The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, March 25, 1892, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    4
UKCLE DAVE'S ADYESTUBE.
BY A. mitSSMOR.
"Hullo, Uncle Dave! Good for youl
Hess aud I were just selling for aonie
ihinj; to turn up. Walk right in!" And
the old gentleman was seized and ushered
into the hall tvMi impetuous hospitality.
"Clarence, how rude!" protested a
second voire. " But, uncle, we are glad to
see you ; the folks have gone to the soci
able, aud our lessons are nil learned,
thank goodness!" Aud ft bright young
face was eagerly raised for the kiss that,
you may be sure, was not grudgingly
given.
Uucle Dave was a great favorite with
both nephew and niece, and he was soon
snugly settled between the two upon the
library sofa.
"Well, Bessie, what is to be the order
of exercises to-night?" he asked, as with
a sly hand he released a mass of curls
that tumbled in a shining cataract over
her shoulders.
"Disorder, you mean," was the quick
retort, as she caught tlie daring hand and
slapped it rigorously. "First of all, we
mu8tcon tri ve a plan for keeping you quiet.
Clarence, what was father saying about
uncle this morning f "
"Do you mean when I was reading up
In parlor magic for our party next week f
"Yes."
"He told me to ask him about his ad
enture with Satan. Oh, uncle, tell it to
us now, won't you 7 Please do! Please!"
"So I am to be kept quiet by being
made to do all the talking; good! But,
chicks, it is against my principles to
frighten children with ghost stories. "
"Chickst Children!" Bessie remon
strated. "Why, even Clarenoe is more
than half-past twelve, and I am two
years and ten weeks older. Besides, this
isn't to be a ghost story, exactly. We
shall neither faint nor shriek, shall we,
Clarence?"
Clarence laughed derisively as ho ran
to the tablo aud turned down the light;
then, regaining his end of the sofa he an
nounced :
"All ready."
"Well, if I must, I must," sighed Un
cle Dave ; and in a grave voice, that con
trasted strangely with his previous ban
ter, he began : "It was back in the thir
ties. Our grand old State of Iowa was
not yet born, and your father and I had
come to grow up with the country. Sho
kokon had just sprouted, aud her one
forlorn tavern was so overcrowded that
we were forced to find quarters in the
upper story of a primitive warehouse."
"I know, I know," cried Clarence.
"I've heard papa tell all about it. Every
man slept in a bunk with the bedclothes
Hailed at the foot, so that he had but to
kick them oil in the morning, and haul
them back again at night what fun I I
wish I had lived in those days ; oh, don't
I?"
"Clarence, be still !" exclaimed Bessie.
"It is very impolite to break in in that
way. Go on, uncle dear. "
"We were forced," repeated Uncle
Dave, with deepening solemnity, "to
lodge in a ramshakle affair called by
jourteey a warehouse. A lank, tow
leaded young giant named Johann
iJoethe Boltz roomed with us, but we
didn't mind that; the accommodations
were ample. "
"Yes," Bessie assented, "it's a standing
joke with father that his boudoir at that
time was mora spacious than elegant.
Later on, I remember, it sheltered a half
dozen families of Irish immigrants; and
one day an up-river steamer landed at tha
levee close by, with a couple of babies
conspicuous among tho passengers
thronging the guards, which prompted
three of the warehouse mammas to ex
hibit at a window a trio of 'darlints.'
The people on the boat responded at once
by producing a quartette, and the compe
tition went briskly on uutil the triumph
ant steamer paddled off amid the wildest
enthusiasm. "
"W-h-e-w!" whistled Clarence. "Very
impolite, et cetera, et cetera. Go on,
uncle dear. "
Uncle Dave seemed in no way put out
by these interruptions, but he now re
sumed in a tone so serious, so impressive,
that his vivacious audience was at last
awed into silence.
"One night," he said, "about a month
after the sign, 'Brent Brothers, Carpen
ters,' had been hoisted in Shokokon, I
was busy at the shop shaving down a lot
of split shingles. Your father had gone
with his gun, just after suuset, to look
up a wild turkey roost located in the
timber a mile back of town. Niue o'clock
had just struck wheu the door was hur
riedly opeued, there came a rush of
-wind, and puff! all became dark.
"'Who's there? I cried, as tho door
shnt with a bang.
"No reply. I felt for the caudle and re
lighted it. Boltz, trembling from head
to foot, stood facing me, his look hag
gard, his hue that of ashes.
