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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1906-11-22, Page 71*link.,,p¢..0 .......... ..,... sSC0 a • ss*tltl...,.. tltltl'ltliA6fl. C •3"k' +++ �i+31+** 4•++4 :a�'�'k '•. 'dr+k+S +k Z"A'%'y t'{" „ rY� i" M :i:° y.3,�: t!'c »..... .... t+w3: 11., . 3.s.. 1"44♦E'cH7a Indiana ;! 4.• Ca x. • i♦a Copyrilbt♦ 1809. by Vvak(edese left McC(are Co. z,• `ik1" Ca ! hi ,. tl , a;,/ e. ?'bill' b Y nti ► Mt CO.C a+, .,, . r 4r±±.4e. t.. : x•.4'+eM'ie»l:4obvtiait'MF ❖;:b 3++•t:'i'3:+1"t•+t:t� o tl; TRE WING 1I TIMES,NOVEMBER 22 1906 2 v BOOTH T."► CINGTOfl s_ +_ e +iso_♦OO maoa6seaaataeetlegOSP4tlee4se4sesoess s.etl ,� z"e" z J�.�.� e .•o M. a a w � eI»L":b"k,.q.,a,, ypdge, just as young p'IsAee pTplaagd e ti weeks ago." lows, and now, as on that long depart. .1 * e +a a ♦ # e ed day of her young girlhood, ho was • It runs one of the great Crowds of borne high over the heads of the peq- ,10arlow's history. Since noon, an al- pie,, for Minnie cried to her to look enost untntermittent procession of pe- they were carrying him on their shout- destrians and vehicles had been snaking tier's to his carriage. She had had only Its way to the station, and every wag- treat brief glimpse of him before he on, buckboard, b'itggy and "cut under" was lost in the crowdthat was so glad bad its flags or bunting or streamer of to get Min back again and so proud of ribbons tied to the whip. The excite- blur; but she°had seen that he looked meat increased as the time grew short- very white and solemn, er. Everybody was struggling for a Briscoe brought Tom Meredith better position. The people in wagons through the Crowd and put birn in the and Carriages stood upon the dents, and buckboard beside Helen, "An right, the pedestrians besieged them, climbing Lige!" called the judge to VriIletts, who 5atthe was horse Treads. o s Yu go get on the h wheels or balancing C ng recklessly into line with the boys; they want you. with feet on the hubs of opposite wag - We'll go down on grain street to see :ons. Everybody was bound to see him When the whistle announced the coin- the parade;he explained, gathering the reins in his band. tug of the train , band began to play, "Did you tell him about Mr. Hallo - the ring cannon fired, d re-echoed blew and the way?" asked Helen, leaning forward sheering echoed and till heav+ anaigtisiy, en's vault resounded with the Hots@ "Warren told him before we left the the people of Carlow were making. There was one heart that almost ear," answered Briscoe "He'd have stopped beating. Helen was standing declined on the spot, I expect, if we on the front seat of the Briscoe buck- board, with Minnie beside her, and at the cotnmotlon the horses pranced and backed so that Lige Willetts ran to hold them. But Helen did not notice the frightened roans, nor di., she know that Minnie clutehed her round the Waist to keep her from failing. Her eyes were fixed intently on the smoke •of the faraway engine, and her hand, lifted to her face in an uncertain, tremulous fashion, as it was ono day in a circus tent, was laid against the deepest blush that ever mantled a girl's cheek. When the train reached the platform she saw Briscoe and the oth- •ers rush into the bunting covered car, and there ensued what was to her an ul?nost intolerable pause of expecta- tion while the crowd assaulted the win- dows of the smoker, leaping up and climbing on each other's shoulders to catch the first glimpse of him. Briscoe anda red faced young man (a stranger to Plattville) came down the steps, laughing like boys, and then Keating and Bence, and then Warren Smith. 