I 11111"'' The I Reformer By ClttRtlS M. SHQDOt Author cf "In His Steps,' "Robsrt liudy'i bevea Lyv" Etc Copiright, JX)1. fcy CTiarlu Jf. Sheldon lou've nothing wore than this?" the Judc akcl. 11U voice was again soft and Ills manner meditative. "N'utliin;; uiuro." John Cordon hesi tated. "Miss Andrews was with me and Mr. l-'ord when we took tlu- meas urements. She could verify their ac curacy." "h she here':" "No, hut -he ruul.l lie MUiiliiolit'd." "It is:i't iir.T-M'iy. I'll pi down there lliysrlf and iMii.r the Measurements. It is jiu-sili:.' :-, -a.' 1'ilstaUe lias !uv:i made hy o:.e !.'..- i t" the nihil-. Icli'.lemen. I desire V..I1- i.t: -iiiillu-i' w hile the Cdlll't ;i lj.'i:r:is l :vni :iv. ;." It' a !.::.' h:i ! x- V1 i:i tli- l'aee of Total::;.' !!:: il .il a -id liis law.v r. they -iiuhl n ' I . . I ! :i ::;" I l:i i-.v.". ); v ilu:i!.';': ' I. The lawyir hastily wl.i.-K !.! hi :.! hi. Tu:ai.iy s:niV;l in a hi-;'; -tin. r. "I; - . i-i' i-.mrt.e, joitr lwe- r. that the ri... : h..s i I . a i:i;- - lilKe In ! ' ; MMal.r- are i- "Thta weans th lec'nu'ng of tbt end for Tommy IU:id;til." said Ford. Miss Andrews she i; li.-r head. Toning appealed tin- c.fsc. He will pet out there. Uruii i.th- r l.e has never yet been" WriVlctod. T. day' experience was only a scratch to hlui. lie bus not yet been seriously hurt You do nut know him a I do." "But Chambers does not Intend to let the other matter rest It was u plain case of conspiracy and deliberate effort to deceive the court." Miss Andrews shook ber bead npiin. "Tommy is an old fox. lie made a mistake In not uieasurliiK Judpj Cham bers aright. Hut now that be knows him he will ho cautious. I confess I have very little hope of bis ultimate conviction." "Hut be will have to change the liiilldiiiK, won't he':" one of the young women asked. "Il'ii my opinion the masons will he at work tomorrow Just the same, and j i 1 I . - p-- . - v I i mm 1 r I WPI Mi The little company rose to greet htm. Xle In surveys and measurements, as can be easily shown by reference to of--ticinl records." Tribnljly n nior spwcbless group '0j men never traveled' n the elfjetric cars tosetlier tlian that oin vv'iilch made the trip from the police judue's court, No. 0, to the Waterside district. ' When I'.i wi :i street was reached, the five men walked over to the Mte of Tommy's double decker. .Tivde .lul l'- Chambers secured a mason's in ::-i:riir-: line from one of Hie workmen. Then he turned some wh. -i r.iidy t" Tommy Kandall. "I suppo-e y.,,i can trust uie to meas ure coi recti;. '." Tommy murmured something. So did the attorney. It may be remarked in passim.' that it was not exactly a prayer that either man uttered. Calling one of the masons to help, Judp Chambers measured off the foundation walls. Then ho put down some figures on a card. Then be strai-htcm d up and said in a peculiarly soft voice: "I pa your measurements, Mr. Gor don, ust liinety-eiKht feet. Court U ad journed to tho station, and I desire the attendance of all the psirties in the ca'." Not a word was said by any one on the way back. Gordon was slugiui; lu bis soul a son of hoie. Here was u Daniel come to judgment Whenever bcTore in Uie history of that city bad u public Jub,'e or any other ever done a thing like this? The spectacled, soft voiced young man suddenly loomed up before Gordon as a most Imposing fig ure. Rack In court again, Judge Julius Chambers, relieving the assistant Judge fwbo had taken his place In bis absence, eonfronteil Out parties in the case. His voice was ringing now; no softness or meditation in his manner. "Tommy Randall, this court liuds you guilty of the charge named in the war rant, ami I tine you the maximum pen alty, which is a tine of $3tHt, with an utldcd sentence of sixty days lu jail, un less the building is changed in its con struction within thirty days to conform to existing ordinances. I may add that