The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, February 10, 1898, Image 7

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RAVE HIS LIFE TO SAVE ANOTHER
Yonung Man Drowns After Rescuingas
3 Companion from Death.
: A story of splendid heroism in s
youth who gave his life to save that of
"his friend comes from Iraserburgh,
Im Scotland. The hero of the story is
8t. Jonn Dick Cunyngham, son of
Lieutenant Colonel Dick Cunyngham,
V. C,, of the Second Battalion Gorden
Highlanders, stationed at Aldershot.
Young Cunyngham and the master of
Saltoun (son of Lord Saltoun) left
Philorth together, and went to the sea
to bathe. Evidently the lads were unac
quainted with the treacherous nature
of the sands at the point at which they
entered the water, for they walked out
‘at once to easy swimming depth. Sud
denly both found themselves in deep
water, a strong undercurrent having
drawn them Into one of the many
“pots” or pools which constitute the
ehief danger:of the place.
To the lad Cunyngham ‘the situation
was not desperate, but the young mas
ter of Saltoun was quickly exhausted
and was on the point of giving up the
struggle. when his companion, forget:
ful of his own danger and eager only
#0.save his friend, devoted all his re
maining strength to the work of res.
cue.. After a desperate struggle Cun
yagham succeeded in getting his friend
into shallow water, through which the
fatter dragged himself in a terribly ex:
hausted condition t6 the beach.
Turning to thank his rescuer, the
master of Saltoun was horrified to find
shat he bad disappeared. Frantic with
excitement, he ran as fast as Lis condi:
tion would permit to some fishermen
who were working some distance along
the beach, but although they lost no
time in making search for the lad no
trace of him could be found. He had
givenall his strength to save his friend,
and the cruel seq had sucked him back
te his death.—London Mail.
No Klondike for Me!
Thus says E. Walters, Le Raysville,
Pa., who grew (sworn to) 252 bushels
Balzer’s corn per acre. That means 23,-
200 bushels on 100 acres at 30c a bushel
equals $7,660. That 4s better than a
prospective gold mine. Salzer pays $400
in gold for best name for his 17-inch
corn and oats prodigy. You can win.
~ Beed potatoes $1.50 a Bbl.
SEND THIS NOTICE AND 10 CexTs IN STAMPS
to John A. Salzer 0;
Crosse, Wis.,, and get free their sect
catalogue, and 11 farm seed samples,
including above corn and oats, surely
worth $10, to get a start. A.C. 5
STATE OF OHIO, CrrY OF TOLEDO,
Lucas County,
FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he isthe
geaior partner of the firm of F. J. CHUNBY &
doing businessinthe City of Toledo,County
So State aferesaid, and that said firm will pa’
tho sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for eac
every case of CATARRH that cannot be
ang by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE.
FRANK J: CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
~+-—} presence, this 6th day of December,
SEAL A.D. 188," LEASON,
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Fe arr and
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
. of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
es URENEY & Co., Toledo, O¢
sod by Dru
's Famil Bile oe the best.
rr err
rmanently cured. No Sporn nervous. |
age of Dr. ine's Great
bottle and treatise free
Arch St.,Phila..Pa.
Brats os te
orve
B R. H. torer. 34 Tad. 881
1 cannot speak too highly of Piso’s Cure for
Consumption.—Mrs; FRANK Mosgs, 2156 W. 22d
Bt, New Youk, Oct. 29,
A man’s idea of tough luck is to play
ecards with a woman and win every
time. when there is nothing at stake.
Weak Stomach
Indigestion Causes Spasms-—
-Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cures.
“I have always been troubled with a
_ wank stomach and had spasms caused by
indigestion, I Bevo sinken several bottles
of Hood’s Sarsapa a and have not been
bothered with Spasms, and I advise anyone
troubled with dyspepsia to take Hood’s
S8amsaparilla.” Mss, HortoN, Prattsburg,
New York. Remember
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
~ Isthe best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier
: Hood's Hood's Pills cu eure Nausea, indigestion. ec.
$1.50 :
POTATOE Ri
t B
PEA
Eek a
et Le ples,
10e. postage. J
i For Poultry, half cost of
oh Netting. Also farm,yard,
: cemetery fences. Freight
: paid. Catalogue free.
