Semi ee some RIND - i | 1 ' ' heart from breaking. How dazzlingly | York and told me Mr. Rogers had died ; night as well as in the day. Her parlor FAKE COMSUMPTION CURES. FOR AND ABOU OMEN. + the sunshine is flooding the hills around! | suddenly that morning. my thought was, | was his bedroom. Ne Yo pation — i Br Y It is like a mockery. | Oh, favorite of fortune—fortunate all his | upon him on the ground floor he always “Lloyd's Consumption Cure” has had | DAILY THOUGHT. - | Seventy-four years old, twenty-four long and lovely life—fortunate to his lat- | followed me about, and when I went up- | different names at different times. It is f none would Hear, a Lie would lack a Handle: » si — |days Seventy-four years old yester- | est moment! The reporters said there | stairs he went too—in a tumultuous gal- | sometimes called "Re.Stor-All” and is I! needs both Tongue and Ear to make a Scan- Bellefonte, Pa., May 12, 1911. > Who can estimate my today? | were tears of sorrow in myeyes. True— lop. But now it was different; after pat- | advertised to cure paralysis as well as 9 a ———— have looked upon Ee I won f ut they were for sie, not for him. He | ting him a little I went to the library—he consumption. Under the name of “Aic- —— TRANSFER. der I can bear it. She looks just as her {had no loss. All the fortunes he | remained behind; when I went up-stairs sol” it is offered to physicians. This med- _ Paris has revived the lace ruffles and mother looked when she lay dead in that | had ever made before were poverty com- | he did not follow me with his wistful | json hails from St. Louis. A St. Louis frills of the Gorgian period. S300 are onthe tne Florentine villa so ago. The sweet pared with this one. ges. He has wonderful eyes—big, and i reports that he called at the This means that this quaint and dainty ou oom Yoe, placidity of death! it is more beautiful | and eloquent. He can talk with office and expressed interest in the fashion will be seen very shortly in this ” a transfer. wiretaud dia than sleep. $ Why did 1 build this house, two years them. He is a beautiful creature, and is i After considerable conversa. country. Jog lined ret . 1 saw her mother buried. ] wid 1:ggot To shelter this vast emptiness? | of the breed of the New York police-dogs. | tion Lloyd offered him a shares in the Conspicuous among the new lace acces- GO AE. ut and goo | would never endure that horror again; How foolish I was! But I shall stay in I do not like dogs, because they bark “Re-Stor-All vy." He said $5.00 sories of this period are the frills that Set She 1 ou 3 and & oom that I would never again look into the it. The spirits of the dead hallow a house, | when there is no occasion for it; but I | would be Ea month's treat. fall over the hand. 4m sunshine there's room, py of any one der to me I have \ fof me, It was fot $0 with other mem. ave liked thi one Sons the be inning, ment and the company’s profits would be _ Another striking development of the Hanaler. to that. They will take Jean from | bers am because he belonged to Jean, cause | §4 50, ici ill i ¥ Yu 20% 0 the wars Sein, | this house tomorrow, and bear her to El Wit alll in oo Mrs. Clem- | he never barks except when there is OC- | the The | Fin Sugfesiod that alt Juli is seen On the boulevards of the g 23 tiatler. se dnd : | isa, New York. where lie those of us'ens would never emter it ‘again, But i casion—which is not oftener than twice a | not have consumption, and Lloyd Itisa satin ribbon folded around pa not stay t complain, that have been released, but I shall nct made the house dearer to me. I have en- | week. ! replied that any persons that had a reia- the neck, the ends tied in a chic bow be- re a transfer. ! follow. tered it once since, when it was tenant-| In my Wanderifge I visited Jean's par- | tive or friend died of consumption would neath the chin. Tho chtecia) cans ate yasaiay thivugh. ! Jean was on the dock when the ship less and silent and forlorn, but to me it |lor. On a shelf I found a pile of mY | think they had consumption if they only _ From this falls a full frill of white cam- Dd here room for you— | came in, only four days ago. She was at was a holy place and beautiful. It seemed | books, and