whjle it is possible the city engineer mSy have made a mistake In his tig ures, it is my deliberate conviction that n conspiracy of a grave character has been entered into here by you, Mr. Randall, to deceive the court, and if such conspiracy can be shown to cxLst, as I shall do my utmost to prove, it will bo n penitentiary case for both you and jour attorney. Call thu next case." Tommy Randall's attorney bud a face the color of dirty putty. Tommy liimself u la red at the Judge and then at Gordon. lie dually, with n great ef fort, pulled himself together and went out with his lawyer after the latter had cone through the regular formal ity of appealing the case to the court of appeals. .Ml the way to Hope House Gordon and Ford felt like executing a dance of Butue kind In the car. Once In the familiar library,, they related the whole affair to Miss Andrews and the do lurhted icttlement worker. two of the papers i .. . r , tlikd laiiilsirvtlon. There's hope be ." Miss Andrews said that evening . the hale settle nioiit family was gathered in the fami ly library aud the accounts in the dif ferent papers were being reviewed. "Maybe this is the lirst murmuring of the people. God grant" The bell rang, aud a visitor was an nounced. Mr. Julius Chambers came In, and the little company around the table rose to greet bun. The slight, p.1l faced figure with the gold rimmed specta cles was at that moment the most in teresting personality, next to their own bead. In all the city. "I've had lu mind to come here for smiie time," he said to Misa Andrews when they were all seated again. "I wutit to know you and your work at first hand. Unless I urn mistaken the storm center of the next campaign will be somuwhere In this vicinity." "Will you be anywhere near the cen ter of that center-:" asked Gordon, lean ing over and looking ut Chambers i:i t( nscly. "I5y the grace of Go.!. Mr. Gordon, I want to be as near the center of it i's I can get. and nothing would please me n. ore than to have f t.ur company." Gordon tingled all ov t . lie arose judge toek at from that Unit to each Xeitlicr miid n iron, no change will be made. My dear, you do not know Tommy Randall nor ap preciate his power. I do, to my cost." In the morning Gordon and Miss An drews went over to the site of the ten ement, accompanied by Ford. Miss Hammond and nearly all the workers. The masons had begun their day's work. In answer to questions they said they had received no orders to change anything. "It's easy to say, I told you so!" Miss Andrews calmly spoke as the little com pany slowly went hack to the house. "Of course, pending the decision of the case in the court of appeals, Tommy will go on with the building, because he feels sure the decision there will re verse Chambers' decision." "Then I don't see as we can do any thing," said Gordon dejectedly. "Yes, you've done something to get Tommy Randall convicted lunny court at all." "Rut I don't see that the conviction hurts him any. He ought to be In Jail. Instead of that, he's going right on with his lawlessness Just the same as if he hadn't been found guilty at all." said one of the young women. Gordon looked at Miss Andrews. She smiled sadly. "Yes," she replied in answer to his question, "unless Judge Julius Cham bers can scotch this viper more seri ously than this I anticipate nothing ex cept endless delay of the case in the court of appeals. There is a case there now that was appealed by Tommy three years ago. It is a case of law's delay, aud we seem powerless to du unytliing." "Somehow I have hope in Chambers. Did you see the account in the Index this morning? That sounded like him." "I saw that," l-'ord spoke up brightly. "It gave Tommy n great roast, 1 tell you." The article referred to in the morning Index was a conspicuous column ac count of the conviction of Tommy Ran dall in public court on a charge sworn out by the Hope House