The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 25, 1895, Image 7

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    Dim HinsclL
,:Tr 7- » V„ Tlicos.)
of Lankinsburgh, was
, ;;r tke during the war
billed Oil him peculiar and
onmvs. At present wnt
* •: prominent otlleer of Post
K i Cohues, and a pa3t aid
t la‘"stuff of the commander
eii.any Co. In an Interview
■ter. lie mid:
untied and sent to the hos
imhester. They sent me to
I, others to Washington—a
Ut too miles. Having no room
ears we were placed face up
mi of flat cars. The sun beat
it our unprotected heads,
irhed Washington I was lu
ll was unconscious for ten
In the hospital. An abscess
In my ear and broke: it has
Ing and breaking ever sines.
Irh"
of this 100 mile ride and sun
jts heart disease, nervous pros
insomnla and rheumatism; a
Jy shattered system which gave
1st night or day. As a last re
ok some Pica Pil'« and they
to a wonderful degree. My
m Is gone, my heart failure,
and constipation are about
the abscewi in my ear has
discharging and my head feels
as a hell when before it felt as
i would burst and my once shat
}rvous system is now nearly
ok at those fingers,” Mr. Ed
aid. "do they look as if there
•umatlsm there?” He moved
. rapidly and freely and strode
i- room like a young boy. “A
those fingers were gnarled at
s and- so stiff that I could not
en. My knees would swell up
buhl not straighten my leg out.
would squeak when I moved.
iot begin to tell you,” said
Awards, as he drew a long
"what my feeling is at pres
ink If you lifted ten years
my life and left me prime
omus at forty-seven I could
better. I was an old man
bhi only drag myself painfully
ic house. Now I can walk off
any trouble. That in itself,”
?il Mr. Edwards, “would be suffl
| give me cause for rejoicing, but
bu come to consider that I am no
shat you might call nervous and
heart is apparently nearly
1 and that I can sleep nights you
alize why I may appear to speak
avagant praise of Pink PlllB.
pills quiet my nerves, take that
assure from my head and at
time enrich my blood. There
I tn be no circulation in my lower
^ year ago, my legs being cold and
at times. Now the circulation
i as full and as brisk as at any
|iart of my body. I used to be so
eaded and dizzy from my nervous
that I frequently fell while
kg the floor of my house. Spring
JlriK and 1 never felt better in my
■d I am looking forward to a busy
l of work.”
■ thin
Piscatorial Item.
lis is about the time of the year,”
Jrs. Watts to her neighbor, “that
Biting* fever strikes my husband.
Ian get out on the banks of some
(and catch two or three little mud
i the course of an afternoon he is
Itlv happy.”
|h<* is fond of fishing, then?*
Ind of fishing? Why, that man is
ffcct anglomaniac.”—Texas Sift
Educate Your Daughters.
■ this season of the year parents
(to decide upon and select the edu
Tial institution which their daugh
Ire to attend for the coming years.
|is connection we desire to call at
pn to the educational announce
I in °ur advertising columns of the
r mV of the Sacred Heart, St Jo
I Mo. Their buildings and grounds
It tractive, locality healthful, teach
m all branches thorough, and terms
■nable. Parents fortunate to select
fcchool for the education and train
their daughters will, we are sure,
|dly satisfied. Next session opens
lSiio. For further information
Mother Superior, Academy of
■acred Heart, St. Joseph, Mo.
I'uanttwered.
J'.V." asked the philosopher, “wh
■ 'hat a man. the noblest create!
''by is it that a man shoul<
'Udi doubts of his ability to win i
fan S affection when he consider
rnccess in that line of a pop-eyed
■^"-shaped, pretzel-tailed puj
k .he assembk-d listeners anstvei
r‘ n not,-Toledo lllade.
