The Sentinel, 1883-08-10, Page 2Oke 11003110d fence.
=BAT 3. en grat,li2AX,
i wa9 ant no use out: in t%® helm
dn't swiaigtheeoytbenor too tothe
x d iestattleiq aamasing, the apple
iteath their shade ala' watch the
8..
t say i'Iu 'tired, but I' somehow
everything seemed sorter to be
Igo aroui4where there bitumen
r after what I.know I cannot And.
in natur' the sweet apple bloc
'pears to know and pick the pur-
m all; a
ones, perhaps, can stand agitt'
elicate aremade too beautiful to:
in the orchard, among the • oldest
ung apple tree just. startin'out to
kinoetial storm come terin' 'gross
while to the restit didn't, do no,
been away a Spell? Well; how is
town?
ttin' eloao an' hot Tod tate it up
try best. :I'm glad to ,see you're
•
don't gr+ ,Just right with me ; I
can say Why.. •
crop is lookin' fair, I've no right
n:
well, an' I have got a purty stand
ost made, an' :Well, yea 1 Betsy?
hearty as she ought to be, you
ey're, lathe medder lot 'down by
ill race; •
of grass ground as. I've got upon
,� w Bern the grass grows up, an' gits
best, to out it down. It's so with
to go into heroics and the wilderness wit
the nun of your heart," Mariam .says, with
el Slight .sneering senile ; " there'e none• of
that .sort of " Wherever -thou -art -would -
seem -Erica -to•: e" sentiment about ane.
Mamma eays. Ishall find this plush furni-
ture well wear, vilely ; I .almeot *Lb a Head
persuaded Robert against. it."'
• ""Come and see the other .rooms now
they're finished, they look so different to
what they did the. other day," Dolly Drier+,
lumping up, heartily glad of the change of
topic, and eager, to lead the alb= mistress
of it over the perfectly appointed house.
But. Miss Lepeli has no fancy for making
an informal progress over her new demesne.
" Wbere is Robert?" I will wait for
him to take me over the. house, I think
as I wrote to tell him I should cofne up to
lunch with•you/to-day he might have been
at, home to see me." •
4' thought I told. you he hadbeen galled
to a consultation ?"
Be you dI"d, but that doesn't last all
day, 1 s• uppoee ; it's half.past three now ; I
Dant wait aboutfor him all day. Tell him
thinktt"he house and furniture' would be
perfect if they were down at .Walton or
Weybridge ; being in Cavendish Square I
shall never take any interest in either."
" wouldn't give him snob a dishearten-
ing- message for - the werld," Dolly cries
indignantly. " Poor, dear, kind Robert 1,
You'll surely .never. throw sold. water on
his enterperise insuch a way, Marian 2"
"Fortunately for him;1 shall frequently,"
Mies Lepell says, quietly. His enterprises
are apt to end expensively, and I shouldn't
have a :pleasant time of it with my own
people- if .1 were a poor,: harassed, ill -
dressed, careworn wifeand mother, and'
wanted help from them I mean to make
Robert a careful, man, Dolly 1 He'll get no
sympathy for any of his rash'enterprises
from me.'.' •
Tell Robert I hope he'll enjoy himself with
his line friends tonight, and tell him also
that Lord. Killeen is thetype of man above
all others of whom my father disapproves
—an absentee Irish landlord, throwing
away the money. in London that, he: grinds
out of his poor wretohed tenants. Robert
will never do any good in his profession it
he gets intimate with suoh a man."
She goes after having euuoiated this sen-
timent, and. with a cry and a bound of
joyous relief, Dolly `gets herself Into her
own room, where large basins; full of perfect
roses, crimson and cream, in full bloom
and in bud, are waiting for, her to • sew
them in bands and clusters on the bodice
and skirt pt the ivory Satin whioh is to be
Moulded on to her splendid, pliant young.
form at a later period of the day..•
Her first- thought, is that. it she goes to'
Ireland tonight she will miss meeting.
