The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, February 04, 1897, Image 2

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    THE niDDLEBOBGH FOST.
GEO. W, VTAGEXSELLER,
Editor od Froprietor
MtDDLmraoii, Ta., Feb. 4, 1897.
Instrnctioa in Etiglixk Lus been
ndded to tbo curriculum of the publid
bt-bools of Mexico.
It takes each year 200,000 ncrus of
forest to nupily crosstics for tha mil
xouj.i of til (j Uuitcd .States.
forty
four
that
A proposition to r'.-orauizo
counties in Western Khuum iu
larso ou'.'s is bciu;: n;:ituteJ iu
Slate.
Iceland, in tbo Not til Atlantic; the
lsln of Mud, liutwui'U Kufjliiud and
Ireland; l'itcairn Islmul, iu the South
Pucitic, hnvofiill woman millrae.
And dow it in claimed thut t'uo jaw
bones of civilizoil peonies ore grad
ually becoming ntteiiuateil, chiefly
owing to tlio prolonged lino of knives
and forliH.
Tlio high lint nuisance in American
Iboalrca is cuinjilutuly outdono iu
Japnu. ()u j)iiymi:i;t of u Ktnall fee
nu auditor is allowed to tstnuil up dur
ing the pel f.irmatico.
Ten ii nt farming iu Grout liritain is
runcb liloio general than supposed by
inaiiy. Out of nearly ."3,000,000
acrcHof cultivate I laud iu '05, nearly
8,000,000 were occupied by tenatiK
Not Ions Ibo I'uitcd States
I jvernuieut was asUod to appropriate
$1,000,000 for the suppression of tbo
Uiishian tliisllo iu tbo northwest. Now
a Soutb Duliotii mill owner lias offered
1.50 a ton for all tbo thistles which
may bo delivered at bis factory. Ho
nays it in uenrly as good as coal for
fuel.
Oqo who bun uinde a study of dys
pesia claims that in a largo number
of ciisca the diwturhnnce is duo to tho
use of lard. Hu miggests tbo liberal
nso of beef tallow to tho cxclusiou of
nil pork fat as n remedy. Ho eays a
person who is fond of "gicaso" can
Hiiturato bis food in this with no re
sulting digestive disorder.
A heraldic anthority iii the Satur
day Review cruelly says hat . yut of
tbo 231 .worthy tneu who form tbo
Loudon Common Council, only three
are legally "gentlemen. " This must
be a shock to the 2-3 who uio accused
of appropriating from old families,
with whom tbey have no connection,
tbo crests, tbo i:oble mottoes, and tbo
complicated quartering which tboy
bear so proudly.
There is nothing slow in Itoston's
munioipid liimiieii-i inp. For instance,
records the Nu w York Mail and Ex
press, she is ImiKliug a great subway
to cost $7,000,000, for which she has
issued bonds hearing 'I 1-2 percent iu-Icn-ht,
ii ad has already leased the sys
tem at a rcutu! that will pay 1 7-H per
cent on the investment. If there are
any flaws in that sort of financial man
agement they certainly don't show on
tho sin luce.
IP WE HAD BUT A. DAY.
should flU thshjun with the (weetwt
things,
It we had bat a dar;
Wi should drink alone at the purest spring
In our upward war;
We should love with a lifetime's lore in an
hour,
If the bonrs wero few;
We should rest, nut for dream, but for
frontier power
To bo and to do.
We should guide our wayward or wearied
wilts
Ey tbo clearest light;
We should ketp our eyes on the hevreu'y
bills
It they tny in sight;
We should trauiplo the j.ride aud the dis
content
Bcncnth our fept;
Wo should tako whatever n good Qod sent
With a trust complete.
Wo should waste no moments In weak rogrer,
If the dny wore but one; .
It what we remember aud what we forget
Went out with the sun;
Wo should be from our clamorous solves set
free
To work or to pray,
And to be what Ihu Father would have us be,
It wo had but a day.
Mary IjOweDiekinson.
