Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, February 14, 1901, Page 3, Image 3

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    —S
%W^LENimE.
( AS virtue of the right
bestowed by good
St. Valentine
*» X take this way of yQT
yQT saying that I
want to make
Presuming you are sensible and flattery
despise
t shall attempt to win you without telling
any lies.
Although I may offend you, in the sweet
conceit of youth,
I mean to try and win you with the plain,
unvarnished truth.
Tou have no gold or auburn crown of
sunshine on your head—
You have the normal quantity of hair,
and it is red.
You do not gaze with orbs of night im
mersed in heaven's blue—
You simply see with common eyes and
squint a little, too.
Your form is not a Venus, with a fairy's
airy grace—
It's rather short and dumpy, and it
couldn't win a race.
You are not yet an angel to be worshiped
as divine—
You only are a mortal and to mortal
ways incline.
Your face is not an artist's dream of
beauty wondrous rare —
It's plain and has some freckles as you,
doubtless, are aware.
You are not always gentle and affection
ate and kind—
You have a woman's temper and you
often speak your mind.
You are not "helping mother," when that
duty you can shirk —
You'd rather ride a 'cycle, which is pleas
anter than work.
Your head is not a storehouse filled with
knowledge we adore —
Yet, while there's something in it, there
is lots of room for more.
Not ail the fine accomplishments that
charm do you possess—
You drum on the piano and you sing—to
my distress.
And now. because T see your faults and
still would make you mine,
H've proven that I love you. Will you be
my valentine?
MORAL:
A Love that is Rlind
Doesn't last, you will find,
Long after the honeymoon's over.
But a Love that can see
Never dies and will be
A union forever in clover.
—II. C. Dodge, in Chicago Daily Sun.
/rrQ|A| CAN'T stand it!"
Wlgl said Maj. Midge
"l can't,
indeed! j.reakfast irregular, dinner
at no particular hour, and everything
at. sixes and sevens! I'm not vised to
it, and it upsets my digestion. Be
sides—there's that nephew of iuine!
1 suppose boys' must exist, but they're
a prodigious nuisance. I told my sis
ter I'd try six months with her. and
I've tried 'em. Now I'll gobacktoold
Mrs. Pry's boarding house, and my
second-story front room, with the
grate fire and the weather strips in
every window. My six months are up
on the 14th of February, and on the
14th of February I'll go!"
The major was a stout, short old gen
tleman, with a shining bald head, a
bumpy forehead, light blue eyes, which
always seemed as if they would touch
his spectacle glasses, and a frost-white
mustache. He was an inveterate old
bachelor, with all the subtle ways and
habits of old bachelorhood, and had
money to leave—at least so said the
tongue of popular rumor —and he had
also a furtive suspicion that all the
ladies were in league against his sin
gle blessedness.
"I'll write to Mrs. Pry," said the
major; and accordingly he sat down
and wrote, succinctly:
"My Dear Madam: I am heartily sick
of tliis sort of life. Will you take me?
If it isn't, convenient don't mind saying
so. i prefer the second-story front room.
No piano practice, no cold dinners, no
neglect about my -shirt buttons—you un
derstand my idiosyncrasies, and will
doubtless accede to them. Please let me
hear from you at once. Yours, very re
spectfully,
"MILO MIDGEFIELD."
"I think that expresses my ideas
pretty fairly," said Maj. Midgefield, as
he read the letter over, not without
complacency. "Yes, yes. pretty fairly.
Now. what is that woman Pry's first
name? I've got it signed to some of
my receipts upstairs, and I do like
things to be shipshape and precise."
And, leaving his letter neatly fold
ed on the table, in a shining, smooth
envelope, the major trotted upstairs
to find out whether old Mrs. Pry's name
was Paulina, Patience or I'arthenia,
all three of which names buzzed, like
faaniliar bees, in bis brain.
"I know it's one of the three,"he said
to himself. '"But I suppose it wouldn't
do to write 'ein all down and let the old
woman take her choice!"
No sooner had the major vacated the
study than in rushed Master Julius
Carey, only son and heir of the ltev.
Joseph Carey, and the aforesaid
nephew whose boyish peculiarities
were so trying to the major.
