The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 04, 1895, Image 7
/.PPLEDORE. i II nvsrs In ApplO-lM* L ,ro Ul tnrtn: froa. i .; w.tl fOlJlU bMdt. Hi.' -“i v ,1.1-1 her mi lo vers* ■ 11, i c.ir.e.vs orv. ,.h0 ny:i hilli nil araual) ,; ini it»by . ,H i';eri wi:» With foam. . ii ro,n 11 ta rido: , tee ahlnm : "in U, i-murlii! ihi tide I in* nin tor tttid her sou ; ■ fur-jv jraiore „ped;s In every wave V .1(1 eii Applodora! —Harpor's Bazar. Latimer’s Escape. [I'AIU.mT.; M. llKXKME. i l'TKR VII—Continued. r knew before.” she said to ming. “what a lovely month r is. ° The red and gold, the kn\vn and deep crimson of the even more beautiful than [e, u loaves; and I like Septem lietter than those whioh pring; there is nothing so the whito chrysanthemum.” hi Id! I knew afterwards why 11 September the fairest of Again, we had driven one Ashton Firs, taking with us i for the sportsmen. We some minutes watching the <m the valley, and the blue tlio distant hills. She turned mikieniy, her eyes filled with Audrey,” she said, “what a |il world it is! I never knew mv. I seem to have slept my life, and to be just awak Do you see the green of the Li the Lovely blue of the sky? Iiidroy. I never knew how much h, re was in a bird’s song. I Ikn w what the brook sung [or the wind told to the trees. piv dear, my dear! neither you Lis wise enough to know what riling you. evening—it was the month of as day in the midst of a dark ly—the gentlemen sat longer nial over their wine. The night and pleasant. Irey,” said Lady Latimer, “let ,s far as the white gate just to the; river.” ipped a black lace shawl round <lcn head and - white shoulders, went out together, leaving the ; lights that streamed from the windows, and the dim, soft r of the old house behind us, last the lime trees, to the white at was canopied with trees, i n it, Audrey, and let us go i 0 the water's edge,” said Lady ! •r. " ! avnt, and I remember as though j 1 yesterday, our shadows on the | rass. and the wooinf sigh of the j 1 the fast-dying lime leaves. | lnniin shone full over the river, ! wavelet seemed to catch a ray cry light; the sight was beauti fairy-land. Lady Latimer stood for some minutes; then in a low, lice she began the lines: a,sed without the city sate, in ft*red bv the way. palm was bendin t to her mate, ul thus I heard her sav: j hi'arrow to the quiver, the wild bird to the tree: ] l stream to meet the river, I nd the river to the sea i waves are wedded oh the toOMfc, he shadows on the lea | 1 like to like—and each to each, And I—to ihoe ! 'he cedar on the mountain, I n 1 bramble in the brake > Willow by the fountain. 1 nd the lily by the lake: 1 ><jrP(,nt cMling In u« lair, j ue ea.-le soaring free. ** klD t0 kin. and pair to pair, I And I-too thee ’ palm was bendin? to her mate, narked her moaning well: passed within the city gate, be old fond tale to tell ” (1. can remember, Audrey,” she "hen I read those lines, and 'eie 80 much Greek to me. Now dcrstand them perfectly. They that everyone must have love, 1su°h like, that the young «uth, the beautiful seek others • Everything in nature loves, 0 the butterfly who loves the 1 t ** ttle hee which is be lt,° , bloom: 4,14 « flowers v,', ’ beos and butterflies, all w much more we— I think_ am am-e that I ^ been blind ■' ufe until now,” "’ftat has given light and sight hi, nJCS now?” ! asked. 8 ,)i I k”°\ !-esbit the question, al I‘l 'vouid have been so ■ with ,if alone; but ^e looked ' ‘ill calm, sweet eyes. . t0 “ Kllu answered. “It iiNt ,,,ihat ,tho eyes of my soul ' ' , lat th«y «ee in ^in—mlmitc brightness. Ah iaught^jmif11 the did not’ what ohtn in t: *?, ^ heart went ■VI. a P4 ';.f °Vin^ Pily- She happi ‘""iioutrr15^11 18 diffe«-ant to 1 thi lithT and vicious, ‘■icy; novv } ,ender and Ion sa'ldenU-<th0Wev® nerer finished, vc heaS i evWhUe **« opened, bat, say °‘ce ihat made my h 'aid coii't.-t, l Hi?* Latimer. -'°u would be here by the ' ^autifu^biush" hth' faee-tha a when sh« , tbe raPt ex am! said wirh'U netl to Colonel w v ' t h a smile: JO'' know that I should !! i 1 f^'dghi^and"60' II- *°U 1, *e foun“ *£u love the riv '■*'1 raid to i,iond .1ra1wI“Z-» Lady Latin and Miss Lovel have gone to look at the moonlight.’ ” •■I, of course;” interrupted Lionel, •‘said at once, ‘Lot us find them,’ And wo have found you.” There was one momont of delicious silo.ieo, when it scorned to mo that the very moonlight throbbed and thrilled on the air. * “Wo need not hurry in,” said Colonel North. “Several of them are coming. A stroll by the river on this moonlight night will be much hotter than sitting in a drawing-room by the light of lamps!” Then came half an hour that was like time stolen from Paradise. It seemed quite natural that Captain Fleming should walk by my side, even more natural that Colonel North should walk with Lady Latimer. Others joined us, but no one broke up these little groups; no one came to me, no one joined Lady Latimer. We talked about everything bright and beautiful; of the river that rolled on to the sea, of the moon that shone in the sky, of the wind whose whispers wero those of a lover among the leaves Then I perceived that Colonel North and Lady Lati mer were standing by the rustio bridge which spanned the river. The black lace shawl had fallen, leaving her golden head bare, and her lively face all washed by the moonlight. She looked wondrously fair. Captain Fleming was looking at them. “What a beautiful pair they would make,” he said, suddenly. “Colonel North is my ideal of a soldier, and Lady Latimer is one of the fairest of women.” Indeed, the dark, soldierly face and figure showed to great advantage by the side of the fair and radiant woman. We remained out-of-doors nearly an hour. I went with Captain Fleming to the square of fountains. They were indescribably beautiful unuer the light of the harvest moon, and I am afraid we forgot every one else. I did. It was the night of nights to me. But when we came back to the drawing room Lady Latimer was there. The oeauutui tenor voice of Colonel North was ringing through the room, and she stood by the window listening, with a dreamy smile on her fair face, and these were the words that he sung: “Xot much I sou -ht I had my dream— Dear love, your very word* t quote— A rose, the ripple of a stream, A blue sky and a boat "But roses fade a* roses blow. And summer skies ean lower and frown The stream runs deep and dark, and so This boat of ours went do vn She smiled as she listened to the words, then, lightly touching a yellow rose that she wore on her breast, she said: “Boses fade as roses blow, but this one will never die.” “Who gave it to you?” I asked. “Colonel North,” she answered; and I saw all heaven in her face as she ut tered the words. Then—then I knew all. CHAPTER VUI. I then knew all. I knew that she had found the something missing in her life, that she had learned what the birds sung about and the wind whispered to blossom and leaf, what the waves said when they broke on the shore. She had learned the great secret of life, which was love; but she did not know it—ah! thank God for that. She would not have looked so happy, so bright, so innocent, if she had known what had happened to herself. She did not know; that was my chief cause for gratitude. The knowledge might come to her, but it had not done so yet, and I vowed to myself that if I ecrald I would guard her from it. She had entered fairyland, but she was all unconscious that she had passed the golden gate. She had lis tened to the songs of Paradise, but she did not know they had sounded in llCMS* OOSB fiVia Viod rlnunlr rtf 4l,n nt,nl . iee which is all foam, hut she had not recognized its flavor. She saw sud denly, and as she had never seen it before, all the beauty and brightness of the world, but she did not know what had opened her eyes. I prayed heaven she never might. She was so innocently happy, the expression on her faee was one of glad content; even Lord Latimer noticed it at last. “It seems to me, Grace,” be said to her one morning, “that you have grown better looking.'” I thought to myself, ■“Oh, Mind of eyes, blind of heart, not to under stand.” Surely, any one who loved her might have seen the danger she was in; so young, so fair, with such a passionate, loving heart, and left en tirely to her own resources—for Lord Latimer spent very little time, with his guests. He had grown older and more feeble lately, and as life slipped away and he lost his grasp, of its pleasures, ho grew morose and more stern. He liked Lionel Fleming, and he spent a great deal of time in talk ing to him; .but he never went out with the sportsmen, he ’never