The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, April 28, 1893, Image 2

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    WAITING.
nentiw I fold my hands and wait.
Nor care Tor wind nor tide nor sea.
I rave no more 'gainst time or fate.
For, ioi my own shall come to me.
1 stay my haste; 1 make delays.
For what avails this eager pace?
J stand amid the eternal ways.
And what is mine shall know tny face.
Asleep, awake, by night or day.
The friends I seek are seeking me;
No wind can drive my bark astray
Nor change the tide of destiny.
What matter If 1 stand alone?
I wait with joy the coming years.
My heart shall reap where it has sown
And garner up Its fruit of teal-s.
The waters know their owu and draw
The brook that springs In yonder height*
Bo flows tile good with equal law
Unto the soul of pure delights.
Yon floweret nodding In the wind
Is ready plighted to the bee.
And. muideu. why that look unkind?
For. lol tny lover seeketh thee.
The stars come nightly in the sky.
The tidal wave unto the sea.
Nor time nor space nor deep nor high
•Jan keep my own away from me.
-John Burroughs.
A ROMEO AND .HI] ’.
•Where are you going, Letitia?” de
mands Miss Banbridge severely, gazing
at the trembling Letitia over a pair of
gold rimmed glasses.
‘Just out for a little walk, auntie.
The day is so delicious,” says Letitia,
with her most engaging smile. She is
thinking what an awful thing it will be
if auntie forbids her to go out today of
all days, and Jack waiting for her at the
top of the meadow.
“Now, once for all. Letitia, let this be
understood between us.” says Miss Ban
bridge; “there is to be no intercourse be
tween this house and that of The Court.
You may think 1 am too old to hear
things, but there you are wrong. 1 have
heard a good deal lately about young
Hardinge, who has returned to The Court
after his father’s death; heard, too, with
deep regret, Letitia, that you so far for
got yourself as to dance with him a fort
night ago at the Mainwarings’ lit
tle”—
‘Hop.” suggests Letitia, who is too
frightened by her aunt’s allusion to the
young master of The Court to remember
her society manners.
‘Hop! How dare you use such a
word?” cries Miss Banbridge. “Good
heavens! The manners of this present
day! Now, Letitia, hear me. ft seems
you did dance with this objectionable
young man at the Mainwarings’ ball.
Perhaps you could not help that. But
knowing as yon do of the feud that has
lasted for 50 years between their house
and ours. 1 trnst you have too much re
spect for me —for your name—to recog
nize a Hardinge auywhere."
‘But what has he—er”— nervously,
“what have they all done?” asks Letitia.
her eyes on the marble pavement of the
hall, her heart at the top of the meadow.
Good gracious! if auntie only knew
that she had been meeting Jack every
day for the past fortnight—ever since
that long dance, indeed when—when—
well, he wouldn’t dance with any one
but her And it is all such nonsense
too. A rubbishy old story about a right
of way that happened 50 years ago—and
Jack the dearest, dearest fellow!
‘1 refuse to go into it,” says Miss Ban
bridge, with dignity ‘It suffices to say
that this young man’s grandfather once
behaved in the grossest fashion to your
grandfather—my " with a sigh, ‘sainted
father If you are going out. 1 trust
that if you meet the present, owner of
The Court you will not so much as ac
knowledge his presence.”.
‘1 shan’t bow to him, auntie.” says
Letitia in a very small voice.
Detestation of herself and her duplic
ity is still raging in her heart when she
meets Jack Hardinge in the old trysting
place. She had certainly promised her
aunt not to bow to him. Well, she
doesn’t; she only flings herself into his
arms—glad young arms that close fondly
round her!
‘Oh. Jack, she’s getting worse than
ever She was simply raging about you
as 1 came out. I really thought she was
going to forbid me to come at all. She
says you’re an objectionable young man!’'
“Oh, 1 say.” says fiardinge. "What
have I done to be called names like that?’’
"Nothing, nothing!” cried Letitia,
flinging her arms about in despairing
protest, "except that your grandfather
once punched my grandfather’s nose.”
"Well, I’m awfully sorry.” said Har
dinge, and they both laugh. "Would it
do any good, do you think, if I were to
go down now and apologize for my ex
ceedingly rude old forbear?’
"1 shouldn't advise you to try.” says
Letitia.
"But what are we to do?” says Jack,
his arm round her.
They are sitting on the grass safely
hidden behind a clump of young trees.
The sun is shining madly on their heads;
the birds are singing on every branch. It
is May—delightful May, the lover’s
month—and the hottest May that has
been known for years.
"I don’t know.” says Letitia. with deep
despondence.
“It’s such beastly folly,” says Har
dinge presently in an impatient tone. “If
I were a fool or a poor man or a repro
bate, but I’m not—am 1, now?”
"Oh, no!” says Letitia. She creeps
closer to him and encircles his waist
with her arm, or, at all events, tries
bravely to do so. It doesn’t go half way
around, but that doesn’t matter. She
grasps a bit of his coat and holds on to
him so. "Do you know what you are.
Jack? The dearest old boy on earth.”
"And you—do you know what you
are?” says Hardinge, pressing her fingers
to his lips
"No,” says she.
"Well, 1 can’t tell you,” says he, “be
cause there is nothing on earth fit to
compare you with. You are you, and
that’s all.”
“What a lovely speech! No wonder 1
love you,” says Letitia naively; “but,”
collapsing into gloom, "what’s the good
of it all? Auntie will never let you
marry me.”
“We could marry without her per
mission.” says he slowly.
"Nc. we couldn't." says Letitia, with!
decision. She looks at him earnestly.
“1 wouldn't marry you without her per
mission for anything. We would have
to run away, and that would break liei j
heart. I urn all she has in this world, |
and though she scolds me a good deal 1:
love her. i wouldn't desert her. Jack.” j
“You conld come back again,” says he.;
"Of course 1 know that. But then
she would always feel disappointed in j
me and hurt and— No, no. 1 shall nevei j
do that. She trusts me so."
"Then 1 don’t know what’s going tc 1
be the end of it,” said he.
•‘We must only wait.” says Lietitia I
desi«)ndinglv "And now, Jack, you
had better go. She is sure to come here
presently to see how the men are getting
on with that fence. Yon know what an
excellent woman of business she is. II i
she caught you here”
"mere would bo wigs on the green,
says Jack, laughing. “Well, goodby—
for awhile. 1 suppose if 1 come back
again this evening I shall find you here?’
“Yes—oh, yes! Jack, do take care.
The men will see you!”
"Not they,” says Jack, kissing hei
again. -"And you—what are you going
to do while I’m away?"
"Think of you," with a little saucy
glance at him from under her long
lashes. “By the bye. have you got a
match about you?”
"What on earth do you want it for?1
says he, giving her some wax lights oul
of a little silver box as he speaks. “Go
ing to have a cigarette?”
“Nonsense! I feel as if I want to set
fire to some of those dry little bunches
of grass; fairy tufts we used to call
them long ago. They would bum beau
tifully today, the sun is so hot."
“Well, don’t set fire to yourself, what
ever you do,” says he thoughtlessly.
Once again they kiss and this time real
ly part.
Letitia stands watching him till he is
out of sight, standing on tiptoe as he
gets over the wall to blow a last kiss tc
him. Then coming out from the sheltei
of her trysting place she walks into the
old meadow, now beaten down save
where the tall, coarse tufts of grass are
growing. Lighting one of her matches,
she kneels down and sets fire to the tuft
nearest her. It used to be an amuse
ment of hers in her childhood, and she is
not yet so far removed from those days
as to have lost all childish fancies. Sit
ting down on the side of a tiny hillock
at a distance, she watches the dancing
flames—so small, so flickering, so harm
less. 0
She leans back against the bank be
hind her and crosses her white amis be
hind her head. What a day it is—most
heavenly sweet—quite a drowsy day.
How lovely that light smoke is climbing
slowly uphill and fading away among
the young beech trees above. And the
little flames, like fairies dancing. Per
haps they are fairies who dwell in those
old tufts. No wonder they are dancing
—with rage evidently. Their strong
holds are seized, destroyed by the tyrant
man! No—woman this time. Ah, ah!
In this case woman has come the front
at all events. She had been readint
about the emancipation of women last
night and had laughed over it. After all,
she didn’t want to be emancipated. She
only wanted Jack to love her always—
nothing more. Perhaps the other queer
women only meant that, too, only they
hadn’t found their Jacks yet. Pouf!
How warm it is!
Gradually her head sinks back upon
her arms, her eyelids droop over the soft,
clear eyes. How delicious it is here!
How cozy! Again the eyes open, but
very lazily this time. See how the little
insgcts ran to and fro over her white
frock, hither and thither, all in search
of the great want—food. A passing
thought makes her laugh indolently.
She hopes they will not make food of
her. And then the eyelids close reso
lutely: she leans back. Sleep has caught
her
So sound indeed is her slumber that
she does not know that now the little
black insects are rushing over her, not
in search of food, but of safety—safety
from the tiny hot flames that are creep
ing every moment closer to the thin,
white frock. Now they have touched
her foot and have so far penetrated the
thin slipper as to make her unpleasantly
warm, but not enough to waken her.
She only turns a little and sighs; but
now-1
Now she springs to her feet with an af
frighted scream. Smoke! Smoke every
where! And what is this creeping up the
front of her gown? A thread of fire. It
blows upon her face. She recoils from
it, but it follows her. Madly she lifts
her hands and tries to beat it back. The
men! the men at the fence! Where are
they! Alas, they have all gone to din
ner! Once again a frantic cry bursts
from her lips.
It is answered. At this moment Har
dinge reaches her, and flinging off his
coat he catches her in it. Folding it
round her, he holds her as if in a vise.
What brought him back (beyond the I
mercy of God) he never knew, except 1
that those last words of his, “Don’t set
fire to yourself, at all events,” had seemed
to haunt him after he left her. A fool
ish fear about the words had touched his
lover’s heart and compelled him to mount ;
a wall and look back. In a moment he
had seen.
He quenched the flames in a miracu
lously short time. Letitia is able to stand
up and answer faintly his passionate
questions to her safety, when suddenly a
voice strikes upon them that renders
both dumb.
It is the voice of Miss Ban bridge. She
has been toiling up the hill. She looks
almost distraught.
“Oh, sir,” cries she. catching Letitia in
her arms, “I saw alL I thought I should
have died. Oh, my girl, my darling
child!" She spent her' whole life tor
menting Letitia, but Letitia for all that
is the apple of her eye. “Oh, sir, how
can I thank you? The gratitude of my I
life is yours—the preserver of my pretty
child.” Then the old lady burst out
crying. Half an hour ago she would
have died rather than tell Letitia she was
pretty, but now she lays many offerings
at her feet. Poor feet. They might have
been burned. “If you will add one more
. jrvice to the immeasurable one you hav .
ilready dono me,” says she softly, “you
trill help me to get my poor child back
to the house.”
“But,” begins Hardinge. It seems
wrong to him, even at this supreme mo
ment, to deceive the old lady, to go intc
her house tinder false pretenses. If she
knew his name. A little pressure from
the hand of Letitia decides him. How
can he have scruples when she is so ill.
so frightened?
Silently he passes his arm around her,
and with bor aunt takes her back to
the house. They lay her on a sofa. Miss
Banbridge flings a rug over her burned
dress. |
“She mmt rest here a little before go
ing up stairs,” says she.
“Miss Banbridge,” sa3rs the young man,
now turning with determination toward
her, “I—I wisli to say”
“Sir, it is what I have to say,” says
Miss Banbridge with emotion. "1 have
not half thanked you. How can I? If
there is anything I can do—any wav’ in
which 1 can show m3’ gratitude to 3’ou—
pray name it. In the meantime pray
tell me the ijame of the brave min who
has delivered my niece from the very
jaws of death?”
“Hardinge," says he shortly.
“What!” Miss Banbridge has fallen
back in her chair, staring at him with
wild eyes.
“Yes, Hardinge,” says the young man
steadily, if sorrowfully. He pauses. “Aft
er all,” says he, “I can’t help my name.”
There is a pause; Letitia draws her
breath sharply. “That is true!” says
Miss Banbridge at last in a severe under
tone.
“I can't help having had a grandfa
ther, either.” sa3's Hardinge. taking an
other step.
“No, I suppose not,” most reluctantly.
“Most fellows have grandfathers!”
“I cannot contradict you, sir.”
“Miss Banbridge,” says Hardinge, go
ing closer to her and gazing at her with
all his heart in his e3’es, “you asked me
just now if there was any way in which
you could show your gratitude to me—
about—about this thing. I want no
gratitude. I would have gladly died to
save 3’our niece a pang. But—but you
have given me the opportunity to tell
you that I want—her! I love her. She
loves me. Give her to me.”
“Letitia!” says Miss Banbridge in a
strange voice.
“Oh, yes! It is true,” says Letitia, burst
ing into tears. “I do love him. I loved
him that night at the Mainwarings, and I
have loved him better and better every
day since. He”—her sobs increasing—
“he used to come and see me in the mead
ows where—where I was nearly burned.”
Whether this allusion to the late catas
trophe that might have ended in a trag
edy stills Miss Banbridge’s wrath, or
whether her old heart has been softened
by Hardinge’s plain acknowledgment of
his love for her niece no one can tell. She
turns to Hardinge with a pale face, but
not wholly unkindly air.
“1 must have time to think,” says she.
She hesitates and then says, “This is
very painful to me, Mr.—Hardinge.”
It seems certainly painful to her to
pronounce his name—the name so long
tabooed in her household. “I must have
time—time.” She grows silent. The
hearts of tho lovers sink. Suddenly she
looks up again.
“Perhaps you will do me the honor to
dine with me tomorrow night?” says
she. Her tone is icy, but the two listen
ing to her feel their cause is won. To
ask Mr. Hardinge to dine, to accept hos
pitality at her hands! Oh, surely the
old feud is at an end!
A little sound escapes from Letitia.
“You are cold,” says Miss Banbridge
anxiously, who had thought the sound a
shiver.
“A little,” sa3’s Letitia, who indeed is
shivering from her late fear of what her
aunt might say.
“I shall fetch another rug,” cried the
old lady, running out of the room.
“An opportunity once lost is never to
be regained,” says the ancient cop3’books.
Hardinge and Letitia make up their
minds not to lose theirs. His arms are
round her in an instant: her cheek is
pressed against his.
“It is all right. She will give in. I
feel as if I loved her,” says Hardinge.
“Oh, Jack!” says Letitia, “wasn’t it a
good thing I was nearly burned to death?”
“Oh, hush, darling! Hush, Letty! 1
can’t bear to think of this day.”
“Well, I can,” says she, laughing fee
bly. “I shall think of it always. It has
given us to each other forever.”—The
Duchess in Philadelphia Times.
Wasting: Valuable Time.
An old farmer died in a little village
in the neighborhood of Paris. His for
tune, the fruit of years of patient toil,
was invested in a nice compact little
farm. A nephew of the departed, believ
ing himself to be heir, called a few days
later on the lawyer, and before saying a
word about the succession thought it
only right and proper to shed a few tears.
“Poor uncle,” he murmured, “so kind,
so affectionate. To think that 1 shall
never see him again."
The notary allowed the young man to
give full vent to his sorrowful emotions,
after which he quietly observed:
“I suppose you are aware that your
uncle has left you nothing?”
“What!” exclaimed the nephew, sud
denly changing his tone. “I’m not down
in the will? Then, why on earth did you
let me stand weeping there and making
a fool of myself for a good half hour?”—
Soleil du Dimanche.
To Live an Old Man.
“I understand young Briefless is about
to marry the daughter of old Bonds, the
millionaire.”
“Yes, so I am told.”
“Will he give up the law business?”
“Yes. He will give up the law busi
ness and go into the son-in-law business.”
—Texas Siftings.
Her Remarkable Taste.
“Do you think, young man, that you
could give my daughter all she asks for?”
questioned papa grimly.
“I—aw—think so, sir,” murmured the
lover bashfully. “She says she wants
only me.”—Exchange.
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16— Malaria, Chills, Fever and Ague .25
17— Piles. Blind or Bleeding. .25
18— Ophthalmy, Sore or Weak Eyrs.25
19— Catarrh, Influenza, Cold in the Head .25
20— Whooping Cough.25
21— Asthma, Oppressed Breathing. .25
22— Ear Discharges, Impaired Hearing .25
23— Scrofula, Enlarged Glands, Swelling .25
24— General Debility, Physical Weakness .25
25— Dropsy, and Scanty Secretions. .25
26— Sea-Sickness, Sickness from Riding .25
27— Kidney Diseases.25
29— Sore Mouth, or Canker.— .25
30— Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed.. .25
31— Painful Periods.25
34— Diphtheria, Ulcerated Sore Throat.. .25
35— Chronic Congestions & Eruptions. .25
EXTRA NUMBERS:
28— Nervous Debility, Seminal Weak
ness, or Involuntary Discharges.1.00
32— Diseasesof the Heart,Palpitation 1.00
33 -Epilepsy, Spasms,St. Vitus’Dance... 1.00
Sold by Dru^txidta, or A**nt ]>oRt-i>:ii<l on receipt of price.
I>u. HraiPHRKYg’ Manual 11» pai.-i*n. mmi.hu frhe.
lllJ.HIMIKKYK* HKD. CO.,1 II St 11 3 William St.. Sow Yorlr.
S PE GEF3 CS.
HUMPHREYS’
WITCH HAZEL OIL
“THE PILE OINTMENT.”
For Piles—External or Internal, Blind or Bleeding;
Fistula in Aim- Itching or Bleeding of the Rectum.
The relief is immediate—the cure ci rtaiu.
PRICE, 50 CTS. TRIAL SIZE, 25 OTS.
Sold by Druggists, or sent post-paid on receipt of price.
HUMPHREYS’ 31 ED.f’O., 111 & 113 William St., NEW YORK
fRipans TabulesTI
Ripans Tabules are com- J
pounded from a prescription f
I widely used by the best medi- ♦
cal authorities and are pre- j
sented in a form that is be- i
coming the fashion every- j
where.
I Ripans Tabules act gently ?
but promptly upon the liver, 3
stomach and intestines; cure j
dyspepsia, habitual constipa- $
tion, offensive breath and head- 3
ache. One tabule taken at the f
first symptom of indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after eating, or depression of
spirits, will surely and quickly
remove the whole difficulty.
Ripans Tabules may be ob
3 tained of nearest druggist.
3 Ripans Tabules
♦ are easy to take,
j quick to act, and
t save many a doc
| tor’s bill.
WANT AN WANT TO
3HTERE/7 ENJST LIFE
1 rrl AT SMALL
jTHE WORLD? EXFENJE?
READ THIS!
A great many people suffer the aches and pains caused
by diseased kidneys, and do not realize their danger until
it is too late. Back-achc, Constipation, Nervousness, Loss
of Appetite, Failing Eyesight, Rheumatic and Neuralgic
pains in the Back and Limbs indicate Kidney Disease,
which, if neglected, result in death.
Oregon Kidney Tea !
WILL CURE THESE TROUBLES.
TRY IT. THE EXPENSE
IS SMALL.
You can not enjoy life when you suffer. You
will take more interest in the world when you
are well.
Dr. Hathaway,
(Regular Graduate.)
The Leading Special let of the United State,
In Bis Line.
Private, Blood, Skin and Nervous Diseases.
Young ann
Kiddle Ageil fv
Men; Remark
able results hav<?
followed my
treatment Many
YEARS of var
ied and success
ful EXPER1- /
ENCE ill tbe uso t
of curative meth
. ods that I alone
gown and control
for all disorders
of M E N. who
have weak or un
developed or dis
eased organs, or
who are suffering
from errors of
youth and excess
or who are nerv
ous and 1MPO
TENT, the scorn of their fellows and the con
tempt of friends and companions, leads mo to
GUARANTEE to all patients, If they can pos;
simv be RESTORED, MY OWN EXCLUSIVE
TREATMENT will AFFORD A CURE
ra'-’KEMEMiiKK, that there is hope for
YOU. Consult no other, as you may WASTE
VALUABLE TIME. Obtain my treatment at
once.
Female Diseases cured at home without in
struments; a wonderful treatment.
Catarrh, and Diseases of the Skin, Blood,
Heart, Liver and Kidneys.
Syphilis. The most rapid, safe and effective
treatment A completo cure guaranteed.
Skin Diseases of all kinds cured where many
Others have failed.
Unnatural Discharges promptly cured in a
few days. Quick, sure and safe. This include*
Gleet and Gonorrhoea.
MY METHODS.
1. Free consultation at tlie office or by mail.
2. Thorough examination and careful diagnosis,
u That each patient treated gets the advantage
of special study and experience, and a
specialty is made of hi3 or her disease.
4. Moderate charges and easy terms of payment.
A home treatment can be given in a majority
of cases.
Send for Symptom Blank No. 1 for Men.
No. 2 for Women.
No. 3 fo* Skin Diseases.
Sen l lflo for.&s*p?.go Reference Book for Men
and Yv omen.
All correspondence answered promptly. Bus
foe**.; .strictly confidential. Entire treatment
sontf: ?e from observation. Bcferto banks in Si.
Joseph and business men. Address or call on
a J. N. HATHAWAY, M. D.f
*.nru‘‘T 6th and Ffiwmad Sts.. St. Jose oh. Ur*
14 unsurpassed in the
i rc:itment <if all
PRIVATE DISEASES
mid all WEAKNESS MEII
and i)JS())M)E)>S of IiILIi
w IK years experience.
|in Q All forms of Fe
^ Un 0 male Weakness,
H Catarrh. Klieumatism,
t i’rivate, lilood. Nervous,
r Skin and Urinary Diseases.
SPECIALIST
PRESIDENT
NEW ERA Medical and Surgical Dispensary
CONSULTATION FREE,
PILES, FISTULA, FISSURE permanent
ly cured without use of knife, ligature or
caustic.. All maladies of a private or del
icate natures of either sex, positively cured.
TREATMENT BY MAIL—Address with
stamp for particulars, which will bo sent
in plain envelope. P, O. Box 654.
Office, 113 S. 15th Street, OMAHA, NEB.
► *1.1. PHOTOGRAf= HS Ofi A1
► RASE SILK HANDKERCHIEF.
V Millar good Photo, a white (bow or old; Silk lland-j
h kerehl«r, with a P. O. or Expreu Money Order for $1,J
I *nd wo will Photograph the picture on the oilk. BeantI-1
L ful effect. PERMANENT picture. WILL NOT FADE or?
^ / ✓ WA8II out. Inis forever, ev-rybodj*
t PHOTO "■■‘•-I
►. . . TTTT.STUDIO 313-3M7S.15th,0|HAHAJ
Otis HOT 1893 rLOWES SEES cm2.
wSfot FLOWER SEEDS
Vaneties, FREE ■
A n l'n paralleled Offer by an
Old-Established und Kell
able Publishing House!
£ The Ladies’ World is a large 20
page, 80-column illustrated Maga
zine for ladies and the family circle.
It is devoted to stories, poems, ladies'
fancy work, artistic needlework,
home decoration, housekeeping,
fashions, hygiene, juvenile reading,
etiquette, etc. To introduce this
charming ladles' paper into 100,000
1 homes where it is not already taken, we now
make the following colossal offer: Upon re
ceipt of only 12 Cent* is silver or stamps, tee
smd The Ladles* World for Three
Months, and to each subscriber we will also send
_ Free and postpaid, a large and magnificent CoL
lection of Choice Flower Seeds, two hundred varieties,
including Pansies, Verbenas, Chrysanthemums, Asters, Phlox
Drummoudii, Balsam, Cypress Vine, Stocks, Digitalis, Double
Zinnia. Pinks, etc., etc. Remember, twelve cents pays for the maga
zine three months and this entire magnificent Collection of Choice
Flower Seeds, put up by a first-class Seed House and warranted
fresh and reliable. No lady can afford to miss this wonderful
opportunity. We guarantee every subscriber many times the value
or money %ent, and will refund your money and make you a present
of both seeds and Magazine if you are not satisfied. Ours Is an
old and reliable publishing house, endorsed by all the leading news
papers. We have received hundreds of testimonials from pleased
patrons during the past five yean: “ I had beautiful /lowers from
the seeds you sent me two years ago andfrom expertsnet know the seeds
are exactly as advertised."—Mrs. N. C. Bayum, Dans, Wis.
“ Myself and friends have sent for various things advertised bn
v»ti, and have found them to be entirely satisfactory." — M. J.
Davis, Brooklyn, N. Y. Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher (a regular
subscriber), and Grace Greenwood, each , “"
ordt-red our seeds last season. Do not con
found this offer w ith the catchpenny s
of unscrupulous persons. Write U
don't put it off! Six subscriptions and six,
Seed Collections sent for 60 cents.
SPECIAL OFFER! ZSWSS
for above offer, and naming the paper in which
the saw this advertisement, w* will send free, in
addition to all the above, one packet of the cele
brated Eckford Sweet Peas, embracing!
the- newest varieties, including Boreatton. Isa 1
Eckford, Splendor, The Queen, Orange Prinee, ’
Apple Blossom, etc. Sweet Peas are the most pop.
md fashionable bouquet flowers now cultivated, i_
th- Eckford Varieties which we offer, are the largest, J
finest and most celebrated known. They grow to »^_w.
height of 6 feet, and produce for three months a continuous pro
fusion of fragrant blooms of the most brilliant coloring.
ANOTHER GREAT OFFER ! Vssat{!ps&
subscription price) we will send The Ladlea* World for One
Year, together with our magnificent Collection of Choice Flower
heeds above described, likewise one packet of the extensively adver
tised and justly celebrated Eckford Sweet Peas. Address:
*. H. MOORE Ac CO., 2? Park Place. New York.
WONDERFUL!
'1 lie cures which are being effected
by Drs. Starkey & Palen, 1529 Arch
St,, Philadelphia, Pa., in Consumption,
Catarrh. Neuralgia, Bronchitis, Rheu
matism, anu all chronic diseases by
their compound Oxygen Treatment is
indeed marvelous.
It you area sufferer from any disease
which your physician has failed to cure,
write lor information about this treat
ment. and their book «»f two hundred
pages, giving a history of Compound
Oxygen, its nature and effects with nu
merous testimonials Irom patients, to
whom you may refer for still further
information, will he promptly sent,
without charge. ;' j
This book aside from its great merit
«s a medical work, giving as it does,
the result of years of study and experi
ence. you will find a very interesting
one. s
Drs. STARKEY & PALEN.
5129 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Did Sutter St.. San Francisco, Cal.
Please mention this paper.