivy gales, the Vampire a crazy undern;rr.i1 timber-ship had sprung a V ik, h.-r erew N-i-ig eventually compelled to alup'l in the foundering vessel and take to the 1 !-g-boat. Their parlous ease was litte- bettered thereby, for twice the boat hoi b--n capsize.!; wlien she was righied tr s - n 1 time, only fair of the sailors sücre-dcü in scrambling into her. Of the .w men missing, the mate, Ben Webb. was one. The survivors were pk ked up nn the following day and landed at Gri.T.sby. It was In fy'lir.m -nt of a pit m ole a: the outset of their peril, &.:d in fateful anticipation of its outcome, that Capt. Wor-ley now broke the sad i-ew.-; to the dad man's svve;hetrt. Kven in the lntesity of her grief, Hilda had thought of her mother's murh-ne,-d d sh;n;ber. and not a cry escaped her lips. Andrew, the big. c'.um.-ey. softhearted gj.neral. raw that n sympathy of his could soothe her distress; sa- must ju t "fret hr dole" And so he left her with her sonow. ' "I had to do it," he muttered, striding' beachwarJ. "An it's better that ner fot'utr it's better." Fervently he add:-d: "; 1 set1d she doe.-.n't let anybody e.se read It!" He mi?ht h?ve been at peace on that s u e. 7o Hil l the s kipper's 1-v.ter Wra-? as the last woids of her dr wned lover a saerel thing, n l lightly to be iirg-rcd or spoken of; .he packed It away v?th the sundrj" ribbons, gl ves and hea; g. vgaws Iten had given her, I" he treasured with them thraughout this srle of time. They who bet know the Port St. P.ede folk will le.at accuse them of want of heart. Out of sheer mercy for the girl they avoided all allusion to Pen Webb; and on her side, Hild kept her woe to herself. The blow was for her shoulders iA n;e, and she b"re Its smart bravely. Besides, she and her mother had to live; the net makinjr ami mending must be attended to, even trvuTh the heart may aehe and the1 eyes blister with un.shed tears. So two yean went by. Then, her mother having been laid to her last rest under the gnarled elms in the churchyard. Hilda went to live with her -ister, Abel Maxen, the cooper's wife. At this Juncture, hoping that time had salved" her wound. Andrew Copley male bold to offer her all an honest man can offer the omni he loves hLs name, his home, his big steadfast heart. His insight was at fault, ft.r she would have none of them. In all simplicity, she told him that her love lay dead with him who alept in the deep sea; she chose to share the lot of no man to whom she could not give herself heartil-, wholly. "I knaw ye like me. Andrew," she said, frankly; "I've aj'ays knawn it, on' I thank you. If ever I come to think f that other way. an If I see ye're i' the same mind still. I'll speak first. Don't ask me any more, Andrew: I'll speak first." Henceforth, as before, they were friends close, firm frimds but no further. Season after season Andrew sailed off in his yawl for the white-fining on the Dogger, returning each time with brain aflame for the sight. of her. And she met him with a mere smile and handshake, in her eyes no token of change, no glimmer of awakening affection. Eight years thus lumbered away eight weary. Joyless years and neither Hilda nor Andrew had sought to break through their part of silence. About this time Hilda was sore :rlcken with typhoid, then rife In the village, and for an anxious space she dwelt on the very borderline of here and hereafter. On Andrew's persuasion he staking his word that the great man's fees should be forthcoming Abel called In Dr. Ratcbff of Morperland, under whose car Hilda slowly began to mend. It was while Andrew was away at the Banks the doctor's comforting assurances for company that the truth stripped itself before Hilda, to torture and afflict her with its mocking ghastllness. As yet she was not able, to leave her bed, but lay there with pinched face, her hair tangled on the pillow, her thin blue fingers twitching Idly at the garish patchwork quilt, her eyes wandering to the half-open lattice through which was borne the distant sough of the waves, and whence she could see their sunflecked crests far out yond the Fork rocks. Then she would turn to answer some question put to her by her llttla niece, Mary Abel's eldest daughter, "rising ten" who had crept Into the sickroom. Presently the little maid fell to babbling, childlike, of the doing and sayings of her school friends. "Ay. but ye'll be gettln' a fine scholard. Mary," said Hilda. "It was a guid thing for the waens when f parson opened a school. I wish it had been done long sin'." v "It was our "xam'natlon today," replied Mary, eager with fresh news. "Mr. Harvey heard me read an' patted me o th head. Out of a newspaper hard words thy was, too." "An maybe ye can read wrltln', Mary?" "Oh. ye." returned she. nowise disposed to lUttle her attainments. "When you ret any letters, Aunt Hilda, I'll read them all through lo you every word. I'm sure I could." "Well, I'm goln to try ye," said Hilda fcmlllngly. "Now, open lhat drawerno; Lie se-oiid one an bring the little black box to m. Yes. that is It." Tenderly picking out the finery with which the box was filled, Hilda placed the variou artlcle by her tdde on lh bed. Underneath, untouched flnce that diy, lay the very letter which had told her IU sad tale through Andrew's mouth. "Now, what name's that?" said she, pointing to the signature. Mary screwed her eyes Into beads,