Ronald Maokiver, and how dear a meeting
is to unacknowledged lovers no lovers who
are "" unacknowledged" need, be told. Her
second' is that: if Robert wants her she
must go with him, and, the roses must fade
Unworn, upon but
dress. It is a
little bard, : there is no sign of feeling
the hardship of itin the 'tone in whioh she
says—
".Offered you Darragh! To lend it to
you, do you moan?'
" No, no ; to;'8e11 it to me.I'll tell you
all. about it. by and: by;'but get ready to
start' by sin o olook like, a good ,girl. I want
you to see the place, and then you'll under-
stand what a magnificent investment it is.
'Such a ohanoe Domes but once in a life-
time.":
"Knit we go to -night? Lady Killeen'
dance.' Have you forgotten it?"
"",My dear Dolly, you're going tobe frivo-
lous • for the first . time ' in your life, and
want to give up :a tangible -good for a
dance! Yes, , yes ! I see ! the dress is
charming. But we musn't stay talking
about it nowl I want your, sagaoious little
head over there, my dear sister, and; we
must leave here by she o'clock."
• He .goes on his way buoyantly, and Dolly
orders . •.a few neoeasaries . into a small.
travelling -trunk, and •:seen the flower=
wreathed dress laid: aside with &.:gallantly
suppressed sigh.She does not believe
that her brother'
ill at • all the man
for .- Galway any ' More than 'that she
is the girl for it. Still She has nothing
tangibleto urge against • the' scheme,'
:and h thought -:sof --?tihe-, ,e ells'' wrath-
tir !u r t f i 1 Utt 7t' " ie bra f8 di;1`+fiU
noes not nu her with diemay. ,.
They-fore=to:.think- that •Marian;is com-
ing: down from'. her' throne in marrying'
Robert, but they're good-hearted people for.
all, that, and it's only - their love for her
that makes them talk as if no one were
good enough- for her:" Dolly thinks, and
thenshe dismisses Marian from her mind,
and gives a few momenta' consideration to
what "might have been" at Lady Killeen's
dance'tonight. • When: her'.brother Domes
,down't ' swoop. her off ..to the station he.
finds her writing these few: lines to Ronald
Mackiver:
.
". DEA& Rortg n, -Business takes Robert.
to Ireland to -night, and Robert takes me.
'Don't wait for me, therefore, but waltz
with „the nicest girl tin the room. You
shall hear directly I some baok.
Yours always..
Pony- ANNEBLEY."
st
natur, ]:. euppose..The harvest,
or all
t :I can't unde5rstand jestwhy the
$ fall ', .
ows best.' .He, flies things to suit
'wise.lawe; -
ous oftentimes to flgger otic the
es, she's doin' well; she's helpin'
now •
•
use. A likely gal to bake, or'milk'a
not halt the• man I were ten 'year
years will tell upon the best Of us,
os; our Lizzie were the beat of them
ly sev8nteen, so sweet, an' fair an'
;- always good, yet.cheerful bright
y _
the ohurohyard, over yonder, yes-
felt I wa'ant no ase in the field. to -
couldn't swing the scythe nor toss
mown hay;:
ght rd jos sit 'here among the. trees
• come harder when we're old; but
e Lord knotte best. •
�Nh S *EI4TJDNS;.
oft, -
ople Loved Her M uch,
CRAFTER 'I
IN'CAVA11DI88;SWANS, .
the truth, my father think,,
been very extravagant in estab-
self here,. and leaving• sUoh a
he had at 'Walton.. And you
intoleranthe is tb anyihiaglike,
erns a good=lookinggirl of two -or
twenty, large, long, and lissom -
young lady who ::does justice to
tting dresses, of the day, and. oan
own- satisfaotorlly`;; on any lawn
and. ...
a little e affeoted in manner, or
hould be said that she lacks the
lity.,.aal .e 5telis tho�trut3h in
'moi:: �v�tiv"�wa •�xvhvia,�•�sii�iw^a��irc,.
foal. ;
d- work -and assiduous- attention-
lents go `f -anything Robert will
nucoess.; and aa for the it
he has taken and furnished it,
, Marian ! Your father ought, not
intolerant." '
sister of the " Robert" under
Who - says this, and the one to
e makes reply is Marian'•Lepell,
-elect of Robert .Annesley, a clever
rgeon who ,lute. recently given up
tine at ' Walton -on -Thames, : and
o in the neighhorhood of ,Caven-
are.
