Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, February 08, 1894, Image 6

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    LOVE'S MEETING,
Emove, who met me on the way,
Kissed life's winter into May,
And through hills of icy snow
Bright 1 saw the violets blow,
While, through clouds of stormy frown,
Streamed the splendid sunlight down,
And 1 heard not Love's sweet words
For the singing of the birds !
Love, who met me on the way,
At my feot in violets lay *
Naver snow upon a hill
Dreamed as cold, as white, as still!
And from heavens of bending grace,
Streamed the sunlight on his face
And 1 heard not Love's sweet words
For the singing of the birds!
Frank L. Stanton, in Atlanta Coustitution.
DISENCHANTED
H. HOLDEN,
HE path looked
cool and pleasant
as it followed the
course of the little |
in |
days |
had |
stream, which
the ancient
of its might
oleft the towering
hills asunder and
thundered down
the rock like
giant water sprite
sunlight flickered down
the interlacing branches of
old its intense
npered somewhat by that cool con
tact Farther down, the ravine
widened and finally lost itself in level
farming lands, through which the brook
flowed gently, watering the flocks and
auge trees,
herds of the honest farmer-folk of this |
thrifty Dunker settlement.
house the
style : plain,
Ihe farm
the
two
were mostly of same
wooden, storied
with wide porches ru
sir
& nning
and shaded by locust
onts
rirl passed down the steps
nearest to the
and sauntered
its shady 1
month of
up the path
» began to sing
but somewhat nasal tone, 1n ul
r Israel,
brick meet
fa
rothe
in the
"n 1rd y ‘
as tmitation of
who led the singiz
at the
minar bymn
ing-house ads, the
Cross-r
fail
"And let this fesbls bo 5)
And iet it fail and die
Rebecca Kins yv'e voice modulated
a faint thread of melody.
caught a glimpse of a young man high
up on the cliff on the opposite side of
the creek, moving in and ont
to
AN she
among
the bushes. Suddenly she was brought
back to earth by a voice almost over
her head, calling out
‘‘Hello, Thorudyke, I've
finest spacimen of-
man, with & tin herbarium strapped to
his waist, came tumbling down the
rocks at Bebecea's feet. Evidi utly as
he turned th
stone ight rested
had given
path, vale and n
Thorndyke
the
boun i,
he
his eve
excitedly,
found the
+
to aceost hh friend,
upon which his
WAY
rocks, el
and
gave a faint gasp andslowly opened
Rebecea dipped her hand
kerchief in the water |
pallid fa
brandy from
ifting his
drink
his
lhorndyke poured some
and bathed
his =
pocket flas and
riend’s head
“Well, how are you now, Damond
inquired he.
“All right, T guess.’ red Da
mond, faintly; then he attempted to
rise, “I can’t do it," he added.
“Something's the matter with my left
ankle and right arm
‘How we are ever to get o
ANSW
f this
I said Thorndyke “You
can’t walk a step, and it's a mile down
stream where this gorge ends.”
i think," said Rebs cea, 1 ean he ip
you.” Jest a few steps further on is a
path up the rocks ‘most as CRY AS ZO
ing up stairs. I am strong, and I can
0 one side of him and you the other,”
14
1}
don't see,’
or
¥
she continued, addressing Thorndyke |
and indicating the injured
her little brown hand.
‘Is there any house
Thorndyke.,
“Yes,” responded Rebecca, ‘Aunt
Susy Rinehart lives right at the top of
the oliff. She's real handy about sick
ness.’
Damond wae in too much pain to be
seriously embarrassed by receiving as
sistance from this rustic beauty, ns
with much difficulty they toiled up the
rough stairway,
Aunt Susy sarveyed the
man with
near?’ asked
singular
looking party, as they emerged from |
the gorge, with wide-eyed
ment
‘Why! bless your soul! bring him
astonish.
right in the house,” was her hospitable |
greeting. “The doctor's jest making »
visit over on the nest farm, We'll get
him here right away.
An hour later the bustie had smb.
sided and Damond was lying, quiet
sod comfortable, listening to the con |
versation going on between Aunt Susy
and Bebeces.
“Ieome over to tell you.” said Re
bedon, “‘that Sister Rachel Miller's
witss and has been an'inted for death,
and they want you to eome over,
Mother's been there ‘most all day and
¥ jest got home as I started here.”