people. It was a scathing article, written by some one who had dipped bis pen In something more than a hired reporter's Ink bottle. There was a scorching vigor to It that drove the fact deep home to the reader that Tommy Randall was murdering little children in Ward IS by his con struction contrary to law of tenements like the one that made possible the re cent tenement house tragedy. The arti cle coucluded with these words: Will tUo people endure tills sort of tiling much lotiKr? Tommy Kamlutl la not un abstraction, lie la 2u0 pounds of cuarse flesh and bad blood, which spits on the law and says to the prople, "You mind your own business." For thirty yunra Tommy Kundull hus ruled Waterside dis trict like a tyrant. He has no olltco in the service of the people. lie works at no trade. He Is not elected to any position In the city. Yet he has grown rich from his blackmail of saloons, gambling dens, houses of vice and business tlrms In the district. Ilia trade Is in flesh and blood. No slave driver ever employed more urt ful iiieuns to trap his victims or more brutality In riveting on their manacles, and the horror of the whole, affair is in tensified by the fact that this creature who la after nil the tool of the machine that created him has actually persuaded the miserable wretches who nourish him thut he is their best friend. There will lie no release from this slavery until thu machine that made Tommy Haiulall what he Is has been broken In pieces by. the people so that it can neither turn out nr.y more product like him or keep in power what has already been brought into ex istence. We say. Smnsh the machine. The people are able to do It. Will they do It? The Review also contained a good account of Tommy's case in the police court and lu addition cited lu full the blue print Incident and boldly de nounced the lawyer and the boss for attempt at conspiracy to deceive the court Three other papers had more or less extended notice of the event, and all of them were unfavorable to Tom my. This was the more significant as and put out his hand. Tl it. Neither said a word. 1 minute the two men wore other. They sat late that tbgiit an ;;:4 t library table, the moM r :: ; h ;a ! Ie. in forested ami in some ways ihe mo- t unselfish group of men ami women in that city. Gordon and Chambers laid out a plan of campaign. It im-hid d tl.e us.' of every moral aud Christian force in the city. Aud the message they were to bring to the people was the message of murdered childhood, the double decker for a background, the political boss a necessary result of politics that lived on its spoils and cared no more for humanity's loss and ruin than any machine cares for tholu.st that whirls through Its mechanism, to lie blown out over the world or trod under foot to rise ami be swept again into the rush of the wheels that with metallic lieart lessuesH grind on, doing the will of their maker, but caring for no man's soul. It seemed to them oil during the weeks that followed that the city was awakening to some stern reality of Its moral obligations. As the young judge had said that night when he appeared at Hope House, "The hour of the peo ple is at band." He himself, sometimes alone, oftener with Gordon or Fal mouth, night after night addressed great mass meetings held under the di rection of church or temperance or mu nicipal reform bodies. Falmouth aud a score of other ministers organized tho young people into campaign material. The pulpit began to speak out. The pa pers contained columns of very free ad vertising of Tommy Randall and bis methods. Chambers' voice spoke through an astonishing number of edi torials and other articles, exp.osrivj Innjj standing cases of awful Incompetency and fraud lu the city government. The storm of the people's fury rose and grew with every night's gathering, and the storm center was literally the Wa terside district. I'nder the