Newspaper Page Text
THE
By GENEVIEVE ULNAR,
Altlisr of "A Weird Wedding Right," "The
lo»e of Her Life,” "The Stolen Bride*
groom," "Crnel u the Ora re,"
"Her Wedding KigM,"
St*, Etc, Kte.
ITrcm tlio Chicago Ledger,]
CHAPTERL
T1IE HOME OP THE roOA
Ghostly falls the snow.
Ovor the trackless, wind-swept streets,
past flickering limp-lights, dim and blink
ing, ovor the roofs and turrota and towers,
over all the great sleeping city n white man-
"onted earthward soft and silent as a robe
down.
JnbI
From n distant bell-tower, musical and
resoum t ns a goldon bend dropped within
a crystal di-h, n melodious murmur of
sound betokened tho onrly morning hour.
It was borne on tho swooping breeze for
a moment and then lo>t as the wind grew to
a wild tempost, like (lie ehimo of an angiy
sea, and the wings of the storm, flapping
out the light of moon and stars, inclosed
the metropolis again ns tho battle soouo
of the disturbed elements of nature.
A wild night, tho hour somborand death
like, tho sky a lendou glare, the earth re
sembling nu immeuso sepulcher In its lone
liness and denortion, with black, frowning
walls of brick and slono, like speoter mon
uments on tho dreary landscape.
Hut at its dreariest, moro speotml, and
lo ely, and deserted in tho very heart of the
great metropolis, where life seemed temuo-
mrily (o have commanded ft halt, and the
few pedestrians visible on tho snow-clogged
thorough fares scurried along like phantoms
•coking a shelter.
T'hn Hashing lights of the thoator had
long since been extinguished, the inclem
ent weather had driven oven the street cart
and vehicles of tho hack-stands to shelter.
Oul.v occasionally somo belated team trav
ersed the roadway, laboriously cleaving
the drifts to convey somo late haochanalian
to his homo.
At a point whoro tho main business street
of the olty lost its commercial character,
and wns merged into n conglomeration of
pawn-shops, saloons, and dnuoe-hnlls, was
nmnifust more of excitonient and lifo than
elsewhere in all tho metropolis.
lloro, from some smoko-rooking bar
room occasional sounds of revelry and music
ecliood forth, but tho inmates, seeming to
liavo found a wnrm shelter, appeared also
to have docidod to tempt tho storm no mors
that night.
Where tho wind had drifted a door-step
doep wi ll tho feathery Hakes, near tho on-
trnneo to one of tlieso gilded palaoes of
revelry, a shivering, thinly clad form stood
rovonlod.
It was that of n boy not moro than twelve
yenrs of ago, habited in tho common
wotched garb of tho child of tho poor.
Tho rimless hat, thin, ragged jaoket,
worn-out shoos and general poverty of at-
tire, bospoko tho wuif or gamin of the
streets.
A’ot, ns ho peered longingly through tho
half-frosted pane of tho bar-room door, as
if covetous for tho warmth and comfort
within, a stray gleam of light showed a fnc.a
at the sight of which the attention of tho
most enreloss observer would have been
enchained.
Ilia fe iturcs wore ns doliontely chiseled
ns those of n woman, aucl cloar and
smooth us marble. Across his brow in
cnro'OKs locks, tho curly chostnut hair foil
wavy mid graceful, whilo the eyes, deep,
dark, and soulful, told of n koen iutolli-
gcueo and a lntout spirituality which hard
contact with a harsh, cruel world had not
discouraged or subdued.
Ho crouched close to tho shelter of tho
doorway, disregarding tho bnsket. covered
wiili a pioee of faded oil-clotb, thnt lay at
bis foet, and blew laboriously on his chilled
flngors the while.
“One o clock!" he Im allied, in a hulf-
dcBpairiug tone. “Oh, if I c uld only find
some place to stay till morning, l’idrouo
Giuseppe will half kill me for staying out
so lnte, and bringing homo less than the
fifty conts. Carry your satchel, sir? Only
a dune to any of the depots?"
Ho had started forward and addressed a
muffled pedestrian breasting the storm on
foot to reach soaio Into train.
Hut tho rising tempest, mightier than tho
boy s feeblo voice, drowned hiR faint ap
peal. and tho muu hurried 01 unheedinghis
words.
Giulio, for so he was known, (ho chi'd
of n bitter destiny, bearing a name as soft-
sonnding and melodious ns (hat of a poet,
drew back into the doorway with a mourn
ful yet half-angry ejaculation.
"Twice they have turned me out of th(
place here when I orept lu to get warm.
The police station-keeper toll mo to gc
homo,and the newsboys' homo is locked U{
for the night, I will freeze if I sleep it
soma open hallway or under tho sidowalk.
All day long I have tried to sell tbo pn-
drone’s matches and mnke a little extra
money at odd jobs, but no one would buy,
no otio would give me work. If it wasn’t
for little Teresa ”
The boy’s voioo grew soft and tender. A
glittering (onr in his eyo rivaled the crys
talline snow Hakes about him in its
radianco.
“l’oor Teresn,” ho choked out a minute
later. “Let the padrone heat mo. For th(
sake of seoing her 1 will bravo it all. If 1
do not return, he will vent his spite on
her. ”
A set determination came into tho youth
ful face. Giulio heat his hands vigorously
to rostoro tho sluggish circulation of hii
chilled form. Tin n ho drew a few ooim
from his pooket, and inspected them on-
rossingly in the light that bUouo from the
ar-room.
“One—three—ten— twenty-five—twonty-
Boven,” ho connted doh<u'ly. Twonty-
three cents short, ’t hat means twenty-
three cuts of the padrone's whip. AVhc
cares? I’mbiavo and young, aud can stand
it. Only a little while longer, aud Teresa
and I will bo able to leave the miserable
borne he givos us and shift for ourselves.’
There was a grim, courageous defiance oj
pain as Giulio picked up the bnskot nt his
feet.
He drew back and uttered an exclamation
of affright and concern as a rough form
brushed by him, ns tho hot, fetid breath ol
a man steeped in drink swept his face and
a firm hand seized his own.
Unperceiveii by him, a big, swaggering
inebriate, reeling from the saloon, had de
tected him counting his little Store.
“Give us enough for a drink,” he hio-
eoughed, making a da-U for the money.
