Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, May 21, 1908, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
In STORY cv I
of the
J THREE L
I *" i
KATC AND VIRGIL D. BOYLES
- ...
(Copyright by A. (.*. Jlci-lurn JL CO., 1W7.)
SYNOPSIS.
George Williston, a poor ranchman,
lit-rli minded and cultured. searches for
<ait|e missing from his ranch—the "I.azy
S." On a wooded spot in the river's bed
thai would have bun an Island had the
Missouri been at high water, he dis
covers a band of horse thieves engaged
in working over brands on cattle. He
creeps near enough to note the chang
ing: of the"Three Bars" brand on one
steer to the "J. R." brand. I'aul Lang
ford, the rich owner of the"Three
Bars." is informed of the operations of
the gang of cattle thieves—a band of
outlaws headed by Jesse Black, who
long have defied the law and authori
ties of K eniah county. South Dakota.
Langford is struck with the beauty of
Mary, commonly known as "Williston's
little girl." Louise Dale, an expert
court stenographer, who had followed
lier uncle. Judge Hammond Dale, from
the east to the '"Dakotahs," and who
Is living with him al Wind City, is
requested by the county attorney,
Richard Gordon, to come to Kctnah and
take testimony in the preliminary
hearing of Jesse Black. Jim Munson, in
•waiting at the train for Louise, looks
at a herd of cattle being shipped by
Bill Brown and there detects old
"Mag," a well known "onery" steer be
longing to his employer of the"Three
Bars" ranch. Munson and Louise start
for Kemah. Crowds assemble in Justice
James R. McAllister's court for the
preliminary hearing. Jesse Black springs
the tlrst of many great surprises, waiving
examination. Through Jake Sanderson, a
member of <\.t outlaw gang, he had
learned that the steer "Mag" had been re
covered and thus saw the uselessness of
fighting against bolng bound over. County
Gordon accompanies Louise
Pale on her return to Wind City. While
ftVilliston stands in the light in his door
pt night a shot is tired at him. The house
Is attacked and a battle ensues between
TVillistun and his daughter, on one side,
and the outlaws on the other. The house
is set on tire As an outlaw raises his rille
to shoot Willlston a shot from an un
known source pierces his arms and the
jrif 1• • falls to the ground. Aid lias come to
Willlston, but he and his daughter are
■captured and borne away by the outlaws.
Jim Munson late at night heard the shots,
ifliscovered the attack on Williston's house,
liurried to the Throe Bars ranch and sum
moned Langford and his brave men to the
rescue. It was Langford who fired the shot
which saved Williston's life. Langford
rescues Mary from her captor. The party
search in vain for Williston. Louise comes
to nurse Mary. Willlston Is riven up for
dead. But meager evidence is obtainable
against Jesse Black, and it is concluded
that the case must be fought out on the
!Sol question of "Mag." Judge Dale ar
rives to sit at the December session of
tl" i in nit court at whit li the cattle theft
•case is to be tried. Gordon has hard work
Ins.- tiring an unprejudiced jury. Red
'Sand, rson takes a seat In the hotel din
ing hall beside Louise and addresses her.
H' is unceremoniously shoved aside by
(Gordon. Sahderson draws his gun. The
(trial begins.
CHAPTER XV.—Continued.
Tlio hearing of testimony for the
state went on all through that day. It
was late when the state rested its
•case —so late that the defence would
not be taken up until the following
day. It was all in—for weal or for
woe. In some way all of the state's
•witnesses—with the possible excep
tion of Munson, who would argue with
the angel Gabriel at the last day and
offer to give him lessons in trumpet-
Wowing—had been imbued with the
■earnest, honest, straightforward policy
«112 the state's counsel. Gordon's friends
were hopeful. Langford was jubilant,
and he believed in the tolerable In
tegrity of Gordon's hard-won Jury.
Gordon's presentation of the ease thus
far had made him friends; fickle
friends, maybe, who would turn when
the wind turned —to morrow—but true
It was that when court adjourned late
in the afternoon, many who had jeered
at him as a visionary or an unwel
come meddler acknowledged to thern
selves that they might have erred In
their judgment.
As cn the previous night, Gordon
was tired. He walked aimlessly to a
window within the bar and leaned
against it, looking at the still, oppres
sive, cloudy dampness outside, with
the early December darkness coming
on apace. Lights were already twink
ling in kitchens where house wives
were busy with the evening meal.
"Well, Dick," said Langford, com
ing up cheery and confident.
"Well, Paul, it's all in."
"And well in, old man."
"I —don't know, Paul. I hope so.
That quiet little man front down coun
try has not been much heard from,
you know. I am afraid, a moral up
lift isn't my stunt. I'm tired! i feel
like a rag."
Langford was called away for a mo
ment. When he returned, Gordon was
gone. He was not at supper.
"He went away on his horse," ex
plained Louise, in answer to Lang
lord's unspoken question. "1 saw him
ride into the country."
When the party separated for the
night, Gordon had not yet returned.
CHAPTER XVI.
Gordon Rides Into the Country.
Gordon rode aimlessly out of the lit
tle town with its twinkling lights.
He did not. care where lie went or
;what direction he pursued. He wanted
to ride off a strange, enervating dejec
tion that had laid hold of him the
j moment his last testimony had gone
iln. It all seemed so pitifully inade
quate -without Williston—now that it
was all in. Why had he undertaken
It? It could only go for another de
feat counted against him.' Though
what was one defeat more or less
when there bail been so many? It
would he nothing new. Was he not
pursuing merely the old beaten trail?
Why should the thought weigh so
heavily now? Can a man never attain
to that higher—or lower, which is it?
—altitude of Blrlfeless, unregretful
hardness? Or was it, he asked him
self in savage contempt of his weak
ness, that, despite all his generous and
iron-chid resolutions, he had secretly,
unconsciously perhaps, cherished a
swert, shy, little reservation in his in
most heart that maybe—if he won
out —
"You poor fool," he said, aloud, with
bitter harshness.
Suppose he <1 id. A brave speci
men, lie. if he had the shameful ego
ism to ask a girl—a girl like Louise—
a gentle, highbred, protected, cherish
ed girl like that —to share this new,
bleak, rough life with him. Hut the
very sweetness of (he thought of her
doing it made him gasp there in the
darkness. How stifling the air was!
lie lifted his hat. It was hard to
breathe. It was like the still oppres
siveness preceding an electrical storm.
His mare, unguided, had naturally
chosen the main-traveled trail and
kept it. She followed the mood of her
master and walked leisurely along
while the man wrestled with himself.
If he really possessed the hardihood
to ask Louise to do this for him she
would laugh at. him. Stay! That was
a lie —a black lie. She would not
laugh—not Louise. She was not of
t hat sort. Itather would she grieve
over the inevitable sadness of it. If
she laughed, he could hear it better—
he had good, stubborn, self-respecting
blood in him—but she would not laugh.
And all the rest of his long life must
be spent in wishing—wishing—if it
could have been! But he would never
ask her to do it. Not even if the im
possible came to pass. It was a hard
country on women, a hard, treeless,
sun-seared, unkindly country. Men
could stand it —fight for its future;
but not women like Louise. It made
men as well as unmade them. And
after all it did not prove to lie the
undoing of men so much as it devel
oped in them the perhaps hitherto hid
den fact that they were already want
ing. These latent, constitutional
weaknesses thus laid bare, the bad
must for a while prevail—bad Is so
much noiser than good. Hut this big,
new country with its infinite possibili
ties—give it time—it would form men
out of raw material and make over
men mistakenly made when that was
V L:- 5
_ ...
v- ,m
--r
"Why. Lena, Old Girl, We've Been
Taking Our Time."
N?ssinle. or else show tie dividing line
so clearly that the goats might not
herd with the sheep. Some day, it
would be fit for women—like Louise.
Not now. Much labor and sorrow
must be lived through; there must be
much sacrifice and much refining, and
many must fall and lose in the race
before jus big destiny be worked out
and it be fit for women—like Louise.
Down in the southern part of the
state, and belonging to it, a certain
big-barred building sheltered many
women, when the sun of the treeless
prairies and the gazing into the lone
some distances surrounding their
homesteads seeped into their brains
and stayed there so that they knew
not what they did. There were trees
there and fountains and restful blue
grass in season, and flowers, flowers,
flowers —but these came too lale for
most of the women.
If it had been Langford, now, who
was guilty of so ridiculous a scnti
mentalism—the bold, impetuous,
young ranchman—he smiled at him
self whimsically. Then he pulled him
self together. He did not think the
jury could believe the story Jesse
Hlack would trump up, no matter how
plausible it was made to sound. He
felt more like himself —in bettor con
dition to meet those few but stanch
friends of his from whom he had §o
summarily run away—stronger to
meet —Louise. Man-like, now that be
was himself again, he must know the
time. He struck a match.
"Why, Lena, old girl, we've been
taking our time, haven't we? They
are likely through supper, but maybe
1 can wheedle a doughnut out of the
cook."
The match burned out. Not until
be had tossed it. away did it come to
liim that they were no longer on the
main trial.
"Now, that's funny, old girl," he
scolded. "What made you be so un
reasonable? Well, we started with
our noses westward, so you must
have wandered into the old Lazy S
branch trail. Though, to be sure, it
has been such a deuce of a while since
wo traveled it that 1 wonder at you,
What's the matter now, silly?"
liis mare had shied. He turned her
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1908.
nose resolutely, domineeringly, bacJi
toward the spot objected to.
"I can't see what yon're scared at,
hut. we'll just Investigate and show
you how foolish a thing is feminine
squeamishness."
A shadowy form arose out of the
darkness. It approached.
"Is that you, Dick?"
Gordon was not a superstitious man,
yet he felt suddenly cold to the crown
of his head. It was not so dark as it
might have been. There would have
been a moon had it not been cloudy.
Dimly, he realized that the man had
arisen from the ruins of what must
have been the old Williston home
stead. The outlines of the stone stoop
were vaguely visible in the half-light.
The solitary figure had been crouched
there, brooding.
"I'm flesh and blood. Dick, never
fear," said the man in a mournful
voice. "I'm hungry enough to vouch
for that. You needn't be afraid. I'm
anything but a spirit."
"Williston!" The astonished word
burst from Gordon's lips. "Williston!
Is it really you?"
"None other, my dear Gordon! Sor
ry I startled you. I saw your light
and heard your voice speaking to your
horse, and as you were the very man
I was on the point of seeking, I just
naturally came forward, forgetting
that my friends would very likely
look upon me in the light of a ghost."
"Williston! My dear fellow!" re
peated Gordon again. "It is too good
to be true," he cried, leaping from his
mare and extending both hands cordi
ally. "Shake, old man! My, the feel
of you is—bully. You are flesh and
blood all right. I don't know, though.
Seems to me you have been kind o'
running to skin and bones since I last
saw you. Grip's good, but bony.
You're thinner than ever, aren't you?"
All this time he was shaking Willis
ton's hands heartily. He never thought
of asking him where he had been. For
weary months lie had longed for this
man to come back. He had come
back. That was enough for the pres
ent. Tie had always felt genuinely
friendly toward the unfortunate
scholar and his daughter.
"That's natural, isn't it? Besides,
they forgot my rations sometimes."
"Who, Williston?" asked Gordon,
the real significance of the man's re
turn taking quick hold of him.
"I think you know, Gordon," said
the older man, quietly. "It is a long
story. 1 was coming to you. I will
tell you everything. Shall I begin
now?"
"Are you in any danger of pursuit?"
asked Gordon, suddenly bethinking
himself.
"I think not. I killed my jailer, the
half-breed, Night bird."
"You diil well. So did Mary."
"What do you mean?"
"Didn't you know that Mary shot
and killed one of the desperadoes that
night? At least, wo have every rea
son to think it was Mary. By the way,
you have not asked after her."
The man's head dropped. He did
not answer t'of a long time. When ho
raised his head, his face, though show
ing indistinctly, was hard and drawn.
He spoke with little emotion as a man
who had sounded the gamut of des
pair and was now far spent.
"What was the use? I saw her fall,
Gordon. She stood with me to the
end. She was a brave little girl. She
never onto faltered. Dick," he said,
his voice changing suddenly, and lay
ing hot, feverish hands on the young
man's shoulders, "we'll hang them—
you and I —we'll hang them every one
—the devils who look like men, but
who strike at women. We'll hang
them, I say—you and I. I've got the
evidence."
"Is it possible they didn't tell you?"
cried Gordon aghast at the amazing
cruelty of it.
(To Be Continued.)
COFFIN WAS A BACK NUMBER.
So Pennsylvania Man Sold It and Will
Purchase Another.
Isaac Coffman of Hatton, Pa., has
sold a coffin he made many years ago.
He sold it not because he felt he would
have 110 use for it, but because his
wife insisted that it was out of date.
Mr. Coffman is nearing his eightieth
birthday. He explained to a friend
that he constructed the coflin 20 years
ago. It was built of chestnut because,
as he put it, "Many's the time I have
sat beside a cheery blaze of chestnut
logs and heard them crackle and burn
merrily. It makes such a homelike
blaze that I picked it in prefernce to
other woods. It was my desire to
have the coffin as cozy as possible,
and I rejected the frivolities which so
many persons affect in the matter of
coffins. In order to have it handy I
kept it in the garret. But my wife
tells me that styles have changed, and
since I have accumulated a little for
tune .?he will not permit me to die un
less I consent, to get an up-to-date
casket. To avoid trouble I agreed to
sell the old one. But at the same
time 1 think that the coflin which was
good enough for mo in my poorer
days should satisfy mo now, and I
shall always feel out of place in the
new-fangled affair."
Tennyson and the Socialist.
Tennyson figuring as a champion of
the Imperiled rights of property is
thus quoted in William Ailingham's
lately published "Diary." "I was once
in a coffee shop in the Westminster
road at four o'clock in the morning.
A man was raging. 'Why has so-and-so
a hundred pounds and 1 have not a
shilling?' I said to him, 'lf your father
had left you a hundred pounds you
would not Kive it away to somebody
else.' He had not a word to answer.
I knew he Uudu't." ~ ' . ■
Picked Up in
Pennsylvania
ERIE. —George A. Hirsch of this
place lost both of his legs beneath a
Lake Shore freight train.
LAT ROBE.—Morris, the 3-year-old
son of Andrew Peters of Bradenville,
was fatally scalded by falling into a
boiler of hot water.
NEW CASTLE.—Partially eaten by
rats, the mutilated body of Harney
Sweeney, aged 65, was found by boys
in a shed buck of the Coliseum skat
ing rink.
WEST NEWTON William Wil
helm, aged 18 years, was drowned and
Roy Hi finger, 16, had a narrow es
cape here while rowing in the You
ghiogheny river.
JEANNETTE. —Owing to the in
creased demand for bottles, the last
of the idle furnaces of the Jeannette
Glass Co.'s works was put.in opera
tion, affecting 150 men.
HAZLETON.—John McCarthy, one
of the best known newspaper men in
the state, died suddenly from paraly
sis of the heart at his home at Weath
erly, 12 miles from here.
UNIONTOWN.—The store of John
11. Bovd at Cool Spring was entered
by thieves and canned and bottled
goods, meats, Hour, etc., were taken
to the amount of over SSOO.
SOMERSET. Shocking treatment
of inmates of the Somerset county
home is alleged in charges resulting
in the arrest of Poor Directors Will
iam Brant and John Reiman.
GREENSBURG.—The Saxman Store
Co. of Bradenville was awarded S2OO
damages against the H. 9. Kerbaugh
Co. for an explosion of dynamite three
years ago, which wrecked buildings at
Braden ville.
PHILADELPHIA.— One man was
probably fatally injured and a large
building destroyed by an explosion of
powder in the plant of the Lexow
Flashlight Powder Co. at Grassland,
Pa., near here.
WASHINGTON. Miss La.ura
Sharpnack, daughter of Abraham
Sharpnack, is dead at her home at
Khedive, Greene county. This is the
sixth death in the Sharpnack family
during the last year.
BROWNSVILLE. While com
mencement exercises for pupils grad
uating from its rooms were being held
in a theater the brick schoolhouse at
Bridgeport, a suburb of Brownsville,
was destroyed by lire.
WASHINGTON.— John Millikin, a
Civil war veteran of Jefferson, Greene
county, has been presented with the
old battle flag of his company in the
Eighty-fifth Pennsylvania infantry, or
ganized at Zollarsville in 1861.
READING.—AII employes of the
Reading railway road department
have been ordered on ten hours per
day. They had been on nine hours
all winter. This affects at least 1,000
men on the different divisions.
POTTSVILLE.—By the explosion of
a charge of dynamite in the gangway
of the Draper colliery, Andrew Cav
aiage was killed and three foreign la
borers were so badly injured that
they are not expected to recover.
WASHINGTON—WiIIiam Cameron,
accused of stealing a horse, escaped
from officers at Hookstown, jumping
out of a window in the office of Jus
tice James Reed while the justice and
others were examining the warrant.
HARRISBURG.—As a result of the
raid made by agents of the state dairy
and food division together with fed
eral authorities 011 the illegal sellers
of oleo in Schuylkill county the traf
fic has been almost entirely broken
up.
BUTLER.—In a wreck of a west
bound freight train on the Baltimore
& Ohio railroad a mile west of Evans
City two men were perhaps fatally
injured. The track spread and 17
coal cars plunged over an embank
ment.
HARRISBURG.—The reports to the
state banking department by 327 trust
companies. 130 state banks and 13
savings institutions, under date of De
cember 16, show that deposits aggre
gated $632,006,359, against $666,143,-
524 a year before.
CONN ELLSVILLE.—Charging con
spiracy and circulation of slanderous
statements, Hev. A. Bleisz, pastor of
St. Emory Magyar Catholic church of
Connellsvllle, lias made information
against the former organist, Adalbert
Pogany, and four of his supporters.
BUTLER. Lawrence McLaughlin
of Karns City, an. oil well pumper,
was struck by the Buffalo flyer on the
Allegheny Valley railroad at Parker
and instantly killed. His body was
hurled 300 feet to the water's edge.
HARRISBURG.— A telegram re
ceived here from Pottsville stated
that John J. Lendcrman, head of the
Dundee Creamery Co. of Pittsburg,
and' N. E. .Turns, his agent, were
fined SIOO and costs 011 each of 13
indictments for illegal sale of oleo in
Schuylkill county.
BEAVER FALLS. The Beaver
Falls .Manufacturing Co. has shipped a
carload of sledges to Panama for use
on the canal, being part of a large
government order.
GREENSBURG. The Stahl glass
works, destroyed by fire last Decem
ber, have been rebuilt and will be
ready for operation very soon, employ
ing 350 men and boys.
HARRISBURG.—A small hatchery
has been established by the state au
thorities at Beaver Meadow, near
Wiikesbarre. It will be used to stock
streams in the vicinity.
JOHNSTOWN. Mrs. Percy A.
Long, a bride of four months, sudden
ly fell unconscious at her home and
died several hours later at the hos
pital. Internal hemorrhages were the
cause.
HARRISBURG.—The state of Penn
sylvania will raise 6,000,000 seedling
trees on its nurseries this summer
and all of the young trees will be
set out in the forest reserves of the
commonwealth and given care.
CONNELLSVILLE. Fire of un
known origin destroyed a vaudeville
theater owned by Samuel Hantman,
and damaged the stores of B. Kerner,
J. Levy and the Chicago Dairy Co., ail
frame structures in North Pittsburg
street.
PITTSBURG. Almost without
warning death came to James Wilson
Lee, attorney, independent oil pro
ducer and former leader of indepen
dent Republicans in Pennsylvania and
in the state senate. Death was due to
heart failure.
GREENSBURG. Mine Inspector
Chauncey B. Ross of Greensburg an
nounced that out of a class of 20 appli
cants for mine foremen in his district
live passed satisfactorily, and out of
45 candidates for fire bosses but six
were successful.
GREENSBURG.—The decision of
Commissioner of Fisheries James W.
Meehan that trout shrink after being
out of water and that the law requires
only that they be full six inches when
taken from the stream will result in
several cases here being threshed out
again.
GROVE CITY. A settlement be
tween the coal miners and operators
of the Mercer and Butler coal fields
has been reached. The miners will
resume work under the old scale,
pending a settlement for the coming
year by a meeting of the miners' dele
gates and operators.
CLEARFIELD.—The body of Clark
Chase, son of Postmaster Chase of
this city, was found in the barrens,
seven miles from Clearfield. Chase
left here recently for a day's trout
fishing. He became lost and perished
in a snowstorm which swept over this
section of the country for two days.
HARRISBURG. Auditor General
Robert K. Young refused to pay the
Wayne county commissioners the
amount they claimed for the printing
of the ballots for the recent spring
primaries and the authorities will
have to be content with a much less
sum than they attempted to charge
the state.
PHILADELPHIA.—The state su
preme court, in affirming a Philadel
phia court, holds that neither the
mayor of Philadelphia nor the direc
tor of public safety can discharge a
municipal employe who obtained the
position through a civil service exam
ination, without giving a reason for
their action.
KITTANNING.—HeId up by three
highwaymen, pounded and cut with
sandbags and knuckles, robbed of his
money and watch and then thrown
over a 30-foot embankment, where he
was a target for stones as he lay help
less, Lynn Saylor, a puddler, was left
for dead by his assailants. His con
dition is serious.
BUTLER.—Charged with assaulting
Frank Ross of Lyndora, driver of a
bakery wagon, stealing 30 loaves of
bread and S3O, demolishing the wagon
and seriously injuring Ross, 25 Ital
ians. employed on the Pittsburg, Har
mony, Butler & New Castle trolley
line, were captured near Petersville
and lodged in jail.
BUTLER.—Joseph Sykes of Butler
township, arrested for refusing to pay
taxes, protested to Justice Jacob Keck
that he understood this is a "free
country where nobody pays taxes and
nobody has to pray." Justice Keck
told Sykes everybody but the rich pay
taxes and prayer is optional with the
individual. Sykes paid.
GREENVILLE. —Awakening to find
a burglar going through the clothes
in his room, Dr. M. A. Bailey fired
two shots at the Intruder as he leaped
through a window. Later a trail of
blood was found leading to the Lake
Shore railroad.
KITTANNING.—The largest single
month's shipment in the history of the j
Ford City plant of the Pittsburg Plate >
Glass Co. was made during April, '
when 1,700,700 feet of plate glass was (
disposed of. Over $60,000 was dis
tributed at the semi-monthly pay, I
This woman says that sick
women should not fail to try
Lydia ID. Pinkham's VegetaJblo
Compound as she did.
Mrs. A. Gregory, of 2:555 Lawrence
St., Denver, Col., writes to Mrs.
I'iakham:
"I was practically an invalid for six
years, on account of female troubles.
I underwent an operation by the
doctor's advice, but in a few months I
was worse than before. A friend ad
vised Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound and it restored me to perfect
health, such as I have not enjoyed in
many years. Any woman Buffering as
I did with backache, bearing-down
pains, and periodic pains, should not fail
to use Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion, dizziness or nervous prostration.
Why don't you try it ?
3lrs. Pink ham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has pfuided thousands to
health. Address, Lyiiu, Mass.
CAUSE FOR HIS HURRY.
"Ah, I love to see a little toy In
such a hurry to get to school!"
"Yes, sir. Me little brother's got de
measles, an' I'm hurrying up to get
excused!"
Bees in Block of Stone.
While workmen were sawing through
a block of Bath stone at Kxeter, ling
land, they cut into a cavity in which
was found a cluster of two or three
dozen live bees.
The incident occurred at the worfts
of Messrs. Collard & Sons, monu
mental sculptors. There was not much
sign of life in the bees at first, but
when air was admitted they gradually
revived and after a few hours several
of them were able to fly.
Compensation.
Mrs. Raker —My husband costs me a
good deal of money.
Mrs. Barker—Yes, and he isn't very
good to you, either.
Mrs. Baker —I know it, but I got a
dandy lot of wedding presents with
him.
Chocolate Pie Is H«althful.
Chocolate is healthful and nutritious and
ehocolati! pies are becoming very popular.
They are easy to make if you use "OUR
PIE." Chocolate flavor. Diroctionson pack
age. Contains all Ingredients ready for in
"Put up by D-Zerta Co., Rochester, N.Y."
Living well is the best revenge w«
can take on our enemies.—Froude.
Mrs. Wlnslow'n Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gums, rtMluoen to
tUinmatlon, allaja pain, cures wind colic. u bottle.
A well-informed physician is fro
quenlly ill-informed.
"MADE FOR SERVICE
IN THE ROUGHEST WEATHER
AND GUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY
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