Marshall County Independent, Volume 7, Number 6, Plymouth, Marshall County, 18 January 1901 — Page 6

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A. A. Vet By M. D. -t .. . . .. CHAPTER VI (Continued.) Diana, who feared him with an intensity that increased as time spt'd by, was left more and mo alone in tlin little set of rooms at -Montreal, until life became a dull and hopeless bur-

den for her. There was no ray of in- Cervis' wife." terest in her heavy face tonight as she : Hravely the words came, but tliey asked for her husband's news, l'aul j wrung the heart of the gentle speaker. oa the other hand, was quivering with "And, Syb. ant you take it in. once unrepressed excitement. and for all. that we are not sent into "I have got a fortune in my fingers, j the world to snatch at as much hapDiana a fortune. I teli you!" he said j niness and self-pleasing as we can? In jubilantly, as he drew up his chair to j onj0P t0 copy our drar Ixml oven the littie round supper table, from j faintly, we must each fcive up'somewhich Diana had risen to greet him. ; thing, and go on giving up until the Paul had so often brought home j en,j corPes. If Gervis had not given fortunes that seemed at his nnpers j l!p hisnis wishe( the old home would ends fortunes that crurapltd into dr.st ; have been wrecked, his parents would ere they were grasped that she felt ; have heen besears. I I tliink ir a

little or no interest in them now. She was growing tired of the whole thing, particularly as she was now cut off from all participation in her husband's more intellectual ventures. "I can't see what good it's going to do you,"' she said at last, when he had explained. "I guess this girl ain't going to die off to suit you, Paul, and you can't live on that bit of paper." "What fools women arc!" savagely broke in Paul. And his dark face took on an ugly look as he remembered that men, likewise, could be fools, when the- saddled themselves with such burdens as that of the heavy, dejected woman opposite him. "I'm going to Europe tomorrow to England," he said shortly. Diana looked up from her pie. "Shall you be gone long this time. Paul?" "I can't quite sajV slowly saiel the 6CientL?t. "It will depend on many things. Rut I promise you. Diana, that I shan't come back until I've got this in my clutch in hard cash." Paul's Angers played with the sheet of paper outspread before him. Diana And?ell shivered, and her white, fair face grew still more pallid in hue. That this man. her husband, was capable of the vilest scheming to win his way she already knw. Nothing was sacred from such an archplotter. And as she furtively watched his frowning, dark face while he pord over the handwriting before, him. Diana toid hers-if half f rarfullv that Paul Andsfll would kp his promise, j He would return to her with the fortune, or he would never come back at all. CI I APT E it VII. It was Christmas Eve, and true oldfashioned Christmas weather. The country round Temple-Dene was glittering with hoar-frost, every tree shining and sparkling in the sun, every pond and stream and pool fast bound in ice. The low, red sun of the afternoon was shining full on the old house, surrounded by the frost-silvered pines, and its many windows twinkled a brilliant welcome to the expected heir and his bride. There had been a great stir, a simmer of wild excitement, under the old roof during the weeks preceding Christmas. Lady Jane had done wonders in freshening up the tarnished and faded glories of the home. She had a free hand, to be sure, In her wholesale improvements; for could not Gervis afford to pay any amount of bills that might ensue? "If I could only rouse up poor dear Francis, before they come home," the busy lady said, energetically. But the master of Temple-Dene was the sole member of the house indifferent to the advent of the heir and his bride. Amid the turmoil of preparation he sat listless and. silent in his library, "the world forgetting, by the world forgot." If it had not been for Leila Desmond, it would have fared ill for the tricken man. The gentle-natured girl, with heart full of womanly instincts, felt irresistibly drawn to the lontly, silent man. He and she had a grief in common, and it bound them together. It was only at the sound of Leila's sweet voice, and the touch of Leila's tender hand, that Francis Templeton ever stirred from his trance of misery. But even Leila could not make the unhappy man comprehend that Temple-Dene was saved, nor could he take In the meaning of the light-hearted preparations going on around. "I'm glad, glad, that Uncle Francis doesn't care, that he won't care!" said little Syb almost viciously to her elder sister. The misshapen girl looked on almost as gloomily at the hurry and fuss as did the master of the house. She clenched her thin little fingers every time the bland, self-satisfied tones, so new in Lady Jane's voice, fell on her ear. "Little Syb" Leila turned her wistful eyes on the girl "it hurts me when you speak so!" "Hurts you? Oh, I could beat you, Leila, if I didn't love you so dreadfully that I should kill anyone who struck you! Hurt you? Oh, why were you made so good and I made so bad? All the time I am wishing that some accident will happen to those two a shipwreck or a railway collision and that they will never, never reach Temple-Dene!" "Syb!" again cried Leila. And this time she gathered the distorted llttl figure on her lap, and laid her own soft round cheeks against the passionwhite lips. "What has come to you, my dear ono? Have you forgotten that 'Love worketh no 111 to this neighbor, therefove lore is the fulfilling of the law'? How can you 'put on the Lord Jesus Christ who died for you and me, and for those who are coming home to us, if you let yourself say such things? I know It Is only laying them I cannot believe you think them." Leila's fresh mouth kissed the angry eyes. "But I do think them! I feel what I say. Leila, what right has that American girl to take your Gervis from you? Everybody knows it was you he wanted all the time, not any other. And

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9 s - . A MANWELL t t. t t t V t. . i si very body about the place so!" hotly sr.id little Syb. Hush:" Leila winced at Syb's Iat words. "As for her right, we must remember every minute in the day that (Jod has given her that right as as great thing to sacrifice all yourself for those dear and near. Syb, I could give up anything for you." "Fore me? Could you. Iila? Such a miserable, humpy, crooked little thing as I?" Syb's lips quivered. "What matters it whether our bodies are straight or crooked? It is our souls that will live by and by in Paradise, if they are straight and true, the homes of pure thoughts and gentle deeds. Oh, Syb, try and cast out that passionate nature of yours. And when Gervis brings home his bride, let us be loving and kind to her, a stranger amid us all think of it!" "But shall you, Leila?" Syb stared. "Shall you really welcome her and be nice to her you?" she demanded, wonderstmck at such a possibility. "God helping me, I shall," gravely said Leila, and she meant it. It was not that her old love for Gervis had died a sudden death; but because he was now the husband of another woman, bound to love and care for her "until death them did part," that Ieila could put him out of her life, save as the man who had saved his old home and his parents from earthly ruin. If Gervis could attain to such a sacrifice as h? had made, could she herself not imitate his self-abnegation in her life? And the passion-distraught little sister must be brought round somehow, and taught to welcome the new comer into the family. It was a ('i.acult t&sk to pe:s ia J,e the untamable spirit. Though Syb was but thirteen yeais of age, she had a grownup mind and one as distorted as her poor little body. "I should like to see her lying dead that American girl!" said the deformed girl when Leila's persuasive voice ceased. "You see," went on Syb, "if she were dead, Gervis would have all her money, of course, and he could marry you." Leila groaned. This horrible, inhuman wish was the only result of her efforts to soften the ungoverned heart. "That's why I keep on wishing something would happen to them!" vehemently insisted Syb. "Happen to whom?" Lady Jane's voice startled the sisters, and Syb slipped off Leila's knee. "I've just had a wire from Gervis. They are in London and will be here today," she went on hurriedly. "And they are bringing a friend with them, a Mr. Ansdell. I fancy it is the same man who saved the whole train, you remember, from j a terrible fire in the midst of the prai ries." "Yes. 'Ansdell was that man's name, dear aunty," said Leila, "a well-known scientist, Gervis said he was." Leila spoke the name of her lover she had lost in a controlled, calm voice. The help she had sought was vouchsafed her abundantly. "Well, we must be good to him in that case. But our house has been filling up this week until there's hardly a decent room left for this stranger. And, Leila, my dear, I want your help again. Our arrangements are not quite finished." Lady Jane rushed off as rapidly as she had come. There was to be a largo party of old and young on Christmas night at Temple-Dene. For years there had been almost no entertaining in the partially ruined home. The Christmas gathering was, therefore, looked forward to by the neighborhood with keen expectation. "It is to be quite an old-fashioned Christmas party, with a tree and blindman's buff and romps neither more nor less," Lady Jane warned them. "It should have been, properly speaking, on Christmas eve; but our dear young people will not arrive until that day, so our merry-making must be on the twenty-fifth." It was late afternoon when the family carriage, newly furnished, came up the steeps from the roadside station, and reached the Temple-Dene avenue of tall firs, whose stately trunks were redding in the sun's dying glare. "Wo're at home now, Gladdy! We're on our own land at last. Welcome, dear wife, to Temple-Dene!" Gervis bent forward and lifted in hU the little hands lying listlessly on Oladdy's lap. Perhaps. If they two had been alone, he would have kissed his welcome as well as said it; but they were not alone. From a corner of the roomy old carriage a pair of dark restless eyes roved over the snow-covered landscape. Gladdy, at her husband's words, lifted her head to look out also, and It was startling to note how she had altered. There was a peculiarly wasted appearance and an unutterable Ustlessneaa not natural in one so young. It needed a distinct effort for her to survey her new home; to speak she made no attempt. Gervis drew back disappointed. "Haven't you a word of praise, my dear, for your own home?" he asked. "It's all very nice, but it is so oold. and I never liked pine trees," Oladdy forced herself to say. And she shivered under her Parisian wraps and her costly furs. "They always make me shudder, they are so gloomy," she added pltcously.

"She's fearully nervous," thou-jht Gervis. But there was no sign of It when Gladdy stepped out of the carriage and into Lady Jane's widely welcoming arms. A self-possessed, wistful-eyed little bride it was who lifted her cold cheek

: for her mother-in-law's kiss; a dainty : figure, in truth, in its costly furs. Hut the face under the green velvet i toque, with its diamond buckle and ! nwlding feathers, was not the face of I a shy. happy bride, and for a moment j I-:dy Jane stared, half puzzled. Then Gervis was clasped in hia mother's arms and held tight. If her ladyship had a soft corner in her worldly, ambitious heart it was for her boy, the son who had done so much for herself and the old home. The bride stood apart, a pathetic little figure in her momentary loneliness. Ieila, who had been shrinking behind the person of Lady Jane, quickly noticed it, forced herself to go forward. "May I bid you welcome? I am Ieila. Perhaps Gervis has told vou that his cousins. Sybil and I, have lived here since we were almost babies Syb, at least, was a baby." Leila's winsome, tender face was bent close to Gladdy, who was slightly shorter in stature than she. Her low, rich voice, with its caressing note, stirred sometning in Gladdy's heart, and she moved eagerly forward so eagerly that their lips met in a clinging kiss before Leila had quite made up her mind to greet the bride with anything warmer than a stiff handshake. "I didn't know there was any Leila," said Gladdy, in her sweet, childish tones. "Gervis did not tell me. But I am so glad! Please take me away somewhere. Let us go together, you and I, I am so weary!" Leila was startled. Go away together, the bride and she! It sounded bewilderingly strange. And and had Gervis forgotten her so utterly that her name had never been uttered to his newly made wife? The thought wrung her gentle heart. (To be continued.) FRUIT FLIES. Small Inect4 Among Canned Krult on the Shelves. Often housekeepers who do not take sufficient pains with the sealing of the cans of fruit they put away in the fall, find on the surface of the contents little, slender maggo's. feeding on the contents. These larvae are probably of the species called fruit flies. They belong to a class of insects containing some thirty kinds. The flies are light brown in color. They are so small that they are commonly thought of as ordinary gnats. They are attracted by the acrid odor of vinegar as well as fruit. Stone jars simply covered with a cloth to allow the fermentation of vinegar are easily invaded by the insects, which lay their eggs on the pieces of fruit that are projecting above the surface of the fluid. The hatching of the larvae is soon followed by the formation of the pupae, which are found on the sides of the cans, usually. Some four days later the flies issue and begin the round of production again, multiplying with greut rapidity. It is a characteristic of the larvae of these flies to live only in upper layers of the fruit and this fact makes it possible to save at least a portion of the contents of the jar3. Fruit put in cans and sealed up airtight is safe. Eggs laid upon cloth tops or near .slight openings between lid and can often hatch into worms that find a way inside. Pyrethnim powder used in the fruit room or cellar will have a good effect in clearing out the flies and this, with the precautions mentioned in connection wlta canning, should rid a place of the insects. George Edwin Black in Indianapolis News. An Expelled M. I" Trayer. During the first half of the eighteenth century one of the members for a southern constituency was expelled from the house of commons for forgery, and, indeed, endured the purgatory of standing in the j llory for a day, says the St. James Budget Ha was a man of unctuous piety, and his career in many respects resembled that of Jabez Balfour in later days. After his death the following prayer was found, in his own handwriting, among his papers: "O Lord, Thou knowest that I have nine houses in the City of London, and that I have lately purchased an estate in fee simple in the county of Essex. I beseech Thee to preserve the two counties of Middlesex and Essex from fire and earthquake; and as I have a mortgage in Herefordshire, I beg of Thee to have an eye of compassion also on that county; and for the rest of the counties, Thou mayest deal with them as Thou are pleased. Give a prosperous voyage to the Mermaid, because I have not insured her, and enable the bank to meet their bills." Theater Salon for Loabet. M. Gaulet, the architect of the Theater Francaise, in Paris, is arranging to give President Lou bet what M. Felix Fauro often wished namely, a salon contiguous to the state box. Tho space needed for this arrangement was taken up -by Talma's dressing room. After the death of that actor it was used aa a lumber room, and then as an office for the semainicr, or stage manager, for the week. It will :1m? connected with the president's box by a small anteroom. He can there receive the actors and actresses whom he wishes to compliment or withdraw between th& acta from the public gaze. Cecil Family ICuna IlrltUb. Empire. It might almost be said that at present the Cecil family is running t& British empire. Lord Salisbury, head of the Cecil fonlly, will continuo to be primo minister. Lord Cran'bo'unie, his son, under secretary for foreign affairs; Lord Relborne, his son-in-law, at tho head of the admiralty; Arthur Ilalfour, his nophew, first lord of the treasury and leader of the house of commons, and Gerald Balfour, another nephew, secretary of Ireland. There are at present thirteen Incorporated automobile clubs In the United State.

! In tüe PuSic pe Honor for Mrs. FuirbanKf. Among the candidates for the presidency of the D. A. R. at the coming session in Washington is Mrs. Charles Y. Fairbanks, wife of the senator from Indiana. In her own city Indianapolis Mrs. Fairbanks is accounted an all-around club woman. She was the rounder of the Fortnightly Literary club, an organization of several hunuivd women. As the vice president general of the Daughters of the American Revolution in Indiana she Is conspicuous among the patriotic women of the country. As a member of the Con-it-:np, 1 ;.ry t-iub, the leading mixed lull in indianapolis, and a worker In the A:t association, she is also well known in her state. When in Washington with hor husband she afSliated a nil the women's clubs in the na- ; r..il capital. In appearance Mrs.