"Where is it?" bawled Master Julius,
a promising youth of 14. "Where's my
valentine? Mother wouldn't let us
come in while Uncle Midgefield was
here, and now I'll have to step lively
to catch the post. Where is it.l say'
1 do hope Uncle Midgefield hasn't been
sending it off to any pretty girl on tht
sly."
"My dear Julius," remonstrated Mrs
Carey, a pretty, faded little woman
jrith colorless eyes, hair in crimping
papers, a.nd a shabby cashmere wrap
per, trimmed with imitation laee.
"It's just like him." said Master
Julius. "So fox so sly as an old fox.
Oh, herV it is! 1 say, mother, can jou
lend me a postage stamp?"
And, anointing wi". h his tongue the
gum my Hap of Maj. Midgefield's brief
letter to Mrs. Pry, he addressed it
with many flourishes to".Miss Adela
Forrester, No. street."
"Won't, she be pleased," said Julius.
"I picked out the very prettiest little
valentine in the store —Cupid hiding
under a wreath of roses, and 'I love
you,' in golden letters, coming out of
his quiver. I chose it because it wm
small enough togo into an ordinary
envelope, and she'll never suspect un
til she opens it."
"Julius," said his mother, "what a
goose you are. Miss Forrester is old
enough to be your mother."
"Miss Forrester is just 20," said
Julius, "and I'm nearly 15, and 1 ve
been dead in love with her these three
years!"
And he scampered off with his letter,
and the goodly, untidy matron heaved a
"WHERE IN THE DICKENS IS THAT LETTER!"
soft sigh and' went back to the basket
of unmended stocking's which was the
Nemesis of her life, and Maj. Midge
field came down stairs to the once
more deserted study, quite uncon
scious of the raid which had been made
upon it
"Parthenia—that was' the name,"
said Maj. Midgefield--'"what could
have induced me to think it was l'a
tience or Pauline? Now where the
very dickens is that letter? Surelj'. I
didn't —oh, here it is, poked away un
der the inkstand. That housemaid has
been in here dusting, as sure as I live,
and it's a mercy she hasn't thrown it
into the grate. 'Mrs. Parthenia Pry,
No. 10 Green court, Foxsley street'—
that's it, and I'll just put my initials
in the corner, to insure a. speedy per
usal, M. M.. with a flourish to the tail
of the last M. I suppose m.v sister will
be very plaintive and injured about
this decision of mine, but she has only
herself and her noisy lout of a boy to
thank for it."
And Maj. Midgefield himself went
out to drop his letter into the nearest
post box.
St. Valentine's day came, bright, and
sunshiny, with hard frozen snow crust
ing all the streets, and a silver fringe
ovicides on all the eaves and tree
boughs, and old Mrs. Pry stared hard
at the letter which the morning mail
brought her.
"It's from Maj. Midgefield. I know
it is," said she, fumbling in her dress
pocket, for her spectacles. "1 know
them little curly-tailed M's of his n as
well as I know my catechism. I'll bet
a cookey he wants to come back, and
a good thing for me, too, with my best
room standing empty for three weeks.
Eh! What? A gilt Cupid with no
clothes onto signify, and a lot of green
leaves, and 'I love you!' It ain't pos
sible, unless the major has gone crazy!"
"A letter from Maj. Midgefield," said
Miss Adela Forrester, who was a tall,
black-browed beauty, with cherry lips
and a good high spirit her own.
"And he wants to know if I will take
him."
"Nonsense!" said Mamma Forrester,
who was buttering a Vienna roll with
the serenest calm.
"Read it for yourself, then, and see,"
said Miss Forrester, with a toss of her
head. "He calls me 'dear madam,' the
horrid old bachelor, and dictates as to
his room, his dinner and his shirt but
tons. My goodness,", with a liftingof
the jetty brows, "does he think the
girls are ready to drop, like overripe
plums, into his mouth?"
"Of course, you'll say no," said Mam
ma Forrester.
"Of course," said Adela.
"Then papa must see the major at
once," said the elder lady. "Though if
he were only a few years younger, the
estate is—"
"I wouldn't marry that horrid old
creature if he were the only man in
the w6rld!" cried Adela, with em
phasis. as she remembered the young
passed midshipman now pacing the
deck of the Silvestra in the Caribbean
seas, to whom her young affections'
were pledged.
So it happened that Mr. Forrester
and old Mrs. Pry both met in Maj.
Midgefield's room at the parsonage of
St. Adolphine, 011 the afternoon of that
radiant 14th of February.
"I am sorry, major," said the former,
"that my daughter declines to enter
tain your very complimentary pro
posal."
"What proposal?" suid the major.
"I never prox>osed to anyone in my life,
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1901.
and 1t is not likely tftat I shall com
mence nowj"
"Do you deny your own handwrit
ing?" flashed out Mr. Forrester, who
was of a choleric disposition, and did
not relish his word being doubted.
"I deny everything!" shouted the
major. "Stop a minute, Forrester;
here is tine respectable female who has
just called to see me on business. I'll
just see. what she wants before we £0
on with this discussion. Now, then,
Mrs. Pry."
But Mrs. Pry was making amazonian
efforts to get a letter out-of her pocket,
and turned very red in the face at thus
being directly addressed.
"I'm sixty-odd, major, if you please,"
said Mrs. Pry, "and a widow woman,
with a small pension, as'never thought
of marrying And i never sup
posed as you could demean your dig
nity by making jokes at my expense!"
".Jokes, woman!" thundered the
major. "What on earth do you mean?
IK all the world g-one mad?"
"I call valentines jokes!" said Mrs.
Pry. "And, please, sir. here it is, with
your own initials on the outside!
Cupids and loves and wings, and not
much of anything' else, sir, s'aving your
presence!" with a contemptuous sniff.
"I never saw the tiling before in ail
my life," said Maj. Midge field, eying
it through his spectacle gla-sses as olio
might survey some noxious insect.
"Ain't this in your writng?" demand
ed Mrs. Pry. holding up the envelope.
"Of course it is," answered the major,
"And is not this your writing?"
sternly joined in Mr. Forrester, hold
ing up the letter.
"Certainly it is," admitted the major.
"And that letter and that envelope be
long together, comprising a note writ
ten by me to Mrs. Pry to engage board
at her house once more. If you will
observe, Mr. Forrester, you will per
ceive that the letter and the envelope
in your possession are in different
handwritings."
"Then," gasped the bewildered Mr
Forrester, "how on earth came this
letter directed to niy daughter?"
"All I know," said the major,stoutly,
"is that I never sent it."
And to the day of their death no
body solved the. mystery. The only
person who could have done so was
Master Julius Carey, who had listened
at the door during the whole colloquy,
and who took particularly good care
that no one should suspect his shar«
in the confusion of letters and envel
opes!
But Mrs. Pry got back her boarder
and, to the end of time. MissAdela For*
rester always insisted that she had re
ceived an offer of marriage from Maj
Midgefield.—Amy Randolph, in N. Y,
Ledger.
the: remorsgluss boy.
112t —
id
Mr. Wise—"What are you going to
do with your penny your teacher gave
you. Johnny?"
Johnny —"Goin' to buy a, comic val
entine an' send it to him."—Baltimore
American.
To My Hu<kl>nnd.
I used to send in days gone by
Some verses sweet, a curl of hair,
A necktie—that you wouldn't wear.
I send you now, oh, husband mine,
What best you like for valentine,
With frosting kisses heaped up high—
A custard pie.
—Katharine Brainerd Barber, in Boston
Budget.
•Just EnoiiKh t« Hart.
The meanest part of a co«uic valen
tine is that it usually ias a little
truth under all the absurd exaggera
tion.—Chicago Daily Record. \
'l'll#. Year After.
Last yeai, false girl, I, fool so rash.
Upon lace paper gauds spent casivi
This year, that folly I regret—
A two-cent comic's all you
—Chicago Dally KecorU.
HE WASN'T WORRYING.
▲ Commercial Traveler Who Didn't
Have Any Preference on
the Hoad.
"Having traveled for so many years," he
Baid to the drummer who boasted of having
been on the road for 18 years, "1 suppose
you have come to think sonic one car in a
train is the safest?"
" I he idea has never occurred to me," was
the reply, says the Chicago Daily News.
"Thai's curious*. I thought all men who
traveled had a preference for a certain car.
I know a Chicago man who always takes
the first sleeper, and a Philadelphnan who
wants a right-hand seat in the middle car,
or else he won't take that train."
