The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, June 28, 1895, Image 3

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    The Did His Beat.
Arizona Pete had been called upon in
the absence of all the deacons and
other qualified church officers , to pass
the contribution basket.
In a seat half way down the middle
aisle sat the wealthiest man in the eon-
gregauon , fast asleep. Arizona Pete
stopped when near him , held the basket -
ket under his nose and waited.
A soft snore was the only contribu
tion.
lie touched him on the shoulder.
Another snore.
Then he shook him.
"Fuddleston , " he said , "you can't
make a sneak out of this game. Pun-
Is , gle up or I'll throw you out of the
window ! "
It is recorded that Mr. Fuddleston at
once pungled up to the extent of 35 for
the first and only time in his religious
career.-Chicago Tribune.
I'm All Unstrung ,
Is the remark of many a nervous individ-
ual. He or she will soon cease to talk that
nay after beginning and persisting in a
course of } iostetter's Stomach } utters.
Nothing like It W renew strencth and apRe-
the and gooddlgestlon. It checks the inroads -
roads of malaria , and remedies liver complaint -
plaint , constipation , dyspepsia , rheumatism
and kidney disorder. It Is In every sense a
great household remedy.
Cleaning Furs.
Ermine and sealskin are best cleaned
with soft lanneL Rub the fur delicately -
cately against the grain. and when it
has been thoroughly lifted and reversed ,
so to speak , dip the flannel into common -
mon flour and rub lightly any spots
that look dark or dirty. Shake the
flour well and rub with a clean dry
flannel until the flour is all removed.
Sable , chinchilla , squirrel and monkey
skin may be very nicely cleaned with
hot bran. Get a small quantity of bran
meal and heat it in the oven until it is
quite warm. Rub stiffly into the fur
and leave for a few minutes before
shaking to free it from the bran. Mink
may be cleaned and freshened with
warm corn meal , and , like the other
short-haired furs may be done without
removing the lining. But the longhaired -
haired furs are best ripped apart and ,
freed from stuffing and lining. Those
who may not care to go to the trouble
of taking fur garments apart will find
that the simple remediesdescribed will
go a long way toward making the
jackets and capes look clean , even if
not ripped apart.-Good Housekeeping.
S. K. COBUIiN , 1ugr. , dare JCOtt , writes ;
"I find Hall's Catarrh Cure avaluable remedy. "
Druggists sell it , 75e.
Pronunciation of "Bicycle. "
The constantly growing bicycle fad
r calls attention to the large number of
cases of mispronunciation of the word
"bicycle. " There is a certain class of
people , particularly New York's fash-
i fonable set , who insist upon giving the
"y" a long sound , as in "cycle , " forgetting -
getting that a prefix or suffix often
changes the sound of the vowel "y. "
Still others go to the other extreme
and give the "y" the sound of "ee , " but
the best usage makes the "y" short
word "bi-sik-L"
and pronounces the - -
Ilut even among those who give the
"y" the short sound there is a disposition -
tion to place the accent on the second
sylable instead of the first , where it
belongs. When a word comes into such
common use as "bicycle , " it is well to
learn to pronounce it correctly-Troy
Times
Coe' Cough Balsam
is the oldest and best. It will break up a Cold quick.
er tbau anything else. It is always reliable. Try 14
I
China silk crepon is craped like mourning
crape and printed with small , bright Hew-
ers.
OTHERS
recovering from
the illness attending -
tending childbirth -
, d birth , or who suf-
fer from the ef-
fectsof disorders ,
derangements
_ ' and displace-
c ments of the two-
4J Izc.)3 manly organs ,
will find relief
and a permanent cure in Dr. Pierre's
Pavorite Prescription. Taken during
pregnancy , the "Prescription"
LAKES C-IILBBIRTH EASY
by preparing the system for parturition ,
thus assisting Nature and shortening
"labor. " The painful ordeal of childbirth -
birth is robbed of its terrors , and the
dangers thereof greatly lessened , to both
mother and child. The period of confinement -
finement is also greatly shortened , the
mother strengthened and built up , and
an abundant secretion of nourishment
for the child promoted.
IdRe hort
cad"x
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' ' 'DAlllll J " a i n a e
whifie f fir ! _ t7 rid
aide
Pi ENjM ,
1 ° i14Q ' ' . ' ' S
' - miCh G PTA t
IcvcIc nd. .
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. ' hiLGo-p'
FOB PLEASANT woaB eaaay secured threttgh
PAT an early application borLocal Agency loseIl e
Y
to F eadofa al eAnother
last number thIs Another f on be
red enL ylrtnrrhDe , nails for Handsome Din }
trrt.d nook Free. DA376 k RA2 kIN BLDG. AW
RF4. CO. 50ieMwuLtciweral OW.LakeSt.Chtcago. f
tore tor sfor
The finest Jeweiry
.tore in the Black
Hills. Stock about $5,000 to > 6t3.000 Watch.
Fork averages $250 perwill trade forgive
time on secured notes. will
tie. Address JEWELER ,
Box 377 , Deadwood. S. D.
y. 111. IJ. , Omatlni-zG , 1895. i
' ' ncwering advertisements kindly t
' menticn this paper.
1
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i
S R M TA
gL1Rf11IItViRG1NIA W JOHNSON.
T- COPYRIGHT 1892 BY RANDMRJALLY b CO.
I
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-
NATIONAL PRESS /ASS'N
CHAPTER 9L
A HERO IN OIL
M was divertedd from her conjectures -
tures by a heavy sigh , which resembled
a groan , hehind her. Dolores turned
her head quickly , and discovered her
grandfather leaning against the doorway -
way , watching her movements in an
attitude so rigid and threatening , in a
frozen immobility , that she might have
believed him stricken with paralysis
had he not remained in an upright
posture.
"What is the matter , grandpapa ? "
she cried in alarm.
The sound of her voice seemed to
loosen the bonds of a spell , the silence
imposed by sheer impotent rage on the
benumbed faculties of the old man.
He moved his right hand feebly
and mechanically , his pale features
worked , and his pallid lips twisted
awry as if by a spasm of pain , re
covered the power of speech sufficiently -
ly to articulate in agitated tones-
"You-you jade ? What are you
doing there ? "
"I was only dusting the portrait ,
grandpapa , " she replied , relieved to
notice the change in him.
"I will teach you , idle hussy ! to meddle -
dle with.my house , " continued the old
man , a violent nervous tremor pervad-
fag his frame , while his eyes rolled in
their sockets' and flashed ominously.
"How often am I to warn you not to
touch my things ? You have no right
to be here , at alL What are you but a
' I-I-have mind to
beggar's brat ? - - a
drive you off altogether. Go , beg your
bread of strangers ! You are not wanted
here. "
He seized her arm , and left the imprint -
print of hisclaw-like fingers in a bruise
on the soft and shrinking flesh.
Dolores recoiled , with terrified eyes ,
and a deep flush of shame and anger
mounting to her cheeks. She was bewildered -
wildered and astonished. The act of
cleaning the portrait seemed so slight
an offense that she was amazed at the
anger aroused. If she had not fully
understood the torrent of reproach
which had gathered in volume on the
lips of her grandfather on the former
occasion , when she had attempted to
bury a broken doll in the garden ,
his bitter invectives now reached her
mind with a keen force of comprehension -
sion , wounding deeply her heart.
The excitement and wrath of Jacob
Dealtry did not abate during the entire -
tire day. The most trifling incident
would arouse a fresh paroxysm of
rage , and he would walk away from his
granddaughter as if in the fear of such
propinquity with the object of his displeasure -
pleasure as might lead him to some
act of violence.
Dolores had trembled and wept at
first , troubled by such manifest injustice -
justice , as well as frightened by the
expression of her grandfathers coun-
tenance. Gradually her tears were
dried in the fever of sullen rebellion ;
as , in the depths of her soul , the seething -
ing passions , prone to swift action ,
of her southern temperament became
aroused. The slow hours were torture I
to her irritated nerves , and each new
attack of Jacob Dealtry , harping ever
on the same chord of his grievances ,
i
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"I'LL TEACH YOU ! IDLE. HUSSY. "
fanned the rising flame of resentment
in the breast of the girl.
At length they met at the evening
meal
"You deserve no supper , ungrateful
child , but come along to the table , "
grumbled the old man.
Dolores paused , erect , with flashing
eyes and quivering nostrils
"I will not eat your supper , grand-
papa ! " she exclaimed , in a trembling
voice. "You make me hate you ! !
What have I done ? I will go back to
the convent and take the veil No-
.body wants.me anywhere ! No ! I shall
go to the town and tell all the people
how cruel and wicked you are to your
only grandchild. Then those who 1
have children will take pity on me , '
and come and mob you , tearing down
our tower stone by stone ! "
"Eh ! " ejaculated her companion ,
blinking nervously , and turning his
head as if he had not heard aright.
At the same time he clutched the
edge of the table , as if to support
I
himself , while an expression of startled -
led apprehension swept over his feat-
ures.
ures.Dolores
Dolores nodded her head energetically -
cally , enjoying this unforeseen tri-
umph. Evidently her chance threat ,
actuated by childish spite , had intimidated -
dated her relative.
"They will mob you , " she , eon-
tinued.
"Who ? "
"Oh , the good , kind people. "
"Hush ! "
.
-
"They will tear the garden all to
shreds and destroy everything. "
The threat was her defiance of exhausted -
hausted patience , of overwrought
emotions. The tragic woe of the
pictured destruction of the Watch
Tower suited her mood.
Jacob Dealtry uttered an unsteady
laugh , and then his voice assumed a
whining inflection.
"You would not set the populace
against me , child ? There are always
wretches that delight to hound and
worry a poor old mar. . You shall return -
turn to the convent and become a nun ,
if you like. We must speak of it
later. "
Dolores made no response , but
sought her own chamber , supperless ,
with nostril dilated and head thrown
back.
She was aroused from her first slumbers -
bers by hearing her grandfather insert
a key in the lock of her door and turn
it , thus making of her a prisoner. He
feared she might run away to the
town and set the populace against
him , then. She fell asleep once more ,
with a smile on her lips.
The following morning Jacob Deal-
try was mild and ingratiating in man-
ner. Evidently fits anger had spent'
its force over night
Dolores was sulky and heavy-eyed.
At breakfast the old man insinuated
that she might return to the convent
if she wished to do so. The girl
pouted at his alacrity to get rid of her
companionship. She beheld herself a
nun , with a flowing robe and a veil ,
investing the placid image with all
the fervor of a youthful imagination.
The next moment fright seized her at
the thought of the prison bars of restraint -
straint imposed on her wayward
humors and impatient spirit by dedication -
cation to the cloister.
"Not yet , grandpapa , " she said , ap-
pealingly. "Let us wait a while before -
fore we decide. Besides , " she added ,
with soft feminine reproachfulness ,
"there would be no one to take care
of you in case of illness if I left you. "
'To take care of me ? " repeated the
grandfather in shrill accents. "Tut !
I need no care or company. Suit yourself -
self , girl. "
A warm color mounted to the temples -
ples of Dolores , and sudden tears
dimmed her eyes. Her glance
strayed to the garden , and then
reverted to the picture of the Knight
in the entrance hall of their dwelling.
"Do not leave us ! " the pomegranate -
ate and orange trees seemed to whisper -
per , swaying in the light breeze.
"Do not leave us ! " sighed the flowers -
ers , each unfolding bud of rose and
jessamine wafting their fragrance
to her senses.
' 'Depart if you dare , foolish child ! "
said the Knight of Malta in the picture -
ure , a threatening shape in the
shadow.
"I am not sure that I would like to
become a religious recluse , " the full
red lips of the girl murmured , half
ruefully.
Unconscious of these subtle infiwt-
ences at work on the nature of his
granddaughter , Jacob Dealtry pointed
to the picture with the intent of disparaging -
paraging its merits.
' 'Rubbish ! Mere rubbish as a painting -
ing , you understand , " was his contemptuous -
temptuous comment.
"I like it , " said the girl slowly.
"Give it to me and I will hang it in my
room. "
' 'Nonsense ! " he retorted , regarding -
ing her with furtive uneasiness.
"What put that idea in your head ?
Do not touch the picture again.
I forbid it. Ha ! Carry the Knight
away to your room , indeed ! "
"Grandpapa , do you believe that hie
built our tower ? "
"Pooh ! No. "
"Perhaps he did , you know. He
may be pleased to shelter us here , or
very angry with us for the intrusion.
It is like that with ghosts who have
buried treasures , for example. I
heard the Sister Scolastica once telling -
ing- a "
"How you run on , with your wom-
an's tongue , " interrupted the old man ,
peevishly. "When I said that the
picture was poor trash it was between
ourselves Some fool may take a
fancy to it and pay a good round sum
for an ancient portrait of a Knight of
Malta , artist and date unknown. "
The mobile features of Dolores acquired -
quired a scornful expression , and she
replied with that mixture of audacity
and timidity which had ever characterized -
terized her intercourse with . her aged
relative :
' .Then you wish to cheat some
stranger ? 1 would not try to sell the
Knii ht at all in that case , but just
leave him hanging there on the wall"
Jacob Dealtry chuckled , and rubbed
his chin.
"Your advice is sound , my dear.
Perhaps I will leave him , " and he
moved away.
Dolores sighed , and went to the
fountain , where she gazed at her
blooming image , reflected in the
water , for a long time. What was
- - - -
. . . ' . .
; .qt' + - y
life after all ? Perhaps "the riddle e1
the painful earth" flashed through her
being for the first time. As every
maiden , in all social conditions , beholds -
holds in a swift and dazzling glimpse
the vision of fleeting pleasures not to
be her portion , and the brave knights
riding away two and two , the foun-
tain's basin may have served as the
crystal mirror of the Lady of Shalott
to Dolores , giving back , as yet , the
blue sky above. To be young was to
resemble herself. To be old was to be
like grandfather. She shuddered
slightly , and turned aside , with a
gesture of repulsion. Perhaps it would
be better never to grow old. That
night the girl drifted softly away to
dreamland. Between shifting shadow
and rippling light , other than that of
the moon , she beheld a radiant shape
approach her door and pause on the
threshold. The accompanying footstep ,
which had echoed on her heart and
smitten sharply her brain , had been
clear and ringing with a vibrating -
ing , musical sound , unlike the
dull , shuffling movements of 'grand-
father around the house at all
hours. Woven of the tissue of pure
fantasy was her sleeping thought ,
mingled with the teachings of saintly
lives in the convent school. Not the
angelic presence of St , Ursula this , but
the Knight of Malta , terrible , beautiful -
ful , awe-inspiring , his cross glittering
with a phosphorescent ray , and his
drawn sword sparkling as the waves
of the Mediterranean gleam in breaking -
ing on the shores of the island in the
midnight hour of summer. Spurning
the clogging film of the obscuring
years in the portrait , he revealed himself -
self to her in his pristine strength of
noble and chivalrous manhood , and the
soul of Dolores trembled in her breast.
He seemed to address her in a tongue
that reached her senses like the murmur -
mur of a sea shell , or the soughing of
the wind through the trees
After that , Jacob Dealtry brought
the tiny dog Florio to the delighted
Dolores. 1Ier happy and careless temperament -
perament cast off the first somber impression -
pression of the incident. She did not
forget the Knight , she even entered
into a secret alliance with the picture ,
unknown to her grandfather. She no
longer whispered to the pigeons and
the flowers , but questioned the dim
portrait and wove histories about the
career of the hero ; muttered poems ,
vague , confused , and fleeting as the
rainbow spanning a dissolving storm-
cloud. She artfully led her grandfather -
father to converse about the history of
the island. Jacob Dealtry was a well-
informed man in many respects , and
he spoke occasionally , in connection
with some relic of stone , pottery , or
glass discovered by him , of the rule of
Count Roger of Sicily , the institution
of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem ,
the first crusade. He repeopled that
rock of soft sandstone called
Tufa , known as Malta , with generations -
tions of earlier inhabitants , until the
coming of the knights to hold the citadel -
del against the Turk. The little maid
at his elbow listened demurely , and
the old man may have experienced
some transient sentiment of gratification -
tion in the awakening intelligence of
his granddaughter. lie was ignorant
that Dolores , bridging time and space
with fancy's airy bow , linked each
glorious deed with the original
of the portrait. Nay , she actually -
tually became the heroine of
thrilling adventures , in which , about
to be swept away by an invading host
of bold and brutal Corsairs , the Knight
Templar rushed to her rescue , and
drove off her assailants with prodigious
valor.
These idle reveries resolved themselves -
selves from roseate mirage into a solid
conviction in the mind of the girl.
The Knight had built their Watch
Tower and protected them in humble
poverty , a feeble old man and an ig-
, iorant child , within his precincts. He
still kept guard about the crumbling
beacon at night. When the sea wvas
rising , with a monotonous beating on
the strand heralding an approaching
tempest , Dolores fancied she heard his
footstep of a sentinel coming and go-
jug beyond the boundary wall.
To-day , Dolores lost herself in pleasant -
ant dreams , as she worked on the pink
dress. "To render it sweetand sacred ,
the heart must have a little garden of
its own , with its umbrage and fountains -
tains and perennial flowers ; a careless
company ! "
( TO BE CONTINUED. )
Lunar Pitoto rcphy.
Professor Langley has been interested -
ed for a considerable time in the possibility -
sibility of preparing a chart of the
moon by photography , which would
enable geologists and selenographers
to study its surface in their cabinets
with all the details before them which
astronomers have at their command in
the use of the most. powerful teles-
copes. Such a plan would have seemed
chimerical a few years ago , and it is
still surrounded with difficulties , but
it is probable that within a comparatively -
tively few years it may be successfully
carried out No definite scale has yet
been adopted , but it is desirable that
the disk thus presented should approximate -
proximate in size one two-millionth of
the lunar diameter , but while photographs -
graphs have been made on this scale
none of them show detail which may
not be given on a smaller one.
A Sad Time for Actors.
The critic met the old school actor
on the highway , and , observing a pale
melancholy in the face of the Thes-
piansaid : "What's the matter , 1Iam-
leigh ? You look blue. "
"I am blue , " returned Hamleigli.
"These new school actors are knocking -
ing us old fellows completely out. " f
"What seems to be the trouble ? "
asked the critic.
"I'm not educated up to the standard -
ard , " said Hamleigh. 'A man to be a i
good actor nowadays has got to swim
in real water , or ride arace , or manage
a buzz-saw , or be an expert far 'hand.
I can't swim ride or milk cows , and I
am as afraid as death of a buzz-saw.
Result , ruin ! " -Harpers Magazine.
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COOK BOOK FREE
t Every housekeeper wants to know the best
things to eat : a nd how to prepare them. i
e Royal Baker an ast oo .
*
Contains One thousand useful recipes for
every kind of cooking. Edited b y Prof.
' Rudmani , New-York Cooking School.
Free mail Address writing plainly ) ,
.
, mentioning this paper ,
$
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO.
too Wall Street , N. Y.
* ' F
n r * r r ,4 'n * ! * r
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Confederate Postage Stamp. .
Persons who have kept any of the
old letters they received in the south
during the war might do well to look
them over. The Confederate govern- '
meat authorized the issue and use of
local postage stamps , and nearly every
city in the south at one time had its
own stamp. Many thousands of these
were used , but so rare are they now
that they bring high prices. There is
among collectors a keen demand for
them , and an idea of what they will
bring may be gathered from the report
of a sale which occurred recently at
the rooms of the Philatelist society.
New York. Local Confederate stamps
sold as follows : Athens , Ga. , $40 , four
varieties of the Baton Rouge ( La. ) :
cent , $41 , $77 and ,30 respectively ; Macon -
con , two varieties , for 563.50 and $171 ;
Lenoir , N. C. , 382 , and Mobile cent ,
black , 340.50. As time goes on these
curiosities will probably increase in
value. They are already beyond the
reach of everybody but wealthy col-
lectors.-Atlanta , IournaL
Tobacco-Stinking Breath ,
Not pleasant to always carry around , but It
dent compare with the nerve destroyins power
that tobacco keeps at work night and day to
make you weak and impotent. Dull eyes. loss
of interest in sweet words and looks tell the
story. Brace up-quit. No-To Bac Is a sure ,
quicK cure. Guuranteed by Druggists every-
where. Book , titled "Don't 'robacco Spit or
Smoke Your Life Away , " free. Address Ster-
iiig Remedy Co. , New York City or Chicago.
Telegraphic Mistakes.
The telegraph has indulged in many
witticisms at the expense of the members -
bers of both houses of parliament. It
has transformed a classical allusion to
"Cato and Brutus" into "cats and
brutes ; " the celebrated phrase used by
the late Mr. W. Forster in a speech on
his Irish policy , "mauvais subjects and
village ruffians" into ' -wandering say-
ages and village ruffians ; " "tried in the
balance and found wanting" into "tried
in the balance and found panting ; '
"the cow was cut in halves" into "the
cow was cut into calves , " and "the
militia is a great constitutional force"
into "the militia is a great constitutional -
tional farce.-Macmillan's Magazine.
The Ladles.