Giulio pushed him back with a cry of in
dignation and dismay, and the discomfited
drunkard rolled into llio snow, straggled to
bis feel, aud laughed in drunken nni'ise-
ment at the diverting episode of the mo
ment -
Teen of chagrin and disappointment
filled the boy's eyes as he groped in the
snow foT the coins which had fallen from
-his hand.
His miltenless fingers were stiff and numb
with the oold ere he had recovered whnt of
'the money he eould find.
A portion of it he wns forced to abandon.
His latest disaster and the auguiemoJ
ehecriessness of ins position mn<ie turn
desperate, and, pocketing the wet, clinging
coins, be seized the basket and darted from
the spot;
“No present, no little keepsnke for poor
Teresa to-night, ” he murmured, eadly. “I
could make up the amount the padrone ex-
peots it 1 could see Miss Julia and opon
my little box of savings. Hut no, that I
have put aside for a cherished object, and
1 will not touch it. *
Giulio left tho main thoroughfare and
diverged upon a deserted street. This ho
traversed slowly, for tho suow wss deep
and drifted, aud finally outored a narrow
court lined with old dilapidated frame
structures, resembling barns or Imrraoks
more than places of human habitation.
Hero were the homes of the poor.
Here, in all its hideous semblance of
somo veritable ghoul gnawing at the Titals
of tho city's prosperity, lurked the twin-
sisters of misery, poverty, and crime. Hero
the garish sunlight showed dally tho half-
famished, illy olad children of the poor,
who found in these rftsmai quarters a cheap
living, and, alas! only too often, cheap
death.
The wail of the hollow-eyed infaut, the
moans of the sick and starvmg mother, the
groans of the invalid, and the harsh cursos
of birds of ill-omcn slinking to tlieso
dons for refuge and oonccalment, com
prised the only jingle of sound that daily
swept the dreary confines of that dark anil
di-aiml court
With all these Sights Giulio was only too
familiar—they had formod a long, monoto
nous panorama in the past, ghastly, haunt
ing. misery-laden.
Beyond its first dawning upon his youth
ful vision in tho far past, ever and anon he
faiight faint glimpses of a memory in
which lifo scorned to havo boeu filled with
Mowers, snd birds, and happy, loving faces.
It was like a dream, however—a vision
from which the harsh realities of life re
called him rndely.
So long as he could remember be hnd
been the claimed nephew, the bound slovo
of old Giuseppe Santo, tho ignoran*, oruel
padrone to whoso idle support; ho was
forced to contribute.
Ho could not but bolievo thnt the treach
erous, malevolent Santo bore no renl rela
tionship to himself; thnt ho and his sistoi
hail been stolen from thoir early home, or
even abandoned by their parents —anything
but Hint ho had (icon born to sink to the
idleness, a d viee, and crime of his daily
surroundings, contact with which onused
him to revolt from all its hideous contend-
hat on.
lioforo the opon doorway of oue of the
most cheerless structures of tho court tbo
boy paused at last.
Tlie snow bad bnlf-filled the unsheltored
ball, mid lie traversed its dark length and
began Rtenlthily to ascend tbo rickoty stairs
loading to tho next story.
At a door ho paused, ltstoncd with
heightened pu'sos and hntod broath, and
then cautiously liftod tho iHteli.
The room beyond was squalid aud mis
erable in all its appoiuimeuts, but its
dreariness wns only partly revealed, for
there wns no light iu the nparlmont.
Only n dull glare from the open stove
cast nickeling shadows on tho rough, un-
enrpeted floor.
"Tho padrone is asleep; I shall osoape a
beating till morning," tuo boy whispored
hopefully to himself.
Ho olosed the door noiselessly, and be
gan to cross tho room on tiptoe.
Then he enmo to a sudden stop, llesido
the stove a roddoning spark of tiro, glowing
angrily, told that tho cruol padrone was on
tho watch. Tho vilo cigar lie was smoking
bognn to show his dark, sinister fnco; his
eye, moro lurid and nionacing than its
b deful gleam, glared at tho late intruder,
and a sullen prowl issued from his lips ns
lie arose to his feet.
From long exporjcuco tho boy know
what wns coming. He neither movort nor
spoko, but stood ns if transfixed, awaiting
Hie furthor movements of liis heartless
guardian.
Giuseppe Snnto, bis largo, bullet-slmpod
head and hooked nose presenting a malig
nant outlino, stnlkod to tho tnblo and lit a
candle.
Then, with the sodden, nnstondy air of
one besotted by drink, be sank to tbo nrm-
1o-h chair bosido it, mid brought bis fist
down upon tl.
"Where hnvo yon boon?"
Tho boy lnd turned slightly pale, but he
neithor tiomb'ed uor lowerod his gazo from
the Aery, mgeful eyes of llio padrone.
"At work," he ropliod, simply.
"And tho money?”
Giulio drew tho few coins he hnd from
his pocket, and, advancing to tho table,
pi n od them boforo Giusoppo Santo.
For n moment tho avaricious flngors oi
the pndrono clutched oovetously at the
money.
'J hou ho uttered a hoarse cry of auger.
" I ho rest of tho money!” ho cried,
menacingly.
“I have no more.”
“ You hnvo spent it. You have boon to tho
tbeator, rovobng nt tlio entuig houso "
"1 havo not tasted food sinco morning."
"A lio!" shrieked Snnto, springing to bis
feet.
"It is tho truth. Footsore and hungry,
I havo sought work till now. I have earned
no moro," came the culm, bold reply.
“Maledetti! You toll me this; yoii know
what awaits you! You did not beg for it,
lie for it, stoni it, when you know I will
beat you if you do not bring mo the fifty
cen is "
"1 noithor bog, lie, nor stoni," interrupted
Giulio, proudly. “Your bcnlings can never
mnke mb do that."
‘ Alnledetti motto! but I will scourgo
you! Tbo rest of the money! Youhnyo hid
den it!”
Santo toro tho basket from tho hand of
his lio'pless slave and pulled tho covoring
aside,
“The mnlches ruined with the suow—no
money. Hartino Davnnti! you shall suffer
for this."
Sa - to rushed to n corner of tho apart-
in "nt with fr.mtio rage.
When ho reappeared ho bore in bis hand
a short, heavy whip.
The sight of tho black, brutal instrument
of torture wns too famfiinr to Giulia's sight
to startle or nlirm li>m.
Mutely, cnlraly he stood, awaiting tho
punishment th it wns ovor awarded on any
occasion of delinquency in returning with
tbo piice G useppo Kauto put upon lira
daily services.