"I have never heard of such instances be
fore."
"But you must realize that there is dan
ger?" persisted the questioner.
"Oh, yes; but I never think of it. I get
a seat opposite a staving-looking woman, if
possible, do my best to render myself agree
able, ,ind leave the accident business to
Providence and the train dispatcher. My
line rather protects me, anyhow."
"And what line of goods are you travel- |
ing for, may I ask?"
'Cardboard for Bible covers and pre
pared food for infants. I shall wait until
I go into groceries or hardware before look
ing for the safest car on the train."
Proitrc** In Medicine.
Medical science grows apace with civiliza
tion and among the leading remedies, one
that combines all the results of scientific
study up to the present time and is put up in
convenient and economical form, easy to
take, easy to carry, is the famous Cascarets.
Five years ago marked the time of the sale
of the first box. Last year the sale reached
the enortnous total of over six million boxes.
In this hustling, every day, busy life of ours
people need just this kind of a medicine to
stimulate their bowels and keep them reg
ular. Cascarets act on the liver just enough
to help nature without causing that awful
sick, weakening feeling that usually follows
the taking of Calomel and violent purges.
Readers who have never tested the merits
of Cascarets should give them a good trial.
A Had 111 under.
Mr. Kip (angrily)— That's a nice thing.voi
say about my business in your paper thi
week.
Editor —What?
"Head it."
Editor (reading): "If you want to hav
a (it, wear Kip's shoes —<Jeerusaiem—stoj
the press!"— Ohio State Journal.
There I* a Clan* of People
Who are injured by the use of coffee. lie
Cgfttly there has been placed in all the gro
r stores a new preparation caliei
(V __ 'N-O, made of pure grains, that t:ik>
the'pi aee of coffee. The most delicate stom
ach receives it without distress, and but fev
can tell it from coffee. It does not cost ove
i as much. Children may drink it wit)
great benefit. 15 cts. and 25 ets. per pack
age. Try it. Ask for GRAIN-O.
Ills Moat I sofnl Hook.
First Passenger—What book hus helped
you most in life?
Second Passenger—The city directory.
"The city directory?"
"Yes: I'm a bill collector."—Syracuse Her
ald.
A Remedy for the Grippe.
Physicians recommend KEMP'S BAL
SAM for patients afflicted with the grippe,
as it is especially adapted for the throat and
lungs. Don't wait for the first symptoms,
but get a bottle to-day and keep it on hand
for use the moment it is needed. If neg
lected the grippe brings- on pneumonia.
KEMP'S BALSAM prevents this by keep
ing the cough loose and the lungs free from
inflammation. All druggists, 25c and 50c.
A Diatlnctlon,
When a man is bilious admits it, and
takes pills; but a woman begins to talk about
life being a struggle and the wretchedness
of her environment. —Atchison Globe.
An Innovation.
The Louisvi:le & Nashville R. R. together
with its connecting lines has inaugurated
the Florida Limited, which is a daily, solid
traiin, wide vestibuled, steam heated, gas
lighted, with dining car service for meal*
en route to Thomasville, Ga., Jacksonville
and St. Augustiine, Fla. The sleeper leaving
Cincinnati at 11:15 a. m. is attached at
Nashville, running via Birmingham and
Montgomery, Plant System to Jacksonville,
an<l ilorida East Coast to St. Augustine,
arriving at the latter city at 7:30 the next
evening. Mr. C. L. Stone, General Passen
?er A(fent, Louisville & Nashville li. R..
.ouisville, Ky., will answer all inquiries con
cerning this train and furnish printed mat
ter concerning it.
"Poverty's no crime," said Job's comfort
er. "Maybe not," replied the poor man,
"but it seems to be punishable by hard la-,
bor for life."—Philadelphia Record.
A Demand front France.
When Mr. Herbert Nash was the United
States Vice-Consul at Nice in France, he
wrote: "Please to send me some of your
Lotion for a friend, who finds great relief
in its application for weak eves." This if
one of many demands for Palmer's Lotion,
the wonderful healer, which is always glad
ly recommended by the millions who hav<
used it and whom it has never failed to cure.
Palmer's Lotion Soap possesses all the me
dicinal properties of the Lotion and may
sometimes be u«ed in its stead. If vour
druggist don't have them, send to f'olor
Paljper, 374 Pearl Street. New York, foi
samples of Palmer's Lotion and Lotion Soap
To be a well-balanced man, with ability to
resist petty annoyances, i» a greater accom
plishment than to be governor of your state.
—Atchison Globe.
Career nnd Character of Abraham
Lincoln.
An address bv Joseph Choate, Ambas
sador to Great Britain, on the career and
character of Abraham Lincoln —his early
life—his early struggles with the world—
his character as developed in the later years
of his life and his administration, which
placed his name so high on the world's roll
of honor and fame, has been published by
the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway
and may be had by sending six (13) cents ih
postage to F. A. Miller, General Passenger
Agent, Chicago, 111.
Mr. Gallagher—"Rumors fly, don't they,
Missis Flannigan?" Mrs. F.annigan—"lii
dade they do; awnly this week wan left me
widout payin' his rint." —Ohio State Jour
nal.
The Grin of Pneumonia maybe warded off
with Hale s Honey of llorehound and Tar.
Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute.
Some young men seem to be surprised
that everybody doesn't stop dancing when
they enter the ballroom. —Somerville Jour
nal.
It doesn't pay to be obstinate. NeitheT
is it wise to attempt to take all the advice
offered. —Washington Post.
To Cure a Cold In One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c.
Use every man after his desert, and who
should 'scape whipping?— Shakespeare.
Draacrt for To-Day.
You need not worry about it if you have
BurnhpLin's Hasty Jeliycon \n the cupboard.
Only tjecessary to dissolve in hot water and
stand away to cool to secure the most deli
cious jelly. Absolutely pure gelatine sugar
and fruit flavors. Flavors: Lemon, orange,
raspberry, strawberry, wild cherry, peach,
also unliavored "calfsfoot" for wine aad
coffee jeiljr. Your grocer sells it.
It Cur«« Cougha Cold», Croup, Bore Throat. Influ- j
enza, Whooping Coujrh, Bronchitis and Asthma.
A certain cure for Consumption in first atagea.
and a aure relief in advanced atagea. Uaeatonce.
You will aee the excellent effect after taking the
flrat dose. Bold by dealera everywhere. Price,
25 and SO centa per bottle.
fcniMi tan fid Or Willian.s inuian r».« 1
■ ■n| <>int nient will cure Blind.
r- Bsfllß H M S Bleeding and Itchinn
B 888 m I*l It absorbs the
■VII Bi tumors, allays the Itch
t O fug at once, acts as a
112 A, *f. M poultice,gives instant re
™ Prepared for Pile*
■ and Itchingof the private
par's. At druggists or b .
mall on receipt of price r»o nonts and WI 00.
WILLIAMS >'»(}.. CO. I'rnns. ri.KVFI.AM> OlUo
'Jfl No Rmoko IIOURO. Smoke meat with
(9k KRAUSERS' LIQUID EXTRACT OF SMOKE.
-fl H Made from hickory wood. Given delicious tlaro
IH Cheapor.clnaner than old way. Send for ci
cnlar. K. Krausi-r & Bro., 31ilton. PP
Skin Tortured Babies
In a Warm Bath with
And a single anointing with CUTICURA,
purest of emollients and greatest of skin cures.
This is the purest, sweetest, most speedy, per
manent, and economical treatment for torturing, 1
disfiguring, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, 1
crusted, and pimply skin and scalp humors,
rashes, irritations, and chafings, with loss of
hair, of infants and children, and is sure to
succeed when all other remedies fail.
Millions of Mothers Use Cuticura Soap
Assisted by CUTICURA OINTMENT, the great skin euro, for preserving, purifying, and beau
tifying the skin of Infante and children, for rashes, ltchlngs, and dialings, for cleansing the
scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of fulling hair, for softening, whiten
ing, and healing red, rough, and sore hands, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and
nursery. Millions of Women use CUTICURA SOAP In the form of baths for annoying Irrita
tions, Inflammations, and excoriations, for too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of
washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily
suggest themselves to women, especially mothers. No amount of persuasion can indues
those who have once used these great skin purifiers and bcautiflers to use any others, espe
cially for preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair of Infants and children. CUTI
CURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great skin
cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the most refreshing of flower odors. No
other medicated soap Is to bo compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying
the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expen
sive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery.; Thus it
combines In ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, viz., TWENTY-IIVE CENTS, the BEST skin and com
plexion soap and the BEST toilet and baby soap In tlio world.
