IN THE SHADOW OF SHAME By Fitzgerald Molloy Copyright by !'• 1 Synopsis of Preceding Chapters Olive Dumbarton, after the legal separation from herbiutal hu.shand. heroine* a su«-res*fiil authrtress nuil lives •piletly * itK hrr daughter, Veronica, in Hevtoii lioiid. s*i JoliuV Wood. I.<<ii«t< Ml . Hrr tin* bund secretly returns to London and by letter makes i'urther demands fur money. Hep cousin, Valerius (•albralth. a man of independent wealth, who has bei ti in lo\ e with her sluce early voutli, calls to nav farewell befoit starting on a trip to Kgypt. A fori night later Olive Dumbarton is found In her library holding a dagger over the dead body of her husband. She i* suspected of the murder and Is arrested. Detectives are put on the ease, the publisher, oiler* to aid Mrs I>uiuburtoii. I'lie « oroner't Court holds her lor trial on the chare*- quinton QUa\e presents a clue to luspcctoi Mark worth Having accompanied Quinton Quave to the door, Mackworth returned to his •i..ing-room and settled himself down ;liink over what he hail just heard. The information volunteered by his visi t >r seemed to the inspector to favor the supposition he already entertained. It was reasonable to think that the man who, w< '.ring a wide-leafed soft hit, the better to conceal his identity, had stood watching Mrs. Dumbarton's house on the night of.and but a short time before the tragedy, was responsible for the crimej nor was it unreasonable to suspect that this man was the same who had visited Mrs. Dumbarton two hours before. But supposition was one tiling and proof another, and to verify his con jecture became Mackvvorth's desire. That Martyn had not seen this indi vidual in the Hexton Road was readily understood, for the latter would natur ally avoid encountering a policeman. However, Martyn might possibly have met on his rounds in the neighborhood such a man as the inspector could now describe, and it was, therefore, his fir>t care to question the constable once more on the subject. "And you are quite sure," said the lat er, "you saw no one loitering about Ilex ton Road on the night of the murder?" "Certain," Martyn replied stolidly. "You didn't meet there or in the dis trict :m\ one .vliom you might suspect His every movement WBH TN*INU carefully wat«'lieil. M 'rtcetned in this business?" ," the policeman answered. v - kt JBT." he remarked, looking • /at Martyn, "a man above mid ..c'heii'ht. and wearing a soft felt hat, was seen in the He.xton Road that night within half an hour of the occurrence." "Oh, I saw him,'' Martyn answered, opening wide his eyes and mouth. Mackworth smothered the imprecation that rose to his lips. "Where have you seen him?" he asked eagerly. "Why, it was' such a man—tall, and with a soft hat—that came running to ward me as 1 stood at the end of the Caxton Avenue, saying that a servant was calling out police and murder in the Hexton Road close by." "What did you do?" asked Mackworth impatiently. "1 started off for Hexton Road as quick as I could," replied Martyn, sur prised that it should be thought he had done anything else under the circum stances. "And he—and he, what became of him?" the inspector eagerly inquired. "I!e came running with me, but I soon outstripped him." "Did you see him again?" "I don't think so." "Now remember—are you sure you didn't sec him among the crowd that afterward entered Mrs. Dumbarton's house?" "If he was there I should have rec ognized him—no, he wasn't among them." The inspector frowned and said: "Do you mean to say that the first and last time you saw him was when he came running to tell you some one was calling out murder?" "Ves," the policeman answered, after a few seconds' thought, during which he fiercely pulled the straggling hairs of his light mustache; "I never saw him before to my knowledge, and I haven't set eyes on him since." "From what direction did he come to you." "From the Hexton Road." "How far were you from it at the time?" "About three hundred yards." "Now, think well," said Mackworth, presently, "for on your answer a great deal may depend. Did you see this man's face ?" I it/.gerald Molloy. I suppose I must have looked at him when lie spoke to me." answered Mar tyn; "but 1 can't describe him to you." "Every man on the force is expected t<> have a sharp eye and a keen memory for fices,'' said Mackworth, testily. "But the whole thing happened so sud denly," Martyn protested. "I was taken !