joined the luncheon parties. He dined every evening with his guests, but he never appeared in the drawing room after dinner. She was left, then, to her self, to the influence of the sweet, sad music and the harvest moon. There was no one to say, “Do not let Colonel North sing your heart away;” no one to say, “Do not go out every evening while the harvest moon is shining;” no one seemed to notice anything but me. Lady Latimer was mistress of the house, Colonel North the most im portant guest in it. It was natural that he should walk and ride by her side, that he should be her escort, that he should make her the especial object of his attentions; but it was not natural that he should look at her, when he was singing, with bis whole heart in his eyes, and that every night, while the harvest moon was shining, he should ask her to go down •nd look at the river with him; nor was it quite natural that he should gather all the flowers she wore, and talk so much poetry to her. I thought often of her simple words to me, "How nice it must be to have some one to say loving words to you and bring you nlco flowers!” She had both now—flowers and words. 1 tried my bost to take care of her. I often sacrificed the time I might have spent with Captain Fleming in sitting beside her, trying to take some little of her attention from Colonel North. I might as well have tried to fly over the moon; but, thank hoaven! no one bow it except me. The boys loved Colonel North. He was their beau-ideal of a soldier, a gentleman, and a “man who had no nonsense about him,” which was Bob's favorite description of him. Give them half an hour with the colonel, and they were quite happy. "Ho knows how to treat a boy; there is no make-believe about him,” they said. To my wonder, astonishment, indigna tion and dismay, they preferred him to the heir of Lorton’s Cray. They all wanted to be "tall as the colonel, handsome as the colonel, and just as upright." In fact, the colonel was the hero of the hour. Captain Flem ing came next, but, as Bob irrever ently expressed it, he was not “real jam.” During this happy month of Sep tember, Lord Latimer did not forgot my father and mother. Every day there was a dispatch of game from the hall to the vicarage, and every week, at least, they joined us at dinner. They saw nothing of what troubled me so greatly; my sweet mother would | not have understood such a thing, j They considered Colonel North a king i among men—so brave, so gallant, so I courteous; they quoted him and ad | mired him. He was a Chevalier Bay ! ard in their eyes, but they preferred I Captain Fleming. I One night, when they dined at Lor [ ton’s Cray, I sat next to Captain Elem [ ing at dinner. We talked, ai usual, I laughed and amused ourselves; a rose ; that 1 had been wearing was trans ! plan tel to the buttonhole of his coat. [ After dinner he talked to me again. We had dancing that evening and he danced with me. I am not quite sure whether I remembered the existence of any other person. When the eve ning( ended I saw an expression of anxiety on my mother’s face. She called me to her side in the great en trance hall, and. raising her face to mine, she looked straight into my eyes. ! ‘‘Audrey,” she said, “for the first time i in my life I am anxious over you. I | am not quite sure if I have done a | wise thing in letting you come to live ; here. My dear, the heir of Lorton's ! Cray is a very handsome young man." “He is as good and brave as he is j handsome, mother,” I replied. I Her face cleared a little; this open i praise disarmed her. ! “He seems to like talking to you, I Audrey,” she continued; “but, of [ course, my dear child, you always I bear in mind the difference in your | positions. You have too much sense, Audrey, to let your mind get filled with absurd ideas. I—I should not like you to be made unhappy because I am not here to look after you; it would imbitter my whole life.” I smiled. I had never hoped, I had never thought of hope, so that I could safely look in my mother’s face and smile. I took her to the great hall window, whence we could see the stars shining in the sky. I pointed to the brightest and the largest. “Do you see that star, mother?” I asked. “Yes,” she answered. “I should sooner think of asking it to come down from heaven to me than of filling my mind with foolish ideas about Captain Fleming.” [to be continued.] A Mnitmche Over Seven Feet Loaf. The people of Bellington W. Va., are proud of one of their citizens, whose only claim to greatness is his enormous beard and mustache. His name is Brown—plain James Brown— but nature could not hide his identity even in the Virginia mountains, es pecially after bestowing on him such an enormous beard. Brown is six feet and one inch in height, but even his great stature does not hinder his chin beard from trailing on the floor when he stands erect. The mustache is even a greater curiosity than his beard, being nearly seven feet and four inches -■‘from tip to tip.” How They Da It 1n Purla. There is to be u lawn tennis club established in Paris upon a grand stale. It will have eight courts, two of which will be covered and avail able for winter play: there will also be dining-rooms, .dressing and bath rooms. It is the intention oC the club to hold two tournaments each year, to which English players will be invited, and an English professional has been engaged who will Book after the lawn and instruct players when necessary. The subscription is fixed at 150 franes for the first 100 members, aftor which it will be raised to 200 franes. He Knew Hie litwleesi. “You wish to join our staff as proof reader?” Applicant—Yes, sir. “Do you understand the require ments of that responsible position?” “Perfectly, sir. Whenever you make any mistake in the paper just blame ’em on me and I’ll never say a word.”—London Judy. Philanthropic. Editor—What are you going to do with these iron boxes. Enterprising Publisher—Sh-. I have a scheme. Into each of these bo .es I am going to put a loaf of bread, and ten coupons cut from our paper wil> entitle a starving person to the use of a key.—Truth. MUST HAVE ABILITY. THB SUCCESSFUL WOMAN STENOGRAPHER. A Bnlimi That Brings Large Returns end Requires More Than Mechanical ■kill—A Compliment Cost Her a situa tion. ' The commonly accepted Idea that the women who All positions of stenogra phers ere usually women of low-grade business ability, and that their work is wholly and simply mechanical, may be very easily dispelled by looking Into the dally affairs and experiences of some of those who are employed in hotels and other large and publlo buildings of this city. The hotel stenographers of St. Louis are said to be above the averaxe repre sentative women of the craft, and this belief has very good grounds upon which to rest, for they are, for the most part, women who have had sufficient business experience to make them fully capable to handle correspondence of all sorts; and, indeed, this Is an absolutely neces sary qualification for the woman who wishes to be successful in this particu lar line of stenographic work. The dictation that comes to the hotel stenographer Is as varied as could pos sibly be imagined, says the St. Louis Republic. One day perhaps she may take down what the patent medicine man says about hla “sugar-coated” pills, and the next day, or the next hour even, from the lips of the orator, who Is, or the orator who would like to be, distinguished for elegant and polished speech, a harangue that It keeps her wits as well as her pencil busy trying to follow. The commercial traveler who sells all grades of wine, the Iron merchant who has a thousand and one names for as many different ores, and, In fact, men who represent every kind of business under the sun, hurriedly dictate their letters, and expect, too, that they shall be properly transcribed on the type writer. To do this the typewriter must be more or less familiar with the typical terms of each line of business, as well as knowing how to spell and punctuate correctly. More than an ordinary amount of common sense and good xMQtilvlIV UtUDV aiDU UC ^UDDCODCU auu exercised. If In the haste of taking notes a word Is omitted, the stenographer must be intelligent enough to know how to sup* ply it, for it Is not always possible to refer such matters back to the dictator until it is too late to complete the letter for the particular outgoing mail It may have been Intended to catch. There Is yet another thing that the stenographer in public office needs al most as much as she does a thorough knowledge of business, and that Is tact. It would never do for her to hand back a letter to the man who had dictated it and tell him any little error he may discover Is his own. The only way for her to get out of such a thing as this is to graciously admit that more than like ly she misunderstood him. If it is his own error and he knows It, he may not admit to her that It was, but he all the more admires her generosity In shoul dering the blame, and remembers her, most profitably to herself, when he needs further stenographic work done. Then there is a strange social phase of life that comes more before the notice of women In this particular line of work, perhaps, than In any other, and this, too, she must school herself to meet. "Has It ever occurred to you," said one of these bright typists who has a desk In one of the largest hotels of the city, “how very many men there are so unfortunate as to be unhappily mar ried? That Is, according to the stories the poor fellows seem so willing to In flict we poor hotel stenographers with.” If the last man who had told this sensible little woman his “tale of woe" had been near to see the mirth It had provoked, he would, no doubt, have been ashamed to think he had proved such a poor judge of human nature for one and woven such a weak bit of senti mentality for her to only laugh over. In the office of a wealthy business corporation, not long ago, the chief clerk found it necessary to dictate a let ter to the lady stenographer that was afterward to be passed Into the hands of the manager for signature. He irood naturedly accepted the task he had found so agreeable, and promptly pro ceeded with It, Standing behind her chair he began his dictation. All went well until the letter was about half way completed, then the gentleman, who had his eyes fixed on the young lady's soft, wavy coll of hair, thought he would pay her a nice little compliment. "What very pretty hair you have. Miss Blank." Miss Blank smiled, but said nothing. The letter was finished and handed to the manager: He, glancing over It, dis covered a sentence entirely foreign to the subject matter of the epistle. In the very middle of the page. When Miss Blank was called In to explain she opened her big blue eyes In a sort of wondering fashion and said: "Why, X only put down Just what Mr. Brown said." Miss Blank was excused from further explanation, but the quality and quan tity of laughter that was thrust upon Mr. Brown was more than that gentle man could stand, and It soon became a question as to who should give up a position and leave the office—he or Miss Blank; and the-matter finally termi nated when Miss Blank quietly handed In her resignation. The women who have their desks In hotels or office buildings pay a certain percentage or bonus for the privilege, and spend as many hours a day or night there as they may see fit. As a rule they find It necessary to remain until quite late, for a great deal of their dicta tion to given after business hours, so aa to have it ready by the morning of the next day. It to quite the exception now to go to any city and fall to find a stenographer In all the large hotels and public build ings. Women have found that If they have the ability they can make these positions pay them better than the ordi nary salary received by stenographers In Individual offices. At the Board BenooL Master—Now, what to Christopher Colombus famed for? (The class U si lent.) Master—Surely somebody knows that. Tommy—I know. For frying eggs. Master—No. He 1s notable for having discovered America, which was un known then. Tommy—How did he know It was America when he hadn't been there be fore?—Judy. Absolutely pure Tobacco In South Carolina. | Ten years sgo not a pound of tobac co was grown in South Carolina for i market. There were stray patches here and there, and forehanded people in some of the upper counties of the state possibly produced enough of a not superior quality to supply a strictly home demand, but tobacco growing ns a money making industry was un known in the state. Last yenr 1,000, 000 pounds of tobacco of tlie best vari eties and somo of the finest quality were grown and sold In the county of Darlington alone. The acreage devo ted to the cultivation of the plant was not 5 per cent of the acreage devoted to the cultivation of cotton, yot the value of the tobacco product was 10 per cent of the valuo of all tho cotton raised in the county. The money value of the tobacco crop of the county was 9130,000.