'What's the matter?" I gasped. 'Has
llal shot himself?'
"A slight shake of the head was bis
only answer.
,. "'Well, then, what ails you?"
"His lips parted, but his tonguo
seemed paralyzed. lie was tho most terror-stricken
man I ever saw, Draw
ing near, I grasped his arm and shook it
roughly; this aroused him. Ho pulled
himself together, gulped down the lump
iu his throat, and begun shaking rtipully,
though huskily, in German, accompany
iug his words with extravagant ges
tures. I whistled, and he, recollecting
himself, stopped abruptly, groaned in
despair, and then tried English. It
dawned upon me at last that he thought
lie had just escaped from the devil, who,
he firmly believed, had made away with
your father.
"I had heard Boltz called 'the super
naturalist' by some of the town's folk;
vpw I knew why.
"Ha explained, as well as fright and
1roken English would let him, that
Hhortly before, on entering the deserted
lower story of our abodo, and beginning
to grope his way to tho stairs at the roar,
he had been horrified by the sight of an
indescribable something whit h he was
sure whs the foul fiend himself, who had
orcurcd 111, your father, au.l uow lurked
the for us,
"His terror vrns too real to be ridiculed,
so I just slipped into my coat and pre
pared to go to the warehouse.
"ycint nein! Du mutt nicht! Dii
must nicht." he implored, and I saw by
the dying candle that he was actually in
tears,
"I persisted, however, and ha threw
himself desperately before the door. His
herculean height towered above me, but
I more than matched him in breadth,
aud easily put him aside.
"I passed out, and, as I had expected,
ho followed, but whether from devotion
to me or the foar of being left alone in
(he shop, who shall say ? You see the
caudle had burned down, and a low, con
tinuous growl in the southwest told of a
coming storm.
"Our goal wag near; we were soon
there. As I pushed open the door Jo
hann had neglected to fasten, I felt his
breath on my cheek, his hand on my
shoulder. lie was in such a tremor that
his touch thrilled, as it were, my entire
being, and I still shuddered After I had
shaken myself free.
"The room before us was eighty foet or
more in depth, and appeared gloomy
even at noonday, being lighted but by a
single wiudow in front. It now yawned
as biuck as a dungeon, as silent as death.
We hesitated at the threshold; then
Johann's quick breath suddenly ceased,
and at the same instant I beheld a huge
eye glariug at us wickedly from a remote
corner. "
"Sinbad's giant," whispered Clarence.
"Polyphemus," Bessie echoed.
Both nestled closer. Uncle Dave want
on.
"I felt queer, there was no denying it.
'But,' thought I, 'if, as Tom Campbell
says, distance lends enchantment, then a
view at close range must clear up tha
mystery.' I advanced.
"The eye moved as though to meet me
half way. I halted involuntarily and
glanced hack. Johann still stood in
the doorway; I could dimly trace the
upper portion of his giant figure thrust
through the aperture. He was evidently
spell-bound. Turning, I grasped my
courage in both hands, so to speak, and
again started forward. The eye changed
its tactics. Uloauiing maliguantly, it be
gan now to move slowly from sido to
side; back and forth, hack and forth,
like a restless wild benst iu its cage. " I
Clarence's hand slid into that of his
uncle.
"As the space narrowed between us,"
the latter continued, "the eye became
fixed, then gradually sank down, down,
ns though its invisible owner were crouch
ing to spring. I once more paused irres
olute, raised instinctively a protecting
arm, then, ashamed, let it drop by my
side. As I did so, the apparition shot up
with incredible swiftness, aud I, tripping
on a loose plank, measured my length j
on the floor, striking as I fell a pile of
boxes adjacent, aud slightly gashing my
head.
"I regained my feet in a moment,
Johann had fled. Sly courage had now
risen, and clutching a crowbar that
chanced to stand within reach, I was
ready for anything.
"The evil genius confronting me was
no longer an eye ; a near view had dis
pelled that illusion. It was too large, to
begin with, and lacked color. It looked
ghastly.
"Its activity, however, left little doubt
of its being alive. True, the dread object
had not pursued me, had scarcely ven
tured as yet beyond its lair; but it
seemed to be fully aroused, and glided
stealthily this way and that I felt sure
it meditated an immediate attack.
"I resolved to be first. Setting my
toeth, and swinging aloft my club of iron,
I bora down on the foe.