“I reckon I ean go," replied Aunt
Susy, "if you'll stay while I'm gone
sad kind o’ get things started for sup-
per. I've got A quilt goin’ in the
settin'-room, and it won't be handy to
havo aboui, and I wish you'd come
over for n few days and help finish it
ap. The doctor says this young man
must 4tay here a couple of weeks, and
LI
heat |
and a young |
| T ain't sorry. I've got tired runnin
lin a rut. The same old things over
nod over again, I thought 1'd change
[it a little this mornin’ and get my own
i breakfast first, hut, law! old Brindle
bawled so I jest gave up.”
“By Jove!” fumed Fred Damond,
two weoks after his accident, *‘I sup-
sprawlad out at that pretty girl's feet,
tw say nothing of clattering
those rocks like a tin
daoming to grief.”
peddler's cart
look ridiculous, I solemnly ASSLT YOu.
There was a dab of mud on the end of
your nose and your coat was split
down the back. Aad now let me tell
you-—1I'll be hanged if I don't think
you're shamming a good deal for an
| excuse to stay here and play your old
tricks! Why can’t you let that girl
alone? Do you think I didn't see you
pose I looked like a fool lying there |
down |
‘“Yes," roplied Thorndyke, “vou did |
PU
| its neenstomed place in his pocket, fell
out in full view,
“Now or never,” thought he, anil
| then, bracing himself, he said, TH)
answer to Rebeorn's inquiring glande,
“‘this is the lady I have promised to
marry.”
Rebecen smothered a gasp. A late
| wild rose, the last one, hang a little
| way up the bank and she turned Away,
| reaching upward to pluck it. It gave
her a moment in which to recover her-
self. Her womanly pride came to the
rescue, and she rose to the oceaston,
{ As she turned again she said, calmly,
| “And I am to marry brother Israel's
{ son.”
This was a new phase of the matter,
| If any one else wanted this sweet wild
| lower, Damond wanted it more than
| ever, and he felt an overwhelming re-
| sentment toward “brother Israel's
son.” He took the rose from her cold
{and trembling hand with a hand as
| the other day, when you had her put | cold and unsteady, aud folding it it an
ot wv » |
| some withered, worthless specimens in
| & press, get your head so close to hers
that your Hyperion curls actually
touched her cheek? and you kept put-
ting your big hand close to hers to
| help, as yon ealled it.”
| “Well, what's a fellow to do? I'm
{ all banged up,” complained Damond,
| “and I've got to amuse myself some
way. What lovely red lips she has,”
continuined he, brightening, “‘and
how can they speak such atrocious
| English?”
‘I've got to leave here,” said Thorn
dyke, gloomily, as he folded up & let
ter. “If I had as much money as yon
have I'd stay here and watch you, and
see after that poor little moth. You'd
| better get away from | just
quick can; if you stay mu
longer I'll write to your mother, if
18 on the other side of the pond. Any
how, I'll give Julia Deven a hint, an
n
8st ail
as
were AH
a8 you 1cl
}
it
and nD
she'll come flying her
your nonsense,”
I'he
| Damond had ne
days len week
|! ood excuse
lingering ; his ankle was well
he often fi
the sling he
I he deel
for
LOT
and
srt
it
+
18 Sine
mt
watching Reb
self with her
evenings nh
porch or
moonlight, while he
world she had
love somewhat n
to that he had to
| many another maiden On Sundays
he punctually made his appearance at
| the meeting-house and gazed at the
rows of mild-faced women in
their immaculate lawn caps and neck
erchiefs,
Many remonstrating letters
from Thorandyke, and sazious
from his mother, proposing to sa
| home if he were not soon able to
tarn to the city, and Miss Deven, his
fiancee, assailed him with tender, sym-
pathetic missives, and even suggested
coming to him with a chaperon and
the family physician
of the
trike 1
l &
ERY
never All ang
of
sung
songs, ont
be sure,
sweet,
Tire
1 he great magician, Love, Lad cast
his spell over Rebecea. She
hant When sh
the
breathed
i air roused her
onsider
ally she saw
situation practic
no nding, and the
with hb
ony
WAS IUATTIRE: er lover, and
this letter written hy
bro
ad
almost forgotten
Damond ]
He
come to an end
ther lsrael’s son, offeri:
f heart, r
to :
knew that all tl
How C
cipitate the it
he thought One day
came from Miss Deven, pro
he should join her,
friends, at the Springs,
Ow
erisin? came
i than a
posing that
with a party ol
rit«
mng-piace not far away, or if
not able to do so, Julia and her mother
would spend a few weeks at the near
est hotel in order to be
munch as ossible
inv water
he were
Al
hin
with
as
Home hours later Aunt Susy
ed to relieve her mind
‘1 want to know,’ queried she,
you're triflin’ with that girl! She's as
good as you are, to say the least, and
her father owns two of the finest farms
about here, and Becky's the
{ child.”
