Marshall County Independent, Volume 7, Number 10, Plymouth, Marshall County, 15 February 1901 — Page 6
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CHAPTER I. The cms was turned up to its fall ariqht aii'I ilared r.ui.sily .a tin; front parlor of a lodging hou.-e in the siib'irhs of London. Just u::(i"rntjath it, s.i thnt the bright light illiai.ined the varying shaIe of Ler auburn hair, sat n girl, with the advertise ment sheet t the Daily Mail lai-i upon the table :t'tvrf her. One linger passed rap-dly iown the columns. ' i wish I wciv a cook, .Wvilh Here hp rooks required of every siz and -h.ipe. no limit to either nsre or sex, -ipparenily. I cM'tM et a doz?n situations tomorrow if I could roast a jr.::i properly. n:i! I coaid tain a 1'or- : :r:o if I could do made dishes." The brother that Janetta Howard v '.lives.--a v.u.-, a ood-lookins Ia.1 i- o:t y.: :: old. with dark appea!eye.., and tlo-Lly-eroj.p :d curly riuir. Tli-.' t ie,' was spoiled by the purpojf I. s-. weak mouth and the chara terl-.s chin. H reclined in an easy :hair. ar.d wa. ?n;okins a pipe, with Li-; ban'i thrust deep into his trouser UO-vkTt-'. " What nonsense, Jennie! As if 1 should evf -r enn-ont to your goinj; out is a rommop. serva-itl 15 side?, l don't u?!ieve you could do a red herring I Topt-rl y." "fliv.ui a jrood lire and a toasting fork, I would evolve- the way to do the herring." retorted Janetta merrily. " But that I dare not draw out our last penny of capital I would go in for a -ieiie.- of cooking lesions, come out at The top of th- tree, and take a plac? .is cook in a high family, I tell you. I would not adopt the title of 'lady help.' I'd be cook, and rule my kitchen with a rod rf iron." And she clenched her hand, as if she really gripped thi rod of which she spoke. " And, failing this, what do you propose to do?" asked Neville lazily. -Anything that oilers,'' replied Janetta 'iui kly. resuming her search through the paper. "It is quite clear that, if you are to accept this chance of a stool in an accountant's office, I must supplement your salary in some way; you can't live on it." "I need not accept it; I can wait Cor something hetter." "Wait until we com to our last TK-iniy. ir. fact!" cried Jaretta impatiently. No. Neville; you must taki 'his ( lentil iu. and I must get soiaethin and h !p you all I can. You know I'm i-ady enough to do it; but" with ; little break in her voice you'll !e ep steady, dear, when I'm oae?" Her tone ir.iM'ier: that the boy's past h.id not been altogether blanch???, and he .started to hi feet, as if stun? by her words. "I know I've beon a beast. Jennie. I've wasted a lot of money; hitf if I hadn't had such bad luck I should have won ir back on the last Derby." " That's just it you'd no right to risk it." replied Janetta despairingly; but you'll leave it alone now you must promise me to try and keep straight. I think it would break my heari if you turned into a drinking, aetting lüan like father!" Th" last words were brought out -aiily and reluctantly, briefly telling Mi" tale of the present low ebb in their fortunes. "Hs dead; you need not bring up ais sins against him," said Neville, 'at her sulkily. "And I would not. except that I lov? von so dearly that I must give you one ord of warning. You've nobody else, you see."' said -Janetta. with a smile hat was almost a care?.s. "Lt me see. where was I? Bent upon kntiin that wonderful situation that is to make both your fortune and mine." she continued, with an eff jrt to jegain her usual light-heaitedness. What do you say to this?" " 'Wanted immediately, a young lady as companion, good-looking and tfood-tempered. Photo must accompany every application. References required.' " '"Humbug!" ejaculated Neville, from the depths of his easy chair. "Come and look for yourself, if you don't heipve me." said Janetta. with laughter in h-r eyes. He rose and peeped over his sister's -dioulder. "Why. yes! it's there safe noueb. It's a hoax, of cours". You won't be green enough to answer it?" "This very nisrht." said Janetta orightly "at least, if you honestly an assure me that I fulfill the requirements. I'm not old at two-nnd-twenty. am I? "I'm averagely good-tempered, and ould attain perfect slf-control if an occasional oiittmr.