"My action was the signal for a new
freak on its part, more strange, more ap
palling, than anything that had yet trans
pired. It now began revolving with
amazing velocity, round and round,
round and round, in ever contracting
circles.
"My heartbeat like a death-watch; the
moisture drenched my brow ; but on, on
I strode, and faster, faster it flew.
"Tha crisis had come, and whiz!
straight at my head! I struck savagely,
missed, dodged; a lurid light was about
me; a jell "
Here a great crash drowned Uncle
Dave's voice. The children clung to him,
panic-stricken.
"What's that?" they cried. Then,
Bessie, reproachfully, "Uncle Dave! did
you kick over those library steps?"
Clarence sat up with a jerk.
"It's a sell 1" he ejaculated. "But the
evil genius, the apparition, the eye!
What was it, uncle?"
"Punk," Uucle Dave answered.
"Punk!"
"Punk ; your father had stumbled on a
rare piece in the woods, aud not finding
the wild turkies, hastened home to make
game of two precious geese. "
"And Herr Boltz, did he never come
back?" queried Bessie.
"Comeback!" ho wus bnek in less than
ten minutes, with halt the town at his
heels, Poor fellow!" added Uncle Dave,
retrospectively. "The nickname of 'Punk'
stuck to him until '40, when, with many
another, he was carried off by the Cali
fornia fever."
"So impa was Satan," Clarence mused.
"Look here, my boy," objected Uncle
Dave, "I didn't say that. Come to think
ot it, though, the theory accounts for
your being so impish. "
Clarence sprang from the sofa, righted
the Btepj, aud turned up the light.
"Come, uncle," he coaxed, "let's play
tiddledy winks."
A Item on for It.
He rnught her to his manly bosom with
a wild, impetuous, tumultuous, tempest
uous hug and held her there for as much
as a miuute.
"What a slugger you are," she said
rwlmlrinirltf mi Iim released her.
"And why shouldn't I be," he replied
ni',,iiitlv luLinir a velvet case from his
pocket, "haven't I brought the prize ring
witu nier
Rl nnonail tha case lovfullv and hei
eyes rested upon a solitaire which was
really a corner.
: One-quarter of the people die before tho
age of C ; eue-hnlf Lx f Ji o 10. '
WASHINGTON'S IISTHDAY-
r.XTRACT PROM E. J. IIOWMAS'S K.I.O
QUKXT ADUKKSS ON NIOIIT 2 2ND OK
FKBRUARY, RKyUF.STEl) TO EE
rvuusiiEn,
We participate with pleasure in oc
casions of this sort Ve can speak
with pride ami pleasure at the career
of our Country; another such country
as the world docs not possess. There
is no room for another such Country.
The discovery by Christopher Colum
bus was the last final climax of all dis
coveries. It was held in reservation
by the God of nations through all the
night of the Centuries when America
was to unfold the grandest possibilities
known to our race. Other nations
have risen and sunk like bubbles on
the ocean wave, and their missions
were not the character of ours They
have come and gone like plunto.ns
that flit across our pathway. Manv
have been of no u?e to the world's ad
vanctmcnt. Many have been such
that it would be better if they had nev
er been born. They lived and died in
the night of despotism. Their careers
have been marked by bloodshed,
slaughter, oppression. There were in
dividual characters among them that
bore no affinity to them, because they
loved the freedom and redemption of
the race. We can look back through
the night of the centuries and find
them stringing their lyres and singing
of liberty; but liberty did not come.
It was but an idle dream to them, a
mere hallucination; something thought
of but never realized. One nation is
conspicuous in history for its love of
liberty, Greece.
Another nation, Rome, sets us a
warning example. She was a Republic
for several centuries; her people lost
their grip, and Rome became a bloody
despotism.
Alexander, Caesar, l'ompey, Pyrrhus,
Hannibal, Napoleon were powerful and
ambitious, but they never fought for
the amelioration of mankind. They
left the human family no better than
i hey found it. We must turn to our
country to find a name that will re
main, illustrious bright and undecaying
when these others have mouldered in
to dust. It is hardly worth while to
mention it. It is on the lips of every
school boy. He it was who stood up
on the mountain tops of the centuries
and saw the light of liberty dawning
upon the world. I tell you the name
of Washington is as endurable as the
summits of our mountains and the
rocks that lie in their ravines and line
their base. Washington's name would
have lived no longer than ancient war
r ors, had ambition and the lust for
power been his actuating and ruling
motives. There was somethi lg high r
and nobler in his make up. His sword
was drawn in freedom's cause and the
rights of man When brass and mar
ble crumble that name will live as
bright as the firmament of stars that
shine in the dark blue canopy of God !
live in the hearts of unborn genera
tions every human heart in the long
ages of the future will feel an inspira
tion at the mention of his name. He
is the great central figure of our hu
manity. Thi 22nd of February will
never die as long as our language is
spoken and while liberty endures.
