Marshall County Independent, Volume 5, Number 46, Plymouth, Marshall County, 27 October 1899 — Page 6

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KITTY'S 5 v ) By Author of CHAPTER I. Five- o'clock on a July afternoon an afternoon hot everywhere, hottest O? all here in London; a dreary, shad Ik-s hous? in a diniy square; a small upstairs room half schoo'rooni. half j sitting-room; an open window, at which much dust, much sunshine and little air came in; and near the window, sitting rigidly upright in a low hrir meant for lounging my Aunt Jane, talking reasonably, mapping out mu future life for me tranquilly, but with decision. I sat and listened in silence; Ale" Ifr.nin. back against the cushions of the sha'ohy little ofa. put down her v.. vi to fi-wing in listen, too. Dora. wi:h her ' her h:!.s !s. bei-jme s.iddenly j ii!(!ont. Aunt Jar.e t::Iked i:e ir.terrupted. nd no 1 laiuv I hear her .-ti.1 her calm ;i. iinem;)! unempnat;.' tones, tn.it expresses Mia) rational sentiments man tic. exrellcnt common such unroense. When I shut my eyes tbe whole scene conies Lack to me. I am seventeen a sain, a schoolgirl stiii. ;i a little shabby, out-ai-olbows froi k. with my hand hot. my fingers ink-stained, und my open school books spread out before me; and on.-e again the fear of Aunt Jane is falling upon ;r.r like a weight. Aunt Jane made cowards of us all; Ave never dared to oppose her plans. "When she spoke decisively we were ac customed to as-cut with meekness, i And of al! Aunt Jane's household I ! was the meekest member, not because ! 1 was by n::.ure more meek than others, but h---i au.-e Fare had unkindly tied mr- and had made me a poor relation in Aunt Jar.e's house. Meg and Dora d.;red sometimes to smile deTisivciy as they carried out her tyrannical orders dared M obey her with a little ?'ir of inditTeif tu e und grand eare-Iis.-nr.-s. ftc though their obedience j was a matter of choice and their i choosing to obey were an accident; j I n! then Me-' and I ra were her sten- ! daughters r.o: hr u!e.-es: house room. I . r I? n 7 r5!'1 Sil

toS5aRii' VI.

'YOU ARE .SIRPRISEI), OF COURSE." CONTIXPEI) A TNT JANE.

food, clothing, life's mves cities and i modest luxuries were theirs bv right. I had no rights. A !o:ig list of benefit:, grudgingly giwn. borne clearly in mind by ilie giver, opp: rssed me constantly when Aiinr Jane was by. Aunt Jane nad brought us unexpected, astoni.-hir.g news that afternoon news that concerned me chiefly. John Mortimer, she told us. had been with her :-ince luncheon; he had been talkir.sr to her confidentially and most sensibly, anil had reliev d her mind of one great worry. "'For of course, Kate, you have been a worry." she exclaimed, looking at n;p ith unsmiling candor. "Your edu cation has been an ex pens?, and a ; growing girl is not dressed for nothing ! - year; and, as I have often .said, you ! rfallv have such a healthy appetite i that I sometimes dread to look at the j vfcklv bills. Not that I .vish to com plain. Your undo and I have been very good to you more than Rood dene more than our duty. I don't re- j ?ret it I don't '-omplain; still, one is Ir.und to own that you hive been an ! rf'xpfnse. Kate, and a responsibility; . end now at last one begins to sea an ' -r.d of it. John Mortimer has been talkin to me-talking most rcnsibly. He hopes by and by to relieve us '.ur responsibility." "Rut but I don't understand," I 5 a id. "You are surprised, of course." continued Aunt Jane in her quiet, even tfiip.s. "I was surprised, too, I own. It ff-rms. Kate, that he means by and by to marry you." There was a moment's pause. Meg and Dora glanced up quickly at m.with look.s half comical, half commiserating. I had nothing to say, or. rather, because I had so much to say. I could say nothing. "My dear child. puh your hair out of your eyes and sit upright!" Aunt Jane commanded. had quite, a' long talk John Mortimer and I. Of course he sympathize with us; lie l.nows that our mean3 are not unlimited, and that we have Meg and Dora to provide for; e knows all that we i ave flone for you all these years, and of course, too, he cannot help feeling that tilings would have been different if his father had acted uprightly. He fee!s most keenly all that you have suffered through his father; but he cannot do more than he means to do. He mean3 to take you off our hands as soon as possible; he is waiting to speak to you Ti!melf. He thinks he ought to wait, o he says, until you are less of a

HUSBAND

''Hetty' Etc, ' '5 child. And I must eay. Kate, that for a girl of seventeen your manner Is most foolishly, most absurdly childish. and most misleading." Another pause followed. Aunt Jane rcse from her chair and stood at the window, looking down with a disapproving glance at the dusty square and a weary little errand boy who was stated on his basket, renting. Presently, with a sigh of relief, she turned to us again. The more I think of this, the more satisfactory it seems." she declared, reflectively. "I hope you feel, Kate, how goc-d of hirn how considerate of him s j'.h an offer is! Von are such a i v ! child still; in the ordinary course of tilings you could not have expected a home i.f vom own for years to come. You muv-t have pone out as a governess that was inevitable your uncle and I could not have maintained yoa in idleness. And how mauy governesses marry. 1 wonder? Put you understand, of course, that John Mortimer was speaking to me. Kate, in confidence; you are to know nothing of the matter. He wished to say nothing to you as yet. You are to behave quite naturally, remember, but to strive to talk pleasantly and sensibly to him and j to impress upon him that you are not a child. That is why I am telling you this. If he means to propose to you. there is no reu-on in the world why he should delay doing so." "IIt? might repent of his intention, sa5,1 rora. a crave voice, but with a little smile as she looked across at me. "He thinks you too young to know your own mind." continued Aunt Jane, severely; "and no wonder he thinks you so young, when lie find.? you. as he did 1 este.'day, with your fingers in your ears, saying your Euclid aloud! ! You have such silly, childish habits. Kate, and this is not the first time I have complained of them. When I was a girl of seventeen I was as old as I am today. As for blushing like a baby, as you arc doin now, that wae a if j trick I was cured of before I left off bibs and pinafores." There, was an impressive silence. After a minute or so Aunt Jane moved to go; but she paused just opposite me and regarded me with attention, with an air of dissatisfaction. "We shall give notice for you to leave school this term." she observed, slowly; "and you can turn up your hair at once. Do see, Meg, what you can do to make her look presentable. John Mortimer is coming in this evening Kate, to ee your uncle. Put on another dress and come down stairs; and pray for once leave your schoolgir', manners behind you!" CHAPTER 1 1. A minute more and Aunt Jano was gone. The door clicked shnrtdv h. h,nil h her lrf.. ni throileh the parsuge. her steps descended the stairs; then we breathed more freely. I put my elbows on the table und covered niy e4iees with 111 hllldS and looked

IÜIÜ

across at the Irls who facfd me. and j wood, grains are prevented by a chemthe girls, following example, put their : ical used in its preparation from ab-

ell o.vs on their knees and their chins on th'ir upturned palms, and looked back at me in sileive. Suddenlv their ; h!uo v, twinkld. they glanced at ! tach oth'T, decided that the situation j was comic, and lanahed merrily, i "He's a piragon!" aid Meg. "poo J little Kitty! Wil' ou like to marry a ! paragon?" For a moment 1 had hesitated. scarce- ! Knowing whether to laugh or cry. The girls' merriment decided nie; a lump farmed to rise up in my throat; the tears filled my eyes, overflowed, and fell fast upon niv open Euclid." ' Why. Kitty- crying! You are never crying?" laughed Dora, in mock reproof. "My dear, this is base ingratitude! Reflec t let us reflect on his virtue." "Turn up your pigtail at once. Kitty." interruptfd Meg, with gravity. "The paragon objects to pigtaiis to the juvenileness of them. Let down your frock, my dear; the paragon will never think of addressing a young person who shows her heels and the holes in her etockings. Dry your eyes, Kitty, my child; take comport the paragon means to marry you." Their merriment seemed heartless; I would not answer. I clasped my hand tightly above my forehead, and gazed at the open page of my Euclid, which my tears yould not let me read. "But what does all this mean?" said Dora presently, In a musing tone. "IIa3

hp real!;- spoken to mother end why? He can't be in love with you, Kitty; he's old quite old gray-haired or nearly, and you're a little chit of a high school girl not clever, not rich, not anything not even pretty." "No, I know," I agreed, with humility. "Then why does he want to marry you?" persisted Dora. "Peoauce he is a paraxon, dear, said Meg. I looked up at her with a swift, tearful, inquiring glance. "Yes, that's it." I echoed drearily. "I understand I understand it all; It's because because he is so good."