hr.ng her head fapintly on rnv side, and spelled the words under hr hrer.tn. "H-e-n. Ben; W-e-b-b, Webb." sh announced at last with a rLag of triumph. "It's main lad writin', but " "No, no!" tried Hilda, rising excitedly uron her elbow. "Not B-n not Ben Webb. Are you sure, Mary?" "B-e-n; W-e-b-b, Webb," repeated her nlve. Hilda sent up a choking cry. "He said It came fro Capt. Worsley," she ejtcu-lat-d gaspingly. "He lied to me. Tt's fro Ben fro' Ben. Ben isn't dead!" Her whole frame, atremble she turned to Mary with: "Begin at the first. Read it all to me. Can ye? can ye?" Mary at all events was willing to try, and although she blundered often and piinfully under the task, between them they managed to piece the words into sense. "Dear Hilda," it ran, "I didn't mean to say a word, but I can't do it without telling you first. Don't hate me, fnr I old love you, and do, more nor .har. Anyways, you can't say I didn't tell you all about Polly Barclay how we was to be mirried. and how it was br.dv? -.ft. Well, me and her have made it up rgain. Her uncle's dead, and left her everything his three houses and f4ö0 in the bank. You see. I didn't have a free hand, so you can't blame me. Besides, there's Andy Copley only too glad to have you; and the banns has been read twice i.i Grimsby church. I think thin?? are best left alone, and no fuss mid", espeial as I don't ask the present oack. nor " Mary had plodded through her letter so far, when Hilda, with a loud hriek. dTopped back upon her pillow. Abel and his wife hastened up-stairs to find her again sitting up in bed. round-eyed, and gestulating with clenched dsts. "1 might ha won hiim back I would h'." she cried shrilly. "A lie, Andrt w C 'plcy! It was a lie!" In this fashion she raved all through the n.irht and long into the next djy. Dr. Kadvdift'e. paid it was brain fever; and although he eventually brought her hick to b"d:iy health, her mind never recovered Ks sanity.

Poor Hilda! She knows not that for the bread she eats, for the :-h dter- a love her head, for the very clothes u; n her back, she is beholden to the.ma:i whom she, for forty years past, has daily execrated. "She never sees me but she throws them awfu' words i my fa.-e," said Andrew to me. "I thowt I wer? actio' for t' best when I did as did I thowt so truly." "I suppose you have r.ever met this B?n Webb since?" "Oh, but I ha'e. I wnt to Orinv-by o purposo to spoil hi.-? beauty, if ne's livin' now. he's livin' wi the m-e o him all askew1. That prank e:n me a week o' jail, but I'd stand a hundred years o' lock-up for the comfort that job gave me." Chamber's Journal. i.n ;kmk ( HAHTiuirsn. The pHinoni Cordial Made 1 (Uo Carthusian 31oiiUm in Friinee. Chartreuse, or Le (."Jrande Chartreuse, as It is called to distinguish it f'-.-m other establishments of the Carthu.-ian order of monks, says the New York World, Is situated In a cuplike valley 4, COS feet above sea-level, amid a group of chalky mountain near da-noble, in France. It was found ed in 10-4, but the first convent was not built till fifty years later. Rnd most of the present edifice is but little over two hundred years in age. The rtreat of the m. nks is extrrnviy difficult of access, and few visitors care to climb up to their eyrie. For centuries the holy fathers were undisturbed, i ut the revolution was r.o respecbT of persons or proprietory ii;hts. In 1T!.1 the domain Chartreuse was dechved confiscated to the state, and th monks were srt into exile. Frnee. however, allowed them to return in 1M6 to the monastery and to have 'ho ie e if thtir buildings and rlht of pasiuraco iynvnt of a nominal rent, but the snlndld forests, chiefly the results of the careful selection and cultivation of their predecessors, were not restored to the brethren. At their laboratories, r.o3r whl-h they also have a saw-mill, some fnrges. and a fine dairy fa to. the nio-k- -mn-ifac--ture various pharmaceutical preparations thit have a large sale in Fr.m-e. t'nou?h but little known In this ,tntry for instance, an -flixir vltae and a mineral salve, called Boule d'Acler. besides, of course, a vas: quantity of ihe rich resinous cordial which bears their honored name. The monk3 are famous far and mar for their active ' benevolence. The sals of their cordial go to the establishment of churches, schools and hospital. in the neighboring vil! iges, so th it anyone who drinks a tasse of Chartreuse may Justly fee! that he Is helping indirectly la constant work of philantrophy and human brotherhood. Their elixir is considered a valuable antidote to fevers, and