I knew what it meant. She ' had 2 pain in their stomach, and would bric or lace in the form of the jabot. a transfer. the door, beaming a welcome, when I to me that the spirits of the dead were | was waiting for me to come home from | ci In the lace frills falling ov. . Hace Hea ak i i send for a bottle of his medicine. ng over knuck You grouchy | reached this house the next evening. We all about me, and would speak to me and | Bermuda and autograph them, then she | doctor saw aroom about one-fourth les is sounded the return of the long, wo Sanger. played cards, and she tried to teach me a ' welcome me if they could; Livy, and | would send them away. If I only knew | ful} of copies of the St. Louis Star. Lloyd tight sleeve. . ae happy special back, | new called "Mark Twain." We sat Susy, and George, and Henry Robinson, | what she intended them for! But I shall | said he was sending out 100,000 copies of Sleeves are of lace or are tucked, but a transfer. the cheerily in the li last and Charles Dudley Warner. How good | never know, I will keep them. Her hand | the november 8 edition of the Star which are always tight-fitting and made of the Jeep ui Shue Shain, ud pl rope EE - and kind they were, and how lovable | has touched them—it is an accolade—thev | had given him a free write-up. Almost One material. lands you at the station Hope— gia, where she was making Christmas their lives! In I could see them |are noble, now. | any newspaper run without a conscience a Get a transfer. preparations. She said she would finish all again, ).could the children back! And in a closet she had hidden a Sur- | would give a fakir a free write-up if he : Aan id them in the morning, and then her little and hear them romp again with George for me—a thing I have often wished | bought 100,000 copies of the paper in re. (air aims of 3. styile ate bigh in THE DEATH OF JEAN French friend would arrive from New , —that black ex-slave and chil- | I owned; a noble big globe. I couldn't | turn. It seems needless to say that the A or With the spring -made. Nearly York-the surprise would follow; the dren's idol who came one day—a flitti see it for ed tears. e wil never know | doctor reporting this visit did not take J the Sulaft Wolds haves Seas pocke surprise been working over for stranger—to wash windows, e in it, pleasure. | gtock Consumption Com- ly The death of Jean Clemens occurred While she was out for a moment eighteen Until he died. Clara | Today the mails are full of loving re. ' saan" SCoNetBtion Core odio it may be ahached the watch, gaily i the morning of December 24, |; stole a look. Theloggia floor and Jean would never shar again the membrances for her; full of those old, | PP fortunately ali doctors. are not so Shang purse of shall vanity case of the Mr. Clemens was in great stress of | was clothed with rugs and New York hotel which their had | od kind words she loved so well, "Merry | conscientious as to deceiving and robbing spr ess, gael, reached this side of mind when I first saw him, but a few ' (ith chairs and sofas; and the uncom- frequented in earlier days. could | Christmas to Jean!" If she could only | the sick for it is said upon good author the water. all, it ma little hours later I found him writing steadily. | pleted surprise was there: in the form of not bear it. But I shall stay in house. | have lived one day longer! ity that some physicians otherwise of '. CLDEr Or not anything is attached to “I am setting it down,” he said, | a Christmas tree that was drenched with It is dearer to me to-night than ever it | At last she ran out of money and would | geod standing are stockholders in this the sod of the decorative Jorghotie chun, Jig ia La relief tose to WHE i, | silver film in a most wonderful way; and , was before. 's spirit will make it not use mine. So she sent to ome of | company and in others of similar nature °° tS 2Pparent purpose is in the me an excuse for thinking. ht ona table was a prodigal profusion of | beautiful for me always. Her lonely and | those New York homes for poor girls all | “Nature's Creation” is a nostrum that PCcXCl: 1here is no end to different intervals during that day and, the next | bright things which she was going to, tragic death—but I will not think of that the clothes she. could spa more, | has been very daring in its advertising pase jtle anaes inc Ro nations of looked usually found ting. upon What desecrating | now. most . Then on the evening of the 25th, when hang wr a eloquent un- | Jean's mother always devoted two or| Christmas Night.