b-adershlp of Gordon. Chambers and Falmouth hundreds of business mt u visited the tenement houses and saw for the lirst time the horrors that were Intensified by the machine. Hundreds of them were tali en by Miss Andrews or Gordon to Tommy Randall's double decke r, which bad gone steadily up through all the rising of the storm, and the lawlessness of his nets was a visible illustration of the whole situation. MUs Andrews had written to Mrs. Captain George Flliugham telling her the situation, and that old lady had replied: "Cse the first hundred thousand if necessary l. .... ,1... t I tl... ill v 1 1 I j H oo tut it.i 1 1 1 1 . ( i, ii lion iiii-j second also. I will try to tind some more If you only succeed In cleaning' out Mr. Thomas Randall." So thu settlement workers thanked God aud plunged into the thick of tin tight as It grew in power, for every saloon Interest, every gambling bell, every bouse of eTll fame, fought for Its miserable life. Fbr once almost like magic, to the astonishment of evil, all the good of the city appeared to lie united, on its knees praying, on Its feet working. And as the campaign drew near its climax every dark and hideous vlpwr that hud fattened In the security of years of protection from the city crawled out of its hole and allowed Its ugly and poisonous front, rearing it against an assault that for the lirst time In history was really doing something to vindicate the "name of the stem righteousness of God lu men. One morning John Gordon, going by Tommy Randall's double decker, found It deserted of workmen. It had gone up three stories and a half. When Miss Andrews heard the news, she said: "That means that Tommy Is In need of campaign funds, lie has rpont a fortune already. If that dumb Dell Is never finished" "We will let it stand as a monument of victory." said Gordon. Two evenings later Gordon, Fal mouth. Chambers and Miss Andrews went together to n monster mass meet ing. .Ml four of them spoke. Miss An drews was received with n great dem onstration. When Chambers spoke, it was noticeable that hundreds of men nnd women representing the wealth and fashion of the city were there, and that, although he nttered tho most scathing rebuke of the seliisli wealthy people who shunned nil civic responsi bility, they listened wVth positive ad miration to a speech that was a torrent of eloquence, for Chambers was an aristocrat himself and could not be re pudiated by any of the city's most cultured or refined circles. Mrs. Ten rose was present that night with Luclhi end Archie. They all heard Miss An drews, with ruulne surprise at ber ability. Chambers provoked their sp ina use even wu.le he sneered them by his prophet's denunclutiou of their wicked seltishuess. Falmouth's speech was a calm hut earnest appeal to the conscience, and every bearer was more honestly thoughtful for 1L Then Gor don rose. He had gained smatlngly In the pow er to address a great crowiL He sim ply told the story of the tenements out of his own cxiM-rhticc. He made no plea; he uttered no denunciation; sim ply told h'W iluldhood was tortured and crushed and stilled and murdered ill the double deckers. His story was the story of childhood's rights. It made a tremendous 'apresslou. Mrs. Penrose hen'; her bead, aud Ler lips whispered the litany: "O l.auih of God. who takust nwuy the sins of the wot Id. have mercy upon me." Luella never took her eyes off John Gordon's face. As he drew near the end she noted the extreme exhaustion of his whole bearing. And as he fin ished and s;it dow n she observed Mi.-s Andrews, who was sea ted In-hind Gor don, lean forward ami a.-1; him some thin;:. Then as the chairman of the nuetii; was m.'ikhr; some atiih.uiiee'.' n: lor another gathering I.u.lia saw Cli am bers and i'alin aith suddenly rise and go over to (.onion ju.