during the passage of the Asiatic cholera over France it was extremely valuable In checking the ravages of the dread disease. The chemical composition of all the things made by these monks has been kept a profound secret, but it is known that Into the manufacture of their delicate liquors, carnations, absinthium and the young buds of the pine tree enter largely. The nearest railway - station to the monasiry Is Voiron, a pretty little town of 18.000 Inhabitants, on the Lyons and t'renoble line. Here the monks have th-Mr commercial and shipping establishment. Their elixir, famous for Its st. .mach soothing virtues a few drops in many cases will cure seasickness instantly and" their Boule d'Acler, which, c ntp.lns Iron In a soluble form Joined with certain herbs, thej- have made for centuries, but their famous cordial Is an invention of this age, and has only been on the market about seventy years. There are several grades of It, differing In color and strength, but only two have found favor In th's country. Hubert Ilrnwnl ntf'a Ttimh, The stone that marks the resting place of Robert llrownlng in Westminster abbey will shortly be replaced by a beautiful piece of Italian alabaster, carve with the Kngllsh roe and the Florentine lily Interlaced. Mr. Barrett Browning hns furnlahed the design, which is being wrought In Florence. The name of the poet a.nd the dnte of Ma birth and death will be the only Inscription on the alabaster. Asolo, the beautiful city, that is the netting of "1'lppa Passes." an which was the lirst Italian town Mr. iirownlng vlaited In his youth. Is now the headquarters of a lace manufacture and school start e.1 by Mr. Barrett Browning In memory of his father. It had been the dream of the poet to see A solo once more a busy center of the sllk-weavlng Industry, as It was when he first law It. A la-rge n:lk factory at n. few mliea distant mactv th realisation of his dream impossible, and to bring back the stir of activity In the homesteads of the hamlet among the hills, the poet's on ha-a organized and ttartl thla lace manufaoture. Ivondon Dully News. Arreat of Decay In Deep Sen Wnler. Burial at iiea 1 repellent to many minds on account of the generally accepted la that the body is Invariably mutilated by the denizens of the deep. Capt. Maury propouni'.a a rea-ssnring theory tlmt put an entirely, new light on the subject. After a aeries of special Investigations he found that at certain depths cay la praetlr-nlly arreted, and he maintains that all corpses which have been committed to the deep In blue waters, with weights attachei, nre now standing on the bottom with their lineaments and features as perfect as they were on the y whereon their cmradea rast them over the ship's side. Chicago Times. Where Women Iral. In hi grvful Introduction to "A Flrut Book In l-lngllsh" Mr. Maxwell sayx: "Women are more successful than men In teaching young children. A laimiiHge book for children should have the e'.u-uey of touch. th Keen appreciation of children's like and dislikes, the Intuitive H-nse of what a rhl! can and cannot do. which only a woman p(wiwi'." o Hurry. My love Is waiting at the gate. And long has tarried; What care 1? -Wist let her wait We're married! Cleveland Plain Dealer. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder World't Fair Highest Medal and Diploma.

WOMAN AND HER . HOME.

somk i;.vmim.i:s miowixg now to ITILIZi: TALK. NTS. Meats That Are DanRerons Domes le Life in Ter la A IlNhy'n Inffnent-e .n in nn I ntiib Boom I'n rlor tonvernation Iii Value of Fan. This is certainly the day of utilizing one's talent, whatever it may be. A woman who lives in another city found herself, after twenty years of happy sheltered married life, a widow with twe daughters, sixteen and eighteen, ro make a home for, and n income so small as to be scarcely worth mentioning. The elder daughter was delicate, and the youngeT had two years of her college course to complete. To meet the crisi3 and tldover an Interval which would give one child health and the other education confronted the mother. For a time she saw no way to pursue. Then a clear-headed friend came to her one day for a talk over affairs. "Now, Isabel." she b-gan. "I know your liabilities, what are your assets? I mean besides your little income. What can you do absolutely well?" "I've a general knowledge of many things." was Isabel's discouraged reply, "but the only thing I can do absolutely w 11," and her laugh was mirthless, "is ti make over oil clothes. You know I've always had a great aptitude at that for rhe girls and myself." "To be sure vou have, and I. believe you can do that now," came the prompt answer to astonish Isabel. Further talks followed, and in the end the friend persuaded her companion that something could be done with this talent. The beginning that spring was small and merely among her circle oi wr.ikhy friends. She did not actually make over the old clothes, but spent a morning or a day with the family seamstress, .