'As the lawyer reached the platform he turned toward the door of the car and waved his hand as in welcome. "Here !le is, boys!" he shouted. At that it was as if all the noise that ]tad gone before 'had been mere leak- age of pent up enthusiasm. A thousand horns blared deafeningly; the whistle of the Locomotive and that of •Hib- bard's mf11 were added to the din; the .bourthouse bell was pealing out a Wel- home, and the church bells were ring - !pg; the cannon thundered, and then cheer on cheer shook the air as John HarkIess came out under the flags and passed down the steps of the car. When Helen saw him over the heads of the people and through heaving the fault of flags and bats and llandker- Chiefs she suddenly gave a frightened glance about her and jumped do n from her high perch and sank into the back seat of the buckboard, with her burning face turned from the station irnd her eyes fixed on the ground. She , "But when they kept watch over ;wanted to run away, as she had run him for months nobody told him." from him the first time she ever saw 'Ale„ said Briscoe, "but this is dit- lbine and then, as now, he carne in tri- ferent” tumph, hailed by the plaudits of his fel- ( "No, no, no!" she exclaimed. "It must be kept from him somehow.". "He'li know it by tomorrow; so you better tell him this evening." at 1 "This evening?" 1, "Yes; you'll have a good chance." "I wine" • • "He's coming to supper with tis—he and your father, of course, and Keating and Bence and Boswell and Smith and Toni Martin and Lige. We're going to have a big time, with you and Minnie to do the honors, and we're all coming into town afterward for the fireworks, ' and I'll let him drive you in the phae- ' ton. Ybu'11 have plenty of changes to talk It over With him and tell him all • about it" Helen gave a little gasp. "Never!" she cried. "Never!" The buckboard Stopped on the Her - aid corner, ' and here and along Main street the line of vehicles which had fol-' lowed it from the station took positions to nevelt the parade. The square was almost a solid mass of bunting, and the north entrance of the courthouse had been decorated with streamers and flags so as to make a sort of stand. "It meant' that von auei'enominates] for C0fOrCSS 1" Hither the crowd was already stream- -A—Mister of the bowl it:cotiiriicnds hadn't made him sure it was all right With Kedge." "If I understood what Mr. Smith was saying, Halloway must have' behaved very well," said Meredith. The judge laughed. "He saw it was the only way to beat McCune, and he'd have given his lite and Harkless', too, rather than let McCune have it." "Why did you leave Mr. Harkless?" Helen asked her cousin, her eyes not 'meeting his. "My bear girl," he replied, "because, for some Inexplicable reason, my lady cousin has not nominated me for con- gress, and, oddly enough, the midis - criminating multitude were not cheer- ing for me: the artillery wee not in ac- tion to celebrate me; the band was not playing to do me honor. Why should I ride in the midst of a procession that knows' me not? Why should I en- throne me In an open barouche, with four white horses to draw it and draped with silken flags? Since these things were not for me, I flew to your side to dissemble my spleen under the licensed prattle of a cousin." "Then who is with him?" "The population of this portion of In- diana, I take it." "Oh, it's all right," said the judge, leaning back to speak to Helen. ."Keat- ing and Smith and your father are to ride. in the carriage with him. You needn't be'afrald of any of them letting him know that H, Fisbee is a lady. Everybody understands about that Of course they know it's to be left to you to break it to him how a girt has rtin his paper." The old gentleman chuckled and look- ed out of the corner of his eye at his daughter, whose expression was in- scrutable. "I!" cried Helen. "I tell him! No one must tell Mm. He need never know Briscoe reached back and patted her cheek. "How long do you suppose he will be here in Plattville without its leaking out?" ing and hither the procession made its way. At intervals the gun boomed from the station, .and Schofields' henry �y r ^al "`•' reft Was winnowing the sir with his boll. 