"Writing in Senbtier'a on tho sub
ject of ill-advised Suud ly-school liter
ature, Miss Agiu tts llepplier observes,
nruong other things, that nothing is
inoro unwholesome- for children than
dejection, which is especially perni
cious when served out to young folks
in their literary food. "It is timo
wo admitted, " sho says, "even into
religious ti jt n hi, some of tho conscious
joys of n not iiltogiither niiserablo
world." Mms llepplier iiiHtiiticci tho
case of n little uine-ycar-old bouse
maid who wuh lietil, ciipahlo aud good-
tempered, hut so perpetnilly down
cast tiiat she throw n cloud over tho
spiiitH of nil about her. lief ore
long tbo cause of inelancboly was
discovered, iu tlio shape of a
book jiurpiirtiug to give the experi
ence of n missionary in a larger city.
Tho book was made up of nine sepa
rate stories, with titles as follows:
"Tho Infidel, " "The Dying Banker,"
"Tho Drunkard's Death," "The Mi
ner's Death," "Tho Hospital," "Tho
Wanderer's Death," "The Dying Shirt
Maker," "The Broken Heart," "Tho
Destituto Poor." No wonder the lit
tie housemaid bad tio spirits left after
tarrying iu such a literary mortuary
chapel as that, admits tho Now York
Observer. Children need to have their
sympathies trained, us well lis their
wits, but their is no sense in deluging
thorn with tbo sorrows of the world.
Nothing cuu make up to a boy or girl
for the loss of its huppy, exuberant
childhood.
A woman Is about as sure to lose her
twtiirlnii a? flic is to lose her pocket
LOVE HU A MINOR KEY.
IIE inhabitants of liar
plestowe had ceased to
discuss Hannah Fletch
er's questionable posi
tion toward her lodger,
nnd any interest at
tached to her uncon
ventional altitude bad
quietly fizzled out along with her
incaare claims to beauty. When tho
world had gono well with Hannah,
and sho had possessed tbo irritable
devotion of an invalid mother and tho
undivided love of a stilish father, sho
hod worn modestly tho good looks
which belong to a middle class young
woman who enjoys excellent health
nud a wholesomo temperament. Now
tho light iu her abundant hair und her
bright color had died for want ot vital
sustenance, and her rather prominent
features had blcakencd with tho un
resting struggle for existence. A
stranger would not troublo to question
if hor unsympathetio manner was the
result or tho cause of au unsatisfied
existence.
Hannah Fletcher had spent tho best
years of her yonth subduing tho pas
sions and filiations which make
beautiful w man irresistible, but sho
had not studied her own uglinoss and
mastered it as sotuo women do. A
plain woman's battle in life is defying
her own ugliness. Hannah had fallen
into tho way of walking like a plain
woman, aud the world accepted her as
such; for tho assnranoo of u beautiful
woman enters into her walk as it docs
into her dressing.
Hannah's lodger was, it is Iruo, an
"elderly party," so the niaid-of-all-work
described him, "always messing
about with them chemisty fizzicks;
'e's wondeTful clever, but it don't
bring in no money, and if it wasn't
that Miss Hannah was a bit sweet on
him sho'd 'avo cleared 'im out along
with his rubbishing smells long ago.'.'
Hannah was a "bit eweot" ou tho
"elderly party." Wbon her mothor
and father had died her lodger had
not given a thought to tte fact that it
would bo advisable 'or him to lcavo
his comfortable quart ots. Hannah had
grown necessary to him iu bis work,
and ho had learnt to depend on her,
as a man of powerful intellect grows
to depend on a practical woman with
an intelligent brain who is his daily
and hourly companion, nabit is
stronger in men than iu women. Fire
or six yean had passed since her par
ents' death, bringing littlo or no
change into Hannah's life. Sho slaved,
and toiled, and pinched for tho "el
derly party," who wa3 too eclf-con-tercd
to guess at tho true extent of
her poverty. Ho was casual about his
payments, and sho would never re
mind him. To brighten up her rooms
and bring a littlo pleasuro iuto her
day ho would now und then go out
and bring her homo an extravagantly
beautiful bunch of flowers, or a pair
of palms, nnd present them to her
with a toughing enthusiaum for his
own generosity and thoughtfulnegs.