Yeltow.tone P»,»,
l"ptionamn°,l™nTcy.,even th« f«hrte
ft- of th°n v„ ^"ndeur and magni
there ~e .<£'vstone National Par
H-ri: mi d tvtcnt“lngClll-V; trem<?,‘doi
l rn;«vir,otrer,ts‘-,i;Jrir0fOUnd C?‘
f'fin mi. jp, |“ "k ’ “d—surpassu
£ abroad * ‘neiS~a iin>PM mou,
f.t.-, of «hlhL?xl°ns® and pictuiesqt
--taint^.Vun^rart.^’ d“
|n mode^'the TOst^f*011 ilf* recent
|"oii as in the toni reErh.‘ngthe lai
Tlua'ion in ' thr°uSb it. Full ii
I J. Fraud. A6*?V0r
F» Omaha, Neb.' ^ ^ T‘ A' kurhngUi
, ... ‘ ' ouuiil
''umi'n.|_ttiiMj,reSs.
“uua. travels faster
runaw av mat. u -
u **ta indSBati<5l.Vray# CaU8es many to
'cdesi ,,0'n«eeker».
" AteaOU,nttention to th“
"£»«<i.atea ,h„, «-0ur motto: “lf
fitment, whv not Tot .1“ !ocatio“ or for
l tod in order to voriT* est‘ " e have
makin. 'ettrom^i °Vr stat«tnent
^rekers and into!?* y.sOW rates to
‘■'a personal ” '.ors ,hat they mav
" ars-and .ow rai roW!ltation F°r ] ar
Laud ( o Moi^T fates ttddress 1 be
^ar«wm, Northwestern Ttentf Omaha;
'“0>t ^SS^oTail. “ obiect or
i:,iard t
*p APPly to or IXets^Hr I°r 8a-'
511 8. “th st ’ n C\Akin'
_St> Omaha, Keh.
Stains an . Table for July 161
'kioks." in * °D “Ilawtl>orne at
*^ioriog Qf the *«r!ta entitli
ftl:'ietta Christ- 1Ca” Literature”
^ettwon?, Uri?ht
,‘S6tt*-is a c» 1,8 ^purs,”
,,,S *Purs’” in ti
r°ii!tionarv day. T of adv®nture
*? ^ortl^I «• T. Fen
tsv-nsyRi ;"'r"'L”r1'
l*angs. 'le by John
)a '■’auuTnT^TdtiTthr'T
*• th« stride inT ^Pf-tation
ln® next wor d.
i .-u.ioVi
IRGINIABw-JOHNSON.
Copyright 1892 by'^and.msnally b co.
1 Pwiaa Aasn^j
CHAPTER Till.—(Continued.)
"I hare polked and jigged in my
time,” quoth the Ancient Mariner,
briskly rubbing his hands together
at the reminiscence. “I recall
plainly the time when I was stationed
off Barcelona on board the Centaur,
with your father Admiral Jack, and we
all went to a carnival ball.” Here he
glanced in the direction of a certain
pair of little feet, encased in black
satin slippers, as if directing the at
tention of the younger man to the
delicate proportions of ankle and
arched instep.
A rustling movement of dresses be
came audible beyond the miniature
forest of plants.
"'Who is this girl?” questioned a
voice.
“She is a bold creature, certainly,”
added a second speaker.
“Lieut. Curzon founi her somewhere
about the Port, I fancy, for the part of
the Phoenician,” explained the silvery
tones of Diana, lowered to a discreet
murmur. “She is not at all the type.
My laundress is much nearer the Ori
ental or African original. We had so
little time to look about for a really
good one.”
“Oh!”
“How very odd!”
“I am surprised at Mra Griffith, I
confess ”
“One should draw the line some
where in these places,” supplemented
Diana, smoothly. “Yes, I have been
waltzing with the Grand Duke. He
dances very nicely. ”
Did Dolores hear this conversation
which was so audible to her compan
ions? Did the Swallow Waltz still
pulse through her whole being, ex
cluding other sound ? She took a step
forward, and, at the moment, a bell
tinkled in the adjoining street. She
dropped on her knees and bowed her
head.
The sound of the bell marked the
passage of the Host through the town,
carried by a parish priest to the dy
ing.
The group of ladies on the other side
of the screen of palms might have
found the movement highly theatrical.
Capt Fillingham exchanged a glance
with Lieut Curzon.
“Yes, poor girl!” murmured the
Ancient Mariner. “The women are
sure to be against her. She is far too
prbtty!”
The note of the bell died away in
the distance. m
The weather had changed. The
night was dark. Storms seemed to
brood over the wild and boisterous sea,
the wind moaned fitfully through the
trees, lightning quivered and flashed,
now on the horizon, as if forming a
part of Etna’s bursting flame, and
again defining somber masses of cloud
overhead.
