Marshall County Independent, Volume 7, Number 34, Plymouth, Marshall County, 2 August 1901 — Page 7

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By Philip Vrrlll Nif hls

iZSaQ LATA ryJUMmW JIM Heinum CHAPTER I (Continued.) Along the path at noon came a tunted man, a barrel-shaped miner, wrho "blazed" his track with a cut-off hovel used as a cane. "Paper for Henley," he puflngly rBirked as he opened tlio door or the hed above the shaft "Paper 'dressed to 'Franklin Henley, " and tossing It In by the side of the nan who was eattas his lunch on a box, he plodded Ahead to return to the trail. "Thaak vom, Billy," called the other; "much obliged." He finished a bone, gave hi3 finders ft. wipe on the ragged trousers and slii Off the wrapper of the "down-east" paper. Sitting la the uoor, he read the news Of the far-awüy home eagerly absorbing ever j' line. Of a tuddon he paused; ft gleam cf something wild came Hashing in his eyes and the muscles of his Lands and arms abruptly stiffened. "Married, by the Ite. Uichard Watson, I'eb. 20. Miss Asnob Col3 to Frederick Law," was all that he read. The type swung u dizzy waltz, with the notice for their center a thousand animated demon spots they wero, dancing at Lis anguish. He hurled the shest, In a crunckedup ball, along in the brush; ho grasped a pick and went where the paper lay all crisply swelling to open again and dug and gushed it to dirt-printed ihreils. "So that's the reason sho hasn't betn UTltin?:" he licrcoiy hissed. "That's the garjc- he's wo. hed on the quiet Ihift.' L'.:,i'j;;: i;.cd me: t'.pp'd tho Te!a! roVjcd the pocket: Damn his cowardly heart: damn the mine! fiamn everything:" lüg voiea was choked; he reeled to the shed, he tank half fit:r.g to the earthen Uoor, to lie where the door. like a flabby Jaw, was vainly trying to closa against fcls body. His fingers gouged in the sand like books; his face was pressed to the chill, hard cheek o! the Foil. The wind swept through, the hole of a windowIts vent, beating the door, in weak, Qucaking blows against his back. The day grew old; a drizzling rain ieseejidtd; darkness obscured him as he lay, half within, half without The Eight came down and found him motionless. The creak, cretk, creak of the door was mingled at midnight with tlie distant howling of a lone coyote. In the morning, when the Indian girl was come to the cabin, a wildej'ed man, mumbling and groping, hagCard, unkempt, staggered out cf the sage brush to fall over on the floor of the kitchen. There on the boards she fashioned the couch whtreon he tossed ani rolled, fouid t and mined for fourtean nights and days. Feebly he opened his eyes at length. It was Susie above him. laving his forehead; Susie pi sparing the food at the stove; Susie who sang him the lullaby of rest in Washoe music, soft and persuasive. Wistfully his eyes remained on her round young face. He Jay there helpless, feeling like a man of thewless cotton. Day by day she coaxed his pulse to its strong, quick thump of acaon. Night by night his en-iyy cre,t in through system again. Ya what wa the u-e. There came a a hour when he tottered to hU ft t, ,t thy gush of spring from tho visaing breeze, and at length returned to the mine to dig in the adamant, to work oil the shadows of hatred and vengeance. He das out a no- kt of gold, nearly pure, a ad Jau-Jied in scorn at its glittering .-Me.fd na th- salver of dross and poipbyry. It lay where it fella pyramid or' rkhs; and he striking epark t- m his stftd and the reck in the oppose rvj-i of the tunnel. SuMe re::i:iiLi-d his shy little doe afloririzr the air that haloed him about, thrilling unceasingly to hear lirn ep--ak lh. (I in her womanly scheme of an arthly heavr n. The b'.o.-jms now presented their cheeks and lips in manifold petals for the sun's taitss; the birds, widethroated by gushing melodies, expressed throuirhoi't the day the joys of twining a nest ia the branches. The Indian girl outspread her very fingers, to fori the current of lovo and life that sweetened the air. At times-, as the spring baa bourgeoned into summer, the girl and Henley roamed on the hVU handdn-hand, seeking the gra?s bladea th-it Friiootiipc! the roots of the sage brush, hunting out the flowers, mocking the mellow lark who sang of endless summer. Now and again the inu was JneJ uy hot desire to honeycomb the mighty hills with drifts and shafts and tunnels. Yet, how sweet to wander "home" in the cool of the evening, Stepping to the cheerful notes of crickets by the trail, to meet the day newborn again in the beaming face of Susie! CHAPTER II. Chloride Hill, the mining camp, was nothing to Henley, nothing to Susie. But out of Its streets ther" came one day a tall, stalwart Indian, who stood aloft in the kitchrn door and gazed In pleasure on the Indian girl. "Mingo!" she cried in alarm. "Yes, Minsro," he replied slowly and clearly, grinning like a wolf. "Mingo, big hunter." Phe had backed away and stool thre trembling. "What do you want?" she finally gasped, in the mimical speech of the WashoeK. "Why do you come?" "Mingo, the hunter, comes for you." Bald he. "Mingo wanta hia mahala his wife." "What do you mean?" she cried aghast. "Mingo's mahala Is afraid like the ehipmunk," he joyously announced. Mingo will make her like the pool of the water. Mingo will take his wife; be has given her father hi3 rifle and pony. She will go to the lodge of Mlngor "Mingo is locoed" (crazed), she answered. Here i3 my lord. I am his mahala. This is Susle3 wikiup." "No," said he. growing dark with frowning, "you my wife my squaw.

H A CKaracter s

o Sketch Your father, he say so. He say you go with Mingo, go to Minjo's wigwam." "But I can't go to your wigwam. I don't love you don't you sabbee? I don't love you." "Mingo, he loves you. That is plenty. I tell you come." "Oh, you sneaking coyote! If my husband were here you would run like the coward. You would never come to the white man's wikiup." "He ia not your husband, mahala. Do you say to Mingo, the white chief here is your husband?" She faltered, staggered and groped a little backward. "You say it not." he quickly continued. "It is lying. No. the mahala is not the wife at his side. She has broken the Indians' law; she has broken the law of the white man. Mahala. you beiong to Mino. I tell you come." He moved toward her; she recoiled In dread. Her searching hand tame down on the table, fell on the handle of a knife, and she grasped It suddenly. ' Stand lar away," she cried, displaying the blide. "you sneaking coyote! You come when women are alone you. the great hunter! Keep away! Co! Let in the light! Tal.e your bad coyote face to the sage brush, you coward!" The savage blood of her nature was aflame. The Wi.shoe iiinched not at all. neither did he corn-?. He was cunning, more than brave. Tho dull, banked fires were aglow in his eyes, his body was bent in a menacing attitude, his head thrown malignantly forward. Muttering threats of vengeance he glid-:d backward, and she slammed and bolted the door. Then down on the floor she sank, to lie there breathing like a wounded animal. On the hill, in the sunshine, Henley was gazing at the deep blue sky. that showed in a patch through a window in the shed above the mine.. Along the path, down below, at his back, the squat, little barrel-shr.ped miner labored wheezingly upward. "Letter for Henley," he called at the door, and threw in the missive and trudged along the hill. Not an answering sound did Henley make. "A letter," he mused, not starting at all from his resting position. "Comes a trifle late. I reckon. Lifepreserver to a coipse so far as the world beyond is at all concerned." He gazed another hour at the slry, whil? the lieht moved slowly athwart the earthen floor and hay at length, a brilliant finger, across the face of the upturned envelope. Turning, he saw the white and placid Invitation. His eyes began dissecting its features. Presently the writing, round and straight, made him move by stages involuntarily toward the light. "Hers." he whispered. His juv grew square and firmly set: his ryes grew hard and glinted like flint. Yet he took up the letter and broke it opn sullenly. and my illness increased to such an extent that the doctor said 1 would have to go to the warm Ber mndas. Kvery one about was quite alarmed they neglected you. my dearest heart and for many a week I lay like a shadow on the pillow. I enclose a notice, the funniest thing, that was printed in ihr Star. "Married by the Itev. Richard Wat son, Feb. 20. Miss Agnes Coies to Fre i erick Law." Isn't iL odd? the oddest thing: k; COJI33 it ought to be Koll.3; but such a laugh they have had on me, and ou Ajnt-B too. But bless her heart, shdoesn't mind; she's got her Fred at last, and they are very happy Hi3 Senses were swimming rra::i'; the world was whirring wildly in p;r. he tottered in his walk. Out he went.i lut hingkis, letter o .i to the light out and away up the hii:. striding like an engine breasting th breeze, fronting the steep ascent, pant ing and straining to reach that upp r isolation. Frank, oh. Frank," cried Susi when he came. "Mingo, the Indian " Bo brushed her by. He looked her blankly; his ears Tailed to foci:, the rounds of her voice; he meiviy comprehended that something was uttered. "No, no," he answered, "no, not now I'm dizzy rattled." She stood with eyes wide open and startled dumbly appealing. "Hut Mingo." she said, "Mingo, tho Indian, he came to-day and he threatenedthreatened us." "Mingo Mingo!, He's a coward I'm tired never mind him, Susie." He stretched forth his hand. She leaped to place it on her neck, ar, kissed it wildly. Ho stood there truly, but himself was far away. Pacing and pacing, he wore away the hours in the cabin. All through ' night she watched his face with startled eyes, pain, doubt and yearning in her dumb, trusting look. In the morning he bolted to the M'l again; and she, like a d not anything but one who is maste -followed him timidly far behind fo'lowed till he threw himself down in the sage brush. She sank where r- " was, to wait there In patience. In the grass-broken sand he lay and fat and lay again, thinking rapidly, ini ;!: a ', r; !" th. same things over anrl over. Under it all ran a current or echoes: "Saved my lifo she saved 'ny life she saved my life." At length his wandering attention was caught by a motley processio n moving slowly along in the duswreathed road bedow. There were half a dozen Washoe Indians, more pe rhaps, approaching the town men an 1 women. They had two horses jade', hopeless creatures that three, old nie a were riding. Near them, walking barefooted, heavily laden, were thr" or four squaws, with time-furrow, .i visages. The loads were contained in sacks and in conical baskets, heaped on the shoulders and supported by heavy bands, which wont across the foreheads of these camel-females. Forward the burdened ones bent, looking.

as if in subn.s-'on and patience, on the ground, leaning on sticks which they used with either' hand. It was only a party rcl.'.uing from the mountains with the gathered supply of bitter acorns and berries from the red manzanita. For fifty miles they had traveled thus. Painfully the wretched caravan crawled around the hill and disappeared. Henley watched them, strangely intent. "Saved my life," he muttered aloud. "Indian same a3 those. Sav.;d me. Yes. she'll wrinkle be old. Why did I have to have the fever! Saved my life. Wrinkled, fearful old squaws." Susie saw the squalid show. "Oh," she cried in anguish to herself. "Oh, the women oh, the Washoe women! Wer they young long ago? Were they part of the summer? Did they hear the larks and crickets? Did they love?" She threw herself forward where she sat till her face was buried in her curving arm. "Oh, love!" she cried; "there is nothing in the world for ma but love!" The thoughts of Ilculcy finally oryatalized in form and sequence. He knew he would leave her, knew he would certainly desert all things Western and go to the far-away Fast. How to do it gently, what to provide for her comfort, what he should say, how apply a balm with the caustic thesa were matters to be planned and planned. Early the following morning he went to his mine to gather the gold where it lay beneath the pocket. There, alone, he labored hour after hour. The mino was simply a hole in tho ground, 50 feet in depth, with branching tunnels down below; and over the mouth a windlass stood, with a rope about it, supporting a bucket that rested on the bottom. Built against one of the perpendicular walls was a wooden ladder, for ingress to and egress from the lower levels. In tie afternoon, from the recks on the hill, a crouching form came stealthily down through the scrubby

i i

bru It was Mingo, the Washoe In dian. Noiselessly he crept to the shed after scanning the prospict far and near for any living thing there to lie full length on a plank at the edge of the shaft. His practiced ear was quick to catch the dull sound of blows that issued from the mine. Long he lay without moving a muscle. Ha could wait an hour; he could wait a day. (To be continued.) farm Wells. The location of the well on the farm is one of the greatest importance. In many instances the farmer starts his wi ll near the buildings and yards, an selects the lowest point as r. location, with the idea that he will not have to dig as deep as he would upon higher land. This is often a mistake, as we know of several places iu a village where the wells near the top of the hill are not as deep and are not as much affected by a drouth as those on the iower land at the foot of the. hill, though there may be fifty or a hunirtid feet difterence in this elevation 'tut the chief objection to the well on the low ground is that it receives the surface drainage from the higher land and thus the water soon becomes so contaminated as to bo unfit for use. either by the family or the animals, for to be hoaithy they must have pure water. In thtse days of driven wells a pipe can often be sunk on the highest gravel knoll or sand hill on the farm more cheaply than in the low ; .1 (I, and when water is reached it is pure and will continue so, because the surface water runs aw ty from it :ul not toward it. If a windmill is tu'ected the wind power is better, and hv tank and pipes water can be Drought to hou.se, barn and yards, ov irricd to irrigate the d!,n and trawberry bed in a way to maho it soubly pay for itself, first in savings f daily hard labor at the pump and et in increased crops by having a ..atcr supply when needed. We heard . market gardener near Boston say, : few years ago, that he put down iiiven wells, bought a steam engine .iul pump, built a tank and laid pipes, -.tid the increased value of his crops .ti l the whole expense the first ye r, . '-hiding, cost of running the engine. J.Miy a man who thought be ot.uld not afford to put in a new well has paid out more cash for doctor's and ir.dertaker's bills than the well would ;nve cost. American Cultivator. Sioux Wotiirii Ilou k-rs. The Sioux woman does moie woik hau the man dots. They live in log ..bins with only the ground lor the .ior, and they have but one room. In :ut room they have their beds in on.: orncr. their trunks around the side -, nd they often have beautiful b.ad.v,vk hanging on the walls. They h ive large ttove as near the center of th ..)?!'. as thy ran. On that stove yo i ill always fnd a coffee pot and a akettle, and they are always kept II. If the women can have coffee t ) ink they are happy. They think it i great medicine. They call it th lack medicine. The women when a1, ome are almost always doing seme nd of beadwork, and they are always etting up Fome kind of a feast. That they have them very often, and esircially if one of their sons or daughers gets married, they will spend th' ir rt cent to make a great feast, when--er it may be. Then, when he has jrre back and told them that he has everyone, the women give him a orse. When they have the feast the women all dress up in their brightest olors. paint their faces and front and Meg em the sides, and they almost always wear a long beaded belt and a 'awl. In fact, they wear a shawl all he time. When it is not around the head and shoulders it is tied around :he waist. They never wear a hat of ny kind, even on the hottest days hey are bareheaded. yU OuM'n (51 ft tn Yftitr. Miss Helen Could has presented to Vassar College, I'oughkeepsie, N. Y.. i scholarship of $10,000 In memory of her mother. This is the third scholarship received from Miss Could within a few years. C'ottMC: IloopUald for Cnnlt. Countess Minto, the wife of the governor general of Canada, has offered o become the head of a movement to stablish cottage hospitals throughout "anrula. The less we have the more tfca recording angels places to our credit when we give.

SAYINGS and DOINGS

Miss Chapman Architect "There Is nothing succeeds like success" might be said about Josephine Wright Chapman. Sho is a brig it Boston woman who has chosen an un it s u a 1 profession from the numerous ones open to women. She has, made a success of it. not alono because she is bright, but because of her cen observation, g o o d judgment, perseverance and hard Miss Chapman. work. These virtues have been coupled with pluck and patience. It is a field that not many women have entered, but there is no reason why women should not fill the place of an architect most creditably with her naturally artistic temperament, her love of the harmonious and beautiful, and her inheicut womanly ideas of suitability. Miss Chapman lives in Boston, in a building occupied entirely by artists, as there sho finds an atmosphere suited to her work. Her associates are those who have interests in common with her own, and she feels this is helpful. Tilols' Ejcclasix)e Club. j Tho Sandy Hook Pilot's club is not I in tho social register, yet it is the most ex&lusivo club in New York. You might apply for admission to meminvj ship now, but you wouldn't get in fo j ten or twelve years and ycu would bo more iortunate than some present members if you got in even then. For. unlike the Author's club, which i.? not all author, or tho Golf clifb, which is not entirely golfer, or the athletic club, which is not wholly athlete, the Pilot club is all pilot. And to be a pilot you must serve, first, two years before the mast, then six years as an apprentice on a pilot boat, then one or two years as pilot. So that, usually twelve ye:uv pass before a pilot gets a full license. "Director of S'caipiurc. P. Wellington Ruckstuhl, the wellknown St. Louis sculptor and secretary of the National Society of Sculptors F. WELLINGTON RUCKSTUHL. has been appointed a director of sculpture of the Louisiana purchase exposition. ZShe Uroublc in Virginia. Virginia has a state constitutional convention in session. It was en'bw primarily to regulate the suffrage question, but the question of sectarianism became involved and its settlement required much effort. Tho present constitution of Virginia recognizes religion by describing it a the duty which we owe to our Creator." The manner of dischavRkv., this duty, it says, should be "dirt ct.-1 only by reason and conviction, not by forco and violence." Therefore, all men are entitled to a free exercise ; religion according to the dictates of conscience. Then comes this paragraph: "And that it is the mutual duty of all to practice Christian forbearance love aud charity toward each other.' A leading member of the convention, in the interest of nonscctarianism. moved to strike the word "Christian" out of this paragraph. On this question Rabbi E. N. Calisch, a distinguished Jewish scholar, was invited K audress the convention. He spoke wit, persuasive eloquence and sharply analyzed the phraseology of the section. He said that the use of the word under discussion made the section contradict its own terms. Other speakers said that the phras "Christian forbearance" was entirely destitute of sectarian significance that it was as unsectarian as tinphrase, "Mosaic meekness," or "Miltonic simplicity," or "Websterian eloquence." But the other argument prevailed and the entire clause was eliminated, leaving only the definition el religion and the declaration for freedom of conscience. Has a The baroness tSitle JVoto. do Bazus (formerly Mrs. Frank Leslie) says she inherits the title from an aunt who died ten years ago. The title was original!;.conferred by LouhIX. on a family, one branch t f which emigrated to New Orleans in Huguenot d a y s. Baroness de Bazus. Accord ing to Mrs. Leslie it. was from this branch that she inherited the distinction. Nathan Church, a man of scholarly attainments and the colleague of Blaine in the Maine legislature, Is now working as street cleaner in Minneapolis at a salary of $1.&0 a day. Descendants of Edward Ball of Bradford, Conn., who are blood relatives of George Washington, will hold a re union at Keuka Par, N. M.. "Aug. ?7 2S and 2f.

rte! Hf-aes Don't tin Mail. The reason why dark-haired and dark-skinned people are more Inclined to mental disorder than the lighter-

J haired and complexioned has never, so ; far as our recollection serves, been ac counted for by the wise In such matters. It may, perhaps, be consoling to the fair-skinned to hear that in one madhouse, out of 200 patients, only four have light hair and complexions, and one, red hair. Health. Yellow Fever Uoe with Mosquitoes. According to the report of Major W. 0. Gorgas, of the army medical department at Havana, yellow fever has been wiped out there, and what is of r qua! If not greater Importance is the fact that the practical extermination of the mosquito has brought about this result, All the pools in Havana and its suburbs have been rid of the mos iuito pest by means of kerosene oil poured J on the waters and no water is allowed ! to remain standing within the city 11mJ Its unless it is made mosquito proof, j Since March 1 there has been only one j death from yellow fever in Havana, a ! remarkable record when the hundreds who formerly perished are considered. Six Doctor Thl Time. South Bend. Ind.. July L'Jth: Six different doctors treated Mr. J. O. Landeman, of this place for Kidney Trouble. He had been very ill for thrt-e years, and he despaired of ever being well. Somebody suggested Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mr. Landeman us d two boxt.s. He Is completely cared, and besides losing all his Kidney Troubb. his general health is much bett. r than it has been for years. No case that has occurred in St. Joseph County for half a century, has created such a profound s nsatiou. and Dodd's Kidney Pills arc being w 11 advertised, as a result of their wendarful cure of Mr. Landeman's case. 'Ladicr la Unci; Sent. There was a teachers' institute the other day in Eldorado. Kas., aud somo of the young men, habited in gorgtous shirt waists, took thur seats in a row In the rear of the room. The instructions were going along a few minutes later, when the old professor looked over the top of his spectacles and said: "For this question I would like an answer from one of the young' ladies in the back seat." Ar You I'slnsr AllenN lont-Ka? It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 2."o. Sample sent FREK. Address Allen S. Olmsted. Leltoy. N. Y. A Martyr to Srtenrr. At Trinity Hall Military Srhool, Washington. Pa., on commencement day a tablet was unveiled to the memory of Dr. Jesse William Lazear of Baltimore, who sacrificed his life while Investigating the cause of yellow fever In Cuba. BEYOND THE HEAT BELT. Mountain liree.ei nn-t .Mountain Sports Available for Thoe Whu Wou! 1 h.'scupo the Sizzling Heat. Out beyond the plains of Kansas, where the snow capped peaks raise their heads, in Colorado, is the Mecca for sweltering residents of the Hot Belt. There has not been such a season of torridity for more than a third of a century, and it is beginning to tell upon the powers of the people. Their minds are less active, ami their bodies are tired, and their systems debilitated. The best remedy is close acquaintance with nature, mir. and robed in cool greens, and swept by invigorating breezes and fortunately the opportunities are at hand and may be taken advantage of by everybody. The Missouri Pacific Railway with its system lccDibling a net work of lines in the great southwest, runs fine train3 of palatial cars by a direc and agreeable route to Pueblo, and there connections are made with America's most popular scenic route, the Denver and Rio Grande Railway, in whose cars the pul iic are carried Into the very heart of the great mountain rafcge, through canyons of dizzy depth and along the busy sparkling waters which came from Snowland and brought its coolness with them. There are very many delightful places in the Rockies and plenty of sport for the hunter and fisher. He displays excellent judgment who steals some time from his business and uses it in the pursuit of a favorite sport and for the benefit of his health. The Rio Grande Western is a natural connection of these two systems already mentioned, carrying their passengers still further toward the western outposts, into still L-ore remote sporting country, and where forest and canyon wear their natural beauty the longer, and so, to the Desert City by the Great Salt Lake. There Is no more delightful short tour and It can be accomplished with comparatively small expense. Sizzling over a desk In the heat of summer Is unprofitable and unremunerative self sacrifice and should not be endured when coolness and health are so near at band. These railway Fystems make travel a pleasure, and nature, ever klnl, ls the great restorer. If you bae not yet decided to taice a summer trip, decide now to do so, and get out of the heat into the coolness of Colorado and Utah. A Stagy VFhretman. Lord Salisbury rides his tricycle before breakfast on bright mornings, and so slowly that his daughter on her bicycle has some trouble to stay with blm. Solid qualities of integrity, of thoroughness, should outweigh in a girls estimate of a man mere superficial cleverness and brilliancy. August Ladies Home Journal. The oldest perfumes were those recovered from Egyptian tombs, 1,500 to 2.000 years before the Christian era. S0Z00QNT for the

At all Stores, or by Mail for the price. HALL & RUCKEL, Haw York.

EXCURSION TO NEW YORK

TLa Ocean. Going via Old Point Comfort and steamer, returning via Pan-American Exposition. Address W. E. Conklyn, 224 Clark St., Chicago. Symptom of ComnmptloD. A man in Itay county, Missouri, became convinced recently that he had incipient consumption. Every time he drew a full breath he heard a crackling sound. The doctor discovered that the crackling sound was made by a small buckle on his suspender. Ladies Can YTer Shoes One size smaller after using1 A '.'en's FootEase, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating I aching feet. iugr win nail-;, corns and ; bunion. All irtiggit ar.d -he store-:, 25c. Trial -pack; ge FREE by mail. ! Address Allen . t n:nted. LeRoy, N Y. ; Ice cream is battery -a hen it is churned before the cream Ls icy cold. Turn slowly at first until the mixture begins to freeze, then rapidly for a few moments until it is fio.n.-August Ladies' Homo Journal. The greatest of professional athletes use Wizard Oil for a ' rub-down." It softens tne muscles and prevents sere ness. Graphite suitable for making lead pencils is found in almost every country on the el-be. Piso's Cure is ta-3best ncJicire we ever us?dl tor all aü'-t tioüs of the thro u air.l lur.irs.--WM. O. Lk-ij.M.i: V, .iL turfcu. 1 .vi., l-b. ly, 1'av. Wh. n a hoy 5 proud of his jack ; knife, why, ho poka. his pride. II.ilJ-s -.it:irrh Ciirr Is taken in;cru;üiv. Price, kxx England is a crt-'.:a.r to tho world for ever l.r.0-).O0. rA LOV Ol A r !:;:"! I T. arul rcrvo-.i-'i-s. r;i i-.lv en.! hv Pit. CRANK'S QL'AKKU 'iV'NIC TACKKiS. In India and Persia she p are used as l easts of burden. Hi-'. Wlii.l ! 'Oii'r Srip. For '.'. :i I !!.:. -: ti.r i.m.-, v.iiirc tn-au.Uia:;-.c jiUj .- curc- w;at r-i:c. caliuttle. The Pan-American exhibits include a 122-pound potato. k i"3 I Vi 2 . .O Y i.t.. Successfully Frosc-cutea Cla.ms. M I.att rr!n.-p-,t Ei:nrr V. . r-r-!.n p-iri. ej a u a i j ii .iiiiiiiuii, 1. I, And Cleanse the Scales, and