's 8 llrsva Nobody hail a better time that day than Schoileids' Henry, except old Walker - eon, leho wattWith the precession. era* setter] years I hate been In *art poet . inkaltb. I a t r e: X Yraa hdvised by 116v. J. O. Arlen, ' In advance came the boys, wheoeiteg and somersaulting, and behind them rode a band of mounted. men, Sitting theirthe 1 or et like lr 1t s Cava men ed y . by sheriff and his deputy and 'Jim Bard - lock. Then followed the Harkless club of Amo, led by Boswell, With the mag nauimous HalloWay himself marching in the ranks, and at eight of this the people shouted like madmen. But when Helen's eye fell upon Hallowni'e fat, rather unhappy face she felt a pang of pity end 'unreasoning remorse, which warned her that he Who leaks upon politics When It le red meet steel hie eyes to see ]malty a Inert with the heart- burnreakfter the men of Mno tame the Herkle,sa club of Gainesville, ,fr. 1en t ' I3 Cb n the e an With the step of a grextadier. There followed nett Mr. t ....et reiA'i °rls'tQEphraim Vette, bearing a light,wand Tesreinth errs, n .... or. Y 1.l , to try ' oxygenator. Ater* try;' it 1 ,., ! me faith in it, but last Oeto. her I heiron ito ,,in Ansi ran truly say that beton, eskn,; ..t, iv,: 1 h ad ale iully improvedr ov ed In ii •xe„rar el hog,.k, y a, tin. t t have used settee Wu.tirar .IikYIrre.tea„lra healthy 4a, ,of ).litot ,3 t..roar. 'oxygenator to. ''set Irubn,. state, t'erityine the ;leod ik,a4 ..- hei!,nu ui. ''.ie t+ystow,1 b:liere to not 4);..•'3.-.a t•,.day l;y rd,.y &titer remiedy. ,9,,,,O.,1 et icy n r; creation Lars alt, used it trtar. t,!ns.•,,i 1•.a- a 1 take, great interest to "01 success . s.,..;,;,.:1 ;,,.'t':s .111.i o. it -twaq, end : io,s .,y tt;s • W -,,.;,::.•'r,, ia,zinhr, f,. r..s.wta a,.:.s w >s. •c:xygcnator' ,has doni At., •' •,•.,a t•• -..t.} o 6..; r,.eali OA nr the treatment '.e. -x,';,-• 1 tn.t r• at t•"crle4s :iter £xin9 id -t1,, -lost 1 .:;,u or ,itis. in real tndyr•ii:,re, Et LW; 1: D...ttel,14 "11. Menet stoma, I".ti.I • ill bis band and leading a detachment of workers from the oil field in their stained blue overalls and blouses, and • after them came Mr. Martin and Mr. Landis at the head of an organization recognised in the "order of procession" Printed in the Herald as "the businese. hien of Plettville." The band played in such magnificent time that every high atel)ping foot in all the line came down with the same jubilant plunk and lifts ed again with a unanimity as complete as that of the last vote the eonyentlon had taken that day. The leaders of the procession set a brisk Pace, and who could have set any other kind, of a pace when qn parade to the strains et such a band playing snob a tune as a"A New ..'eon In Town" with all its might and male? But as the line swung into the square there came a moment when tiie tune Has ended and the Lnusieians paused for breath and there fell comparative quiet. Among the ranks of the "bust, nese leen" ambled Mr, Wilkerson, sing- ' Ing at the top of his voice, and now he could be heard distinctly enough for , those near him to distinguish the mei- ' ody with which it was his intention to favor the public; "Glory, glory, halleluiah! As we go marching an." The words, the air, that husky voice, recalled to the men of Carlow another day and another procession not like this one. And the song Wilkerson wag singing is the one song every northern born American knows and can sing. The leader of the band caught the sound, signaled to his men, twenty in- ' struments rose as one to twenty mouths, the snare drum rattled, the big drum crashed, the . leader threw his ,baton high over his head, and music , burst from twenty brazen throats: `"Glory, glory, halleluiah!" Instantaneously the whole procession began to sing the refrain, and the peo- ple in the street and those in the wagons and carriages and those lean- ing fl'olu the windows joined with oro :weevil. The ringing bells caught the time of the song. and the upper air t•e eerbrr:ttrcl to the rhythm. 