—This afternoon they DE aris 3: sue vith seid from an Jifferent semi-precious stones mounted he knew that Jean had been 3 west finished surprise from that place? Not three weeks to Christmas shopping, and | took her away from her room. As soon impure life but after public attention was | nag ares, While others are more con- in Elmira, he came to my room wi surely. All these fittle wa was always physically exhausted when |as I might, I went down to the library, | drawn to the enormous death rates from | “c v20ve ifn I Bom. tters Jays, Christivas Eve came, Jean was her very | and there she lay, in her coffin in exact- tuberculosis, this accommodating nos- little oth- | own child—she wore herself out present. | ly the same clothes she wore when she ' trum became a consu .| “Clocked” osiery, such worn | hunti in New York these latter days. | stood at the other end of the same room | tj | OATS ID Lop iy acs og wie, Wer , Paine ust found on her desk a long |on the 6th of October last, as Clara’s public. | smartly dressed girls. All the i E § g 3 gE 2 : 2 z z | 3 : d. Her face was radiant | The advertisemen ” . for day wear show this embroidery ts final 3 othe digo | those, and the thought of it brings tears. | whom she sent presents last night. Ap- | with happy excitement then; it was the | tion” say: “It is NE A area: side, sometimes in self colors, bat more wy a eral Blmost I . All these things such a few pareiily she fi no one. And Katy | same face now, with the dignity of death | etable matter: contains everything bene- Often in one contrasting. Red or white (April 21st) he was Jean. It would | hours ago—and now she lies yonder. Lies | found a roll of bank-notes, for the | and the peace of God upon it. ficial and nothing harmful; itisa com. on black is beyond doubt the best. 1 seem, now, that the world , with pro- ts. They told me the first mourner to come i decora! alread plex vegetable compou This form of tion has priety, read these losing words. PANE. | Her dog has been wandering about the | was the dog, He came uninvited, and analyzed; it contains 0g, ht cuvioL be displaced openwork for the Ploet v' 4 BERT had this experience before; but it loday, convaieless and forlorn. | stood up on his hind legs and rested his dient that the medical world knows noth- dressed woman. It has finally been de- $ EU; CHETIAS ve. 43 A. A100 still be incredible if I had had it a t have seen him from the windows. She | fore paws upon the trestl®, and took a | j about, etc.” cided that lacy effects are not good for TORMFI , «BAM. 00. | amQitimes. ¢ | got him from Germany. He has tall ears | last long look at tte face that was so dear analysis of the American Medical the street, but that they should be reserv- ean 5 Heat cHiinl . “Miss Jedh is dead!” i and looks exactly like a wolf. He was | to him, then went his way as silently as | Association report that they found "Na. ed for the house and evening wear. There. a Q one a : 0 py : Upon | That is what Katy said. When I heard | educated in Germany, and knows no lan- | he had come. He knows. ture's Creation” to be “essentially a so- fore, elaborate as is the hosiery for dress papes il ittle happenings of twenty. the door behind the bed's head with- | guage but the German. Jean gave him | At mid-afternoon it began to snow. | jution of potassium iodid in a week al- USe, it is very plain for street wear. our Ls Drvcell po. i sagen, Would out a iminary knock, I Spl it no orders save in that tongue. And so, | The pity of it—that Jean could not see it! | coholic medium containing vegetable ex- ' Severity in out of doors dress has led : a dear 3 No was Jean SOM to kiss me morn- | when the burglar-alarm made a fierce | She so loved the snow. tractives and flavoring matter, and small | to adopting an entirely different quality DOS 1 woul books ing, she being only person who was | clamor at midnight a fortnight ago, the| The snow continued to fall. At six quantities of inorganic salts.” This an- Of hosiery for that time. Girls who can con them? I think not. They pour wot to entering without formalities. | butler, who is French and knows no Ger- | o'clock the hearse drew up to the door to | alysis shows that the principal ingredient "afford to, wear silk stockings always, but things that have been always happening | been 10 Joan's parlor, Such 4 man, tried in vain to interest the dog in | bear away its pathetic burden. As they | of the complex vegetable compound ; they have now at least three different every day, and were always so unimport- | Js oups burglar. Jean wrote me, to | lifted the casket, Paine began playing on | which cannot be analyzed” was potassium qualities. When walking, the thin trans. turmoil of Christmas presents for serv- | about the incident. It was the | the orchestrelle Schubert's Impromptu, | jodid | parent, though plain, kind is gi ant and easily forgettable before—but ants and friends! They are everywhere; | last letter I was ever to receive from her | which was Jean's favorite. Then he pla youl any end but a iestom Ven | Patent, though plain, Kind ie given up. : ! 3 | , y- i ing- This is ni now! Now, how different! how precious tables, chairs, sofas, the floor—everything bright head and her competent hand. |ed the Intermezzo; that was for Susy; des clase Potssh in. the vegetable king OW Sogrvm fay. 11s house 41 g j g ks ie : : : the morning, h i isits i they as, J how Sear, how uniorgettable; is occupied, and over-occupied. It ismany | The dog will not be neglected. then he played the Largo; that was for| The resident of the “Nature's Crea. motor in i aa paying Yeming Patsetics OW Sacred, clothed | and many a year since 1 have seen the ; their mother. He did this at my request. | tion” Company is a woman, Mrs. J. M. | with dignity like. In that ancient day Mrs. Clemens There was never a kinder heart than » «M. | = : ; Elsewhere in this Auto-biogra; i Last night Jean, all flushed with splen- and I used to slip into the nursery at mid- | Jean's. From her childhood up she al- | o}d on Intermeszo. ae Reynolds. She has of late used what is : “hlivd® Pe) The neweat trimmings in millinery em- ug hesilth, aud I fhe same, ftom a | night on Christmas Eve and look the. ar- ways spent the most of her allowance on | came to be associated in my heart with Zaliod 000 nd Mvertising method. A phasizes the use of ee Such oli be Ne as 0 ro 4 Bs rmu a . I" | ray of presents over. The children were | charities of one kind and another. After | Susy and Livy in their last hours in this sumptives that she possesses information = 1h¢ Word conjures up an infinite variety y, strolle nd in hand from the din- | little then. And now here is Jean's par- | she became secretary and had her income | ife. which cost her a fortune and she feels ©f Styles of which our mothers and grand- ner tale pn sal down in he Wary and 'lor looking just as that nursery used to | doubled she spent her money upon these, Fyom my windows I saw the hearse | that she should let every Ce Bus mothers knew nothing, and fair women cha i a h plan » a scussed, | look. The presents are not labeled—the | things with a free hand. Mine too, I am | and the carriages wind along the road | know her experience. The Ne of today can be doubly grateful for the c er 4 am happi Y day ow Jvsuspect hands are forever idle that would have la- | glad and grateful to say. . and gradually grow vague and spectral | answer this advertisement receive a let. | ¢fiorts of milliners. ingly) until nine—which is ate for Ug | beled them to-day. Jean's mother used| She was a loyal friend to all animals, | in the falling snow, and presently disap- | ter in which she says she cured herself Garlands of plumes re used on broad, then as Jean frond ro | to WoilChersalf gown with her Christmas | and she loved them all birds, beasts 5nd fear, Jean was gone out of my life, and | by the discovery “of a combination of low hats, Thay are spotted and flecked i ia oe : i rations. Jean di e same yester- | eve ing—even snakes—an Ce | would not come back any more. Jervi i 5 " + with color, and some ar said, "I can't kiss you good night, father: day and the preceding days, and the fa- | from me. She knew all the birds; she the cousin she had i with Jovi certain roots and herbs,” not mentioning | $ je made of avers the : : ie of different shades, giving a wonderfull . I have a cold, and you could catch it." I ioye has cost her her life. The fatigue was high up in that lore. She became a they were babies together—he and her potash. She then refers the inguirer to | irridescent effect. 8 y bent and kissed her hand. She was mov- | caused the convulsion that attacked ! her secretary, and letters come extolling er | member of various humane societies when | 1s 1 ? 1 ¢ | [ 1 | beloved old Katy—were conducting her | « 0 son | On velvet turbans the use of a single » A Saw it " hee SYeswand She np. ‘ this morning. She had had no attack for | she was still a little girl—both here and | to her distant childhood home, where she | Nore Craation Cures” mentioned A Plume attached at the front, and extend- a oly kissed 1 y “Sleep Eh dear!” | months. | abroad—and she remained an active mem- | will lie by her mother’s side once more, | | ing toward the back in a slanting line, is 1 i 1 from both, we parted | 9 I ber 20 SHO Just Mio Re Tuna i" > in the company of Susy and Langdon. 3 his Aridle ew! om quite evident. : ‘hi ; : ean was so full of life and energy that | : i oh in deceiving multitud S pw | \ art if pt seven this morning L woke, | ut" Conshanily in Ganger of guanine | Mls. ere and in Europe. to | December 2611The dog came to see | 1 Seceving multitudes because so few ing’ the ie fn shapes ead us to he ny nig Mg vp Mp or ing her strength. Every morning she | he was an ernbasiaceiig Secretary: o me at eig * o'clock this morning. © | disease of any kind. Some drugs in the introduction of ostrich feathers to edge iin at a IE ion ler | was in the saddle by half past seven, and | she Pehed my correspon fence og 3 the | was yory an egtionats, poe oipluant My hands of experienced and carefully train- | the brim. Two successful Paris milliners 3 roe - % ar | off to the station for her mail. She ex. Waste ket and answ the letters. | room wi is quarters hereafter. ed medical men help tide over emergen- | have done this with great effect. € nail ien Katy entered, stood | amined the letters and I distributed them: | She thought all letters deserved the| The storm raged all night. It has raged ; quaking and gasping at my bedside a mo- oon 0"t0 her some to Mr. Paine, the oth. | courtesy of an answer. Her mother all the morning. The snow drives across | Ci€S; but itis Nature that cures. Drugs = Miss Jo Jognd he T tongue: | ers to the stenographer and myself. She | brought her up in that kindly error. the landscape in vast clouds, superb, sub. | in the hands of the unskilled and ignorant | [400 pores frequently disfigure an J ean 4 } . : ; She could write a good letter, and was | lime—and Jean not here to see. are potent for harm. Drugs are especial- | otherwise pretty skin, and when once en- Possibly I know now what the soldier | jicspaiched her Share 2 a fen Samed swift with her pen. She had but an in- I harming 0 th Sonsumplive as they jarged, it is generally adifficult matter to feels when a bullet crashes through his | jnien dine her farm and her poultry the | different ear for music, but her tongue| 2.30». M.—It is the time appointed. nen y all affect the ig piariously | cloge them. heart. | rest of the day. Sometimes she played | took to languages with an facility. | The funeral has begun. Four hundred | 57C.% cOTSURPUYe needs to have Ws Cl-| If possible, go to a skin specialist for In her bath-room there she lay, the pir. gc” vih me after dinner. but she | She never allowed her Italian, French and | miles away, but I can see it all, just as if ON mil est og PD. | massage. If not possible, try bathing the fair young creature, stretched upon the | was usually too tired to play and went | érman to get rusty through neglect. I were there. The Scene is the library, | © POR the assimilation o 18 file de- | face night and morning for ten minutes floor and covered with a sheet. And | early to bed. ! The telegrams of sympathy are flowing | in the Langdon homestead. Jean's coffin Tt is ti igh pin hot water, the temperature of which is looking so placid, so natural, and as if | Yesterday 1 told her about some plans | in. from far and wide, now, just as they | stands where her mother and I stood, TE ihe 3 mgity protest vent pa constantly increased till it is as hot as asleep. We knew what had happened. | 1 had been devising while absent in Ber. did in Italy five years and a half ago, | forty years ago, and were married; and ovept le land against the false ON ertise- can be borne. She was an epileptic: she had beenseized | 2 "CF lighten her burdens. We would | When this child's mother laid down her | where Susy’s coffin stood thirteen years or 0 pe’ Han Dore. il} e for | Then quickly change to cold water, with a convulsion and heart failure in | get a housekeeper; also we would put her | blameless life. They cannot heal the |ago; where her mother's stood thirteen | = hi hall n an ag on in. | Partly dry the face and pour alcohol in a her bath. The doctor had to come Sev- | Gare of the secretary work into Mr, | hurt, but they take away some of the | years and a half ago; and where mine | SWE RHCH WILCERD OF CeStroy The W- | wet Turkish washcloth and rub over the eral miles. His efforts, like our previous | pair ess hands. pain. When Jean and I kissed hands and | will stand, after a little time. Oe he) Sorliang whereby muliitudes | face and let it dry without wiping. To This line for the plume is used on large hats as well. And speak- ones, failed to bring her back to life. , : rt t last night, how li are money and life by | keen the f A It is noon Bow ow Jovalie he looks, Ee in She had bask Ra od} bi eh a a, how ite Five o’clock.—It is all over. Sharks | who ought © bein prison a i d-| eep the face gant take frequent baths. ow sweet and how tranquil! It is a no-|; . : t uld be bringi ttors o i ir | be face and ul of lim: and ha | SE Lod ie anise ter oe | When Clara went away two weeks age | ellowmen. By is, MAvTun AL. | Dainty frock of fc striped back was a rt that lies there so still. i : \ Ast a | and white mo ine de soie, over satin In England, thirteen years ago, my Paine 20 out the checkswehe would con. “From the bottom of our hearts we | bear it, for I had Jean left. I said we The Oldest Rose-bush. | of some more festive coloring, finished at wife and I were stabbed to the heart | sou corsmoe to Torslt AIO, she | send our sympathy, dearest of friends.” | Would be a family. “We said we would — | the neck and sleeves with a narrow bias with a cablegram which said, “Susy was 1 be close com: and happy—just we | So far as is known, the oldest rose-bush | fold of satin the same color and having a mercifully released today.” 1 ey to Jet Raty assist. iso She woul contin- For many and many a day to come, | tWO That fair dream was in my mind! in the world is the one on the cathedral | round collar and empiecement and 9 send a like shock to Clara, in Berlin, this Dis Beer le Je ot personal | wherever I go in this house, remem. when Jean met me at the steamer last | wall at Hildesheim, Germany. It can be | der sleevs of embroidered net or lace, are morning. With the peremptory addi. | frien 2 Nie. Soh Se he COMPIO- | brances of Jean will mutely speak to me | Monday; it was in my mind when she | traced back with certainty to the eleventh | adorned with tiny groups of flat satin tion, “You must not come home.” Clara o Ey all 5 Jat ame: of her. Who can count the number of | received me at the r last Tuesday | century, when the ca records show | buttons, either black or the color of the and her husband sailed from here on the SHORED | Was Sot ale) Re rot any | shem? evening. We were ; we were a! thatit was an item of expense to the | underdress. Others, of checked or fi 11th of this month. How will Clara bear Li e gi eat 8. nat She was in exile two years with the |family! the dream come true—oh, | care takers of the ancient edifice. The | mousseline de soie, have a fichu arrange- it? Jean, from her babyhood was a wor- TE hope of healing her : preciously true! contentedly true, satisfy- | main trunk of the bush is twenty inches | ment tucked into a high pleated belting. shipper of Clara. | pa HOF I was proud of There are no words to express how grate- | ingly true! and remained true two whole