“I will cut tbo lying bou! from your
body!” ho screnmod, maddened with drink
nnd rage.
“Thirty lushes for the nirasiiig money,
lin'f a lin dred moro for slaying out till
now. Strip!"
Tho boy's lip quiverod ns ho road in the
padrone's eyo moro than usunl of tho wicked
demon of brutal cruelty.
Ho hesitated, blushed Indignantly, and
thou lemoved his tattered jacket,
Santo slushed th i whip with whistling
energv, ns if enger to appease his blood
thirsty inst nets.
At thnt moment a white-robod form
sprang from t’ue darkened doorway of the
adjoining apartment.
A fairy figure, fragile and spintuello,
tottered to the spot where Giulio stood, and
fell upon her kneos between him and tho
drunken Santo.
Her thin whito hands raised in eloquent
entreaty, her eyes suffused with tears of
anguish, in piteous tones of plonding she
cried wildly:
“Oh! padrone, padrone, spare him—spare
him, this time. Pity, mercy, for my poor
brother GiuKo!”
CHAPTER IL
MTSTEII1ES OF THE NIGHT.
At hearing the plaintive tones of tho little
Teresa, the inhuman Santo stood silent for
a moment or two.
Amazed at her temerity, angered at her
Interference, the padrone uitered a guttural
cry of irritabil tv.
Giulio s altitude had chauged in a flash.
Every vestige of en'im, unrnmea submis
sion departed ns sudden j a; it had came.
His eyes looked tend'-rly, anxiously upon
the beautiful pleading face before him. and
then wero riveted upon the lurid features
of the padrone with a menacing, resentful
light.
“Y’ou!” screamed Snnto,in a paroxysm ol
emotion dire and dreadful to behold, to the
trembling Teresa. “You dare to come here
when I told you to-day you should be
beaten for bringing only a basketful of coal
from the railroad tracks? Ah! I will whip
yo» both. Miserable children, yon shall
both kuow and foar Giuseppe Santo'l
whip."
Swish!
The snaky coil of rawhide shot out and
downward from the padroni'p brawny bnnd.
It whistled cruel y through the nir, en-
circling both the children wtlh n biting,
sickeniu ; contact of pain.
Not n murmur of suffering escaped Gin-
lie's proud lips, but a timid, frightened crj
broke from the tonified Teresa.
"Mercy—pity!" she sobbod wildlyj as l
second blow foil ovor her thinly clad shoul
ders.
It was not repeated. A* if suddenly
aroused to indignant resentment, the
spirited Giulio broke into bold dofianoo nt
last.
Ho lifted the trembling Teresa to hot
feet, nnd pushed her gently away from him.
His ej’i s fin-ln d, his loeth clenched, lie
leizod a heavy piece of wood lying near the
stove, nnd swuug it aloft.
“Brutto!” he ertod, in thrilling neoents ol
resentment and disgust for the brutal
padrone, nnd unconsciously employing the
Italian expletive to which his onr was fa
miliar. “Do not Btriko the girl again—at
your peril. Giuseppe Snuto!"
[to nE CONTINUED. ]
SCIENTIFIC SCK A I’M.
During tho last centlfry 100 lakes in
tho Tyrol have subsided trod disap
peared, according to Dr. A. Hulun of
the Geologlosl Society of Vienna.
A French instrument for recording
tho rolling of a vessel at sea was lately
tried on tho voyngo of n steamship
from Bordeaux to Brazil, and made n
tolerably nccurato register of tho mo
tion.
A recent computation mnkes the ve
locity of tho solar system in spaco about
10,000,000 milos a year. By a different
method, nnothor computer hnd dotor-
minod tho rato to bo about 0.’5,000, -
000 milos a year.
To aid in nn analysis of noiao, Prof.
Crum Brown of tho Royal Socioty of
Edinburgh hopes to bo nblo to make
» machino to givo very loud imitations of
vocal sounds. He expects tho appara
tus to hiss with thousaud-man power.
A new nsparngus, found in the
steppes of Aklral-Tokis, lately annexed
by Russia, is said to have stalks nearly
as thick ns a man’s arm and growing to
• height of live or six feet. In flavor it
equals the best cultivated varieties.
Trichina have been discoio cd in n
human body which was being prepared
for anatomical demonstration nt the uni
versity of Cnmcriuo. Tho man had livod
for many yenrs in a neighboring com-
muno, nnd died without the presence of
trichina being suspected. Peculiar in
terest attaches to the caso for tho renson
thnt it is said to bo the first case of
trichinosis ever observed in Italy.
It is goncrntly supposed thnt pnou-
monin is due to tho accidental penetra
tion of specific microbes into tho systum,
but tho observations of SI. Jnccoud, a
French student of tho subject show thnt
tile disenso really results from tho de
velopment under favornblo conditions
of microbic germs permanently present
in the Bystem. A chief condition of
such dovclopinont is a Midden chill,
which explains tho frequent coiucidenco
of lung nffoctious with abrupt changes of
tomperaturo.
Mr. W. A. Carter, in a recent lecturo
on "Marine and Fresh-Water Fishes,"
said that fish liavo tho power of influenc
ing ono another by sounds and action.
He hnd obsorvod a slionl of carp follow
ing the lead of nsinglo ono which con
ducted thorn to a quantity of food nt a
considerable distance away. Ho had
also noticed that certain fresh-water
fish, such as trout, wore subservient to a
ruler, which might be soon swimming at
tho bond of his tribe. Tho satno was
possibly tho case with somo marino
forms, lilco tho herring nnd bass.
Roses In Bulgaria.
Bulgaria, the little country in Europe
which wo hear so much about of late, is
a veritable rose garden in itself. In no
part of flic world has the cultivation of
tho rose come so near perfection as in
this smnll State, and nlthough tho soil
nnd atmosphere of tho country havo
much to do with tho success of the work,
the native inhabitants havo made such a
long and careful study of the plant and
its needs that they have created wonder*
out of their fields of blooming roses. A»
is well known, tho flowers are grown
there for the purpose of extracting the
precious aroma known as "Otto of Rose, ”
but this circumstance does not detract in
tho least from the nppearanco of tho roses.