“Trifling !"
dening, *“‘I
| mean.”
“I'm going out to milk,’ snapped
Aunt Susy, “and you ean jest study
over it while I'm gone.”
Damond resisted an almost over
powering impulse to pay his usual
evening visit to Rebecea ; he resolutely
set about packing up his belongings,
| and for fear his courage would fail he |
{ sent a telogram to Miss Deven stating
| that he wonld meet her at the Springs.
! Poor Rebecen sat the p&veh
| alone, watehing and waiting for her
recreant lover, Sometimes as the
shadows shifted she thought she saw |
| him emerge from the ravine, and her
heart would give a glad bound. Never
was the witchery of the moonlight so |
strong, never was the music of the
evening breeze so sweet, Rebeees sat |
| until the moon went down snd the
clouds gathered over the stars. The
| song of the night wind changed to al
wail that found echo in her heart, and |
(Ly and by the storm burst in all its |
‘ary. With sinking heart she gave
| him up and went eadly to her room.
{| Damond promised himself one more
{stroll through the ravine with Re.
beeon, Certainly he must bid her |
good-bye ; even Aunt Susy could not |
object to that,
“I am going away this afternoon,”
| said Damond, as be and Bobeces were
taking their last walk together.
Rebocon gave a little start at this
unexpected announcement and dropped
the bonnet that she was swinging by
“the strings. As Damond stoo to
| pick it np the picture of Miss Deven,
ar +
! nly
exclaimed Damon, red
don’t know what you
on
| friends would ridicule
{ would be only a target for the small
! teen rabbits
envelope put it in his pocket next his
heart. He stood silent a few mo-
ments, How unlike those beautiful
eyes were to Julin's small, piercing,
black orbs, that wealth of rippling vel-
low hair to Julia scanty frizzed locks.
In & moment of delirium he thought to
break his engagement with Julia and
take this fair girl to be his wife, and
then the absurdity of it all appeared.
| How out of place she would look in
How his
him, while she
his mother's drawing-room !
wits of his set!
her from a false
position, and persanding himself that
he loved her too well to bring her into
an uncongenial atmosphere, he put the
mad dream aside. He took her hand,
,'" he faltered—snd then he
to hesrt “Oh,
I could not help loving
vou, but 1 never
Forgive me, oh,
not he
tO marry
He conld not protect
the annoyances of
“Good-bye
folded
RTI
my dariing
he r close his
meant to tell vou so.
iD Speaging
T
HTave
market fol ‘ CATTYIing
a large basket He paused at a stand
of country produce. There were re
of g butter, baskets of SNOWY
egues, jars of limpid and r
p poultry.
something familiar in
lowed by a servant
ls
olden
honey, we
of plump dressed
There was
the face of ¢
and in the
of her voice as he inquired the
of her and it was
bef memory established
the connection. It Rebeces,
grown stout and commonplace. She
had a comfortable double chin, and
the once glorious eyes looked out ower
ruddy masses of flesh. Her hair had
grown coarser and darker sud the rip-
ples had almost yielded to the com
pul rigorous A
«haired, | shonldered
the
attending Dunker
sound
price
’ |
nce: i
Woman,
mmodities,
ong ne
was
:
HL
slgint {
pasion 03
1
cheerful. lm road
stand and oo
DIAN RsuIs
addressed her affectionately
Damond fille
while
i his basket
chases Memory was
Time, the
er, had done his work well
re
busy with the past
great
ft :
IRIRIOn iS Reb OA 8
ry disturbed
Clearly, her con-
longer oppressed
with
wianl mem
ions, and
chanted dave,
Damond turned away. -- Worthington's
Magazine
A Rabbit-Hunti
and Warden
of New Castle, is just now
with a difficult problem, as
to whether it is hisduty to arrest Will-
iam CC. Robinson, the confectioner.