'f Le Ile valve; club of Carlow wltt't'!t'tl into Mnin street, 200 strong, rritli their banat'r.: tuna transparencies. i,e{r, Willetts red:, at their head, and Irid '":1 diel strait. William Todd and l.'ari;er and ilo:.a Schofield and Newt 1 Tibbs and Hartley Bowlder, and even 1 Bud TIpw'orthy held a place in the ; ranks through his connection with the Herald. They were all singing, and ' behind thelrl Helen saw the flag cov- ered barouche and her father, and be- side him sat John Harkless, with his head bared. She glanced at Briscoe. He was standing on the seat in front of her and Minnie and both were sing ing. Meredith had climbed upon the back seat and was nervously fumbling at a cigarette. "Sing, Tom!" the girl cried to him excitedly. "I should be ashamed not to," he answered, and dropped the cigarette and began to sing "John Brown's Body" with all his strength. With that she seized his hand, sprang up beside him, and over the swelling chorus her full soprano rose, lifted with all the power in her. The barouche rolled into the square, and as it passed. Harkless turned and bent a sudden gaze upon the group in the buckboard, but the western sun was in his eyes and he only caught a ' glimpse of a vague, bright shape and a. dazzle of gold, and he was borne" along and out of view down the singing street. "Glory,' glory, halleluiah! Glory, glory, halleluiah! GIory, glory, halleluiah! Ar we go marching on.” The barouche stopped in front of the courthouse, and Harkless passed up a lane they made for him to the steps. When he turned to theta to speak, they began to cheer again, and he had to wait for them to quiet down. "We can't hear him from over here," said Briscoe. "We're too far off. Mr. Meredith, suppose you take the ladies closer in; I'll stay with the horses." "He's 'a great man, isn't het" Mere- dith said to Helen as he handed her out of the buckboard. "I've been try - Ing to realize that he's the same old fellow I've been treating so familiarly all day long," "Yes, he is a great man," she an. swered. "This is only the beginning." "That's true;" said Briscoe. "Only Wait awhile, and we'll all go on to Washington and get a thrill down our i backs when we hear the speaker say, . 'The gentleman f'.roiii Indiana,' and see , John Harkless rise to speak. But hurry along, young people." Crossing the Street, they. met Mise i este`. __,... --seesse. .et, MOTHER, SISTER AND BROTHER Died of ConsumpDon,hatthts Haden lady used Psychhie and is • strong and well "' wry mother,bre^ fire and sister died of consumption," Pays Bile M. Cove, of Lin- den, N,S., 4' and 1 myself suffered for two yearsr distressing front olzt a d s resstng cough and weak lungs. I suppose I inherited a tendency in this direction? " But thank God I used Psychine and it bunt me right up. My lungs are now strong. I enjoy splendid health, and. I owe it all to Psychine.:" Cousumption,Whetherhereditaryorcon_ traeted, cannot stand teforo Psychine. Psychine kills the germ, no matter how it attacks the lungs. Psychine builds up the body and mi snakes t strong and able to resist disease, Psychine is an aid to digestion and a maker of pure, rich blood. The greatest giver of general health is (Pronounced Si keen) 50c. Per Bottle Larger ulnae Si aacui 52 --Fits drugty e , Gil, 't, A. SLOCUM. limited, Teroeite. Tibbs. i5he was wiping her streaming eyes with the back of her left hand and stili mechanically waving her band. 1 kerchief with her right. "Isn't it beau- tiful?" she said, not ceasing to uncoils sciously flutter the little square of cam- , brie. "There was such a throng that I grew faint and bad to come away. I don't mind your seeing me cry. Pretty near everybody . cried when he walked up the steps and we saw that be was lame." John Harkless looked down upon the attentive, earnest faces and into the kindly eyes of the Hoosier country peo- ple, and as he spoke the thought kept recurring to him that this was the place he had dreaded to come back to; that these were the people he had wished to leave, these who gave him everything they had to give, and this made it diffi- cult to keep his tones steady and bis throat clear. Helen stood so