The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, November 15, 1895, Image 7

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    LIVING PICTURES
J^. IN BROAD OAYLIOHT.
On* R**l Living Picture Meet*
Another.
^ What hha Took For a Spirit Wat
Mar Friend.
Oh oat* don’t walk In broad daylight,
and yet whan a woman finds neraelf
suddenly confronted by the friend ahe
haa mourned ae dead the la apt to ea
perlence a creepy aenaation tbat Isn't
down in the dictionary.
In a case like thla no amount of pres
ence of mind or self-possession can
ward off the mingled feellnge of aston
ishment, fear, Joy and curiosity tbat
will render a woman temporarily
tongue-tied. It le only after seeing the
cherlehed smile of greeting, after again
>
K \
1WO LIVINO I'll,TURK* MEET,
feeling that there 1* throbbing life be
neath tiie dainty glove, and after again
hearing her own name spoken in the
ever familiar voice, that thia strange
actuation vaniahc*.
THE aril A MIE MEKTIRO.
'i he meeting of the two women whose
pictures are her* given, allows that
everyday life furnishes experience* aa
thrilling a* those that come to u* only
in our wildcat dreama. And the fact
that such meetings occur every day
Kdnta a moral that every woman In the
ud should take to heart. Here waa a
woman in the prime of life, pursued by
that sentinel which seeks its victim,
among her sex alone.
From a living picture ahe became, in
less than a year, a wreck of human
wretchedness. From despondency to
despair aeeined but tiie remaining step,
the last step
It Ell LAST rAREWEI.I.
Overcome by tiie presentiment that
precedes a lingering death, ahe asked
to be removed to her old home in the
West, and spoke what to all seemed to
be her last farewell, in the very pa
per that chronicled her departure the
doomed invalid found letters written
by Mr*. Helle Dement, of Iroquois,
11L, Mr* Minnie Smith, of Ixiwell, Ore
gon, and others. Some of these letter*
. / are printed below. They told how cures
(j had been found for cases like her own
—shattered health that had almoat
sapped life away. With no more hope
than that which prompt# the drowning
man to catch at a straw for she firmly
believed herself incurable, just as ten*
of thousands of women believe tliem
w selves incurable— she followed the ad*
' vice contained in these letter* The
result is best told in the woman's own
words: "In less than five months,"
ahe writes, "I returned to my friends
in the Mast, as well and strong in body
and mind and as bappy and free from
pain aa any woman in the world. I
bad gained nearly thirty pound* in
weight and was so changed in face and
form that when one of my dearest
friend* met me in broad daylight she
almost fainted, for
SHE BELIEVED ME DEAD.”
Khe adds. “I owe my whole life and
happiness to Doctor Fierce * Favorite
Prescription, which cured me after doc
tors, travel, baths, massage, electricity,
had failed to even benefit!"
Thia woman's case, remarkable as it
may seem, is not an exceptional one.
• Thousands and thousands of juat such
cures have been made in every State by
peculiar disorders and diseases. This
world-famed remedy is not recommend
ed as a “cure-all" but as a most perfect
specific for women's peculiar ailments
As
A I’OWKHKLI., INI V Iti OK A TING TONIC,
it imparts strength to the whole system
and to the organs distinctly feminine
in particular. For overworked, “worn
out," “run-down," debilitated teachers,
milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses,
“shop-girls,” housekeepers, nursing
* mothers, and feeble women generally,
i I)r. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the
greatest earthly boon, being unequaled
invigorst
l
“Favorite* Prescription" is uue<|usled in
auloluing nervous excitability, irrita
bility, nervous exhaustion, nervous
prostration, neuralgia. hysteria,
spasms, chorea, or Hi. Vitus's dance,
and other distressing, nervous symp
toms commonly atteudaut upon func
tional and organic diseases of tiie gen
erative organs of women. It Induces
refreshing sleep and relieves mental
anxiety and despondency.
In complicated cases, or when the
kidneys or liver are affected, or the
blood impure, Dr. Pieros'atioldrn Medi
cal Discovery should be taken conjoint
ly with the use oI the "Favorite Pres
cription, according to directions,
around each bottle.
a tins a t kook ruse.
When Dr Pierce published the first
edition of his work. 1 he People's Com
mon Hrnse Medical Ait
viser, he announced
that after ««o,uuu
copies had lieeiisold at
the tegular price, II. Ml
per copy, the profit on
which would repay
him fur the great
• mount of labor and
utouey c« pended In
producing it, he would
,1 isti it'iite the uest
As this number
copies bos already levs sold, he is now
distributing, at-solutety free, ittu.ooo
copies of this must vompieie, interest
lag and valuable common sense medi
cs! wnvb ever published live recipient
only being required to mail to him. nr
the Worlds Disnentart Medical Asm*
vintioa, ef buffalo, N V , of which ha
i# president. * 1 a thin little
couroxhum-I eoi.rox I nan with
twenty-one | No Ifll I (21) one
cent stamp**-—• to cover coat
of mailing only, and the book will be
aeatpoat-puid. It 1* a veritable medical
library, complete in one volume. It
contain* over lOhOpageeand more than
300 illustrations several finely Illus
trated chapter* are devoted to the care
ful consideration in plain language, of
dlaeaee* peculiar to women and their
auceeaaful home-treatment without the
aid of a physician and without having
to submit to dreaded "examination*'
and the stereotyped "local applica
tion*," ao repulsive to the modestly sen*
Itlve woman. The Free Kdlllon la prn
eiaely the same aa that aold at gl.f/0 ex
cept only that the book* are tasund in
strong manilla paper cover* ln*tea<l of
cloth. Hend xow before all are given
away. They are going off rapidly,
therefore, do not delay sending Imme
diately If in want of one.
Whitest « Ilf In the World.
There cannot possibly be a whiter
city than Cadiz, unless It be built of
enow. The best wav to approach the
port la to take e trip in one of the small
steamers which ply between the port#
of Morocco and Spain. A* you near
the coast you see In front of you a
white mas* which appear* to be float
ing upon the water, juat aa you are.
The flrat thought of a foreigner la that
he la In alghtof an lecbcrg. The whit#
maaa glittering iri the aim, and ren
dered more da/./ling by the blue re*
and aky, look* exact)y like a monster
ice mountain partly melted, so that the
outlines of castles and hills appear
upon It; but only for a aeeond does the
illusion last for you know there are no
Icebergs In that part, and yon arequick
ly Informed that you are looking at
Cadiz. No other town In the world
presents such a magic appearance.
When Wrinkles ***>» (he Hr«»,
And lhe locks grow scant sod silvery, ‘n
flnaltlns nI >it« corns on . To retard
and *niellorat< tin I* one of lint benign
effects of Hostetler's Htowscb Hitters, a
medicine to whbh the aged and InHrueu
resort as a safe solace and Ifivlgorant. It
counteracts a lend/ r»cy to rheumatism and
neuralgia Improve* digestion, icctlne# tdl*
lotisness and overcome- malaria A wine
glass latfore retiring promote* slumber.
frog* sail Their Prlerol*.
It was l>r. John Brown of Kd In bora
I think, who spoke in sincere sympa
thy of the mun who "led a dog-less
Ufa.*’ It wus Mr. "Josh Hillings," I
know, who said that in the whole his
tory of the world there Is but one thing
that money cannot huy, to-wlt: the
wag of a dog’s tail. And It was I’rof,
John C. Van Dyke who declared the
other day. in reviewing the artistic
career of * Landseer, that be made his
dog* too human. It war the great
Creator himself who made dog* too hu
man—so human that sometime* they
put humanity to shame.
1 have been the friend and confident
of three dogs, who helped to humanize
me for the space of a quarter of a cen
tury, and who had souls to he saved, I
am sore; and when I cross the Htygian
river 1 expect to find on the other shore
a trio of clogs wagging their tail* al
most off In their joy at my coming, and
with honest tongue* hanging out to
lick my hands and my feet. And then
1 am going, with these faithful, de
voted "logs at my heel*, to talk dog*
over with Itr. John Mrown, Mr Kdwm
Landseer and Mr. Josh Hilling* —
"Three Dogs," by Laurence Button, In
November St Nicholas
There 1* more Catarrh In this section
of the country than all other disease*
put together, and until the last few
years waa suppose/) to he Incurable.
For a great many year* doctor* pro
I nounced It a ’o al disease, and pre
i scribed local remedies, and by constant
ly falling to cure with locul treatment,
pronounced It Incurable. Helene* has
proven Catarrh to t>e a constitutional
disease, and therefore requires consti
tutional treatment. Hall'* Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney &
Co., Toledo, Ohio, I* the only constitu
tional cure on tne market it Is taken
Internally, In dose* from ten drops to a
teaspoonful. It act* directly on th*
blood and mucous surfaces ot th* sys
tern. They off<-r One Hundred Dollars
for any case It falls to cure. Bend for
circulars and testimonials. Address
F. 3. CHUNKY At CO.. Toledo, Q.'
Bold by druggists; 75c.
Mali's Family Fills, 25c.
Tli« Tiniest Married I unpin.
Westminster Hazette: On .September
2'J the wife of u dwarf hy the name of
Morris gave birth to twin* at lllaena
von. North Wales Morris is only
thirty-five inches in height, while his
wife ia even smaller in stature. They
were married at Harthomley church
last Christmas, and have atnee been
traveling through the country aa (len
eral and Mrs Small, being the smallest
married couple in the world. The
mother and infants are doing welL
||■ in m
to Om iW«i and besk l« will brsa* up a fnld quiets
*r man an> iblus alas It V always rallabl*. Try Ik
Aggravating Hays.
Aren't there some times in your life
whan everything seems to go wrong,
no matter how hard you try to have
them go light? Those are the trying
days when you want to blame all the
trouble on the way vou get out of bed
in the morning.
Another woman says she can make
more enemies on one of these days than
frieuds during the other 3«i4.
Words may be forgiven, hut they are
uul so easily forgotten. The unkind
speech that is forced from you because
you are not feeling quit* wall, or the
|M)ltish. annoying action that you in
dulge in simply because you are nervous
or worried doesn't do you one bit of
good and makes every body around you
uucoiufortabie, and long after the
words hare been uttered or the deed
done the memory will rankle and burn
and vou will wish you lied held on to
your tongue and your temper before
you got into such a ecre|«e.
The Atlantic Monthly for Noveuibei
will rontalu aiming other features three
shurt stories of esceptioiial ttMlifJ In
Harvest Time, by A M hweil; The
Apperttiou of tirau'ther Hill, by Hots
land ti, linbtusoiil and The I ace of
Heath, by I* Iktognll No recent se
rles of paper* in the Atlantic has at
tracted inure wide silent hilt than
Heoege llirkheck IIUfa A Talk over Au
tug raphe The lift It and last of the
aerlea appear* In title issue I afeadio
Hearn's contribution t«*r* the eug
festive till* After lit* War. and taqult*
aa readable a* hia other delightful
studio* of JapaU I'oeni*. eshaustlve
lltaik Itevietas. and the usual deport
ments etuiplal* the issue ,
Ika souse Is < ol*l alien love gees uut
HE HAH PITY.
Jabez Wllaon, whoa* Vi year a of
lift) had been pawned In »lngle lde*aod>
lie**, had little III common Ui do with
the rcat of the world.
Ill* fault* were many and hi* vir
tue* few. Ill* two redeeming potnW—
rail them virtue* If you will—were gen
eriadty verging on weakne** In Imllvlu
ual cate* and a love for monk.
I .ate one night he came out of Ht.
.lame*' hall.lnittoned hi* coat up round
hi* ne< k. dived hi* band* Into he
pocket* and made for home. On til*
way he entered a cafe and took a cup
of coffee.
A* he alpped the leverage hi* ear,
ever on the alert for mu*le caught the
nound* of a voice that wa* *t once rich
and melodlou*
J»boK, IlMtened attentively for live
minute*, during which time the *ong
continued with abort Interval* of *1
leru ■>.. At length It etopped altogether.
,laet>j! naked the waiter attending him
to fetch In the p*-r»on alnglng.
<j'ho waiter returned In lea* than a
minute, indicting lit a young man of n
diatlnctlv Italian cant of countenance,
whom ho Introduced a* l.nlgl the tar
tie waaher,
"Well, my man you have an extreme^
ly fine voice, Idd you know that?
With due care and rigid training there
ought to Ik- both fame ami fortune In
It. You would like to I* eomethlng
better than u bottlo waaher all ymtr
life, eh, my man V
l.ulgl. In a wondering aorl of way
maided. .. , ,.
"That'* all right, that1* all right, rny
man. Here la rny card, Come and *<•<•
fui* ui my hoitHf fo*inorrow hi HwK *
want to have a aerlon* talk with you.
Can you comer' .
••Yea, alt- that I*. no, air. Not to
•norrowr I work till II every night dur
Ing the week." „
"Ob, oh aut-h In th# Irony of fate,
mtittered Jabss. Can you eome on
HundayY
• Yea, air; I will come."
True to hla word, I.nlgl. clothed In
i hla Hunday garments, found himself In
i Mr Wllaon'a drawing room Hie follow
tog Humlay evening.
"I.nlgl, you have a nioai ebartnlng
voice. It la, at present, In wlistt I may
term an embryo form. The foundation
la there In nil Ita alreuglh, and n eon
pie of yeara' careful training will place
you will milt a doubt aa one of Hie top
moat bruneliea of the vocal trees.
"You muat make a point of cultivat
ing your voice on every jmaallde wen
alon, I.nlgl. Avoid tboae artlclea of
food Which I abnll give you a Hat of.
that your vocal chorda may retain the
nwoctncaa, alreuglh and fiilneaa that
now mark them,
"Your rlotbea, loo, arc uiisulicd to
the pupil of a vocal profcaaor. You
muat lit youraelf out like a gentleman.
I.nlgl, You muat exercise care, and
take a pride In your jiemoiial appear
a nee In almrt, be In every reaped
worthy of your profeaalon.”
Aa I.nlgl'a profeaalon wna that of
bottle waaherat an Italian ream urn m.
he naturally failed to nee bow be could
well give evidence of Ida occupation
than by the milt tn which he appealed
before thin alrauge gentleman. And
he an Id ao.
"Jiear me; of courae I muat explain
to you, I.nlgl, what I propone to do. I
am too liaaty. First and forenmat, do
you like niuaieV*
”J arn mi Italian,” wna the modeat
re|dy.
“flmnd. A moat Ailing answer.
Now we eome to bualneaa. Would
you like to give up your prcaent men
ial occupation and become, Aral, the
pupil of a musician, and ihen a master
of the art you excel In?"
••'I lia l la beyond my liojiea. air. 1
have no money,”
.laliez Wllaon threw up bln hnuda.
"Tlini'a all right, I w ill nee to ih.it
little matter. Hive me the aaauniuee
that you will put your whole In-art
Into the work 1 have cut out for you,
mid will do your ls*at. I aak for noth
ing more.”
A few dnya later I.nlgl left Ida nlt
nntlon and lav-ame the protege of Mr.
Wllaon. To any that l.i Igl waa.grate
ful would tie to put the feeling he
evinced toward Ida latnefaetor In very
I mild terms. He could find no way of
expreaalug Ida gratitude beyond uink
lug himself aa jierfeet In Ida art aa It
been me (aiaslhle for him to do.
"I.nlgl.” aaid Mr. Wllaon one day,
"I am delighted to tell you tbni It la
now beyond the enpaldlltlea of Kngllah
maatera to teach your further. If re
».hIi>u f/>H I i. if i ato i*aa uf i-iiiit* titil i i n
land to Inmll Into you Hint tittle re
quired to take you to Nnplen, where we
will Hpend the’next year or two."
For the ttrnt time aline their odd no.
quiilutuin e. I.ulgl fulled to luill mi an
Dounrement for Ida lieuoilt with any
Mgu of jili-anure or aatiafnetton. tie
looked gloomy and healtnted to npenk.
"You have alwaya Im*oii extremely
kind mid good to me. Mr. Wllaou. 1
cannot by any imalhle liienna exprean
niv gratutude. Hut the auggeaiion you
have made, although entirely for my
good, tilla me with pain. I enmiot
leave idighmd. lava line hecmme I urn
going to get married."
The dlekena you are!" run red the In
furiated Itiichelor, mud with rage.
"Thin, nlr, la the way III which you
allow your gratitude. You Itiilimi ting
- you ncuurnlrel you ”
lie atopped abort. WlmI nil idiot lie
wan. I.ulgl wun only flenh mid blood,
and young blood til Hint.
"I.ulgl," lie began, after the alienee
of the niouieut, "In tida girl of yourn
a nullable purl tier to aeooin|Mliy ,VOII
ou your upward eareer ihrougti life?
You will maud at ihe head of your
art, aud you will move In the highent
elretea of F.iirofieau noelety,”
"Kite, whaieter her |nml In life now,
may l>e III nulled to grace the draw
ing nnuii of the arlntin'raey, or to nil
! h,v your aide lu the carriage that
| drawn you to your mauniaii."
"You love her now; nhe In everything
| to you. Time may In-, however, when
you may he lad to make odloua com
uuriaoua lietweau her almpllelty aud
the wltiulug facen of mv>re Uniutlful
1 women "
“My kind lieiiefacptr, that la lm|n>a
allde I ahull hive Maggie an much na
| I i|o now."
Jaliea Wtlaon algheil. It wan a nail
blow to bln vanity aud to Ida i-eacv of
mind
' Think It over, lad." he liegau ,
"Wlu u the ttrnt intuga of grief at part
lug are |«ool, you will forget nln>ul
your l.-wly girl In Ihe whirlwind of
your fame and a tie wilt noon pm you
from her mind t'oiue lo me to tier
row and let me know what you Intend
doing "
Tka uelt day Mr Wtiaoa recalvad a
i
visit fr«tn Mnggu. Kin- is me In tear*
to lieu itIm eoiiNctit; hi* heart wa*
touched nt the Might of a woman tn
Morrow, and, reviling hlm*e|f for n
told-Hooded iiioiiMter, lie told her, In an
oulhurMt of generoMlty, to go and mar
ry Luigi Jim many time* AM *lie liked.
After a twelvemonth apent tn Italy,
I. ulgl became perfeet. III* llrat ap 1
I learn me In public waa made aa Oar- S
ardo, and, a» he retreated behind that
curtMlrm that night, old 4 a lie/. Wllaon
waited to preMM hla hands and tell
him that hla dream waa at laal real
ized
,lulie/, Wllaon walked out of hla *o*
II. lior'a ofllee JM-Iinllea*. The (sink of
whtcli lie whm prlnelpal abareholdcr
had fulled, and thla, In conjunction
with a few minor dlaaatera, had role (
bed him of every prniuy he had po*
lie had never In hi* Ilf* done * '
airoke of work, and waa not even ea
paid# of a clerical poaltlou.
Ihe apartmenta he had occupied
were given up; the club waa never,
again to aee him or hear what had Iwe
coma of him; the Mud obi wine* In hi*
cellar fetched aiilflelent to |*iy hla
long ataudlng rent, wlih a ampin* to'
keep him III final and lodglnga for u
few week*—that wa* all.
From til* oenuty "lore he ilrew a
penny every day lo aear<-h the paper*
for new* of Luigi’* *uece*». He could
not bring hlmaelf to write to him, and
to tell him everything It wa* pleas
ant enough to know that the man
whom lie had dragged from obaenrlty
ahould at that moment la- making
Kurop* vIhMile with Ihe aplendor of
hla voice.
One night aa he crouched over the
fire In the do** houoo be frequented,
riodlng Hie paper, a abort imragraph
nt, be foot or the column caught hi*
eye.
"F,arly yealerdey morning the taaly
of a woman waa found In the Or and
. . 1 .,1 . I.. *4. I... *1.4.
Ill/ll *11 v •III’ • / nil' *rf n.ii*.
wife of Hlg I.ulgl, the well known
winger, wltli whom whe Iw wuppowed to
have led u wretched live. 'I here are
no mark* of violence on Hi'1 body, and
the aiitlmrltlew have jiawwed a verdict
of mill hh- while temporarily Inwatie."
JalM-y. Wllwoli* foreeawt had been
ronll/.cd only too fully, and the bro
ken-down mail cried like n child,
A week later lie wtood outwlde the
doe* houwe with exactly a penny In
hlw pocket.
Ho wtood wondering what he wliould
do, when hlw muwlcal Inwtlnctw, which
had been crilabed and lain dormant
for wo long, arowe within him. lie bur
rlcd along tin- wtreet, entered a abop
and piirelmwed a tin whlwtle with hlw
. one remaining <-opper.
An hour later he waw walking wlow
ly along the middle of the road, hlw
threadbare coat buttoned up around
hlw rieek, an old tiattered bat prewxod
tightly down over Hie wtraggllng gray
hair that blew In the cold wind, and
hlw dry ll|w* prewwed agulnat the whla
tie, he waw playing "Home, Hweet
Home”- that waw all lie knew.
In front of a rewplendent hotel lie
wto«w| and played, with one foot on the
pavement. A tall, hlai-k hi-arded gen
tleman, evidently a foreigner, wrap
(ied In a prh-elew* fur coat, came down
the wtep of tbe hotel, In coni|»eiiy with
a beautiful woman, lu the full glare
of I lie lamp.
Inwtlnotlvrly the Inwtrumcnt fell
from the llpw of the player, a* he mut
tered half aloud:
"I.ulgl!"
The Jtallnn peered Into the pale,
pinched, upturned face.
"Ho you have come to thlw, ehV" be
wwked In a wbiwper, lewt hlw compan
ion wliould hear, at the waine time
drawing half a crown from bl* pocket,
"my unfortunate friend."
lie turned abruptly, half awhamed,
when the wonnin by hlw wide told him
to come away from the beggar.
•*1 come, Mlrand.” Then, aw whe took
hlw arm and he handed her In a
brougham, “I have pity for l hew# poor
mawb-lana/'—Pearwon’a Weekly,
rnil«U« All K AJTII “OFF.”
Valnrr *rl» llir Hull- iin.l People ang
Animal* AHhi-r* to II.
The “off ox" Iw the ox on the right
wide of the team. The one on the left
wide Iw the "nigh ox." Tide cornea from
the fact that the driver In thlw country
drive* from the left wide. Tearau turn
oirt to the right nml thlw give* the dri
ver command of (lie wltuallon. Mows
turn the furrow* to the right, wo the
driver can lie on the unpin wed laud.
Tile term* High Him on apply 10
nny iemu or riding animal, and per
Imp* have a wider application In rtc
x.rlblug relative poaltlona. Rider* al
wn.vH mount from the nigh wide of the
home, and artillerymen ride the nigh
liorao. There are eouutrleN where the
driver la mmally on the ofT aide, hut It
i« not the rule. In copying picture* In
engmving the right and left aide*
limn lie reveraed on the plate* to ahow
properly on the print. If thla la not
done we have what la often aeon, the
driver on the ofT aide with Ilia whip In
Ida left hand.
When one la a|Hikeli of aa licilig "on
the off aide” of any quoattou It Impllea
Dial he la aomewliiit out of control, ua
the off ox la not naually a* mating®*
Idc aa the ntgti one; he iloea not come
imi itoae to the driver, not In |ae-aoiml
eouUet with him Milwaukee Jour
nal.
rk«ln«ra|ihi In *purl
Tlie value of photography lit deter
mining the atari or ttiilah of a race
waa aplendtdly evinced hy Mr. Weat,
the lliigthdi expert at Hwanaea. Kng
laud, lie "a napped" tlie Defender and
Valkyrie Juat aa they ware lit colllalon
and hi* picture waa o' great value In
determining the tiduda of the regatta
committee lu arriving at their verdict
III favor of the Defender, for the |de
t ire allowed that the Valkyrie had
p.citty of room and could easily have
molded colliding with the Defendrr
tVr yearn I have tried to Induce race
tnuk naiguatea to properly photo
gi.toh the atari* and Itidahea of all
llielr ImiMUiant rare* If thla were
dour i lie to would !*• a check on atari
era aetllug down or Itulng Jockeya lu
r-vi ue* their own Imd work with tha
gag, amt a preventive of l<ad declalotta
hv Ju Igea In clone conical* where their
eve* vara defective I hope that neat
year the official photographer will ha
aa liMDiriaitl a functionary oa the race
Hack ia tin Judge, atarler or ale ward.
.Saw Verb journal
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
a—, .. i ■ .1. ■■■ " . J—11 — ■■■■■■■ —
Arranging Ihn I*inner Tallin. {
Tbe table ahould ba placed with due *
regard to the chape and >Im of the c
room and alao with proper relation to j f
light air and warmth. No laws are laid ,
down for breakfaat. tea and the ordl- j
nary luncheon. 'I haae are Informal |
occaaiony and much latitude la allowed t
for tha exprevelon of mdlvldual taate; <
but the wine woman, aha who "lookatb ,
wall to the waya of har houaehold," at- f
way# aeca that th# In al reaulU, both In (
comfort and apiieararice, are obtained |
from the meant at hand Neither the ,
al/.e of the family puree nor the quality (
of the aervlee el command, will prevent ,
her from arelng that the family board j
la tactfully arranged and that the fur- (
ntnhinga and acceaaorlea are ao dlapoaed ,
aa to vleld the greateal pv**lblc si/io^pt i
of comfort and convenience under the 1
drcumatance*.
A U-l T CAI.KMIMM PNKK.
The publlfbera of I he Youth’# < ornpaolon
offer to aerni free in every new airbaerlher a
baiulaornn four-page calendar vxjw In,
lithographed in nine bright enlora J ha re
tail mb’* of l hi* calendar I* #0 cent*,
'I1 line* who eilhacrlhc at one*, -.ending
II 7'i, will al-o receive ihn paper free every
week from I he lime the »ul™erlpl Inn I* in
cel nd to January I, I vial. Alao ilia 'I hank*
giving. « hrlaima* and .New Veer a Would#
Number* free, and the < om pardon a full
year, f,: weak*, to Jan. I I-V7. Addrea# I ha
Youth# < ornpanlon l/J « olunilma Avu,
Heaton,
Tha Hniato'a Oanaala Heanlrad.
'The early oaluralletadlffered greatly j
aa to the origin of the notato, write#
John tfllmer Hpeed In November l<a
die'* Home Journal. In England It
waa held to be a native of Virginia,
and In hpaln It waa aald to bare orlg
I jnuled in I’eru Modern opinion hold*
that It la Indlgenoua to the elevated
table landa of f b«l, I’eru, Hoi I via, j
j < oata Idea, Mexleo and aoutbweatern
United Htatea, It probably got to Vlr
frlnla bv the hand* of aome early Hpan
ah explorer#. It la certain, however,1
that It waa not cultivated In Virginia
till far Into the eighteenth ernturv,
and then It waa introduced in the
American Colonleaon account of the
•ateem In which it waa held in Europe.
* arrant tip a Trea.
| Quite a freak of nature can l»a aecn
In a Mg elm tree in Watervllle, Me.
| In the fork of the tree, up a dozen feet
from the ground, a large currant buah
ha* taken root, and waft recentlyloaded
i with currant*
llao k ('ure I* a wonderful I'ougbmedl*
ritin Maa. W. Charter Van Hlclen and
Blaka Avea , Brooklyn, N Y , Oct, IU), V4.
It Ian t the IrlggeNt born that make* Ibe
boat muaic
Tbe man "with the beavfaat muatarbe
often baa tbe I at Id eat bead
l>» Vow MpeealeteT
'iben aend for our book, “How to Bi<ecu
late Hucreaaf ully on Limited Margin* In
drain and Htock Merkel*. " Mailed free.
Oomatock, IluKbe* * (ompeny, Kialto
Building, Chicago, 111.
Many a bummacd giant baa turnad out to
be only e ahadow.
An Knlgmatlral Hill of Para
I For a dinner nerved on tbe dining car*
; of the Chicago, Milwaukee & Ht. 1'aul
j Railway will be aent to any addreaa on
I receipt of a two-cenl pondage ntarnp.
1 Apply to Oeorge II Heaford, general
; paaaenger agent, Old Colony building,
! Chicago, 111.
Tbe hearer of good new* elweye bee a
, eweet voice.
Billiard tabia, awvmd-hand. for aale
1 cheap Apply to or addreaa, H. C. Akin,
! Ml H. Iktb Ht.. Omaha, Neh
A Pmllft* < ereal.
In India, rice i* really cultivated
ver but a email portion of tba
ountry: but from the fact that it i* a
ery prolific cereal, and that whera
town it almoat monopoll/ea the Held,
f forma, aa already undernto/rd, one of
he moat important eropa of the antlra
ountry. In Kriliab Hurrnah tlie rice
rop occnplea about tm per cant of the
'round under cultivation and in addl»
ion to what ie eonaumed by the j/opu
atlon. the anuuitl exportation rcachea
oma !ffi,<><io,ooo buabela While the
rrltielpnl growth lain tire lowland* bor
taring the great rivera, another variety
a cultivated which grown well upon
Irv ground, ami a* far up an tha river
'alleya of the Himalayan. The Hurinah
ice la of rather inferior <|uellty, ami
iut one crop a year la grown
A I Irlld K
ITie pleanaut flavor, gentle action and
toothing effect# of Myrup of k'lgn, wbeo la
need of a laxative, and if the father or
mother ire coativc or bllloun, tiro fOOn*
(ratifying reaulle follow Ha une, no that it
ia the beat family nmoly known, and every
family aliould have a bottle on hand.
Hr all a oner Inagalree In met eanlly r> #»ln»a,
vi,( I*.,rXwC • Oliig r T/nle li»* /ilUli'/l ill » ' '•
in inner i a*e< Wood fomrerf w*>kina> ami a •*'»*•
One of the lent belj* toward heaven in a
(ood mother.
(I In were Ikee wnndvrrel
k)> W irA'itf • Iy huff' f With VAiftt* 'fft I'1'*#*
nn* iui»if ft Of riiHi'/vine i n rn wIHi rini/tc/iniuii
• ITg -All Pirn nt/ipfie/l fi eekf Or. X llBe'nOmv*
Mnrve Uenurrnr. lor M-nUrr U.n ill - nn/'n «'«.
|tnrv.i|</u*<riir#'i,, TrentInc a/"l fTtrinl Ootllrffr/'W
tllueu. «| |.|| U, l/f. glim ,1X11 All I, at.,In ll».|l'a*
leaver wan named for <»ov ,'amnn W.
Ireuver, of Kan an.
"■anaon'a Mafia Cora ■alee."
Wnr/nnimi to iui■ or moimf rnfundnd- dnh ynW
drugglnt lor It. P/kw I* »n»ln.
Brooklyn In /al «d the «/tty of < bufebec.
There are more tiiau bOh.
If tha Ualry la uattlag Teem.
|< an and im thnlold and wvll Wind m/nadf, Mna.
Winnu/w'v Wamino irntr for Children Tnettiing
Hn/rw, at a very low tem| erature auorta
luolntor*.
Wiadom can live on what foot* tramp!#
under tool
1 ■■
The Oreate»t nedltal Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
HUUI KENNEDY. Of NOHOW, NAU
Hu discovered in one of our fomitWA
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from the worst *:rofuU
down to a common Pimple.
He has tried It in over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in two cases
(both thunder humor). He has now in his
possession over two hundred certificates
of its falue, 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. Pead thclabel.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first.
No change of diet ever necessary, bat
the best you ca.i get, and enough of it
Dose, one tablespoonful in water af bed
time. Sold by all Druggists._
1
Timely Warning.
I —The great euccese of the chocolate preparation# of
1 f the houae of Walter Baker A Co. (established
in 1780) has led to the placing on the market
many misleading and unscrupulous imitations
of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter
Baker lb Co. are the oldest and largest menu*
facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and
Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are
used in their manufactures.
Consumers should ask for, and be sure that
they get, the genuine Walter Baker lb Co.'s goods.
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited,
PORCHK8TER, MASS.
a health signal.
The baby's mission, its
work in life, is growth. To
that little bundle of love,
half trick, half dream, every
added ounce of llesh means
added happiness and com*
1 at «. the signal of
perfect health, comfort, good-nature, baby-beauty.
Scott's KwutJtoH is the best fat-food Uiby can have, in
the easiest form. It supplies what he cannot get in his
ordinary food, and helps him over the weak places to |»erfect
growth, For the growing child it u growth. For the full*
grown, new life.
to •*.. to* to* ***** <«»*** ***** to* ***** *•*«** *♦**/ ********
Scott A Downs, New York. All Urugguu. le-aaik