>y surprise, and " "You should always have your wits about you. Do you think you would be able to recognize him, if not by his face, perhaps by his figure?" "I might," Martyn replied, somewhat doubtfully. "I know he was a tall man, rather slight in build. Yes, if I saw him again I think I should know him.'" "Good," replied Mackworth, hope fully. "You suspect some one?" "Never mind. What you have to do now i"s to think well of your meeting and recall what you can about him. Then this evening at half-past eight come to my place and I will put your power of recognition to the test. Meanwhile, not a word of what I have said to you—not a word," said the inspector. ***** That evening as the clock struck ten George Bostock left the room, put on his overcoat and his hat, and, as had been his custom for some time, quitted the house. There was no hesitation in his movements; he had already decided on his course, which custom had made familiar. His step led him to tile Ilex ton Road. Arriving there, lie neither sought nor avoided the house where lie was a fa miliar visitor, but contented himself by walking up and down in front on the opposite side of the road. Now and then lie paused as if to listen; more than once it seemed as if he would cross the road. Whenever foot passengers approached he continued his walk, as if anxious to avoid observance, and disappeared when a policeman came in sight, only to re appear again when the road was once more deserted. As he passed backward and forward George Bostock was (utile unaware that nis even movement was being carefully watched by three men. For the pub lisher, having been shadowed for some time by Mackworth's orders, the latter was aware of George Bostock's nightly walk, and the inspector, together with Quinton Quave and Martyn, now closely observed him from the bedroom window, from which the young medical man had, on the night of the tragedy, seen the figure that attracted his attention. When at last George Bostock, after spending an hour in the vicinity of the house where lived the woman he loved, took his departure, they who watched him felt keen relief. Quinton drew down the blinds and lighted a couple of can dles. In silence the three men gazed at each other, two of them, nccording to instructions, forbearing to exchange im pressions in each other's presence. "I will join you presently," Mack worth said to the policeman as the lat ter left the room. Then the inspector, turning impatiently to Quinton, said: "Well, sir. well. Is that the man you saw the night of the tragedy?" "Why, that's George Bostock!" Quin ton replied in surprise. "I know that. Now, remember, sir, how much may depend on your identi fication. Dismiss from your mind all prejudice you may have for or against him, and tell me candidly if you think he is the same man whom you noticed in the same place a little while before David Dumbarton was murdered." Quinton hesitated before replying. "I don't think he is." "Yon are doubtful?" '"I am not certain." "Make allowances for the differences in the hats you saw then and now, and perhaps for some excitement natural to a tpan about to commit a crime, and then tell me what's your conclusion." "The height of this man is about the same as the other." "Well?" "But, making allowances for that, there i-> little similarity between this man and the other." "Then, sir," said Mackworth, with evi dent disappointment, "you cannot ident PICTOKTAL MAGAZINE AND COMIC SECTION ifv tlit-rn as one and the same?" "I cannot," answered Quinton. ''One question more, sir. Is Mr. Bos tock a friend of yours?" "I have known him for some time." "And like him?'' "And like him," the young man re peated. "Good-night, sir," said the inspector shortly, as he turned away; then, as if acting on a second thought, lie added: "Remember, sir, not a word of this. I may be right, or I may be wrong in my suspicions, but let no incautiously dropped word of yours help