far from the steps (nor could she be induced to penetrate farther, though they would have made way for her) that only fragments reached her, but these shit remembered. "I have come home. Ordinarily a man needs to fall sick by the wayside or to be set upon by thieves in order to realize that nine -tenths of the world is Samaritan—and the other tenth only too busy or too ignorant to be, Down here he realizes it with no necessity of illness or wounds to make him know it, and if he does get hurt you send him to congress. There will be no other in Washington So proud of what he stands for as I shall be. To represent you 18 to stand for fearlessness, honor, kind. ners. You have sent all of the Cross. readers to the penitentiary, but prob- ably each of us is acquainted with politicians who ought to be Sent there. When the term is over I shah want to take the first train home. Tbis is the place for a man who likes to 'live where people are kind to each 1 other and where they have the old fashioned way of saying 'homes other places they don't seezn to get so much into it as we do. And to come home as I have today—to see the home faces—I Nave come home." . CHAPTER KV. T was 5 o'clock when Harkless climbed the stairs to the Her- ald' office, and his right arm and hand were aching and limp. Ross Schofield was the only per- son in the editorial room, and there was nothing in- his appearance that should have caused a man`to start and fall back from the doorway, but that is what John did. •'What's the matter, , Mr. Harkless?" cried Rost, hurrying forward with a fear that the other had been suddenly re -seized by illness. "What are those?" asked Harkless, with a gesture of his hand that seemed to include the entire room. "Those?" repeated Ross, s'. sing blank- ly. "Those rosettes — these i''reamers --' that stovepipe—all this blue ribbon?" Ross turned. tale. "Ribbon?" he Said inquiringly. "Ribbon?" He seemed unable to perceive the decorations re- ferred to. "Yes," answered John, "These ro- settes on the chairs, that band, and"C- "Ohl" floss answered. "That?" lie fingered the band on the stovepipe as if he saw it for the first time. "Yes; I see." "But what's it for?" "Wily—it's--it's likely meant fer dec- orations." "It seems to have been here some time.'" It has. I reckon its most be ost du@ to called in. It's ben up ever songs-» Nonce"— "Who scut it'up, Ross?" CURES Dyspepsia, Eons= Pimples, IXeadaehes, Constipation. Loss or Appetite, Salt Rheum, . Erysipelas, Scrofula, and all troubles arising from the rStonaeh, Liver, ' Bowels al Blood. hire A. Letlituigtie, of Bellyful}', Ont. writes: ♦'I believe I would have been in my grave long ago bail it not been for Murdock Mood Bit- ters, I was run down to such an extent that I could sexret,- ly nova about the house. 1%18 subject to severe headaches, baekae}ies and dizzi- ness; my appetite Was ,ne and I Was unable to do` my house,rerk. After using two -bottles of RP. II. 1 found m health fully restored. 1 varinl reeonimen it to ell tired Winn out'aorrets. • ( Tri he conlirtued.) 1.4Thatlght it Meant death srtre "— Mrs J'ttnos iit.tKlnt, of Dannvilie, Oat., says of her alurest intraotitmns Cure from heart disease btr Dr Agne"'t Orme for the Eleart: I began taking this remedy I despaired of my life. X had heart failure fend extreme en. stretion. One dose g vo me gawk relief and one bottle bared me. The sufferings °C,years were digs -Med line magio. 