-t as lie sv, and would have fallen. The lw oil ciught him aud quickly carried oh" the s;a:;e. Miss Andrews f, il them, iilnl the gnat rudatiec b . go out. I. m-lln hesitated. Mrs. I'e::i-e - not seen anything. She had I lool.hiL. "I think Mr. Gordon was ill,' bald. "Shall we wait and inquire Penrose asked quickly. "I'll co up and sec about it.' suddenly volunteered. lie went Up ami crossed the stage and disappeared. When lie catoe back after a few miiitit'S, In- said that Gor don hail been removed to Hope llo. isl and no one seemed to know Just what the trouble was. "Nothing serious. I think." Mrs. Pen rose remarked. "We'll telephone down when we get home." Word was sent back bv one of the settlement workers In nn-ui-r to Mrs. Pcnrose'8 Inquiry that (ion! in was 111, but It was not possible yet to say how seriously. Mrs. Penrose sent word to I.uelhl and added that If I.uelbi wished she would go down to Hope House with her next day and Inquire. Luella replied that she did not think it neces sary, and Mrs. Penrose did not press the matter. Rut three days later Luella was in the drawing room when h visitor was announced. "Miss Andrews from Hope House." said the servant. Luella rose to meet ber as she ft tered. Rot women were very wuve. Luella treti ilcd as she motioned Grace -Andrews i eat. ...... drews! Have pity on me! If I loved him truly, would I refuse to accept bis test for me? Why do I shrink from thatr "Do you expect me to answer all the contradictious of your heart? You have been born Into a social life that reck ons up Its wealth In physical things. It Is also true pardon me for saylug It but It Is true that you women of wealth and social activities are' as a class des titute of any real love for humanity. You can feel remorse or momentary pity. You will weep at the representa tion of wrongs ujion the' stage In a well lighted, warmed and upholstered theater from a comfortable seat for which you have paid an i .vrliit;-bt price, hut you will not take th- prire of that seat and go with It yourself to a 'real Lun.an sufferer, or if yo'i it It Is in a spasmodic effort to relieve : dull day or a eompouml with a ir. s'-ieiiee that will not always leave y alone !n your seltishuess. The broad basic element of genuine love v.i' h i inanity is not known bv vnu or wo:. .en Sciatic like you. Tie- r! st, most cultr.r. d. yei; llils him v.d I t i h; be. Luella " Mr-. Archie CITAFTF.R XII. Pi ' n Slit put hr Hp mi John LLU CAME to tell you, Miss Marsh, that Mr. Gordon is very III. It Isdoubtfur- "Thnt dreadful place and work have killed him!" ex claimed Luella. Her face bad paled at sight of Miss Andrews. It blanched now, nnd her exclamation contained a certain tone of reproach as If the wo uiau In front of her were to blame. "And, if they have, is It not better for him to uie there after having fought a good fight for humanity than to live elsewhere and carry no burdens that kill 7" It was a question provoked by the entire social cruelty of that world rep resented by such women as Luella and Mrs. Penrose. The gentle pat'ent, sac rilieing spirit of the blue eyed woman who had given her whole life to lift the human burden burst out of Its ba bitunl repression of feeling and swep lip 'n ml over Luella as if she were the incarnation of social selfishness which in nil great cities 'of the world s -eks easo and pleasure and luxury and de nies nil claims of brotherhood, refuset to share its strength with the weal and never dreams of such a thing : personal responsibility for ehildhond ways of mankind's suffering. It seemed u long time that Luella was silent. After awhile she raised her eyes to Miss Andrews. "I am all that you think I am.' Aud yet"- - - .; "And yet, Miss Marsh, John Gordon loves you. He waiits to see you bcrore he"- "Dld he send you here 7" "2io. But I know bo longs to see you. Will you come?" "Yes," Lnclla trembled. "But I am or be does not love me! Oh, Miss An most favored wie-.ii ::i this cty : re 0 r..le disti'tUto of rr2'. human b.ve f r the masses. l:.