-artfully inspecting accumulated materials and suggesting designs and ( ombinat i ms which permitted the cor.tinu d use of dresses and fabrics. She charged by the day, and her rate wa-n-ot low. but she saved it often a dozen times over to her patrons. The autumn siw h r clientele increased, and now, ; fter three yeais, she is busy nine m-n:hs of the year at pood prices. Before o.ivr women embark in the same occupation it must be understood that this woman ha.-? little short of gejiim fir her unique calling. It is a positive .ensure to see her at her practice, for she .io.-ostly styles herself doctor of robes, and certainly her skill and deftm.ss are closely allied to the surgeon w ho fus and restores humanity's broken b.'ii.- and displaced anatomy. She is shown a line Paris dress bodice of black satin, whose sleeves have vanished, and of whose skirt is left a single straight breadth. She looks them ovei trf tic-ally. "Have you any velvet or fignred heavysilk or silk and wool cloth or any h-trd-some black novelty material?" she asks. A piece of frise velvet is found which will do f r full sleeve tops with some other cuffs and leave two or three straight piece."". Then the odds and ends trimming box is looked over and a few detached jet ornaments and some black le.ee jire found. The waist is fitted, the Ion postilion l ack carefully opened and presse! and 1-ft !r. hang. The pieces of the frlse velvet are set on for skirt fronts and h:p pieces joined by jars of tlie bh" k s:itin skirt breadth. The jet ornam. nt are put on the waist and at critical points on the hin skirts. Puffs of lace laid over white silk and a collar to match are made, and the end is a costume jacket of imported elegant e that looks as if it might have cost $100 and did not cost a penny beyond the seamstress's time find the designer's suggestion, as the lack silk lining in this case was produced from a discarded coat. If sonirhinr extra is needed, she can tell to the shade, quality and fraction of measur-. merit what it must be. And her customers are no longer confined to th.1 wealthy. Persons in moderate circuin-stnn.-es realize ther their need of her is oi:?'ta as creat. Did spice permit, the recital of hr-r nitiiiy triumphs in evlovlmr h Worth gown from the family ratrbaer would be mot Interesting. Her work Is carried on quietly, her patrons advertising her from one to another, and h-r cxcell nt social iosItion. which has und mhtrdly much rl-ded her. has naver been in the, lea.si impaired. N Y. Times-M-nti That Are lliinifrrnnn. Animal foods are not generally conducive to good color or fine complexion. Milk, eggs, butter and cheese are exceptions. Meat once a day 1s a sufficiency for nil children, and for all women who prefer the spiritual to the sensual type of b-auty. The school of vegetarians may not be famous for its Venuses and Apollos, but it is not a large contributor to the freak museum". Many meats are positively dangerous. For instance, only giant constitutions have the muscular ability to digest fresh pork. Undigested it Is a fruitful source of dyspepsia,- tuberculosis, scrofula, gastric fever, nervousness, and. In fact, all the diseases resulting from inflammation of the gastric system. Fresh pork is not a safe food for any woman to eat unless she runs a ranch, a steamboat, a farm or is engaged In some equally active pursuit necessitating outdoor life and muscular exertion. Even ham and bacon of the choicest "cure" need the purification of fire. Veal Is another bad meat unless cooked to shreds, and rare mutton Is under suspicion. While beef is the most nutritious of meats properly served. It is often so badly served as to uselessly tax the digestive oigans. Much of the hash Is no better than stewed brown paper, nnd the fried steak and corned beef of the average home dinner wuild do the consumer far more good In the garbage box. Foods that fill the stomach and foods that feed or nourish it nre not the same. The value of the ment Is In the Juice, and nothing else counts. That Is why th trained nursery maids who get $s0 i month to keep infant heirs of complicated estates from dying, and so annulling lep-al documents, never allow the tots to swallow a morsel of coarse meat, as beef nnd mutton nre called. There Is more nutriment In a piece of broiled steak the size of a spvol of thread than In a five-pound piece of pickled Jfnd smoked beef. N. Y. Letter. Domestic l.lfe In Persia. Whatever society each sex enjoys must be exclusively with members of its own sex. Women nny give entertainments or visit. Men may d the same. But on all such occAsrns only one sex Is represented. The Interchange of visits among Persian ladles is attended by an etiquette similar to that practiced by the men, with somewhat more attention perhaps to serving and urging the guests to eat fruits and confectionery.' But, except among women of the highest rank, who have private baths ntti'hed to their residences, the most Imposant social factor among Persian women Is the public bath. There they assemble with their children, and after bathing and having their Krtg tressen dyed with henna ninl J,illed In lorn; braids,, which are good for several days, they gather In groups, making the exquisite embroidery for which they are famus and exchanging the gossip of the neighborhHd. Thus they plan the marriages of tln-lr children, retail the news they have hid fr m their husbands irtid learn what Is going on In the world, nddlng to the means which they ftoKsen In no less degree than their I'liropean st-derw for Influencing the m'l nvn b r.