The Nebraska advertiser. (Nemaha City, Neb.) 18??-1909, April 07, 1905, Image 6

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    . imiftiinmiii' iiiiiiinwiiniwiiinm
CRiPPS, THE CARRIER
D Y
R. D. BLACKMORE
I Author of -LORNA DOONB," "ALICE LORR At N B' ETC., ETC.
' CIIAI'TKIt VI. (Continued.)
"1 knows where Miss Grnclo be," he
pffnn with n llttlo defiance. "I known
h-hfro our Miss Grncle Ilea dead and
It.hl dond nntl cold without no coflln.
i :- it winding Hhcet tho party craturc,
!) i purty crnture there, what I fool
t Iip!"
Mnnter Crlnnn, nt the picture himself
J. id drawn, was taken with n Bliort fit of
t,w, Had turned nwny. Mr. Oglander
Cuvly laid down tho pon, which ho had
'.liken for iiotM of n wise, nnd Btandlim
ta firm n IiIh own (rent onk tree, gnve
bo nisu 6f the shock, except In the color
tf his face, and the brightmH of hi
ra ;:.
' (In on, Crlpps, as oon tin you can,"
b" i.-iil In a calm and Rontlo voice. "Try
h t t keep mo waiting, Crlpps."
"f be trylnir; T bo trylnj? all I knowtt.
1 no blessed ungol bo dead and burled.
tJuso to TiokHSB' tatle crop, in tlio Cor
It of Uramble Quarry. At leafit, I moan
JVkuss's tntlen wrm there; but ho dug
them a fortnight, come Monday, ho did.
"Tho corner of tho 'Gipsy Oravo,''as
they call It. Who found It? How do
rou know It?"
"Esther was there. Sho seed tho whole
It. Boforo tho snow coiul last Tues
flay night."
"Tuesday night! Ah, Tuesday night!"
for tho moment, tho old man had lost
hla clearness. "It can't havo boon Tucs
Any night It was Wednesday, when I
todo down to my sister's. Cripps, your
llstor must havo dreamed It. My darling
eras then at her aunt's, quito safe. You
havo frightened mo for nothing, Cripps."
"I am glad with all my heart," cried
Eucchary; "1 nm quito sure It wore Tues
day night, because of Mrs. Exlo. And
rour Worship knows best of the days,
10 doubt. Thank the Lord for nil Ills
ncreios! Well, seeing now, it were some
jody else, in no ways particular, and
perhaps one of them gipsy girls, as took
tho fovcr to Cowley, if your Worship
will take your pen again, I will tell you
all as Esther seed. Two men with a
pickax working, where the stouo over
haugcth so, and tho corpse of a nice
young woman laid for tho stone to bury
It natural. No harm at all In tho world,
when you conio to think, being nought of
a Christian body. And they lot go the
rock, nnd it come down over, to savo all
infection. What a turn that Etty gived
mo, all about a trllle!" Tho carrier
wiped his forehead, and smiled. "And
won't 1 glvo it well to her?"
"Poor girl! It is no trifle, Cripps,
Whoovcr It may havo been. But stop
I am all abroad. It was Tuesday after
noon when my poor darling left Mrs.
Fcrmltago. And to the Quarry, across
the Holds, from the wny she would come,
Is not half a mile half a milo of fields
rind hedgerows Oh, Crlpps, It was my
daughter!"
"Her might a boon, suro enough," said
Crlpps, in whom tho reflective vein, for
tho moment, had crossed tho sentimental
"surij enough, her malght a' been. A
pnaturo meadow, and a Held, and Gibbs
turnips, and then a fallow, and then Into
ilekuss' tatles half nn hour malght a
done tho carrying and consarning of
tile rest your Worship, now when did
uho leave tho lnty ? Can you count the
timo of it?"
, , "Zflcohury, now tho will of tho Lord
bo done, without calculation! My grave
Ik all I earo to count on, if my Grace
,licrt buried so. Hut before I go to it,
.please God, I will find out who has
dono it."
"Now, do 'o put on a-muffler, sir,"
cilod Mary, running out with her arms
full, us Mr. Oglander set forth in the
bitter ah', without overcoat, but ready
to moot everything. At tho door was hi
old Whiteehapel cart, with a fresh young
coit between tho shafts, pawing tho
nw, and snorting. The floor of tho cart
was jingling with Iron tools as the
fating horsu shook himself; and iho
bqnii'e n ffrooin, and two gardeners, were
ready to jump in. when called for.
"So piaizo your Worship,' let mo
drive,' said Cripps, who was going to sit
in front. "A young horse, and you at
your timo of life, and all this trouble
over you!"
"Give mo the reins, my friend," cried
his Worship; nnd Crlpps, in somo dread
for his ncck obeyed.
The men jumped In, nnd tho young
horse started at a rather dangerous pace,
Many a timo had Miss Grace fed him
mil ho usod to follow her liko a lamb.
"He will take us safe enough," said
'lio Squire; "ho seems to know what he
r going for."
Not another word was spoken until
liey enmo to tho gap nt the verge of the
Juarry, where tho frosty moon shone
lirough it. "Tie him here," snid tho
nasier shortly, as the groom produced
lis ring ropo; "and throw tho big cloth
Ivor him. Now all of you come; and
Crlppn go first."
. Seared as they wero, they could not in
(innie decline tho old man's orders; and
iq1 sturdy Cripps, with a spado on his
Bioulfler, led through the united thlcuet
Behind him plodded the Squire, with an
lullt lantern in one hand, nnd a stout
Ink staff in the other; tho moonlight
fllstening In his long white hair, nnd
arl?ling frost In his hoary beard, The
how. before them showed no print larger
linn the pari of an old dog fox pursuing
lie Hphmerlng track of a pheasant's
tpurs; iu'd m crunched beneath their
tiots with tho crusty impact of crisp
levenuire. All around was white am
frame wiih depth of unknown loneliness
kid M t'riin n, f. r the rest of
After many floundorlngs In nnd out of
hollow places, they came to the corner of
tho auarry dingle, nnd found It entirely
choked with snow. Tho driving of the
northeast wind had gathered as Into a
funnel there, and had stacked the snow
of many acres In a hollow of less than
half a rood. Over tho wholo, tho cold
moon nhono, and inado tho depth look
leupor. The men stopped short, nnd
ooked at their shovels, and looked at
one another. All powers of evil were
bandod against them, and they Baw no
turn to take; still It wns not their own
wish to go bnck, without having struck
ii blow for It.
"You can do nothing," said the Squire.
with porhnps tho first bitter fooling he
had yot displayed. "Ail tilings aro dead
ignlnst mo; I must grin, as you say, and
henr It. It would take a wholo corps
of sappora and miners a week to clear
this place out. Wo cannot oven be Bitre
of tho spot; wo cannot tell whore the
orncr Is; all Is smothered up so. Ill
luck always rides ill luck. This proves
beyond doubt thnt my child lies here."
Tho men wero good men, ns mon go,
nnd they all felt lovo and pity for tho lost
young lady, nnd tho poor old master. Still
their fingers wero so blue, and their froz
en feet so hard to feel, nnd tho deep,
whlto gulf before them surged so palpa
bly invincibio, that they could not repine
at a dispensation which sent them home
to their suppers.
"Nort to bo dono till change of weath
er," Bald Crlpps, as thoy sat In tho cart
again; "I reckon thoy villains know what
was coining, better nor I, who have kept
tho road, man and boy, for thirty year.
The Lord knoweth best, ns He alwnys
do. But to my mind Ho mnnoth to knpc
on snowing nnd freezing for a month at
lastc. Moon hnvo chnnged last night;
and a bitter moon we shall havo of it."
And so thoy did; tho blttercta moon,
save one, of tho present century. And old
men said tjint there had not been such
a winter, and such a sight of snow, since
the ono which had been scut on purpose
to discomfit Bony.
Mr. Oglander, in his lonely home,
strove bravely to make tho best of It.
Ho had nono of thnt grand religious con
solation which somo people havo (cspc,
clally for others), and ho grounded his
inppmcss porhaps too much upon his
own old hearthstone. His mind was not
an extraordinary one, and his soul was
old-fashioned.
Moreover, his sister Joan came up a
truly pious and devoted woman, the.
widow of an Oxford wluo merchnnt. Mrs.
hVrmltngc loved her niece so deeply that
she had no patience with any selfish pin
ings after her. "Sho Is gone to the
better land," sho Bald; "tho shores of
bliss unspeakable unless Itusscl Over-
Rhuto knows about her a great deal
more than he will tell. I havo llttlo
confidence In that young man. But to
wish hor bnck Is a very sinful nnd un
christian act, I fear.