I like the house . well • enough ;
e up the' idea that t ant disoon-
ith it or with anything else that
eta or doee. for me,. Marian .Bays;
r it is not according to her notion
nese of things that any one should
er as . to any 'opinions she may
told about Robert, her own` peon
rty; "but•you oan hardly wonder
t being elated• at the prospect of
alton. I looked forward to living
r, years to come, having mamma
girls' close by near enough for us.
ether every day would have been
antes -now, here x shall be quite.
Annesley' feels that a faint Dolor
to her brow as her future sister -in-
,
s this,. for' it is in the projected
• things that she (Dolly) is to con -
live with her brother, and now his
t is to be appears to be ignoring
a ent.
npeva _.-.
cse' than aloe*, in faCk"---lliariiitT
in her low, sweet,•unemphatirc
for,Robert is sure to get into a
tiff professionals, and I shall have
blo_,of entertaining them 'at dull
parties ' 'without any help, from
a and the girls." •
haps I shall be able to help you,"
ays reassuringly; and -then some-
ike a feeling of contempt for the
annered puerile grumbler seizes her,
adds—
any rate, .I :can't regard your griov-
'a serious one. If you preferred
mother • and the' girls to 'Rober't,
ain't have taken him ; now that
ve taken him you ought to °think
f his interests; and less. of leaving
would 1 yes, of bourse, yen' w d be ready
•
• .n
town. The sea has been smooth, and the wishing to snake a home. here,: don't Bou,',
sunshine, on the distant hills seems' to hold; Dolly ?" Mr. Annesley says, as they stand
out a' gol'=n promise .fromthe land ,to' in .one of the windows of the dining -hall: at
nn e s are comm for the. A e 1 the
first ti e, 'What wonder that in view .of.
this goodly harbor and these greenand•
gold -appeal lanaisall prudent dread o$
a. what the Lapell' s will think of Robert's
plan" should fade from Dolly's mind?
" In half an hour weshall be tenting the
capabilities of the "Bhelbourne,' the hotel'.
that Killeen deolaree to "be the best in the
world,"' M>
Annesley says. as be seats
-0- You=re=not telling 'Maokiver°' anything'
about Darragh, are you ?" ' r: ,Annesley
sake, as he glances at the • rests on the
envelope. '.
" No ; why not, though 2"
"II prefer telling people that •I've done a,
thing to saying that I, am going to do it.
Now, dear, we're off:" • `
They catch • the train, and are speeding
away through the summer night 'air.
Quaint; picturesque old'Chester is passed,
the valley' of the Dee is rushed through,
and Holyhead is gained before aolne of the
vests reach
R e Lady Killeen's
house in
harles Street. Amongthese late arrivals
is -
a man -who who has run u -fr
om Alder4
o'
p
sh t
and-wh ar - lxa� hie° detention by duty
may . Cause him to., appear a laggard in lova
in the eyes' of Dolly Annesley.
His quick, ;searching glance flies round
the bell -room and conservatory, and 'fills
to find her, Disappointed, but still, after
the Manner ot• men, disposed to make the
best ofit, helooks about him critically.
Dolly's note has' not reached him, for the
simple reasonthat he has not been to the
hotel at whioh she has addressed him.;. but
unconsciously he follows her adviceand
Hooke to solace hamaelf with the "nicest'
girl" in her
absence.-
C1IAPr1R IL .
