The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, September 14, 1893, Image 3

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    I,
n
Daughter Oh, father, a bird just flew
iutu the parlor window, and that's
aureeign otdealii in the house! Will
you dm bim out?
Father Well, if this is young Addle
pate's regular night for calling, let the
bird stay. It may mean luck! Truth J
He I declare, MUs Angelina, you'
treat me wore Mian your dog.
bbe Ob, Mr. de Mogyns, how can
you aay so? I'm sura 1 never make the
lightest difference between you, Tit-,
Biti.
THE MODEEN BEAUTY
Thrives on good food and sunshine, with
plenty of exercise in the open air. Her
form glows with health and her face blooms
withiu beauty. If her system needs the
cleansing action of a laxative remedy, she
uses the gentle and pleasant liquid laxative
Syrup of Figs.
, A Thieving- Mink.
i Two gentlemen were fishing on one of
the rivers of Maine. The tish were quite
plenty, and as fast an one was caught it
was thrown behind on the grass. Af
ter some time one of the gentleman
thought he would take a rest ai d at the
same time' examine his capture. But
he could nut lind a single fish. He
charges his friend with having played
him a trick, but the friend was as sur
prised as watt he. They now determined'
to watch their cel . fish, and their as-
tonishmeut was unbounded when they'
saw a mink run out from a hole near by,
aatch up the fish and carry it o f to
the hole, where tbey afterward found
their entire capture cunningly hidden
under some dead leaves.
A new telephone tranemils a whisper
to a distance of 500 miles, and a keen
ear, if familiar with the speaker, can
recognise the voice.
"German
Syrup
Boschee's German Syrup is more
successful ia the treatment of Con-
sumption than any other remedy
prescribed. It has been tried underj
every variety of climate. In the
bleak, bitter North, in damp New
England, in the fickle Middle States
in the hot, moist South every-'
i where. It has been in demand by
every nationality. It has been em
ployed in every stage of Consump
tion. In brief it has been used
by millions and its the only true and
reliable Consumption Remedy. S
Sheridan County, Wyoming, (only
recently opfcued up for settlement
by the completion of an extension
of - the Burlington Ball
Til 0 road) offers greater and
INK more profitable opportun
ities to farmers, business
men, investors and prospectors than
any other section of the United
States. Finest agricultural and
stock-raising region under the sun.
270,000acresofmagnificentirrigated
land, fertile as the valley of the Nile.
A million acres and
more8till Umainft vacant,
waiting linW Kf the com
ing of the 1 " w husband
man. Brisk, rapidly-growing towns.
Rich mineral lields less than a hun
dred miles from the county seat.
Perfect climate, pure water, cheap
fuel coal and wood. Send for
free descriptive pamphlet; thirty-
two pages
with illus
trations and map.
Northwest
J. FRANCIS, General Passenger
Agent, Burlington Route, Omaha,
Nebraska.
8
I
TMi Trade Mark ! on the belt
WATERPROOF COAT
in the World I
Vrea. A 1. W"). POCTO!. MASS.
NO HATCHET NEEOEB
TO OPEN THIS CAN.
for H06 CHOLERA this
LYE
U a mire cure If used In time.
Far maklnK Soap, Cleantnf
Bounos, Softening Water, U
bai no equal. The bouae
wlfe'a best friend. A vavlu
ablr waablnc recipe la
each tan. For le by all
Grocera. Itwlllsurprlee Jo
PEE'S
II
88'.
PATENTS. TRflDE.Mfll.KS.
Examination and Advice as to Patentability of In
vention. Bend for iDTentorn' Guide, or How toCk.t
a Patent Patrick OTarhkul, Washington, d. O.
A own Wasted to Skix Tka We g ve all
hw ily ailver plated Tea Spoons to every
urchaaer of two pound, of tea. For .ample,
fend particular addreaa, Kibbajka Tia Co,
Davenport, feb.