/niipnr9 Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Kumor,
liUtfivllflu Consisting of CUTICURA SOAP (25c.), to cleanse the skin of crusU
and scales and soften the thickened cuticle, CUTICURA OINTMENT
VIAE APT /ft nr T® l6 -'" Instantly allay Itching, Inflammation, and irritation, and
THF \r ! >,l 7h soothe l'«»l, CUTICURA RESOLVENT f50c.),t0 cool and
MIL. UL I | cleanse the blood. A SINOI.E SET, costing but $1.25, is often <ufli.
clent to cure the most torturing, disfiguring, and humiliating skin, scalp, and blood
humors, with IOSB of hair, when all else fails. Sold throughout the world.
nDf XOWEfI'S
WEI! brm*°
ill BHig
• ©a YtLLtUDW ■ "" s2/
WILL KEEP YOU DRY
GtoTODCfl® HIL§E WOtH
TAKt NO SUSTITUTE . fRCt CATALOGUE,
SHOWING FULL LINE: or GARMENTS AND HATS.
A.J.TOWER Co. BOSTON MASS.
S"MTZEKS 5ttDS DITHH
j WILL MAKE YOU KIUI!!
1 BROMUS INERMIS ■
I HflßfiC'i OfMlcit Permincpt I
I QT C?ntu *** I
M ' [jgflTOf* NotAln>l]k« l?on Mrtb
IfrTji' jiijT ' to-day that »*e of |
Jr Vi I H * n< l w « have scoured
H 1 ***« World over to find I
I>MU VMUr lta®«iual. Grows where *
m a a " o'hers kill and burn I
5 / OP from excest>ive hout
■ / vJcty (r aiu * * a, 'k ° r sufficient I
■ . all others winter kill ■
t • 'r«oze out 3to 7 *
■ yOv^SbStone of magnlOcent hay i
*■.M\!iaagl,. A per acre and lota of pa*. ■
■'a i/ tura <f® besides.
81.20 and up a i
Barrel.
I J«i I-*rir<'it potato and. I
*< !i ' vegetable giowori. .
KSu. /Choicest, rurest, heuvi- I
JE res. est yielding stock. .
112 -j Celelocue Telle. I
J For 10 Gents and this Notict!
our bl|j catalogue will be mailed you free, to-
H gether with 10 sample packages of the HO bu. H
n Kot ltz Wonder, the 40c Spring Wheat, the
SHllllon Dollar Grsm with its 12 tons of hay per I
acro.ttie Peaoat—a startling food, 1
the Vic torht Knpo Marvel, the I
astonishing 850 bushel per acre, /^Mv^ s. ■
Out", etc. In all. 10 pacLagce -if ... \ g
fully worth $lO to get a P
start for 10c in
JDHNA.SALZEmDCPnr'-!
™ «3 MB W M M M M ■ B
'iSUCSaMATISM matlc Compound ta
w HEbI I the only positive cure. Paste*'
Til JB Hsj H 9 perlence .speaks for it self Depot
1R 9 H Bbi%T" BiS Cla'.iforaia Are.. Chicago.
WIEE.V WBITISO TO AUVEBTHERS
Itlruie atute that you k»w the Ailv«rtl»i»
Bent In thl» puper.
For full explanation of the most
ATTRACTIVE and PROFIT
ABLE PROPOSITION ever offered
to AGENTS. Address P. O. Box
1501. New York City. N. Y.
I Can Sell Your Farm
for msh no matter where located. Send description and
Kelltnur price, and learn mv wonderfully sueresstul plan.
W. Sfl. Oatrjimler, lilt Filbert St.,l>lilh»,l»i».
ni?nPQY m ' :,v DISCOVERYj Blves
I I ■ quick relief and cures worst
Buses. isook of testimonials and lO duytreatment
Jb ree Dr. H. li. (i KEEN'B SUNS, bo* D. Atlanta. Ua*
A. N. K.-C 1851
Beet Cuugh Syrup. Tastes Good. Use W
in tlnao. Bold by drugglets.
3