We cannot in this connection fail to
allude to the great struggle for the per
petuity of liberty and the Union. There
are dark spots on the sun and bright
spots on our earth Antietam, Freder
icksburg, Lookout Mountain, Gettys
burg and a host of other battlefields.
Through four battle burdened years
arose and fell like the waves of the
sea, the stars and stripes, till at last
they hung in brightness and glory over
fallen and dismantled Richmond and
at Ap omattox Court House. It there
looked a if it had been dipped in the
fountains of the morning and the hand
of God had placed it there.
If there is anything that will live
undimmed upon the ocean of time
it will not be some mound of crumb
ling brick work, some monument of
mausoleum dedicated to the memory
of the aspiring and ambitious soldier
merely, but it will be a monument
consecrated to the memoiy of a Wash
ington. What tongue can tell the grand pos
sibilities that is out in front of us if
we are only faithful and posterity is
true to her own interests.
No eloquence can portray, no imag
ination conceive, no conjecture ap
proach, no supposition surmise, the
glorious destiny that awaits the Amer
ican people and the American nation.
May the rainbow ot promise never
fade from our political horizon and the
stars of hope never grow dim.
"A God send is F.ly's Cream Balm.
I had catarrh for three years. Two
or three times a week my nose would
bleed. I thought the sores would
never heal. Your Balm has cured
me." -Mrs. M. A. Jackson, Ports
mouth, N. II.
I was so much troubled with catarrh
it seriously affected my voice. One
bottle of Ely's Cream Balm did the
work. My voice is fully restored.
U. F. Liepsner, A. M., Pastor of
the Olivet Baptist Church, Philadel
phia, la. 3 18 at
Had We Anj ?
"There seems to be something the
matter with my bwain," said Cholly.
"Wheah is youah bwain, deah boy ?"
' asked his bosom jriet.ci, ui.Ksy.
! can't find out that's what the
I doctah said was Iio matter wL'.h it"
Kitcbep
Extepsiop.
University Extension is
good, but Kitchen Extension
is belter. Wider knowledge
of better cooking processes
means better health and com,
fort tor everytx)Jy. Science
can never do us better service
t han by the multiplication of
thecbokingsc1ioois which
nukFjHJiFul "means an3
methods available for even
the most modest home.
C0TT01ENE
The vegetable substitute for
larJ, is science's latest gift to
tha kitchens of IhlT vrldL
Every woman who has ever
cooked a meal, knows that
lard is disagreeable in use
anj unhealthy in its effects.
Cottolene is a most satis,
factory substitute clean,
delicate and far more eco
nomical. At your grocers.
N. K. FAIRBANKS CO.,
CHICAGO, and
138 N. Dataware Ava., Phila.
11 ys catarrh
CREAM BALI,:
Cleans the
Nasal 1'assagps,
Allays Pain and W,
uiwrruri-. CV if i
Inflammation,
Heals the Soies.
Restores the
Sense of Taste
and smell.
tey the cuee HAY-FEVER
A particle Is applied Into each nostril and Is
ntirei-Hble. HiUf S rents at Dniiiiflst; by mall
mflHtentl, M cts. ELY HHOTHKKS, 46 Wurren
St., N .Y.
I-"I3-' :c(TIJ m:r,Mi7Tl
unrcLANIt cubcb ciOAacrrea for a
QmUKC tarrhl-frltt 10CU. Atoll druggists.
HOW I
kvnmftivr. r vw - ivi
KnterprlalBf? Ttwil Hf fint Tnr A Co. ImtmrtM
mid atari m: I worked itfaviiljr and mwj Tutor
ttiftitl exrHKOedto. I bcmt.1e tobtry ma ItUnd and t-oild
ftMitmli aureaiar htsl. If 1 dim'ttfQfewvdat that, 1 will go
u work nt U feniinM in which i mn-ie my money.
'1 rut & Co.! Hiall w luatrurt aaif awrt yno. rattlurf
If we do, ftitdif ya work InUnslrlnnstr. jon will lu dua
lima hm J.taiobuyan Island and bnlld ft hll. If ynttwlsti
In. l ofiaij can t mroml at nur aew liua of work, rap
iiilr aud tumoimbly, bjr ihoaf ithar . young or old,
and la tliair owd nrliii. wlnrsftr hy liv. Any on
ritt dotue work. Ear ilrii. WfarntabaTrrTiliinir. No
tir-k. Yon eaa drnrayir aparw momenta, m all your tint
to tliework. Tliia titirily nw lod brine- wonderful inc.
ren toavatr worker. Jteifinera ar MMruinar from to
r wmk and nownrdu, and mora after llttlaaxpa
rutnra. V cn ftirniah ytmtbemnloyrnnl wetuarhynai
V 15 Y V Thla la an t.f marvelous tlitntc. "nd Here li
not Iter ureal, naeful. weahh yivlnr wonder, iirent ffHina
wlU reward every indnatrfwna worker. YYlKrwer yon are,
and whatever yon are doltte. yon want to know ahont
wonderful work at onre. lietay meant much money lout to
you. No anaco to explain bare, but If yon will write te a,
w will ruko all plain to yun F KX ! Addretti.
''Utile. CO., llox 4O0, Auiaita, Muloa.
Wisely invested will soon double itself,
and there are often as many elements of
safety surroumlmn a coou paving invest
ment as one that pays sinnll dividends. The
earning capacity of every investment is the
foundation of dividends. The Atkln:CP
llflCSe Furnishing CO., of Maine, Organized
in 1307, nas pum its siocxnoioers 9 seini
annual dividends of 5 per cent, each (10 per
cent, a year) aud is earning a handsome sur
plus besides. It is a buy und fell bu&inesi
and a sale investment lor all classes. 1 ne
authorised capital is $1,000,000, of which
If570,ooo has been I'aul in. lo lurthcr in
crease the business, ifcSo 000 of the Treas
ury block is offered until March 15th, at par,
10 per share, l'rice of stock will be ad
vanced February l8th to take effect on above
date. I'or full particulars address the com
pany, Vox iai 8, B:ston. K&ss. crFort.and,
lis.
QA)
i.USMRN WANTED
l To noil NI KSEltY STOC K. We Brow all
I lie. leudtiiif vunuttns, uoin oin ana new. we re
plune nil Htnelc tliia dies, and guarantee satis
faction. Hlk'heHt salary or eoimnlislon froru the
si art. Write for terms.
II. K. Hooker Co., N uiMcrymrn, Itotuester. N.Y
Coed Silirj,
To live antlve men wo will
guuruuUte HleaUy i uiiloy.
intuit wua nuciiu aaiury mm
xunn. HrnvKiun vxiturt
en 'e not required.
Terms una out Hi I roe,
A ll-
IW, MKAKH, H KN KV
l'Ct.
Uneva, N. V., Bvuuc Nuwrtua, ElUUlUhed
ltfctt.
1 :H:ia.'i .:mid.-jti
Jewelry and Silverware.
CSialaate Optician,
o
Eyes examined free of charge,
Expert workmen in the Repairing
Department.
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
CL B. BOBBINS,
DEALER IN
Foreign and Domestic
WINES AND LIQUORS.
BloomsHurq, Pa.
mm
LJ U
1 Easily, quickly and permanently
You will admit after having taken a few doses that It Is a Hw I llUllkkliC
specific for that terrible disease. Instead of flying to the door or window, gasping for
breath, seeming as if each one would be your last, you have only to take a fow ma
of the ASTHMALENE when the spasm is broken, the breathing becomes easy, and you
feel as If some angel of mercy had unloosed the iron grasp of tho fingers of death,
that had nearly deprived you of life.
IT IS A$ HARMLESS AS THE FOOD YOU OT.B?Aq!SLffi
worst cases ot ASTHMA is the wonder and admiration of all who have used It. The
happiest moment of your Ufa will be when you have used a bottle of DR TAFTS
AMTaHhJVl A FN F an(1 ,ound l( nas cured you ' the most distress
' 1 la.niing diseases that ever afflicted thehuman family.
FOR BRONCHITIS It surpasses every known remedy. For sale by all druggists.
A trial bottle aant free to any one sending P. 0. addreee who Buffers
from Asthma, Dr. TAFI BROS. MEDICINE CO., 142 Stat at., Rochester, N. V
PHILLIPS.'
THE SWEETS OF LIFE.