-t of their households and nw.aylng the affairs of the naTbe who think that the seclusion of oriental women reculls In diminution of their influences labor under a great mis

take. If anything, this seclusion sharpens their wits and quickens their talent for intrigue and the-execution of deep laid designs, and the num i;re like putty in their hands. Occasionally a Persian husband, in a sudden paroxysm of rage e.r restive under a petticoat rule, nviy temporarily rebel and ig rou.j!y as. ert himself, but he Is s.on reduced to subjection again, and fa'r woman r sorn.es her sway. Half the civil wars of Persia have been due to the women. Christian Register. . A IlnhyVlk.fi uence. A pretiey story is lold of a baby's infuiance over fallen women in a Puss! in jail. Th? Jailer was Col. V., and he and his wife had Just arrived to take charge of a large prison in one of the central provinces. The colonel was a terrible dis -1plinarian, but a kind enough man In his way. His wife was a gentle little enthusiast, who had made up her mind to reform all the women pris mors. This particular jail had a very bd reputation, and the women espev-ially were often in mutiny. Col. V. got along famously with the men, but the women were too much for him, and he meditated flogging and all sorts of terrible measures. Once Mme. V. took a walk through the prison yard when the women were exercising. Behind her walked a nurse, with her baby. The prisoners, as fvn as th' y git sight of the baby, flacked around, and Mme. V.. at first fearirg violence, was relieved to see that only habyolatry was the matter. First one and then another of the women begged to hold lhe chill a moment. Some laughed with Joy, and many shed tears. Mme. V. had a happy thought, and ahe spoke it out. "The best conducted woman of you all at the end of the week will b-3 allowed to tend the baby for half an hour." Never was a change so instantaneously wr ught. The women becim amenable to every word of the warders and at the week's eid It was with the utmost dilliculty that Mme. V. could decide, among: so many well-conducted prisoners, whl-h had the best claim to the promis d reward. The baby's visits were afterward freouent. and the women's wards weie completely reformed. Ab to I'ntldy Room. Many of us know the girl who, hastening to class or lecture, leaves at home an untidied room, open lidd- d boxes, bureau suggestive of compressed earthquake, bookcase doors swinging in imminent risk of demolition, who litters halls and vestibule with discarded gloves and crumpled memoranda, whose belongs are distributed Indiscriminately ;hr H'.gh every room, regardless of ownership. She evidently "waits to h-lp," but Is she preparing herself for the prospective service? Many of us know the patient mother, who moves along in the track of this household hurrie-ane to remove the de'hris. rearrange the surroundings, cl we a box, .-mooth a glove, clear stand and table of encumbrances and m i'c fast the -door that endangers the previous volumes It is supposed to guard as well as the physical safety of some junior member of the famiiv. I like to teil young people of a simp'e rule thit my m e a -r enforced, the helpfulness of which it took me years to r -il-ize. "Never leave a room without nothing whejher there is not something, there which belongs -or is likely to be nee1?d in another part of tlv house and will eventually hve to be carried th-re." It is astonishing how rirely you find yourself goirg f:-ji;i room to rwin cmplyhanded if you observe tl.i- rule, and how many ste,.s you sive som-body who neds to have steps saved. N. Y. Commercial. Parlor ('iinversnl ion. Mme. de Tjirnrdin has given in a humorous way very g - l ce-ipes for t -or. creation: "First of all. Llv? quality of the talkers; FK on 'Iy. th- hp-m my .' f th ir nrl-d -. and., -thirdly, a propitious aira::vLiner.t of the furniture. An amusing conversation." she says, "cannot start if the chairs : re arrang-d syinaie-.viciny. The di-position, of a drawing room must be like that' i f an Kngli.di garden app iro:u disorder, which is not the efUit of chance, but, on the contrary, of consummate at;, the result of fortunate comoinations. I:i a. symmetrically furuUhtd drawing ro...n it is only at the en 1 of the evenmg. when the ft fc.,;ture his against Its will yielded to the necessities of .