to divert the course of justice." "You can rely on my silence," said Quinton stiffly. In the road outside Mackworth joined Martyn. "Well," he said abruptly, "have you made up your mind ?" "I have,"the policeman replied, promptly and decisively. "Then out with it and don't keep me waiting." "That's the same man who came run ning up to tell me some one was calling for the police." Mackworth paused in his walk and eyed his companion fixedly. "Are you quite sure?" he asked. "Certain." "Remember how much may depend on your word." "I knew him the minute I clapped my eyes on him again," the policeman said eagerly. "Are you ready to swear he is the same man?" "I am." "That's enough," said Mackworth, with evident relief. CHAPTER X. Throughout the days following the return to town of Valerius Galbraith, all his energies were expended in striving to penetrate the mystery which sur rounded David Dumbarton's death. 1 lours of his time were spent in con sultation with George Coris and the counsel instructed by him; while Valer ius had several interviews with Mack worth, who listened to his suggestions without revealing his own ideas regard ing the man he suspected of the motive he believed to have caused the crime. And no day was allowed to pass with out Olive Dumbarton seeing her cousin, whose sympathy in this hour of need was welcome to her, whose efforts to give her hope and bring her cheer she gratefully appreciated; and that he now made no reference, as he had often done in recent times, to the affection he felt for her, or dwelt on all that might have been had she long years ago accepted his love, she felt more grateful still. He was to her a friend, her next of kin, and nothing more, and as such she willingly accepted the services he placed at her disposal, the companionship he gave her. It was Galbraith's Ir.bit to avoid Ros tock when possible, inn it happened one afternoon when the former was spend ing the afternoon with his cousui, that the publisher called. Valerius, who was too well bred to show discourti y t •- ward a guest of his hostess and his kinswoman, rose and greeted Bostock formally and with an air of restraint of which Olive was painfully conscious, and of which the publisher was likewise aware. Olive Dumbarton sat in a deep chair beside the fire, her black dress contrast ing the pallor of her face, her thin hands with their long, sensitive fingers lying listlessly in her lap, her large, gray-blue eyes fixed absently on the fire when not raised in question to those with whom she conversed. Veronica, seated at a little table apart, made tea for their visitors. George Bostock was narrating the lat est literary gossip to his hostess, for, knowing the interest she always felt in her fellow-workers, he strove by this means to banish for awhile the dark and troubled thoughts that forever faced her. Mrs. Dumbarton moved her head until she faced the window, the blind of which had not been drawn. As she did she started violently, her eyes became fixed, her face grew ashy white, and her hands clutched the arms of her chair. They who stood beside her saw with fear the sudden change which had come upon her, and without questioning her turned simultaneously in the direction in which her gaze was yet fixed. And as they looked they were startled by the sight of a face pressed close against the glass, its outlines lost in the darkness surrounding it, the eyes large, dark and luminous, tilled with a fixed determina tion and eager purpose there was 110 mis taking. The second of profound silence which followed seemed an age, during which they suffered from a stupefaction which held their senses in abeyance; then Va lerius, who was first to recover, rushed from the room and out of the house. As he did the dark eyes, which had noted his movements, withdrew from the window and disappeared in the black ness without. As if relieved from a gaze that had fascinated her against her will, Olive Dumbarton drew a long breath, closed her eyes and rose to her feet. "Mother, deaitst, who can this be?" Veronica asked, in a frightened, appeal ing voice. "God knows," Olive Dumbarton re plied, in the tone of one ready to meet whatever