rs. Ihave the honor, monsieur alute you,” “Which proves Paul,” said Edouard, when the stran With the hush before the ‘Only the solamn trembling Of the organ stirred the air. Without, the sweet, still sunshineg Within, the holy calm. ‘Where priest and people waited For the swelling of the psalm, would have su . the thing, in my opinion, too serious! “He reason,” replied Paul, “Slowly the door swung open, And a little baby girl, ‘Brown-eyed, with brown hair falling In many a wavy curl, ‘With soft cheeks flushing hotly, Por Slanen downward thrown, ama ds clasped befo Stood in the aisle vo ii Stood haif-abashed, half-frightened, Unknowing where to go, While like a wind-rocked flower Her form swayed to and fro; And the changing color fluttered In the little troubled fa », As from side to side she wavered With a mute, imploring grace. brought about a salutary reaction, sequences. But a truce to words! Com to be my second witness,” park. Paul was a commercial of the dueling-code, and of practios possessed the natural and inherent cow age of a brave heart which enabled him under the present circumstances te It was but for a moment; worthily sustain his part. What wonder that we smiled By such a strange, sweet picture #rom holy thoughts beguiled? Up then rose some one softly, And many an eve grew dim, As through the tender silence Ho bore the child with him. the ground, charged the pistols, and placed the principals. As they were about to give the word, the Englishmen checked them,” ‘A moment, if you please, messieurs | and he drew from his pocket a ting white pellet and extended it to Paul. ‘With this, monsieur,” ssid he, ‘re. membering that you struck me here.” and, tossing the pellet to the ground Sir Arthur designated with hiy finger the outer part of his right asm. A minute later two reports were heard, and Paul staggered, his right arm pieread by a ball, serious, though not And 1, I wondered, losing The sermon and the prayer, If when some time I enter, The many mansions fair <And stand abashed and drooping : In the portal's golden glow, t “wr God will send an angel To snow me where to go! —~George Horton, in Sunday-Sehool Visitor. EE — — The wound was { dangerous, and, with care and nureing, three weeks from the meeting behind | the park Paul was as good as well again. once more, my dear had turned on his heel, ‘‘that it does tot do to trust to appearance. Who pposed 1 at little man so touchy on a point of honor! He takes h whose brain the freshness of the air had | have committed a serious and offensive stupidity ; it is just that I take the con- with me to the house of M, D——, whom I know slightly, and whom I shall ask Promptly at the hour appointed the next morning F'aul and his seconds and Bir Arthur .acobson and his seconds arrived at the spot indicated behind the man, peacefully imelined, and nothing of a sportsman, but in default of knowledge The seconds meanwhile had measured % ARS anes ot prey ww - | ealled him to reality. Sl ou of is Phfore.- that a gentleman n here regular d Jo as for mews of yout" § SVeRY a7 Sn ark “A. gentlemen? Oh, yes,” replied Paul, whose cheeks had flushed a ffeste ~*'yes, Bir Arthur Jacobson, was M not{" “That was the name adding irsgairingly, perhaps” : “Yes, a folend”—wish a bitter smile. I must sce him socw. To-morrow J shall be abl to leave the house, and it go be my fim visit.” : As uo flash Psul had comprehiender mmensity of the peril thay awaited Lie that he had seturned sinply that his enemy s from him. Yes, those iwo fire encownt- | ers were truly Insignificant, though | showing ®im what fe had to expoet: thee third) one was inevitably death: "The | pellot' of bread, the” third one he re | memberod’ it woll—hasl struck immedd- | | ately in the*center of the brow. Death! when love sang in his heart, and’ the | future smiled before him, tilled with the | | sweeten Jromises! It was indeed too | ‘wach, wd the vindictiveness, Paul told {1 $msell,. of a'bmte rather than aman | {| Blind fury took possession of him toward this ferocious adversary who al- { lowed him to take breath only to strike Lice down thesurer. This time it should . ,"! said Martha, ‘A Irlend of yours, to life again | hold take it | i but ane and ‘Paul prayed for it devoutly | ¢ —wilere comsclousness of right would force that weuld lead to victory, ’ Th rnext morning, bright and carly still feverish ‘with anger burning in his heart, Hat very resolute not to wait til’ the peril came torseek bam, so eager was . THREE WADS OF BRE. J EE Al (S OF BRE AD. Kir Arthur hid ¢ ue to inquire for him S————— daily, and Edouard? Duchesue, tranquils ke to fisish it) Paul sallied out alone {ized by the condition of his friend, had | | long since returned to Paris; and soo | { Paul was able to go without carrying BY E, C, WAGGENER, “ Paul C—— was a “jolly good fellow,” 80 every one said. Thirty years old, | his arm in a sling. perhaps, a Parisian in every sense of the But scarcely had he gone a hundred word, with that courageous nature, lively | yards beyond the hotel, “when he foand! and a little inclined to teasing that is | himself face face with the characteristic of the children of | man. Tharis, Nevertheless he had an excellent “Pardon me, monsieur,” said he, ap. heart, aad was ready to throw himself | proaching Paul: “but now thatyou are into the fire if necessary for the very one recovered I must reeall tov whom an instant before he had made the reparation you have accorded me is not target for his jests, the only one that you ow | It was at that prett i neighboring city to Puy, that Paul found I bimself one morning for pleasure ana the be drinking of certain healthful waters, for i n pasysi ermit you t ; R , ? AS ever; one knows, ing resort, and 8 mer at least with a ¢ d of guests. | plied Paul, o felt | Paul and his friend ] i t} were at the same hotel an yok their ht meals together at the table d*hot : they had for a neighbor in front ; an Englishman, known to be v ery ricl and very eccentric, and whose life, they | fury. said, was but a series of endless journey- The next g. then, » Dew en angs around the world. counter took place under thesame con- If Paul betrayed himself a Parisian in | ditions as the other: the witnesses were | every act aud feature, so did the stranger also the same, with the exception of a4 betray the nativity of his country. Short young physician and friend of Paul's, of stature and fat, the face broad and who had taken the place of Edcuard ruddy, the skull bald and shining, the | Duchesne As upon former occa~ beard blonde, the eyes blue as corn sion, when the adversaries stood in po- flowers, he was truly the most perfect sition and the word was to be type of an Englishman that it is possible given, Sir Arthur drew from. his pocket fo imagine. More than once Paul had | a second pellet like the first. and show. esught himself smiling at the impassible | ing it to Paul, repeated the formula visage of Sir Arthur Jacobson—for such “With this, monsieur,' remember that | ¢ was this stranger's name, This evening, you struck me here,” and he laid his then, when the events occurred that [| hand upon his left shoulder. A moment going to tell you of, and, by the way, | later two reports came simultaneously, and evening of departure of the two the branch of acacia above the English g men, as the dinner was drawing man's head shook slightly, sut by Paul's | to a close, exhilarated doubtless by the ball, and Paul lay inert upon the ground, champagne they had taken, Paul amused his shoulder ploughed sad torn. This | himself while talking to Edouard in roil- time t wound was decidedly serious ing balls of bread crumbs and launching Carried senseless to his chamber, them between thumb and as Paul, as soon as he could speak after the schoel children lauach balls of paper, at | agony caused by dressing wound his neighbor the Englishmaa. It was a had passed, insisted to Ris doctor that thoughtless, not to siy rude, exhibition he must be taken Pay the hots om the part of Paul, but then Paul was of a sister who resided there wot quite himself, and the temptation The was not difficult, aad, was for the moment irresistible deeming it best to gratify his desire, the As the first pellet struck the arm of doctor consented asd arrangad accords Sir Arthut Jacobson, he slowly turned ingly, and that same evening, accom his clear eyes upon Paul and his com- ' panied by his physician and second, whe | panion, but his broad physiognomy lost | refused to leave him, Paul was placed im |} nothing of its habitual placidity. One the care of Martha, his sister, whose would have supposed evén that he had distress at his condition you can readily seen and comprehended nothing, had it imagine. The cause of the trouble, mot been for the fact that with an air of however, Paul wisely kept to himsail, the utmost indifference and phlegm he “It was an accident received when rid. lifted the morsel of bread crumb and ing,” was all he told her, slipped it into the pocket of his vest The fever that the doctor had foreseen | still, however, without uttering a sylla- | with this wound soon made it appear. ble. ance, and, aggravated by the diffienity + The bearing of this man was well cal. of extracting the ball and the short culated to excite the teasing humor of journey from R _spee lily maa into the Varisian. and scarcely a moment had = delirium, and complications of other elapsed mince the launching of the first kinds. In short, though the cure of the liet when a second followed it, and | patient was positively promised by the taking the same direction as the first, doctor, it would be a long and tedious went to flatten itself upon his shoulder, process, ‘six weeks certainly, perhaps a aad, like the other, to travel the road to little longer." 8ir Arthur's pocket. Angered a little Madame Martha, reassured by the by this systematic imperviousness, and doctor's confidence, decided to take ad «certainly for the time being blind to the vantage of the occasion to impress npon insult and inconvenience that such pleas: her brother the ex ellent qualities of a antry had for its object, Paul believed it certain young woman whom for a long his duty to repeat his pellet for the third while she had tended as his future time. It struck his vis-a-vis upon the wife. Jeanne and her mother, then, had forehead immediately Letween the cye- been called upon in hot haste, and that brows. And still he received it with same day installed by this shrewd peither a movement nor a sign, though tactician ostensibly to assist and relieve the waiters at the table could scarcely re- her, by the pillow of the wounded. ; press their hilarity on seeing him, with For a long time the fever and delirium the sume stojeal gravity, lift his hand, continued, but at last ceased, and when remove it, and send it to join its com Paul entered into the areamy and peace- arades in his pockbt, ful state of convalescence, his eyes rested This amusement, in bad taste as you always upon the fresh and charming are bound to admit, had lasted long face of this young girl who had volun. enough, and as the guests were quitting tarily and for many days past beon his the table, Sir Arthur rose and followed burse. He recalled the thousand-and- their sxample, and Paul snd his friend, one cares of which he had been the their heads decidedly heavy with wine, recipient, and of which he had taken got up in turn and went to smoke a count bat vaguely in the weakness of ar on the terrace. Hardly, however, body and brain produced by serious had they made their appesrance there illness. A strange, sweet emotion in than Paul found himself confronted by vaded his heart. He extended his hand his recent vietim, who regarded him full to Jeanne, who smiled and gave him her jn the face, and in excellent French own with charming grace and gentle. stated thet he desired to speak to him a ness. moment, From this on the cure proceeded “Youmust certainly understand, mon- rapidly. aleur,” said he, “that the play to which “The day was near,” said the doctor, | you delivered yourself s while ago con | “whan the invalid would be able to leave stitutes a serious allront, of which I de- his room.” mand the ronson. Morever, as a gallant | A~d gradually, as strength returned | you also see that you must secord | to his feeble body, love increased in his | me, Without my forcing it, the repara« heart, and the tender, unaccustomed | Alon that is my right.” sentiment, combined with the warm sun “Precisely, my lord; I see, and I am of April, contributed not a little to | ‘at your | hasten complete recovery. “To.morrow morning, then, monsieur, ~~ Strange as it may seem, though in- | at five o'clock, behind the park.” | stances are not rare whets the fcree ofa . “The conditions!” | true affection overpowers and effaces all “Pistols thirty vise. In fiosory of the Shuten thas have given it an hour my seconds will wait upon birth, at this point was so abserbed % » to the English Lt 1 n have | by »v | a ” : th io hj to-day, bun avo eans onl have —— 8 a charm wnt upon me,’ within | orn 1 COMA Dersiaion 118 man pursued his hof al a0 In e, where gt ¢ 00 much arisian ’ of y 1 fat trifling it's stubbornness pwt him in 3 +h y Lil iry 0 i { E mornihg t i : ' se y r about " C . 1 he DEAriy L fa > unger, the to to f i transt ¥ } thar coming, as usual, le inform himselt ine% exaction u thatthe Let "wl terest and ¢ La Lae Dupe despite the fact that his happiness was | Arthur Jacobson, who said to him, ino an day eatket of “chased gold, and turned low solitude, Paullifted pellet of bread, yellowed and but still the third ent that Sir Arthur hood his lashes three years later died in Holland, leav | ing to Paal« ‘a aan,” so the will read, “brave enough to {ace the consequences of a momentary indiscretion” —a fortune that amasnted to more than $400,000, — | New Youk Dispatch. der in New Jozsoy,” said a former law. had evidently been well brought up. He B certain of encountering him whom he sought Nor'were his expectations dis appointed, for at'the end of the A streel im which he lived he perceived Mr Ar of his vic:tm's prog give him *i know, m you still awit mo. Tess, k ur,” said he, *“tha If) submit to this itis becanre I also have 3 finish’ once for all with the edvy of your porvuit, but { put a con Hon apon th fina) encounter shal? mot take pla ts until O-hwy ~thavis to gy, 1} th day I prover t ove with all my Paul did not tne t 4 fosive to » by that § that 8 month " $e .¥ Hoity, wil wait; b of © vanes’ redly ree he © ga: pO sadictUon i” replied Paul, but wr mothing to peeve eh other a courteous va mon parted, One month Liter precisely, the permit of % Maire andi the bemediction of the vest mnited Paul and Jeanne, the latter wre beautifuhthan ever in her bridal shes, Paul, was very happy A Hig OL or ML} L ? b “Cartainly, Adly: ‘“ kn asl bdddine ea ernimg, the good also, b CL notaned with secret sadness, and ae | spted with a proud aod joyous smile he congratulations showered upon him & the door of the saoristy by the throng f guests. The last of the file was Sir 1:3 mdertone, as Ye slipped into his hand » LINAS “My present With the ex intimates, every i gofiting to you, monsieur.” of the family and one had now re 8 moment to fi eption ired, and, by the y find ivind dried up, ano bat Jast this pres. had given him was ga. condomement, life and It was no shame to his man » tear of joy sparkled upon . Paul comprebiende n orgetfuine mppinesy, that ti That same day Sie Arthur Jacobson eft the country to. return no more, and b d ti A ———— nee on the Seaflold, “1 defended a young Englishman, named Black, reeently hanged for mur. © yer of this city to me the other day. “He was a splendid young fellow, and hag been in the English Navy in some capacity, and was at the siege of Alexan: dria. During the six months he was in jail he was the life and soul of the place. He told stories, sang songs, cracked yokes, narrated his adventures and gave dramatic recitations, People from the town went to the jail on purpose to. en- joy his society. Poor fellow! He com. mitted the crime for which he suffered when be was on a spree. The gallows was erected in the court room. When he stood under it he said to the Sheriff : “Ttseems to me that rope isn’t properly fastened at the beam. | don’t want any blundering.” The Sheriff asked him what was wrong. He pointed it out and the error was rec tified. “Lot me see the noose,” he said. Having examined it earefully sod tried how it worked, he said: “Dip the noose and the part over which it works in water and that will make it go casy."” This was done and the Sheriff said that as only a couple of minutes were left, he had better think of the next world, “Put the knot right under the ear,” he said, “Don't you desire to say a few words of prayer!” the Sheriff asked. SAN right,” was the reply. “I'm | ready. let her go, Gallagher." Brook- iyn Citizen. : : ) “Lot a girl bleach her nar,” says a Boston doctor, ‘and within three months she will have trouble with her eyes, pains in the hosd, and be well on the way towarda some nervous disorder re quiring & doctor's services hail the time.” Aud yet \hey will bleach ‘ carry on converalimna five dierent WAGUAGOS - . es Bi lh oth ot in hia dream that he hv absolusely for. gotten the events that hed furnished the motive of his descent upot Puy, when an incMdent occurred that Ltesquely re. *'Do yon know, Paul,” said Martha to Fim one morning —*I have for,etten to recommend it on the score of | 8 10 ol put Is the hand of the feoble a superior | grace of outiiue, and color redeeming point. gathered to a band, but even the poor: esl women make their skirts a half-yard too long, after the fashion of the pa Indies, snd then gather and tie t in bulky folds sround the waist, wear the shortest little lon ots, cloth thickly wadded with cottor the quantity of padding for each st ing stocking at! Woy weatt Ea t} ry cost ime wealth th sats with the f dr among the women, proves of Corean men to the green-deraped fig ures that skulk by must be warrante« facts and their wide experience ol ut failed own men, as their husbands’ coats for centuries, do as if they went honestly bareheaded. or gold pin. in enormous chignous of faise hair, weigh. ing ten and twenty pounds, but this isa | head dress of rank and for mony. that exceed the years ago. in her suite, and employs 8 woman phy sician who recently went out America, | dren, are beard if not seen at night, and in the stiilness succeeding the curfew | bell of Seoul one hears them lifting their | voices in quavering, camp-menting wails, | The white cotton clothes of the people are washed by the women, who pound them with stones in some dirty pool ot | watercourse, and they are ironed or given their silken gloss by being wound tightly on wooden | wooden sticks by the hour | sit on the ground facing each other, with the roller between them, and play | a regular and lively tune with their drum. | sticks, | day and half the night; and as they do not know or drink tea, it is a question when the down trodden women of Coren get even the poor privilege of gossiping about their sad condition, Ju hon they are paivileged city with uncovered faces, and vishs ail the punise placa, Mon are supposed | thon ladies day, s I THE WOMEN OF COREA. {THEIR BOCIAL ©coWDITION AND GURER COST VME, A Life of Seriet Seclusion — Wearing Their Husband's Coais Yor Head Coverings—Thelr Holiday. | Nothing could be more dre vy sod hopeless than the socigl condition of the women of Corea, They cannot be said 0 occupy amy position atrall, and are re- | garded as of the least importance in the family order and arrangements, (‘mbjection of women has reached the! e.Streme point in and their | seclusion 8 strictly e seveWth year, except with those of the lowe. ® and poorest classes, who caanot help Lwing seen while firey work or carry | burdens on the streets sa d ronds. kven | these 0dr creatures try to cover their foces at sight of a man are not as Jovely as ow Jnd, ‘an squaws, Theirjcostame is no gid 4 2 comlinesss. Like the mmwn the csaws 0 dress Coresa wome is of white & ‘tion, or of the lustrous grass cloth we ven of the fibre of a wild netle that Figs) peninsula as well @» in Ching really tie color of mourning; | the fuet that the who's nation i. into mourning garb when a kin the practieal minds cfs few con White is wt from wdered * dies, ago voted to stay in mourning an ready for untoward events rather t make the change from blue 1 clothes so often, . be » duel’to the death between them; | "sting of » $ " Their costume, ox bagey trousers, long pest, ont, and short jacket, has nothin = oS muty or is” the one-\ petticoat’ is The full place hem ‘ug They t g-sleeved jack. The Corean stocking is of white 1 n, and in regulated £ maxes ted with elephantiasis 1 Straw sandal prote ts the y times, but in miny sand wintry er they wear the regular wo : it of He it raised by eces of r the foot and OY aw, The padded | the wh a people see A foot in m LL : wel rding on we en and ad upd cle two wo iat snd ep 4 al t gheen Ci ot piches of col walking po Mex f).r TIO tL HUL the eves, fy rly, » : " ns Yo } on the green * f 25 ~ 1 Pp i: AD olded and Ind on the ad or cushion for H the heavy although they | 2 X y ing out against all improvements that have pla d { no person or laws to hold them accountable, “The Lost Atiamtls, gsnturies there haw boen a tradi. tion of & lost wand Nai Atinntle The Greek aphers located it in the Atlantic Oouan, west of the northwest pert | of Africa dnd the Pillars of Hercules. The | soa-kings of Atlantis are said to have in- vaded Europe and Africa, and to have been defoatod by the. Athenians, All the legends agree that it was a vast island, of inexhaustible resources, and in- habited by a race of superior pacha For ages this island has existed only in legendary love. But now, when the light of modern | research is turned full upon the investiga- Son, behold the lost Atlantis at our very QOre, So the bigoted medical fraternity goes oping about in the dark, seeking for an | BR tlantis or Esculapius, when if they would | investigate, they would behold the lost At lantis at their very door. With thir ancient | text book, a cass of physic, a paper in their | wristeoat giving them License bo practice ex- periment and dose with their injurious drugs, cauterize and perform unnecessary acts, with Form they continue their bigoted, unjustified prao- | tice, staring into vacancy, and imagining | that they ses in themselves an Esculapius Wrapped in ancient bigotry, they are cry- | science, They de- | been made in medical {| mounce any new idea advanced by a laymas | vs on the | : GRITTY Wore Ba pra ie son, knowin their them, then. in th or an opposition school as a fraud Why! Because humanity will not bs benefited? Not atall, but because their specialism did | not make the discovery. Yet they concede that thers is no remedy | known to their ma eria medica that will cure sn advanced kidney malady and the discasos arising therefrom-~although many of them know from crowning proof that Waroer's Safe Cure will--but unscrupuiously treat symptoms and call them a disease, when in reality they know they are Fut symptoms A few of the more honest physicians ad- mit that Warner's Safe Cure Is a valuable remedy, and a great blessing to mankind, but say, in so many words, when asked why they do not prescribe it, that they cannot, accord- ng their Noevertiioelon satisfied 1 {incase becoming mt th for kidney and liver in whatever form or o rftition, has overad, and there i» y doubt but arner's Safe ( and its fame will g after such bigotry as we have in- fend and buried minent physician and writer, Dr publi Servibner's a of such big i that Atlantis is fast cure Sen Ais Ww ure hed fol.ows aver best propr, ore pice and moss of were 0) rt dis prac Oowever, rtue, an Cures as an popwiart Lamepem 0 a 10s early Blagee. I w ny Arm | from those who | and $l Packing Them Rather Closely, 1 was talking with an old lumber- ' man the other day, who wanted to make an impression om me” said 8 friend to the i/iner-Out, “and he made out ao pretty good case. ‘Talk sbout river drivin’? he exclaimed scornfully, | “hey don’t know anything about if, nowadays, When 1 used to work on the river, we used to drive the logs up stream instead of down, and the river was 80 full of "em that we had to stand ‘em on end just as they growed and pole ‘ern along in that way.’ Lewiston (Me. ) Journal, Germany's foreign policy it said to be keeping busy all the men-of war that can be spared from home defences, er ———— 545250 Card of Thanks, 11 the proprietor of Kemp's FEalsam should publish a card of thanks, contiining expres. sions of gratitude which cor to him dally, Lave been of seve > throat and Jung troubled by the use of Kemp's Balsam. it would fill a fair-sized How much better to vite all to call on any drug. gist and get a free sample bottle that you may test for yourself its power, Large bottles S00 16 cured book i Tere are over three hundred thousand hee keepers in America. In General Debility, Emaciation, CONSUMPTION, AND WASTING 1¥ CHILDREN, Scores Exmvision of Pare Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites, is a most val and med icing It creates an strengthens thie nervous &) the body food Hosplial % eward, M A Radical Cure for Epileptic Fite, T6 the Editor Please 3 readers that] havea positive for the above named disease which weare the WOE CRNOS, strong is my faith in its vir. that 1 will send free a sample bottle and treat to any sufferer who will give 0, and Express address ; M. C18 Peari St infec r me his ¥ H.G. ROOT No ore res wl JACOBS LA w ir Pine er remedies 1 [RA ( re oll Ol REMFEr-ne NS FrEuones Perllings, Bruises, Ppreiss, Galle filfoess, Orached Heels ractiont, Tiesh Womsds Miimghalt . v Distemper, Colle, Wh Pell Evil, tals, Tumors, Splints, Rlaghones snd Spavia irections with each botile. AT DEvGGIATS AND DEALERS THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltimore, Md. DIAMOND VERA-CURA FOR DYSPEPSIA, URE Vo PiGe ION AXD ALL 8 pet Vera : “ iil be Bases $100) tn samp Lo dpi ty Co.. Baltimore, Md, -31 haries A, Yogeler XYN1 , or basket they may be car ing there. Little girls wear the same in miniature, but the wis of the onlor-box i» spent clothes, and their bright } and green gowns are Surpass leeves made up of sewed * on L1] 4 * ue, different. onlored cloths gether, While the beauty of suggests the powsibilivy of beauty some of the chil. Lat] no one's o ax perience and the general indifference 1 iy iby the men who for centuries have to evoive bonnet, or veil, stional head. pear, or asserted the rights 1 eiled w A or of their head to a proper covering of its These « seeplionat bounetiess wo. up with such makeshifts wetting putting much If yore were anything to be seen inside he it command one's sympathies as green costs but their stolid. stupid, heavy faces, one might pardon for coquetry's sake the ugly veil i In-doors their hair dressing proves to | be quite a simple affair, the abundant lack hair being parted and smoothly | rawn back into a knot at the nape of | eck, and caught with a thiek silver Some of the women seen ueen's suite at the palace were | we | the state cere At the same time their petii. wats are distended by bamboo hoops ‘stilters™ of so many | The singing and dancing irls at the palace wear full divided | skirts that allow them to ride astride of | ponies in the roval procession, and they have a coquettish little cap for winter and a full brimmed hat for summer as a wark of their profession. wears the same women, only that it is made of silk and | fine materials, and the jacket and broad | girdie are handsomely embroidered. On very rare occasions she has given andi ence to foreign ladies, and she has dis charzed all the astrologers and wizards | Dr. Plerce’s Golden Medical Discovery. | because it purifies and enriches the blood, and pure rich blood gives good health, and good health-beauty. The Queen dress as other Corean from | The Corean women, unlike good chil od singing the most plaintive songs. Book at my face and my hands-not a pim- | Soe my fresh cheeks and I'm getting a din. Such os you saw there some time 1 don't ook st all like I used to, I A DELIGHTED YOUNG WOMAN. pie, ago. pie, know. No ¥y face was ail bistcbes—complexion: ke tallow; No wonder they thought me and calied me a fright: one need have pimples and skip gray and sallow, If she'll take what 1 took, ox'ny mon, noon, and night. 1 asked the delighted young woman what she referred to, and she answered, It iz the best beautifier in the world, Dr. Pleree's Golden Medical Discovery is guaranteed to cure all Blood, Copyrighted, 186 by Woain's Daapmesany Skin and Scalp Diseases, as Blotches, Eruptions, Salt-rheuam, Totter, Eczema, Erysipelas, Serofulous Sores and Swellings, in short, all diseascs esased by bad blood, or money paid for i will be promptly refunded. Meprcan ASSOCtATION Proprictors, rollers and pounded with Two women One hears that steady rat-tat all The wamen's great holiday comes in when for n, whole twenty-four to roam the to tly withdeaw on that day, to avert CATARRH Is permaneutty cured by BA. SAQRS CATARAA S gi SOMETHING YOU ALL — : Toadies tdit SEY "HE " 4 oy or | 4 wi Ty Its ab 80 eunta, by druggists, NEED ¥ Nickel-Plated Towel Roller, a th thing (n the wa - ie BER act OF, ) Bond a hy a warm the wrects on ths
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