—Charleston Nows and Cour ier. _ Whal a UleesTng It Is to have strong nerves, und bow many are dented it. They lo wuom nature bus been niggard In this respect tun enjoy nerve vigur uun quietude if iney use iiusiutior s Summon miters, one ol me tluust nervines una lunits in existence. Dyspopsiu, a praline source ol nerve inqutctuue. is nivurluuly overcome by tms geniui medicine, wnieh is ulso poluni us u remedy lor muiunui und kidney trouble unu toiislipulion_ No Good. Mrs. Will ,T. Chalmers, daughter of the late Allan I’inkerton, and herself n notable figure in Chicago, in West Side society at least, has lately added to her retinue of English butler, who, being a late Importation, was unaware of the existence of the naval orange. The other day Mrs. Chalmers ordered a box of this fruit to be sent home. During ing dinner, a few lntimatea being present, the lady of the house, sur prised that the oranges did not make their appearance, inquired of the but ler what had become of them. “His you please, mum,” said the but ler, “I 'ad to send 'em back. Hevery one of those oranges 'ad 'oles in ’em."— Coe's Cosgh Balaam Is the oldest end best. It will break up s Cold oulolo er than anything olio. It Is always reliable. Try It. The man who cheats another robe blm eelf. more generally than ever before, enpoclully as they have been greatly reduced in price The Chicago Scale Co. are leaders for low prices on the best Wheels, us well as many other articles, and all kinds of Scales. ' The Delaware County (la.) Farmers' club at one of its meetings recommend ed a rotation suited especially in the north part of that state: 1. That grass is the best crop on the farm. 2. To maintain the fertility of the soil with out grass is practically impossible. 3. That no more than one-third the farm should be under the plow at one time. 4. That a rotation of crops for six years is the best for our county, 5. The rotation should be as follows: Two years in corn, one year in oats, two years in meadow, one year in pasture. a. That a permanent pasture made on the native' sod' is best, 7. A pasture that will not pasture one grown animal on acres is incomplete. 8. The level country in corn is preferable. 0. That shallow cultivation is recom mended when the land is first in good order. Money Made Quickly and Easily WMb the Plerca-Clark Plating outfit-; ptatlrg ta ble ware, watcbe-. Jewelry, harness trimming*, etc. We aie the only Arm In the west manufacturing reliable platli g outfits. Our Instructions teacnlng PI. tine are ao simple, ocmplete and eu 1 y u> d r stood that In a ah' rt time you can do art line Plating as wo no In our own works, i-enu for clnuiar,. PlgBCg-tLAHK PLATING WOHKS, CanMIOO, Mo. Whitelaw Reid recently gave 1600 for mission work in Egypt. Piso's Cure for Consumption has no equal as a Cough medicine.—F. M. Abbott, 883 Heneca St., Buffalo, N. Y., Ma y II, lbl)4. Owes.ST. JACOBS OIL=§Hr§s Rheumatism, Neuralgia, •olatloa. Lumbago, Bpralna. Brulaea( Burna, Woundaf •wallings, Soreness, Headache, Baokaoha, All Aohes, Stiffness, Outs, Hurts, Frost-bites. ....WHAT MORE 18 NEEDED THAN A PERFECT CURE.... i'Webster’s International Dictionary It 13 tho Standard of the U. 8. Supreme Court, of the U. S. \ Government Printiug Office, and of nearly all of the Schoolbook*. ( It is warmly commended by every State Superintendent of Schools, j Invaluable In Office, School, or Homo. New from cover to cover. A College President writes j “ Fcr case with which the < eye finds tho word sought, for accuracy of definition, for ef- ] fectlve methods In indicating pronunciation, for terse yet! comprehensive statements off facts, and for practical use < as a working dictionary, ‘ Webster's International * excels [ any other single volume.** G. & C. Merriam Co., Publishers, Springfield, Haw., 17.8. A. O^Scml forfree pamphlrtcontalnlnff specimen pew*. Ill nitrations,etc. •arDo not buy sheup phetoa rapine reprint* of the Webster of 1847. A friend advised me to try Ely's Cream Balm, and after using it six weeks I believe myself cured of catarrh. It is a most valuable remedy. —Joseph Stewart, Vt'4 Oran a Avenue, Brook lyn, New York. n«KEVO| ^ CATARRH ELY'S CREAM BALM opens and cleanse* the Nasal /'aHMiK'rk, Allay* t'um ami Inflammation. Heals the Sores, protects the Membrane from Colas, Re stores the Senses of Taste and Smell. The BalmlS quickly absorbed and gives relief at once. A particle 1* applied Into each nostril and Is affree able. Price SO cents at Druggists or by mail. SIT B&OTSEBS, 56 Warren St., Hew York W SCALPER ti page-, *c. All about making money In Grain and Stocks by “scalping tbs market" on margins of •20 to fi.ooo. Best method yet. All scalpers make money. Laxsixo A Co., lit Quincy SL, Chicago. 1 I AAV for oar announcement In UtVT issue of this | LUVA paper^ It wlU show s cut HEA I of 1 style of j DAVIS CREAM SEPARATORS It Would take several pages to give details about these Kcries* machine*. Handsome Illustrated Pamphlet i ailed Free. IFaomti Wahtkd OAV,loaV.nu,Ao“t!:?.®;,A^hDJ5^o: °° W. n. V., Omaha-U, IMS. When aniwerln? advertlacmenta ktniHr mention this paper. ’&y&,,eiAs IS THE BEST. FIT FOR AKINC. ^5. CORDOVAN-, ^ FRENCH ACNAMLLLCO CULT. !'4.£3.m Fine CalfMUnbaim r *3.SP POLICE,3 SOLES. »2M7* BOYS’SCHOKSfim, -LADIES e!*,sss-v. LH.’1 R?. BROCKTOtCMASST^ W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoos are equally satisfactory They give the best value lor the money. They equal custom shoes In stylo and fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform,—stamped on sola. FI?m ** J°j*3 MveJ over other ncket. lx your dealer cannot supply you we can. «.mtrnitiwa. tih. iotmi told b/ all bruggUu. The Pr*«« unit tit* Pulpit. Poughkeepsie Press: A preacher f came to a nmvnpapcr mnti In tills wayi ■ r "Yon editors dare not. toll the truth. If you did yon could not lire; your news* paper would be n failure." The editor replied; "You aro right, and, the mlnr inter who will at all times ami under - all circumstances tell the truth about J his members, alive or dead, will not oc cupy his pulpit more than one Sunday, , and hen he will find it necessary to leave town in a hurry. The press and the pulpit go hand In hand with white was brushes and ploneant words, mag- ' nifylng little virtues into big ones." Warms In Horses, The only sure cure tor pin worms In horses known Is Mleketeo's lion 'holers Cure, Mention name of paper. Mure Dentil to Hair. The influence of diet on the growth of hair has often been discussed. It has been shown that starchy mixtures, milk and many other foods recognized as being highly nutritious, arc, in fact, sure donth to the growth of hair, Chemical analysis proves that hair is composed of A per cent of sulphur nnd and its ash; of SO per cent of silicon and 10 per cent of iron nnd mungonese. The foods which contain the larger percent of the above named elements are meat, oatmeal and graham. Henry pointedly eays; "Nations which eat most heat have the most hair." Tha Involution Of medicinal agents is gradually rele gating the old-time herbs, pills, draughts and vegetable extracts to the rear and bringing into general use the pleasant and effective liquid laxative, Syrup of Figs. To get the true remedy see that it is manufactured by the Cali-, fornla Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale by all leading druggists u me rota to tne pit dhin t team in re spectability it touldn t etui in ruin. If the Debj Is Catting Teeth. Be stirs and um that old and wall-triad remedy, Mss. hr is blow’s Boothixo Srncr for Children Teething The pedestal means nothing until the statue is in place. “Hanson’a Magfto Corn ■alTt.M Warranted to cure or money refunded. Ask 704s drusifl.t for It. Price IS cent*. WE~* ~=QIVE AWAY< Absolutely free of cost, for a LiniTED Tine only, The People’s Common Sense Medical Ad viser, By U.V. Pierce, M. 1)., Chief Consulting Physician to the Invalids' Hotel aud Surgical Institute, Buffalo, a book of over 1,000 large pages and 300 colored and other Illustra tions, in strong paper covers to any one sending 21 cents in one-cent stumps for packing anti postage only. Over 680,000 copies of this complete Family Doctor Book already sold in cloth binding at regular price of $1.50. Address: (with stamps and this Coupon) World's Dispisnhauy Mkd ical Association, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. JJhSE! TIIOBE WHO HAVE acalrut the Government GLAISS will write to NATHAN -w D, Pension A Paient Att’j, 014 V W., n,D.C.,tbey wit I receives prompt reply.