calamity fate had yet in store for her. (To be continued.) A Little Story of Married Life. An Ohio farmer had a "hired man," a steady, phlegmatic worker, who was al ways on time and had not missed a day in more than a year. One morning he appeared in his Sunday clothes and an nounced that he had "togo bei his wife's funeral The following day he appeared as usual and went about his work in his careful, methodical manner. Less than n fortnight later he again came before his employer in his black suit and asked for a day off. "Jake, I hate to refuse you, but you know we arc pretty busy now. Woudn't it do just as well next week?" "Alier T denke nicht," said Jake; "may he T better be dere. It been my wedding still." "Whnt! Your wedding? Why, you buried your wife only week before last." "Ja," returned Jake calmly, "but I don't hold spite long." DELICACIES FOR EARLY FALL Mush Fritters. —Heat one pint of milk in a double boiler, anil just before it begins to boil sprinkle in half a cup of granulated white meal. Cook, stirring constantly, for ten minutes. Then cover anil cook slowly for thirty minutes. Aclil a level teaspoonful of salt and turn into tin molds. Stand aside to cool. When cold, cut into slices a half inch thick, dip in egg, roll in bread crumbs and fry in hot fat. Sauted Celery.—Select six small, solid stalks of celery. Wash and cut them into length of one and a half to two inches. Soak them in cold water for half an hour and throw them into boil ing water. Add a teaspoonful of salt and boil rapidly five minutes. Drain again. Now toss them in a napkin un til thoroughly dry. Put two tablcspoon fuls of oil or butter in a frying pan. Add a teaspoonful of chopped onion, and when hot putin the celery, a small quantity at a time. Stir or toss over a very hot fire until slightly browned. Lift with a skimmer and drain on brown paper. When ready to serve sprinkle over two tablespoonfuls of catsup and send at once to table. English Beef Soup.—Make a plain soup stock by boiling a shin of beef well seasoned. When cold remove the bone from the stock and cut the meat into neat small pieces. Put a tablespoon ful of butter in a saucepan with a table spoonful of Hour, and after mixing to gether without browning add one quart of the beef stock and season with one half teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pep per and a teaspoonful of kitchen bo quet. Bring to the boiling point. Now add the meat blocks and one hard-boiled egg chopped fine. I hrow into the soup half a lemon cut into thin slices and then into quarters. Serve at once. Panned Baked Apples.—Wash and core the number of apples required, but do not pare. Cut them into parts, eight parts to each apple. Put a layer in a baking dish, cover with two tablespoon fills of sugar, then another layer of ap ples, and so continue until the dish is tilled. Add to each quart of these a cupful of water, cover the pan and bake in a quick oven until soft, or about fif teen minutes. They must be tender, but the parts must remain quite whole—that is, not becoming mushy. Serve warm in the pan in which they are baked. Steak en Casserole.—For this choose a round steak, and have it cut at least one inch thick, and then into small pieces about two inches square. To each pound of steak allow one-half pint of small new onions, one tablespoonful of chopped parsley, one good-sized carrot, one turnip, one teaspoonful of salt, and a saitspoonful of pepper. Peel the onion, cut the carrot and turnip into fancy shapes, and put a layer of the mixed vegetables in the bottom of a cas serole or earthen dish. Heat an iron pan and rub the bottom with suet. Throw in the small pieces of >teak, let them heat quickly on both sides. Now lift and put them in the earthen dish ver the vegetables. Cover with the re maining vegetables, add the seasoning and two cups of boiling water. Cover the dish and stand in a quick oven to hake for an hour. Serve in the dish in which it is cooked. Rice Jelly.