CAUSED BY VACCINATION. (From the Journal. Detroit. Mich.) Every one tn the vicinity of Meldrun •.venue and Champlain street, Detroit, knows Mrs. McDonald, and many a neighbor has reason to feel grateful to her for the kind and friendly Interest •he has manifested in cases of illness. She Is a kind-hearted friend, a natural nurse, and an intelligent and refined lady. To a reporter she recently talked at une length about Dr. William's Pink lls. giving some very interesting In dices In her own immediate knowl e of marvelous cures, and the uni ursal beneficence of the remedy to ose who had used it. " I have reason to know,” said Mrs. cDonald. “something of the worth of i :hls medicine, ror it lias been demon strated in my own immediate family. My daughter Kittle is attending high school, and has never been very strong Since she began. I suppose she studies I hard, and she has quite a distance to go j'every day. When the small-pox broke ; out all of the school children had to be vaccinated. I took her over to Dr. Jame son and he vaccinated her. I never saw such an arm In my life and the doctor said he never did. She was broken out on her shoulders and back and was Just as ’sick as she could be. To add to it all neuralgia set in and the poor child was In misery. She Is naturally of a nervous temperament end she suffered most awfully. Even after she recovered the neuralgia did not leave her. Stormy days or days that we-e damp or pre ceded a storm, she could not go out at all. She was pale and thin and had no I appetite. “X have forgotten just who told me about the Pink Pills, but I got some for her and they cured her right uo. She ,a nice color In her face, eats and ^^PeleF$ifcjyell, goes to school every day, arJ ' — ■ ul ■ PI I nc I f p" • n t and Is WcVljmd strong in every partic ular. I have'Sever heard of anything to build up the blood to compare with Pink Pills. I shall always keep tljem in the house and recommend them to my neighbors.” Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo ple are considered an unfailing specific in such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, sci atica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after-effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sal low complexions, that tired feeling re sulting from nervous prostration; all diseases resulting from vitiated humors In the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities and all forms of weakness. In men they effect a radical cure In all cases arising from mental worry, overwork, or excesses of whatever nature. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will he sent post paid on receipt of pric.e (50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50—they are never sold in bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co* Schenectady, N. Y. A Joke That Is Not Half True. It is a common joke that when a man's wife is out of town he writes a mournful letter, and then goes around and has a high old time. There is not much in that joke. It does not begin to do duty with the mother-in-law joke, and that is pushed far beyond its deserts The fact is that out of a dozen men whose wives are out of the city for the summer there will be at least eleven who are really lonely, and, in fact, put in a very miserable time. They do not feel willing to acknowl edge it at first, and few like to have sympathy thrust upon them, but there are mighty few who do not in their hearts pay the highest kind of tribute to their wives and wish for their re turn.—Washington Star. Word. Which Rhyme Not, The number of English words which have no rhyme in the language is very large, Five or six thousand at least are without rhyme and consequently can be employed at the end of the verse only by transposing the accent, coupling them with an imperfect conso nance or constructing an artificial rhyme out of two words. Among the other words to which there are no rhymes may be mentioned month, sil ver, liquid, spirit, chimney, warmth, gulf, sylph, music, breadth, width, depth, honor, iron, echo. THE NEBRASKA STATE FAIR. Special Rates and Trains via the Bar line ton Route. Hound trip tickets to Omaha at the one way rate, plus 50 cents (lor admission cou pon to tho State Fair), will be on sale Sep tember 18th to 20th, at Burlington Route stations, in Nebraska, in Kansas on the Con ordia, Oberlin and St. Francis lines and in Iowa and Missouri within 100 miles of Omaha. Nebraskans are assured that the '05 State Fair will be a vast improvement on its predecessors Larger—more brilliant—bet ter worth seeing. Every one who can do so should spend State Fair week, the who e of it, in Omaha. The outdoor celebrations will be particu larly- attractive, surpassing anythingof the kind ever before undertaken by any west ern city. Every evenin'/, Omaha will he aflame with e'ectric lights and glittering pageants will parade the streets. The pro gram for the evening ceremonies is: Monday, Sept. ICth—Grand Bicycle Car nival. Tuesday, Sept. 17th—Nebraska's parade. Wednesday, Sept. 18th—Military and civic parade! Thursday, Sent. 19th—Knights ef Ak-Sar fcen Far ado, to be followed by the “Feast of Mopdaihm" Ha'l. Round trip tickets to Omaha at the re duced rates above mentioned, as well as full information a! out the Burlington Route's train service at the time of the State Fair, can be had on application to the nearest B. & M. R. R. agent. Homefteckerfi’ Excursion*. On Aug. 29th. Sept. 10th and 24th, 1895. the Union Pacific System will sell ticket from Council Bluff's and .Omaha to point south and west in Nebr. ska and KansaR also to Colorado, ■•'Wyoming, Utah anc Idaho, east of \\ eiser and south, of Beavei Canon, at exceedingly low ’■ates. For ful information, as to rates and limits, apph to a. C. Duw City Ticket Agent, 130*2 F\rnam St., _Omaha, Neb A-vein of coal five feet thick was foum 90 feet deep near Louisville, Ills. Among- the books announetd by Harper & Itrotliers for publication in September is A Study of Deatl? by Henry M. Alden, author of God in yiis World. The extraordinary succeciJ oi Mr. Alden’s previous book, which Jvas pronounced "the most successful wfark of religious thought of the seasota,” and "the most noteworthy book c-Sa religious kind (in style as well as in substance) published iu England or in America for many years,” insures a suitable reception for A Study of Death —a book wholly uncommon, spiritual, hopeful and important The largest cut stone in the world is in the Temple of the Sun at BaalLec. * . ■ , :■ .... - ' ■’ , I Ingernai w_ IN6ERNATIONAL PRESS ASS' •Slip nJ CHAPTER XII.—(Continued.? "Where shall I go? Where will you hide me?” she demanded, with childish simplicity of confidence. The color mounted to the young man's cheek. "1 will take care ofyou,” was his re assuring response, delivered after a moment of reflection. ‘ Oh, carry me away from Malta on one of the ships'.’’ sighed Dolores, clinging to his arm. »«*****/ The hour of departure of the Italian steamship Elettrico approached. The confusion and hustle incident to sail ing increased rather than diminished as the day advanced. Mrs. l'illingham trotted about to secure, the best of everything fed- her invalid husband during the short voyage to Messina. The Signorina Giulia Melita, hoarse and very much wrapped up iu shawls, made petulant responses to the solicit ous inquiries of the urbane Mr. Brown. Melita was bored and out of spirits. She displayed a fickleness which is occasionally observable in birds of song and scarcely glanced.at the Island where her own debut in opera had been successfully achieved. The American millionaire from the great west, and his bevy of children, were bidding farewell to their numer ous acquaintances, with cordial in vitations to visit them in turn and make a tour of Colorado or the Rocky mountains. “I think the Mediterranean is per fectly splendid,” affirmed the 17-year old daughter, with enthusiam. •‘Hooray for Malta'” cried the son and heir Tommy, aged 10, striving to climb a ladder. “We will come again soon, won't we, Pa?” “I shall expect to see jTou arrive on a flying machine, invented by your clever fellow countryman, Mr. Edi son,” remarked Cant Blake. “I like to travel,” said the rosy cheeked daughter. “People are so pleasant.” The keen eye of Captain Blake notie-.d a lady among the passengers with sudden curiosity. The lady stood alone. She was en veloped in a brown cloak, with a hood, and wore on her head a small straw hat, with a veil of black lace attached, which effectually concealed her features. The captain roamed around this solitary figure, inspired by a suspicion, and endeavored to gain a closer in spection of her face, but she averted her head, as if disturbed by his inter est, fixing her gaze with a timid and melancholy insistauce on the shore. l_The summons for all loiterers to seek land was given, and Captain Blake prepared reluctantly to depart Here was a little drama in real life, and he longed to serve as cynical spec tator. Here was a baffling mystery un •aer uis very guze, aim n« wiaueu vw solve it to his own satisfaction. The agitation of the unknown one in the brown cloak became marked. She shrank nearer the bulwark, and grasped the railing with a nervous hand, while her shoulders moved con vulsively, as if she was unable to re press some powerful emotion. At this critical juncture a small boat approached, and Arthur C'urzon sprang on board of the Elettrico just as the packet was about to swing from her moorings “>ly dear fellow!’’ exclaimed Capt Blake, with vivacity. “Areyou off on leave?” ‘■Yes,” was the brief response. ‘■And I am chained to this rock of steel for several months longer,” grumbled tlie soldier. Lieut Curzou had never appeared more animated and handsome than in civilian's dress on this occasion. He hastened to the traveler in the brown cloak. “Am I late?” he demanded, in cheer ful accents. "Y'es. You are very late,” she re plied, in a low tremulous voice They talked together earnestly for a long time, quite oblivious of sur roundings. The young officer, on quitting Dol ores at an earlier hour, had sought the presence of his kinsman, the comman der of 11. M. S. Sparrow, to claim the promised leave of absence. He had no misgivings as to the result, and possibly the conversation- with his cousin Mrs Griffith recurred to his mind. The amiable hostess had inti mated her conviction that file stern ruler of the ship would be disposed to overlook all peccadilloes. A brief and stormy interview had nevertheless en sued, of which the full particulars were not given by either of the par icipants. The captain made subse uant allusion to headstrong young en who threatened to throw up their ^missions if thwarted in their dear jshes of the moment vessel once in motion, /Lieut. Curzon led his companion to the Fill- | inghams. What was the amazement and indignation of worthy Mrs. Fill ingham at beholding Dolores, who stood before her pale and frightened, and holding her little dog Fiorio in the ample sleeve of her traveling gar ment "Oh, my dear child!” exclaimed the matron. ”1 lo v could you take such a very rash step!” “He loves me, and I love him, and that is all we care about in the world,” faltered the girl, with a sob. "Hut think of your poor grand papa!” "Orandpapa will not miss me,” re torted Dolores, stealing a deprecating glance at the severe and disapproving countenance of Mrs Fillingliam. “I am quite sure he will miss you,” rejoined the older woman. "He never cared about me at all,” cried Dolores, with a sudden and pas sionate outburst at wrong. "Lieutenaut Curzon, 1 consider your conduct as simply abominable,” said Mrs. Fillingliam. becoming red in the face. "I will have nothing to do with vorir eloneinent. ” Then she turned away, as if to clear ly demonstrate that she washed her hands of a very bad business. The Ancient Mariner removed his spectacles, and polished the glasses on a silk pocket-handkerchief. Dolores clung’ to her lover's arm, aghast anil bewildered by this brusque, feminine repulse. Did Capt. Fillingham wink at Lieut Curzon? It’ cannot be positively as serted that the old gentleman was guilty of such an undignified proceeding on this grave occasion, yet assuredly a highly suspicious trembling of the right eyelid wus per ceptible, while his benevolent feat ures failed to reflect the anger of his spouse He even smiled at the ter rified Dolores, and patted her hand re assuringly. "There is no use in crying over spilled milk, you know,” he reasoned at length. "What are your plans?” Lieut. Curzon eagerly unfolded his projects. Ho intended to seek Switz erland at the nearest point of the Can ton Tessin, get married and journey on to Paris. If Dolores could be placed under the charge of Mrs. Fillingham in the in terval, all scandal would be avoided und busy tongues at Malta effectually silenced. It is true that the lover thought of public opinion for the first time as the shores of Dolores’ island home faded in the distance. The young hypocrite pleaded his cause warmly and well. He did not hesitate to remind the ancient mariner that he had been his father’s best man at his wedding, and to hint the ac ceptability of his giving away a bride of another generation. The comrade of Admiral Jack list ened attentively. What reminiscences did the voice of his companion evoke? His heart warmed toward the rash couple and he felt young again. He nodded acquiescence and made the culprits take a seat beide him on the deck, thus assuring them of his own protection and approval. An hour later Mrs. Fillingham, in relenting mood, had given the pale Dolores a cup of tea, with plenty of sugar, and held the whimpering and doleful Florio on her lap. in the meanwhile, Capt. lllake strolled into Mrs. (Jritlith’s tea room, where the Vicar, with the weak chest, was discoursing on shells with Miss Symtlie. uur menu uxe lieutenant is off on leave of absence,” said the airy in truder. ‘■Who?” demanded the hostess, with an unusual inflection of sharpness in her tone, “Lieut Curzon,” replied Capt. Wake, accepting cream at the hand of the hostess. "The pretty Maltese was on board.” “Are you jealous, Capt Blake?” in quired Miss Symthe. Not a trace of displeasure was per ceptible on her fair face, nor a tremo of agitation in her soft voice, as she turned to the tea-urn. lie laughed his grating little laugh. "lam not a marrying man.” lie thought:— “She is very strong.” The clergyman resumed liis thread of talk, pleased with the graceful deference of an intelligent listener. “1 should like to show you my cabi net of shells, Miss Ethel. 1 have some rather good specimens.” Capt. Blake stirred the contents of his cup and gazed into the' depths, as if lie suspected some private jest of lurking at the bottom. “I always have bet ten to one on the chances of the parson in iny own mind.” he thought “The living is an uncommonly good one, I am told.” The Island of Malta lessened, faded, and disappeared altogether to the passengers of the Elettrico, as the packet made her way in the direction of Messina over the calm, blue Medi terranean sea. The day had held in its unfolding hours the elements of marvelous changes. ****** A fortnight later i' young man sat at a piano in the sal >n of a hotel of the Avenue de 1‘Opera at J'aris, strum ming a bar of the Swallow waltz of Strauss, while a young woman paused in the embrasure of a window, hold ing a tiny dog in her arms. The night was rainy, and the great globes of the electric light shone on the passing crowds and the wet pave ment The voting woman drew from the folds of her dress a Maltese cross. She > gn/.ed at it for a long time, and then ! kissed it with reverence. The trinket slipped from her fingers, and fell on the floor. Stooping hastily to recover it she trod on the cross, and broke it She burst into tears. “1 dreamed of grandpa pa last night” she sobbed. "He seemed to be call- i ing for me. Oh, poor, old grandpapa! j The portrait of our knight had fallen ! down. Take me back to the Watch 1 Tower!” “We must sturt for Malta on Mon day,” said Arthur Cur/.on. “Let us go at once,” pleaded Dolores CHAPTER XIIt Money. S I ACOB dealtry L tottered into the y little garden of his abode, and sank down on a bench. , Ilis appea ra n o e was that* of a man wno nan just sus tained a crushing1 blow, lie wiped his moist brow, and gazed, vacantly, about him. "Good God!” he groaned, his pinched features contracting with anxiety and fear. "Who would have ever believed it? How could I have forseen this day? Accursed knaves!” Two weeks earlier his agitation might have been attributed to the flight of his grand-daughter; but, in fact, the old man had sustained her loss with remarkable equanimity and resignation. "it is her Spanish blood,” he had muttered aloud, after reading the note written by Dolores before sailing. "Shcmust .be full of tricks as she grows older. Let her go, once for all!” ! in his profound egotism lie might even have been suspected of a senti ment of relief that a burthen was 're moved. Sorrow, apprehension, re gret for the rash step taken by a young girl, wholly ignorant of the world—did these paternal misgivings fail to touch the heart of Jacob Deal try? lie gave no sign. When a letter from Lieut Curzon, dated Lugano, had been received, an nouncing the marriage, and enclosing a second, faulty, little missive, written in Italian, from tile bride, he had read the two communications without com ment, and thrust the crushed envelope into the pocket of his threadbare coat. Now a far more severe misfortune had stricken the old man, and his whole being threatened to collapse in the shock. The event which moved Jacob Dealtry to despair had convulsed all native Malta as with an earthquake throe. Italy, actuated by the nim of con solidating a national currency, had recalled the coin known as the .Sicilian dollar. The government of Malta an nouncing the decision, had given an ultimate date for all money of this denomination in circulation on the Island, to be brought to a given place and redeemed. The unexpected tidings were re ceived and discussed with a perturba tion of which municipal authority may have reviously entertained no suspicion. The Maltese, bigoted by tradition and distrustful by tempera ment, had remained cold amidst the fever of modern speculation, hoarding his worldly goodB rather than risking all in bank, railway shares or loans. To possess gold one should be able to handle and count the glittering coins frequently. Such is his creed. More over, to obey the present summons would be to fully reveal one’s treas ure, a course to be deplored. Malta wept, prayed, raved in secret In vain! The nobleman in his palace, penurious and abtemious of life, the merchant, the man of law. the sailor, the fisherman, equally cursed the tem poral dispensation which so ruthlessly unveiled the actual condition of indi vidual finances to public curiosity. Here was a situation almost unique | in history. The island must divulge j her wealth as far as the Sicilian | dollar wus concerned Now the Sicil ! iau dollar was a coin of preference | with all grades of society, agreeable to manipulate, and sufficiently con venient to slip into unsuspected hid ing-places, where neither moth nor rust need be feared, nor thieves break through and steal. * .Swift and unforeseen stroke of des tiny coming to overturn the estab lished order of things! The world changes, and one must change with it, or be flung from the wheel of fortune and crushed. During the period of waiting, con jecture and doubt, when rumor still lacked complete confirmation, Jacob Dealtry had gone about like one dis traught, seeking news Each neigh bor was absorbed in his own gloomy meditations, and did not especially heed the eccentric foreigner. Alone in the Watch Tower, his con duct did not astonish grandchild or servant. At the first hint of impending change he had haunted the streets of Valetta and the quay, eager to glean fresh news from any source. 'Then he had returned home, to sink down on the stonje bench, spent, dejected and hrokon in spirit In Jdl the prudent calculation of years it had been impossible to realize his da/. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report Baking Powder Absolutely pure Confined Sound. The intensity of confined sound is finely illustrated at Oausbrook castle, Isle of Wight, where there is a well 200 ■ feet deep and 12 feet in diameter. The well has 18 feet of water in it, and the entire interior from top to water is lined with smooth masonry. Thislining so Completely confines the sound that a pin dropped "from the top can be heard very plainly to strike the water, at a distance of 182 feet below. Another instance is cited from India, where workmen at waterworks often talk with those at the reservoir, 18 miles nway, their telephone being an 18 inch water main that is no longer used for conveying water.—St. Louis Republic. M. L. THOMPSON & CO.. Drnralsts, Cou dersrort. I’n , say Hall's Catarrh Cure 1b the best und only sure euro for catarrh they ever sold. Druggists sell It, The. The Woman Medical Writer. A London, writer, with duo respect for women journalists, thinks that the only department of a paper that should bo closed to a woman writer is the medical—unless, of course, she is a medical "man." He goes on to say that the medical columns of uny London weekly, it is easy to perceive, are eon ducted by accomplished experts, but a case has recently come under his notice . where a young woman who had failed as an art critio was set to answer the medical inquiries of correspondents on a country paper. “I.forget to a deci mal what was the exact mortality of the district,” ho continues, "but the proprietor said if she remained much longer on the paper ho should have had no subscribers left. One of her replies was something like this: ‘To Daisy— Thanks so much for your kind letter. Yes. The mistuke was mine. _ It should have been a quarter grain of strychnine instead of a quarter of a pound for your father's complaint. I low unlucky! Hetter luck next time, but I was so very busy. Yes. There is i no better shop for mourning than •lay's.’ ” After six years' suffering, 1 was cured by l'i-o'n Cure.—Maky Thomson, Uhiu Ave., Allegheny, Fa., March lit, 'U4. v A Daughter'* Cruel Joke. . A story is being told of a young lady who found a package of love letters that had been written to her mother by her father before they were mar ried. The daughter saw that she could have a little sport, and read them to her mother, substituting her own name for that of her mother, and a fine young man for that of her father. The mother jumped up and down in her chair, shifting her feet, and seemed terribly disgusted, and forbade her daughter to have anything to do with the young men who would write such sickening and nonsensical stuff to a girl. When the young lady handed the letter to her mother to Tend the house became so still that Coo could hear the grass growing in the back yard. "Hannon’s SXagio Corn Salve.” Warranted to cure or money refunded. A»k yo«IZ druggist for it. Trice 16 ceute. The Century for September will con tain three complete sketches of fiction by popular American writers, repre senting three different sections of the country. Mrs. Mary llallock Foote will contribute a powerful story of mining liie in the fur west, entitled ‘‘The Cup of Trembling." Miss Sarah Orne Jewett will contribute a humor ous story of the New England coast, entitled “All My Sad Captains." and illustrated by IJape. The third is a roaring sketch, by Harry Stillwell Ed wards, of negro life in the south. It is entitled “The Gum Swamp Debate,” and is full of humor, and is a faithful reflection of the characteristics of the negro race. Ticket* at Keduced Kate* Will be sold via the Nickel Plate road on occasion of the meeting of the Ger man Catholic Societies of the United States at Albany, N. Y., Sopt. 15th to 18th. For further information address J. Y. Caluhun, Gcn'l Agent, 111 Adams St., Chicago. Small on found the note considered the matter* in ail its phases and decided to write to the girl. He did. Awaiting the an* Bwor with considerable anxiety he waa at Inst rewarded with a curt letter stating that the girl was now the moth*N er of two children and had beentnar- ■ V ried four years, and the- letwrne had \ answered had been written ever so long ago. It was a “sock dollager,” and the young man hunted for a solu tion. He found it. The merchant of whom he bought the socks doesn't ad vertise. i uc jnourm Thrives on good food and sunshine, with Plenty of exercise in the open air. Her .'r. R line’s Qrosi Aervu Kastorsr. So Flta alter the UnilCuy’* UM, ,, !i <, atarveloiueum. TrnatlseanilKitrInibotueliet** Fltuauia. Baud to llr,Kltne,SttlArcbut.,I*hlla.,nh Humility is a virtue all preach, noneprao tice, and yet everybody is content to bear praised. __________ Experience leads ninny mother* I* i»y "line I’lirner’sain.erToiilo," neeauae Itlanpeclully aood for eoiil*. wain and alinoat arery we.iSnea*. The largest mammoth tusk yet discovered was sixteen leet in length. • Thoae dlatreaatns Comal aft they are, lllndureorua will tumuvo them and than you can wal* and run ami jump aa yon like. The Nickel Plate road has authorized its agents to sell tickets at greatly re duced rates to Albany, N. Y., on occa sion of the meeting of the German Catholic Societies of the United Staten ( in that city, Sept. 15th to 18th. For particulars address J, Y. Calahan, GenT f i Agcnt, 111 Adams St., Chicaga _ Love books not with the eyes, but with the miuil. The Greatest fledical Discovery of the Age KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. f DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every , kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder hutnor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver' or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you ca-i get, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. IV! eta Wheel for your Wa Aar iln m; »«x» l* <• M •"•'I'M kith, tiro. Ito • lu rk** wide — hubs to lit sny mi*. Ann Cwt assay tones la a n» nktMnt *f low wfeida to lit yoar wagon forhsulliiK Strain,fodder, insi nr*, hoes, Ac. No. resetting of tires Cstl’e/rre. Address Kinplrsklg. Co,. !’■ u. Box 83, Quincy 1U, Tuuimuuur USED LOCALLY Iunfflator. ML *»«•* tun 00K 00., H Btnoa fcoid toj all drnaUia, X-U..1.1 TTLX-I. /, /■ / / M. L-.L L m* Cabled Field and t)abled Pwllr»< Garden and Rabbit Panel. N^UWIVM ■ IVIU U1 Steel Web Picket Ijiwn Fence, etc* Quality S U a/4 pAfir'P first class. PK CrfS IX)W Catalogue kh&Hj ,1US awllWC* Os Kalb Fence Co., 121 High St.. DeKlb, JU" . . ' •• -wMd