Mr. Robinson has a large cat, which
came directly from Madagasear Island.
Like the eats there it has no tail, and
when it runs it resembles a rabbit. Its
owner is a hunter, and the eat, named
Arcus, renders valuable assistance in
catching rabbits. The cat can crawl
into almost any crevice or burrow that
will hold a rabbit It then drives
them out, and in the race that follows
is always a winner
One day this winter the cat was sue.
cessful in estching no less than nine
Game Warden Parmer
in trying to find a law that will pre.
veul Robinson using the cat for hunt
ing purposes, as thero is a law against
ferveta, A man named Brown, in
Plaingrove Township, this county, has
a big gray squirrel which he has
trained to hunt and kill rabbits, but
in the case of Arcus no training was
necessary. — Pittsburg Dispatch.
Military Value of tz Dog.
The French were the first to realize
the military ability of the dog when
fighting against the Kabyles in Tunis
and Algerian. Next the Russians fol:
lowsd suit in the last Eastern war and
then the Austrians, who consider the
dog of the greatest use in discovering
an amboseade, Tho Duteh employ the
animals for The same purpose in Acheen,
as a dog will give immediate warning
of any foe concealed in the jungle, In
Tonkin the French find dogs invaln-
able to prevent usurprise from the na
tives, for without such warning many
solitary sentries and even wall de-
tachments have fallen victims to the
hidden foe. Even in Switzerland
Inrgo dogs are kept at Fort Fondo del
Bosco at the Bt, Gothard pass above
Ariolo, for the purpose of sccompany-
ing sentries to ontlyi The
dogs are especially useful for cotnmuni-
cation in mountainous regions, as the
Pyrenean smugglers have long since
ng Cat,
Fish
Parmer,
wrestling
Game George
which he had repentantly returned to
found out. — Detroit Fee Press.
{ important
|
i
|
|
CARROT GRUB,
An English gardener reports that he |
effectually destroyed the earrot grub,
after it had become so sbundant as to |
cause the tops of carrots to wilt, by
watering them with & lignid made by |
putting a bushel of “me and a bushel
of soot into 100 gallons of water. This
was well stirred up and allowed to
stand over night, then the next morn
ing the clear water wis used freely in |
the common rose-nozzled
water-pot
New York World.
WASTE OF GOOD FODDER.
An enormous quantity of corn fodder
18 grown each year, but not one-third
of its feeding
Hundreds of thousands of scres of
stalks are allowed to stand in the
fields until December or January until
the grain then the
cattle are turned in the field get
what they cin. Usually they find
only blades whipped ofl by the wind
and blown and
and the upper part
ruined, and even the
beaten t
Such feod ns remains i
The greater p
the ground There is hardly a better
or cheaper stock feed than corn fodder,
vot ers treat it as though it
had Farms
value 18 procured
f
is husked, and
to
AWAY, stalks bent
best
husks weather
of littie
of poor quality
it
the
the portion
80 a8 to be value
rt of is rotting on
most inary
11 y x
Lttileornovalue retruide
per acre
BOWINDGS made
ber 20 f
maintaining viel :
has:zed
- fi
son of rotating
r 8 compar
sta
crops with co nt
grain cropping for seven vears showed
an gain of 5.7 bushe per
sere in favor of the Another
t obtained that
wheat may be harvested at any time
from the dough stage to the dead ripe
condition, withont appreciably affect
ing the weight or
~
Average
resu; wan
vield of the grain
| A comparison of the forms of nitrogen
been
‘
{ stomach gave evidences
| taking food,
a8 fertilizers for wheat indicated that
sulphate of ammonia is better than
nitrate of soda or dried blood,
WICE T0 bs
VERS
was start
lithe
of thirty miles
that instru
wortem examinat;
revealed the fact that the oats had not
lining of the
of having been
irritation It was
Ia previ ac
nerve power had been
largely exhausted in defen ling the
terrible irritation set up by the sharp
points of the Had the
horse been permitted to stand, or lie
for an hour after f
wonld have prepared not only a re
serve of to snstain himself,
but the amount of nourishing material
scenmulated would have helped him to
endure his exhaustive journey. Time
is required for the digestion of food
before beginning a long muscular
strain. It must also seem clear that
when tie =ffort at hard labor ends,
time should be given for rest before
lider and Driver.