Her practical mind would 11 y with a
woman's quickness of thought to tho
lour mouths' rent which was still
unpaid ; but only n feeling of tender-
lifss for his eccentricities would como
over her, and sho hugged to her heart
tho thought that sho could help him
iu Ihe work by waiting for tho over-
duo rent.
He was poor, and his income would
have baiely covered the modest ne
cessities of his simple hfo if ho had
devoted it to them, but "ho spends ull
his money on t'jem messes and invent
ing things as aren't no uso to no one,"
ns Arabella remarked when ho over
looked her tip ono Christmas Day;
"I ain't got no uso for tho like of his
sort." Clothes bo never bought, and
Hannah, with a beautiful regurd for
the feelings of tho man she loved,
stitched and monded and patched, and
bit by bit replaced his worn and
shabby wardrobe. Sho was careful
sever to put into his room any new
garment she had mado until the ruth
less laundress had robbed it of its
newness. Then sho would substitute
it for one which was beyond even her
clever ncedlecraft to mend, nnd the
"eldcrlr party" would put on tho
new shirt or wear tho new socks with
out tho slightest suspicion that tho
familiar patches and darns wcro miss
ing. Ho acted as intellectual food
and nourishment to her starved brain,
and sho became the pratical part of
bis unevenly balanced character,
which nature hod loft wanting. - She
often argued with herself that tlieir
existence together iu that bouse was
proof that purely platonio friendship
can exist botweon a man and a woman
fit a Mm arfuaent, ad the knew it.
lor her love for bin (ot wnoo be
never for a moment suspected) was
eating her strength away day by day,
and undermining her constitution.
She had his undivided attention, and
he was fond of her, but the fact that
he waa a woman, and not much over
thirty, had never really foroed iUelf
on hia mind, and certainly not on his
feelings. A man, if he could have
made himself as useful and at com
paiionable, could have taken hor
place.
Ono day the peace ot Hannah's lifo
was broken by thoooming of a cousin,
an orphan like herself, who had
wriltcu and askod Hannah to give her
a home while she looked for work.
Hannah wrote and-welcomed her with
bitter misgiving at heart. She had to
toil night and day to make money to
pay for food enough for herself pl
her lodger.
Madeline came, ami, like a hot wind
passing over a sensitive plant, sho
withered up Hannah's courage. She
was young, and the beauty of her ani
mal health was stnrtl'. She stood
in Hannah's humblo parlor ia tho
noouday sunlight, straight as a young
palm treonnd beautiful in symmetry,
a pulsing, tingling piooe of flesh and
blood, colored like a palo pink peony.
Hannah felt herself grow colder as sho
looked at her. Madeline's eyos wcro
so bluo that if you came iuto tho gar
den and she was thcro it was her two
germanders fringed with black that
caught your notice, and her childishly
perfect teeth closed tight when she
laugbccl, ana nor passionate nps quiv
ered into smiles. Bluo eyes such as
Madeline's, aid whito young teeth
alono can uiuko a face provoking to
tho dullest sensibilities; when she in
troduced herself blushing for her own
prcttiness) to tho elderly party ho
cursed tho whito teeth in his heart nud
blamed tho beauty of hor eyes for he
knew not what. And poor Haunnh,
whoso eyes had had color in them
once, with a growing numbness nt her
heart for her owu plainness in con
trast, followed the jink flower that
moved so glibly r.Sout tho house, giv
ing her tho best that lay in her power,
mat .Jlliog at her cousin's beauty,
which was after all priuoipally the
result of perfect health and and a self
ish disposition.
Weeks passed into months, nud
Madeline had plantod herself firmly iu
tho house; Hannah could not turn bcr
out, and sho never suggested going,
and novor mado any sorious attempt to
get work. Her orphan and penniless
condition served her as a useful means
of appealing to tho sympathy of tho
'elderlv party.". As time woni on,
Hannah saw less and less of her lodger,
her cousin appropriated as her charge
his study and laboratory, aud it was
bitterness and gall to Hannah to see
her administer to him all the little at
tentions whioh sho had been wont to
perform, and tho last straw was that
Madeline talked as it sue gave cnoupu
help to fully repay Hannah for hor
room and keep.