"Perfect!" corrected Meg. "Yes, so perfect." I agreed. "He wants to be kind and to nike things better for me; I always knew that he was trying to be kind. When he talks to me he is always so gentle ?o much more gentle than when he talks to you. I know why it is I have always known. He is thinking of that money of mine. It hurts him to remember that his father took it away from me and made me lose it all. He wants to prevent things from being horrid for me. and so so he has thought of this." My tears were falling fast on the open pages of my Euclid. There was a epell of silence in the room; no one . . . ... contradicted my explanation of John Mrtimcr's motive. Through my tears I looked up at Meg and Dora, and read In their faces that they agreed with the explanation. How could they hut agree? His motive was all too clear. His father, old Roger Mortimer, had been my guardian, had speculated with my little fortune and had lost it. John Mortimer was taking up the burden of his father's sins and follies, and I was one of the burdens. He meant to marry me it was his plan of compensation. We all understood it clearly; Aunt Jane approved, the gir'.d were merry, and I sat and wept with passionate, helpless indignation. (To be continued.) POOR UNCLE. ot ho Mirpwd S'ometlmcH as He Ha Credit for lieiu;. "People who put faith in the traditional shrewdness of pawnbrokers." said a veteran in the business, "would be surprised if they knew how often they are hoodwinked into loaning more than the value of a pledge. Most of the big shops have experts who are hard to decehe. but they make mistakes now and then, while with others of less experience overvaluation is n. distressingly common occurrence. A certain class of sharpers make a living by victimizing pawnbrokers, and they regard them as tolerably easy prey. Colored stone arc- often used for that purpose, and I have known dozens of large loans to be made on paste rubies and emeralds. The bogus stones are usually mixed with good ones in the setting, and are hard to detect. A few I years ago an ingenious gentleman dis covered that by dipping an off-color diamond in a weak solution of aniline I ink, he could render U temporarily ! blue-white and extraordinarily bril liant. He saw a fine field for operation in the pawnshops, and these painted diamonds.' as they were called, were worked off all over the country before the trick was exposed. A big yellow stone worth, say $00 would look like a $.",00 gem. and it was no trouble at all to borrow from $300 to $.100 on such security. Another cornmen swindle is a filled watch case, re- ! enforced at points where it would be j apt to be tested, and pawned for solid j gold. When these watches were first . made there were very iew pawnbrokers that didn't g't one or two. The works of a watch may also be 'sham.' For years a firm in Switzerland T-iade cheap works in imitation of famous and expensive varieties, and forged the name on the dial and inside plate. It was only a surface imitation, but it was good enough to pass muster at mauy a shop. Lots of men have been forced out of business simply because they were loaded up with ! worthless pledges.' NO SKILL. KMiilr-l to Do ;i-hIii1iiic with IhU Alirlfiit Taper. Philadelphia Record: A new method of graining has just been brought from abroad by which any one without any skill whatever can do a job of graining much better than nine-tenths or the painters who pose as first-class grainers. The marking is done by means of absorbent paper. It is not a transfer paper, but is of the nature of a prepared blotting paper, which is always used dry, the wood graining being always painUd thereon. The figure shows the mode of application. After a coat of oil color is given to the surface which it is designed to Krain. it is painted over again with a sap color or graining stain. The imprinted portion of the graining paper absorbs the yap color, while the T.rintr.t narts which show the various mm I ing the color. The natural grain left upon the surface can be softened if dt sired. The grain of every variety ; of hard wood used in building; and j cabinet work can be easily reproduced I by these simple methods. A large number of grainings can be made with a single copy of the paper, each having a different appearance. The paper is put up on the usual widths of wall paper, ami in rolls, and there are i-ix-tten different kinds of graining. ll)Cs Art Hein in Victoria MntPiiin. Many pieces of sculpture and carving in the Victoria and Albert Museum were discovered some time ago to bo spurious. No- bogus paintings have also been found, among which are two suppo.-ed constables, which have proved to be imitations. The museum is a favorite resort of American tourists, and until these discoveries was supposed to contain an unblemished collection of art curiosities. Pittsburg Dispatch. Not In lilt Line. Teacher "If I had four herring and gave half a herring to each of three boys, how many herring would I have left?" Trie scholar Is silent. Teacher "I am surprised that you can't an swer. I should have two herrings and a half left." Scholar "I could have told you, teacher, if you had asked m about apples. You see, I don't eat her ring.