The
n a high stats i
plain that the kh
cumulation of
H 4
undigested oats
down ceding he
material
REQUISITES FOR A HORSE STABLE
A horse stable should have thorough |
| drainage first, then a solid, non-al
sorbent floor ; next, the stalls should
be roomy, and the feeding troughs
should be made so that food eannot be
wasted. The best floor is one made of
cement conerete, of one part of coment,
two of sand, and five of coarse gravel,
Inid three inches thick, and when well
dried and hard, saturated with hot gas
tar,
vermin proof, and very durable, with
sufficient elasticity to prevent injury
to the feet of the animals
ing one inch to a shallow gutter in the
rear, from which the liquid mass may
flow away into a drain, The feeding
trough should have a deep grain box,
H grain is fed, or if ont feed is used,
the whole trough may be the full
length of the width of the stall, A few
bars fastened across the top of the
feed box will be useful to» prevent the
horse from throwing ont the feed, as
some will do, If long hay is fed, this
shonid ba given in a rack above the
feed trough, but on account of the
great waste in feeding long hay and
wholo grain, the hay should be eut
and the grain, finely ground, be mixed
with it. in avoids the loss by waste,
which is often one-lnlf of the food.
It in desirable to have a drain from
the stable to a manure pit at a dis
tance, where the liquid may be ab.
This makes the floor water and |
The stalls |
| should be six feet wide, the floor slop
by the coarse litter, The
width of a horse stable should be not
less than twelve feet, to afford space to
move about in easily, The loose
boxes, made nine feet sqnare, are the
most desirable for safety and econ-
venience, and these may open into a
passage five feet wide. A feeding pas
sage should be made in front of the
stalls,
{ sorbed
FARM FENCES,
timber in
| some parts of the conntry, and its en-
tire absence in others, make the fence
The growing scarcity of
question a more serious one year by
Year. Only in the newly settled
heasvy-timbered land do we now ses
rails eplit for fences. Wire in
form almost universally used
this purpose. The woven wire
ing which is made in various
ROBWETrS ¢ very purpose
it is too expensive for
Wire and picket fencing
well, but it is to be broken by
unruly animals, and once rent
started it is soon of little use to turn
stock Barbed wire, which composed
the « fences of the West,
many horse
1% cruel, and
ruined by being eaught on
some
for
fenc
widths
# fence, but
8
of
general use
does very
liable
" in
riginal wire
a has been
the sharp,
kuife-like points
making
free from the
There is a A Wire
fence,
«i: Hood's®
’
at 1
feria
pisiniy
€, and
rani
ir ling
ces of any kind
braced an
they will
nid be th
stret
roug 1 very
oh
¥
or SOON
sag and get « shape. —New York
I'ribuune,
————
FARM AXD GARDEN SOTERA.
Strain the milk before the cream be-
gins 10 rise,
Medium sized now bring the
.
DOs
iargest prices,
The milk is largely affected by the |
physical condition of the cow,
{| It requires about twenty-five pounds
lof milk to make a pound of butter.
There is a scarcity of beet sugar
1 Eur drovght
umber of sheep killed by dogs
seed ope owing to the
ar is said to exceed 700,000,
I
Ia
, 8 dairy
worker and a business
make dairying a sucoes
must be a
as
Experienced butter r that
nakers
washung spoil
m wr of
he great food
wheat, ©
potatoes
i arket for trotters
but only at prices consistent wit}
There is a goo
now,
the facts in the case
Colts in training, if well eared for,
yw better and keep in better health
atl iarge
ry
gr
than when running
that a horse whose
strong enough
type will also fix the
color with great unif rmaty
It is established
individuality
family
is
‘reate a
First-class fancy animals, suitable
for driving and earriage horses, sound
and well broken, are reported
scarce and bring good prices.
ne
Prices ruanuing well into the thou-
sands are no longer given for road
horses unless the speed and other quali-
ties are of an exceptional character.
Many trotting horses, owing either
to natural defects of temperament, to
bad training or to imperfect prepara
tion, sre exceedidgly difficult to con
trol.