Hannah, with her heart smarting nt
the bitter injustice of things, could
not tell her that she was day by day
robbing hor ot all that made lifo bear
able. Madeline had takeu to using
the "elderly party's" study as hor Bit-
tine room: it was more attractive
than the prim parlor downstairs; and
when Hannah was hard at work dur
ing the hot August days days that
mado her look paler and plainer than
ever, her cousin would sit reading a
novel in her favorite basket chair,
with her fcot up on tho rungs of an
other a pretty picture ot easo and
comfort. Sbo never forgot to look np
at intorvals, with a ont-liko something
in her bluo eyes and in hor solt, pur
ring voice, and say to her companion,
"Don t vou wish that lianuau wouia
stop fussing and como and sit down?"
Aud &i. when a woman is particu
larly bOBj, a man generally does think
6bo U "fussing" aud choosing to do
soraothing totally unnecessary, tho
elderlv party came to look upon it
as quito natural that Madeliuo should
bo hia hourly companion, and that
sho should tit in an easy chair whilo
Hannah, hot and weary in mind and
body, should toil and strivo for them
both.
After Madoline had been with them
thrco months Hannah s lodger came
into a fortune. It was not a largo
ono. but it wt.ul l enablo him to live
in easo and comfort for the rest of his
lifo. When Hannah heard the good
news, what she dreaded most did nob
happen. He did not suggest moving
iuto moro luxurious lodgings; ho
seemed to consider himself a fixture in
tho old wainscoted room with its cot
tazo window and old oak lloor ; but ho
bought more pretty plants and fresh
hot honso flowers, wnicu Madeline now
accepted with a blush and prettiueMi
that Bent hia .blood coursing mrougu
bis veins.
She knew that sho had appealed at
first sight to tho human passion latent
iu tho scholar, as Hannah had never
dono. Intellectually she was nothing
to him, but for that she did not grieve.
As an intellectual companion only, a
woman has no aotual power over a
man's heart; but ns a beautiful woman
she can use him as it best suits her
purpose. Hannah's lodger paid his
money in advanco now, and she felt as
a mother feels when her son grows in
to manhood and parses out of her care
There was no need now to substitute
new pkirts for old ones, and the
"elderly party" was conferring a favor
on her by remaining in his humblo
lodgings. Her solf sacrificos for her
beloved teacher wore useless now.
She comforted herself with the thought
that he never treated Madeline as an
intellectual companion, but she knew
that ho was more a man aud less' of
scholar when Madeline's blue eyes and
bright bead wore lighting tip tho cor
ner of his dark study. " . '.'.,
One morning when iiannau was
ironing, with the table piled high in
well bleached linen, the "elderly par
ty" came into the kitohen with Mado
tu wii(d straiirht no tp where
Hannah stood, with her hot faee brat
over tho steamiog ahirt, and drew
Slalelino forward.
, "Hannah, your cousin has promised
to marry me. 8he ia young and beau
tiful, and I am only a plain scholar,
but I will do my best to make her a
good husband."
As it it had been thrust through her
body with the point of a bajonet each
word went to Hannah'a heart. It
oeaced beating. Madeline, of course,
knew why her cousin had fco suddenly
fainted, and the poor littlo bit of
triumph made her heart beat quicker,
but when she looked np at hor lover
his face was pale with fear. She saw
a look of agony in his eyes a the turned
them to her for help, which told her
that she did not possess the heart of
the soholar so completely as she
thought, and tbo vixen in her was
roused.
"Ob, yon need not bo so alarmed ;
she has fainted through sheer jeal
ousy." For one moment ho stood transfixed ;
all that he had been blind to for years
was made plain to him now, and iu
that moment he recognized the 'hear t
lcssness ot the woman ho had proposod
to only ten minutes ago.
"Are yon a woman to tell a woman's
secret and make light of it?"
Madelino was frightened at the look
of scorn and contempt in his eyes,
which had always looked at hor so
gentlr. She stood at bay, and watcbod
his trembling hands sprinkle Hannah's
face with the cold water she had used
for sprinkling tho linen. It was kept
n a small whito bowl on tho ironing
table.
"I've not said anything 'that tho
whole villago doss not know, Arabella
ncludod, Uiat Hannah rletchcr has
been waiting to marry her lodger for
tho last ten years."
'Then 1 11 marry her now. I lovo
her, I tell you." He chafed tho pulo
checks, and rubbed tho thin hands.
M ve alwavs loved her. Oh, what a
selfish fool I have been."
"You loved mo but ten minutes ago.
For a simplo scholar you are wonder
fully quick at love.
'leu minutes ago I did not know
that it was Hannah I loved as a mau
ought to lovo the woman he marries.
Your beauty deceived me into bcliov-
ng that I loved you. 1 had not given
a thought to love until you came. I
a6k your forgiveness."
Tears, which wero always ready,
camo into hor blue eyes at tho harsh
words be had spoken, but she knew
that they wero true, tihe had no love
for the grave and elderly scholar ; ho
was to bo hor refuge from work, and
ho loved eaec. - Sho stood for a mo
ment or two and watohod returning
consciousness quiver over Mannabs
palo face, and then she turned to go.
"After all, Hannah is growing old,
and she has been good to mo ; I will
not rob her ol hor elderly lover.
A lover was waiting for Madeline
half a mile out ot the villago. It was
provision dealer, and Madeline
would have preferred being tho wife of
a scholar. The Queen.
LONDON'S INTELLIGENT HORSE.
Origin of tho Marino Bau'l.
A naval officer, who hac tho history
of the Ecrvioe at his tongue's end, says
that tbo Marino Baud owes its exist
enco to the eccentrioitics of ona Cap
tain McNoil, who was a gallant if pe
culiar o flicer of tho United States
Navy at the beginning of this century.
The story goes that Captain MoN'eil,
when in command ot tbo Boston, ofT
tho const of Sicily, engaged a baud
bolonging to a regiment quartered at
Messina to play ou his ship, aud that
when it was safely aboard ho sailed
away with it to America, and so the
Marino Band was acquired.
what became ot this band is not
written, but later, just boforo the
War of 1 S 1 2 , another naral olUcet of
reckless and vonturesomo spirit, when
cruising along tho coast of Italy, sent
a boat 8 crew ashoro with instructions
to impress a band of strolling musioians
as American seamen. This was dono,
and the poor stolen Italians were
brought to this country. President
Madison failed to appreciate the
humor of this cscapado aud ordered
tho musioians returned to their own
country. They were, accordingly,
placed on a man-of-war bound for the
Mediterranean, but on tho way out
this vessel mot and captured a Brithu
warship, and, having to return with
the prize, brought the men back to
New York with hor. This victory,
perhips, inspired tho Italians with an
admiration lor theservioo.'forit seems
they abandoned the idoa of returning
home, enlisted ebortly afterward, and
subsequently woro formed into tho
Marine Band. There is no doubt some
truth in this story, although it is not
much moro than a tradition, for tbo
early records of the band show on its
rolls the names ot thirteen Italian
musioians. Its personnel to-day is al
most evenly divided between Germans
and Italians but its leaders havobeen,
with ono exception, Italian) or of
Italian descent. Now York Tribune.
Play "Hoai,' SMt Hoaia, ' aait
Draw Lifelike Plctaree. .- i
Alpha, the most intelligent home that
ever lived, ia now being exhibited in
London, where his performances have
astonished even those who for a' life
time have-studied the wisdom ot hU
race. This Intelligent animal has a
companion named Beta, who' is much
imallcr. Between the two of ibem they
seem to comprehend about the highest
Intelligence that Is to be found In the
animal kingdom. Tho two animals ap
pear upon the stage of the Aquarium,
in London, with bells tied to their fet
locks and without the assistance of a
prompter or any other adventitious aid,
they play "Home, Sweet Home."
Much more surprising than this, how
ever. Is the performance of Alpha In
drawing a portrait. A coarse pencil Is
grasped in the teeth of the aulm.il, aud
Mr. Shaw, who exhibits lilm, holds a
drawing board just under bis mouth.