roit wo:.j hn and home

ITEMS OF INTEREST FOR MAIDS AND MATRONS. A Culling (Sofrii A Iecorated Covert Coat A t'rmlirue Falling Frettln: W -in- Out Mortt Women's Liven Than Work or fare. The I.nt Won!. The word of the wind to the aspens 1 listened all tl.iy to hear; Put over the lull or down in the swale He vanished as I drew near. I a.ked of the quaking shadows, I questioned the shy green bird; Hut th fulling river bore away Tlie secret i would have heard. 1 Tlw-n I turned to my forest cabin In a clove of the Kaater!kills And at dead of ni;ht. when the fire was low. The whisper came to my sill. Now I know there will haunt mc ever That word of ancient tongue. Whose golden meaning, half divined. Was lost when the world was young. 1 know I must srek and ?ee It. Thrnoch the wide green earth, and round. Though 1 come In Ignorance at last. To the place of the grassy mound. Yet It may he I shall find it. If 1 keep the patience mild. The rVxible faith, the open henrt. And the calm of a httle child. P.M.- Cameron in the Congregationalism A Feminine Failing. "Worry wears out more people than work does, and fretting causes more unhappiness in fam'lies than either sickness or poverty," writes Mrs. Moses P. Handy in the October Woman's Home Companion. "Indeed, the secret of happiness may almost be said to be inaking the best of everything, and good humor under all circumstances the most useful virtue which man, and more especially womai , can possess. There are good women who to-day would peril life and limb for husband and children, yet who daily render their dear ones uncomfortable by going forth to mret trouble half way, j and by grievinir over that which is t past and irremediable. If a thing can be helped by any effort of yours, go to work promptly and help it; if not, waste no time in vain repining. When your husband has made a mistake In business and times are hard do not wail over the mistake, (lather up the fragments and stand by to help him. If you can do nothing else you can at least pretend that ou do not mind; can show him that you believe in him still, and prophesy that better times are coining. Nothing so chills a man's courage as the damp spray of a wife's tears. Did you never try to run your sewing machine without oil? Don't you know how the surfaces grind upon each other, and how hard the work is? Well, just as one hour of that scraping will injure the machinery more than a whole day's u?e would if properly oiled, just so one days' worry will dig more wrlnklfs in your face and sprinkle more gray in your hair than will months of patitnt, trusting labor. V.'orrying is an essentially feminine failing, and there are women who do it in spite of them.-elves. If you chance to be such a one. fret all to yourself in the privacy uf your chamber, provided you have any privacy. Put under any circumstances do not empty yjur basin of cold water or wor3, your Lottie of tears - over the sitting room fire." The Cire. of T;ll l.ineii. It is not enough to have fine table lineu; it must be well looked after if we want to keep it at its best. You may haTe a delightful meal to serve, plenty of pretty china, glass and sil ver, but if your tablecloth is not snowy white and just the right stiffness your table will be spoiled in appearance. Ex amine the tab'e linen once a week and darn the smallest break. The secret of this homely art lies in running the thread so far on each side of the break that it does not immediately fray and pull out the fabric. A tiny hole is eas ily darned, while a patch is very un sightly and ruins a nice tablecloth, ah under cover of canton flanuel makes the tatlecloth look better, as it throws out the pattern of the damask, and it also prevents the table from wearing the linen. Tray cloths should be used under all the dishes, the contents of which are liable to be spilled. These cloths save the tablecloth wonderfully and are easily washed when they become soiled. When small cloths and napkins are washed and dried and ready to he ironed, dip them in boiling water and wring out between dry cloths. Then iron rapidly with a hot flat iron and they will be glossy and stiff. The method of laundering counts for much in the care of linen, and all spots and stains must be removed before it is put in the wash. If fruit or coffee stains are found upon the cloth, place the linen over a large bowl and pour through it boiling water from the tea kettle. Kerosene will take Iron dust anil old fruit stains from the cloth without injuring the fabric. Wash the soiled spots in the oil before it Is put into hot vater, or it will do no good. Grass stains may be removed by washing with alcohol. For chocolate stains use cold water, then boiling water from the tea kettle. Table linen should be washed by itself to obtain the very best results. After all the stains have been removed, prepare a suds of warm water and let the linen remain in It fifteen minutes before rubbing, then rub the fabric between the hands in the suds. If any difficulty is experienced It will be better to boil the article rather than rub on the hoard, aa this wears tne fabric. Itinse through two or three waters nnrl add a little boiled starch to the second water if any stiffening is desired. The dainty woman who wishes to keep her tabic linen up to the standard must be able to direct the laundress If she does not do the work herself, f ir a housekeeper is judod greatly by the appearance of her table linen. Presbyterian Journal. The Tonelmtnn of AmlahUltr. Is there any woman who cannot be amiable? Do not understand me to mean the forced sweetness that degenerates Into flattery. Such an attitude Is unworthy. The first definition of "amiable" given In the dictionary is "worthy of love." To be worthy of love w must get ourselves J-nto right relationship with the world. L,ovfi hget9 love, and the woman who would be amiable in the highest sense must learn to love her fellow man. She