+ FENGING = 43 F. 8t.. Atlanta. Ga.
~ Ladies Wanted.
: TO TRAY Lio old established house.
en Formagent sition Su #3 month and all expenses
BPW. Locust St., Philadelphia.
. An Afflicted Mother,
From the Times, Paw Paw, IT.
A resident of this town who has lost t¥wo
children during the past six years, by Vio«
lent deaths has been utterly prostrated by
the shock, and seriously sick as a result of
it. One child (aged 9) Yas killed by a oy-
clone in ‘C0 while at school; another, three
yours later was run over by a Burlington R.
train. That griefs and misfortunes may
so prey on the mind as to lead to serious
physical disorders has been well demon-
strated in this case. As a resuit of them,
her health was shattered and she has been
a constant sufferer since 1890. Her princi-
pal trouble has been neuralgia of thestom-
ach which was very painful, and exhibited
all the symptoms of ordinary neuralgia,
nervousness and indigestion. Physicians
did her no good whatever. She was dis-
couraged and abandoned all hope of get-
ting well. Finally, however, a certain well
knowh pill was recommended (Dr. Will-
iams’ Pink Pills for Pale" People).
She supplies] herself with a quantity of
them and had not taken them two weeks
when she noticed a .marked improvement
A Constant Sufferer. ¥
ifn her condition. 8he continued taking
the pills until seven or eight boxes had
been consumed and she considered herself
entirely cured. She can now eat all kinds
of food, which is something she has not
been able to do for years. Bhe is not trou-
bled in the least with nervousness as she was
during the time of her stomach troubles,
She is now well and all because of Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People a com-
plete cure has been made,
If any one would like to hear more of
the details of hersuffering and relief gained
by the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
Pale People they may be obtained prob-
ably, by writing the lady direct. She is
one of our well known residents, Mrs. Ellen
A. Oderkirk. Paw Paw. Ill,
Immigration from Europe.
That we Hve in an age of wonder is
proved by the bare statement of figures
with regard to the immigration from
Hurope to this country during the pres-
ent century. Statistics previous to
1820 were not kept, but it is estimated
that between 1789 and the last named
year the immigration from Europe to
the United States did not exceed 250,
1000. In 1820 the Government began a
systematic collection of data with re-
‘gard to immigration, and from that
time to the close of 1806 ¥7,5344,692 peo-
ple came from Europe ‘and were wel-
comed on our shores. These figures do
not include the immigration to British
America, to Mexico, Central or Bouth
America, but solely to the United
States, The smallest number of immi-
grants during recent years was 177,820
in 1879, the largest 623,084 in 1892; in
1896 the immigration was 343,267. No
such movement of population has ever
been known in history. The migration
of the German nations over the terri-
tory of the Roman empire did not com-
prise more-than 4,000,000 of people and
covered 400 years; the exodus of the
Jews from Egypt was with 600,000
able-bodied men, or counting flve to
each family, about 3,000,000 of people.
Compa. pared with the exodus from Eu-
rope the depopulation of Goshen was a
trifie.
Ontwitted the Laird.
In the absence of a family, says
Spare Moments, the private grounds of
a certain Scottish lord were often used
by the natives of the two neighboring
villages, as thereby a saving of fully a
mile wag effected. agi,
Occasionally, teo, when his lordship
was at home, attempts were made to
“run the blockade,” for, whenever any
trespasser was caught by his lordship
he had po obey the command to “go
back thé “way he had come.”
A locdl hawker, when gautiously
wheeling his barrow along the forbid:
«den path one day, happened to see his
lordship befose the latter saw him, and
coolly turning the barrow round sat
down with his back to the dreaded
laird, who, coming up, gave him a se-
vere reprimand and then ordered hin
to “wheel about and go back by: toe
road by which he had come.”
The wily hawkerglid as he was bid-
den, thereby turning his barrow in the
| direction in which he wished to go, and
so effectually outwitting the unsus
pecting laird.
The Question.
“And,” continued the physician, as he
was about to leave, ‘eat only what
agrees with you.”
“But, doctor, how am I to know
whether it agrees with me until after 1
eat it?’—Yonkers Statesman.