Slowly and carefully Alpha proceeds
to draw the portrait of Mr. Gladstone.
The big nose, the high collar, aud the
sunken mouth of the great Kngllsli
statesman are carefully penned by the
horse, and he can be seen to serutinir.o
the lines as he proceeds. The ear, Wte
hair, the coat collar nnd even the shad
ing under the eye nro nil carefully put
In by this equine artist. The likeness
Is unmistakable when this pen. picture
of Mr. Gladstone Is completed.
A more difficult trick Is then perform
ed by Alpha, assisted by Iiota, bis lit
tle companion. A target Is set up at one
end of the stage, nnd Beta conies out
with a gun strapped to bcr back. Beta
Iligli Trices lor Belles.
Tho book salo at Sotheby's, Lon
don, when thirteen signed letters from
Georgo Washington to Arthur Young,
tho agriculturist, dated from 17811 to
17U3, on farming in America, .were
auctioned for $2350, attracted ntten
tion on account of the high prices
reaohed.
Three leaves from Franklin's letter
book, containing copies ot eleven
lotters, addressed to Dr. Rush and
othors, in Philadelphia andNewlork,
on the oanals of America and the slave
trade, brought $10. There was great
competition for tbo first edition of
Izaak Walton's "Complete Angler,"
the size being 55x31; inches, in -the
original sheep binding.- It fetched
$2075. Now York Press.
The tiger's strength exceeds that ol
tho lion. Five mon ean easily hold
down a lion, but nine are required to
ubduo a tiger.
RODE ON.A.ttfER'sN
X Haater KacItU and perii. .
William M. 8tover, a mine oirn- '
Tuolumne County, California, had
experience, recently, that he WOoM
wish to repeat for all the wealth la
mountains of . the -State. WbliT
hunting neor the Stnnislans Kirtt
shot at a deer that was standln-i, i
crest of a hill. The bullet vent sw? i
and the deer plunged forward awSl
Mr. Stover laid bis rllle down and w
tened to fts fallen gnnie for ti
pose of cuSilug its throat. jllst Jn
reached tbo deer and leaned 0r
ripply tbo knife, the anluial In-,
bis feet and glared nt Mr. StoW
Instantly the mau seized the u.
by the horns. This action territi,?
tiuck. He made a plunge, and t
the steep sides of Devil's i-anj,!'
went, carrying the man with hi
...O (HI l ... . . V. ' ' 1
fi-lirlitnnoil ii ml Mr Ktm-,i '1
scared than the ucor. n,
turn loose, and away went
'"UlJ a,!
nulmal, over rocks, bushes nilj t)i 14
When near the bottom ot tho
ran... I
the deer fell against a tree, nnd l(0
be could get up, Mr. Stover Rra'
largo piece of quartz ro. k iln,
tlio animal by beating it (u the
mm
a rKKii.tics Anvr
TnilS HOUSE THAT PI1AWS PKTUHKS.
Is so much shorter than Alpha that the
latter can "sight" the gun over the ears
jf his companion. The distance fired
Is over 30 feet, nnd Alpha almost invar
iably scores the bull's eye. Alpha can
also work out simple sums lu arithme
tic. The horso Is good-nnturwl nud
tractable, aud thero appears to be no
doubt that ho understands whnt he Is
doing, and rather enjoys It.
Wc defy any man on earth to do up
a package the way a woman does It.
Mr. Stover bad his !: h.- tiullv
nnd his face and hands v,w Ki&to
by tbo hushes like tin: iv.-i:iu d
MTlllllllUKt IU1 Willi', 11. llt'!jJ
blc to tell how he esciipod fi'riwj
jury while going down the side of -J
rough bill nt n biviiUiHvk sp.vj.i.'j
tno ueer was iteait, au cx.u;mi
showed that the bullet iud sinnthj
sijuaro upon tlio horns T. -rir t!nM
which caused him t. f:;il o-.iT it
stunned condition.
I'lisclniitlng HunKiiriuni.