-t ru'-ant a lo.s of situation. And" as she spoke she glanced at the common little mirror nbove the mantel shelf "don't mind my fef lings. tU me truly; am I good ""joking enough?" "Oh. to that, you'll do." replied Neville, with the bluntness of a brother. The face that the mirror reflected was framed in a cloudy mass of hair, set like an aureole roun 1 the daintilypoised head. Hazel eyes, half veiled by the long lashes, looked wistfully from t;nder level, clearly-defined eyebrows; a creamy complexion; and a smiling mouth, whose half-opened red lips disclosed the whiteness of the small, even teeth, completed the picture. Beauty was the one possession left to Janetta. and tonight she prized It mote than she had ever done before as a possible means to an end. What if the simple fart that she was pretty fehould win for her the situation she so longed to obtain? "I .shall send her my prettiest photo, Neville," she said, after her brief self f'jrvey. "You don't even know the sex of the advertiser. It may be a widower advertising darkly for number two." suggested her brother. Janetta laid down her pen in some alarm. "I don't care," she said; "I shall write and eend my photo and references. The answer will tell us all fcbout it. I think it's a very rich old maid, with a poodle and a parrot- I shall probably have to wash the
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poodle, and play pretty Poll with endless lumps of sugar, and got my fingers well packed ia the process. There! my letter is at any rate short and to the point. Will it do?" sha said, tossing it over to Neville. "A man could not have put the thing better. Old maid or widower, I would close with you at once if I were tho advertiser. You write a short note and a piv-tiy hand." "Very well, we'll go out and post it," said Janetta, stretching out her hand for her hat. "May good luck attend it!" She received an answer by return of post. Taq pointed handwriting in which the letter was written was of the style prevalent about 40 years ago. "An oi l maid! Look at. the writing!" cried Janetta triumphantly, as she opened the envelope. "There 'is a modern brevity about it," said Neville, peeping over her .shoulder. "Read it out, there's a dear." "Dear Malan: I think you seem likely to suit me. The salary I offer is .CT.o pounds a year; but I shall be willing to raise it at the end of th? first quarter if we find we get on together. Will you come for a month and see how you like it, beginning on Monday? "Can you leave by the train which starts from Paddington at 2 o'clock? I shall be sending to Northcliff Station meet a friend, and you could come by the same carriage. Wire reply. "Believe me. faithfully yours, "(Miss) Clarice Seymour." Janetta and her brother burst into simultaneous laugh when she finished the letter. "Kit her the woman is a lunatic or it's a hoax." said Neville. "I'll go and see for myself. It's too good an opening to miss. Sixty pounds a year for doing nothing, apparently. No mention even of the poodle or the parrot. Anyhow, it's a genuine place; I've looked it out in the 'C,azetteor. " Thus it came to pass that, on the Monday following. Janetta and Neville pared up and down Paddington station together, both their hearts too full of the approaching separation to trust themselves to speak of it. In-tead. they talked of trivialties. watched the other passengers as they hurried down the platform to the train, commenting idly upon them. "Lc:ok. Neville! what a handsome man that is getting into the first-class carriage not far from my humble third. If he were a girl, and applied for my situation. I should not have a chance, should I? He's so very goo J looking! " The man in question turned, as if he had heard the remark, glancing at the brother and sister, who had com1 to a halt before the carriage in which Janetta had placed her rugs. The glance was but momentary. Ho signed to the porter, who followed him. to hand in his belongings, jumped into the carriage, and closed the door. "I believe lie heard you, Jennie," said Nevill quickly. "if he did it can't matter. We shall never meet again, and it can't be the first time that he's heard he's good looking." said Janetta. with a little laugh. "Oh. Neville. I must get in! I don't know how to say good-by. I will write tonight. Good-by. dear; good-by. Jump in a minute. I must kiss you; and you'll keep steady, for my sake?" The last words were said in a whisper. "All right, don't bother!" said Neville, horribly ashamed of the fact that there were tears in his eyes. CHAPTKH II. In a few minutes more the train was pufling slowly from the station, and Janetta. who had craned her neck from the carriage to ohtain a farewell smile from Neville, sank back into her corner, with plenty of time before her in which to eonsider her prospects and her fellow travelers. The latter were singularly uninteresting, with the exception of a little girl not more than two years old, who sat just opposite Janetta, regarding her with thoughtful eyes. Pretty," she said presently, stretching out her arms to come to her. And Janetta. with a reassuring nod to the mother, stood the child by the window and talked to her for the first hour, only handing her back to her natural guardian when the little thing was tired out. and showed signs of dropping off to sleep. A glance at her watch told her that she could not be many miles from her destination, and she looked out of the window to notice the sort of country through which they were traveling, fancying that in the fast-fading light of the February afternoon she could catch the shimmer of the sea in the distance. The thought had scarcely frame d itself before she was conscious of a curious swaying to and fro in the carriage, then a shivering vibration ran along the train as if the brake had heen applied with unwonted force; and, before she could do more than read the awful alarm that was written upon the faces of her fellow travelers, there came a crash and a total cessation of movement. The earth itself seemed tottering under her. and she was thrown from her seat to the floor. She was toi stunned for a few minutes to realize in the least, what had happened; but when at last able to collect her senses, she knew that there must have been an accident, the nature and character of which she was incapable of gauging. The air was alive with sounds more or less distressing the hissing of the engine, the shouts of the engine driver, the piercing shrieks of women, and close to her, making itself heard above the din, the pitiful, frightened wail of a little child. "Poor little dear! It must be the little child I was talking to," said Janetta, trying to raise herself on to her knees so as to see better what had happened to her fellow travelers,
and much relieved to find that ncr own limbs were wiolo and sound. The carriage was jerked off the rails and was pitched half over on its side, i.nd the struggles of ethers to tvoo themselves were beginning to be unpleasantly felt when, from her kneeling posture, Janetta caught a g'.imps-J of the man whom she had seen getting into the first-class carriage a little beyond her own at PaJdington. "Hallo!" he said. v.ith a pleasant smile, "You seem to want help here. Don't bo frightened; I don't think there is much harm done, barring the smashing up of a carriage or so. No, no! don't struggle behind there! Ladies first, please. I must help you out through the window, as the door is jammed, and beware of broken glass." "The child first," said Janetta, with quivering lips, who had laid hold of the little frightened heap that had been propelled right under the seat opposite to her own. "Hand her out, please!" cried the man, depositing the child high tip on the bank near by. "She's soared out cf her wits, as well sh? may be. Now give me your hand-?, and place your feet on the handle of the door; I'll keep you steady as you climb through and lift you out." Janetta obeyed every direction swiftly and deftly. With her arm about the child, Janetta sat and watched the strange scene with dazed, bewildered eyes. The hugo engine, wlir h had run off the line, stood half mbedded in the bank at the side, snorting and pufling as if indignant at finding himself in such an ignominious position. Men with scared faces hurried hither and thither; women stood in groups along the line, sobbing in helpless terror. The mother of her little charge lay stretched at full length on the grass close by, borne thither by the strong arms of her rescuer, who seemed almost the on! man who kept full possession of his senses, except a fairfaced, fair-haired young doctor, who hastened forward towards the prostrate figure, kneeling by her and feeling her pulse with professional calm. "Fainted, that's all," he said, looking up at the man by his side. Then a quick glance of recognition passed over his features. "Why, Merivale, you here?" he exclaimed. "On your way to the George, I suppose?" From a certain hardening of the voice Janetta gathered that, for some reason unknown, the fair-haired doctor did not like the handsome stranger, whose fine physique and pleasant bearing seemed so attractive to herself. (To be continued.!
TITLES FOR SALE. You May Also Acquire a Line of Noide A "t r. Would you like to be a baron, vicomte, comte or marquis? Nothing is easier (if you have the price), and it is not such an expensive luxury, even though an ancient pedigree is thrown in with the title. For 12.000 you may become a baron, for $4.000 a vicomte, for $n,000 a comte. What is more, if you buy in the right market you will have letters patent from a European government attesting the genuineness of your title and descent. It is the nobility of old Spain that is thus accessible to the stranger with a fat purso. A circular marked "confidential" is being sent out by an agent in Paris to newly rich people in America and Europe. It does not elicit many responses from Americans, who are conscious of the ridicule they would encounter in their own country if they sported titles; but Europeans of recent fortune take the bait eagerly, and the 1900 crop of barons and counts haa been large. If you call at the agency in Paris you are received by a gentlemanly individual whose manner inspires confidence. After explaining to you that every person has such a mob of ancestors that it would be a miracle if a count or even a king did not slip in somewhere among them, he will exhibit the volumes of reference bound in red morocco and containing royal warrants of Spain delivered by the official at Madrid, who has charge of all matters of heraldry, and countersigned by three court officials. By means of one of the&e certificates any one may become the acknowledged descendant of the proudest Castilian grandees. Through the influence of a partner in Madrid the name of the aspirant is entered on the roles of the Spanish nobility, and that settles it. Rut the accomplished agent does more than this for your money. If you are a Frenchman he procures the seal of the French embassy for your warrant of nobility, and he claims that the seals of tin German and Austrian embassies are equally at his command. Walk up, walk up, ladies and gentlcmen.and buy a Spanish title, signed, sealed and delivered, with a patrician ancestry thrown in for good measure! New York World. lliawlnuliikn nf TVf r KnA -. . When Mrs. Russell Sage mach her I appearance at the dinner of the Mayflower society one evening recently it was a matter of comment, says the New York Times. She is not a woman who gets away from her home after the evening shadows fall, as a rule. But she and ' Uncle Russe 11" renewed their youth, and not only sat out tho dinner, but through tho long speechmaking that followed. This is the one evening of dissipation that Mrs. Sago allows herself during a year. She enters into its enjoyment with, all tho zest of her younger associates in this organization of Puritan descendants, and maitcs the most of this red-letter evening of her year. Mrs. Sage told a friend that she feared she was taking life altogether too easily now, and is really becoming lazy, hecauso on some mornings she does not have her breakfast until 8 o'clock. The Ahi4 of Dante. The ashes of Dante, inclosed in an iron urn, are about to be transported, with great ceremony, to the library palace nt Florence. The urn was long ago stolen from a church in Ravenna and secreted In the outer wall of a chapel. It seems that a sculptor named Pazzi has for years possessed this extraordinär: treasure, and has but recently handed It over to Florence, where Dante was born and whence he was exiled.
ALBERT D. SHAW IS DEAD. Formerly Comaunlcr.n-Chlf of tli Grand Army. Representative Albert D. Shaw of Watertown, N. Y formerly command-er-in-chk-f of the Grand Army of tho RenuV;:c, was found dead Sunday luf.'rnirg in his ro.un at the Rigs house. Waging; on, I C. A physiCi.::i jv.iiiiKJii'-J immediately after the discovery of the body pronounced death due to apoplexy, occurring probably about 2 o'clock in the morning. Colonel Shaw had returned about 1:"0 o'clock from a banquet at the Ebbitt hcr.se in honor of his successor. General Loo Rassieur, and before he left the banquet hall had responded eloquently to a toast and appeared to be in excellent health and spirits. Colonel Shaw was born in Lyme, N. Y'., Dec. 27, IS 11. He served a term of enlistment in the Thirty-fifth New York Volunteers and ns a special agent of the war department at provost marshal headquarters during the civil war. Later he was a member of the state assembly lor one term, was appointed consul at Toronto in lS'.ls and promoted to Manchester, England, in 1S7S, from which latter plaee he was removed by President Cleveland in 1SS.") for being "an offensive partisan." Afterward he filled tho ofiice of department commander of the Grand Army of the Republic for the state of New York, commander-in-chief of the national body and a representative in congress, succeeding the late C. A. Checkering, who met a tragic death in New York.
Tomb of Kins Kobbel. A painful impression has been made by the report that the tombs of King Victor Emmanuel II. and King Humbert have been profaned by thieves, who entered the Pantheon at Roms and carried away a number of ornaments, one of them gold, adorning the madonnas, together with facsimiles of the various orders of the Iron Crown, and a badge of the Annunciado. Other objects were taken, though not of great value. Plnifree Goes o Kurope. Ex-Governor Hazen S. Pingree left Detroit Sunday over the Michigan Central railroad for New York on his way to England. lie will sail from New York on Tuesday on the steamer Cymric. Hazen S. Pingree, Jr., will accompany his father as far as Southampton, where he will board another steamer for South Africa. Ex-Governor Pingree, who is making the trip for business reasons, will spend several weeks in England. Overissue in Min Mi it res. An official examination of the books rf the Goldstone Mining company at Colorado Springs. Colo., has disclosed an overissue of 3,000,000 shares, and as the stock sold for 2 cents a share the shortage amounts to $G0,0uo. C. P. Rentley, who is now serving a sentence of six months' imprisonment for overissuing 5,000 shares of Astor stock, was secretary of the Goldstone company when the over-issue was made?. attle with Kebel Indian. The federal troop.- in Yucatan have had another .battle with rebel Indians, who were strongly intrenched, but the Indians were unable to withstand the charge made on their position and fled in all directions. Many of the Indians would like to be released from the tyranny of chiefs who inflict the death penalty and torture and who commit many barbarities to infuse terror into their adherents. Find .Midget l'atr Starving:. In a miserable shanty, the windows of which are hoarded up, and through the sides of which the wind whistles, Frank Bailey and wife, two midgets, 72 years of age, who have been exhibited as freaks in all parts of the United States, were discovered Monday nearly starved to death. The hut is located three miles east of Niles, Mich., in Howard township, Cass count 3. Shoot Wife in Sleltrli. George Ilrown, while driving with his wife in a sleigh about five miles from Butte, Mont., shot and killed his wife, then put a bullet in his own head. He will Re No cause for the act can be learned. Nobody appears to know anything about the couple, but the supposition is that they were ranchers who had been to town on business and were on their wa3r home. Youth In Found Shot. Walter lieberer, aged 22, was found dead r ear Red Bud. 111., by a party of hunters. He left home in the morning to visit some animal traps, and, failing to return at noon, a search was instituted and he was found with a gunshot wound through the heart Itelx-N Uouted hjr Troop. The federal troops on their march to Chan, Santa Cruz, encountered rebel Indians holding a small fortified hill and car-led it in a dashing charge, the Indian-; scattering in all directions. The rebel loss was considerable. Contests ICIcli Man ) Will. The will of tho late James M. Starr, who left a very valuable estate at Richmond, Ind., is to be contested. Neither wife nor children surviving him, other relatives were remembered with email bequests and large blocks of stocks and bonds were loft to charitable institutions. The dissatisfied heir is Mrs. Hannah Leeds of New York, formerly of Chicago, a sister of the deceased. Starr also made a bequest to tho city to be used for park purposes. YuqaU Kill 100 Mexicans. Mexican troops were ambushed by Yaqui Indians in tho mountain passes east of Ures. Mexico, and fully a hundred were killed and wounded before they could extricate themselves. The battle occurred in the most rugged portion of the mountain range, not far from the main camp of the Indians. Saturday while the troops were resting In a canyon, the Indians attacked them from both sides and did such effective work that more than 100 were mowed down before the command sucMded'ln effecting Its escape.
iNGURABLE"HEART DISEASE SOON CURED ! fly the Great Spet-ialltt In Treating TVoak and Ibeed llrart, Franklin Miles, M.D..LL.IS. Will Smi.1 Worth of His Special Treatment I ree as Tri.nl.
To demonstrate the unusual curative powers of his new und complete ?pocial treatments by mail for heart ilisease, short breath, pain in the side, oppression in the chest, irregular puLse, palpitation, smothering spells, pufling of the ankles, or dropsy. Dr. Miles will send two dollars and a half worth free as a trial, to all who mention this papjr. His treatments are the result of twenty-five years of careful study, extensive research and remarkable experience in treating the various ailments of the heart, stomach and nerves, which so eaten complicat" each case. So astonishing are the re.-nlts of his complete spc.'-ial treatment that does not hesitate to or'ier all por.-ons a trial free. Nothing conld be more grnorous. Few physicians have such confidence in their remedies. There is no reason why every ahiietcd person should not avail themselves of this exceed ingly liberal offer, as they may never have another such opportunity. No cleats comes as suddenly as that from heart disease. Mrs. A. Kmi'i li. f I iiT ! 1 nqum. Ind.. was cur'd alvr thirty :i'iar:s faded; Mrs. riov.i draotnr. of I Yis?o!vi!!e. O . niter twtiily-iwn; .Jas 1 1. Y.it the nr.tci! ii'-to!'. ;jft r a s-nre had pronouncd him nuurahh ; Mis. l-'rank Smith, of Chicago, aft r livo K-ading physicians had pivt-n Ii r up; M". .Iidnis Koistcr. of Chicago, after ten; Mrs. K. Parker after sixteen failed. A thousand references to. and testimonials from. Bishops. c"l-rgynn-n. I:. inkers. Farmers an! their wives will he sent free upon request. Send at once to Franklyn Miles. M. D., LL. B., 1'0:; to 207 State St., Dept. U, Chicago, 111., for trial treatment. I'.oers Teach Art f War. It is said that several of the Kuropean general staffs are studying the feasibility of organizing special corps something after the Boer model. The principal difficulty lies in the limited supply of horses at the command of the various governments, with the exception of Russia. The last equine census in that country is stated to have shown considerably more than 10,000.00(1 horses fit for war purposes. Tliomim Conrrrt. A particularly inviting program has been prepared by the Chicago Orchestra for their next appearances, Friday afternoon and Saturday evening, Feb. leth and 16th. Mr. Leopold Kramer, the eoncertmeister of the orchestra. Is soloist for these performances, which insures the music loving public a rare treat. Legal Interest in l'iin;il The legal rate of interest in Canada is now f per cent, the reduction from Ct per cent having been made by a statute of the Dominion which went into effect January 1. f.ane'n Family Me.li-in. Moves tue uoAcis tuen ua. in order to be healthy this is necessary. Acta gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures Eick headache. Trice 25 and 50c. Mexiran Statn Fair. A permanent state fair will soon be established at Chihuahua, Mexico, for the special purposes of developing agriculture and cattle raising. Remedy for tirlp SifTrr: Garfield Tea cleanses the system, purifies the blood, aids digestion and helps nature throw off disease. It is made from Herbs. For some years there have been few brook trout in Colorado waters. Last 3'ear nearly 5,000,000 brook trout eggs were placed in them. Don't Injur Your Health by scrubbing clothes all day. I'se Maple City Self Washing Soap and make washing day easy. All grocers. A pretty girl always looks like the picture on a magazine cover doesn't. It Cures Colds. Couqas. Sore Throat. Croup. Influenza. Whooping Cong'), t'ronchitijand Aatima. A certai i cure tor tons irrptton in first staqes. and a sure rrlief In adxancd s'aqs Use at onc. You will see the exrel'c-nt effect, alter takinq th first dose. Sold ly dealers erryhere. large bottles 25 cents and ZO cents IVill eep You Dry Take No Sustitute . Fruit Catalogue. Showing FullLinC OF GARMENTS AND HATS. A.J.Tower Co. Dostom. mass. I'N Bl'MOMA, IMlMITItl'lilA, tiKlF. Eün ii 17 RUBEFACIENT It will "ul In the hiitl" nv di.toase accompanied wltll Intern! norniess. nie lri.l I Muillolent to convince any one cf Ii womier ful merit lnterrttbooklet cent free. Address Kuhttfitrlfiit Co.. Newton l'prr Kail. Mass IfiUEV ,n S,1,,'P ,n Montana I SAFE r. I Uli LI 2i e" Mmmt. Now I the thi'H i I 1 Y tu I U n l,e Pft'lreil fr f-inr limit vecr of nronierlty. Wrlit t' T our annual ri'l'orl und particular Vm Co-IWrtlv Punch C.. nrrat T!' Moni" HARRY RICH SELECT LIST s ENI FREE. Add. CENTRAL AGENCY. Lincoln. IK. ldlHUsMill:J 4 Bwi Couh yrtip. Tftte- Good. Use 7r.KMII&l;iH.lJI 1 in iimn. iMi n it i ru wipih.
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A Remedy for the Grippe. Physicians recommend KEMP'S BALSAM for patients afflicted with the grippe, as it is especially adapted for the throat and lungs. Don't wait for the first symptoms, but get a bottle today and keep it on hand for use the moment it is needed. If neglected, the grippe brings cn pneumonia. KEMP S BALSAM prevents this by keeping the cough loose and the lungs free from inflammation. All druggists, 25c and 50c.
The legal rate of interest in Canada Is now 5 per cent, the reduction from 6 per cent having bocn made by a statute of the dominion which went into effect Jan. 1. Hamlin's Wizard Oil Co.. Chicago. Bends son?: book and testimonials for stamp. Get Wizard Oil from your druggist. Holland has nine miles of canal for every 100 square miles of surface, 2,700 miles in all. Each pnrkajxe of Pl'TXAM FADELESS DYE colors more goods titan any other djv and colors th- ::i bettor, too. It requires a man of push to propel a babj' carriage or a wheelbarrow. to ctri: a corn in onk iay. Talre Hxatite Hiomo ic.mnk Tahi kis. All drursrits refund th ir,o:n-v if it fails to cure. K. W. drove' si-nat uro is :: t'ae L-ox. "c When a woman discloses a secret it is always with tolling effect. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a rough cure. J. U. O'IJkikn. H'Jü Taird Ave., N.. Minneapolis, Minn.. Jua. C. l'.üü. The money paid the infant's nurse is apt to be hush money. iiovt i:xrnuMi:.T With your health. Use Mutt's Caps for Cold. Prompt cure guaranteed, üöo at druggists. Query Will the coming shirt-waist man oxidize his hair? Pon't Do nnereanr TTorlc Use the creat labor-Faver. Maple City Self Washing- Soap. All grocers sell it. Love can make us friends as well as angels. Kingsley. Coe Congh ItaNam ffl the oldet and let. It will break up rcoM quicker tiian anyiuluK else. It In always reliable. Try ic That man is generous to a fault who never corrects it. Avoid baldnes, pry ha!r, danilrufT and tb!a lack, by iisine Parkkk Hair IUi.am IliMEKCor.N9, l be best cure tor t orus. 13c t. The English statute mile is 1.7C0 standard yards. Hasehall players; Coif players; all players chew White's Yucatan whilst playing. Never fool with a fool, be might fool you.
Red, Rough Hands, Itching, Burning
raims, and ramiul ringer Unas. 13 Ji
One Night Treatment Soak the hands on retiring: in a strong, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. Wear, during the night, old, loose kid gloves, with the finger ends cut off and air holes cut in the palms. For red, rough, chapped hands, dry, fissured, itching, feverish palms, with shapeless nails and painful finger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful, and points to a speedy cure of the most distressing cases when physicians and all else fail.
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I WAS troubled with binds so sort? that wfurn I put them in water the cain would near set me crazy, the skin would peel off, and (he flesh would get hard and break, then the blooJ would How from at least fifty places oa each hand. Words never can tell the suffering I endured for three years. I tried at least eight doctors, but my hands were worse than when I commenced doctoring. I tried every old Granny remedy that was ever thought of without one cent's worth of good and could not even get relief. I would feel so badly mornings when I got up, to think that I had to go to work and stand pain for eieht or nine hours, that i often felt like giving up my job, which was in the bottfin? works of Mr.E. L. Kerns, the leading bottler of Trenton, N. J., who will vouch for the trc.t'a of my sufferings. Before I could start to work, I would have to wrap each finger on both hands, and then wear gloves, which I hated to do, for when I came to take them off, ft would take two hours an J the flesh would break and bleed. Some of my friends who had seen my hands would say, ' If they hid such hands they would have them amputated " i others would say they would never work," and more would turn away in disgust. But thanks to Cuticura, the greatest cf skin cures, it ended all my sufferings. Just to think, after doctoring three years,nd spending dollar after dollar durinjj that time, Cuticura cured me. It has now been two years since I used It and I do not know what sore hands are. I never lost a day's work while I was using it or since, and I have been working at the same business, and in acids, etc. THOS. A. CLANCY, 310 Montgomery St., Trenton, N. J.
(jHicura : Complete Externa! TnP Pl tJ 9h 1 Ct,cOR I IIU OCI ViiL.O A Hinolb 8kt. U mine and htimtli.ttnR akin. avilp, and blood throughout the world. I ottcb Iruo and Cue
(Vlillions of Women Use Cuticura Soap
Asl8tPil by Cuticura Ointment for rtresorvlnir, pnrifvlnsr, nnd bcnntlfylncr the skin, tor fleanslnjr tho noah of criHtu, ur.ileu, an! d.inilrutf, ahl the Ftopplni; öf fülllnif hair for softening, whitening. an1 soothing red. roucli, anl aoro hand. In tho form of baths' for annoying Irritation", Inflammations, and ch-tAngs, or too free or offensive Perspiration In the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for m.inr sanative antiseptic nur roses which readily snetrest themselves to women, and esiieclallv mothers, and for ill the purposes of the toilet, lath, and nurserv. No amount or persuasion ran Induce (ho who have onco lined it to use any other, especially for preserving and purl fvlntr the sLInscalp, and hair of Infants and children. Citticur Soap combines delicate emollient nron ertles derived from CUTICUR. the jrreat skin cure, with the purest of cleansing Ineredlrnta aad the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicated soap ever compounde diät be compared with It for preserving, purtfvlng, and beautifying the skin, soaln hilr and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive. Is to be comiVared with It for all the purposes of the toilet, bath and nursery. Thus tt combines In Ovb JT at Onb Trick, viz., Twbntt fits cknts, the E8T skin ana complexion .nan themii toilet and best baby soap In the world. w p'
WHAT IS OVABiTIS? A dull, throbbing pain, accompanied by a sense of tenderness nnd heat low down in the side, with an occasional shooting pain, indicates intlammation. On examination it will be found that the region of pain shows some swelling. This is the first statre of ovaritis, inflammation c?f the ovary. If the roof cf your house leaks, my sister, you hav it lixed at once ; why not pay the sarcs respect to your own body ? You need not, you ought not to lei vourself po, when one of vour own sex holds out the helping band to you, and will advise you without money, and witbout price. Write to Mr. I'inkham, Lynn, Mass., and tell her all your symp-
ic ...w 5r .v 7 0 Mrs. AsiE Aston. torns. ITer experience in treating fö male ills is greater than any other living person. Following is a letter from a woman who is thankful ior avoiding a terrible operation. "I was suffering to such an extent from ovarian trouble that my physician thought an operation would b necessary. "Lydia E. Pi nfch ana's Vegetable Compound having been recommended to me, I decided to try it. After using several bottles I found that I vrai cured. My entire system was toned up, and I suffered no more with mj ovaries." Mas. Ansa Astox, Troy, Mo. COUGH SYRUP Cures 3 Cough or Cold at once. Conquers Croup. Whooping-Couh, nronchitl. Grippe and Coun nipt ion. Ouiik. fire results. Dr. IJulTs Pills cure Constipation. SOpills lOc ET M O 1 f Til -'OIIN XV. MUKRIS eCm 64 d 1 J fcM W hmi;toii. 1. C. Successtuiiy ProsecutesCIaims .ate Principal Miamincr V. S. Penn on liureao. . rs. lu rlvll wr.ira4jU(llcatlDg claims. atty. kl:jc zni Internal Treatmsnt far E.erj Humor.
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,lr-,'0' vrNTf.iiv.),t.c.Hlan.lclean.ethe bhv4. often um-ient t- eure the nmt tnrtnrirw. di.fl. htimora. with !"" of h tir, when (.11 !. falla Bo 14 x. Corp., Hole l'rop., IKntton, U. tf. A.