"Sweets to the Sweet" is a soulful
motto. Who would be guilty of mix
ing bitter with the sweets offered to
such charming creatures? Yet that
is just what dishonest confectioners
do. A specialty at Phillips' is the
very best of pure candies. Sole
agency for Tennes celebrated New
York Confectionery. Ihe Bakery is
always well-stocked, and the Cafe is
always open.
M. M PHILLIPS & SON.
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
G1STTIIK IJKST.
My Plymouth Rocks and Red
Caps are great iavorites, as is
proven by my past success.
Eggs of either kind $1.50 per
13 or $2.50 per 26. Write for
information.
W. D. GERMAN,
Millville.Pa.
RUPTURE':
delay. Thou sand, of cuiuj. Mny.'u
Hotel roun, Heading, 1'., baoour KUiGnr o:
nrasnsir
Willi!
by Or. Taft'iUCTIIM Al CMC
KESTY& HOFFMAN,
ii
We repair Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills,
Threshers, Harvesters. Mowers a id
all kinds of machinery.
WE 1IANDLK
STEAM PIPE FITTINGS
IVALVEf, STEAV&QAUGES.
Andall kinds of Repair;.
I IPE CUT 10 ORDER.
AGENTS FOR
Garfield Injector Co., Garfield
Doubla Jet Injector, Automatic
and Locomotive Injector.
All work done by us is guaranteed
to give satisfaction, and all work in
our line will be promptly attended to
BH0P8 - Oth and COTBE 8TREET3.
oa BAirDEirs
ELECTRIC BELT
UTHTPATUT. it
WITH tlECTII
BADNITie
SUSPENSORT.
BEST
IMMOVEMIIITS.
Will tar withe B4llBt til Wafcaaft rtloltlBI from
varttxtlloa mt bra l, rv fare, r ioJUerettuu.
M riuat aatiaiutloo, dralnt, lottaa, Drfei daMUir, iip
lt , languor, rhfnnaium, Bid?, liv and bladdar cui'
piainta, Iaa bank, lumbago, aelalieft, mtmmimi 111-Laalih. (
Thu rttctrio b4 aootatua Waadarful fpraalB raf 'L
oitiera, aud flvai a currant thai la luitaulij rait by in waitror
crw forfait Ca.UOU.UU, asd will tra altar tha bo dUca
aaa or aa ptj. Thauaauda bava auvaA by thU oiarrtloua
ItivautlunaHar all at bar rauadiaa fall!, and wa fiva buu
dicta ot tatlaobila ta tbltaad avarj aabar alata.
Our powarful improved KLMTHIC MhHKMnT 1
graatait boo arar atTerad aak man. 9U W ITIIALl ItbL'lH.
tiralia aaa ltaruB Blraavtb U l mm a n t a a. if ia w
DilM. band far Urf lUatral4 lalcLa, aaalad If
fc mall, addrfaa .
No. 419 Broadway. NEW YORK.
OUATKFL'L COMFOHTINd.
EPPS'S COCOA
BHEAKFAST.
ny a t .oroiitrli knowl1(eof the niUurnl !
whlvh Knrern I lie opeinllunH of rtliillm nl
nulrlt Ion, and by a i-nivtui apill'uiluii of lli-i
flue proiwirtlt'8 of woll-wliit'tHl .ih'. Mr. Kiim
hiw uroUcliMl uiir brt-ukfuHl. Uitilim t.itb a ilnli
palclv flavunMl bovmuire wUli.-h limy buvb tin
nirtiiy hiuvy doc-torn' blllH. It In by Hie JudUiiiu
uae of auitli artlcifgot dint thHt a cmisUtullim
muy be Kiuduully built u;i unill utronK ennuKH
l rt'Hlut fviry tuiidoin'y to dl'ai. TluiidiviH
of Bubtle umludlcH are noulIliiK around u ri'ijd
to aliwk wUt'iuver tbeiv la a weak point. v a
mv K am manv a tuiul Bi:rt by k 'l'plinf iu:
"lvua wi-ll foitlllHd with U!"e blood aud a prot'
eily tiouiliiliod fraiuo." Vtrtl Srrv i UMMIf.
Martitlui,ily with b itllnv wator or milk. Hold
oiily lu Will pjuud Um, by 1,'roctiu, UbollnJ
tliua:
1AMFN r:rii Ik CO., lloinooipatlilO
t U'U-lath. H. fid.
Practical Machin sis