-o,-ie;y. tii.it enjoyment begins. Y )U just bea;iii to amu-e your.-elf when i: b-voiiu-s mves.-ary to take leave. "And remember," she adds. "that good talkers h.ne idleness; the most witty men hardly kn -w- whit to s. y when they ceremoniously hold th ir hat.s in their hand. Tii.'.v niii?t he.ve some valuable thing to finger and help, them keep countenance dainty scds3-v "r penknife, a golden chain, a jeweled smelling bottle. The m:e you rcattei trilies and bauble in your sal m the bss nonsense there will be in conversad ot. But before anything," she recommends, "let yourself go. Do not think of yourself. Forget the taient you may have." Century. The Value nt n Van. "When we were children," remark -d a delightful old -latfy, who carried her seventy years with aristocratic grace, "the little girls were always taught io carry a fan when they went into the drawing-room. 'Always carry yur fan, my df-ar," was my mother's last injunction when I went ouf. 'It will keep you from -ieeling awkward and looking conscious,' and I have often thought what an excellent fashion it wa- an i w hat a pity It is th.it the importance of the f..n had so greatly de.reased. In my day to min.ige a fan properly was considered a distinct a-cvompllshmert. To unfurl It slowly and mnjeMkally as a Juno might, to flutter it vivaciously, to wave It languidly, to open and shut it meditatively all this w" were expected to learn by instinct and observation. "' 'With a fan you need never look ill at ease," we.s another of my mother's maxims, and we girls quickly found out the truth of this for ourselves, and I tell my g:andd tuithters that they lose a goodly wr'.tpon when they leave liieir fans at home or consider them merely as an adjunct f their toilets, in use merely to cool their h-alcd faces." N. Y. Tribune. The Bicycle f orj Woiiirn, The use of t lie bicycle by girls and women, says Dr. F.. J. Sern of Chicago, will be a great factor in keeping American womanhood from physical degeneration. Bicycle riding combines both pleasure and exercise, and the female sex 1s not naturally im-limd to indulge In. exercise without a corresponding amount of pleasure; hence the success of the bicycle as a health producer. As a general rule, the bicycle Is most used Jiy the class of people who nt-'l it legist that Is, the ml.ldl" (lass of the female sex, who usually have ample exercise without bicycle riding. It Is the wealthy woman, surround d by luxuries, who should give up her victoria and substitute the wheel, at leaM tor an hour or two each day, and then we would mote nearly approach the ideal Greek woman of old than the weakling of today. Pone of Hie l-'eet. What to do with one's hands has been considered a sort of test of ease of manner, but foot etiquette is nowadays a distinctly recognized topic of th"i physical cnlturlst'n curriculum. CrosstWl feet are n"t only Inelegant but weaken- the ankles. Tip tilted feet are Indiscreet, and toes or heels twisted upon their ruVgs are not to be tolerated. Straight on the ground, Wfll b iuatli the shadow of the skirt anil In an easy nitur.il position. Is the pone for feet that ore not in walking use. A VniMlerltlK I'nrlor. A delightful room In Mrs. William II. Vanderhllt's grcit min-don Is the Japinse parlor. Toe celling Is of hämo picked out with red, green anil yell-.A-lacquer wcuk. A low tomd tapestry of

Japanese velvet In curious design covers the walls and furniture. The lower part of the walls is hidden by a fantastic cabinet, with Innumerable pigeonholes, shelves and cupboards. At various points are bronze pan. Is, picked out in gold and silver. N. Y. News.

Hint Abant the Corset. Now, If a corset Is laced every time It is put on. it will give the best satisfaction. The corset must adapt itself to th waist for fit and form. The house drs'-s are always looser than any cthr, and. corresponding ease In th? corset 13 conductive to comfort and appearance. Said a skillful woman who only makes corsets for private customers: "When the trim Ftreet suit or th smart evening dress is put on. It is rhe work of a moment to draw the laces tight at the belt and loose top and bottom for a small waist, full hips and fuller busc. J and tie tiiem in front, with the knot urder the skirt hok, Thi; is the way the French demoiselles get their exquisite figures." Paris Letter. Miss Fashion. The very word . "fashion" was the nam-1 of an English dressmaker of the last century, who was quite as celebrated in her day as Worth has been In ours. Miss Fashion lived in Hanover square, London, a square noted then as now for Its court dressmakers. Miss Fashion, on account of her celebrity, was soon called only Fashion, muh as the great Parisian authority Is with us called only Worth, not Mr. Worth. Miss Fashion's taste, skill and reputation were so great that every dress of taste end elegance was called fashion. "That's Fashion" meant the no plus ultra of taste. From "Fashion" to "the fashion" the step was short. Wall Dressing. A bare wall Is better than one blotched with daubs. Many pictures that hang In family parlors would lok well In the woodshed. Unless a portrait has artistic merit or exquisite beauty it should bhung In th? hall or privat room, races "lost to sight, to memory dear." are too ricred to pe gared at by the selfish, critical crowd. It Is go i judgment to hang marine, acquatic anl Held pieces !o.f. Oceans, rivers and meadows are s-Mom peen shove ground. One fine engraving or good etching is rive to be prized than four square miles of gilded, paint spattered canvas. Singing ns n l'rophj Incite. Dr. Rush used to affirm that one reason why the Gorman mtloa were so little predisposed to consumption was be;aus they were so musical a race. lie contended that there is nothing better for warding off passible disease of the lunga than the exercise of pinging. With thl in mind it may be weil for parents of little ones who seem far from strong In rfais direction to insist upon the cultivation of their voice.-, regardless of any particular talent for shining. It will not only V? apossible a.-c mi o ishmen t . but It may be a preventive of figure disaster. I.n eo Im the I-'itlry Vnnil. A simple way of turning a plain handkerchief into, a handsome one Is to sew very narrow lace around the equally narrow hem. The sole requisite is tht the center should b' suitably fine and the trimming -of a good quality. Then one hrs a very diinty addition to one's wardreöe. Th 2re are m t unobjectionable irritations of lace n-w that might be levied upon for the purpose. The I)n-s Album. A dress album lies a value beyond the mere caprice of its ov.io-r. It is a large j blank book, into which H pasted twoinch squares of every new gown which the compiler buys. The date of its fir,t n-.ci r!n rr lk t. .j f. 1 . 1 -ti.l oa Itc -r.tt f j usually add-d in a oi,h.r. it offers a j tHboi.it-! presentment f ounparative I economy wnicn snouct oe rceu-!. m ruoTi'itivrs in ti-:.s. The Truil of rrehlxtorle Animals 1'oiiikI In Hip RoeUn. T-i th P.ilo r-jro c.riyon. lyirc n- rth of he.-e. the haeklr-ff away of a-lers-e plee of -alluvial eor-la h:s recently revealed a singular trace cf prehistoric life. It cons!: of Lhe unmistable tra il of some larjre animal poiuur over th rook, f 1loved by another, probably of the human kind, but at av.y rat-1 of a pic.mtlc speei-m-m of tiie ape. That it is ti.e former is more likely, as th- monkey tribe, except In the smallest families, la n -t to be found on this continent or in South America. The f!:t animal, judemsr from the narks it left in the then impressionable rovk, was of the reptile family, for Its tail, soft underneath, though. wHphed with scales sufficiently to make it heavy enousrh to drag1 an inch and a half deep, left a brood, smooth trench, while th (laws by which it assisted iteelf were cf the true alligator type, weboed between. These clitvs were nearly five Inches ion? a:.d were evi i ititly Intended to aid the. creature in climbing o:i kind. as Its webbed membrane served It for swinv.nir.s in water. li-at more curious ar the markj of the cnimal whiih pursue.1 It. Thee are of ttvo hands, nearly three times the size of the ordinary man's hand, and those of two active fec-t. b nh hands and feet possesir? five members, though all of equal length except tli thumb. This, while shorter, is yet 1 aiper in proportion by J.a'if an Inch than Is founo- in man of today. It was also of unusual strength, pinking much deeper than the rest of the hand into whateer it seized upon. The mils are curved and very powerful, those of th? feet b-Mnir particularly so, grainingthe rock firmly. Another sirifrular thiriff in eonnecüon with tr.e remaiiLs is th. .position of the marks. They are carved in a r n k stan 1ilivf nearly perpendicular to the bed f the atioient rivtT, feet bt low, and whi -la must once have b?rtn as wide as the .Mi.;Kissippl. and of a current sufficieratly stron. to hive cut its way through these granite rocks. This position f the remains would indicate that the reptile, swarming up from the stream, was pursued by the oiher animal and probablykilled n land. This part of the countryis pronounced by gealotrists to be among the most ancient formations of the continent. The rock on which those marks are to be found are abut one hundred and fifty f .'ot below the surface of the earth, and is only to be reached by one swinging over the side of the precipice. They were disc ov.'ted by an amateur geologist of this locality, who, n:tiii? the fall of the soil, went down in th hope of adding to the rii-tti antediluvian spoils this singular rtu.-ün has yielded. I Master ca.:s have hen taken of the prints and will be forwarded to the state mi cum at Austin. Th marks are plainly visible from a ledge k. me lifty f.t down the tdde of the canyon, and from here have lcon viewed by all In this section Interest"! la su -h nutters Texas Letter to rhlladelphla. Times. The scrofulous taint which may have been In your blood for years, may be thoroughly expelled by Riving Hood's Karsaparilla a trial. Mi's. Tut nam, Furristdalc, Mass., says : "That Feeling and dizzy, faint, paspln ill lacks I. ft ns soon ni be an lo take l.ttliti I'. 'iuk on V-;ctabli ( 'oinpouii.!. 1 a:u like one raised from th dead. I was sick with womb trouble fco long 1 thought i never could get wcli

.T-eV 1

n m tu FC3 IKIEF.KÜL VD EXTtHSAL USE. Pain Cured in An Instant

Let Itudrray's Heady Relief be u.ed n th Drat Indication of I'alu or I n -eaoines. If threatened with Pl-eu-i-or Siekne, the Cure will be made before the fjtinlly 1 oe tor would ordinarily reach the house. CL'RICR THE "VVOIiST PAINS In fro-n one to twenty ralr.ut". Not one har'fc.ftcr retdng th - 1 . erUfccmttit :ieed any one SL'FFtili WITH ACHES and PAINS of Itheuniatinra pt Neuralgin. - - of llcadftche. of Toothache.) of Sclutlca. of bumbngn. of It r ul e v F.A.:asrs v( Darm, Trtan1r t?pi the most rxcrJc't'ny i psuns, ailuyg In.Tan:motlv,-n an! eures tVr.- j gMtlon. whether of te Iyjr.js, bt' nacH, Hiwels, or other glands or o:t"ans, by c-n application. No matter how violent or exerueiatlnr rain the nheumat.c, Ijel-nai-n. li-.t'm. Crippled. Nervous, Neuralgic protri.ti W.ta illseas? may safir. IK an iiv. IK in K.v "iL. Hi 111 El WILL AFFORD INSTANT RELIEF. Cites of rr.osq-.rito tnd iinir of Insects -j rajred hr:uit-ia by j..j!of .y !tdw; y ) Kea!y Reiu-f. It liri re ed .:. ii'-JtriJ j tl.e pnlioa and prevents futUivr ui.rafort. j For luternal am Well um Lxlcrnxl Cite. A CURE FOR ALL Summer GGüiplsints. 0YSESTE3T, CIAHHKtEJ, CHOLERA MORBUS. A half to f toaspo-i'l of It-ady Relief In a half tum bic- of water, r i -at-l us r ften as rb d ohircftt c Tt oi , ii 1 a flannel saturated w.th it-i;y It -I cf : ...iced ov-r th- t-t-pi.-o-h fid .. w.i e rd immediate re.:ef and soon "-ct a core. I at -rn.i'ly, a hilf t :: ir i -) ; al .a h''f a t:;:;ii: r'of wat will In f -v m'.-it-s I care Cramp-. i-:pe. -tii.--. t :r '-C"". o"'i. Na;.sa, o.r.:t:r. i -art burn. N--a ; s -;. S ee;.ie.-aef. S eit lleaaihe, l"-a ti-ler.cy and all internal pa a-s. lalnria In It V-irloui I";rms fnrrd lauil l'r-'iitt'(l. Th-re Is not a r mcüal nert it? th-? e..rli that will cur f r." " "'1 i'! ott.er inTiar"''a. b'n .. ni l oth fvers. a'ded bv It alway's IM.s, s qui-kly ai ItRdwav's lb t ly V.'.';. Travelers fii -nl 1 a'.way. rarrv a lottl- of R'iwav' Kea ly !,:-; w'.-h t!-ein. A f;-vr lr ops in Wiit'r Wo, prevent f . ::-r r- cr pains frcm -h-in.2eof wa.r. It : bc-r-r th.-m Freu h brandy or Letters a- a stlmal:nt. Trice To per bottle. Sold by II si Sarsapariliinn . ItL-iwiU! .Vilrlt is the only pos tive eure f jT Kidney nnd Illadder t'oniplnlnts, t'rnary and HVIn Il!"?w. Ornv.fl, D'.mbeUS. "Drop-y. Moppte of Wat-ü". lne-.a-t'nence of brin iirght's Ibe-ae, Acj;aniuuria, and iu nil Ce th.-re tf bi.c-K tiukl ae'jue.irt. tae w'r i U..C.. c-oiidy, mixci w.ih ia'iUii.'w i i:. vhite of an e?g, or thread i ke -.v- xe or there Is a m.6rb!l da-K. bilious t vj a.raace and white botie-di.l dep,;ts. n-l when there Is a pnkir, bumin tlon wheu pa-s.ir: wter aid i.a la th small of the baci and alonto- the ktns. Mi In, lJle-. H iiDuiri und Korea. There is in remedy that will cur tb su-Terer of .a!t Hheum, Kinc or: a. Erye'o.las St. Anthoöy'f I .re. Tmers. Fifh. I'unp.Ws. r.lotches. fr.okly Heat. Ach ani ;Vre I'lcers Boils, Humors of ed kinlm. mdek a- the" SARÄAPAIULiUAN Kl üObVKNT. lt it b? tr'l. The Slont Kconomlral! The Urn ft v.unller I)a.e Thun Oilier mrjipirillun lint Mure Conceit t ra tea. On bottle conUins nnre of th activ principle of me.lic.ne than any oih-r prep. aration. Taken in teasp.onlul does. wn.I otjiern reon.ie live or s v ume u.s much. Sold by druK'isis. l'rice ft. für wiJ y'J xs'-a ü Ü ü8 PBLLS ALWAYS RELIABLE. PURELY VEGETÄ3LE. Perfectly st'-'eF. -lrnt1v Nated. purve, rertilte. t.nrilv. ..p, ni trnethen. liadway's 1'i'ls tor tre cure of nil d-orers of the r't'-mach. U.wf.s, Kidney-. i::aid-r. Nüvens I' -e-oees, iJzn-ne.H.-., Vertjso. Cost: venev. KK UK lOACIIi:. 1'IIM l.i: COMPI.AIVTM. IllLDlSMlf, IM(ilTIO. DYSPIIIMV. fOSTIPATIO, And mil DISIUlllllIlS uf f..e LIVEIU Oheerve the foll.wlre fyirptom-t resaltln from d-seasi-H of ti ii-ettive ot-pans-(.nt ipe t Ion, Inward p.!--. faliio-tts of b,..i In th lo-aj, an 1 ly of the si.mii'-h. iuuci, hearibura. d.-ii;jM ir foxl. fti.'.n-?.' r weht of Cie st.cu1"''. sour cruet ailoni, n'nl; nvr or tbittel-m ; of Iii l--srt, ch-e-i.Pir er sutf -ci t !n ir xciiMtionm w h-n In a l.n posture, deiiiie-s of vision, .tot or wi bc'or-r the svht, fevr and biii pa n In the head. d.-Uc'.Miey of "-r i - t : ei. v'Wtioi of to.? sk n nnd eyes. ti i-i m (l.c . f,e-t, limb-', im.l MiikK-a lbflo-M .1 hi-dt, buriiitiif in Ihn A few d .-es of It AI WAY'S TILLS w II free the system of hII the a !ve-namf 1 d.s-o'-der. Price m per bot. koll by Dniftulai r neu I Ii) hihi I. Sen t to ld. U.MVAV r-i, Iek 11. x 4 EU New Yolk, Ivt Ujvk. of Advice,