"Now, Joan, you know thnt you wish
her bnck, every timo that you sit down,
or get up, or go to tea without her."
"Yes, 1 know, I know I do. And most
of all when I pour it out sho used to
do it for mo. But, Worth, you can wres
tle more than I can. Tho Lord expects
so much more of a man."
Being exhorted thus, tho Squire did his
best to wrestle. Not that any words of
hers could carry now their former
weight; for If ho had no daughter left,
what good was money left to her? The
Squire did not wnnt his sister's money
for himself at all. Indeed, ho would
rather bo without it. Dirty money, won
by trade but still It had been his duty
alwnys to try to get it for his daughter.
And this is worth a word or two.
At the Oxford Bank, and among the
lawyers, It had been a woll-known thing
that old Kerniitage had not died with
less than jElfiO.000 behind him. Ever
in Oxford there never had been a man
so Illustrious for port wino. "Fortiter
occupa portuin" was the motto over the
door to his vaults, and he fortified port
Impregnably. Therefore he supplied nil
tho common room cellars, and among the
undergraduates his nanio was surety for
nnother glass. And thoro roally was a
port wine basis; so that nobody died of
him.
Mr. Formltago went on, nnd hit his
mark continually; and his mark was that
bull's cyo of this goldon age, a yellow
Imprint of a dragon. So many of these
enmo pouring In, that ho kept them In
bottles sealed, and left to mature, and ac
quire "tho genuine bottle flnvor." When
ho had bottled half a pipe of these, and
was thinking of beginning now to storo
them in the wood, a man coming down
with a tap found him ucad; and was too
much scared to steal anything.
This man reproached himself, ever af
terwards, for his Irresolute conscience;
and tho two executors gave hltu nothing
but blamo for his behavior. Peoplo In
Ilollwell said that these two took a
dozen battles of guineas between them,
to drink their testator's health. Enough
thnt ho was dead, and every mau seelug
his funeral, prnlsud him.
CHAPTER VII.
There was'a street In Oxford, nenr tho
ruins of the ancient castle, and behind
the now county jail, where one of tho
many off-sets of tho Isls filters Its artifi
cial way beneath low arches and betwixt
dead walls; and this street was known to
tho eldor generation by tho name of
"Crossduck Lane."
Here, In a highly respectable house,
a truly renp' i-t !! r in w i Mlnu, with
I ! " 'lrr" n.ld h's f i,, ' " ,
enptfon, style and title; and he waa not
by any mans a bad man, so as to b an
a ttorney.
Thin man possessed a great deal of in
fluence, having much houso-property; and
he novcr in the least disguised his sentl
nlenta, or played fast and looso with
thorn. Being of a commanding figure,
and fino straightforward nspoct, ho left
on impression, wherevur ho went, of hon
esty, vigor and manliness. And he went
into very good society, as often as h
cared to do so; for although not a native
of Oxford, but of unknown origin, h
now was the head, nnd indeed tho en
tirety, of a loug-oatnbllshcd legal firm.
Ho had married the daughter of tin
senior partner, nnd bought or ousted
away the rest; and although tho legend
on his plato waa still "Piper, Pepper,
Sharp, and Co.," every one know that
tho learning, wonlth, and honor of the
whole concern were now embodied In Mr.
Luko Sharp.
His wlfo, a fat nnd goodly person,
Mlrnndn Piper of former days, happened
to bo the first cousin and nearest relatlvi
of a famous mnn "Port-wine Fermir
nge" himself; and his death had affected
her very sadly. For she found thnt he
had provided a most unjust disposal oi
his Avorldy goods. To his godson, her
only child and her idol, Christopher Fer
mltago Sharp, lie had left a copy of Dr,
Doddrldgo's "Expositor," and nothlnq
else. Mrs. Luke Sharp, though ft ver
good Christian, repacked and sent bad
tho "Expositor."
If Mr. Sharp had boon at homo, lu
would not havo let her do so. no wn
full at all tltnca of large, generous Im
pulse, but nover ypt guilty of lmpulslv
acts. It had always been said that hi
son was to havo tho bottled half-pipe o(
gold, or tho chief body of it, after th
widow's llfo-Intercst. Whereas now.
Mrs. Fermltnge, If phe liked, might roll
nil tho bottles down the High streot She,'
how over, was a careful woman; nnd 11
was manifest where tho whole of thi
vintage would bo binned away to wlti
in tho cellars of Bcckley Barton, with i
tho key nt Grace Oglnuder's very protty
walBt Mr. Sharp at tho moment could
dobcry no euro; but still to show tempec
was a vulgar tiling. I
Now upon the Now Year's day o
1838, tho bitter weather continuing BtilL
and doing its best to grow moro bitter!
Mr. Sharp had closed his otllco early)
He had ordered his turkey to bo kopt
back, and begged his wife to sco to it
until he could mako out nnd settlo tho
import of a letter which reached hlra
about ono o'clock. It had been delivered
by a groom on horsebnek. Tho lottex
was short, and expounded little.
"Sir
"I shall do myself the honor of calling
upon you at four o'clock this afternoon,
upon somo Important business. Obedient
ly yours,
. "RUSSEL OVERSHUTE."
It is not altogether an agreeable thing,
oven for a man with tho finest consclencd
to receive n challenge upon nn unknown
point, curtly worded in this wise. Luk
Sharp hnd lod nn unblemished life, sine
the follies of his youth subsided; ho sub
scribed to inevitable charities; and h
waited for his rents when sure of them.
Still he did not like thnt letter.
Now ho took off tho coat which he
woro at his desk and wnshed his nice
whlto hands, and clothed himself in ex
pensive dignity, then he opened his book
of daily entries, and folded blotting-paper,
and prepared to receive instructions,
or glvo advice, or be wiso abstractedly.
But ho thought It a, sound precaution to
have hh son Christopher within earshot;
for young Overshute was reputed to be
of a rather excitable naturo; therefore
Kit Sharp was comma n ted to finish tho
cleaning of his gun which was his chief
delight iu his father's closet adjoining
tho otllce, and to keep the door shut, uu
less called for.
Tho lawyer was not kept waiting loud.
As the clock of St. Thomas struck. four,
iho shoes of n homo rang sharply on the
ley road, .and tho otllco bell kicked up its
tongue, with a jerk showing great en
ergy. "Let him ring ngaiu," said Mr.
Sharp; "I defy him to ring much hard- '
er." !
Tho defiance was soon proved to bo un
sound; for in less than ten seconds, tho
bell which hnd stood many years of
strong emotion was visited with such a
violent spasm thnt nothing short of tho
melting-pot restored Its constitution. A
piece clinked on the passage floor, and
the lawyer was filled with unfeigned
wrath. That bell had been ringing for
three generations, nnd was the Palladium
of tho firm.
"What clumsy clodhopper," cried Mr.
Sharp, rushing out, ns if lie saw nobody
"what beggardly bumpkin hus brokun
my bell? Mr. Overshute oh I I beg par
don, I am suro."
"We must mako allowance." said Rus
sel calmly, "for fidgety animals, Mr.
Sharp; and for thick gloves In this frosty
weather. John,' tako my horso on the
Seven Bridges rond, and be bnck in ex
actly fifteen minutes, now kind of you
to bo nt home, Mr. Shnrp!"
With tho words, tho young mnn be
stowed on the lawyer a short, Bbarp
glance, which entirely failod to penetrate
the latter.
"Shut out tills cold wind," he cxeln lin
ed as ho shut In jiis visitor. "You young
folk never soom to feel the cold. Now
take this chair. Never mind your boot;
let them hiss as they will on the fender.
I havo had men hore come fifty mile
across country, as tho crow files, to 6o
me, when the floods wero out; and
away with mlnda comforted."
"I have heard of your skill In oil legni
points. But I nm not como on that ao
count. Quibbles and shuffles I dotesu"
(To bo coutinucd.)
Now Th. y Don't tJponk.
Nell Do you think I look uu M 1
needed a doctor?
Belle M'ni well, a beauty dootcs
wouldn't do you any harm. Philadel
phia Bulletin.
There ro octae widows wiio '."111
I HE BROUGHT A FRIEND.
"Hero's little Brtght-Eyos," said, the J
sallow young man with the corduroy
waistcoat an the waitress approached.
"Hello, sweetness!" ho continued, ad
drcsfllng the yow-.g woman. "I haven't
seen you for a long while."
"Not sonco yest'd'y," Bald tho wait
ress, without n patiBO In hor gum chew
ing. "I don't Bee how you've bore
up."
"I ain't not very well," said Hip
young man. "1'vo lost flesh. Every
body notices it. Blllj this Is the queen
of tho quick lunchers the sassiest
evor. Get on to that pompadour bang
and tell ruo if you evor seen anything
like It In town. Gladys, darling, thl.
is my friend."
"Ho looks liko an Improvement on
you," retorted the waitress.
"Now will you be good?" said Billy.
"I guess that ought to hold you for a
while."
"Takes more'n that to hold him,"
said tho waitress. "He's a great jol
lier, ain't he?"
"YoU know you don't mean that,"
said tho young mnn in the cordurop
waistcoat. "I never gave you nny Jol
ly. Ain't sho n peach, though, Billy?
Didn't I toll you?"
"I guess you told him a lot about
me," said the waitress.
"Haven't talked about anything
else, hnvo I, Billy?"
"I don't wonder at it," said Billy.
"You're something of a jollier your
self," said the waitress.
"No, that's straight," protested Bil
ly. "Cut it out," said the sallow young
man.
"He's Jealous, ain't he?" smiled tho
waitress.
"We don't care, do we?" said Billy.
"Sure wo don't"
"What you going to have?" asked
the sallow young mnn.
"What you going to have?"
"Sparerlbs and sauerkraut"
"Guess I'll take the same."
"Two sparerlbs and sauerkraut,
said the waitress, supplying them
with paper napkins. "Say," she mur
mured, leaning over Billy, "if he tells
you any more about mo don't you lis
ten to him, will you?" She smiled with
impartial coquettishness on them both
nnd sailed off.
"Ain't she a corker?" domnnded the
sallow young man.
"Sure," snid Billy, emphatically.
"Thoy all like a little Jolly," Bald the
sallow young man. "I've got myself
solid with her, all right" Chicago
Dally News.
UNWRiTTEN LAW RIGID.
Prcuidcut Restricted from Leaving
Country liven for a Day.
The President must not leave the
United States even for a day. This is
nn old, unwritten law which has been
respected by all successors of George
Washington, with perhaps one or two
exceptions. This restriction Is not im
posed by statute. President McKlnley
emphasized his respect for this rule on
his tour to the South and West It
was unofficially announced that 4u
would meet President Diaz of Mexico
somewhere near the boundary of that
sister republic. A controversey as to
whether Mr. McKlnley might properly
cross the Mexican line, even for a few
hours, arose. Early in May, when ho
visited El Paso, Tex., where he was
greeted by President Diaz's persona!
representative, hu expressed a desir
to take a look Into Mexico.
From El Paso there extends intr
Mexico the International Bridge span
ning the Rio Grande. Whether the
President would dare to cross tbl.s
structure or not was the question
whteh members of his party naked ono
another. He did not. He went to th
bridge nnd caught a view of the Slerro
Madre. Half way across the bridge
was a line. Stopping over this was
putting foot upon Mexicnn territory.
President Harrison had ventured as
far as this line ten years before. But
President McKlnley did not so much
as place his foot upon tho bridge.
President Arthur was nceused of vio-
' Iating this unwritten law In October,
! IRft'J nnnn n nlnn surf, trln in Aloxmi.
drla Bay, Thousand Islands. Ills poli
tical enemies, accused him thou of ven
turing across tho Canadian line on a
1 Ashing excursion. The boundary ho-
I tween Canada and New York extends
I to Uie middle of the St. Lawrenc
river.
! President Cleveland was similarly
accused. ' On ono of his hunting trips
I to North Carolina he sailed by the
ocean route past Cape llntterus. His
enemies contended that ho ventured
outside the three-mile limit Accord
ing to international law, a country's
possessions extend for throe mllrs out-
, side Its coast lino. Plying tho seas
I farther than this Is leaving home tcr-
; rltory.
j The President must not nccept irlfts
if gront value from Infouors In tho
i federal service, but ho may accept
u'lfts from foreigners. Grant, McKin
ley nnd -'Mr. Room-volt hnvo received
.sifts from foro'irn rulers. Several
' jflfts have been sent to Mr. Roosevelt
'rotn th West Kmiwis City S nr.
wum
ITS MERIT IS PROVE!
RECORD OF GREAT MEDIUM
A Prominent Cincinnati Woman TaHj
How Lydla E. Plnkham'a Vesretaktt
Compound Completely Cured Her.
Tho great good Lydia E. Pinkhsmt
Vegetable Compound is doing among
tho women of America is attracting
tho attention of many of our leading
scientists, and thinking peoplo genvt
ally.
jtiiii' iM-inwHwiax wHomiKaawy
f Mrs. Sara Mson
The following letter is only ono of
many thousands which are on file la
tho Pinkliam office, and xo to prove
beyond question that Lydia iJ. PInk
hum's Vegetable Compound must be A
remedy of great merit, otherwise ill
could not produce such marvelous re
suits umong sick and ailing women.