The winter is the time to build the
intended silo, as it ean be done with
less interference in other work, Have
the silo ready and complete for a erop
of corn next season. A silo soon pays
for itself,
Sloppy food in
continued diet for pigs. Give a change
oconsionally. The hogs are very par-
tial to whole corn, fod dry, and will
eat it from the trough, either shelled
or on the sob,
Carrant and gooseberry cuttings
should be about five or six inches long,
and planted two-thirds their length in
open ground They will root more
quickly if cut a week or two before
using and packed in damp moss. It
| is well to keep them partially shaded.
The Sharpless strawberry has been
tested over a large part of the eonn-
try and does well in almost every Jo.
| cality, but in spite of its excellent
| noord it sometimes fails. The Jessie
lin a fine berry whew ‘t succeeds, but is
| should be tested well before planting
ex tensivel y.
Turnips are easily kept by pitting,
if mot put in too thick, the pits
long and abont threo and a haif feet
high. Cover with straw and about
six inches of earth, Ventilators should
be about every ten L Jud The
pit is best made in a shel place,
where the snow will not be blown off.
Your
Strength
Renewed
not advisable as a |
|
|
R. R. R
Colds,
Sore Throat
Stiff Neck
Catarrh
Grnse und Clover Seod,
The largest grower of Grass and Clover Seed
in the world Is Salzer, La Crosse, Win, Over
00 hued y varietion, with lowest prices!
Npecial low (reight to New York, Pa. and the
Fast,
I¥ YOU WILL CUT THIS OUT AXD SEND IT with
14
Crosse,
postage to the Jolm A, Salzer Seed Co., La
Wis., you will recsive eleven packages
grass and clover sorts and his mammoth farm
for the fur.
A
” 4
weed catalogue; fall of good thin
wer, the gardener ar d the citize
An lmpertant Diflerence,
To make it apparent to thousands, who think
themmnives (11, that they are not affected with
any disease, but that the system simply needs
cleansing, is 10 bring comfort home to their
hearts, as a costive condition ix easlly cured by
using Syrup of Figs, by the
California Vig Syrup Co.
Manufactured
If afflicted with soreeyes use Dr. Inase Thome.
son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25 per bottle,
HOODS SARSAPARILLA
PURIFIES
THE BLOOD
2S
CF nrw |
All Es) 4
Miss Blanche Clark
. SALT RHEUM
ra formed Ler rik
Cures
A
Hood » Pills
ADWAY’S
READY RELIEF
{TURFs A 5
Coughs
Hoarseness
Bronchitis
Headache
No
Eheumaic, Bedridden,
Neuradgic,
’
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RAD 4
WAY'S READY RELIEF.
Fitty counts per Bottle,
eight
best,
INTERNA
yi
Rheumatism
Asthma
Sprains
Quicker Than Any Known Remedy,
matter how violent or excraciating the pain th
Infirm, Crippled, Nervogs
or prostrated wits diseases may suffer,
RADWAY'S READY RELIEF
Will Afford Tustant
LLY~A hall
Imbier « water
wr
Toothache
Neuralgia
Bruises
Faee,
a teapot
vy ips, Mpasms, S
omitting, Heart
Sick Headache
at wi
a. Hilious and
WAY'S PILLS
y 11
ain
i ers, aided b
. kiya RAD
Sold by Druggists
ST HBESIRE TO GET RADWANY'S,
“Almost as
Palatable as Milk”
This is a fact with regard
to Scott's Emulsion of Cod
Liver Oil. The difference
between the oil, in its plain
state, 1s very apparent. In
Scott's Emulsion
you detect no fish-oil taste.
As it 1s a help to diges-
tion there is no afier effect
except good effect. Keep In
mind that Scott's Etaclion
is the best promoter of flesh
and strength known to
science,
Prepared by Scott & Bowne XV. All drageita,
XYSNU.8
AND
YOU
RUNDOWN SYSTEM
BUILT UP AND
REORGANIZED,
jt TaD
A few bottles of 8.8. 8,
will do 0.
—gp—"
1, and needs arity
Ml thoroughly clear away all im.
Furies and impart new vigor and
ife to the whole system.
“1 have used t medicine often for the past
feel safe in saying that it is the
health restorer in the world,
F. H. GIBSON, Batesville, Ark,
Our Traatioe om Rie vd and Shin Gnetses mailed frpe
SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPITY. Atlante. Bs
Greatest of Family Games
Progressive
America,
fie of the centory. 11 delightte
American « while it
iso