-y ;.ie bora w;;h.t.t :;. they live w itho.;; it am!, i. ay ! bid h.v. e I.iercy on tin-::., tl.s y . !! .i:e wit; ic; .; and receive the I I:::! o ld. m-i "I ...n sji.il. en to those wh-i. I, he the r;.-.: in .Icsus' story, have their uoe.d -i : -111 tills world, but will h- shut t u; ail impassal le chasm M. i-i :li ; . ;. oi l.ar.arus in the bosom of .br:.:i::: i." Atiin the spirit of this v, Lilian, w ho had for all tho.-v dr. ary year- ; some burden bearing Lit the :;:. '..,:,.; weight of a proud city's v.ea..ii . . : fashion whirl, lifted no f.v ;er :, .. in proportion to its etiori... . , ; li.lity, ros.- ttp ar-l IV.'. .d :;s long re; : ,.i tie :n . .a : w :;..... .1 refused j.;,. nr. :. i.:c of a : .an because i-hi d ! no want it. i...-s tin- things t.i..t I.a.;ar..s had to do Without. And again Luclhi was painfull;- : ;,.! She uttered no denial, she app i nil.i did not resent a syllable. She si looked down, folding ln-r bands I:. ,i.-r lap, mill Mi.-s Andrew s, gazing i ! la ; could see no sign of anger or pride. Rut suddenly Luella rose. a::. I. stretching out her hands toward le r visitor, she said, while tears were In ber eyes: "All this may be true, but y-ui say he Is dying, is it the time to say aii thi. to tue now'? I love him: I do love him' You do not. or you would not I e saying these things to me now while be l dying'" She cam-..- up close to Miss Andrews and stood near her. with her hand clinehed and her whole attitude ex pressive of the deepest feeling. "It is no wonder John Gordon loved her," Grace Andrews said to herself with a pang at t lie thought of a beauty that had Ix-en dulled by years of contact with trouble, for Luella was magnili cent in her strong; young womanhood, and it ueeded.only that one human love for the multitude to make her'h creu turj! .of boundless' affections worthy of the bravest, best man that ever lived. "I did not say be was' dying. He Is very 111. The Issue is doubtful. Rut he Is perfectIycoiisciou. and it may be lt may be that your presence will help him." "Come, then. let us go." said Luella. On the way to Hope House Luella asked again if John Gordon had sent for her. "lie has spoken y.;ur name," Mi.-s Andrews hesitated, "but he has not asked to see you." "Then I am going to see him on your Invitation'?" "Yes," she replied simply. "He will not care to see me." Luella spoke as If to herself, and Miss An drews did not reply to her. When they reached the house, Luella was so agitated that she asked to be left alone lu the library a little while. When she came to Miss Andrews and told her she was ready. Miss Andrews could not avoid almost a feeling of pity for her. "Is he very 111?" Luella asked. "You must be prepared for a great change lu him," Miss Andrews said. When she reached Gordon's room. Ford came to the door. He had been nursing Gordon. When Luella entered, Ford and Miss Andrews went out and knew that as they left the room Luella had kneeled at the side of the bed aud put ber lips on John Gordon's hand. She was not prepared for the sight of such a chance in so short a time. But Gordon had thrown himself Into the problem of Hope House from the first day of bis residence with a whole souled abandon that bad told tremen dously on his vitality. The daily strain cn his sympathies, the apparent hope lessness of the effort to remove causes, the unceasing call on heart and mind, had burned like a fever In his life, and when the city campaign came on he was not at all prepared for Its Inces sant demand on physical nnd mental resources. Nevertheless he had flung nil caution aside night after night, even when be felt growing on him the wea riness that, like a leaden weight, hung on heart and brain. The collapse came Inevitably, nnd his condition was crit ical. It was the old story of driving the machine beyond Its p.iw. i s and without sulliclent care for the delie.