The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, November 04, 1909, Image 7

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    Meredith
Nicholson «
ILLUSTRATION BY
RAY WALTERS
COPYR/CHF 1907 BY BO BBS -BERR/LL Ca
SYNOPSIS.
Miss Patricia Holbrook and Miss Helen
Holbrook, her niece, were entrusted to
the care of Laurence Donovan, a writer,
summering near Port Annandale. Miss
Patricia confided t<» Donovan that she
feared her brother Henry, who, ruined by
a bank failure, had constantly threatened
her for money from his father’s will, of
which Miss Patricia was guardian. They
came to Port Annandale to escape Henry.
CHAPTER I.—Continued.
“If a strange knight in quest of a
lady comes riding through the wood,
how shall I know him? What valorous
words are written on his shield, and
does he carry a lance or a suit-case?”
“He is the Knight of the Sorrowful
Countenance,” said Miss Holbrook in
my own key, as she rose. “You would
know him anywhere by his clothes
and the remarkable language he uses.
He is not to be taken very seriously
—that's the trouble with him! But I
have been afraid that he and my
brother might join hands in the pur
suit of us.”
“But the Sorrowful Knight would
not advance his interests by that—
he could only injure his cause!” I ex
claimed.
“Oh. he has no subtelty; he’s a
very foolish person; he blunders at
windmills with quixotic ardor.”
“Won't you please say good-night
to Miss Holbrook for me?” I said, my
hand on the door.
And then an odd thing happened.
I was about to take my departure
through the front hall when I remem
bered a short cut to the Glenarm gate
from the rear of the school. I walked
the length of the parlor to a door that
would, I knew, give ready exit to the
open. I bowed to Miss Pat, who stood
erect, serene, adorable, in the room
that was now touched with the first
shadows of waning day, ahd her slight
figure was so eloquent of pathos, her
smile so brave, that I bowed again,
with a reverence I already felt for
her.
l nen as 1 nung tne aoor open anu
stepped into the hall I heard the soft
swish of skirts, a light furtive step,
and caught a glimpse—or could have
sworn I did—of white. There was
only one sister in the house, and a
few servants; it seemed incredible
that they could be eavesdropping
upon this guest of the house. I
crossed a narrow hall, found the rear
door, and passed out into the park.
Something prompted me to turn
when I had taken a dozen steps to
ward the Glenarm gate. The vines on
the gray stone buildings were cool to
the eye with their green that hung
like a tapestry from eaves to earth.
And suddenly, as though she came out
of the ivied wall itself, Helen Hol
brook appeared on the little balcony
opening from one of the first-floor
rooms, rested the tips of her fingers
on the green vine-clasped rail, and,
seeing me, bowed and smiled.
She was gowned in white, with a
scarlet ribbon at her throat, and the
green wall vividly accented and
heightened her outline. I stood, star
ing like a fool for what seemed a
century of heart beats as she flashed
forth there, out of what seemed a
sheer depth of masonry; then she
turned her head slightly, as though in
disdain of me, and looked off toward
the lake. 1 had uncovered at sight of
her, and found, when I gained the
broad hall at Glenarm House, that I
still carried my hat.
An hour later, as I dined in solitary
state, that white figure was still pres
ent before me; and I could not help
wondering, though the thought an
gered me, whether that graceful
head had not been bent against the
closed door of the parlor at St. Aga
tha's, and (if such were the fact) why
Helen Holbrook, who clearly enjoyed
the full confidence of her aunt, should
have stooped to such a trick to learn
what Miss Patricia said to me.
CHAPTER II.
Confidences.
Miss Patricia received me the fol
lowing afternoon on the lawn at St.
Agatha’s where, in a cool angle of
the buildings, a maid was laying the
cloth on a small table.
“It is good of you to come. Helen
will be here presently. She went for
a walk on the shore.”
“You must both of you make free
of the Glenarm preserve. Don't con
sider the wall over there a barricade;
it’s merely to add to the picturesque
ness of the landscape.”
Miss Patricia was quite rested from
her journey, and expressed her pleas
ure in the beauty and peace of the
place in frank and cordial terms.
“I could ask nothing better than
this. Sister Margaret is most kind in
every way. Helen and I have had a
peaceful 24 hours—the first In two
years—and I feel that at last we
have found safe harborage.”
“Rest assured of it, Miss Holbrook!
The summer colony is away off there
and you need see nothing of it; it is
quite out of sight and sound. You
have seen Annandale—the sleepiest
of American villages, with a curio
shop and a candy and soda fountain
place and a picture postcard booth
which the young ladies of St. Aga
tha's patronize extensively when they
are here. The summer residents are
just beginning to arrive on their shore,
but they will not molest you. If they
try to land over here we’ll train our
guns on them and blow them out of
the water. As our neighbor beyond
the iron gate of Glenarm I beg that
you look upon me as your man-at
arms. My sword, madam, I lay at
your feet.”
“Sheathe it, Sir Laurance; nor
draw it save in honorable cause.” she
returned on the instant, and then she
was grave again.
“Sister Margaret is most kind in
every way; she seems wholly discreet,
and has assured me of her interest
and sympathy,” said Miss Patricia, as
_____-,
I Saw a Dark Figure Sprawled on the Veranda.
though she wished me to confirm her
own impression.
“There's no manner of doubt of it
She is Sister Theresa's assistant. It
is inconceivable that she could pos
sibly interfere in your affairs. I be
lieve you are perfectly safe here in
every way, Miss Holbrook. If at the
end of a week your brother has made
no sign, we shall be reasonably cer
tain that he has lost the trail.”
“I believe that is true; and I thank
you very much.”
I had come prepared to be disil
lusioned. to find her charm gone, but
her small figure had even an added
distinction; her ways, her manner an
added grace. I found myself resist
ing the temptation to call her quaint,
as implying too much; yet I felt that
in some olden time, on some noble
estate in England, or, better, in some
storied colonial mansion in Virginia,
she must have had her home in years
long gone, living on with no increase
of age to this present. She suggested
peace and gentleness and a beautiful
patience: and I strove to say amusing
things, that I might enjoy her rare
luminous smile and catch her eyes
when she gave me her direct gaze in
the quick, challenging way that
marked her as a woman of position
and experience, who had been more
given to command than to obey.
“Did you think I was never coming.
Aunt Pat? That shore-path calls for
more strenuous effort than I imagined,
and I had to change my gown again.”
Helen Holbrook advanced quickly
and stood by her aunt’s chair, nodding
to me smilingly, and while we ex
changed the commonplaces of the day,
she caught up Miss Pat's hand and
held it a moment caressingly. The
maid now brought the tea, Miss Pat
poured it and the talk went forward
cheerily.
“Oh, Mr. Donovan," said Helen Hol
brook, as I put down her cup, “there
are some letters I should like to write
and I wish you would tell me whether
it is safe to have letters come for us
to Annandale; or would it be better
to send nothing from here at all? It
does seem odd to have to ask such
a question—” and she concluded in a
tone of distress and looked at me ap
pealingly.
“We must take no risks whatever,
Helen,” remarked Miss Pat, decisively.
“Does no one know where you
are?” I inquired of Miss Patricia.
“My lawyer, in New York, has the
name of this place, sealed; and he
put it away in a safety box and
promised not to open it unless some
thing of very great importance hap
pened.”
“It is best to take no chances,” I
said; “so I should answer your ques
tion in the negative, Miss Holbrook.
In the course of a few weeks every
thing may seem much clearer; and in
the meantime it will be wiser not to
communicate with the outer world.”
“They deliver mail through the
country here, don't they?” asked Hel
en. “It must be a great luxury for the
the farmers to have the post-oSlce at
their very doors.”
“Yes, but the school and Mr. Glen
arm always send for their own mail
to Annandale.”
“Our mail is all going to my law
yer.” said Miss Pat, “and it must, wait
until we can have it sent to us with
out danger.”
“Certainly, Aunt Pat,” replied Hel
en, readily. “I didn't mean to give
Mr Donovan the impression that my
correspondence was enormous; but it
is odd to be shut up in this way and
not: to be able to do as one likes in
such little matters.”
It was time for me to leave and I
picked up my hat and stick. As I
starred away I was aware that Helen
Holbrook detained me without in the
least appearing to do so, following a
few steps to gain, as she said, a cer
tain view of the lake that was par
ticularly charming.
“There is nothing rugged in this
landscape, but it is delightful in its
very tranquillity,” she said as we
loitered on, the shimmering lake be
fore us, the wood behind ablaae with
the splendor of the sun. She spoke of
the beauty of the beeches, which are
of noble girth In this region, and
paused to indicate a group of them
whose smooth trunks were like mas
sive pillars. As we looked back I saw
that Miss Pat had gone into the house,
driven, no doubt, by the persistency of
the west wind that crisped the lake.
Helen's manner changed abruptly, and
she said:
“If any difficulty should arise here,
if my poor father should find out
where we are, I trust that you may be
able to save my aunt anxiety and
pain. That is what I wished to say
to you. Mr. Donovan.”
“Certainly,” I replied, meeting her
eyes, and noting a quiver of the lips
that was eloquent of deep feeling and
loyalty. She continued silent as we
marched on and I felt that there was
the least defiance In her air; then she
drew a handkerchief from her sleeve,
touched it lightly to her eyes, and
smiled.
“I had not thought of quite follow
ing you home! Here is Glenarm gate
—and there lie your battlements and
towers.”
“Rather they belong to my old
friend, John Glenarm. In his goodness
of heart he gave me the use of the
place for the summer; and as gener
osity with another's property is very
easy, I hereby tender you our fleet—
canoes, boats, steam launch—and the
stable, which contains a variety of
traps and a good riding-horse or two.
They are all at your service. I hope
that you and your aunt will not fail to
avail yourselves of each and all. Do
you ride? I was specially charged to
give the horses exercise.”
“Thank you very much,” she said.
“When we are well settled, and feel
more secure, we shall be glad to call
on you. Father Stoddard certainly
served us well in sending us to you,
Mr. uonovan.
In a moment she spoke again, quite
slowly, and with, I thought, a very
pretty embarrassment.
“Aunt Pat may have spoken of an
other difficulty—a mere annoyance,
really,” and she smiled at me; gravely.
"Oh, yes; of the youngster who has
been troubling you. Your father and
he have, of course, no connection?”
“No; decidedly not. But he is a
very offensive person, Mr. Donovan.
It would be a matter of great distress
if he should pursue us to this place.”
“It is inconceivable that a gentle
man—if he is a gentleman—should
follow you merely for the purpose of
annoying you. I have heard that young
ladies usually know how to get rid of
importunate suitors.”
“I have heard that they have
that reputation,” she laughed back.
“But Mr. Gillespie—”
“That’s the name, is it? Your aunt
did not mention it.”
“Yes; he lives quite near us at
Stamford. Aunt Pat disliked his fa
ther before him, and now that he is
dead she visits her displeasure on the
son; but she is quite right about it.
He is a singularly unattractive and
uninteresting person, and I trust that
he will not find us.”
“That is quite unlikely. You will
do well to forget all about him—
forget all your troubles and enjoy the
beauty of these June days.”
We had reached Glenarm gate, and
St. Agatha's was now hidden by the
foliage along the winding path. Helen
threw away the bits of twig when we
came to the wall, and, as I swung the
gate open, paused mockingly with
clasped hands and peeped inside.
“I must go back,” she saifl. Then,
her manner changing, she dropped her
hands at her side and faced me.
"You will warn me, Mr. Donovan,
of the first approach of trouble. I
wish to save my aunt in every way |
possible—she means so much t.p me; i
she has made life easy,_for me where |
it would have been hard.”
“There will be no trouble, Miss Hol
brook. You are as safe as though you
were hidden in a cav§. in the Apen
nines; but I shall give you warning
at the first sign of danger.”
“My father Is—is quite relentless,”
she murmured, averting her eyes.
I turned to retrace the path, with
her; but she forbade me and w&s gone
swiftly—a flash of white through the
trees—before 1 could parley with her.
I stared after her as long as I could
hear her light tread in the path. And
when she had vanished a feeling of
loneliness possessed me and the coun
try quiet mocked me with its peace.
I clanged the Glenarm gates to
gether sharply and went in to dinner;
but I pondered long as 1 smoked on
the star-hung terrace. There was no
disguising the truth that the coming
of the Holbrooks had got on my
nerves—at least that was my phrase
for it. Now that I thought of it, they
were impudent intruders and Paul
Stoddard had gone too far in turning
them over to me. There was nothing
in their story, anyhow: it was pre
posterous, and I resolved to let them
severely alone. But even as these
thoughts ran through my mind I
turned toward St. Agatha’s, whose
lights were visible through the trees,
and I knew that there was nothing
honest in my impatience. Helen Hol
brook's eyes were upon me and her
voice called from the dark; and when
the clock chimed nine in the tow'er
beyond the wall memory brought back
the graceful turn of her dark head,
the firm curve of her throat as she
had listened to the mellow fling of the
bells.
Sobered by these reflections, I left
the terrace shortly after 11 and walked
through the strip of wood that lay
between the house and the lake to the
Glenarm pier; and at once matters
took a turn that put the love of wom
an quite out of the reckoning.
CHAPTER III.
I Meet Mr. Reginald Gillespie.
As I neared the boathouse I saw a dark
figure sprawled on the veranda and my
Japanese boy spoke to me softly. The
moon was at full and I drew up in the
shadow of the house and waited. Ijima
had been with me for several years
and was a boy of unusual intelligence.
He spoke both English and French ad
mirably, was deft of hand and wise of
mind, and I was greatly attached to
him. His courage, fidelity and dis
cretion I had tested more than once.
He lay o.uite still on the pier, gazing
out upon the lake, and I knew that
something unusual had attracted his
attention. He spoke to me in a mo
ment, but without turning his head.
“A man has been rowing up and
down the shore for an hour. When
he came in close here I asked him
what he wanted and he rowed away
without answering. He is now off
there by the school.”
“Probably a summer boarder from
across the lake.”
"Hardly, sir. He came from the di-'
rection of the village and acts
queerly.”
I flung myself down on the pier and
crawled out to where Ijima lay. We
lay by the post that bore the three
lanterns, and watched the slow move
ment of a rowboat along the margin
of the school grounds. St. Agatha's
maintains a boathouse for the use of
studepts, and the pier lights—red,
white and red—lay beyond the boat
man, and he seemed to be drawing
slowly toward them.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
AS TO ORIGIN OF THE SPOON.
Shells Probably First Used for Pur
pose in Prehistoric Times.
The suggestion is offered by a cor
respondent that the domestic spoon
probably owes its origin to the shell.
Shells of the mussel, scallop, and oy
ster, it is believed, were used in pre
historic times as spoons and ladles,
the handle being formed of a piece
of wood split at one end to hold the
shell firmly. Some savage nations
make similar spoons up to the present
day, and the old Highland custom of
offering whisky in a shell ha3 been
probably handed down from genera
tion to generation for untold ages.
Westman in his “History of the
Spoon,” gives Roman specimens, which
are very simple in design—something
like silver caddy spoons—and are
much shorter in the handle than those
from Egypt. Those for common use
were generally made of bronze, iron
or brass. They clearly show how the
shell shape was retained, and their
marine origin is also preserved in the
name of a spoon—cochleare—derived
from cochlea, a shell or cockle. The
Celtic spoon also closely resembled
the shell in form, though made of
bronze. The horns of various animals,
such as the ox, bison and ram, were
often used as drinking cups, and as
the material was found suitable, it
was sometimes used with wood, ivory,
metal, etc., for spoon making. Hence
the ancient expression: “To spoil a
horn to make a spoon.”
Irish Witty Before Foe.
Col. Nugent, commanding officer of
the Irish guards, at the annual dinner
of the Windsor and Eton chamber of
commerce, told a story of an Irish
soldier in the last war.
At dusk of a day throughout which
they had been lying under heavy Are.
an officer crawled up with orders for
the battalion to assault, upon which
the Irishman got up, shook himself
and said: “And whoy not?”
On another occasion when a man
screamed at the loss of a finger on
the battlefield a sergeant shouted to
him: “Hold yer row, yer cowardly
skut; there’s a mon over there who’s
lost his head, and “he hasn't said a
word.”
Sought to Carry Off Servian Bride.
Nasta Saritch, a pretty young peas
ant girl of Koluba, Servia, was walk
ing to church arrayed in her wedding
garments when a rejected suitor and
three friends dashed out before her
and endeavored to carry her off. The
bridegroom rushed to the rescue, and
a tug of war ensued, In which Nasta’s
arms were almost dislocated. The po
lice put an end to the fray by routing
the assailants and the ceremony was
successfully carried out
NOT SO BAD.
Nervous Lady—Don’t your experi
ments frighten you terribly, profes
sor? I hear that your assistant met
with a horrible death by falling four
housand feet from an aeroplane.
Bold Aviator—Oh, that report was
greatly exaggerated.
Nervous Lady—Exaggerated! How?
Bold Aviator—It wasn’t much more
:han two thousand five hundred feet
.hat he fell.
The Best Food for Workers.
The best food for those who work
with hand or brain is never high
priced.
The best example of this is found in
Quaker Oats. It stands at the top
imong foods that supply nourishment
tnd vigor, without taxing the diges
tion, and yet it is the least expensive
food one can eat.
This great food value and low cost
make it an ideal food for families who
want to get the greatest good from
what they eat.
Laborers, factory or farm hands, fed
plentifully on Quaker Oats will work
better and with less fatigue than if
fed on almost any other kind of food.
All of these facts were proved and
very interesting information about
human foods were gathered by Pro
fessor Fisher of Yale University in
1908. In addition to the regular pack
age Quaker Oats is packed in large
sized family packages either #,ith or
without china dishes. 8
He Forgot Something.
“Is that all you have to say to me?”
she queried, looking off into space.
“Great heavens, girl” said he,
a ashed, “what more can I say?
Haven’t I told you that I worship the
very ground you walk on? Haven’t
1 offered you every iota of my worldly
possessions? Haven't I said that you
would never want for anything, that
your relatives could come and stay as
long as they wished, * that I would
work my fingers bare for you, and
Jthat I would devote my entire exist
ence to you?”
“Oh, yes, you said all that,” she re
ilied, wearily, “but—”
“But what?" he asked, tremulously.
“You—you didn’t say right out and
cut ‘I love you,’ and that's what 1
wanted to hear most of all.”
The Rare Gift of Courtesy.
Courtesy includes not merely social
kindness, graces of speech, absence of
ludeness, but honorable treatment of
business associates and of all the fel
low citizens with whom a man of af
fairs may have business to transact.
It ' not American to keep one citi
zen waiting all day at the door be
cause he is poor, and to grant an
other citizen an interview because it
is believed he is rich. Wisdom is not
confined in a purse, and frequently
much wisdom may be learned from a
poor man
$100 Reward, $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to lean
that there Is at least oae dreaded disease that science
has been able to cure In all Its stages, and that to
Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive
cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
being a constitutional disease, requires a constitu
tional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure to taken In
ternally. acting directly upon the blood and mucous
gurfaccs or the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up the constitution and assist
ing nature In doing Its work. The proprietors have
l» much faith in its curative powers that they offer
One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to
cure. Send lor list of testimonials
Addreee F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Two Items.
"I suppose with all this modern
prison philanthropy, abolishing stripes
and convict uniforms generally, they
will soon introduce dress suits for the
well-behaved prisoners in our penal
institutions.”
“Well, you know, they already give
convicts watches and chains.”
Mistaken Identity.
“I always did enjoy that scene in
which Hamlet comes out and solilo
quizes,” said Mr. Cumrox.
“My dear,” replied his wife, “you
are confused again. You have gotten
Hamlet mixed up with that vaudeville
person who comes out and throws his
voice.”
important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
"ASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
fiears the
Signature of <
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
inherited.
“Willie Holt seems to be developing
into a very fast young man.”
“What else could be expected In his
case? Hasn’t his father been fined
nearly a dozen times for exceeding
the speed limit?”
Rough on Rats fools the rats and mice,
but never fools the buyer. The secret is,
you (not the maker) do the mixing. Take
a hint, do your own mixing; pay for poi
son only, then you get results. It’s the un
beatable exterminator. Don’t die in the
bouse. 15c, 25c, 75c.
Contentedness in all accidents
brings great peace of spirit, and is the
^jjeat and only instrument in tempor
al felicity.—Jeremy Taylor.
Some people would drown with a life
preserver at hand. They are the kind
that suffer from Rheumatism and Neural
gia when they can get Hamlins Wizard
Oil, the best of all pain remedies.
Of course it is possible to con
vince a woman, but she is apt to for
get that she has been convinced, and
then you have to do it all over again.
_ are you losing flesh
through a racking cough that yon cannot seem to
check.' A bottle or Allen’s Lung Balsam will cure
1 he trouble and help you back to health.
An office seeker’s love for his coun
try is a good deal like that of a titled
foreigner for an American heiress.
Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugar-coated, easy to
take as candy, regulate and invigorate stomach,
liver and bowels and cure constipation.
You can save a lot of time by being
sure where you want to go before
starting.
-in the baking
that is where Calumet
Baking Powder proves
its superiority; its
wonderful raising power; its never-failing ability
to produce the most delicious baking—and its
economy. In the baking—that is the only way
you can successfully test it and compare it with the
high price kinds. You cannot discredit these
statements until you have tried
CALUMET
the only high grade dicing powder selling at a moderate
cost. $1,000.00 is offered to anyone finding the lead
trace of impurity, in the baking, caused by Calumet.
Ask your Grocer—and insist that you get Calumet.
Received Highest Award World’s Pore
Food Exposition, Chicago, 1907.
The Wizard of Horticulture
Hon. Luther Burbank
says: “Delicious is a gem—the finest ■
apple in all the world. It is the best
in quality o£ any apple I have so far
tested ”
And Mr. Burbank knows.
Delicious is but one of the hun
dreds of good things in Stark Trees
—the good things yon should know
about before you plant this fall or
next spring.
Let us tell you about them by
writing today for our complete, illus
trated price-list-catalogue which de
scribes our complete line of fruit
trees, ornamentals, etc.
Wanted
A Bright, Capable Man
in each county of this state to sell
Stark Trees on commission. No pre
vious experience necessary. The
work is pleasant, clean work, highly
profitable, and the positions are per
manent to the right men.
Many of our salesmen are earning
$50 to §3o per month and expenses;
some are making more. You can do
as well or better if you're a hustler
and trying to succeed.
No investment called for; we fur
nish complete order-getting outfit
free and the most liberal contract.
For complete information address tbe Sales Manager of
Stark Bro’s. N. & O. Co., Louisiana, Missouri
Raising!'temperature
depends upon the heater—how
constructed—whether it gets all
the fuel-energy or only some of it.
If the heater is a
PERFECTION
Oil Heater
(Equipped with Smokeless Device)]
the raising of the temperature is
certain.
Turn the wick as high or low as
it will go—there’s no danger, no ^
smoke, no smell—just an emphatic
raising of temperature. The
Automatic Smokeless Device
is a permanent check upon carelessness, making the heater
safe in the hands of a child. Burns nine hours with one
filling, heats all parts of a room quickly.
Oil indicator tells amount of oil in the all-brass font. Damper top.
Cool handle. Aluminum window frame. Cleaned in a minute. Finished
in Nickel or Japan. Various styles and finishes.
Every Dealer Everywhere. If Not at Yours, Write for Descriptive Circular
to the Nearest Agency of the
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(Incorporated)
Waste Material.
In process of time it was observed
that the multi-millionaire philanthrop
ist had ceased giving costly library
buildings to towns and cities.
“Why is this, Mr. Canaggy?” the re
porters asked him.
“Young men,” he said, “what is the
use of building great houses for li
braries when all a man needs for an
education is five feet of books?”
Whereat they marveled, but they
could not answer him.
Sheer white goods, in fact, any fine
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done in a
manner to enhance their textile beau
ty. Home laundering would be equal
ly satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
improved appearance of your work.
Hardly.
“Would you," he asked, “care to
live to be 100 years old?”
“Not if anybody knew it,” she re
plied.
There’s a rich, satisfying quality in
Lewis’ Single Binder that is found in no
other 5c cigar.
Some family skeletons are padded
beyond recognition.
Busted
Many a man goes broke—in Health
—then wealth. Blames his mind—
says it don’t work right; but all the
time it’s his bowels. They don’t work
—liver dead and the whole system gets
clogged with poison. Nothing kills
I good, clean-cut brain action like con
, stipation. CASCARETS will relieve
! and cure. Try it now. 91a
CASCARETS 10c a box for a week's
treatment. All druggists. Biggest seller
in the world. Million boxes a mouth.
j Paper-Hangers & Painters
I You can greatly increase your business with no ex
tra investment by selling Alfred beats’ Prlae
Wallpaper. We want one good worker in each
! vicinity and to the first worthy applicant will send
i FREE, by prepaid express, five large sample*
• books showing a *250,000.00 Wallpaper Stork
i for customers to select from. We offer li»>eral profits
j to our representatives. Answer quickly that you may
get the agency in your vicinity for 1910.
| Alfred Feats Co.. 144-146 Wabash ATe.,Chlc**o»
‘
'__ _ J
IBANK riYTIIDCC (Hl«nt
STORE rl A I UK CO SCHOOL.
I „ . GEORGE GRAY
620 W yandotte, Kansas City, Mo,
niTFIIT^ WatioaE.Coleman,Wash,
r &1 I rM i Jk ington, D C. IJooksfree. Iludt
I H ■ *■■ w ■ W eat references. Beet result*
W. N. U.. OMAHA, NO. 45-1909.
--,---;-»r„ -rw >» j
A Clem Man
Outside cleanliness is less than halt the battle. A man msy
scrub himself a dozen times a day, and still be unclean. Good
health means cleanliness not only outside, but inside. It means
a clean stomach, clean bowels, clean blood, a clean liver, and
new, clean, healthy tissues. The man who is clean in this way
will look it and act it. He will work with energy and think
clean, clear, healthy thought?;.
t He will never be troubled with liver, lung, stomach or blood
disorders. Dyspepsia and indigestion originate in unclean stom
achs. Blood diseases are found where there is' unclean blood.
Consumption and bronchitis mean unclean lungs.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical. Discoyeiy
prevents these diseases. It makes a man’s insides clean
and healthy. It clleans the digestive organs, makes pure, 1
clean blood, and clean, healthy flesh. "
. ■ > * ... . .. ...
It restores tone to the nervous system, aod cures nervous eitwuifiqa sad >
prostration. It contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs. ...
Constipation is the most unclean uncleanliness. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pet,
lets cure it. They never giripe. Easy to take as candy.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
otty dya. Oy IQc.pactage colon all tbira. They dye in cold water better thaa any other dye. Yo.cx.te
nilsarnwotwnMutnppwflaaart. Wnta tertm beiUrt Uoa to Oie. Bleach and Mu Celor*. MONROE DRUB OO.QuMOR, IUmSm,rome****