The bushes require considerable care and
attention, and they are seldom allowed
to nttain a height of over six foet. %
In tho great roso gardens, where the
flowers are raised for manufacturing tho
“Otto of Rose," the bushes are seldom
grafted or budded. Tho roots forming
tlie bushes of a young rose garden aro
taken from the old bushes and carefully
buried with plenty of mnnurc, where they
send up young shoots. Those reach their
full growth in about fivo years, and for
fifteen yenrs will yield large crops of
roses. When an old bed begins to fail
tho bushes aro cut away aud now shoots
allowed to spring up, or tho wliolo field
plowed up and roots from nnothcr bed set
out in their place. A successful rose-
grower keeps several rose gardens at all
times in different stages of development,
so that when one garden begins to lie un
productive another ono is about ready to
come in. The roses blossom in the latter
part of May, when all the neighborhood
is employed in picking them and getting
them to the distillery.
In addition to tho great industry of
extracting tho precious aroma from tho
roses, tlie inhabitants of Bulgaria make
quite a business of exporting rose slips
nnd roots to different countries. Tho
fncility witli which the roses grow in tho
fertile valleys of that country makes it
a profitable business to raise the bushes
for mnrkct. Tho cuttings for buds are
sent hundreds of miles packed in long
grass and surrounded with straw disposed
longitudinally. Rut the particular rose,
from which tho Otto of Rose is made,
thorosa mosclinta, cannot bo grown with
much success in any other part of Europe.
Attempts have been made frequently to
cultivate it in tho south of Franco, but
nil such experiments have proved a
failure. Tho slips aud roots of tho
bushes aro sent to different parts of
Europe, wltcro the roso is grown in somo
of tho principnl public gardens. Tho j
aroma is so sweet that it will scent up tlie
wliolo room if kept in doors, and will
even impregnate the outsido atmosphere
of a garden with its penetrating odor.—
Vick'e Magazine.
A mah went home | intoxicated. His
wife aud: "So you’ve had another glass I"
"GlassI” said he. “Wonderful word.
Take oft g and it is trofi."
"Yes,” she replied, ("and then take off
1 and it is you. ” |
Many People Rerun* to Tako Cad
Liver Oil on account of |lta unpleasant taste.
This difficulty has been overoome In Scott’s
ExoiAton of God 1 Liver Oil with Kypophos-
pbitss. It being as palatable as milk, and the
most valuable remedy known for the treatment
of Consumption, Scrofula and Bronchitis,
General Debility, Wasting Dlsoasos of Chil
dren, Chronic Coughs and Colds, has caused
physlolans in all parts of the world to use it.
Physicians report our li|tUe patients take It
with pleasure. Try Scott's Emulsion and be
convinced.
Mr. Corcoran, ttjo Washington, D. O., philan
thropist Is recovering, but can never walk.
” Throw Physio to the Regs’’
When It ts the oUt-fnsliionod blue mass, blue
id insist on UBlng Dr. Pierce's
Potlets," a modern msdl-
:nr-coatod granules,
noiples of certain
terbs, and which will ho found to
oal luxury, being small, sugar-coated gri
... . the active principles of i
- fil '
contain as muoli cathartic power as any of the
old-fashioned, larger pills, without the latter’s
violent, drastic effects. Tlie pellets operate
thoroughly but harmlessly, establishing a per
manently hoalthy action of the stumach and
bowels, and os an anti-bllious remedy aro un-
equaled. ( i
Flower mission work ts tho fashionable char
itable orazo in New Y'ork tills season.
“A little tire Is quickly trodden out
Which, being suffered, rivers cannot quench.”
Procrastination, inay rob you of time, but by
inoreaMd diligence you can make up the loss;
but U it rob you of life the loss is lrromodlable.
If your health Is delicato, your nppetite flokle,
your sleep broken, your mind depressed, your
~ v -’e her a ’ ’ — ■*
your healtl
. or sleep bi ,
whole being out df sorts,, depend on It you are
sorlously diseased. In all such oases Dr.
l’lercs’s "Goldon Medical Discovery" will
speedily etfeot a genuine, radical ouro—make
a new man of you and save you from the tor
tures of a lingering disease^
Chicago olniras a loss of $12,000,000 In the
building trades from strikes.
* * * * Piles, fistula) rupture and strlot-
uro radically cured. Hook of particulars 10
oents in stamps. World's Dispensary Medical
Association, Buffalo, N, Y.
In Now York they hire out wedding trosscaus
for a nightly rental varying from $7 to $40.
Throw tlie Pom-iter Ororbonrd,
Were thrilling tyords, spoken at a time of great
danger. The lives of alii on tho vessel depended
on prompt net Ipn. Your life may bo ulessod
and prolonged by tho prompt use of Dr. Har
ter’s Iron Tonic for that blood trouble.
Olu pill bowy arc spread over tbo land by
llio thousands after having bean emptied by
suffering humanity. What a mnss of siokon-
Ing, disgusting medicine tho poor stomach has
to contend with. Too muoli strong modlctno.
l'rlckly Ash Illl|tors is {rnplilly ami surely tak
ing tho place of all tills class of drags, nnd Is
ourlng nil the Jlls arising from a disordered
ring
ndllk
Vels.
The best and turret Remedy for Care ef
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yield readily to the haaefleeat influence of
It k pleoaaat to tho taste, toass ay the
systeai, restores aad preserves health.
It la purely Vegetable, aad caaaot fail to
provo be official, both to old and yoaag,
■ a Blood Purifier It k superior to all
others, gold everywhere at $1.00 a bottle.
; thing In the morning wash It ail
way down tho link, drain pipe, when all lha
tv (n the hotise.they must Dfl A CUE#
Insects from garret to cellar will
Fits socretla In the.fnct that wT
C ink during the night. II
f lean nut flats, Mice, Bed-biim,
"ItotiUH nu Rats," is soul al
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mailed on rooelpt of two oenta tn postage, f
*HE DR.HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY
8t. Louiie Mo.
A Iirldo.'iAum’s Mistnko.
"8|)oukin^ of mnrringo fens,’’ a promi
nent clergyman said to-day, “reculls a
very embnrrassing blunder which was
perpetratod upon nn iunocent brotlior
clergyman recently. Tito groom who
was not a very nervous fellow cither,
carelessly poked an old plantation negro
ballad in bis vest pockot with tho five
dollar hill which ho intended as the
marriago fee. During tho cxcitomont
which followed the ceremony, tho young
man placed tho plantation ballad in tha
palm of the clergyman. After a fervent
god spoad tho officiating clorgymnu left
without inspecting tho negro song. Tho
divino wns indignnnt when ho discov
ered tho nature of the bit of pnper which
ho had stowed nway in his wallet. How
ever, tho young man found tlie fivo dol
lar hill in his vest pocket, made a hur
ried examination, nnd succeeded in
allaying tlie ire of tho clergyman.—
[Albnuy Journal.
A Wonderful Grotto.
In Znpohtluii, Mexico, two hunters re
cently discovered a beautiful grotto 300
yards long and 130 wide. Tho grotto
is formed of quartz and is adorned with
tlie most beautiful stnlnctites nnd stning ■
mites, which glitter like pearls when tlie
light of tho torches falls upon them. Tho
infiltrations liavo formed exquisite pil
lars and colonnades thirty yards in
height. In the centre of the grotto are
two artificial reservoirs filled with clear
and very cold water. On tlie floor »r •
found many petrified skulls nit
which lends to tho Lnlicf that the • ee
wns once used as a temple for human
sacrifice by tho ancient Mexicans,
Freedom of a City.
Whntever significance might bo at
tached to it in former times, nt present
tho "freedom of the city" is simply a
complimentary honor, conveying a recog
nition of distinguished merit, nnd a
small box made of thin gold in which is
inclosed a parchment setting forth tho
nntnro of the honor to bo conferred.
Tho presentation is nttended with con
siderable ceremony. Tho favored person
is notified to he nt tho town hall, where,
at the npnointed time, are assembled the
municipal dignitnries. Then, on His
arrival, ho is addressed by tho City
Chamberlain on behalf of tlie corpora-
tiog, and is, indue form, presented with
the gold box nnd its contents. Tho
parchment inclosed is inscribed with his
name nttd titles, and gunnintees tho
holder nnd his children after him, for
ever, tlie right to live and trade within
the city without having to pny a tax on
the goods as they are bronght t hrough tho
gales. It exempts them from military and
naval service and tolls ami duties through
out (if in Great Britain) the United King
dom. It insures to his children tho care
of the Chamberlain, who, iu caso they
arc left orphans, will take charge of their
property and administer it to their inter
est until they arrive at years of maturity.
The parchment hears tho corporation
seal and 1 he signatures of Lord Mayor
and Chamberlain, nnd is handsomely
engrossed. The custom is now confined
to European countries, notably London
nnd cities of Great Britain and Ireland.—
San Francisco Call.
A Phy.lelam Prom Iowa.
Dr. H. Munk, Nevada, Iowa, states: Have
been practicing inedlatne fifteen years, nnd of
all the tnsdlclnl.s I have evor seen for (lie bow
els, Dr. Diggers' Huckleberry cordial is by far
tbs beat. ' |
nu on roe race or tns globs,
powder, well shaken, in a km
or water, ana applied with sprinkling pot
•pray nvriniro. or whisk hrootn. Keep it wel
■Erred up. lfc.$ tto* and 91 BoUtAgr. tf*
'MUCH-RATS? -CnLEARk OUT—
BED BUGS,'
PLIE8. J
Roaches. ■ntAwr.ter-bugt, moths, rata, tolas,'
fparrowi, jack rabbits, squirrels, gophers, lto.
.III.DM! U, l.ri’AttTAIKNT. ~
TULUHE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIML
iP.oinerljf, 1M7, - IK8I, tlie UnifWflty of TjouIbUim.)
Its ndv • ut 'gt’A f ir nrHotionl iiiHlrucMftD, And napeoiaifr
in ttt*s iri •*•*••* of th* H.mth-wont Aro nhcqualmi,u th®
h\v KH. tit it it «H|VH«bun(tAiit niatorikM from thecml
Charity lluspitAl wit 1$ ttn Tim tsoiln, aihI LM.DOl) nationt®
AiiuiiAlly. Ktudont® li«v« no honpitAl-fwi to daj and
hhooiaI iiiatruct C>n I® dally niton i.t Iti** bedti fe >•/ tha
• it *•, aa in no utlior iiistitutinii. Pur catalog®® «
inhumation, addr****
Pr«l. M. i:. CIIAMaI., M. I)., |>c a it,
IW~V. O. Drawor, Util, Now Orlcuna. Lu
Danffhtors. Wife* nnd .tlotlier*.
SJand for Pnniiplilet on Female DIbimummi, free;
•eouroly sealed) j)r. J,| H. Marohlsi, Utica, N.Y.
If afflicted with noroqiyoB, use Dr. Thompson’*
EyB-wtttor. All druggist* soil It at !Hfc\ a but I lo.
Tired Languid Dull
Turkish Houses.
Turkish houses contain no parlor, no
dining-room, no sleeping-room. All
tho apartments resemble one another,
and aro furnished in nearly tho same
style. Visitors are receive I in all the
rooms quite indiff really; people cat
wherevor they happen to be; they sleep
whorevertho master of the Ii-misc orders
to be plnced the mattresses nnd cushions,
which are shut up during tlie day in a
press, nnd during the night are laid out
on the floor.—[Cosmopolitan.
Always a Teuton—A German band
master.
Preserved Game.
In an open sunny space, in Hampden
Park, not fnr from the road, standing
among tlie thick grass, wo see two linnd-
sotno birds as largo as our ordinary poul
try. They aro pheasants and do not tip-
pear to lie in the least disturbed at seeing
us. They probably know that no ono
will he allowed to harm them except in
the game season, which will not arrive
for several months. The laws regarding
game are very strict in England, and
even in the shooting season no ono who
does not “preserve” game, as tho rear
ing and care of it, is hero called, is al
lowed to kill u rabbit, a partridge, or a
pheasant, even on his own property. All
such game is considctod lo belong to
tliosc persons in the neighborhood who
I have “preserves." If a rabbit should
' come into the garden of tlie house where
; we arc staying, and be found eating tlie
i cabbages, it may he driven away, but if
| tho owner of tlie garden should eateh or
i kill it, lie would be subject to penalty.
It must not lie supposed that tho great
I proprietors aro always stingy about
their game. On one of tlio estates
of tlie Prince of Wales each poor
1 man is allowed to come to the houso
j every day in tlie shooting season nnd get
one rabbit. Hois perfectly wolcomoto the
animal, now it is dead, for the Prince
and his friends could not possibly eat ail
they shoot; but if lie should presume to
deprive tlio owner of the pleasure of kill
ing it, lie would lie a poacher and be put
iu prison.—St. Nicholas.
How Loin; n Watch Should Last
“A iirst-class watch should lost for a
hundred years, if properly taken enro of,"
sail 1 a well-known watch-maker to a New
Y’ork Mail and Fxpnss man.
The reason that they wear out is the
faultof the owner and uot of tho watch.
In tlio first place, a wuteh should he
cleaned nnd oiled onoo in every eighteen
mo-'tV.. f f 1 ills i j not done the oil which
1 ibriiatcs tlio works will dry nnd the
wo. ks wear out by friction. Another mis
take is to wear a wuteh in an outside
S ocket where it is liable to ho jammed. I
ave known more watches ruined by
billiard playing titan any thing else. In
leaning over to mnke a long shot the vest
pocket is frequently brought in violent
contract with the table, and this repeated
jarring cannot fail to injure tho works.
The ; best watches are made to-day in
England. They arc masterpieces of work
manship. 1 should say that the American
watch ranks next, aud those manufac
tured in Switzerland third in order.
Some watches are made to run eight days
with one winding, but they will never
become popular. Their owners almost
always forget to wind them up on the
eighth day. 1 know of only one or two
in this country. They are made in
Switzerland. The usual length of [time
modern watches are calculated to' run
with one winding is from thirty to thirty-
six Lours ’’
■xprtvwM's tho romlltlnn ut tlmiisandt of peopls At
this aoiuon. Th* depressing rlTaets of ths worm
wenthor and that tired feeling aro quickly over
come by the iIao of Hood'® Sarsaparilla. It give®
strength In plocji of wenkne®*, glvoa tone to every
organ, cronto® an appetite and purlllea the blood.
Qlve It a trial nqw. i
"I have been troubled |for many years with violent
headache. Ilooll'g Sar®uparllla did me ®o much good
that I feel like m now being. I earnestly recommend
Hood'® .Sarsaparilla to all whotufTer with headochee."
“Mrs. K. Batciiikll, 0alien Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Bold by all druggUte. $1; six for $.V Prepared only
by O. I. ROOD It CO., Apothecaries, Lowoll Maes.
IOQ Doses One Dollar
Central University,
RICHMOND, KY. Ni xt Session opens Sep. 14,'87
Pnll Faculty, thorou^li iimi ruction, hsAlthy foention,
KtoderAtn «»xj)Mi!*«. 1*nf information »mi OaUIhruo
Apply to It. II. hliuifo-n, l>. !>., Cbansellor.
DATE
■ iiigton, l>.
\| HP iO obtained by II* IJICls-
y ■ IO HTON A VO., Wnsli-
('• Hond for our book of instruction®.
OPIUM
1 Morphine Habit Curai In lO
to 2til Suva, no pay IIM cured.
| I)r. J r Hirulieu., l^banon.Ohio.
COLTJMBIii
ATHENAEUM,
A SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES.
fl@f“Before deciding where to send your
daughter to school, write for nn illustra
ted catalogue giving full particulars, to
R0BT. D. SMITH, Pret’t, Columbia, Tenn.
MARLIN REPEATING
_ ~ RIFLE
Ouxrsn. —^
teed perfectly ac
curate and absolutely
•af®. Made in all elxoa for
large or small gome.
BALLARD
Gallery, llantlng and Target BI
head For Illustrated Catalogue.
Marlla Fire Arms Vo., N ow liavoo, Gobi
GLOVER BUILDING,
1 Washington. D. C.
TREATED FREE.
I>K. H. H. GUHJH1N Ac SON’S.'
Specialists for Thirteen Years Peat,
Have treated Dropsy aud it® coinulioation® with thsi
most wonderful ■uoo®®s; n«® vegntahla rsmedte®, ®w>
tlielr harmleR®. Romov® all symptom® of Dropcj la
eight to twsnty days.
Oure patient® pronounced hope!®®® by the b«®t of
removed.
Some mayery humbug without knowing anything
About it. Remember, It doe® not cost you anything to
pvt I ir.® the merits of our treatment for yoqrtelf. In ten
day i the difficulty of breathing is relieved, th® pu’«a
regular, the urinary organ® tnadn to discharge their
full duty, sleep is restored, the swelling all or nearly
/ini®, tnestruigtb increased and appetite mad® good.
Wo ar® constantly ourlng oasoe of long standing, cam
BEST IN THB
WORLD!
« Opt rating W.iahlng Machines. If you want
oiifseii'l nn your name.U.O.and egpreasoffl «•
At once. The N’tiMnnnl <’•* . 27 • ey8t..N.V
jSSp' ROOT BEER
Img. wholesomn bnrerMga. Hold by druggist®: mailed
forilfto. O. H. IllItKH. 4H N. Dela. Ave., Phlla., Pa.
Blair’s Pills.
St,f Box, .i t I
Uroat English Gout anti
Hhcumatlc Ksmedy.
4ivxl Box, .it) roiiiul, I -k l*i I to.
£
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. C
est Cough Hymn. Tnstoft good. Uso I
| III tlmo. Bold by druggists. 1
HEamg&aiKgM
... of long i ...
tlmt hav® boon tapped a number of tim«s, and th® pa*
tlent declared unable to lit® a week. Ow® full history
of oaa®. Name mx. llow long afflicUd, how badly
swollen and whor®, ar® bowel® oosti?o,\havo lean burst*
cd and dripp«d water! Send for fre® pamphlet, ooo*
tabling testimonials, questions, eto.
Ten days' treatment furnished fre® by md).
If you order trial send I Oct A In stamps to pilf postage,
lipllnny (Pit*) Positively Cured.
n. II. UUKKN «t NONH. M. I>*$
VAOH Marietta .Street, Atlantis, <•’a.
J.P. STEVENS & BRO.
Ini far Cxlxl.f
BUSINESS
Kdnoatlou * nucoi.lt/ at MOOUI'.’M lU'NINKDW
I'NIVIfltNITY, Atlanta, Un. On. of th. b«t
lohoot. tn the Ouuntrv. homl lor OlrouUr*.
' C /J/£-ns inr'Ofrcui
TIT*
A Specimen ot Peuiuanihlp.
I Must ruled lloek
Ivi'iii I’ Kt.i:. Address*
1.4. Al. HOCK, P.0.
K i I1IO. AI In n tn. OAj
1 to it day. Samples wor^h IJ ; !A FRP.R.
\ Linen not under the horse's fen? rue
! Bro* der Safofy Rein nolder Co., -JMIy.
Obtained. Bend stamp for
_ _ _ Inventors’Gulden U.
-awyer. Washington. 1). C
fIDIIIIfl Habit Ourod*Trentinentsei^ontrlij.
U« IUnl glTMANE HKMKIIVTil. I.itKay
A. \. IT TMrtv»ovn , * t »J
PATENTS
■ ham, Patent lawyer.
LIVER, BLOOD AND LUNG DISEASES.
Mrs. Mart A. MoCr.rtnE, Columbus, Kans.,
I IVEm DISEASE I writes: "I addreMotl you In November, lh«4,
I In regard to my health, being afflicted with
AND I fi vor disease, heart trouble, and fomale weak-
I nnn«. I was advised to mo Dr. Fiorco's*
HEARMRO R ElUo'dcn Medical Discovery, Favorite I’ro-
iltxniinutlDLCj 8cr iptlon and Pellets. I used ono bottle
of tbo ’Pregcrlptton,’ fivo of tlio ‘Discov
ery,’ and four of tho * Pleasant Purgativo Pellet,.’ My health bo-
gau to improve under tho ugoof your mcdleino, and my strength
exmo back. My difficulties liavo oil disappeared. I can work hnrd
all day, or walk four or fivo milos a day, anil stand It well; aud when
I began using tho niodlclno I could scarcely walk across tho room,
most oif tbo tlmo, and I Uld not think I could ever foci well again.
I havo n little baby girl eight months old. Although slio lsaltttlo
delicate In size and appearance, she Is healthy. I givo your reme-
dlosall tho credit for ourlng mo, as I took no other treatment utter
beginning their uso. I am very grateful for your kindness, aud
thank Cod and thunk you that I am as well us 1 am after yours
of Buffering.”
Mrs. I. V. Wanna
N. Y„ writes:
nan, of Yorkshire, Cattaraugus Co.
I m wish to stiy a few words, in prnisd
of y ur ’Golden Medical Discovery ’ and ‘Pleasant
Purgativo Pellets.’ For fivo years previous to
taking thorn 1 was a great sufferer; I had a
severe pain in my right side continually; was
uuahlo to do my own work. I am happy to say
I am now woll und strong, thunks to your medicines.'*
Chronic Diarrhea Cured.—D. Lazahiik, Esq., *75 and *77
Jlecatur.Slreef. Nfiu Ortcmu, La., writes: "1 used threo bottles of
the ‘Golden Medical Disoovery/ and It has cured me of ehronlo
diarrhea. My bowels aro now regular.’’
n _. Mrs. PaimET.ra Brundaob, of 157 IjOtk Street,
GENERAL lockport, N. Y. writes: " I was troubled with
Mknbiiab c hiiig, nervous and general debility, with frequent
[lCDII |TV sore throat, and my mouth was badly cankered..
ULDIkllla My liver was Inactive, and I suffered much from.
dyspepsia. 1 um pleased to say that your‘Golden
Medical Discovery’ ami ‘Pellets' bavo cured mo of all these
ailments aud I cannot say enough lu their pralso. I must also
suy a word in referenoo to your ‘Favorlto Prescription,'us It
has proven Itself a most excellent medicine for weak females.
It haa boon used in my family with excellent results."
Dyspepsia.—James L..Colut, Esq., of Yucatan, Houston Co-
Minn., writes: "I was troubled with Indigestion, and would est
heartily and grow poor nt tho same tlmo. I experienced heartburn,
sour stomuen, and many other dlsagrceuldo symptoms common
to tlmt disorder. I commenced Inking your
luuiflsnivri, ‘Goldeu Modlonl Discovery’ nnd ‘Pollcts, und
INVIGORATES I am now eutlrely free from the dyspei«tn, and
. nm, In faot. healthier tlmn I liavo been for
THF NVSTFII fivo y<'»rs. I weigh one hundred and seventy-
ink, uiaibm. OI10 uu(1 ono-hulr pounds, and liavo dono a*
much work tho past summer as 1 have ever
“much work tlio past summer as l nave ever
dono In tho same length of tlmo In my life. I novor took a
mcdleino thnt seemed to tono up tho muscles and Invl^orato
tho whole system equal to your ‘Discovery ’ and ‘ Pellets.
Dyspepsia.— Theresa A. Cass, of Springfield, Mo., writes:
1 was troubled ono year with liver complaint, dyspepsia, anu
sleeplessness, but your ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ cured me. i
Chills and Fever.—Hcv. II. E. Mosley, Montmorencl, S. C.,
writes: "Lust August I thought I would die with chills und fever.
I took your * Discovery' aud it stopped them in a very short time.
“THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.”
aio.i^! 1 i?, l ? , Vf'VTi. 0 !n?i nie b th0 LloodjWhich Is the fountain of health, by using Dr. Plereo'g Golden Modical Dlsoovory, and good
! i n .'u buo5,nnt l>°dlly health and vigor will bo established. „ .
imlan i FjrmnrnHv hn« ?f V nrnS! 1 !l ulnor8 / from the common pimple, blotch, or eruption, to the worst Serofula^ or blood-
P o t? 0 Jf' .Bspoolnlly^bas^ ,,ItvHV^nri't^F°t| CltC! ^Ul ou ^ 11 0 Salt-rheum or Tetter, fnvorjimvi llln-lnlnf TUacmin. SurofuiOir S’tei
Rev. F. Asburt Howem, Pastor of the M. E.
Church, of Silverton, N. J., says: ‘‘I was af
flicted with catarrh nnd Indigestion. Bolls and
blotches began 'to arlso on tho surface of tho
skin, mid I oxperlenood n tired feeling and
dullness. I began the uso of Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medioal Dlsoovory os directed by
r . . , him for such complaints, and in ono week's
gan . ! ko tt"P w man ' 'md am now sound and well.
The Pleasant 1 urgatlve Pollcts aro the best remedy for bilious or
Blok headaoho, or tightness about tho chest, and bad taste In tho
mouth, that I huvo over used. My wife could not walk across tlio
floor when »ho began to tako your ‘Golden Medical Discovery.’
Now sho can walk qulto a tittle ways, and do somo light work.
ot Ainsumrth, lnd., writes:
My little boy had boon troubled with hip-joint
disease tor two yenrs. When lie commenced tho
.H s , 0 ., 0 f y?ur Golden Medical Disoovery’ and
I pilots, he was confined to Ills bed, and oould
not po moved without suffering great pain. Dut
now, thanks to your Disoovery,’ he is ablo to bo up all the tlmo.
and oan walk with the help of crutches. Ho does not suffer any
pain, and can eat nnd sleep as well as any one. It has only been
about throe months sinco ho commenced using your medicine.
I cannot find words with which to express my gratitude for me
benefit ho haa received through you.”
Skin Disease.—The “ Democrat and New*;"
of Cambridge, Maryland, says: * Mrs-
Ann 1’oole, wifo of Leonard Toole, of It «-
liameburg, Dorchester Co., Mil., has been curea
of a had case of Eczema by using Dr. Fierce*
Golden Medical Discovery. Tho discus*) SP"
poarod first in her feet, extended to the knees,
covering tbo whole of tho lower limbs from feet to knees, then
attacked tho elbows and became so severe as to prostrate i‘*-‘-
After being treated by several physicians for a year or two sue
commenced tho uso of tlio modiclno named above, bho b
began to mend and is mnv well nnd hearty. Mrs. 1’oole tinmoi
tho medicine has saved tier lifo and prolonged her dnys. ...
Mr. T. A. Ayres, of East A’eui Market, Dorchester County,
vouohes for the above facts.
CONSUMPTION, WEAK LUNGS, SPITTING OF BLOOD
Consumption (which Is fiorofulaof the Lunas), bv Its wonderful blood-mirlfvlng. iuvlgor
— — — ■-'*"**> w■ aw—w — -
Ung a anS B L”r , ft , i , ve A prwonies HRT F 0 o U r r 'wS’k®'/n^ 0n K < ,^l , , ich the I*ungs),by Ha wonderful blood-purifying. IuWg
ana kindred affunfinn* if in • 9? Blood, Shortness or Breath, Bronchitis, Severe Coughs, -AstU
and purlfieis the tilood.’ S * * ovorel <f n ronody. While It promptly oures tho severest Coughs It streugthons the sys'
" wastlr^^llaeas'fl." 8 Up tll ° 8yBtem > 811,1 iuoreasea the flesh and weight of those reduced below tho usual standard of health
nn)*' vl.V.T^m 8- Kd Y akd Newton, of HarrowmUh. oal Disoovery ’ has ourod my daughter of a very bad ulcer looa
uni., writes. You will ever bo praised by mo for tho remnrkn.
ble cure in my caso. I was so reduced that my friends had all
given me up, and 1 liac] also been given up by two doctors I then
went to tho best doctor in these parts. He told tno that medioln*
was only a punishment in my ciise. nnd would not undertake to
I ———1 mo. Ho said I might try Cod liver Si if I
Dtllirii IID I 118 , wafi the only thing that eould possl-
HllVEN UP I My VO power over consuSptPonso
Tn llir I t 1 trio " tbo Cod fivor oil as a last
TO UIE„ I bu i 1 wtis so weuk I eould not keep It
I on my Btom&ch. Mv hnshnrwi *>nnii. ,
t for mo
TO DlE„ I o r n1nV «Sv’m IU 'h 1 M IUJ n° WCak 1 eould 'r'ot^eorflt
■hhI ?n in?? My husband, ni)t . feollnre satisfied
srroirything ho saw advertisedl^r^ny'TOmptabit 1 'proeure^a^u^ 0
Uty of youir ‘ Golden Modloal Discover" S took on y four bottbi'
and, to tho surprise of evorybodv . r ootttes,
!m?KtTnd n V„ roly T f £ 00 tr S m t ^ llt t ^rlliln^ig y ti wiUch hareassod 0 me
of^ireare. d und'now l fnei b ^ n aral ^ t e <1 with rheumatism fora number
M^yfVo^ ‘Goldon^Sdl^D^e^ S^t^
. S* “—oj-* w* vuu uio> uau, aim uioreuy BdVC
•Sl'fn^doubt. WSLyhoAi
doiibt,^ need But wtlte^ me, inclosing a stamped^“aelf-
the foregoing statement will
oldsn^Me
very ’ has ourod my daughter of n very bad ulcer lot**
Igh. After trying almost everything without success, j
ttiroe bottles or your * Discovery,” whloh healed it
r Mr. Downs cotitinues:
Coninmptlou and Heart Dlseasee-“I also wish
thank you for the remarkable euro y ou linve effected in my ca
For tlm-i venis I hail sntfured from that ter
Wasted to
! Skeleton.
tliUil 17171 ifjli i I I'H Y Ull, IIIIU J DU ty* u _ "ii,
hopes of curing me, liut it would take ann
took five months’ treatment in ull. The first two month* f
nlmoBt discouraged: could not perceive any favorable synjP!r-
but tho third month I began to nlek up In flesh and strengm-
cannot now recite how, step by stop, the signs and rciwui.
returning health gradually but surely developed tnenisei
To-day I tip the scales at one hundred aud sixty, and am
and strong." _, ...
Our principal reliance In < Mr. Downs’ terrible oia
waa tho ’• Golden Medioal Dip.
inrkii ino euro ymi nave euuutcu ....... —
thro yeme I find siitrercd from that wr
bio disease, consumption, und heart oiblu
Before consulting you 1 lmd wasted away
a skeleton: eould not sleep nor rest, ana mn
times wished to dlo to lie out of uiy mlscy-
then coosiilled you, and you told roe you u
' ----- ’’It would take time.
ii-et turf) montufl 1 "
cannot now recite ho it, step by Bt'‘P, tho signs ana
returning health gradually but surely developed thorn*
To-day I tip the scales at one hundred aud sixty, and am
and strong,"
addressed envolope for reply, when
be fully substantiated by me.”
Iffleer Cured.—Traao R. Down, ukn nt
Bockland Co., N. Y. (P. O. Bo*^MlTwSUsF'h'nhe
Goldea Kedlcxl Discovery h Sold by Druggists.
SNDNLD’S OIGFENGARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Proyrlstor®
No. M| Main Wrest, BUFFALO' *
BLEEDifiG
CRflM I HUPP I 'VToldcn "jiriiicni "Dlsoovory.’ She ua» '
irnum LUnL't).S I,,1,1 :my Bin-:'' Ira use. For some six men
* onoJ sho has ti. . trollng so well that si
1 discontinued it.”
Price $1.00 per Dottle, or Six Bottle* for $6.0®>