Dear Sirs. Pinkhnm:
" About nino months ngo I was a great suf
foror with womb troublo, which caused nrt
sovoro pain extreme nervousness and fr
?iuent headaches, from which the docto
allod to relievo mo. I tried Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, nnd within
short time felt bettor, and after taking flv
bottles of it I wns entirely cured. I therefor
heartily recommend your Compound as a
splendid uterlno tonic. It makes tho monthly
periods regular and without pnln ; nnd what
a blessing it Is to Hnd such a remedy after sa
many doctois fall to help you. I am pleased
to recommend it to nil suffering women."
Mrs. Sara Wilson, 31 East 3d Street, Cinch,
nati, Ohio.
If you havo suppressed or painful
menstruation, wenknos of the stom
ach, indigestion, bloating, leucorrhcea,
flooding, nervous prostration, dizzi
ness, faintness, "don't-care" and
" wnni-to-be-loft-alone " feeling, ex
citability, backncho or the blues, thes
are sure indications of female weak
ness, some derangement of the uterus
or ovarian trouble. In such cases there
is one tried and true remedy Lydia
E. Pinkham'3 Vegotablo Compound.
Wo miKnt cut out tne music, sortlj
suggested u bad young man iu th
rear of the auditorium. Evansvllli
Courier.
Mother Gray's Swoot Powtlora fbi
Children. ..-
Successfully used by Mother dray, nurso
the Children's Home fn New York, ouro Oon' -stlpatlon,
l-'everlshness. Had Stomuoh, Teeth J
lng Disorders, move and rcsrulate tho BoweW
and Destroy Worms. Over 30.000 testimonial
At all Druindsts, S5o. Sample F1UIIC A
dress A. S. Olaistku, Leltoj, N. Y.
Two Questions. She Are you sun
you love me for myseK alone?
lie Did you think I loved you foi
your mother? Somervillo Journal.
A GTIA ItANTKET) CUKE FOI? PIIKS,
Itohlnif. nitnd, Hleedtnr or Protruding Pile
Yourdruu'idst will refund money If PAZU OINT
MRN'T tn too In to 14 ?- SO.
The n tir. wlo m ver takes ena
risks makes az mermy blunders a
nnnv'io.idv.
11 w liixh can that, soprano sln)
As hin as $5,000 a night, answered
the manMftv, absent-mindedly. Now
York Sun.
f Western mm
Parlnu thn monthn of Murrh nnd April, thi'io will b
EicunjIoiiN on tli Tnrloti linn of rnllmijr to thl
O nmllun fit. HumlrmU of UiotinmU of ttlH host
li(int nl Uniting UnilK on thn (tontliiHiit frt to lli(
icttlnr. Ailjoinliiu In lulu mnjr uh iiiircluinoil from rullwai
li U mlronirmiiIii rniionnnli'n nrlr. iik oiout".tq
ApIr for Information to Suporint mlentof Immlgra
Hxu.OttHwa, iiiiHila.oi to , V. Iluiiu,biil Nhw Vorl
Lift lluildmu, Uuiuhii, Nab , AutU. riiud (ioTorummj
Ajmitt.
I'Uum u; whura jou Uf CxU adrartWamtut.
1 look upon most nouiii g, all fa)8,
at best, mere sauce for theoli
ones.
The top round ov the la mr lz thi
dancerous ono: come ard u nst, wir
me, mi Iny, on the mi'ini ono.
Mrs. WiP9lows SOOTHING SN ULT fur cht
drun wthlnR. softens Die umiib.rtriucim i,ifli
nation, allays pnln, curus collo irip -jfio bottle,
"Kno thys if" iz the pin o. pnei'i
siuuo; it naz nuwuss Ofen n S'krot,
and pr balily allwiss win ...
BEGGS' BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES catarrh ot the .stomach.
I never yet hid mi n n "way In
cnntyhhiK bub what i hmv f o' ard
how I could hav m-ir v ,mn it
MBlfclinvi't it Hi si 4 i.
jj uo uusun oil 'p TBV i.
in tlinn.
id by rt' -rfC
TO THE
i
-i
1 ' VI what
. t Ml
1... ' 7