and the branches spread over our days ago I came back from a1 STE MY Secretary, was never able | ¢)'1 am that she did not meet her fate in | 4ays. i is Sie Wall 10 @ Mejght of wen ve feet. . : month's holiday in Bermuda in perfected | {> persuade to give up any part of | bo ona oe strangers, but in the loving| And now? Now Jean is inher grave! | Though the oldest, this is by no means | Eye-strain frequently acts, says a writer health; but by some accident the repor- | Te share in that unic work. shelter of her own home. In her grave—if I can believe it. God | the rose-bush in Germany, how- on medical topics, exhausting the ters failed to perceive this. Day before | oo he talk last night I said I found rest her sweet spirit! —By Mark Twain, | ever. largest one in that country, Nervous system of the patient, and vesterday, letters and telegrams began to | everything going so smoothly that if she | «Afiss Jean is dead!” in Harper's Magazine. and likely in all Europe, is the one | through the medium of brain and spinal i i and | . Moe itje true. i bial ere eene in the ehnle Garden in Freibmg. Tie ford Siten has a profound ahd. far seach blessed! month ago I was ng bubbling : runs up to a height of one hundred and | ing effect on functions of the various again for another | and hilarious articles for magazines yet to t One baby in my a wouple of others fifteen feet. The stock is wild rose, and | organs of the body and on the general month. She wi Srpent that | should do | appear, and now I am writing—this. Heging at her sk and vet this woman | the graft, made thirty years ago, a_tea- | nutrition of the patient. it, and said that if I would put off the ig Da yet Foie: woman rose of the Chromatella variety. There | An important thing to bear in mind is : — I Maras Weep 3 cool rN rast is an enormous Banksia rose at the Castle | that, while eye-strain often manifests oe and Ray. wears of Chillon, on Lake Geneva, that is better ! itself by pain or discomfort in the eye that, and said it was settled. I had a | turned back the sheet and looked at the it any wonder that her nerves are to tourists than either of these, | itself, this is not always the case. | mind to write to Bermuda by tomorrow's | peaceful face, and kissed the cold brow, | racked? Hardly is a woman exem though, as a matter of fact, it is exceed. — remembered . in size by the one of the same variety - the Marine Gardens of Toulon. This in dy 63865 the eye strait fa accom Woah one spreads over a space eighty feet wide no pain or discomfort in the falls the hardest. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite and fifteen feet high and has as many as STS t by Sywploue Sltoether Juiside Shousand of t= flowers 11 Bloom at | YB Tren the notice of the prac- and inflammation. It dries the drains References specially directed to the subject. that sap the strength. It cures female Referen * Of all the reflex symptoms of eye-strain, trouble, strengthens When you engage a servant, ally | the most frequent i Meme: Strong aiid Sek wom: in a position of trust, you refer- | very many cases of ocular headache contains | ences. You are not content to just read | on suffering for years without the true no alcohol, neither opium, cocaine nor | these references and take them for what | cause being headache other narcotic. It cannot injure the most | they say. You enquire into their u- ~ delicate woman. ineness. When I had known and ; a to the care of a should you not | wakens up free from headache. It begins How Paris Got its Name. EX8r€ich aqua) Cate? Anybody can claim | in the course of the day and gradually . ; | ten, now. crept down-stairs so many times, ro the Amorous paragraph by telephone | For she lies yonder, and before her is | tarhed back a sheet and looked “charge” that I was " enying Ho another journey than that. just like this one—Jean’s mother’s oF ould ot do such ¥ thing at my time Night is closing down; the rim Jean was a little troubled, and did not | the pre” STO above the sky like to see me treat the matter so light- : ly; but 1 said it was best to. treat it so, Y nave beers |00king lak shat for there was nothing serious about it. 7 : ! 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