—Cover a quarter of a box of gelatin with half a cup of cold water and soak for half an hour. Wash a FACTS FROM MANY LANDS Italian railroad authorities are experi menting with a device for use at rail road stations, by means of which all tickets arc printed and stamped with their price in the presence of the pas senger, a record of each sale being at the same time made on a roll of paper inside the machine. Each machine is equipped for printing tickets to more than four hundred stations. A great canal which drains the two Italian provinces of Mantau and Reggio and discharges into the River Po lias just been opened. For five years six thousand men have been employed in digging the big ditch. The first turbine steamship ever built in the United States was launched at the Roach shipyard at Chester, Pa., in April last. It was christened the "Governor C< bb," and will ply between Roston and New Brunswick. It is 2>>o feet l<nig and contains one hundred and event y-tlve staterooms. According to the Machinists' Monthly Journal, more men are killed in Alle gheny County, Pa., every year than fell in many oi the great battles of history Last year ni::e t! uisan ! men were killed and injured in the steel and iron mills and blast furnaces. In other mills the casualties numbered four thousand. Railroad employes killed or injured in the county during the same year num bered four thousand three hundred, making a grand total of seventeen thou sand seven hundred on the roll. The oldest university in the world is the "School for the "ons of the Em pire" at Peking, Chi\ 1. The names of its 60,000 graduates are carved on 320 stone pillars. The production of aluminum in the United States has increased tenfold in as many years. In 1883 the total pro duction was eight-three pounds. In 1904 it was 8,600,000 pounds. A lighthouse that has neither lamp nor keeper is located at Arnish Rock, Stornoway Bay, in the Hebrides, Scot land. It is a conical beacon with a lantern, which has a mirror and an ar rangement of prisms at its summit. Across the channel, 500 feet away, 011 Lewis Island, stands a lighthouse which throws a stream of light 011 the mirror in the lantern, which in turn reflects it on the prisms. The rays of light are converged to a focus outside the lan tern and then diverge in every direc tion, making a serviceable lighthouse, fully adapted to the requirements of its locality. The money value of the Vatican, the Pope's palace at Rome, and its treasures is estimated at $150,000,000. At New Haven, Conn., Yale Univer sity is building a reinforced concrete stadium which will have a seating ca pacity of 40,000. Newspaper despatches from Denver announce that it has been decided to adopt electricity as the motive power for the Denver & Rio Grande railroad, the quarter of a cup of rice in cold water, boil fur thirty minutes and drain. Stir or toss it with a fork until it is light and dry. Whip a pint of cream, stand it in a pan of ice water and sprinkle over with sugar and then with the rice. Stand the gelatin over hot water, and when melted strain over it the warm mixture. Stir at once and continuously until the whole is thoroughly mixed and the rice remains 011 top of the cream. Turn into a mold and stand in a cold place. Creamed Baked Macaroni.—Boil four ounces of macaroni twenty minutes and blanch ten. Put a layer of macaroni in the bottom of a baking di h, then a sprinkling of cheese, a dusting of salt and pepper, and so continue until all the ingredients arc used. Rub a tablespoon ful of butter and a tablespoonful of English Beef Soup.—Main a plain flour together. Add a cup of milk and stir over the fire until boiling. Pour this carefully over the macaroni and bake in a moderate oven thirty minutes. Scotch Stew'—Cut two necks of mut ton into small pieces. Put two table spoonfuls of suet into a saucepan and shake over the fire until it is nearly incited. Remove the frizzled pieces, put in the pieces of muttftn and shake un til they are seared on all sides. Add two tablespoonfuls of flour to the fat and mix. Cover the pan and simmer gently for one and a half hours. Serve with boiled rice or baked onions cooked in cream. Chocolate Souffle.—Put two ounces of chocolate into a saucepan. When melted add one cup of milk and stir until hot and well mixed. Moisten three table spoonfuls of flour in four tablespoon spoonfuls of cold milk. Add to the hot milk and stir until smooth and thick. Take from the fire, add the yolks of four eggs. Cook a minute longer, take again from 'the fire and fold in carefully the well beaten whites of the eggs. Turn at once into a baking dish and bake twenty minutes. Serve with cream and vanilla sauce. Green Corn Gems.—Score and press the corn from half a dozen ears. Beat the yolks of two eggs and add one cup of milk and then the corn. Sift one and one half cups of flour with one round ing teaspoonful of baking powder. Stir tins into the corn mixture and fold in the well beaten whites. Bake in gem pans in a quick oven thirty minutes. Codfish Souffle.— l'ick apart half a pound of salt cod and wash well in cold water. Now cover with boiling water and let stand for half an hour. Drain and press dry. Have ready two ctipfuls of cold mashed potatoes that have been beaten until light. Stir in the codfish, add a salt spoonful of pepper, the yolks of two eggs and finally fold in the beaten whites. Put this 'nto a baking dish and bake until a golden Lrown. Pumpkin Custard.—Make a oLntit crust and roll it out thin, using two cups of flour, a rounding teaspoonful of baking powder, a level teaspoonful of sale, -uul moisten with two-thirds of a cup of milk. Line a deep baking dish with this thin crust. Have ready stewed sufficient pumpkin to make one pint or two cupfuls when mashed and pressed through a sieve, being careful that it is not too watery. While the 'pumpkin is warm add a tablespoonful of butter, -tir in two eggs well beaten, and half a pint of milk. Season with nutmerr, turn ir.to baking dish and bake in a moderate ov n for one hour. electricity to b' r;c:icrate:l by mountain streams along: the line. It is added that electric engineers report enough water going to waste within the state to run all tlie railroads inside its borders. The Czar of Russia is the possessor of a bullet-proof automobile, devised not for safety alone, but for comfort as w. 11. It is fitted up with a chest 01 drawers, cabinet, easy chairs, etc. Mohair is likely to become an import ant produce in the United States. At present, however, there are probably not more than 1,000.000 pounds of the sub stance grown here. It comes from the back of the Angora goat, three or four pounds being secured from each animal. The price of mohair varies from 25 cents to $1.25 a pound. Chinese graft, which is proverbial, finds an excollcnt opportunity in the lighting of Peking. Annually 80,000 taels are appropriated for the purposes of street illumination. After the money has sifted through the hands of various officers a wick and some oil are left. One of the numerous beggars of the capital drinks the oil. Ballooning has a curious effect on the vision. The pressure on the visual or gans decreases and the sense of sight becomes so keen that at an altitude of 6.000 feet a bottle dropped to a body of water below may be observed in do tail as it disappears beneath the sur face. A policeman's club with an electric light in the handle is a late invention. If it proves a success the searchlight lantern may be dispensed with, A Hungarian chemist has produced a fluid optical lens at a moderate cost. The largest lens used for astronomical work has hitherto cost thousands of do!-, lars and taken several years to produce. A few weeks' time and an expenditure of SSOO is all that is now required. For the purpose of raising the Mi kasa, the sunken flagship of Admiral Togo, the Japanese have constructed an exact model of the wreck. As a hole is repaired in the Mikasa, a correspond ing patch is placed on the model. The progress of the work may thus be meas ured at a glance. The Canadian Pacific railroad has constructed, between Montreal and Win nipeg, a distance of 1,400 miles, a tele graphonc system. One wire does doubel work at once, so that a telegraph and a telephone message may 1);- transmitted simultaneously. The company will in stall this system over all its lines. The work of dispatching trains, it is be lieved, will be revolutionized. The nationa's capital has the largest collection of anthropological specimens 011 the face of the globe. Four thou sand to five thousand skulls and skele tons are here preserved. Two hundred brains are arrayed in jars. These are exhibited with those of animals for the purpose of comparison. food Salary way for you to help yourself and good pay in the trade or hes your taste and ambition. saving home; without losing or a dollar of pay; without is until qualified to step into re. Will you mail the coupon OUt how the INTERNATIONAL JNCE SCHOOLS will help you lug yourself at once ? ity presented in the coupon ortunity. No matter where at you are doing, the coupon odo better. Mailing the cou to no expense or obligation. 1 you a chance to find out all derfulmethod of money-earn nv within your reach through No matter if you are poor and cation; no matter what obsta t in your way, the I. C. S.—& nal institution with a capital o' 3 —will find a way to help yo* ie Coupon To-day 'respondenoe Schools, SCRANTON, PA. further obligation on iny pnrt > »r a linger salary In the posl tiich J nave marked X , Hrrhaalfal llrafltma* 1 Telephone KiigtNMr , Kler. I.ltflitlng Kupt. ■ Mei-hnn. Miiglnitcr I on- NttiUuiiiiry Kngln««r 1 l*r« <i»ll Knglneer I II till d I ny < untractor Arrhltvr'l pr*rua.H« 1 Arehltfol • Htruetuml Engineer It rid if e F.ngliiccr Mining F.nglneer I a STEEL I Ml Moat economical and durable roof covering known. F-asy to put on; requires no EH'wHiWflWr tools but a hatchet or u hummer. Willi ordinary care will outlast any other kind IHrfli'Hifl Vlw Thousand.* <f sathllod cu-tomem everywhere havo proven Its virtues. BultaMe for IM, 111 3' Eli covering any building. Al.-o liest for celling and siding Fire-proof and water-proof, twl 'l 'l ■>! Cheaper and more lasting than shingles. Will not taint rain-water. Makes your building I 1 V r cooler iti . Minmer and warmer in winter. brand new, painted red two ti r p'*ps. rv.T T.TV ' 1 Tn? n-.iT Sn.tt pr.rtt' r<T t wwl IV 112 siding, c i'!i sheet i Inch, s wide and Zi Inches long. Our price on the corrugated, like 'J j Kin 'ri 112 i i— _r nchew wide x:' 4 inches long 91.60. AtSßconU per square additional 1 * 5 • II fin:.i ' Khcrt- (V and 8 feet long. Steel brick siding, per square SI.OO. ' i . in. :t.el ' ■ a«J. I Celling. per squaro $2.00. Can also furnish standing seam or "V • ! <>■"'s. WE PAY THE FREIGHT TO ALL POINTS EAST OF COLORADO sext\ -» bli'r.h' ». Texas and Indian Territory, quotations to other points on application. , d satisfaction or nonoy refunded. We will send this roofing to any one tii -st rlne this advertisement C. (). !>., with privilege of examination If you will tend < tt. J tbo amo' ut of 3'our order In canh; bidance to bo paid after material reaches your Station. If . * ■ ,».t: ented,you do not have to take the shipment ami we will cheerfully refund your deposit. ~i» fio. YJ- 723. Lowest prices on liootlng, Kve Trough, Wire, Pipe, Fencing. Plumbings Doors, ~i 1 e.« rvthfng needed on the r'arm or In the Home. We buy our goods at bheritf's and re < 112 STFICZITS, CH Ig AG^ BOYS QKT A REAL air Rl£le—free r SHOOTS DEAD DE/=C ""lUiUKD RARREIj DEAD EASY FfiEE fot selling 30 packages of our Fnnioua Ink Powder* at lde a package. Kach package making over one dollar's worth of Ilicil and Illack Tnk by simply adding w :it er. Something entirely new to sell. You can sell out In a day. Itucclmll Outfit*, skate*. ItolK I.sinierim, All* Chum, given for selling 20 packages. Boys and • t«-; , ' iv. i'ii >i Im sour i • .i. All express charges fully paid. If von wish our X-Ray IHiilag '"oudte* m-i :•!of , • I:ii: i owder*. a> ho. and we will send them. We make both. No money required !f you are honest, we trust you. j g ROYAL SUPPLY COMPANY, Box 4, Station C, New York. R? 12ft 2fa i .v'e Ik »{ft y°»> home. For a limited time we wIQ give free, for >la 11 \' B aLV " J 112 \ ?■» MI" Is advertising purposes. % music lessons for beginners or «IU0«U Lt^Uiw rntt pi.- ciht of pi:iml f.'iiMm -ie •. < u use, which Is small]. \N e teach by mall only ami guarantee success. I -i .im||s| ..i i• \ fii ,11 : i niicN wrho: "Wish 1 had heard of your school before." Write today for book h-t, testiTijon: li. : ;id m •• ti.u'oii Vddrcja: t. H. Hi lIOOL OF Ml NIC, Box 8. P. 1# I'nlon'Sq., N. 112, R. R. Agency Work a'ncl Type-writing L*r<r'V Sy t 'xn of ."><•' !<» : a Arecirioo. Enfiorsod by It.iilroar; 'J ;:i itl». . uumul a,- /u dcmund. Wo secure posftth-as for • ;.ralu •» ;'iud mo i cuier r.tiy :Irne. hop..:- . ii- n'-oL op VKMCQU .PHY co. Cinolnnr.d, O.J 15uii>.. nntu, ''roise, Wis.j Texjtrkvia. Texas. 112 1-froo l»,u< dre««dn?ti) The MORSF SCH'iC, c.* V LEOSMPHV CO. 52 Opur:? P:r.:j CIWCiHNATJ, OiiiO. IrjiEpO ''OH VfANT IT?j B IIL.BM truths ,v n vv. <•.!?*inKfi 11 !! liioiii v jn\. 'il<> air .11. • v!. 11 I» int. • < sted in Invest - •ml tO explain to you wore about my lluauclal work. Address R. S. KENNEDY, 22-537 West 24 St., Y. City. BIRD MANNA is the secret 9 /lily, Breeder 8 of the litirtz Mountains I oases of Cage ISirds. and restor- Mtfrffif 1 ' i ng loat gong. 1 tacts like magie. l '» cents at druggists, or by mail. PHILAD'A BIRD FOOD CO.'. J 400 N. 3rd SU, Philadelphia^^* G!row Mushrooms JT '"i"'-' Ft III# nud Quirk Profit*. /_ 'a 1 fun give practical Instructions WorUl '"»»>' dollars to you. No matter ? v,lal y° ur occupation Is or where located, got a thorough knowledge I JT .. of y l * B P u yfng business. Particulars I 1 I™°;, JA®K NON Ml SHIfOOM FARM, L—i M. Western Ave., U*UO, ChloMgu j PhPf OI T !i new:v»-page 111 iiHtrutcd booklet, "The LULL liook of Ihe Hair," explaining the most I 1111 elllelent and harmless method of restoring gfav. t: ded or streaked hairtoanv desired Hhadeaml youthful gloss by simply combing It. 11. I>. Comb tu„ llvpt. IV, \\Y>t yist St., New York nnßlllfl nl * mokpiiim: IIARIT cnm>. IIM ■ 11 rJs l''»'«e 11'Inl tn-utinenf. NVe spednllv UI ILi 111 cam** where other roinedien wi l*i! Ih'l |. Conthh n.ial. II Alt Hl* IN STITI'TK, Room &;?, No. 4UU \V. *>;;«! St. New York Horse or Dog Owners should have Dr. A. C Daniel's Hooks on Dlsenses, Tr»»Htinent and Cure of Sick and I.HUM- \nlmals, I'uHlshcd by Dr. A. C. Daniels. Inc., !?•» M Ik Street, Hoston, .\tsiss. MMI.IM FIlKi:. Mention this paper. CITQ ~s Dance and all Nervous Diseases per ri 0 hihuciiilj cured »► v Dr Kline's <ireat Nerve Kcnforer. end f< i I Itr.i: »v.no trial hott ie and treat• isr Dr. IMcKi.i t lArch St., Philadelphia. Pa. LADIFS . - .nltiiiv Melts Meferialallcut > iriidvlo sen; >|.'n per dozen; partlcn lurs stumped envelope JJ.NOX CO., Dept. U9, Chicago i !3^H|3HMr St c estate " How to invest small ciiooae real estate c lass of properties i _ > j n mOSt lon|^H where to buy. Cause of gruwth in population, etc. This bouk Is not an aJ- Kd vertisement ot any particular investment but isthecvn* *£%>. den&ed expert testimony of the best known real estate men. This book will interest every one who has $5 or ■f more a month to Invest and wants to invest it where it w ill l»e safe yet where it will earn more than an ordinary ■BB- <-r 4 interest. Write us a postal saying, send "Uol- H larsinDlrt." You will receive the hook by retura mall. W.M.OSTRANDFR,Int.'Hi "lortbAmtrka. Udg. Ptill.<lrl*M* jM Suite WB6 W. 4»d HU, Now York Olty FAT PEOPLE 112 can reduce your weight 3 to fl poundslß week. No starving, n6 exercising, fto nau* /WT seatinar drugs or sickening pill» that ruin the -s* stomach. I ana a regular DractlUiije PyP Ijhyiclan and a specialist m the auecese #wi JNI * u ' rwluct,on of superfluous fat. My perfec iA ted method atrengthens the heart and enables S\ H breaths easily, and qukkly removes double chih, large stomach and fat hips. My zJKs- scientific method and treatment is recom mended by physicians In their private prac- a, jd many DOCTORS themselves are my 'patients. References; professional, personal and bank-. - Satisfaction guaranteed. I send my new PPFP •T-.nfe 5 °. n ,i "Obesity; Its Cause and Cafe," FREE I,JII HENRY C. BRADFORD; M. D.. CB3 Bradford Building, 20 East IU Street. Ntw York City. j with Strum Motor, brass boiler, Propeller, etc., all hand- I somrly hnishrd. (liven for selling 32 useful articles of I merchandise at only f|ye cents each. Boys mid f;irls I write quick 112« r the articles. We trust you. Address, I NICKEI. Mi'kCHANDISB CO. I Motor Boat IX.pt,**ioi Brldgewater, Coots. I Vtimamaimu jus umnuMffmaraas«HßßMMr "^;' u IV \ At JiumjlsH.Mc; orftom
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers