Marshall County Independent, Volume 6, Number 32, Plymouth, Marshall County, 20 July 1900 — Page 6
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GUILTY OR
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INNOCENT?
CHAPTER V (Continued.) Something must have happened. People are running. There is a little crowd round the bank, and a policeman is pushing his way through. What can it be? Sebastian joins the crowd, and the people fall back and make way. Mr. Saville is a magistrate, and every one stands aside to let him pass. In the bank itself a small, eager crowd are peer ins over the counter at a strange ene within. The bank manager is stooping over a prostrate figurf 1- K!y of the cashier, limp aivl ins-r! -ii.le. That il-.Te has ben an outrage is p'uiu to the commonest understanding. The floor is s:r'.vn wit'n papers, ami a stoul is overturned. There must have bten a d-s;erate struggle before the yojn? rn:i!i wl overjowered. The p.a..' is : regular vrt..k. At hrt the t'UM'ai :I:i iüii is that the cashier is u-,au mui'dered. nut probably. There is a heavy, faint odor of some drug. Mr. Kelly, the btnk manager, lifts an ashn rar-. "It mast nave been very quickly done! I had not left the bank ten minutes! I v.as at my lunch, and when I got back I found Grey like this!" "Has any one gone for a doctor?'' Mr. Saville puts the question as he stands looking down on the livid, insensible fare of the bank clerk. "Give him air; open his collar," he says, and glances around on the scene o: confusion the money lying on the fioor. the hooks, the Sebastian stoops suddenly and picks up a cheque off the floor. George Bouvere is sciawlfd acioss the back of it. Without a word he hands the cheque to th? bank manager, remarking: "Mr. Houvere may be able to throw s r.w light on this. I met him coming out of the büMk about a quarter of an hour a so. He can at least say if eveiythinsr was rizht then." "Wiif J, Mr. Bouverie now?" "Gone home, I fancy. He was wiring oft a large -um of money at the I.or-t. t?:. e -vhen I met him." Mr. Kelly turns white as his eyes meet tho.-e of Seba.-tian. "I do not know if anything has been taken." .-ays very low. still chafing away at iL limp hands of Mr. Grey. Then the do. -tor hurries in and makes an examination. "The man is not jjd: he has been chloroforra- I." 'i i.is i- the verdict, and the news . go-s out :- tae little knot ot people o rs: . Not only has the cashier been chloroformed, but the bank has been robbed. So far has, been ascertained bv a h'tstlv examinaf ion. It is a very clever robbery, evidently well r!a;.ned and carried out successfully during the time the manager was at his lunch. Nothing further can be known till Mr. Grey recovers consciousness. The cashier, who is a very uninteresting young man, becomes all at once an object of excitement and discussion, and through the length and hreadth of Portraven the news noes like wildfire. CHAPTER VI. "It was a very near thing indeed," the doctor says, when at last he succee,ij jn rtorincj Mr. Grey. "This young man has a weak heart, and very litf'e more would have finished him." As it is. the cashier lies limp and livid i'rom the effects of chloform. by wh im administered it v.vre hard to 3 ay. .'Hie Mr. watches eagerly. Gry's dazed senhe easts terrified huami'.y. while Si's .-ome bai k. and ü i winces round. ' There, now you are all right." says the bank manager nervously and impafiently. He is anxious to lind out if the cashier can 'ive any account of the assau't upon him. any clue to the perpetiator of the outrage. A couple of policemen stand by. Mr. fi rev's eye?, turn towards them almost apprehensively. He must have got a terribU Shock to be so unnerved and shaken. "Now, Mr. Grey, try and give us some account of this mystery. You must know something." Mr. Saville says. "Kvery moment's delay gives the thief time to get off. It seems from the hasty inspection made by Mr. Kelly that over a hundred pounds have been taken." The injund man's lips writhe, and a damp sweat stands out on his forehead: he lifts two shaking hands. "He tried to murder me!" he gasps almost inarticulately. "I was all alone, and he sprang over the counter!" "Who?" asks Mr. .Saville, with desperate earnestness. "Quick! do you know who it was?" The cashier's face turns ashen; he has not yet recovered by any means. His eyes rove anxiously round. Mr. Grey, you are losing time," the manager says. "It is of the greatest importance that your statement should be made perfectly clear." "I will tell all I know," the young man whispers with diffculty. "You had gone to your lunch, Mr. Relly. It was very quiet, about two o'clock, a time very few people are about. I was writing in the ledger when the bank door opened and a man came in. He had a small bag in his hand. He presented a cheque for payment; it was for five pounds. He said he would have it in gold, and I turned to get it for him. This is God truth. Mr. Kelly. In a second he sprang over the counter, p-ized nie by tlie collar, choking me. We struggled desperately, but I could not call Mit I was choking. And then he stuffed a handkerchief soaked with chloroform in my mouth. He held it there. I do not know any more." Ho shivers as he speaks and covers his ghastly face with his hands. Sebastian Sarille bends forward. "Who was the man? He askä the question intently.'rarneRtly
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By AMY BRAZIER. Mr. Grey lifts his head. "It was George Bouverie." "I knew it." Mr. Saville says quietly. "I saw him coming ouc of the bank, and immediately after dispatch money by telegraph. It -was a bold robbery indeed. Now, Mr. Kelly, what are you going to do?" Mr. Kelly's face looks grey with terror. "I cannot believe it!" he exclaims. "George Bouverie! The thing seems to me impossible. Mr. Grey!" fixing stern eyes upon the drooping figure of the cashier. "Do yoa swear that Mr. Bouverie drugged you and robbed the bank? Before God, is this the truth?" "Yes. it is the truth; I am prepared to swear it!" The cashier's tones are steady enough .low. He looks Mr. Kelly straight in the face. "I did not know the bank was robbed; I only kjiow for certain that Georg? Bouverie attacked and drugged me." "He has been financially embarrassed." Mr. Saville says. "He has been in desperate straights for money !" "I know." admits Mr. Kelly reluctantly, remembering a passionate request from young Bouverie to be allowed to overdraw his account. But, still, from money difficulties to a bank robbery was a wide and awful gulf. Mr. Grey is examined and cross-examined; he sticks to his statement in an unshaken manner. "This is terrible!" groans Mr. Kelly. "To think young Bouverie should sink to an act of burglary! It will kill his mother!" Mr. Saville prepares to depart. "It is sad indeed; but that young man is steeped to the lips in turf transactions more or less discreditable. I suppose you will have a warrant made out immediately?" He lowers his eyes to conceal the look of triumph. Branded as a criminal, Barbara can uo longer think of George Bouverie! The bank manager sighs and passes his hand across his forehead. "I suppose it will have to be done." he says slowly: "but. Mr. Grey, I could almost believe you the victim of a hallucination!" Sebastian laughs. "Hallucination can net chloroform a man or rob a bank." "I mean," said Mr. Kelly, "that he might have been mistaken he might have fancied it was Bouverie." Mr. Saville holds out the cheque he Vint iii-Lrv.l ii? n?i tVio tlfwit" rf tlio i oaiiK. "This is conclusive evidence. This is the identical cheque Mr. Grey was giving gold for at the moment he was attacked. I cannot see the slightest loophole for doubt. I myself can swear to having met George Bouverie running hastily down the steps of the bank, carrying a small bag. and ten minutes after saw him handing in a pile of gold at the postofflce. Let him account for that money being in his possession." Mr. Grey sits white and listless, nervously clasping and unclasping his hands. "I feel ill," he says, looking at the doctor, who has turned his back and stands in pale consternation. George Bouverie a thief! Impassible! The doi tor has known him since he was born, and now to hear that he has sunk so low is appalling! He feels stunned; yet. he remembers the young man's altered look of care that sat so oddly on the young face. During those anxious weeks of Mrs. Houverie's illness he had noticed George, often finiiin? him sitting moody and depressed. "Poor, poor lad: if he had only made a clean breast of it to me!" says kindly old Doctor Carter to himself, "I would have helped hi in only too gladly." But facts are facts, and. within an hour two constables are driving rapidly tovvaius the Grange on an outside car, and one of theni holds a warrant for th1 arrest of George Bouverie. The warrant is signed by two magistrates, one of whom is Sebastian Saville, who never in all his life signed his name with such alacrity before, for i.ie downfall of his enemy is complete! CHAPTKR VII. The evening sunlight is slanting across the lawn, making a glory of the dancing daffodils, and the birds are nolding a concert that commenced with the dawn this morning. Such a j tender, loving spring evening. ! The sun shines in at the windows of ; the Grange, and one shaft rests lov ingly on the fair head of George Bouverie. Mrs. Bouverie looks at the sunshine and at the face of hr handsome son, and smiles as she gazes. Her own eyes are very sweet juid patient. She is very happy this evening. Between her and George stands a teatable, and George is laughing and pouring out the tea, desperately particular as to sugar and cream, waiting on his mother with gentle courtesy. Her pale cheeks have taken a pink tinge, soft as the blush on a girlish face. She wears lilac ribbons in her filmy lace cap. and lace ruffles fall over her slender hands. In upon this homelike scene stalks a trouble dark and horrible. The maid, with a pale face, open the door and stands trembling, looking from her mistress to the face of the young man who is so calmly helping himself to a second cup of tea. "Well. Mary, what is it?" he asks. gaily tossing a lump of sugar to a fox terrier sitting at his feet. "Oh, Mr. George, I don't know! ' stammers the girl. "It is something dreadful, sir. There is a sergeant and a constable in the hall!" Georg" lays down his "up, but no idea of th truth rises in his mirfd. "The bank rolled? That is odd! But I am not a magistrate. What do they want me for?" he says. "I'll just step out and ask the sergeant what 't means."