• A GALWAY DZItIteN +'.
The Morning breaks lilote,
beaminga
nd
bright, as the strainer in Which they have
:.
orspsed discharges her passengers at -Kings.
himself by his sister inthe railway car-
riage. "I say, Dolly, these Irish appreciate
their own land.. ' Darragh's the loveliest
spot' in creation,' Killeen says.°'
These Irish are rather ready to leave
the lovelieat spots iia creation. Do you think
:there can be any reason for it, Robert 2"
Dolly asks... • 9 . " �•.
" Oh 1 of course, I know what you mean
—smolsidering. sedition, anarchy," lawless-
ness, disorder 'and all the rest of it'.are
reigning, or are about to regn, in the land ;
Darragh the next day,,andlook out through
mush duet and a few rose-loranehes, upon.
a superb, uncultured coons.
" Heart and soul, Robart. Do take some of
my :Money to help to put the place in
order."
" My dear girl, that's the very thing I
find I Must earth you,"' he says eagerly ;
" your money must .come kits the. business
—that is, it you will trust .me, Dolly.
Killeen didn't say that hewanted the pur
phase-nr;oney down, but I find. "from the
agent's letter that -if I want Darragh . I
must be prepared topay ten thousand
pounds at once."
"Why, that's just ,my, fortune ; how
lucky i . Take what you want, Robert, and.
I'll some and help you to look for the lead.
mine and to keep the people happy and
contented, and make them good specimens
of the finest peasantry in the world."
" Yes," • .he .says,' meditatively, '.we'll
show •what, a' geed, straightforward, manly,
liberal° line of conduct Dan do,. I wish
with a all my heart that young Thynlie
wasn't coming here to upset us all with his
name litems.. -
" ' --"All your own fault
If yon remain sick when you: can
° Get hop bitters that never-- .ail.
-:-.The weakest woman&' emmalle child,
a
nd
sick®st invalid, as use hop Witte with eafl*?
and crest good. .
—Old men tottering around from Rheumatism
kidney trouble or any weakness will be almost
new by using hop bitter .
—My wife and daughter weremade healthy
by the use of hop bitters and lreoommend them
to my Fieople—Methodist Clergyman. • •
Ask any good tor if hop
Bitters are not the best: family -medicine-7:1
_On earth.
malarial fever; :ague and. Biliousness, will
leave every neighborhood as soon as hop bitters
araive.
--" My mother drove the paralysis and nen-
ralgia° all out of her systea with hop bitters."—
Ed. Oswego Sun.
--Keep the kidneys healthy; with hop bitterri
and you need not fear sickness.
-Ice water is rendered harmless and more
refreshing' and reviving with hop bitters in each
•draught.
- The vigor of youth for the aged and, infirm,
in hots' bitters.
"and that's why Killeen is willing to part
with Darragh. My dear'Dolly, dismiss all
that nonsense from your mind, and -look
plain fasts in' the fade the Drops were
good last year, and?promiee to be even
beter this ; the country is quiet and pros•'
perous, and notat all disaffected. They're
purely private consideration's that make
Killeen want to•sell Darragh.. The people
are just exactly what the landlords make
them. Treat them well and liberally, let
them live like men and 'women, and not
like pigs, • out of the land they labor'on,
and their worst aots'kof rebellion will
be to sing, " Let Erin remember the days
of old,' and. " Wearin' of the Green.' "
"' I'm. prepared to bedelightedwith. Dar-
ragh 'and tobe devoted to the people ; but
several of our friends have failed to find
perfectfelinity on their Irish estates, and I •
don't , think that they were mush leets
.deserving than we are," the girl laughs as
the train runsinto the station --a forth-
itous oiroumatanoe, whish enables her
brother to evade, answering her in a conve-
nient and creditable manner.