Dolores rose to her feet Gen. Grif
fith, guided by the ubiquitous Capt
Blake, sought the girl to present to
her partner for the quadrille.
“I am ready,” said Dolores, quickly.
“That eharming child makes me feel
young again,” said Capt Fillingham
to Arthur Curzon. “What an ankle—
eh? A man might be pardoned for
committing some follies on her ac
count”
He chuckled silently at some amus
ing recollection, until a purple glow
overspread his face and neck.
“When 1 was second lieutenant out
at Buenos Ayres I fell in love with a
pretty Spanish girl, and persuaded her
to run away with me,” he continued,
after a pause. “We eloped to a coun
try house in the interior, as a first step
toward matrimony, but another fel
low was after her. The irate parents
and injured suitor followed closely on
our heels, and we were brought back
by the ear. Small blame to my beauty
for preferring a fresh, young English
man to a mud-colored native. ”
“Then you lost her?” said Lieut.
Curzon, interested in spite of himself,
while his gaze followed Dolores
“It seems she was an heiress I did
not know it. Not that I cared a straw.
The lover challenged me, and I pinked
him with a rusty horse pistol just be
fore we set sail for Demerara.”
“My cousin is beckoning to me,”
said the lieutenant, crossing the ball
room.
“Like his father, Admiral Jack,”
mused the Ancient Mariner. “He will
run the gantlet of the women's
tongues by dancing with that foreign
girl all the evening, if only to defy
them, and in the fear that she might
have overheard their spiteful com
ments and backbiting. They will be
furious, of course. There’s not one of
them can hold a candle to the Spaniard
for beauty, unfortunately. Bless me!
we can only be young ones ”
Here Mrs. Fillingham bustled up tq
him. She was attired in a girlish
toilet of sky-blue silk, trimmed with
Maltese lace, and with a liberal dis
play of white shoulder and arm per
<
mitted by a very tight corsage. "Are
you overheated, John, dear?” she In
quired. "There is a most treacherous
draught on this terrace.”
"I do not feel the draught in the
least," was his testy rejoinder.
The elements of this ball in the old
Maltese palace of the Knights Templar
comprised the usual guests gathered
together on such occasions A num
ber of Maltese noblemen, officials
of the government, and members
of the army and navy, formed
the masculine portion of the throng.
The Irish lady, a recent convert to
Catholicism, ardently desirous of
spreading her propaganda everywhere,
invited the Scotch ladv, who belonged
to the Plymouth brethren, and was re
puted to Invariably carry tiny, pink
booklets, printed in several languages
in her bag, to take tea with her on
board her yacht the following after
noon. Mrs b'illlngham, as a zealous
member of the Primrose league, and
much addicted to the wearing of Prim
rose league aprons on occusiou, ate
ices with a stubborn radical The
colonel’s lady snubbed the major's
wife, and it is to be feared that the
latter retaliated by putting the cap
tain’s meek, little bride in her place.
Everywhere the social phases were
discernible of Charles Kingsley’s tropi
cal forest, in the climbing of parasi
tical plants disposed to displace a
neighbor by a pushing aggressiveness,
and with much external affability of
manner.
Ivor was a sprinkling of Americans
lacking', the western millionaire en
route around the world, accompanied
by a bevy of brisk young sons and
daughters, the Blender lady from
New England in search of health, or
the vulgar matron of doubtful ante
cedents, and much display of
glittering wealth, who avoided her
own people uneasily, while intent on
picking up a husband for her buxom
offspring among the ranks of the
British officers present
Mrs. Griffith, the suave hostess, in
tuitively perceiving the requirements
of each guest may have been a trifle
puzzled when the New England lady
of Puritan pedigree gave it to be dis
tinctly understood that she did not
know the parvenue matron. The
hostess was disposed to ascribe len
iently any gaucherie on the part of
the latter to a transatlantic origin,
ameliorated by a profound respect for
English habits and customs
A little flutter of curiosity pervaded
these groups when Dolores was led
forth by Gen. Griffith. Why had the
guest of the evening chosen a quad
rille to dance with so young and agile
a partner? The reason was obvious,
the grand duke wished to talk with
the girl who had personated the Phoe
nician iu the tableaux, and the quad
rille afforded him all the advantages
of a tete-a-tete. He was a young man
like another, and he amused himself
as best he could. Did he not, quiet
and simple in manner, view
humanity from a terrible height
of royal superiority, which dwarfed
all to a level of complete equality?
Gentle reader, did you ever happen
to pause in a Jardin d’Acclimatation to
note the familiar yet miraculous sight
of a mother duck seated comfortably
on the ground, preening her feathers,
and her ducklings, balls of yellow
down scarcely emerged from the shell
quitting *lier side nimbly to hop on
the coping of an adjacent basin, and
launch forth ,with a sudden pop, on
the water, paddling boldly and grace
fully in their native element? The
further shore gained, the tiny atoms
emerge on terra-flrma with a bright
glance at the human intruder, as who
should say, “You could not do as
much. ”
Dolores remembered the downy
duckling. Guided by the music, the
movement of others, the hand of her
partner, she went through her first
quadrille without awkward seif-con
sciousness, and with the lack of ser
vility perceptible in the Spaniard or
the Italian. Had the grand duke re
quired her to tread the stately
measure of solemn saraband, punc
tilious minuet or coranto with him,
inseparably a sociated with the
powdered wigs, diamond - shoe
buckles and silver hilted
swords. of the French court,
Dolores would have bent and swayed
to the same bewitching spell of the
pastime, novel and delightful in her
experience. No doubt her partner
was a very great gentleman, and he
was kind to notice her. Were not all
the men present great gentlemen to
her, beings of another world?
The grand duke talked with anima
mation during the changing figures,
and Dolores listened dreamily, her
rich color glowing, and a dewy light
awakening in the depths of her eyes.
A slight accident marred the dance.
The prince caught the silver cord of
her card, threw the fan attached to
the floor, and stepped upon it. lie
gathered up the broken sticks with
apologies and gave them to one of
his attendant gentlemen. Then he
stooped over Dolores, with some ex
pression of regret presumably, but she
smiled and shook her head.
Among the idle, curious, and deeply
interested spectators of this scene,
none followed the movements of the
couple with the keen anxiety and un
willing fascination of Arthur Curzon.
Why did the royal visitor wish to
dance with Dolores? -Mrs Griffith had
summoned her cousin to remind him,
In a reproachful undertone,’ that lie
had not yet claimed the hand of Mias
Ethel Syratho. '
He bowed and led the young lady to
a place. If the conversation of the
Vrlnce was vivacious, the speech of
the neighboring couplo was dry and
monosyllabic. A frozen restraint was
established between the partners The
lieutenant lacked the finesse, malice
and self-consciousness of Capt llluUe
under similar circumstances His re
plies to the propitiatory remarks of
MUs Syinthe were brief and ab
stracted. The heroine of many ball
rooms did not suffer a frown to furrow
her fair countenance as she drank this
bitter cup of neglect and humiliation.
“Kow lor one of my waltzes” said
Capt. Ulake, with empressemcnt, dart
ing to the side of Dolores
Hut the gallant soldier was foiled by
no less a person than Jacob Dealtry in
person, who appeared in the colonnade
with Florio asleep in one of the
capicioua pockets of his loose and
shabby, coat.
‘‘How long do you expect to keep
me waiting?" he inquired, peevishly,
of his granddaughter. "Will your tab
leaux never have finished?”
“It is all my fault, Mr. Dealtry,”
Lieut Curzon hastened to interpose.
"I think we have finished with the
tableaux, and are ready to go. Let
me mind the carriage for you.”
The old man glanced with his habit
ual abstraction around him, and a
cynical smile hovered about his with
ered lips
“The fool and his money are soon
parted,” he muttered to himself.
Lieut Curzon, with a slightly defi
ant expression, took Dolores on his
arm tc make her adleux to the hos
tess He could have wished the girl
had not beeu quite so timid and hum
ble in bearing.
“What did the prince say to you
when he broke your fan?” he ques
tioned, abruptly, as he led her away.
“He wished to know where I lived.”
"And you told him about the old
Watch Tower.’” imperiously.
The dimp.ed chin of Dolores ac
quired a saucy curve.
“No, I only laughed,”
Then the darkness of the stormy
night swallowed up this Cinderella of
the ball.
CHAPTER IX.
A MALTESE ORANGE.
! IEUT. CURZON
’ awoke late on the
morning after the
a ball.
H lie had slept at
f the hotel, and
must return to
> duty on board
' ship in a few
hours. He hummed a strain of the
“Swallow” waltz as he dressed, and
partook of breakfast. His spirits were
light, although the weather was
gloomy, heavy rain having fallen from
midnight to dawn. The breakfast dis
patched, he consulted his watch. He
need not seek the port and the wait
ing gig for another hour and a half.
Much may be accomplished in one
hour and a half. He smiled with a
sense of boyish exhilaration at the
prospect of a country walk, and rap
idly made his way through the town.
A yellow placard on a wall made
him pause to read afresh the announce
ment of the debut of the new singer,
Signorina Giulia Melita, in the “bar
ber of Seville.”
“The very thing!” he exclaimed
aloud.
A few paces further on he met Capt
Blake, carrying an enormous bouquet
of fresh roses, which he was about to
leave, with his card, at the door of the
young prima donna. “I am quite gone
on the little Yankee since the cotillion
of last night,” he explained, with a
sentimental expression. “She can hold
her own in international chaff by the
hour, you know.”
Lieut Curzon glanced at the shops.
No! He would not replace the fan
broken by the grand duke in the quad
rille. A curious and inexplicable phase
of obstinacy withheld him. He bought
a package of sweets instead, and took
the direction of the Watch Tower.
The girl Dolores was the central ob
ject of his thoughts, the mental star
whence diverged all rays of trivial
events add evanescent emotions. She
had entered in and taken possession of
his heart and soul The thraldom was
sweet to him, and he made no effort to
resist the spell, Lovely, radiant, ca
ressing Dolores! He still felt the
light pressure of her supple, young
body on his arm . as they
circled around the ball-room together
in the mazes of the Swailow waltz.
His_senses were not yet free of the in
toxication of the previous evening.
For the rest, he was eager to behold
her again, to remind her in a thousand
indirect ways of his own right of pre
cedence of other men in her esteem,
and yet his mood was tranquil, even
secure.
(to be continued. )
Politeness of the Swede*.
“The _ unfailing politeness of the
Swedes is a constant source of wonder
and astonishment to visitors,” said
Gerge C. Truman to a St Louis repor
ter. “They have a large assortment
of bows and courtesies according to the
age and sex of those who are thus rec
ognized, but the lifting of the hat is
so universal that it seems to be going
all the time. Evan the butcher’s boy.
in meeting the baker’s assistant, in
stead of passing him with a careless
“hello," or giving him a friendly
buffet, as an American lad might do,
doffs his hat to him with elaborate '
courtesy.” I
. ' •*/ ’ - . , . i v« \ . ■ 'jL i
A Pertlng Peltne'ft Morrow.
Cincinnati Tribune: A pathetic cat
story cornea from one of the down
river auberba Little I’cur He Kelch,
the daughter of Mr. Knoa Kelch, haa a
large pet cat which haa aiept for many
montha in a basket by her. A week
ago the child waa taken by her mother
to Nebraska. They left in the morn
ing before the cat woa up, and Pearl's
little night gown waa' left in a white
heap on the floor. When the cat first
missed the child it went to the little
gown and laid itself down there and
has refused to leave it, save at short
intervals, ever since. The other mem
bers of the family have not had the
heart to take the garment away from
the disconsolate pet.
Skinny Sufferers Saved.
Tobacco use i a as a rule aro away lelow nor
mal weight because tobacco destroys digestion
and causes nerve Irritation that sups bruin pow
er and vitality. You cun get u quick, guaranteed
relief by the use of No To-Hac, and then If you
don't like your freedom und Improved physical
condition jou can learn tne use of tobacco over
agBln, fust like the Hist time No-To-lluc sold
tinder guarantee to cure by Druggists every
where. llcolt tree. Andress Sterling ltemeay
Co., New York City or Chicago.
A Progressive Prioress.
Mr*. Weldon, the wife of Mr. Frank
Weldon of the editorial staff of the At
lanta Constitution, is in correspondence
with the princess N'nzle of Cairo, Egypt,
with a view to securing: an exhibit of
tlie work of the women of Egypt in the
woman’s exhibit at the Cotton States
and International exposition. The
Princess Na/.le, though a Mo: em, has
abandoned the veil and enjoys more
freedom than most Mohammedan
women. She is regarded as the most
enlightened and progressive woman in
Egypt and has many friends and cor
respondents in America.
wnen Traveling,
Whether on pleasure bent, or business,
take on every trip a bottle of Byrup
of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and
effectually on the kidneys, liver and
bowels, preventing fevers, headaches
and other forms of sickness. For sale
In 60c and ft bottles by all the leading
druggists. Manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co., only.
Catherine II. was a handsome woman
In early life, but dissipation and vice
soon destroyed every trace of her good
looks; she became very fleshy and
coarse in appearance.
Ihere is no hurd'e too high for the
woman with fashionable aspirations.
The day is always too short for the man
who loves blB work.
CONDUCTOR E. D. LOOMIS, Detrolt,Mlch.,
says: “The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is
wonderful." Write him about It. Sold by
Druggists, 78c.
The Soudan gives the world most of the
ostrich feathers worn.
We think Piso's Cure for Consumption
is the only medicine for Coughs.—Jennie
Pinckakd, Springfield, 111., Oct. 1, 18U4.
The Leeward islands are now exporting
large quantities of preserved fruit juice.
"Hanson’s Haglo Cora ■alTO,"
Warranted to cure or money refunded. Ask your
druggist for it. Price IS ceoU.
The more the church mixes with the
world the less It can do to save sinners
Educational.
Attention of the reader Is called to
the announcement of Notre Dame Uni
versity In another column of this paper.
This noted Institution of learning en
ters upon Its fifty-second year with the
next session, commencing Sept. 3, 1895.
Parents and guardians contemplating
sending their boys and young men
away from home to school would do
well to write for particulars to the Uni
versity of Notre Dame, Indiana, before
making arrangements for their educa
tion elsewhere. Nowhere In this broad
land are there to be found better facil
ities for cultivating the mind and heart
than are offered at Notre Dame Uni
versity.
Many a girl who takes “the first man who
offers” lives to repent the act.
Old Rip Van Winkle went up into tlie
Catslcill mountains to take a little nap of
twenty years or so, and when he wakened,
he found that the “cruel war was over,”
the monthly magazines had “fought it
over” the second time and “blown up”
all the officers that had participated in it.
This much is history, ana it is also an his
torical fact that, it took the same length of
time, for Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
covery to become the most celebrated, as
it is the most effective, Liver, Blood and
Lung Remedy of the age. In purifying the
blood and in all manner of pimples,
blotches, eruptions, and other skin and
scalp diseases, scrofulous sores and swell
ings, and kindred ailments, the “Golden
Medical Discovery” manifests the most
positive curative properties.
It Wes All Hs Could Do.
Washington Star: “Mr Lively," Mid
the managing editor, “tve'd like to
have you draw something comic."
••Yes, air."
“Without making reference to tho
new woman." i ‘
"Y-yee. sir."
"Or the bicycle.”
The artist turned away in silent do*
jection. In a few minutes he returned,
and laid a sheet of paper on the desk.
"Have you done it so soon?”
"It didn't take me long to do all I
could under the circumstance*"
"What is It?"
"I've drawn up my resignation."
Make Tour Own Bitten!
On receipt of 90 cents In D. 8. stamps, I
will send to any address one package Bte
ketee's Dry Bitters. One package makes
one gallon tad tonic known. Cures stom
ach, kidney diseases, and Is a great appe
tiser and blood purifier. Just the medicine
needed for spring and summer. 26c. at
your drug store. Address Uso, O. Bn
Kama, Grand Kaplds. Mich.
The duchess of Marlborough had vary1
marked features that Indicated, In no
small degree, that strength of character
which made her a power In English poli
ties. ____
. PIT*—All Ft tm topped free by Itr. It line’s Oree*
Itestorer. NoPIMpIter tiiunnailay'a UM,
Msrveloukcureii. Treattnoslut tStrlnl Ijoltiefreeto
rll atm. Send to Ur. Kllue,Ml Archat.,Philo.,fie
Golden Days advises, If at the side of
a sloping road on a muddy day, pedal
only with the foot on the gutter side.
It prevents side slip.
WINTER WHEAT, M ^UIHELI FEB
■ ■ .ACRE!
Did you ever hear of that? Well there /
are thousands of farmers who think §
they will reach this yield with Balser'a
new hardy Red Cross Wheat. Rye 60
bushels per acre! Crimson Clover at
63.60 per bushel. Lots and lots of grass
and clover tor fall seeding. Cut this out
and send to John A. Balser Seed co.,
La Crosse, Wls., for fall catalogue and
sample of above wheat free. (W.N.U.)
The Bermudas export enormous quanti
ties of onions and lily bultis.
It the Baby is Cutting Teeth. .j.)*.;'
Resnre anduse that old and well-tried remedy, Mas.
w is slow's SoonuRo Syrup for Children Teetbiag
When love has the power It will al»
ways help.
The wore oac bici Parker's Olemr TmmIm
the niora Itsgnod qualities mre repealed Id dlei ailing
colds, indigestion, pains and every kind of weakness.
Greece has 490,000 women over a
years of age.
Walking would often be a pleasure
were It not for theoo na. These pests are easily re
moved with Ulndercorns. 15u. at druggists.
A new bonnet ha* been.known to weaken
friendship between women.
EDUCATIONAL.
ACADEMY OF Ttic SAGRRD HEART
The course of Instruction in this Academy, conducted
t»y the Itellglous of the Hicred Heart, einbraoes the
whole range or subjects necessary tu constitute a solid
riiiI refined education. Propriety of deportment, per
Minal nest nets and the principles of morality are ob
ject-* of unten-ing attention. Extensive grounds tf>
lord the pupil, every facility for useful bodily eser
cl be; their health Is an object of constant solicitude,
on l In sickness they are attended with maternal carat.
Fell teim opens Tuesday, Sept. Sd. For further par*
tlculars, address THK NIPKMIOR,
Arsdsniy Marred Heart, Mt. Joseph, Ms,
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME.
THE FIFTY•SECOND YEAR WILL OPEN
TUESDAY. SENT. 3d, 1099.
Full courses in ClMsalra. Let tern. Helene*. Lew*
<?lvf I at d Heehanlral Kngtneering.Tborough
Preparatory ard Commercial Courses- St. Edward’S
Hall for boys under 13 is unique In tlie completeness of
its equipment, Catalogues sent free on appllcatl* n to
Kkv. akdebw MoaaiasBT, C. 8. C., Notre Dame, lnd.
I EWS
1 WWSAS
98 * LYE
Nnuoinmnnat
(PATUCTID)
f Th# flnmout and jmrrrt Lp,
yt made. Unlike o“— ' — ■* —£
X .
In Dm I nates without'boilin#." ftls
S;he beat for cleansing waste pipe*
llslnfectlog sinks, closets, vsulv
bottles, paints, trees, etc. ^
PENNA. SALT M’PG COL
9 (tao. Acratk.piiihk.nb
other Lye. It MM
----- in , eal
“nta
mo m, ven penumeu nifd HOSS
D minutes without tfoiiing. |tM
it* floe powder and packed in • %mm
(•with removable lid. the content#
are always ready for use. WU
make the best perfumed Hard
Thu irruuur
us
USED
LOCALLY
•m
Insnfflator.
M. tm'l UK OIK OS.. H SAXTON
told by mil diugtfMs.
PARTIAL
„ HAIR BALSAM
sad beta ti 11m th« ha.
FroaiotM_s luxuriant jfniwth.
V««er Falla to Bettor* Oraj
Youthful Color.
Half to It# M UUVU1U1 VOIOTt
Out acslp diRtwa * htir falluic.
Patents. Trade-Marks.
Examination and Advice m to Paten tab! Uty oi
Invention. Bend for " Inventor*’ Uuide, or How to deft
a Patent” ?ATCCI OTAMIL, WAatoOTOir. P. QL
w. W. UM Owha-ao, UN,
When aniverlnx advertisements kindly
mention this paper.
The P. Lorillard Company
has been for many years the largest manufacturer of
tobacco in the World—Y/I)y? Chew
and the reason .why will be as dear to you as the
noonday sun.
ITS MUCH THE BEST.