The pleasant effect and perfect safety
with which Iadies , may use the California -
fornia liquid laxative , Syrup of Figs ,
under all conditions , makes it their
favorite remedy. To get the true and
genuine article , look for the name of the
California Fig Syrup Co. , printed near
the bottom of the package.
The man who would lead others must
first learn how to stand aone.
A novelty tailor button is made with a
metal rim and sews through and through. i
The Little Girl's Prayer. i
A little girl'in a Pennsylvania town ,
in saying her prayers the other night ,
was told to pray for her father and
mother , who were both very ill , and i
for one of the servants , who had lost i
her husband. She faithfully did as else 1 !
was told , and then , impressed with the
dreary condition of things , added on
her her own account : "And now , 0
God , take good care of yourself , for if ,
anything should happen to you we
should all go to pieces. Amen.New a
York ' .l'iines.
Make Your Own Bltterst
On receipt of 30 cents in U. S. stamps , i
will send to any address one package Str
ketee's Dry Bitters. One package makes
one gallon be tonic known. Cures atom-
ach , kidney diseases , and is a great appetizer -
tizer and blood purifier. Just the medicine
needed for spring and summer. :5c. at
your drag store. Address GEO. G. Sm- ' "
sETEE , Grand Rapids. Mich.
A Good Fencer.
f
Mr. Hardtack ( who has just discharged -
charged Mr. Jackson-You want a
recommendation , eh ? You are absolutely
lutely good for nothing. How can I
conscientiously recommend you ?
Mr. Jackson-Well , sah , you might
jes' say dat ye tink Mr. Jackson would
prove invaluable in any position-dab
he's capable of fillin'-Scribner's.
It the Baby is Cutting Teeth.
Be sure and use that old and weil trTd remedy , idaa.
tt t.sLOW's Soorilixa Srnur for Children Toething-
The trouble with culture is that tt has to
stop at the surface.
" 13anson's Magic Cora Salve. "
warranted to cure or money refunded. Ask yo a
druggirt for it. Prlce 15 ccots.
Coarse linen in ecru shades is much ascd
for Looting gowns. '
Borrowed troubles are the heaviest.
Every mother .houbl ahvny. have at pans
, . of l'arker'slneerTonic. Nothiui el-esa
boo ] for pain , weakues , colds , and slecplcx nesa.
Armure crepon , or armure with crape
markings , is fashionable and durable.
What part of a house is the darkest ? The
part near the eaves.
Non. I. the time to cure your Corni t
withilindercurus. It takestaiemutperfectly gives
cuudort to the feet. Ask your druglst for IL ] Ss. ;
Vevet : capes are fashioiiab'.o lined with
cloth and cloth ones with silk. +
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I cannot speak too highly of Piso's Cure
for Consumption.-3fity. FIASIC Moats , 315
11' . 2 .d St. , New York , Oct. . : + , 1594.
The flesh is an enemy to suffering , Lo-
cause suffering is an enemy to the flesh.
Billiard table , second-hanl , for sale
cheap. Apply to or address , H. C. AKIN ,
511 S. lath St. . Omaha , N& , .
See that ro and red tin tag ?
t iat's
hl Climax
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.1 lug.
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: 35 Cent Patterns for 10 Cents , When the Coupon L-elow Is acnt. Also One
: Cent Additional for Postage.
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6345 , t .
: 6323. 64119 6375 6355
C No.6345-Flue sizes ; viz. : 32 , 14 , 36 , 38 and 40 ho. 6403-Five sires ; viz : 22 , 24 , 2S , 23 and S7r' Ir
inche bustmeasure. inches walatmeasure.
C No. 63:3-Five siren ; viz. : 22 , 24. 26 , 28 and S0 No. tai r-Four sizes ; viz : 6.8,10 and 12 yeah.
: inches waist measure. No. 6355-FIve sizes ; viz. : 32 , 34 , Sb , 38 and fi ,
C inches bust meaanre. I
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K 'rnIs COIIPON sent with an order for one or any of the above 35 ant patterm is credited
O as 25 cents on each pattern ordered maktnc each r.aHern cost only 10 cents.
One cent extra for postage for each pattern. Give number of inches waist measure for
, = lets and number of inches but measure for waists. Address
O .
° - COUPON PATTERN COMPANY , . . 5. =
76ock Box 747. NEW TORY , N. T. s'
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