It is a busy day in Dublin,and the
" Shelbourne" is wide awake by the time
they reach it—wide awake, but in deshabille
still, as is evidenced bythe oru'mmineea of
the table . cloths and thedustiness of the
furniture of the spaoioue saloon into whioh
they are ushered for breakfast. But there
issuoh warmth and radiance in the atmos-
phere, and euoh a beautiful southern air of
do-nothing and care -for -nothing about the
waiters, that Dolly • feelsthte't words of
reprobation'ae to the staleness of the' soles
and the greasiness ofthe chops will be
worse than idle' and vain. `
Meantime, Robert Annesley, who has all
his life been wont to aot on impulse, and
repent him •of•his :ants at :hi>a ,leisure, is
occupied in -reading up°all the information
he oan glean from an agent's letter and
sundry guide -,books about Darragh' and its the name delights me already. Does ' Dar -
neighborhood.'
nonsensical notions." ° '
" "" You :have always. said :'the Home
Rulers bad a lot of right on their side
Robert?
"Yes,`but I don't want the right 011 their
side to be ranged. against me .now I'm a.
landowner -Lor nearly one ; he has his hand
in half a dozenof the best London journals,
too, and can ,say what he wants through
the press mush too powerfully for him to
be an agreeable opponent." •
`v Why' should you. dread him ? He'll
never oppose you, ' or be anything but a
firm ally to Ruch a liberal employer and
goodlandlord as you willbe," she says,
with an . air of half -questioning astonish-
ment that makes him retort, impatiently—••
""You know nothing , about it, dear.; if
people get stirred up against law and order
they don't Dare whether the lawns lenient
to them and the order agreeable or not:;
they'll rebel against: it, and ,try to make it
hot for those who. enforce 'it; that's what
Killeen found here, and I' believe that's the
reason he's letting me have thin place 'so
cheap."
"Don't come here if you're not. Doming'
with your whole heart, Dolly pries in' ,a
prophetic spirit, and then she wishes she
had bitten her tongue before she. had spoken
thus, when her brother replies : •
""Are you , afraid that I shall sink your
money and never be. able to repay you? My
dear child% you're all vele ; even ;if Darragh
turns out to be a worse investment than I
think it now; you shall not -be &'loser by it."
""Don't fear for me," the . says smiling
encouragingly -trying to win him .from -the
sombre mood into whioh he has fallen for
a few: moments.. "Don't /ear for me !'
Darragh! I. feel that I shall love the plane
All that he learns from the guide -books
is intensely satisfactory.' " Darragh lies
between Oranmore and Galway•Oity, and
from its well -wooded grounds beautiful
views of the islands of Arran and. Galway
Bay are to be had. These grounds are
Wildly ' and romantically beautiful in some
parts, and in others highly , cultivated,
richly planted, and intersected with walks
that are bordered by magnificentshrubs
and -grand old: trees. The house is a hand=
soros gray stone structure with a square
tower at, one end and a turret at the other;
and of sufficient size and importance to
justify its owners in galling it a. castle if
they ;pleased. But hitherto its owners have
rightly been contented to call it simply
Darragh. It 'is said that lead has been
found in large . quantities on the demesne,
but ' mining: operations have never .' been
carried out, and, therefore, we oan hardly
give credence to this' rumor."
" Dolly, I believe I'm' in for a big fortune
in buying this property," Robert says, call-
ing bis sister's attention= to thiepassage,
and' she, being quite - as desirousfor: his.
welfare as he is himself, reads it with
avidity and replies with sympathy:.
" It seems to be all that' you could wish,
Robert,; Marian can't help liking such : a
plane. I see maidenhair ferns are found
T i on f�csureasof-the rooks on:
Ytt
,,.} . ...�.. �., Lx,li�e' .
" Almost aaegood as the lead, eh, Dolly?"
he says, -.with a good tempered,f superior,;-
patronizing air.- He almost' `feels as if he.
were the . lord of Darragh already, and
though he will soon have to crave a great,
favor from his sister, he cannot :help
deporting, himself. _as such•to.her already.
" What a olimate it muet be ! Maiden-
hair ferns growing wild, roses and myrtles•
blooming and living in the open air all the
year round, just as they do in Cornwall and
the Scilly Isles, and a soft humidity in'the;
atmosphere from.the influence of the Gulf
&Stream, whioh is instrumental • in keeping
fresh and fair the notoriously beautiful
bloom.. of Irish girls. Robert, if you strike
lead, and Marian finds the air agree with
her complexion, you'll be a happy man."
V•
CHAPTER II1.
with : nennac II MEANs.
Among these themes DolIy's tongue ran
on in sheer gladness of heart. She has
quite gotover her chagrin at having' been
kept away from Lady Killeen's ball and
122191310g Ronald Maokiver, and all her cur-
rent interest is girven. to Darragh and her
brother. He cannot help wishing, as she
goes on talking of the fragile ferns, and the
blooming flowersand the gigantic lobsters
with whioh this land.is blessed, that Miss
Lepell "'would Speak,' and ,think, and feel,
and look a little lie more. like .
Dolly Not
,
but what he is very fond of bis grandly
pr
of-
portioned'lovs� and more than veryprimid
0
her ; but as he thinks about her'this evening
in the streets of 'Galway, where everything
is entirely unlike all the'tewns of his expe-
rience; he cannot .help feeling that Marian
is ;Leant for the well-established walks of
life, and: that she will fail to find any
poetry in the Claddagh. •
Late into the night:Robert Annesley and
his' sister saunter ' about through the
Streets of the old town, ;cohere the wide
gateways, broad stairs, and a variety of
fantastio' architecturalornamentation car-
ries them .ini imagination to the Granada
and Cadiz of whioh they have read. Obli.
vious• ofthe human want and penury whioh
is crouching just out of sight around them,
they see nothing but beauty in the soften.
ing moonlight, and feel no warning in the
breath of.liberty which blows in freely from
the balz. a
" Yon go with me heart and soul
P..•
ragh'.mean anything, Robert ?"
"It's a corruption of ' Deargh,' whit);
Means 'red' in Irish-Gaelio, and ' Agh' is
a "field,' I believe; I.suppose. one of their
gory battles was fought here ages ago, and
it's oahed:' red field' in oonsequenoe."
Darragh'! Darragh ! I think the; name
will haunt me all mylife; it seems to make
the place muoh . nearer and . dearer, and
more like a ` living 'personal : frienU tome
than if itwere called the Castle or .the
Hall," she says softly, and then she .ban
ishes.poesyand comes back to plain, practi-
cal prose.
" There's a lot to be done in the house
before you oan, dare to bring Marian here';'
the whole place wants polishing up'; all the
furniture that isn't torn` and tattered is.
tawdry.".
"I'11la furnishin -pi es on from. Dub-
ling.°'that will soon be set straight. You
write to Marian 'and ask her' what, colors
she will have in the resp'eotive rooms;
that's all she . need bother .herself, about:;
you and I can do the rest while we're here.",
". And- . you won't be' extravagant 2"
" No, no, I won't—there 1 I promise you.
I_ won't,". he says testily, and she crimsons
with annoyance at the thought that he may.
fanny -that she is asking him to be cautious
:beoauee the money is hers that bele going
to ,use., -_•
ti
1-"=.±..1Z44girls 21.ii '• biaeyit+l ain,
she resolves, •vexedly-, "hie worst .impru-
denoes have somush good feeling in them'
that they -never .:lead to 'any harm.'Dear:;
old boy, I wouldn't have him think me
grudging and 'cautions „ about the money, for
the world."
She is;so buoyant, no blithely delighted
with Darragh and the prospeot of life there
for a time, that her brother, whose nature:
it is to look always : 012 the sunny side, sees
a vista of unlimited prosperity and happi-'
ness' stretching out• before him. The
penetrate into' every nook and corner of the'
rambling old house,` which has been the
home of some ' of the mighty : Lynches in
days of yore. The trefoil and the.lynx"
are carved over many of the mantlepieoes,
and in one painted -glass windowthey find
not . only the.. coat -of -arms, but, the motto,
"Guarded ' by its own• virtue,"' whioh the
great :Galway race had taken for its own.
On some of the tattered . tapestry in the
State bedroom the „trefoil still ,blooms is
faded silks, and the lynx still watches as
keenly as when, generations ago, the' dames
and damsels of the houseworked it, with
their fair and skilful fingers., There is a
buffet full of grand old silver, and some
carved black° bog oak that" seems to have
been touched by fairy fingers, and taught
to blossom into .flower, and leaf. And
standing in solitary state; chained to the
massive table on whioh it stands, there is 'a
giant: punch -bowl of Irish gold; over whioh
orgies, the remebranoe of whioh makes
modernblood runoold
havs ,
been held.
To be. continued..).....„'_ ..
Miss A dahParker is a. girl of 18, who
lives on a cotton plantation two miles from
Monroe, La. For the last 'four years she
has had exclusive charge of the plane, upon
•whioh her widowed, mother, sister' and two
younger brothers\ -reside, surporting them
all by her industry. Several ohivalrous
young men have offered to marry her, but
seeing that all that theywant;is to get a
home with some one to make• the living, she
has decided not to indulge in the luxury of
a husband until she is. a little mere fore-
handed. .
Father Riordan,, of Chicago, who has
been appointed a bishop and ooadjetor of
the Arnhbishop of San Francisco, is only
38, and le thought to 'be; the • youngest
Catholic bishop in . thb world.! He was
born in New Brunswick, but was taken to
Chicago when quite young,
•
•
G MITER B1J UNTITLED WOMAN.
[prom the Boston Globe.]
Iffeeere..E'ditora e—
' The above is a good likeness of 'Mrs. Lydia B. fink-
han. i, o! Lynn, Mass., who aboveailother human being,
maybe trithfully called the "Dear Friend of woman,"
Co some cf her correspondehts levet* call her. , dhe
Is zea dui y devotedto her work, which is the outcome
of a lifa-s;u"ly„ and is. obliged to keep sixlady
assista✓ts, to helpher answerthe large correspondence
which deity pours in upon her, each bearing its special
, burden cf .suffering, or joy at. release from it. Ser,.;
Vegetable Compound'is a medicine for good and not
evil purpose& I havepersonally invcatlgated'it and
em satisfied of the truth of this.
On account of its proven merits. it' Is recommended
MA prescribed by the best physicians in the: comity..
One says "It works like a charm and saves mach
pain. It will arse entirely .the worst form c: farting •
of the 'uterus, Leacprnccea, irregular and painful .'
Meenstivation,an CvarianTronbles, Ir.Snmmatte and
Ulceration;'bleedings, -all Displacements and the coa-
eequent spinal wealmess, and is est ec.r.•i:.4.adapted to
the Change Of Life."
Itperl neater every portion of the eps;e :., and gives
new'life and vigor. It removes fe.iatr e:s, flatulency,
destroys all craving for stimuir.zts, ant 7, eiieves weak-
ness of the etomaoh. It . sures .BBleating, Headaches,
'Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleep essnesi,
Depression and Indigestion. That feeling of bearing
down, causing Fain; weight and backache, is , always
permanently cared by its use. "It will at r,11 times, and
ander all circumstances, act in'hr icny with the law
that governs tie female system.
Remo only $1. per bottle or six !c: $5., and is sold by
druggists.' Any advice required as to special cases, and
. the names of many who have been restoredtoperfect
health by the use of the•. Vegetable Compound, can be. •
obtained by addressing Mrs. -P, with stamp for reply, ,
at her home in Lynn, Mass. . •
For Kidney Complaint of'etther sex this compound!,
nnsuipassed as abundant testimonials show.
• `dire. pinkham's Liver Pills,' says one writer, dare
ilt beat in the world for the cure of Constipation,::'
Ili'lonsness and Torpidity of the liver. Her Blood
Purifier works wonders in its special line and bids fair
to equal the Compound in its popularitf
' All must respect her its an Angel of Arc :.y r':^_�a,:cie •
ambition is to do good to others..
• Thiladeiphia. mu's.' (2) yin. ll: hi. D.
FOR THE PERMANENT CURE. 0
CONSTIPATIOPIL'
No other disease is so prevalent inthis coun-
try as Constipation, and no remedy has ever .a
equalled the celebrated Sidney -,Wort as .a
E cure.. Whatever the cause, however obstinate
td the ease, this remedy' will overcome it.
THIS distressing com-
e P- , •-plaint is very apt, to be
, complicated withconstlpation. gidney: Wort
,,, strengthens the weakened parts and quickly
0 cures alikinds of Piles even when physicians
n and medicines have before failed.
v 92- L-1.1 you' have either of these troubles
PRICE SI. USE ' Druggists Sell
C
L
-1
ao
0
s
•
0
�qq AWBIID$. d19a day- at �hoirie�eaeiiy�atfe
G Costly Dull, free. Taus & Co,. Augusta, Me
WELLS, RICHARDSON, &• CO'S
IMPROVED
BUTTER COLOR
A"°NEW ,DISCOVERY..
erFor several years we have furnished the
Dairymen of America with en excellent' arta
llciah.colorforbutterso meritorious that it met
with great success everywhere receiving the
highest and only prizes at both International'
Dairy Fairs: . '
lgirBut by patient and scientific cheniieal re-
search we have improved in several points, and
now oder this new color as the beat in the. world.
It Will Not Color the 'Buttermilk: It
Will Not Turn Rancid. It Is the
• Strongest, Brightest and
Cheapest Color Made,
12rAnct, while prepared In oil, Is so compound•
ed that it is Impossible for tato become rancid.
targE,WARt of nilItnitatIons, and or+:all,'
other oil Colors, •for they aro' liable to become •
rancid and spoilt:yo butter. • '
t;;,-if,you cannot ret the' "improved"'write us` '
to know where and holy to. 'get It withoutbxtra t
expense. • (411)
• WELLS, uleitAlibSOV & f<k ih,.itnafon, k, k
A,CURE GUARANTEED.
ETIC
j[ADICI N ,
,
•49
[
or
iiiADE
:•i6
am
e OR ABRAIN&NERVE FOOCO, AFTE
For Old and .Young, inlc „,and Ft run a.
Positively cures Nervousness la' ALL its stages
Weak Memory ;'Loss of Brain Power,Sexual Prose.
tration, Nigbt Sweats, Spermatorrhoea, Louoor- -
rhrea,'Barrennees and General Lose` of Power
It restores Surprising Tone' and Vigor to the
Exhuusted Generative 4,arga$s.I2VVith each
order for rl8Lv11 packages accompanied with $Sb '
WO will send our ,Written Guarantee to refund
they money if the treatment does not effect euro
Pamphlet sent free by mail to any address. Sold
by druggists' at 50e, per ° box,' or ;• 6 boxes for.:..
VA 60, mailed frog of !postage, on 'receipt of
trionoy t 1Ry,u Ittagnctic jil cs1Ieb t/a.
Windsor, Ont,
Or. LeJIeus' PRENCI MOOST4ORE VIGOR
i7rotvsti beard spits, snontir,t face in• 20 dopier
4uoneyrefunded Never faits. son tentoeri},tofb0c
ritnrups or Over 1 pacicnaes for el, lied'nre c'f cheap
hnitntlow; 'w no ether genuine. 5xnd'lore�» •Marr
Add rgss, S.'11'. NA \L, Lok 22. TI•ar'. w,.l a 2. t . S. A.
•
,t"