PATENTS
THOMAS P. SIMPSON. Wahlnirton,
DC. Jin attjr nw unui raienioo
Utluetj. Writ forttivriitor'i.Gul1u.
cf1 r : : stJn
CMMaaptlvee and people
who bare weak Ionia or Aftb
ma,.bouldute Plao'. Care for
Concnptlon. It bae care
UMoeaaSa. ft baa not total
ed one. It la not bad to lake.
old everrwheni. Me.
5
T3
- ....ism
feVcs IS
CHAPTER III.
PAKM LOVE THE SWEETEST.
Louis and Mary spent their first
summer vacation at their home near
tho country village. They wero both
at that age when love of romance over
shadows all else in life. Tho practical
and real will come soon enough, but
they do not obtrude themselves on
young hearts when all the surround
ings are bright and joyous. These
young people lived in castles in
the air, and they hoped that if the
realities of lifo were to run counter to
their dreams, and their airy castles,
they might never awake. Not a ripple
broke, tho harmony of their young
lives.
Much of the time was spent in sail
ing on the little lake. They called it
sailing, but their homely craft had
neither sail nor mast on which to fix a
sail, or place to put a rudder. It was
a frail thing which Louis had managed
to put together at odd times some
thing after the nature of a raft, with a
rough box-like structure built much as
children build play houses. This
served for protection from sun and wind
and' rain, and as it was tho only craft
that floated on those waters, it had the
right to go anywhere and everywhere,
and no one cared to object or protest
against it. In order to direct the
course of the craft and control it. a
sculling oar was fitted in the end of
what might be termed the prow, and
thus easily and roadly was Louis able
to manage the little float.
So, drifting and floating in whichever
direction the wind blew, they had
naught to do, save tell the story of
their love, and over and over again
they told it, and it neither grew mo
notonous, nor did they w eary of telling
it. Leisurely and unconcernedly they
drifted on, with now and then a slight
wind from the bluffs to break the
the smoothness of the placid waters,
and they wished they could float all
the years away, and at will land on a
shore where love weighed supreme and
always.
' "Louis, If you love me. toll me so. "
"Did you say 'if',. Mary V In the vo
cabulary of love there is and can be no
'if. Tho little word has never come
betwixt your love and mine. It must
not now. 'If chases love away. 'Ifs'
flourish where there is least love.
They drive the schoolboy to despair,
and mako him hate his books, his
teacher and himaolf, and yet, 'ifs' are
the rounds in the ladder of fame which
enable tho student to climb to the top.
In that blissful realm where love is
queon there can be no 'ifs', because
lovo wo nld die were an 'if admitted
there. There never was yet a heart
large enough for love and an 'if to
dwell together I know there is not
an 'if in any part of my being when
lovo for you is my theme."
"There now, Louie, I like to hear
you talk that way. That is music to
my ears. It is real poetry the oootry
born of love. But why don't you keep
on tolling me you love me?"
"Why, Mary, only yesterday, I told
you a hundred times that I love you."
"True, true, I remember now you
did, and to-day I want you to tell mo
so a thousand times. I livo only in
your love, and that withdrawn for a
day, or lessened by so much as a breath
of air, and I caro not to live. Tell mc
you love mo; not in words, for they de
ceive. Tell me with your eyes; tell
me with your cheeks flowing with the
flame that comes from swift-flowing
blood through veins that ought to know
no other duty but to bear the messages
of love from your heart to mine, tell
me through silent lips of the height,
depth, and juration of your love. Put
the story in big volumes and bo ages
telling it, that I may .know that I am
truly loved."
"Mary, since early childhood I have
told you the story of my love, and it
has been the story of my lifo. As life
grows apace, my story grows, too, and
whithor I toll it with eyes or lips, with
heart, or soul, it shall bo tho lovo you
ask of me. It shall tako me ages to
tell it, then let me live those ages in
your love, and the ' story tells itself.
To livo and to love are one. May
Heaven never close the cords that bind
our hearts together."
Thus those lovers talked. The great
big world and all therein were noth
ing to them. Love was everything.
Did Heaven hoar that prayer?
The summer vacation ended, Louis
resumed his studies at the collogo.
His class would graduate In the spring.
The fall months pass rapidly, and
winter finds him busily engaged in pro
paring the paper he is to road at com
mencement. The professors expect
much of him. He has been a diligent
and tireless student, and hit) heart in
his work. His theme is one of great
interest throughout the land, and par
ticularly to the farmers. Brought uo
on a farm himself, and at home and in
the college a close student of the effect
the tariff has on agriculture, ho aip-
Droaohes his subject of "Tariff Re
form" with his whole soul full of well
matured thoughts.
CUAPTKB IV.
THE MYSTERIOUS STRANGER.
One day the new spread rapidly
through the neighborhood that Major
Nordrum was seriously ill. A malarial
fever was having its run with a con
slant uncertainty as to the sick man'i
recovery. Mrs. Patterson was a fre
quont visitor at the Major's home,
maklncr herself so useful in the tlok
! room, relieving Mary and the nun of
a part of their duties, that they be
seecbed her to make her home with
them for a time, so that
with less inconvt nience
she might,
to herself,
render the atsistance she proffered.
Seeing that Mary was worn out, and
likelv to break down, Mrs. Patterson
consented, and was placed in charge of j
the house,
A male nurse was needed, ard in-
uiries for one wero made at the
Jiiuty seat. In time, a strong, stout,
i..iddle-agvd, prcntlemanly appearing
franger applied for the place. His in
terview was with Mrs. Putter-son. She
employed him and installed him In his
work.
There was a mysterious
sometning j
... i
about this man and his habits which
Mary oftentimes found herself tryinjj ,
to fathom, and the most singular thing
was that the mystery seemed to in
volve Mrs. Patterson with it. Why or
how no one that noticed it could tell.
Mary threw it off with the thought
that" the worstof it was only a suspicion.
Mrs. Pattersons' early history was a
blank as far as tho people in the neigh
borhood knew anything about it.
While she had lived" the life of a Chris- j
tain woman since coming there, and .
while her character was pure and j
spotless, yet tho closest observers had, j
from time to time, noticed a strange-j
ness in her actions which created aj
feeling that something . was wrong. I
Men unknown in the community had ;
been loitering after night in tho shadow '
of tho trees that grew near hot
house. They came, from where no ono
knew, and they went, no ono knew j
whither.
She was never known to mention the
never told it. If lie were living sho i
never mentioned it. Yet sho had a j
son she idolized. Why silently feed
the mysterious with mystery?
Tho stranger faithfully applied him
self to the work assigned him. He
gradually won the respect, and, it may
be, the confidence of the sick man. He
studied to please Major Nordrum. He
labored to make his services indispen
siblo. There was, however, a coolness
between him and Mrs. Patterson which
others could not help noticing. Why
was the man nurse who was only a
temporary employe of tho household,
and a stranger, too, and who, when his
services were no longer required,
would go, as ho had come, a stranger,
worthy of even being shunned by Mrs.
Patterson?
The man soon became a necessity at
.Major Nordrum s bedside. No nurse
evermore laithiui served trie sick,
than did this stranger serve Major
Nordrum. He was ever on tho alert to
make himself useful, and he succeeded
in so ingratiating himself into the af
fections of Mary and the physician, and
the nurso, by little acts of kindness to
all of them, and by his constant devo
tion to the failing invalid, that all was
ready to trust bim and put the utmost
confidence in his honor and integrity.
To all these marks of respect shown
tho stranger, Mrs. Patterson demurred
by looks and signs, which seemed to be
never understood, but sne communi
cated her thoughts to no living person
She evidently wanted to warn the
family of something connected with
the stranger's presence, but her lips
wero sealed. She was tho woman oi
mysteries.
One morning, after a restloss night,
the sick man callod Mrs. Patterson to
his bedside. He told her that he be
lieved he had but a few hours
to live. He assured her that he
was prepared to die but he was
in doubtasto a future world? "Whore
can Heaven be?" had been tho Bubject
of his thoughts for weeks. Could Mrs.
Patterson, whom he had always found
so sensible and wise in worldly matters,
give him some reasonable theory as to
where God might put the souls of men,
when life on oarth was ended? then
he would die full of faith in the power
of the Almighty to redeem the
promises of Christ.
Mrs. Patterson stood aghast. Sho
was astonished that Major Nordrum, a
man of so much intelligence and in
formation, whoso life was spotless and
blameless, whoso mature years had
been spent in doing good to his fellow
man, who, though making no outward
profession of religion, was known to be
a Christian, should, on tho verge of the
grave, harbor a doubt as to the ex
istence of a future state.
Tho good lady controlled her feel
ings tho best she could. She under
stood the situation at once. Major
Nordrum had not seen Heaven, had
never seen any one who had, and now
ho was in doubt whether there was a
Hoaven.
"Major," replied Mrs. Patterson, "as
vou have faith in God's promises, have
faith now that he will fulfill them."
The dying man gave the Christian
woman a look of satisfaction as if to
acknowledge the justness of her mild
reproof, and to accept her words of
hopo and comfort. His lips parted as
if ho would say something more. That
the end was nigh was evident. Tho
household was quickly summoned, but
no word did he utter. Mary, weeping
as ono whose cup of sorrow was full,
held her father's hand. Mrs. Patter
son, calm and almost stoical, held tho
other, and the stranger bathed tho
dying man's temples. A sigh, a groan,
a fluttering' heart, and all was over.
Then camo the funeral and after
that a sensation that startled the whole
community.
CHAPTER V.
STORY OF A LIFE.
In a drawer where Major Nordrum
had kopt his private papers tv ere was
found, after his death, the following
letter written by Mrs. Patterson:
To My Dear Frlnnd Andrew Nordrum :
Yesterday I told you I would give you
my reasons in writing, for refusing your
oiler of marrlago. I will now fulfill
that promise.
I was an only child. I was born in
, a New Kngland factory town, In
the year 1& . My father was the
senior member of the firm of Patterson
& Groundwlg, who owned and operated
a large woolen mill, and wero consid
ered quite wealthy. 1 was given aa
good an education as tho somina-ios of
those days furnished young ladies. At
the age of 19 I graduated, not at the
head of my class, but with my head
well stored with book lore. On ray re
turn from school I took a great interest
la tha welfare of the operation of
the mill, and was constantly busy ia
various ways trying to improve their
condition. Silas Groundwig was the
city partner and received and sold the
t;oid8 manufactured at tho mill. He
visited the factory three or four times
a year, and each visit ho sought to
make his coming and stay agreeable
as possible to me. It did not take me
long to perceive that his politeness
grew out of something more than
fi-iendshiu. so I could hardlv sav I was
surprised when he asked my hand in
marriage. While I had no particular
reason to dislike him. I did not enter
tain that love for him that I felt I
should to warrant me in accepting his
offer
i lost no time in telling him so,
and with real sadness and sorrow I ac
quainted him with the state of my feel
ings towards mm ana v,e parted.
A few mouths afterward I heard mut
terings among operatives about pay
day having passed without their
wa'es having been handed them.
; At this time my mother died, and
ton-
1 learned that matters were in
a worse condition than ever. I asked
my father to take me into his confl
uence ana leu me an, ana no then in
formed me that his partner had in
vested the money in schemes that bad
proven worthless, and that the laciory
would havo to bo sold to satisly the
mortgago that had been placed on it.
I saw that such a proceeding would
leave the operatives -men, women, and
children-without money, without
food, and with scant raiment, and, in,
many instances, without shelter. I
knew that Mr. (JrounJwig was a man
of many resources, and I was not long
in getting to his oflico. anl importun
ing him to come to the aid of the pen
niless operatives. Ho did not appear a
hard-hearted man. He was a busi
ness man in every sense of the word.
The world might have called him cold,
and. it may bo, the world would have
been right, but I thought I detected in
him a warm, sympathetic heart. So
when ho referred to the lovo he once,
had for mo, and assured mo that it had
grown stronger with time, and when
ho again asked rao for my hand, and
gently intimated that wo could do to
gether what I had implored him to do
for the operatives, I yielded, not for
love, but for humanity, not because of
any affection I had for him, but that
almost a whole village full of people I
loved (and I loved them all the more
because they wero poor and needy)
might not be turned out into tho world
friendless and homeless.
We wero married. The factory
hands were paid all that was coming to
them. They never know that the one
they loved so much, made the greatest
sacrifice a woman can mako, for their
sake. I did not then know, myself,
how great the sacrifice was. How bit
terly I have learned it all inee. A
few months after the marriage my
father died. I think he believed to
the hour of his death that I had mar
ried a man I did not love to save my
father from bankruptcy. My great
sacrifice boro bitterer fruit than that.
A boy babe was born to gladden my
heart. My whole soul was onrapped
up in the child. There was no ono
else for me to love. The father of my
darling boy had continued his specula
tions and lost all he possessed, and, on
tho day my child was born, my hus
band came to my bed-chamber and de
manded that I should sign a paper
transferring to him all tho property
my father had loft to me at his death.
I refused, and the man who had the
j right to call me by the holy name of
wife, in that hour, if in no other,
angels should guard the mother's
couch, struck mo a savage blow, and
then passed beyond my threshold, out
into the world, no longer my nusDana,
except in name. If he could have then
gone to his grave instead of afterwards
returning to my presence, much of
sorrow 1 have borne, and many tears I
have shed would havo been spared me.
For soven years he remained
away. I hoard of him from time
to tirfo, as an adventurer seeking
a livelihood by dishonest means. One
day be returned to my homo. Ho
claimed my boy my darling boy. His
boy. Though the father had never
seen the child, though he had aimed a
blow at tho mother on purpose to kill
tho babe, though he had abandoned
tho family and left the mother alone
to care for tho child, yet the lawyer
told me there was danger that the law
might take my boy understand, my
boy and give it to his unnatural father.
TO BE CONTINUED.
Train Robbers and Wreckers.
The Eailroad Gaaette has collected
statistics of train wrecking and train
robbing for the first six months of
1803, which yield some surprising re
sults: One is accustomed to think of
train wreckers and train robbers as
investing sparsely settled Western
States, but the statistics show on the
contrary that such crimes are most
prevalent in well-settled States. The
Gazette's figures show sixty-one at
tempts to wreck trains and twenty
one attempts to rob them. Massa
chusetts and Illinois head the list in
the number of attempts to wreck
trains, and Ohio follows. In these
three advanced States were made
more than one-half of all the at
tempts to wreck trains, and the
State of New York follows. The only
explanation offered for this prepon
derance of train wrecking in well-
settled and, generally speaking, well-
governed States Is that the mileage
of railroads is greater in those Slates
than In others, aud that tranrjs, who
are responsible for ruost attempts to
wreck trains, tlourisli in thickly set
tled regions.
The geographical distribution of
attempts at train robbing are sti'l
more curious, lov heads the list;
Indian Territory and Oklahoma takeu
together have the same nuruoer;
Texas fob jws, and then comes Kanaas
and Neb aska. bixty-seven per cent,
of all the train robberies or attempt d
trian robberies occurred In these four
States and two Territories.
To Hi-muTO Grease.
Aqua ammonia, two ounces: soft
water, one quart; saltpeter, one tea
spoonful; Bhaving soap in shavings,
one ounce, mix together; dissolve the
soap well, and any grease or dirt that
cannot be removed with this prepara
tion, nothing else need be tried for lu
When a boy grasps the toy pistol
bo Miies hold of the butt end of an
accident
TAT
y.
I II II KB II N I 1
The United States Government reports
ROYAL a pure cream of tartar
baking- powder, highest of ail
in leavening- strength.
"The Royal Baking
u . .
H the purest and most reiiaoic taking powuci c
fered to the public."
Late United States jj,
Government Chemist.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER
-T'-v-"-,L v - . J(
The three feathers of tin Prince of
Wales have been prominently used in
handles of large bonbon and berry ser
vices cf silver and silver gilt. This is
probably due to the royul wedding.
Jewelers' Circular.
A new substance ca led va'.zin is now
being manufa itureu iu Bsrlin under a
( Stent, and it is duiined to be 200 times
sweeter than sugar and free from cer
tain objectionable properties cf
saccharin.
Tho Firt Stovrn.
A heating apparatus called a "stuba"
(stove) was widely ured among the
higher claes of Romans before the be
'ginniog of the Christinn era. This class
of beaters was fixed and immovable be
sides beim; in several other respeeta
wholly different from the modern stove.
In Germany and Svtindinav'.a they were
used in bathrooms and hotireuges Jur
ied the middle ages. 1 hey were us
ually constructed of brick, 6tono or tile
and wereof immense 6iz, Thny some
times covered the whole side of a 20 or
30 foot room and often extended out in
to the room as much as 10 feef, in which
cbsb the smooth, flat top m used for a
bedstead, the heaied surfaca imparling
an agreeable feelinK of wurmth during
those cold nights of bnc ago, when such
things as covers were quite rare.
Cardinnl Polignac of France wns per
haps the first to attempt the coestruc
tion of a stove wholly of iron this at
about the beginning of the ighteentH
century. The first real improvement
over the old Roman "staba" war brought
about by Franklin in the year 1745. Ooe
of his efforts produced a typical base
burner, nhnost perfect and a model of
workmanship. Stoves were not used in
private houses to any great extent prior
to the year 18.'J0. Philadelphia Press.
She Took Ihe Clftari'tte.
When a belt line car was coming
down Virginia Btreet yesterday after
noon, a solemn looking young man was
the occupant cf the rear seat. Just as
the Seventy-fourth armory was reached
two beautiful young women signaled
the car and walked out into the road
way. One was a tall blonde with brill
iant blue eyes and golden hair, and the
other a brunette of manificint figure.
Both wore fluffy white dresses, and both
were exceedingly fair to look upon.
Every Feat in front of the one which the
solemn youLg man occupied in solitary
state was crowded.
"Well, Lit," said the blonde, "I guess
we've got to get in here "
"That's the smokers' seat," replied
Lil.
"There isn't any other," contended
the blond.
"I don't like to get in where men
smoke," said the brunette, pouting,
"Hurry up, ladies, if you want this
CBrl" broke in the conductor, and the
two women olimbed aboard.
The solemn young man looked them
over with a great show of interest. He
had just lighted a cigarette, but out of
deference to his seatmatee he threw it
away.
Thn blonde giggled. "Seems kind of
queer to be riding in the smokers' seat,
don't itf she asked.
"I don't think it's queer," replied the
brunette.
"I mean it seems ai if we ought to be
smoking."
The solemn young man looked up.
Then he dove down into his coat pocket,
fished out a new package of cigarettes,
broke the stamp and handed it politely
to the blonde, i
She shrunk back as it frightened.
Not so with the brunette. She reached
over, took the cigarettes, put them in
her handbag, smiled a smile that was so
bright it sh lines the sunlight and said:
"Oh, thank you! We'll smoke them af
ter we get Dome.
And the solemn young man doesn't
yet know whether she was stringing him
or not. Buffalo Express.
K. A. ROOD. Toledo, Ohio, says! "Hall's
Catarrh Cure cured my wile of cutarrh fif
teen years ago ana sne nns nna no retwu
of it. It's a sore ours. Sold by Druggists,
70.
Powder is nntUuibtcJly j
1 i i i i i . y.
i
f
CT
CO., 1C VAU. ST.. UCV-YOIK.
. -.; . - w-
He blushed a fiory red. Her heart
went pi o pat. She gently bung her
head and looked down on the mat. He
trembled in his e peach; he rose from,
where he eat and shouted with at
screech, ''You're sitting oa my hat!"
Tit-BitB.
Tirnrains Can your daughter play
the piaLo?
Robbiua wearily I don't know
whether she can or not, but the does.
Chicago Hecord. '
Eyes of Deep Sea Flab. 1
The eyes of deep sea fish are very
varied; some have neither eres nor,
sight; others have greatly enlarged eye-1
bulls, so as to catch the least glimpse o
light. Their eyes tend either to disap
pear or to be unusually efficient, bus
sines no trace of sunl'ght can penetrate
to any great, depth, and it is probablyj
quite dark beyond a dspth of soma 200
fathom?, of what use can eyes bef
Fish have been captured at a depth ot
nearly 3,000 fathoms, where- there muit
be not only absolute stillness, but also
total darkdesr, except for toe fact thai!
some of thestt deep Eea creatures are
phcsiiiio.'es ent and therefore luminous.
This tact m first ascertained in the
Challenger expedition. Since then, MrJ
A 1 cock ot the Indian marine survey has
found that some deep sea crustaceans
h-ive a similar p Vker, one large prawn
qu te lightening up a bucket' ul of water
in which it was placed. Fish with large
eyes have therefore a better chance oi
finding; feed and mates, but tbey cannot
wholly depend upon sight, since soma
havo quite abandoned all attempts to
see.
Some ngair, have luminous organs on,
their head or body or tail, which ar
under control, so that they can actually!
throiv light at pleasure on their prey or
extinguish it in time of danger. Thus
the angler, among others, attracts it
prey by means of those colored lures or
phosphorescent lights. Chamber's
Journal.
A Feminine Weakness..
Did you ever notice the weakness wo-i
men have for marking their letters "per
sonal?" They seem to think by soi
marking the envelope the letter will getj
to its destination quicker, through thej
same line of reasoning which souaysars
ago led women to write oti envelopes "inj
haste," supposing that the postnasal
would immediately start on a run with!
them.
The habit of writing "personal" some
times leads to very embarrassing results.'
I have known a purely business commu
nication Hddretsed in unmistakable!
feminine hand and marked "personal"
to rise a liveiy row in an unusually'
peaceful family. Nen York Herald. '
Who woitld be free from earthly ill
must bin- a box of Beecham's Fills. 231
cents a box. Worth a guinea.
David S. Muzzey of Lexington, Maes.
who was graduated this year with honor:
from Harvard, has been appointed pro-
fessorof mathematics at Roberta ool-j
lege, in Constantinople.
Drapery pins of long irregular loops,
ot sold, set intervals with diamonds.!
have been introduced. These were first)
seen in solid diamonds. It is an ew
peoinlly graceful shape.
Pen Can Describe
Tho Buffering I endured
"1,
len
-hrn. from Dra-i
papula,.
I tried aim.
oaw
every medicine and el-
mnat icave up hope oi
ever botna; any better.
But Hood' Bamuarillal
nave me rollel verv aaanl
L' ' , ... . ' " 1
ma now i am aaurM
j cured of djrapepaiaJ
md a (Trifle everr one loi
,try Hood'a SarmperUUJ
lira. J. Fentona
IBM. JOHW J KM TOH, m
Pride 81, PlUaburg, r
Hood'sCurc
Hood's PlUa act easily, yet promptly.
X. M. U. Mx S4S-S7
ork,HeaW
TTTHKX WRlTWa TO. AD!
jJyMJJJMwr saw ate mi
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w m
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