hampoos with

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fiirr CITT blood. A Single hKT Is often sufficient to cure the mottortur. I nt Ob Inp, diFflpurin?, and humiliating ekin, Fcalp, and Mood bnmonrs, Tvlthlossof hair, when all else fails. Sold throughout the world. Urititsh Depot: F.New. r.ERT A. Sons, ut 28, Charterhouse Sq., London. ToriEU Dklo am Cue. Coriv ol l'rops., lioeton, U. S. A.

SEflLE AUCWJ BIDS BY MAIL. YOUR OWN PRICE. Jonen. He Para th Frolht, Itinichamtoii. N Y. Teeth and Breath 2

In tho Canadian P.ookie?, tho great resort of travelers from all parts of tho plobo ; Lakes in tho Cloud, water sketches in the J-aud of lLc Sky; th Yoho Valley, the newly di-cJvereJ Wonder'aud" near Field", British Columbia a region of lofty waterfulis. va.--t glacier. startling cuuuii and high mountain peiks; the Great (iiacierof tho Selkii k a huge frozen Niagara ou the liuo of the CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY Suis guides. Houseboats on the K-.:e:i:iy fnd Shuwsp Lakes for fhhmg at-'I shooting j arti.-. For descriptive bo kJets, rates, etc , epi-ly to A. C. SKAYv', ücr.eral jtnt, Px.erg?r De;nrtmtct: CANAPUN PActnC k ML WAY, 223 5mu:'i Cljrk Street, CSUCAO'J. II. Ifft ftff &U U;Sm?ft lil5J?U UAA 1 J Uli & feW ; To h-,Ipi:r.rvc-t U.ev.ci.ücrful-vli.u. t-r pot ;t ' fau:or.. ncd 1?: er Yah. v. alvg Hue of ;k CFJEAT MCFITHEkN HMLWAY. railvav :u:c. cc-o-1 w.,.- .s u:..". a c' :c.te to up scire cf the frr:k f;.-r till to rc tvi Write at ereo to V. I. Wjii . .rv. ek V. L T. t j .. . r ; . r r L , r Y V-.' - a- I n-.- rj '.. ; t c th- J 'I 4 ' ... ' 'f X - v ,Js' a ru-s;f, ;i 7 - .t-m or o -"M fit- I:' - v .--I--C-cv I c A - ( 0. !il..i.r?l:i:,H..lil.r....j. 5 es If r.. . to .liter;-:. : .. , : v ' I i., FOR SALE ON EASY TERM3 A Ü i'i ' r -:' ::a :' in:-s : r : r- i.iiem ' v.ir!. :!.' '' v u ' i' ' a ril. it-i.M rnn ki"-. ;T' "i ici c; i (?. ! c.Ij h.-.X any it Li. .:!- tu : .!v. r V'.' ;:.. ......... , " : "'.' . i ,f , .,.;.. i . Scalp of Crusts, Dandruff by Treatment for Every Humour.

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Contlsunp or CCTicxTt soap, to oloange the In or crimp and Fcalcs and poften the thickened cuticle, CtTiei R4 Ointment, to instantly allay itching, Inflammation, and Irritation, and noothe

tuna kksolvknt, to cool and cleanse th W. N. U. CHICAGO. NO. 31, lOU Ulico Anshciinq Advcrtiscmccts hiodly Ncotion This Taper. ry- Ti9t t'4i pi fijrii. ':':st.! Wood. TJfC LrJ tntinio. Sohl ry ClruiTCihta.