Newspaper Page Text
14
Holds America’s Highest Prize
Walter Baker & Co. s
Breakfast Cocoa
Finest tn
the World
i f jU I 46
f Wb
E I fl V lib I HIGHEST
IB A awardsin
HI I JJ ■ I EUROPE
|| 1 AND
AMERICA
Sold in %-lb. and J£-lb. Cans
FULL WEIGHT
WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd.
Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS.
Light Saw Mills and Supplies
Engines, Boilers,
Fittings and Repairs
sSi TRY sS j£&
LOMBARD IRON WORKS
AUGVSTA. GA.
Cancer Cured
WITH SOOTHINC, BALMY OILS.
Cancer, Tumor, Catarrh, Piles. Fistula. Ulcers.
Eczema and all Skin aud Female Diseases. Write
for Illustrated Book. Sent free. Address
DR. BYE I Broadway, Kansas City, Mo.
Old Dominion Nurseries.
XI7 A 'NTT'TTIA Reliable salesmen to han-
»v -CAIN iDD die our com pi e line o f
nursery stock. Virginia grown. Liberal terms.
Write immediately for contract. Exclusive ter
ritory. Previous experience not necessary. Out
fit free. Established 40 years.
W. T. HOOD 8 CO., Richmond, Va.
A)/) jZ Z GUARAN.
t b e A°
<k K AAA BANK DEPOSIT
R, R. Fare Paid. Notes Take.l
" 500 FREE COURSES
■HMBBEKI Board at Cost. Write Quick
GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon, Ga.
Cure For Liquor and Tobacco
The Kansas Anti-Liquor Society is mailing
free a recipe for the cure of the liquor habit. It
can be given secretly in <ood. Also one for the
tobacco habit that cm be given secretly. The
only request they make is that you do not sell
recipes, but give copies to friends. Address with
stamp, Kansas Anti-Liquor Society, Gray Bldg.,
Kansas City, Mo.
GKEIDER’S FINE CATALOG
JEX of Prize-Winning Poultry for 1906. This book is
printed in several Beautiful Colors and is larger
than ever. Contains a Fine Chromo of lifelike
J fowls. It illustrates and describes 00 varieties of
poultry, ducks, geese, pigeons, etc. It shows best
equipped poultry yards and houses howto build
houses; cure for diseases; Best Lice Destroyer;
how to make hens lay; poultry supplies and all kinds of in
formation indispensable to poultrykeepers. Prices of eggs and
stock within reach of all. Send 10 cts. for this noted book.
{'. IL GREIDEII, Rheems, I’a.
flk DIIDDED LIECI O This Woman’s Vici Kid
Bk v XtlUDDtn HttLo Hospital Shoe, Patent
Leather Tip, London Toe, Best Rubber Heels,
to 8, C to EE, sent postpaid on receipt of
51.50 Equals any J 2.50 shoe. Money
if unsatisfactory. FREE Ulus. Cat.
of 500 styles of shoes. Dexter Shoe
WBr Mfg. Co., Dept. 1 , Truro, Mass.
* The Golden Age for March 1, 1906.
7/z/o Marvelous Light
By LLEWELYN STEPHENS.
{Continued from last nveek.)
SYNOPSIS OF FIRST INSTALLMENT.
In the first chapter of this story, a young man, walking one night beside the
Hudson River, near Grant’s Tomb, New York City, accosts a young clergyman in
a rough manner, and by the “retort courteous” of the clergyman, Julian Deveaux
is attracted to him and determines not to lose sight of so unusual a person. With
this end in view, he follows the preacher—John Marsden —to a nearby hovel whege
a pathetic death bed scene is in progress. The dying man is young, and is surrounded
by his wife of a year, an infant child and an aged mother and father. The latter re
grets that no priest of the Roman Catholic Church is present, but the mother and
the dying man, Tom, are content- with the ministrations of John Marsden, both
agreeing that “There ain’t but one priest that can save a soul from Hell and that
Priest is The Son of God.” With this thought and with a vision of the Beyond,
Tom McCarty dies, and Julian Deveaux, the unseen witness of the event, retraces
his sfeps toward the spot where he is first discovered. A deeper interest in the
scene he has witnessed siezes him.
Inhaling a deep breath of the exhilarating morning air, he turned his steps
toward the house where he had witnessed the death.
“Who lives there,” he asked of an early wayfarer, pointing toward the
McCarty home.
“The McCarties,” was the reply.
“Do you know them well?” ,
“Faith, and sure I do.”
“Very poor?”
“Yes.”
‘ ‘ How so ? ”
“Well, the ole’ man is gettin’ too ole’ to do much. The ole’ lady takes
in washin’ an’ the daughter-in-law use ter take in sewin’ before ther baby
come. She has been too w r eakly since. Tom was alius a good-hearted fiddlin’
sort uv a feller, loved his dram an er lively game er cards, and him an’ Sallie
use ter make er purty good livin’ actin’ in er play house down on the Bowery,
until a boy minister uv some heretic set got him inter one o’ them cursed mis
sions one day when Tom was strollin’ about. The upshot uv it all wus, he
quit chumming with Father O’Brien, and gave up his job for a better one
promised him. He married Sallie, what he’d already been er livin’ with, got
her ter leave the playhouse, too, an’ under the listenin’ of that boy preacher,
he got ter imaginin’ they was allns goin’ ter sail erlong on beds uv flowers.
Then he took the fever, and hit appears to me he’s not gettin’ well over fast.”
“He is dead,” said Deveaux.
“The poor bye,” exclaimed Flannigan; “they’ll be buryin’ him in the
Potter’s Field, they will.”
“No, my man,” said Deveaux. Go in and tell that boy minister—he is
in there now—that you met a friend of Tom McCarty’s who is willing to at
tend to everything about the funeral and pay all the expenses. Now, mind
you, you are not to tell anything about how this friend looks, nor anything
else he said. Not a word, do you understand?”
‘‘An ’ faith, an ’ I have ears. ’ ’
“Then meet me here and go to the undertaker’s with me to assist in carry
ing out my plans. Be quick about it before that boy minister has gone to any
unnecessary expense and trouble. Here’s a dollar for you. Hurry back. I
will wait for you around the corner.”
CHAPTER 11.
- r
Julian Deveaux had never been a man of impulse. Everything he did
was coolly calculated, measured and weighed, to benefit himself directly or
indirectly. What he determined to accomplished allowed no obstacles in his
way, so far as man’s power went. He had reached that prominence financially
and socially w r hich permitted him to honor his most autocratic whim.
He was an actor, an artist and an author, and he had risen ot a high
degree of fame in each. The night we met him pacing up and down the banks
of the Hudson, a mental problem was troubling him. That was why he
was so annoyed when he came upon John Marsden, who had strolled from
the stifling air of the room in which Tom McCarty lay dying, and had wan
dered down to the refreshing river breezes. There the contrasting natures of
these two men first met and clashed. Yet, somehow their drawn swords were
crossed at just the angle to hold them together for an indefinite time. There
was an indefinable something about John Marsden’s whole bearing that drew
Deveaux’s attention to him from the first moment he heard him speak. His
interest greatly increased as he followed him to the bedside of Tom McCarty.
There he determined to win his confidence and friendship. Deveaux knew it
would take unusual means to accomplish such an undertaking, and that it
would have to be done in a most delicate way. His first step was to give
Tom McCarty a respectable funeral. He would allow John Marsden time
for the usual nine days’ wonder to pass before revealing the name of the
benefactor. Then he would manage to leave him discover it as if by the
merest accident. He decided one morning to go to John Marsden’s mission
church and hear him preach. It had been long since he had been within a
church, and he ventured no further than the back seat. When Marsden
arose to read the first hymn, the unusual face and figure of Julian Deveaux
caught his eye. A swift look of recognition -was exchanged between the
two men. Deveaux wondered why he slightly winced under it.
At the close of the service he remained sitting, waiting for John
Marsden to come down the aisle. Marsden intentionally delayed the meeting,
| WHY TAKE ■
■ CALOMEL? ■
■ When Mozley’s Lemon I
I Elixir, a purely vegetable 1
I compound, with a pleas- I
H ant taste, will relieve you ■
I of Biliousness, and all ■
I kindred diseases without ■
■B griping or nausea, and ■
I leave no bad effects.
50c. and $l;00 per bottle I
at all Drug Stores.
| |
■ LEMON ELIXIR. ■
•'One Dose Convinces.’’
KUIDINE.
DIRECTIONS:
For Kidney and Bladder Troubles, two tablets
three times a cay. For Indigestion two tablets
after meals. For Costiveness, one teaspoonful
of liquid on retiring. For Sleeplessness take
three tablets on retiring.
A Box of “Kuidine” Tablets, 50c or sl.
Bottle of “Kuidine” Dissolved 50c. or sl.
MOUNTAIN IRON MINERAL COMPANY
Spartanburg, S. C.
Your Druggist or direct from Manufacturers.
A for 50c worth of leading Novelties in
I 111* Choicest Garden Seeds. sl’s worth of
Universal Premium Coupons free
with every order.
BOLGIANO’S SEED STORE, Baltimore, Md.
New Sweet Peas
McMillan’s New Giant Mixed,
the most gorgeous collection of
Sweet Peas yet introduced. They
have caused quite a sensation
wherever shown during the past
year. The stems are long and
stout, and may be described as
a giant in every way. Price, 10
cents ounce; 75 cents per lb.
McMillan Seed Co., 23 S. Broad St.
The Old Reliable Sead Store.
Excellent Facilities For Treating Cancer.
New Up-to-Date Hospital Just Completed.
We are curing Cancers, Tumors and Chronic
Sores without use of the knife or X-ray, and are
endorsed by the Senate and Legislature of Vir
ginia. If you are seeking a cure come here and
you will get it.
WE GUARANTEE OUR CURES.
KELLAM CANCER HOSPITAL
1615 West Main St. RICHMOND, VA,
DRAUGHON’S
Atlanta, Columbia, Montgomery, Waco and
Nashville. POSITIONS secured or money RE
FUNDED. Also teach BY MAIL. Catalogue
will convince you that Draughon’s is THE BEST.
Send for it.
HOTEL BRISTOL
42-44 Walton St., ATLANTA, GA.
In same block with Postoffice and First Baptist
Church.
A MODERN, UP-TO-DATE HOTEL
Delightful rooms. Table first-class. Special
rates per week on application.
J. D. McMILLAN, Proprietor
ißsTwiisiws I
SOOTHING SYRUP
( 1 Has been used by Millions of Mothers for their ’ >
. I children while Teething for over Fifty Years. <.
j It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays <
' i all pain, cures wind colic, and Is the best i
1 > remedy for diarrhoea, < *
' > ~ C BOTTLE._
luse the Great English Remedy I
BLAIR’S
|Safe, Sure, Effective. 50c. St sl.
I DRUGGISTS, or 93 Henry St., Brooklyn, N. Y.