Princess Do Cariuuaii-t'liinm.v'i
ment with a Hungarian cyiisj
leader bus turned the attention of
away from the similar case of Pal
Kerko, who died there tho o'h
He' appeared ns conductor of 1 1;
gnrlau band nt tbo IKS'.) ciliililtim,!
though he was small and ugly, h
im ted a rich unman-li-d girl of mk
able parentage. She took tlierttf
to live with her, bought off biitfy
M.0OO, and spent $'JiJ,XH) a r.'
him, till her relatives stopped herW
talnlng a cousell Juilicliire for lie:
still bad money eumigti, hownrJ
enable blni to drink himself to tot
If you are able to 'JT
pay I00 for a bicy- A yyf
clc, why be content ff J SJf (f
with any but a Vt V
STANDARD OF THE WORLD.
Nineteen years cf reputation for building the best bicycle, tM
by the certainty ot quality assured by our Ku.rrj
should mean much to any buyer of a bicycle. There is cI0B
Columbia quality one Columbia price I
ioo:
TO ALL ALIKE.
BMuliful Art Camloffiie of Columbia and Hartford Blcyc'ea If free If you cjaoF1
Columbia Agent j by mail from us tor two j-cent tamps.
PHPR MFft. m Hartford. Conn.
Rmnrh Rtnrrm and Arenclea In almost everv cltv and town. If Cotu"'iu "
propetly represented In your vicinity, let us know,
"lfjmm
rfcrtitrsnplioj
Cn-H Ult.
mm
REVIVO
RESTORES VITALITY.
1st Dny.
V V
mfi
y? S
Made a
jV cn man
J ( hS A
13th Day,
lis great sot h Day.
rat!-.i-cs tlinulinvorutlln 30 1iit. It a. f
owcrmlly and iiuii-kly.v Cunn wlwn all otlnT fail
oniiu men will rt-uiuii tumr Irat iiianlioml.and old
i':ii will nvover tlu ir youthful vmor b. usiny
tKVIVO. It nnlol Ijr and unruly n-toir Ki-rvous-.wa.
I.W4 Vitality, Imkotcury, Nlnlitly Uniiwnonii,
onl-rnvrr. l'i.ilnu ll inory. Yliuir Dlvrui s. and
II rffert ol n-K-ubum crnca-miicl imllmrrution.
lilcb mint one tor a nly. ln.tnnu or marrl'mr. it
M only rums by Htartmv at the s'nt ut dlwuu, but
latrrat nerve tonic bud lilcxid iMilldrr. urtiif
K bar tha lnlc Rlmv tu liuln r lin ks and re
Ki lng Mm lira of youth.- It irartta oil Insanity
ud Conminiptlon. Iniut on bavin ICKV1VO. do
Hit. It can be carrifdlll vrrt ockit. 11 mall.
11.00 poriuu-ksite.oveii for WA.OO, with a post
iv written aruuruiitee to rnie or rotund
bemoneT. Circular fne. Addrcu
vOIAli MEDICINE C0..W Ittak CHICAGO, ILL
" For itlo at Miridleta.rgh, r., by '
.t-'' .' Vi. U. HrANULKIW- :. . ' :
n A - The 03
UQliU UUIU
Tub1
Uvcil
AN T fcU-AWI UEASffe
'alng to patent T IJroUctyoiiriilcn : Wicy m7
ring yon wealth. Write JOHN VKUl)i:i
JtTiiN A CO., I'utcnt Attorneys, Wasnalor,
O. O.. lor their J ttw price offer.
Baco-Curo
Baco-Guro
Baco-Curo
Baco-CuroHg
I nvestlitato lo-t VT u J
remedy for the Tolw yin
AU dnmulstB are wit ar'-J
with ourlron cliid rt,,a!?ani-',S
Ono box 1.iio; '""T '" Tt,,u
i.nxjts.)
the J
iiouar4!
ithf
rour dniiiif li dow n?
for frH lnK.klct and P""'!'.
Hl-K . WEI 1.11.
FATgggl
Ni ba.f rlfi:lor-tvnil',"1'f1!j '
Ku aianlim. wr-uH'i" ' M 'f
lcuiisil Mi-U'iy i'1' f en f
PATIENTS TREAje,
RaSNYDCReK-