3 —Said by A. L.1Xamilton. aura to Catch tee. Two "Silesian,, seated in a muslat halI, began to argue' about the MUSIC of Waguex The argument as it pro- gressed grew Treated. The upshot, was that the younger ebaileeged the Miler Silesian to a duel. But the eider Silesian de...Wed to tight, "No, no," he said.. "'I refuse to meet you. The risks are not equal. You, you See r , are a bachelor, whereas I am a married man with three children, I'll tell you what to do. Go get mar- ried a d and wait Fait tin you've it family AS large as mine. Then. when our risbs are Alike, come and 'elballenge Lzxo again." The younger uuui complied. Ile Inar, tied. •Three years passed and one day. three years later he went, accompanied by a nursemaid, to bis opponent's home, "]dere I am," he said fiercely. "My wife is at home. In this coach are my three children. Now for the duel." But the older man shook his head. "Not yet awhile," he said: "I have fire now." Exerelro For Business Men. The average city business man with - Out physical inmedimeats to fight against can probably get along success- fully on such an exercise schedule as the following: First.—•Five minutes each day of purely znusenlar exercise, such as can be taken perfectly well in one's room Without ally special apparatus. Second.—Short intervals during the day of fresh air, brisk walking, deep breathing. This eau all be secured in the regular order of the day's business. A man can easily spend as much as half bit hour walking out of doors every day. This is for heart, lungs. bud digestion. Third. -2U reservation of at least ane day a week for rest and recreation, for being out of doors, for playing games, etc. This is essential. This is Mr both body and mind. A man who thinks he can get along without at least one vacation time a,week simply .proves his ignorance. The Bite of ai Girl. The bite of a girl may be as produc- tive of poisonous germs as improperly prepared foods, according to the state- ments of Professor W. D. Miller of the 'University, of Berlin. In a lecture the professor said that a bite of a pretty girl would often bring a quicker and more horrible death than the bite of a serpent. Professor Miller, who has wade a specai study of the bacteria of the mouth, said that only a short time ago he experimented on a beautiful girt in Germany and found that an arrow Clipped in saliva from her mouth would send its victim in death throes more terrible than one dipped in the venom of the most deadly snake, Twins Born In Different Years. "1 have often been present at the birth of twins," said an old nurse. "Only once was I present, though,when the twins were born in ditl'erent years." "Twins born in different years? You are crazy," said the young bride. "Not a bit of it," said the oid nurse. "The thing happened in Pittsburg in 1899. The fast twin was born at 11:30 o'clock on the night of Dec. 31, 1899, and the seemed was born at 1 o'clock In the morning of Jan. 1, 1900. there are, ma'am, a number of other eases recorded of twius born In different Years." The Cat find Chickens, The old housekeeper met the master at the door on his arrival home. "If you please, sir,""he said, "the cat has had chickens.' "Nonsense, Mary," laughed he. "You mean kittens. -Cats don't have chick- ens." "Was them chickens or kittens as you brought home last night?" asked the old woman. "Why, they were chickens, of course." "Just so, sir," re stied Mary, with a twinkle. "Well, the cat's had 'em!" A. Comprehensive, Verdict. A child in an English town was kilted by a steam atomizing apparatus falling on it. The coroner's jury brought in the following curious ver- dict: "Death resulted from shock fol- lowing bronehitis and whooping cough, caused through the shaking •of the house by the firing of a gun at the government proof butts on the ?Mtn - stead marshes." In Womanly Ailments and Weaknesses Dr. Shoop's Night Cure Soothes, Healy and Cures while the Patient Sleeps. The best remedy {vbir}i physicians know for Female Weaknesses is eontposed of parts of n certain white lily. To this are added other remedies whieh draw out the poisons and heal the inflamed membranes. This soothing' anti- sept1e local application is known by =druggists i and di •Q' •inns r•vei,v{rhe le its ]lit. $ rc,or'S NLnn.,.t'Lttt-'bee: a-.• it curt :s while the pa. tient sleeps and t" r a nio rn i n e finds the r:- i.In l 3 tinr Con, t nithr die �}aa • • . 11 n t a .e4 vron m re at' .Y E ,. , y n e records _ cc t i mart r• a.. , ., .. n They suffer, S m. Tit r � they nry r ht t to S w q t�: , �•`\::It*.i:uuftt•'rint+ fand iai.ti:nt > ,�, w til&� .t:+anc.'esutiry. - Every Mine'woman maybe madretron e �.:� ,�, ,i -may be made 1" ex. a,r •: , . k �l^$ '. y tterit.,.'e the viiror rt:d v .art d • .: tolit.v i.l i�- bust:uu}pcii.t 1.oulthywo- nnhoad,.ever-in- • M Orta. tV,,.. 2 h i t" t ,+ - ♦,, ,i,♦ Yrtt"R'"lt:Ca tltatllr.,yta..+t cu • \ r phi T' r, engl•ox Y:.,pO and Life bud ut ` '` ahtrr It ,a to t} otCkeu.iad t t e;, ti,at Ittt, :tnt+c..P'5 Nxox,'re'111 i'l,ta'i .. 3 a 13'!m of t'itcad. You tiny tot ]+now ourttrouble. by the name physicians taiv,' it. l,.at remember Int Sizoovs Nxon r et:.tr, may h.' telie.i u,fon iu all races of Womb ulerration, tallied; of thn womb, dins in the womb t,r oval ,,a. lcurorrbo':i, `whites), inflammation conde';tlon, lrr:Ruiar or painful menstruation h9S ter 1?r. s'1trC'F'e5 N1Gn1 I WAT�I''•, "Y'S MS.t�l)RUG STO11i•. , the., hr:• sick, a Wenr•iy--yl. t 1 Aar ... ...'�.; 1 , The Kin41, Ton Ylav'e Always Bought, and which has b aci* over n use for o3a;x .,0 years, I;ils borne the signature of . and bas been made under his per,. sonalt Supervisian Since its infancy. • "4���'� Allowno one to cieecivr� you in this. Ali Counterfeits, Imitations and rf Just -as -good" are but Experiments that trilft 'vitll and. endanger the health of Infants and Children E'..xperienee a;ainst, Experiment* Gr ~° ill° CASTORIA Castoritt is a. 51arroless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare. Boric, Drops and Soothing Syrups, It is Pleasant, It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other l+7arcotie rsubs;tance. Its age is its guarantee. It elcstroys Worms and alittys I3'everi:,lzness. It clues Dial -Anna axul 'Wind. Dope. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation. t and I'la.-lllexte5-. It assimilates Idle, Food, regulates elle Stomach and Rowers, giving healthy and natural sleep. a rr ire i!Adlds:ant Panacea --Tile 1FIother', Friend. 4 NW Al���R ALWAYS Beam the Signature of e E•irI YoiiilavoAlways n Use F orOver 30Years. erNTr.UIi C, .L+RSN. 71' MURRAY =NEWT.. NCW VCAR CITY �mcl;-I,a ;' s-r'T:Fr,Y.:.,,r�„ r*I: t a oA 6 s .... ,r+:..u..s x. DUDES OF OTHEfl TIMES, Dress of a Dandy of the Early Nine- teenth Century. A cure for the confirmed railer against modern dress might be a course of inspection tbrough a file of old fashion magazines or the perusal of such accounts as are given by the author of "Sketches of Lynn." The description is that of a suit worn in the first part of the nineteenth century. The boots were an important article 1 of dress.. The toes were made as broad as the ball of the foot, with the cor- ners well rounded, giving the shoe the resemblance to the snout of a shovel nosed shark. They were very snug and required strong straps. In order to get 1 into a fashionable pair the heel of the stocking was well soaped and some pulverized soap sprinkled into the boot. The length of time it took to get one on depended on the strength of the owner and the strap. The stylish overcoat displayed five I capes, one above the other. The trou ears were expected to fit as tight as the skin. Just how they were put on is a mystery. The coat was especially snug under the sleeves, and the velvet collar scraped up tieback of the head. The camlet overcoats after a little wear, became as stiff as birch bark. The thing worn about the neck was called a stock, This name was appro. pniate in its suggestion of an instru- ment of punishment. The stock was from three to six Inches high, and was made stiff. A man was foreed to Iook straight ahead. Only by careful man. agement could he see a little on either side. About halfway between his eyes and ears two little points of collar stuck up like toothpicks. ' Bullied bosoms and wristbands fin- ished the costume, with the addition of a tall silk hat. When inclosed in this manner, with a dash of attar of roses on his handkerchief, the man of the period was considered irresistible. TOO HUMBLE A HUSBAND, Position of Prince Albert, Royal Consort of queen '4 ietorin. A woman looked up with a laugh from a heavy volume ,she was reading. "Now. I know," she said, "why queen Victoria was so fond of the prince con- sort. This husband did not merely re- gard his wife as his equal; he regarded her as immeasurably his superior, say- ing that it was his duty to sink h1s own Individual existence in her. Lis- ten to this letter that Prince .Albert wrote to the Duke of "Wellington. here is a champion of woman's rights in- deed, Don't you #!rink, though, it is going too far for a man to humble himself $o lots as this?'" She then read from her book in a sarcastic voice; My Dear Duke -1n the question whether it is advisable that X should take tho command of the army X have come to the conclusion that my derision ought entire- ly to bo guided by tho consideration whetter it would interfere with or assist my position of consort to the sovereign. This position Is a most peru}far and deli- cate one. While a. female sovereign has great many disadvantages in compari- son with a ]:ing, yet if she is married and her husband t ane understands and dors lits dutyher o e position, on the other hand, has many compensatory advantages and in the long run will be found to bo stronger even than that of the male sovereign. But this requites that the husband should Entirely sink Isis own individual existence in that of his wife ani that he should aim at no power by Iiltnsrlf err for himself, beingContent tob n e the husband of the queen, the private secretary of the eov- ereign And tho tutor of the rnsa1 Oa. dren. tatting Egexitshes. An eyelash is pointed. A. cut lash fes blunt. A lash once cut never again becomes pointed. Every Iash lives at variable time and then falls out to be replaced by a fresh one. When a cut lash so falls the newcomer is pointed. So any mischief resulting from cutting the lashes will 'be remedied by time. Opinions differ as to whether lash cut- ting promotes growth. That it renders the lashes unsightly is very certain. A Lengthy Drop. Mrs. Portly-Puflington (proudly) Wo can trace our ancestry back to one of the Saxon kings. Visitor Indeed? Mrs. Portly-Pufington — Oh, dear, yes! We have been descending for generations. I don't want to brag, but I've goit my health and my friends, so what our !earth more do I weal—Deland. ,M, ITCH, Mange, Prairie Scratches and. everp form of contagions Itch on human or animals cured in 30 minutes by Wol- ford's Sanitary Lotion. It never fans. Sold by A. L Hamilton, It's no use looking like a lemon when yon tallz`of loving your neighbor. Many think they are defending faith when they are only fighting against the necessity of thinking. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT re- moves all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes froth horses, blood spavin, ' curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, Sore and swoollen throat,cougher etc. gave $50 by the use of ono l ottlo,. Warranted the Meet WOttdcrfitt Blemish Cure ever known, Soid by A . L. Hamil- ton. It's a wise old world that Waits for the indorsement of every day honesty on the Cheeks of extraordinary holilness. The Weakness of Old Age AS the years go by the brood gets thin, watery and impure, and fails to' supply the nourishment required to keep vitality at high water mark. Circulation gets bad,. and the nervous system suffers. Besides the pains and aches, besides the eak c 1 w n ssai1 d dlzztn ess there are feelings lgs of numbness which tells of the approach 0ac1 of paralysis and Ioconiotor ataxia. Judging from the experience d the thousands of old people wiles have tested Dr. Chase's Nerve rood, it seems to be exactly suited to overcome these conditions, copse quent on old age. 'Unlike ordinary medicines, Dr. Chase's Nerve rood is entirely" restorative hz action, and eures by::i• -n al' us ruttier would ria a t:r or re. forming nary, firm flesh and tissue :. l = n t,l'rchvi the t proetie e a little and building up the system. 8, e"•, fit tratc3. Cents a box, at all dealers.