A DECORATED

The little covert coat has been improving the shining hour by assuming decorative touches of fur that will undoubtedly prolong its sphere of usefulness far into the autumn. It has appeared lately in gray, brown and green, cut on the mode of a basque coat that is fitted to the figure with a rounding tail on the hip and flat cellar revers folding in a group of should seek out the older people, and find what delightful companionship she has hitherto missed. If she will sympathize with the younger boys and girls she can be most helpful in their affairs of heart and ambition. The love affair of Jack of 21 and Petty of IS may seem to her foolish in the light of her larger, deeper experience, but she should remember her own life story and bring some of the great tenderness which seeks for an outlet to the unraveling of their tangled skeins of perplexityTemple Pailey in the October Woman's Home Companion. a c.iii i ii s: liimii. Calling gown of tan crepe de chene, with velvet of same shade, and silk embroidery. Paris Correspondence Prooklyn Eagle. The. Toiieh of Color. Colored velvet and ribbons are to be used much on all gowns this year; the black gowns are, almost without exception, relieved by some touch of

COVERT COAT.

three on the s-houlder. An enterpris ing tailor saw fit this autumn to run a narrow piping of mink on the cage of the revers, over the fronts and around the tails, and his happy thought has evidently found instant favor, for these trimmed coverts are almost the first of the fur-touched wraps to go into active service. j color, and are made much more becom- : ing when a bow of the same color i j worn In the hair. It is remarkabk how often a color can be made becomI ft-lrr 1.1- V,n .-I.,, n V, t ,f ! t- ,. I, ,-..... iL as well as below. The same rule wil: be carried out in the street gown.whict iu many instances will have adjustable revers of different colors, and a tiny rosette or cockade of the same velvet in the hat. Harper's Hazar. OUR COOKING SCHOOL. SeHuiiiic IlintH. Small pickles, olives and capers minced fine are an excellent seasonins for a salad dressing, lloston bakec beans can be improved by adding 3 cup of sweet cream the last hour o! baking. Three tablespoonfuls of fren ly made Japan tea. with a bit of nuimeg. give an indispensable llavor tc 3:1 apple pie. To give a fine ilnor tc ccrned beef hash, use good stock for moistening with a pinch of salt, sugar and cayenne. When making tomato soup add a raw cucumber sliced line, boil soft and strain with tomato. 11 gives a pleasant seasoning. OjnltT Sltllltl. Cut oysters into thirds or quarters. Pull hearts out of nice lettuce heads and shred up one-third as mtic'i you have oysters. Dressing to be made in following proportions: Two tablespoonfuls salad oil to four of vinegar, one teaspoonful salt and same of sugar, one-half teaspoonful each of pepper and fresh-made mustard. Pub up, mix thoroughly an 1 pour over oysters aiu lettuce just before serving. UIU! Koh Cake. Make the dough after the recipe given for pond lily cake, flavoring with rose and strawberry instead of peach. Pake in two inch deep jelly tins, and sandwich with pink icing, and Hip same on top. (Made by substituting finely pulverized pink sugar for white.) When you have put the last layr ol pink Icing on top, si rt very lightly over the top granulated white sugar. lllrVory Nut Ciimt. One cup hickory nuts (meats), two cups sugar, half cup water. Poil suga: and water, without stirring, 111r.il thick enough to spin a thread; llavor with extract lemon or vanilla. Set of! into cold water; stir quickly until white; then stir in nuts; turn into flat tin; when cold cut Into small squares. CMer Jelly. One box gelatin dissolved in one pint of cold water. In twenty minutes add one pint boiling water, one quart cider, one pint sugar (granulated), and grated rind and juice of two lemons. Let stand on stove until hot, but do not boil. Then strain into molds.

"It is an III Wind That Blcnvs Nobody Good, ' ' Th.3.1 small ache or pzin or weakness is the "mind" that directs your attention to the necessity of purifying your blood by taking Hood" s Sarsaparüla. Then your whole body receives good, for the purified blood go's tingling to every orgj.ru It is the remedy for all ages and both sexes, .

New Trick to Catch IlicjcIMt. A new way to bunco cyclists out of half dollars is being played. The rictim leaves his wheel to enter a tor and returning in a few minutes finds a lock fastened to the sprocket wheel an chain, presumably through the mistake of some careless wheelman. Upo the advice of a bystander the cyclist takes his wheel to the shop of a mechanic nearby, who is unable to pick the lock and so saws it in two, or appears to have done so, when he reappears from his hack room with a lock like the one on the wheel in two pieces. The mechanic charges half a dollar and as the victim does not care for the useless two pieces of the lock, they aro kept in the shop for further use, -while the lock that was really on the wheel is handed over by the mechanic to b.L accomplice, the accommodating bystander, to he employed in catching Uo next rider. New York Sun. Innocent Child. It is impossible to suppress the small boy. He is always saying something. He was iu a crowded Fifth avenue ear with his mamma a few days ago and h looked vainly for a seat. His mamma took a strap, and he clung to her dress. Out near Soho a fat woman beckoned and the conductor pulled the bell rope. When the car stopped she arose slonly. With wide-open eyes the boy looked at the vacant space she had left. "Her you are, mamma," he said out loud; "she's left room enough for threo or four of us." The fat woman turned and looked at the innocent child, but she didn't hurt him. Pittsburg News. A Kemarkahle Career. Jno. M. Smyth, head of the great house of Jno. M. Smyth Co., of Chicago, commenced life in a very humble way, but by dint of hard work and great business ability has built r.p the largest concern of its kind iu the world. His name is a synonjm tor honesty and fair dealing. 7'he great guitar bargain shown in another column of this paper should be of interest to those who are musically inclined, and their mammoth catalogue of everything to eat, wear or use shoald be in the hands of everyone. Bicycle Fright in the Mnle. From the Columbia S. C.) State: Have you noticed that the mule, ordinarily so phlegmatic and philosophic is peculiarly subject to bicycle fright? That is our observation. It is the rarest thing that even a country horse is alarmed by the passing of a wheel at moderate speed, but the bolting of mules at the sight of cyclists is cl everyday occurrence on our roads. What is there in mule nature to caj these alarms? How's Tlilsl Wc ofTer One Hundred Dollar reward for aay rase of Catarrh that cunnot be cured by Hail s I'atarrhC'ure. F. J. CHENEY & CO. . Toi cöo, a VTo, the undersigned, have known l- J. CfcenoY for the last 15 years and believe hint perfectly honorable in all business transactions und linüncially able to carry out any obligations m:ide by their Una. West & Truax. Whoksale Dmrplsts, Toledo. O.; YVaJdiTic. Kinnan & ilarvm. Whole-sale Dnippis-ts. Toledo. Ohio. Halls Catanh Cure is taken internally, actInp directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces cf the system. Testimonials sent in lrw TI" per bottle. Sold by all drupisUi. llall'b I-'ainily l'ills are tho bcu Demurrer. He I see they are discussing the question in England, '-Shall Women Smoke?- She If they don't want to get into trouble they'd better change It to "Will Women Smoke?" Chicago Tribune. Literary Life is a new weekly newspaper issued by the Montgomery Publishing company of New York and dealing exclusively with news of books, authors, and publishers. If it can maintain the noteworthy excellence of its lht numbers it will soon i make itself indispensable iu the lit erary world. Central park. New York, has Just revived a magnificent royal Siberian tlper that is said to be one of the rery finest specimens of the beast overseen in this country. 7 SfffiQßÖ S3f. Acts gently on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels -.EANStSTHE 5Y5TEM U EFFECTUALLY CWFRCOMFS LsrzL? I 7 I OVERCOMES CONSTIPAT,ON PERMANENTLY BITUAL IT5 Brii0 r rfCTS.

FICIAL & n CVT THC GENUINE - M AMT O (AUfeRNIAjlG toP(. rot uu by u onu&WTi rex kx ru lomt

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