-.f. mechanism of nerves and li art and tissues. "John." said Luella us she kneeled there, and be felt a tear fall :i the band she held, "you do it d d. uht my love for you, do you? Why did ; o;i not send for me yourself?" "You ore here, Luclhi. That Is all I want." He spoke with great etTorl. He was conscious of a weakness that made hlni cling to any strong nature like a drown ing man. Ills whole Interview with Luellu must be interpreted in the light of that weakness. Ills mind was feel ing vaguely for relief from a dark, hopeless falling down into some un reachable place where Liella could not Trouble From SprajJ w aaca, Dizzy, Dull. Nervous, vsonsiipaied. Dr. Miles Nervine CotJ pieieiy vurea Me, A frequent complication of rheum,. I ! Miles' Nerve and Livtr Mils iu c " j with Restorative Nervine m.-ikt I treatment for such canes. The Nerv, Liver Pills, by their tonic inflnenct ut.,.1 nerves of the stomach, liver an i 'i , : cause tlu-m lo actnaturallr. Tl,,.. . . 'V is readily ch-ansed of the mi.urm ll ' its u-onitrr U u-orlf rif rpcr...... " i hindrance from the complication. I "Abort ten m inths so I s.ir.i;n(j I back. Tins r:m into sciatic tr, ! c j which I have -i'fry.J more orl.-s.l "''I i ins vi.sc,:ivii iu-ii bv chrome "i ,. I I hail s'ci; hc.i.! e-h evtrv d.iv " ,": i '11! ...n. ...... ijiinc ,i i.i;r. , V.ist-- ::. :-. fits ;ui, ! . .i'J"-;M i'oi:i i- i w.is in- u 1 I I- v; ... .......... I : . 1 -'I'll ' ' 1 n 4,1 I ,4 , ' "'" ' : :-cn.-rd a b n, . ! no and a i. , . i in 1 th." i . I macli reh '. I .'. '" . Md i ha.i um i --.' ;' ' :1' ' M 'l l v; . .1 ( '. if - ill), i . 1 . I !in!th. !t-:ii, , .,.:;; .. kill I o( fojj W .'-ur 1:1 ri-foniiiieniii!!" ,. ; . .. i lot.ie public. Kkv. A I; v i . . I. -. - I ..Ml, MJ. '" .vi u n. l, ' -,s sen and eiiarar'. VI. 'Ii I V ' '-I ii - it. nil,) ifiiittues. iuii : 1 : .A on N'-rvo.i .in 1 Heait lne.i-.-.' 'in.'' ' Dr. Miles M.-.!ical Ca. F.llil.ari 'l.' . l' ' rv-i K. v. come. He had not strength ru;, tori II... .t...... I...- ....I.I iuiii ui? . i.ii ui mi i oiu un.:, :s. j-j Flic was terrified as she saw l. t,-. 1 lessncss and thought be n, .:,t 1 liWil.v Clou uiiini:; uie orni I,:;,i,jJ I fi It, slie iifjht to.be there with j i roinise ine, i.iieiin, ni;ii ,iw.;;J ! will be my wife. Let us give i.ursrfJ I to. the cause of childhood v,i.;,i;ii; I ib.cs- these awful p!ni-e" "(Hi, I promise; yes, yes. nJ I will come here i.inl live i.i.njtr- arivwhe!" -if you will not ii;,-"- ni' cinnir to ins mi tui. iin,i .ii'vvvlji To lilt ((INTIXt Kfi NKT WKKK. scents Eight cents a pound what a j-oung woman paidd twelve pounds of flesh. She was thin and weak k paid one dollar for a bottle Scott's Emulsion, and by i'.igt reqrular doses had giii twelve pounds in weight befoi the bottle was finished. Lic:ht cents a pound j cheap for such valuable tcrial. Some pay more, i ' k'ss. some crct nothing their money. You get monev's worth when you Scott's Emulsion. We will send you a ! free. SCOTT & BOWN'i:, C'liEMisisj aoo Pearl Street. New Y 50c. and $i.QQ ; all druggists. Ill Own Wny. "Do you ever have your own nf asked the cynical near relative. "Yes." answered Mr. IWt "Sometimes I have my own wj; not without consulting Henrleta carefully before I make up mr3 Washington Star. Ska Did Her lint. Mrs. Uppmann I musttellyoij that I was displeased at yourenWI lng tnat policeman in tne muw' night. Delia Faith. 01 did ax hlmW parlor, ma'am, hut he wouian. Philadelphia Press. Tho Canal Fair. Contentment's better far, t!"T Than wealth, but Oh. my broiJJ We lust plod cn from uuy tow With neither one nor t'oibtf Philadelphia I'ri'sn, HOW, IXUEEIIf K' fin llDil ltla . .11 "Why. Mahel! I'm Burprl you should read such a shodM! 'Yes, but how can I tell oajj shocking It Is If I don't rew cago American. or . kir. a P :i!ll in ash tin P a 'a pi V ii
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers