Marshall County Independent, Volume 5, Number 44, Plymouth, Marshall County, 13 October 1899 — Page 6
CHAPTER XVI.-(Continued.) "Jlarsuprite, my darlinz. my sair.t eay you forsive ne! Think what I feel this numeric. We are parting you and I. And that aieans death! Won't you forgive me?" "Yes, I will! I forgive you." she returned tremblingly. "Heaven forbid I d:ould be hard-hearted to you. indeedindeed I forgive." "Then." he said, "give me your hand." She gave it and he pressed It to his Hps. "Good-by. beloved." he said. touching it wi:h as tender a reverence S3 If it had Leen the hand of the dead. Hut he lingered to ask her the question " are yen goin? hack to I.Dndon?" "Yes." "You have hired a fly to take you to the Ftaticn?" No." ' You can never walk It." I must try." lie went dose to her. Ycu must let me help you " "Sol Oh. no!" "Then I sha'i not believe that I am forgiven. Let rc take jcu to the vilüse. I know where to set a fly there, and I will scs you safe into tne train. Vcu cannot deny me that; you will not j te unforgiving? I ewrar I will not FI?rak a word to vox jcti; bat oh. my own love. let me do this for you! Don't i ciave rr.e mad." "Yes," she answered, "you may take me. I-I feel very stranjje and weak. I don't think I could wjik. Will you please take care of rue?" She took a few stops forward, hut the effort to nuite made her turn deadly yj'.e. She had Lota through too mucn that r. y. Valdane paw the change in her fare, ard dantd forward. The next moment she was lying senseless in hii CHATTLH XVII. Lady Mildred wen: down stairs into the drawing room thru nfeht. a tunm't ' cf feeling contending in h:r heart. :
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WITH KI3 HANDS BEHIND HIM VALDA.Nj; SAf.vn; I ::!) YV XD VOW'S.
AW day htd Valdane absented hlm-clf, and she cculd not understand it. It muat be Jialoiiiy, of course that clear; but was it pi.-sible that she had gone too far, and alienate ! where fli had but Meant to Incite? Sho ; Atd round the rcooi as she entered in search of him. He was not there that fact just turned the soale against Lit. Lady Mildred v. as not going to endure even the suspicion of being jilted. "That settles the matter," ?ho said to herself. "Bernard Selwyn shall prctose to r:e tonight, and I will accept him." l ater la the evening- Lord Vmrravill brought her a telegram frora the c'efaulter. "Called to town cn bulnp-s-very forry. Please make my nji'i'oga.-:. Will return tomorrow if I may." IIi3 lordship would have !.! ! ti t elegrarr. with more emotion 1:1 he known that it secored twenty thousand a year to the Uir.fravill f sf itf-. Late that night li.-u-nard. v te.iiy pat at the open window nf hi a b. !i ;;on:. He had broken faith with the girl v. !-) loved and trusted hi?'i: he had y-oV. - ! to temptation and wac now engu'c l to Lady Mildred. The ma ! iri'unph of the hour was over; in the darknrss and stillness his nn.liwt looked very Tile. Kot only was he bitterly ashamed, but he was alarim d. What were likely to be the consequences of this act? Should Lady Mildred once discover that, at the time of h!3 propping tr her. he was in hf.nor bound to another woman well, his imagination ras scarcely vhid enough to picture what might happen. He really believed himself to be in h,'e with Lidy Mildred. Difference In rank hnd weighed very little: but for the moment the swayed bis emotions completely, and Marguerite seemed ns nothing beside her. He only felt hot that, with Lady Mildred for his wife, he might fulfil all the gnlden dreams which he h; 1 form d ühice hi sudden acquisition to wealth. He tried to rr-uale hires" that Marguerite would not have been hippy with him. that it was truer kindness to confess this before marriage than to cling to an engagement on Yhich his heart was no longer cnicred. IJesIden he was not engnged V? Marguerit? she always said so. Had rot her last words to him been, "Remember you are free?" Ah, but had
he not, in return, hold her to his heart and vowed that he was her F'.ave? It was a humiliating position, and he writhed under it, but determined to put off the evil cay or confession. While Bernard was thinking thus at Clarisdale. Martineau th? irresistible. Martineau the hearil ess, for whom his stately cousin was suffering all the pangs of jealousy, was pacing the dreary length cf a street in K.ist London. It was a very warm night the atmosphere in that crowded district was almost fetid. Now and then screaming and discordant laughter broke the silence, as various denizens of the neighborhood reeled Lome to their teds after the night's carouse. With hU hands behind him. Valdane paunttreJ up and down, heedless cf these interruptions. Hi3 face was very pale; he had no cigar to console him in his solitude. He seemed like one who neither knew nor tared whither he went, only his sunken eyes were fixed upon an upper window iu the doctor's hou-e a window where a Iisht was burning. To and fro he walked, while still the candle burned steadily on through the night. He knew that in that bedroom the woman who owned all his heart v. as suffering the cruelest agony, and that he was the cause of it. and he could not help her in any way could not mitigate one pang. The self-abasement which he suffered then was the salvation of Valdane Martineau. lie acknowledged to bis inner self without reserve that he had sinned, and his whole being was filled with a deep longing to aton. Her window was open; the night breeze swayed the white blind. Perhaps she thought the measured tramp in the street below belonged to the night policeman on hi.-; bit. She could not know the despair and hope-ler.-ne? which filled the soul cf the m:j.n who Witched her windows, mentally taking farewell of everything which makes life glad to men, mental-
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j ly caning- down every blessing on the head of th Innocent girl who hau cuff; red so il epiy. J The dawn c;na at la.t. and ll-bfe 1 ! "P Vcl h::u -s i agg.-d fac Then i if ; SS the liivt I"d i: un): earn fell mn:i ' Marguerite' castn:t:r.t tlw. r-...i., vr,. out. It s.-rme.l i;?:f a i-r.al fv.r him to go. Xoihing v..u kf: but to drink hU t ;f hi-tniliaticn to the vtry dre-s-to -pp'ar to an astcnlshe.l wcr'd as f l!ow-co:?-pirator with ! h ,fr-!;;. ia the carrying out oS ia most juramous of pUs, and t d;sjlve the illi-it Ju!;3 Walch hound Margiu ri:o. Mtvtr.whiV a l-)!d front rr.ust be ! worn to V. world : and nn-M. r.-Mt,l ''- I'-a.-.k better th...ri Valdane Muri lie n' t day l.r tu-rrd fo riarlaI . re.; S V, :r. n v.ith a calmness j v. hir h Pi . : r i , h"r tnipor. He j . v- ij .It ..J.'J U.U. one thought Mild.ed imI M irt I u V altered. rTinfil I hat li Iii is - be suffering In v'ciet, h.if. .Üh hi f hara'!teri:-tic j pride, held l-.i-r fellpg ln elieek. Her hear y:irnd towa'-d.-i him pa.s.sionj ately. Her h"t;i'h! lover h:ni r. hard time ( f It that day. Ti;. pues:J-j rema'krd r r one mnthrr that, if Marj tinrau wa ";.wct" on bis rou.in. be j put a v ry g'.v.d face it: for ho talki fd with fjuict :: ( tn her did iwt avoid lier in the lea. and offered hH congratulations wltl'.nut any evidence of "repre-sed f Motion." Feme thiee days afler this. Valdane raw a paragraph in the papers which took him hack to London at, once. A week later Marguerite received the following letter: "Hear Mis Liibourne I h ive to announce to you that your uncle. Mr. Daniel Ilrandon, died suddenly of apoplexy In Pari. Ia.;f. week. There is no will, and. hy the nature of the entail, all his landed estates and house property revert to yon. ;is the only living biped relation. Hi affair?, I am sorry to say. are in great disorder, and quite half your fortune has been gambled away on t Ii ' stock exchange. There will be, I hope, between kIx and seven hundred a year for you when all claims are j-ettled. I have seen hi3 solicitors, and can eaj'ly prove your Identity, a3 Cathie recognized you at once that day you fainted at High Leea and wo have Mrs. Acland a3 well to
trust to. His pcor young wife takes the personalty, but I rm afraid thera will be next to nothing for her; no tlcubt your generosity will suggest it to you to make some slight provision fcr her. Mr. Brandon's solicitor will call upon you tomorrow, as 1 imagim that it will not be pleasant for you to see me. The money which I owe yo.i has been placed to ycur account at the Lank. I an: afraid that the annulling of the marriage will b? a mora lengthy Luiincsi; Liu it shall be done I promise you, as soon a3 possible. The cne thing now left for me to wish fr is that, afier so ininy years of forrow. happiness may come to you in unstinted measure, so that In years to ccme you may Icok back upon me and the injrry I did you as nothing hu: the nightmare which you ?aid it seemed the first day you came to see me In Lance Lane. I shall go abroad when all this is settled, and shall try to cross your path no mere. I can never forget your noble forgiveness the one comfort I shall carry with ma through my lonely life. With deepest respect I am most entirely yours, "Valdane Martineau." Some days afterwards he received a note from Mary Stelling, inclosing a slip of paper, the words on which were written in pencil: "Dear Sir I send you a line from Miss Lilbourr.e. who is not well enough to attend to business at all Jus: now. She has had a low nervous fever; my father thinks it is because ?he refused to leave London this autumn. Now that money is no object we hope to take her to the Riviera for the winter. Thanking you for all the trouble yo 1 have taken on her Leh.tlf, I urn. yours faithfully. Mary Steliing." The slip of paper indeed, which Valdane tarried reverently to his lips before opening, contained only a few weirds: T am not at all well I cannot attend to anything. Kindly leave the question of the marriage until you have heard again from "Marguerite." (To be continued.)
WHY SOME PCOPLE ARE CLACK It I Clitluied Th.it ':krlii; of Ctoltit Affect thf t'on; pie vlon. Why are seme raus cn thi earth darker-skinied than others? It is not altogether due to th:1 h'.:at cf the sun's rays, for many people of tropical climes arc as lialn-hud as Europeans. It lias long been known that climate alone is not iu.'Uv ient tu account for a colored people. L'ark skins are by no means confined to tae tropics; they are to be found in race cv.n beyond the temperate- zr.n. Tin's diversity, according to a writer iu t;:.e o itu American magazines, can only ! ' iiecountod for by tonsidf ring the di lerem modco of life that have acted for centuries i. pon the various c!üü.-:s ai I ear-.tes of the country. The coolie vho works in the Holds with :i strip of cotton cloth '.hont his loirs, is very dark; the merchant and trader who nrver go abroad without being thoroughly ilothed are many t'egr. ts fairer. It is s-aid that . eolonj- of Jerv oa ti e vest ct-.at cf India has b.?u tstablihcd for rarly ightien centuries, hut because they have not followed tho habits cf the peoplo as regards clothing they remain to this day a white people. On the other har.d. the Aryan populations of In ein ar.d Persia, originally a f.ur pvople, by aiioptiag the customs of these countries have le-i-c:ne in great measure a colored nice. Accordingly, it is argued that th-2 steady march vf. nature i toward th? evolution of ;i fair pei pie ail over the world. The biyr of dark pigment beneath the cuticle prevents the tkin from blistering. ;:nd v. hen p-opfr clothing rcuders this .-afegoard unnecessary rature dispeutes with altogether. Jt is glso hinted th.it rolor l;.:s Kometbing to Co with the mental and intellectual conditions- of a pt'):le, but into the: e questions the wiit'.r windy forbears to enter. FOUR COURTSHIP SUNDAYS. Kctlcw, I erisioii. I'ctreli:. sp ainl i'uf.si'sIon I:lT-. The four Sundays of November are ohserwd as feo days in Holland. They ate known by curious name,-, -- Review, Decision. Ihncbns and Pcsicislor: and all refer to mairimonial affairs, Xover.ioC.- In Holland !tein.g he month par exetllep.ce devoted to courtshi; and marriage, probably because the r.j-ricultuial occupations of th? ear r.re over, and posnibly bt-caus the lords of or :iii(;n, from rjui'e remote tiquity, have recognized the ple::sant-ie.-s of hi'ving wives to c(jo'k :tp"i catr for them during t? rng winter. On Kcview t;;:ruby cverh.dy goe to church, and nf.'-r service there is a church parade In every village. wh-T. thf youths and inaidi ns gaze upon each oth t, but forUar to s;; ck. On 1)-ci.-ion Sunday each bachelor who is Sicking a wife approaches ;i maMen of his (h(jic? with a. eeremonhms bow. and from hr maiiiu-r of responding ! judges wb.eUier bi advances are ac ceptable. Parcba-e Sunday the consent of the parents is f-nurh:, if the sr.it has pror-pnel during the week. Not tili Possesion Sunday, however, do tie1 tuain r.ppcar lefore tho world as actual or prospective brides and grooms. It l'I; rtM-y t Arnx-r. It is cnecrful to hear that perhaps we are to have the estates of Muektoss, on the Lakes cf Killarcey, Ireland, in addition to our other Aimuicau possessions, an axe manufacturer of Lansingburgh. N. V., having purchased It f-r $1 S." 000. Of t-ourie thf is a possibility that Mr. Peck and h!;? money will hiurudf be annexed to Ireland instead, but we hope that he will spend his winters in this ceuMitry, and spend his time issuing free ticket for the ensuing summer to his fellow Americans, feir the hospitalities cf the Ir.rnoci t&chauled region. Hint frmii hh A ii tlrtnrrr. At a re'eent party a young lady began a song. "The ;:utumn days have crone, ten thousand leaves are falling." She began too high. "Tea thou s-nnd " h'1 scrr.rned, ;,nd tli'n idopped. "Start her at five thousand!" cried an auctioneer who was present. To Vrenerv V:1 hnj. A picee of horse radish placed In the mouth of pickle or catchup bottles whtn putting up will prevent spoiling.
WOK WOMEN AND H0M3
ITEMS OF INTEREST FOR M A I D 3 AND MATRONS. CoMniue of Fine Wool Snltlng Tarty I'rork oT Corn Silk ChifToii 1 be SlalriinoiiiHl t'ro.n Wotuuu Frw'tui'Mtly Slalc It for JlvrseK. ICone I.catcs. 1. I re her nfyiiln as she wai tVrit ntsnt. Wicn I thought lur iuie t.s the tiraca snow; Her aims ar.d her r.ock v-re lily white, lu her hair a single jacuenunuU II. If I were a woman I m'"ht crv. 1 Lut 1 am a man and must remain da.nb. if I were a eow.nd I micM iie. And who in tii wor3 w.uM care a crumü? lit. Ited rn?e petals, cumson hued. color of love I.ove -!: n.inie I know not my more, rity me. 1k-;j) ;,ef i'n,ii c, d above, A helpless houI is at thy ioor. IV. lit es! I hate th name thry b"Tr. l.ivel Luve ji.ivo.l irie fal.-e am! he Hid me i r;; t. Jo i: she v. as tair. Can 1 fo.vti: Whiio I lice? V. i O, the tvdd io. k, the hu:s!itrr !nl. ili,- uioiid-i .J io-p, t!ir i.ii-.n'-nette. 1'ti" rhyihm of mu.-i the inadcip wal;z. t-au I fury et! Cod! Can 1 for,, el! -J. C. V. The Mftlrimnu'al t Woman often makes her own matrimonial cross. And tote hew cheerfully .she- goes about it übe cannot drive the rails fast enough tome times. The vast sea of incompatibility that so c-fter. surrounds the s-tate matrimonial, a sea fed by woman's futile and willing tears, would come to gradually melt away and disappear if women would dry their eyes and look squarely In the face the reason cf her weping. An effort spent to cultivate the gentle art of beirp agreeable as against time wasted in disagreeing is one way t. ch'ar sundry matrimonial fkies of many domestic clouds. This hint to the men as well it Is not a bad habit to contract, this habit of first Iking agreeable in your family. Tii habit once formed is found to be the best promoter of smooth matrimonial running known. Ard row why does the woman who has a m jgus üu.I iiritahle spouse ! . t t i tun- ii " , ' 1 1 1 1 iiit U. i;.iiiitr aim v.'.iy cf speaking that she is clever cn;ur-h in the first years of marriage to discover i'isron.'erts him and fa .13 the liame of his irritation? Thus giving up wiiifiilly a hatpiness she craves. Or why does me woman with a selfish bus band enter to that 1 1 L'ishntPs. until she binds he i self enti'.cly cut of he ü-beiae cf .-.uc !i a husband's life and her happiness ;.s a.-hes in htr mouth? Why decs tin- won: cm whose hu.band is easyj'oirg ami ihoughtlesss of her wishes f-: iv.io a fef.Ue v.: constant faultfinding, approving of r.othi::- that he does, in vorr.ir.g an initat.t to his xistc ik-o. j until she drives hin: and her happim ss in coaicquira e - from her? Again, why does the woman with a jealous bus- , Land that i.ffront t woirvjuhcod in untold e.-'ss g.er.i l:t.td!cyS of bis f hc;rteoiTiit:gs oi put up with the luisery that Is the outcorce of his suspicious nature? A thorough understanding between si f h a hus';-.nd and hi.-; wife cartiiut echte to a uor;. s:t; :i v. i iter ia the Drtrc.lt Fr e Press. And why d.r:s the wife who has a shiftless and lay.y husband, in nine cases out of ten. put a willing sho'ibbr to the wageearr.ing wheel and hope In this way to bold tegether the foundations of her home? To find that hc has the rather wrecked it by taking upon herself the wrong part of the domestic partnership. Need I cite more? Let us look ove r the field and pi k our way intelligently among the many .stumbling blocks whie'u have the appearance of sound timbe r; .pind 1 ss time squabbling around for nail?, gie up cross building, hovt is ell too vital a matter to Le trifled with, and time is all too short to be wasted in such employ ment. Ht.w tu l: iiMr :i li.iht Kin. .Most who have had buoy rings jin.e had trouble in rt:uovi:ig then: fr.;rn their lingers. "There is really no ri'.ccsrit j- for all this ado about removing a tight ring,' said a downtown jeweler. "In that as in everything e-;se, the secret of sucecs lies in knowing how to do It. Here is a recipe that I have found unfailing for removing a tight ring, and there is ho painful surgical o;eraTion involved, either. Thread a needle fiat in the eye, using thread that is stremg but nt too coarse. Then pat s tt e nead of the needle under thv ring. Care, of eoni.-e, must be used in this, and it ..ni!d be pest to soap the needle before beainnir.g-. Thy needle having been passed through, pull the thread ! through a few inches toward the hand --so." Ily this time the jeweler had passed the needle vnd thread under the ring on his own länger, ami was prepared to Illustrate the little lecture. "Wrap the long end cf th" thread tightly and regularly around the linger toward the nail in this manner. Then take hedd of the .short end and unwind !i so. Tbe thread, thus pressing pgalnst the ring, will gradually remove il. however tight or swollen the fnrcr." Co.lntr to IJr.f Ilnncry. J, m a ..oi.tke' to sat pote tnat it Is x.'-ver od to eat before sleeping. Many an hour of sieeplessiiess may be avoidto a.v nibbling a bis.:ult at bedtime. All eiiinwlc, except man. eat before sleeping, and there is no reason why man Fhoirld form an exception to the rule. Fanlirg bttween the Jong Interval between supper anl breakfast, ami esp Sally eo.np'.et f n:ptir.ess of the stomach during sleep, add greatly to the amount of rm o i.aton..-b eplessness and general weakness so often rue with. It Is well known that in the body there is a perpetual disintegration of tissue sleeping or waking. It Is, therefore, natural to believe that the tupply of nourishment should be somewhat continuous, especially In those in wlom the vitality Is lowered. As bodily exercise is u.?pendcd during Fleep, vi!h wear and tear correspondingly diminished, while digestion, assimilation and nutritive activity continue as usual, the food furnished during this period adds more than Is destroyed, and increased weight and Improved general vigor Is the result, says Woman's Life. If the weakly, the emaciated and the sleepless
PARTY FROCK OF
's.--Towtlered with black dots, over-yoke satin. Dark gieen velvet garniture. were to take nightly a light meal of simple, nutritious food bvfore going io bed fcr a prolonge-1 period, they would he r.o:-c J to a better standard of health. It has Teen e ;r e xrr'en -e that, after digesting a bowl of .?.ad and milk or .". i-aacer of oatre'.i b"fore .eouig to bed. for a few m.vaths. a surp: i-ing incie;!s-: in w e . str::g:h and gei i ra'. te:ae bar- rcsul'cd. 1'nr lft.lfli ami Ki intj. Mir Tncnias lawyer, an Kagiish leetuier nr.il writer, ;.-itd the f'::iowing rules for Icng life: 1. .Sk'tp t-g!it hours in each tw nty-foijr. 2. Sieep cn your rieht side, with the window open. 3. Place the bed away from the v.a!3. 4. Take a bath the temperature öf t h ü body tidily, a. Take exercise before br.;.;.f.ts!. it. ihtt br.t little nu at, well cooked. 7. Do not drink milk (fcr adults). S. L.it much grain food. 9. Avoid intoxicants. 10. Live a riiu'b as p:.ssi!le in the country. 1!. Vary your occupations. 12. Limit your ambitions. No rr.ie.s can be given tha: will apply to every c.ne. Experience and knowledge of one's eeif most be the guide- in applying these rules. l'istn:ii of FJnr Vol Suiting. vr-y ; y. s Skirt closias to cne side with pointed pattes. Short tolero jacket, tastefully appliqucd over a blouse of soft figured silk. Cfinreriib't; Headache. To attempt to banish all variations of headache by a. single "cure" uhows a childlike, faith in medicine, but very little cpmreif.n sen--e. The first rtep toward curing a headache is to lind emt which kind of a cne it is, and te devote one's energies to drive it away. The headache which results from indigestion is of frequent occurrence, and it implies 'overeating or unwise rating, and that when a woman finds herself auTietcd with such a headache she should proceed to cure it by fasting and a mi-d cathartic and sitting w.tü her feet in hot water before coin g to bed. The nervous headache Is the kind to which women are the most subjected, rays Woman's Life, as it results from the effort to make the nerves do more than they ouht to do. The first step in treating th;s headache tei drop work and worry, if possible, and drawblood from the head by soaking the feet in hot water and putting cold applications to tbe forehead and tho back of the neck. A great many mysterious headaches have their origin in overstrained eyes. This kind is cured only by giving the eyes a vacation or by an oculist. Of course, care iu the use of the eyes is a!o a help. Ucaeling.writing or sewing in a dim or Uickering light must be given up. Tue common practice of trying to real In jolting trains must also be discarded. The eyes must never be used too Ions at a time, and when there is much eye
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CORN SILK CHIFFON.
and skirt of husk green embroidered work to be dr.ne, I.-rir.f rests and bathings in hot wafr -vv ill ward off th d:e;led heatlaehe. The headaL'hft wit:: b js the result of exposure" to cold or draughts or sudden changes is best treated by hot applications, hot water hau.-, and gentl friction of the ph;ca o: i.ain. f t L Is. dr.es not banish the headache In a day, then a deeper illness is indb:-;itcd. The best way t3 treat heauae '- ',f to avoid them to refuse to overtax the eyes, tbe nerve or tho sloma-h. and lo give- attention to exercise ard bathing. OUH COOKING SCHOOL C'::i:iiii I'rult. To can peac.'us lirst select nice, ripe fruit, but rid that which has become sefc. Wash ;b :n in a pan cf cj. j water, then lay a s.oft cloth in the to:torn of another pan to lay the peaeb'-s on to drain after wadilng. Peel theu with a reasonably sharp knife, so as not to bruise them. Cut In halves and remove the pit. Place the fruit in the cans with the open side down ard put in as many as you can without mashing the fruit. Xnw make a syrup of one-half cupful of sugar to each quart of fruit and pour over the fruit whibi L is warm, and fill the cans full. Put some pb ces of thi:i boards or lath iu the bottom of a wash bailer and ret the cns upon them; then rr;t warm water enough in tbe boiler to ccm:- up a couple of inebes on the eanv, put tbe covers loosely on the cr.b.s ar.it cover the boiler tight and boil one hoar, then remove the cans from the boiler, put cn the rubber and screw thrt top on tightly. Tip tb tan dov.n on the side and turn it around, to be sure that i: is perfectly tight. If the least bit o" syrup oozes fro::: b?n'.-a1h the cover it is not light enough. If you cannot turn the eoer any tighter take sa.ne hard substance, euch as a knife ban lie, and press the edsc- of the cover down firmly onto the ruMy-r and try it again and again until riot one eirovi of syrup runs out. If the work is done thoroughly on the start you will not have the least trouble to keen fruit any length of time until it is wanted for use. get the fruit away in a box or cupboard iu a reasonably cool place. To t':n CIr.t !. Take good fresh grapes, pick them from the sterns, being careful no! t i 1 reak the skin, and ii 1 1 your cans full and rdiake them down and add n.orj if there Is room without mashing. Make a syrup the same as for the peache-s, and be sure you fill the cans full of syrup, then proceed the same as with tin? peaches, drapes canned in this way keep ibeir saape perfectly and are Jus.ious for the? table. Tha juice from this fruit when the cans are dient d is the most perfect sweet wine that can be found for invalids or con-valcse-ents, or as a most delicious s".mn:er drink when water and ice art' added. f;MtK,". Take small muskmelons and cut an oval piece out of one side: take eiut the seeds with teaspeion, and till this spate with stuffing ef chopped onion, scraped horseradish, mustard seed, cloves and whole pepper: fw ,n ,4H piece. Put in jar, pour boiling vinegar, with little salt In it, over them. Do this three times; then put in fresh vinegar; ce c r close. I'.iniinl IV?. Open can peas cms hour before cooking them and turn into a bowl. When ready for them put on In a farina kettleor one saucepan within another of hot water. If dry add cold watet to cover them, and sdew about 23 ruinutes. Drain: stir in a generous lump cf butter, pepper and salt. An l!veii Kxrlrtngv. "Will you love me when I'ci old?" she asked. "Certainly," he replied promptly, "Il you will love me when I am bald
What's in a Name?
E-veryihing, tunen you come to medicines. cA bj tmy olhcr rurr can rxi'cr cjdl Hood's, because cf tht pecxV.3.r cornbiru.iii, rropori.cn znj pro ccss by rjjhijh Hood's pcssc::cs rr.crü fccu'ij.r ft it -elf. and by Zi'tish it ewes Lvhti a.7 other mcd.c.nes ".::'. Currs SCrofuU, 5a.' rheum. d'spepsU. CJ.!ju-rK. rheumatism, tTut iircJ j'teli'ij, etc, Sitin (; nfr'I .fi IIt Arn. A skin-grafting operation was performed in Wilke.-barre, Pa.. b Dr. Sweeney on the aim of Katie Foy. which was badly injured by being crushed in a mangle at a laundry several weeks ago. The arm was tora fn,m the wri.-t nearly up to the shoulder, and the skin is gore frora all thia i-pace. The fiitren girls in the blew dry o! ,:nt.'ei ed to give p;at ef tr.elr kin tu be grafted cn the injured arm. and the firt grafting has bre n doie. Fiv cf the girls wmt to a hospital and hid pieets cf skin about the size of a penny taken frem their arms and graft 1 cn Mi.-s: Key's injured arm. Two places wen taken frem som of them ar-.i from ctb.cr.-. ;l.:e. In a day or two iwn t'.M r five will undergo ths same (;' ntti'.a and a ft. w day latr the remuii.ir.g f.vc-. 1 HEART i::SF.ASt TÜEATCD FRFE. 1 bo lin Mi at "ob-.-.- 'n--aiNt. Prank- : M. !. Lb. I. . v. ill vi,)! $?.;,0 voitii.f bi .. ii i: i: i iv.v IV-rxuial Tu-. l fi 1. any i: -ri aillictcd v it !i h art !iv:-;ts.-. ..-t l ; . .ith, paia ill t!i' si-'e. Wi'iviit im tbe 4 -liest, iireglibn" poise, pa! pi t s ootherin so-ils or lips. I.e.1' t v. imoiikiid from pi . in; o-iit r-- mis :it free. Mr. Julius Leisler. ;-..". Michigan Ave., Chie.tgo. w.-is eured f ti. w;rt form of heart ii'-i-.i and drj'vv after ten ;.:iyi.-ians bad fail.-1, Mr.V. .1. Held. of 7'. Curt is St.. (itii!'. 1 Uaphis. M.clu, after eleven physich!!- bad pri riouneed bis cas', b:-!ess. A'ldresü Tin- Dr. lYaiiklin liils Asoiiation. .lauis and Male Ss.. t hie.i jm, 111. l b- se iiK-utiou this paper. A Look sc;it J i ce. Attention is called in medical journabs to the durability of testing railway employes for ebfecthe hearing ai v.e-II as for cedur-blindn ss. A receiil e xaminaticn iu M. 'rope developed th fact that out cf eighty-two firemen and e r.gine cri t i s only three posjetsed pet feci ly i:-:r..:;i hearing. It la su?ges:.ed tint ! re slu.uid le a standaid cf hearing power for the examination of employes who have to deeaJ upoa suui'd signab-. Tli!-f,,n-':',e.it:i:r:'. -.n tV. ; '.cf'.iin t! Ihm e-ij:irv than u'.l ' h-r !.- .- :'U t."etiief Hi 1 air.il t!;- !.ist p-w j.s v... s.u iM-.l wt im-urable. I ru i.: a::y vc:irs rf---tr pro3u:" il il a O ; ' --. ui.O ;-r nbcJ l.aJ rem ;-; s a..j i- ,ü-tt: ti : v J.iihr,' to curt Hl'. i..c:;l tr ain,) r;i, pf .:;- .!.: 1 it ir.ee r:.! -Muiif ii;:s Tir.?n c:'i;in:i ;o t e-.'iiM tnti ;:sal Ci.-; s.', :oiU I :: -r- I ' . s f.:.si 1io'Kii irai"n iu. 1 bill's t VarrU Cure, n.aa a:.!fture.I b; I'. .1. 1:-!.ey c... 'i oh:.. Ohio. in t r .tiv ooiiMiimi'.n.il cure n trc t:arUe. It is l:;1;;, i l.-rr.ü ! ly i'l V'si-s f-.i.i lO'ln-TstO 3 t:iNp.'orf.-.i It :nls diie-ctiv t.p. n the- bloe4 ami m::ooi; .iirf;,cf-i t!..- svM. i-. Tl.( y t TTef .:. huüCr. ! ;;!. o s f. r -n v i-'v it fails or'ir. bv:.d tvrtirtui.irN;.!' ! t. s:h.:e!ia!v Address r. j. t p.jiNi.v ro. So!.' T.- nrvcrivls. "V. Hall's Panniv Pills uiv the b-st. Cartcrsville (Ca.) American: Recently we were shown at Pairview a chicken with four wirgs. The fcconÄ pair were cn its lees and were well developed in every partieuhrr, rxrepl they were small. It w;: a curiosity, ar:d should not have been killed, but sent to some i lace where the traveling public could have see-n it. Traveling on tho Ilurliugton Railre.ad on the way to Denver, a littla town called Atlanta, near Hastings, Nebraska, is pointed out as :t punt o! Intere.-t because ef d,.' ei in -ribs b'lllt there along the ks. Iu all th r are twei.ty-four m -p.e'.at. er b-, 12 fet wide an-1 jl' f-.a: high, v.iib a total length of .',.1'CI feet, or a distance oJ ne arly a in'" ;ui ! a piarti r. Thii vear's c norirous :- : etiiiee hiindred million busheis f. r the State of Nelr;kl,a) will !t n p.icity. Lve-yicdy trcms imP-mous in Nol.:a s!va. Nobo.iy ..!: .'.mis but tin baukeas, wini l;nI it ban' t leul tbe.f money. Isjbo.iy v..:i,t. lo InrioiV iL The eain'igs : th? Ch'c.agn Creat Wfftern Ly -.Map:.' Leaf Ho ate" for the third wr in SrTUeniiier. lS 'D. show an inere;.- of J.k747.u. Total Increase s;inc b in'ng of llsca! year (July ist) to date ;.:;.: ik Crand I)al-: Abxatul r Micha-do-vit h. lo ir tr the Lussian th:c:u, funis lii favorite- re .ie tio:i i:i tha study cf hot: r.v. 'S . if Acts gently on the Kidweys, Liver and Bowels f GANSES TH 5Y5TEM rlC EFFECTUALLY OVERCOMES .;rO 1
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HABmiALCbNSTlWW uw PERMANENTLY VT TH t GENUINE - MANT O BY (AUl?RNIAjTGSRVP. rot au by u onixwn rnu 5x Pts adink
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