MRS. C. W. FAIRBANKS. Fairbanks is unusually prepossessing, having that indefinable stamp of a gracious and refined woman. Stjcty-S'tjc Mill on Cents Qoined There were coined last year at the I'nited States mints CG.S33.700 bronze cents. The number was almost large enough to supply every inhabitant with one of these useful coins. The mints turned out more cents last year than ever before, but they have not been inactive in preceding years. Their output in 1S9.", was thirty-eight mil.lons. in 1S0G thirty-nine millions, in 1S'.7 fifty millions, and in 180S forty-nine-millions. The cents which are in circulation seldom are much worn. They disappear some how before they have had time to get rubbed .smooth s nickels and silver coins do. What become ; of the cents is as much a mystery as what beonies of the pins. Milions of these small coins are minted yearly, and yet there is a steady demand for more. Nobody hoard's cents. Nobody melts them down a fate which befalls gold coins often. Then what becomes of all the bronze cents? Compatriot of Famous Men, The late Senator Bradbury of Maine, whose death was announced last week, was the oldest statesman in the United States, and a colleague and personal friend of Webster, Clay, Bentor and Calhoun. He was the only survivor of the 100 men who sat in the senate during his senatorial term from 1S47 to 1 $";. The departed ex-senator was the only living member of the THE LATE SENATOR BRADBURY. Bowdoin class of 1825. which included Longfellow, Hawthorne and John S. C. Abbott. The career of the venerable statesman covered a period of American history unexampled in the cxperl-" ence of any other man. He was one of Andy Jackson's warm supporters. He was OS years, six months and 2S days old when he died. He never chewed nor smoked tobacco, nor drank intoxicating liquor. Dr. A. Donaldson Smith, the famous Philadelphia explorer. Who has recent ly returned from Africa, has been awarded the Elisha Kent Kane medal by the Geographical society of Penn sylvania.. This is the first medal the society has awarded. Sir Wilfred Laurier. the Canadian premier, is noted for the unstinted manner in which he dispenses private charity. He has been known to go out on cold nights to carry food" to some poor person in whom he took an inter est. Colonel Campbell, ex-congress s m a n from Illinois, who left his seat to go to the war, has "been proniot e d from lieutenant colonel of the Thir tieth volunteer regiment to be brigadier general. He will not have long cn. Campbell. to serve if the pres ent army bill Is passed, but ho will come home to his country with the title of general. He has for many years been a leader In Illinois politics. Senator Thomas It. Hard of California, Dr. C. L. Bard of Ventura, Cat, are to erect a hospital in that city as a memorial to their mother. The hospital will be presented to the city eventually. James WrhItcomb Riley, the poet, now rarely wears the buttonhole bouquet which he used never to be without lie dresses simply and wears the flowers but seldom.

REFUSED ALL TITLES. IWcher Preferred "the Name bj Which My .Mother Cil-1 Me." A reporter, probably bioken into work after Henry Ward Bcocher died, recently referred to th- late Henry C. Bowen as "prominently 1 elated to some of tin- troublous y.a;s in the life of Rev. Hen;y Ward Becher." D.-. Henry War.! l'ft!.tr was not Henry Ward Beecher. He refused all dot -torates, whether of divinity, of philosophy, of letters or of law. He did so not ostentatiously, but so positively that decree conferring institutions at last passed him by. His naive and characteristic statement was: "I prefer to be known by the name my mother called me." And. somdiow. amid the thror.R of D. l)s LL. D.s.. S. T. Us, or D. C. I.s., plain Htnry Ward I leech r on a program or on a poster or in an advertisement had an explicit distinction by itself, because the gre.itness of the man exceeded the gieatness cf all degrees. "His mother." by the way, was his stepmother. His mother died in his inf.mcy. His stepmother came into his life when he was 4 years old. She was all love, tact and wisdom to him. Brooklyn Eagle.

LIEUT. MABEL C. HUNT. A Bright Salvation Army I.ais Who Koowi How tu Keep Iter Corp In (iood IIWHlth. Ogden, Utah. Jan. 12. 1901. (Special.) The Pacific Coast Division of the Salvation Army, whose noble work in the interests of fallen humanity has done so much for this western country, has its headquarters in this city. One of the brightest and most enthusiasticworkers is Lieut. Miss Mabel Clarice Hunt. Everyone knows how these devoted people parade the streets day or night, exposing themselves to all kinds of weather, that no opportunity may be lost of rescuing some poor unfortunate from sin and suffering. In some cases, their recklessness in thus exposing themselves has been commented upon as almost suicidal. Their answer to such criticisms invariably is their unfailing faith in the Divine injunction to "do right and fear not." Lieut. Hunt explains one of the means she employs to keep hr "Soldiers" in good health, as follows: "I have found Dodd's Kidney Pil's of great value in cases of Kidney and Liver Trouble and Diseases contracted from severe colds. Several of our lads and lassies have been repeatedly exposed to cold weather and : ain. and have spoken for hours out of doors, often with wet feet and chilled to the marrow. As a consequence of this exposure. Pulmonary Trouble. Rheumatism and Kidney Disorders often ensue. In such cases 1 always advise Dodd's Kidney Pills, for i have noticed better results, quicker relief, and more lasting benefit from the use of Dodd's Kidney Pills in such cases than from all other medicines I know of combined. They cleanse the blood, regulate the S3'stem and destroy disease." A medicine which can do what Lieut. Hunt says so positively Dodd's Kidney Pills do is surely worth the attention of all who suffer with any form of Kidney Trouble, Rheumatism, or Blood Disorders. Projected Railways In Folkestone. A conduit line to cost $500,000 is projected in Folkestone, Kent. England, in down town sections, with an overhead trolley system in the suburbs. Coughing Lead toCousuniptlon. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist today and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 23 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous. "Modern Culture," formerly "Self Culture Magazine." is now under a new title and new management. It ia one of the brightest, most readable and most valuable magazines of the day. The beneficial results of Garfield Tea upon the system are apparent after a few days use: THH coMl'I.KXIO.N KS CLKARED FOR THE BLOOD HAS BEEN PURIFIED. Don't give your guest the benefit of your domestic broils, and never find fault with your servants in her presence. THE DUTY OF MOTHERS. What suffering frequeatly results from a mother's ignorance; or moro frequently from a mother's neglect to properly instruct her daughter! Tradition says "woman must suffer," and young women are so taught. There is a little truth and a great deal of exaggeration in this. If a young woman suffers severely the needs treatment, and her mother should see that she gets it. Many mothers hesitate to take their daughters to a physician for examination ; but no mother need hesitate to write freely about her daughter or herself to Mrs. Pinkham and secure the most efficient advice without charge. Mrs. I'inkham's address is Lynn, Mass. r, Mrs. August Pfalzgraf, of South Byron, Wis., mother of the young lady whose portrait we here publish, wrote Mrs. Pinkham in January, sayln? hr daughter had suffered for two years with irregular menstruation had headache all the time, and pain In her side, feet swell, and was generally miserable. Mrs. Pinkham promptly replied with advice, and under date of March, 18W, the mother writes again that Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetabla Compound cured Iter daughter of all pains and irregularity. Nothing In the world equals Mrs. Pinkham's great medicine for regulating woman's peauliar month! troubles.

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Holland has cine miles of canal for every 100 square miles of surface, 2,700 miles in all.

Each package of PUTNAM FADELESS DYES colors either Silk. Wool or Cotton perfectly. The amount of German capital invested in China Ls over 170,000.000. AV. 'TKTMcn with r'z t- flvr-t! and Introduo; t.'iirtr:-h l'.m'.try Mixture. mVt.t F&!tirT :..') u?f:y an.l exii.!--. .V.;-ps ut-i ttamp Muuarch Mfg. Co., Sta. rinmlv'd. min-!. Never mention your own faults; Ulli iiii I U It iUi 2 ÜU. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. Take Laxmivt Himmo ch .mnk'I kisi fts. All ini-Tcist rpt'imt ihr n-,.r..-r if it f;i;is to cure. K. W. Grove's iA-:.ature is eu the U x. -.'x-. Morl y took six years to write "The Iiis of the Dutch Republic." I do not believe Piso s Oiro for Ccts-j-r.pt Ion tas an e-i-ial f.,r couylis a ad oM.s. John' F Roteu, Trinity Springs, lud., l b. ;5. IM In 1S99 China imported from Germany $235,000 worth of beer. ltVTTS CAPS I 'OK COI.D. Safest, surest, quickest cure for cold. Druggists know the ingredients. cents. Some men acquire that tired feeling from lcoking for an easy job. W pay SIX a Week nd eipn ! mon u'tli rV's t- :ntr, .!,( our I'Oi I. try C"Mi"ii !). .Javh.i.k Mf. i) . Iie;r. !, A farmer works a miracle when he turns his horses to grass. Coe'n Chr!i ISitlxam Is the oldPt ami liest. It 1 .1 n jk u a vld quicker than anything else It U a:- aye r 'l'.ad.e. 1 ry It. Vanity is sometimes cured by having a photograph taken. Care, worrv and anxiety whiten the hair tooear:y. Henew It wild V kk t tt' Hai: IUlmoi. Hisder i:. the be-: iure for curas. IjcU. Success comes from not making the same mistake twice. When cycling take a bar of White's Yucatan. You can tide further aud easier. A boaster is next door neighbor to a liar. ave Your

"GAIT IT WP A J . WV!

hampoos o

And light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of emollient skin cures. This treatment at once stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces, stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots with energy and nourishment, and makes the hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp whert all else fails. ILL10US USE CUTICURA SOAP Assisted by CüTlCüitA Ointment, for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and tht topping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and healing rod, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chaflngs, and for all the purpo3ea of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women ti?e Cuticcra Soap in the form of baths for annoying Irritations, inflammations, and excoriation?, for too free or offensive perspiration, In the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily ugg8t themselves to women and mothers.ONo amount of persuasion can Induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and beautifiers, to use any others. Cuticcra Soap combines delicate emollient propertief derived from Cuticcra, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing Ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicattä Soap is to bo compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying I the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic foiZcf. soap,' however expensive, Is to be compared with it for all the purposes of tho toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines, in Oxn Soap at One Pktcb,' viz. : TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, the bkst skin and complexion soap, th BEST toilet, best baby soap In the world. Completo External and Internal Treatment for Every Humor. g , OonniBtiriir of CCTiccm Poir (tic, to rtatniie the Vn of crut ani nmi-wZ llTrl onle and soften th thickened cuticle; Ccticcra Ointwixt (50.), fllll Kill to b"tantty llay Itchlnf. inflammation, and irritation, and aooth and HUIlvUlU heal; and Or-rirnm Krani.TiNT (50c), to cool and cleanse tha blood. 771, p. A HiNoi.KPrT la often anfflHnt to cure the tno(ttortnrinf,dl.n4Tii1nt THP VtT l Ok ltrhlna. rmrnlni. and eoalv akin. acalp, and blood hnmora. wllk leal iZi. lUfm OL 1 1 PliZü Lair, when tUaiMUU. 6oli tLrtoihont Um world.

Don't Get Footsore! C.t OOT-E.VPC A certain cure for Swollen, Smartins,. Burning, Sweating Feet, Coras and Bunicna. Ak for Allen's FootEase, a powder. Cures Frost-bites and Chilblains. At all Druggists and Sho Stores, 25c. Sample sent FRKK. Address Alien S. 0:m?ted. LeRoy. N. Y. Treferre.1 Toothichc. A little boy said tliat he would rather have the earache th:m the toothach, because he- wasn't compelled to have the ear pulled o it.

Lane's Family M.IIiri. Moves the buwtis each .i ay. In order to be healthy this is :u cess.iry. Act3 gently on thellvf-rand .:Jnvs. Cures sick headache. Pri.'-e and ")c. Am ar.ecdote i - a tal v it '.out i -o !v. 3: 5 Cold Agony Pain intetistäfd by cold is unbearable. Neuralgia in winter must secic I St. Jacobs Oil I ' "5 for the surest relief and promptest cure. Zfi I If II it i iff M i M lift IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMUIi flair with