But before he can leave the room there is the sound of a little confusion in the hall, and Doctor Carter, with a grave, desperate face, hurries In and goes straight to Mrs. Bouverie. "My dear old friend, there is some monstrous mistake! There, don't let frightened, the whole thing i impossible a travesty of justice, that's what it is. a driveling idiot making a statement like a lunatic! You'll set them right in ten minutes, George, won't you?" a shade of anxiety creeping into his voice. "What is it?" asks Mrs. Bouverie, sitting up, pale and trembling. "Doctor Carter, what is it all about?" He pats the trembling hands he holds. "My dear lady, leave it to George. It is all nonsense the blundering Saville and that fool of a bank clerk!" "But I don't understand! What has my son to do with it?" asks Mrs. Bouverie, getting frightened. "Sure. I'm telling you!" cries the doctor, his natural tongue gettinf the upper hand, "It seems some one drugged the clerk and robbed the bank and the fool, dazed with chloroform, has saddled the crime on George!" "On me?" George exclaims, a flush of indignation dyeing his forehead. "Ho-.v dare any one say such a thins?" "They have dared!" retorts the doctor furiously. "Mrs. Bouverie. George can explain everything: you mustn't excite yourself. George, my boy. you were at the bank this morning?" "Yes: I cashed a cheque," George says, his face growing stern. "Yes; afterwards Saville saw you wiring off a hundred pounds your money, of course; but you've ju?t got to tell them that. And. look her " Doctor Carter stop short at the look that has come over the face of George Bouverie a stricken, conscious look. "A hundred pounds! Oh. George, what does it mean?" cries his mother, weeping now iu her fear. George gives one look at her, and then his eyes meet the troubled, inquiring gaze of the doctor. "My boy. my boy, surely you'll set it right?" the old man stammers. George Bouverie's face is as white as death. He touches Doctor Carter on the arm. "I will go and speak to the sergeant," he say, in a hard, cold voice. (To be continue 1.)
11 perinient in Jlunicipal Millie. Another new departure in the way of municipal enterprise has to be reported from the progressive parish of Battersea. For some time patt the members of the dominant party on the local vestry have been of opinion that open-air concert:; in the summer months given at the expense of tho county council, ought to be supplemented by similar entertainments during that port of the year when the state of the weather precludes any public gathering in the park or on Clapham common. The assent of the vestry to the use of the town hall on Lavender hill having been obtained, arrangements are now being made for a series of free conceits to be given weekly in that building, and yesterday a public notice was issuel which expresses an opinion that there must be many ladies and gentlemen in the parish who would be glad to assist the scheme with vocal or instrumental music. All such artists are invited to communicate with the vestry cHrk. London Leader. Krlic of 1XOI. Mr. H. M. Beecher of Prospect street has in his possession a copper plate stipple memorial engraving which possesses more than ordinary Interest, says the New Haven Leader. It represents a monument which consists of two parts; the has?, or lower part, is a large, cubical Mock of marble, which is surmounted by a tapering shaft of the same material. Upon a part of the base is inscrib.1: "Sacred to the memory of the illustrious G. Washington." Above the ius.-rip-t'on is an excellent likeness of the "father of Iiis country." and in tin; foreground there are three figures, standing at the monument, two of them repre.-f nting weeping friends, the third being an allegorical figure representing Hope, poi iim upward. On the shaft is the convention.! figure of a cherub. The work is most exquisitely done, and bears name and date: "T. Clark, sculptor. 1S01, Boston" two years after Washington's death. "K-iiiii-ii'cI. The word "ecumenical" is a poser to many of the newsboys who sell papers in the vicinity of Carnegie hall. Some wisely disergard it. Those who do attempt it generally call it tha "economical" conference, while "alimentär' and "elemental" are ternn frequently used. In its broadest sense the ecumenical world is the inhabited world. The root of the word is "house." The term ecumenical, as applied to a religious gathering. dtes from Roman days. When n council was to be convene that, represented the entire Roman empire, both totstem and western, it wa.s called an "ICeumenical Council." Hence mi ecumenical conference on forien missions is a conference called to consider methods of christianizing the ruonohristian portion of the inhabited world. New York Mali and Express. Tli l.nr "Kxliulmin-e. Queer stories about the czar are circulating in Germany. Dinner was kept waiting recently in the Winter Palace at St. Petersburg owing to the unexpected disappearance of the imperial pair. They had taken an afternoon sleighride accompanied only by a lady in waiting, and an indiscreet wltnsa declared that he had seen the sleig-h standing near the edge ot a lonely wood outide the city, with the two ladies in it laughing like children, whil the czar of all the Rtuilart hoppftd about on one leg in the now, flopping his arms and croaking like a crow. Tag on ( lill'lrrn. Tho children of the poor In Jfcivia are always labeled, in c ;. they ishoulj fctray away from their home whllt their mothers are engaged in dornest.! duties.
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China is an absolute monarchy, but the emperor spends his life inside the sealed walls of the Forbidden City, and not one Chinaman in a hundred thousand ever looks upon the imperial face. Again, in spite of the absolute character of the monarchy, there is, according to the Chinese law. a body called the Tu-ch-a-yuen, or board of public censors, which is independent of the supreme government and, theoretically at least, higher in authority. Theoretically, again, the supreme direction of the affairs of the empire is vested in the Chun Chi Ch'u, otherwise known as the privy or grand council. The practical administration of the laws is under the charge of the Xei-ko. or cabinet, a body which consists of four members, two Chinamen and two Tartars, with the assistance of two members of the Great College of Confucius, whose3 duty it is to see that nothing is done by the cabinet which is not in strict accordance with the sacred books. Under the cabinet, again, are seven boards of administrators, each of which is presided over by a Chinaman and a Tartar jointly. These boards have the work of government divided among them as follows: 1. The board of civil appointments, which has charge of all the civil otlicers in the empire. 2. The board of revenues, which has charge of all financial matters. 3. The board of rites and ceremonies, which has charge of enforcing the laws and customs of the empire. 1. The military board. ". The board of public works, d. The board of criminal jurisdiction. 7. The admiralty board, which makes its headquarters at Tien Tsin. Equal in authority with those is the board of foreign affairs, or Tsung-li-Yamen. which has as members all the members of the grand or privy council. As for the mysterious emperor, he spends his life in the Forbidden City, into the central portion of which no man may enter. There he lives, surrounded by the members of his harem and by the enormous number of from 8,000 to 10,000 slaves. Massive walls and the even more formidable barriers of Oriental etiquette shut him off entirely from the rest of the world. When on rare occasions he goes out to wor-
T VIEW OF TfiZ CIl r OF TAKU.
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ship at one of the temples or to visit one of the palaces iu the vicinity the streets along which he and his retinue will pass are cleared and freshly paved, while the houses and other buildings long the line are barricaded and the fronts covered with huge mats, so that no vulgar eye may look upon the great lord of the sun as he is carried along iu a magnificent sedan (hair. Only once in a number of years, when the emperor goes out into the country, where it is practically impossible to barricade all the roads, does the average Chinaman have an opportunity to get even a glimpse of his imperial master. There is no law of hereditary succession to the Chinese throne, it being left to each emperor to appoint his own successor from among the younger ueneration of the imperial family. As the emperor commonly has a number of Shooting Peter Nisen of Chicago, under the assumed name of P. M. Bowser, successfully shot the whirlpool rapids in his boat, the "Fool Killer," last week. He was taken from the water at the whirlpool by Howard Iake, the body catcher. Nissen lost fully twenty pounds during his trip, and was thin and shrunken when rescued, although he was uninjured. Defore the awful ride he stated that ho would make the trip again if he was uccossful. After being taken from the whirlpool he said he could not say whether he would ever attempt it again. Nisrifii displayed wonderful nerve. Ho madrt the trip in a boat weighing 4.000 pound, with a keel of iron which weighed 1.LT.0 ounds. The keel acted like a pendulum and the boat was never wrong side up for five seconds at a time. The Unt rode the first wave like a duck. The second engulfel it uid Nisten disappeared. He afterward stated that th wave nearly tore his head cWT. Crowd. of people lined tho bluffs on both sides of the river to tee the adventurous mau.
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wives and children the practice opens opportunity for an endless amount of intrigue and chicanery. The manner in which the present emperor, Tsait'ien, came to the throne is an example in point. The whole Chinese empire is divided into eighteen provinces, each ruled by a governor-general, who is responsible directly to the emperor for the entire administration, political, judicial, military, and financial. Each governor general is assisted by a council and by a number of minor officials, sich as the treasurer, the subcommissioner, and the literary chancellor. Each province Is divided into departments, ruled by prefects, and each department into districts, with a district ruler over each. Each town and village lias also its separate government, with a complete f'-t of officials, so that the offlceholding class iu China is large and extremely influential. The gradations of rank among Chinese orhViaL are clearly defined, and each man is directly responsible only to his immediate superior. Thus the village governor reports to the district ruler, and he m turn to the governor of the department. The departmental governor reports to the governor general of the province, who may remove him at will or even cut of his head. The whole administration, therefore, hinges on the eighteen KIOSK ON jwovincial governor generals, or viceroys, and those positions are in the greatest demand. A village official who wishes to keep his place finds it a good plan to make large gifts to the district ruler, and therefore levies large taxes on the people. The district ruler finds it good policy to hand over most of what he gets in this way to the departmental chief, and the latter passes it on to the governor general of the province. To be appointed governor general of a Chinese province is therefore equivalent to a gift of a large fortune, the amount depending only on the avarice of the viceroy in power. A wise Chinaman greatly prefers to serve his country as a provincial governor general or viceroy than us member of the grand or privy council, the "perquisites" of which positions are small. This form of administration makes it clear why the body of Chinese officials the Whirlpool
THB FOREIOW CONCWStOIf W TIENTSIN;
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is the most corrupt and unscrupulous in the world. Prince Ching. Prince Ching, leader of the counter revolution in North China, and political rival of the monstrous Prinze Tuan, is now looked upon as the hope o! the foreigners in Peking, or of euch of them a,s have survived the atrocities of tho Boxers. He is a great and powPRINCE CHING. erful prince, and seems to be a friend of the whites. He is now in Peking at the head of the Manchu srarriscm in that city. These forces number about 10,000, and numerous Chinese are flocking to the standard of the new leader. Ching is the uncle of the late emperor, Tsai-Tien, who was the poisoned the other day by the order of Tuan. He is the greatuncle of the heir apparent, who was chosen last winter by the emprr.ss dowager. He was president of the tsung-ll-yanx'n before the government was sundered by the revolt of Tuan and his followers. Jfailing Campaign Lies. Nailing lies constitutes an important: feature of the business of candidates and campaign managers in every political campaign. Th "goo.l-ctiou?!:-IMPERIAL LAKE, PEKING. Morgan-until-after-elrr tion" method of inllueneing voters is hoary with age, but never a campaign is waged without the employment of this ancient device. Mark Hanna for the Republicans and Senator Jones for the Democrats will deny some of the campaign lies, but they can't find time to deny all of them. The safe rule for the average newspaper reader is to believe no campaign yarn that is improbable. Control of Schools. Mr. Aaron Gore, superintendent of schools at Denver, leaves all political parties far behind in his views on centralization. Not only would he have the schools in our new possessions tilrected by the War Department hut he maintains that federal control should be substituted for state control over the schools of this continent. Tiapidf.
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COLORADO VS. SWITZERLAND. A Comparison. Switatrland, "The playground of Europe," is visited annually by over 15,000 American touruts and invalid. Why? Wh.il the Alps have Isolated pealt suh as Mont Blanc (15,781 feet), and the Matterhorn (14,826 fet), the mean elevation of the highest Alpine chain is from only 8,000 to 9,000 feet. Colorado possesses more than 120 peak over 13,500 feet in altitude, of which no fewer than thirty-five peaks range from 14,000 feet upward. In the whol of Europe, there are not over twelve mountain peaks of note. The highest village in Europe is Avers Platz in Switzerland (7.500 feet); the highest inhabited point in Europe is the Hospice of St Bernard in Switzerland (8,200 feet). In Colorado the mining town of Leadville, with 15,000 inhabitants, is 10,200 feet above sa level; other mining camps are still higher and some gold and silver mine3 are worked at an altitude of over 12,000 feet. The highest wagon road in Europe Is said to be the Stelvio Roa I in Switzerland (9,170 feet). In Colorado the railroads cross the crest of the continent at Fremont Pass (11,223 feet), Marshall Pass (10,952 feet and Tennessee Pass (10, Switzerland does not possess, even in the famous St. Gothard lire, any railroad engineering surpassing, if equaling, these. There are wagon roads over numerous passes in Colorado ranziiu from 12,000 feet upwards, the high-vt being Mosquito Pass (13,700 feet I. In Switzerland the cog-rai'.road from Vitznau to the summit of the Rigl Kulm (5,900 feet) has a lensth of four and a half miles, in which the ascent U 4,072 feet. In Colorado the cog-rail-
i road from Manitou to the summit of Pike's Peak (14,147 feet) has a length of eight and three-quarter miles, la which the ascent is 8,100 feet, or an. ! aTeraSe f 4Gfeet Per mile, the maxlmum grade being 1,320 feet. One class of Switzerland's finest scnery is alons the Via Mala, the Schyn Pass and Urnerloch. In Colorado, the Canon of the Arkansas with the Royal Gorge, the Black Canon of the Gunnison, the Canon of the Rio dt las Animas, the Canon of the Grand River and others, are all much longer, quite as grand as and more varied In character than the best passes in Switzerland. The walls of the Canons of the Grind River, the Gunnison and the Arkansas ri.-e to a sheer height of more than 2.0''"" fef-t. As Colorado can be reached by at least one railroad the Burlington In one night from either Chicago or St. Louis, it is hard to understand why more Americans do not travel We.it instead of East in search of health an! pleasure. ! Worth It'inemteriii;. j To be glad of life, because it gives I you the chances to love and to work j and to play and to look up at the stars; to De satisneu with your possessions, but not contented with yourself until you have made the best of them; to despise nothing in the world except falsehood and meanness, and to fear nothing except cowardice; to be governed by your admirations rather than by your neighbor's, except his kindness of heart and gentleness of manners; to think seldom of your enemies, often of your friends these are little guide-posts on the footpath peace. Henry Van Dyke. of Work on SImplon Tunnel. The work on the SImplon tunnel 13 progressing slowly but surely. On March 31, 4,762 metres had been pierced 2,770 metres at the Swiss end and 1,992 at the Italian endr so there still remains about ir,0) metres to pierc-a j before the workmen meet; 3,00 men j are employed, and they work in three ! relays of eight hours each. trtcctliit: the Treaty. Everybody is talking about the coming war with China, and nobody seems to think of invoking The Hague peace treaty to prevent it. Will there ever be a case to which that famous treaty can be applied? New York World. o Is a proud and pecross record it is a record of euro, of constant con quest over obstinate ills of womonj ills that deal out despair; suffering that many women think Is woman's natural heritage; disorders and displacements that drivo out hopQm LydU E. Pinkham' Vegetable Compound j euros thoso troublos of womon, and robs menstruatlcn of Its terrors m Uo woman need bo without tho safest end surost advice, for Mrs Plnkham counsols women free of charge Hor oddross Is Lynn, Mass. Can any woman afford to ignore tho medicino and the advioe that has cured a million women? Use Certain Corn Cure. Price, 15c 1 Thompson's Eye Water hrf Beat lounh emp. TasuGoia. Use
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