FEIIITIIIIITITIITIINY
AFTER NEARLY
Fi
ST. JACOBS oIL
Is the Master Cure for
RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, |
SCIATICA,
frrrorrrToTrTITIOOL
LUMBACO.
“Brrr
i Wafts the answer,
Good Night Song.
Good night, little trees!”
My little man says when, the Sandman
comes.
And the soft-swaying breeze
In the listening trees
“Good night, little man,
Good night!”
“Good night, little star!”
My little man says when the Sandman
comes.
And a bright tle star,
In the heavens so far,
Blinks the answer, ‘‘Good night, little man,
Good night!
—R. E. Phillips, in St. Nicholas.
The Toad and Its Skin.
The toad sheds its skin at certain
periods, the old one coming off,leaving
a new one, which has been formed
underneath in its stead. It does not
give its cast-off coat away to any
poorer toad, and, there are no toads
dealing in second-hand . raiment.
Neither does it leave its cast-off
jacket on the ground after the fashion
of the shiftless snake. It does none
of these things, but swallows the
overcoat at one mouthful, converting
his stomach into a portmanteau.
Marvel of the Basket Trick.
One of the most startling of all the
exhibitions given by the stage magi-
cian is the ‘‘basket trick.” Formerly
it was done only by the expert Indian
fakirs, but in recent years western
magicians also have done it. A child
is placed in a basket in front of the
spectators. Then the magician thiusts
his sword through the baskdt again
and again, drawing it out covered
with blood. The child screams fran-
tically for some time and then -stops-—
as if it had been killed. = When the
basket is opened it is found to be
empty and the child appears suddenly
among the spectators. All this is
done with such an aspect of reality
that it often frightens the timid ones
among the crowd, and yetit is simple
enough.
One side of the basket is double.
After closing the basket the magician
pretends to turn "it over on its side.
He really turns over only a part of it.
The bottom and one thickness of the
double side are left as they were, the
other thickness becomes the bottom of
the basket in its new position, what
was the opposite side of this becomes
the top, and, the old bottom is lying
free upon the ground, with the child
upon it, outside the basket.
old bottom and the child upon it are
now under the role of the magician.
While the magician is turning the
basket back to itsoriginal position and
running his sword throughit the child
escapes into the crowd. The blood on
the sword is from a sponge in the
basket.—Chicago Record.
Thirty Miles for an Acorn.
Fred A. Ober contributes, an article
to St. Nicholas entitled ‘‘A Bird's
Storehouse, or the Carpenter-Bird.”
Mr. Ober tells of the California woed-
pecker that bores holes in trees, and
then fills them up with acorns. He
adds:
Down in Mexico there lives a similar
woodpecker, who stores his nuts and
acorns in the hollow stalks of the
yuccas and magueys. These hollow
stocks are separated by joints into
several cavities, and the sagacious
bird has soniehow found this out, and
bores a hole at the upper end of each
joint,and another atthe lower, through
which tn extract the acorns when
wanted. Then it fills up the stalks
solidly, and leaves its stores there
| secure no aid in
But this |
tin- chunk, ” Endless Mountain of
the Red Man. The land of which this
God’s acre is a part has never been
bartered since "William Penn bought
it from the aborigines. It is part of
the glebe of ninety acres granted by
the oh in a patent dated March 2,
1744,to the handful of staunch Scéteh-
Ir ish settlers,” who formed the Big
Spring Ptesbyteri ian chureh. More
than five generations sleep among the
limestone boulders of this quiet spot.
Among the multitudes who here
wait the resurrection mor ning are a
score of soldiers of the wars of the
Revolution and 1812. - Of these is one
whose faithful service in troublous
days earned for him the title of ‘“The
Patriotic Blacksmith,”” Early in the
great struggle for independence, Wil-
liam Denning enlisted in the patriotic
ranks. For some months he shared
the hardships of Washington's army,
crossing the Delaware on the memor-
able Christmas night of 1776, and
meeting the foe at Princeton ten days
later.
But Lieutenant Denning’s
effective aid was rendered with the
sledge, rather than the sword.
Throughout the long, unequal con-
flict, but particularly before France,
in the spring of 1777, sent two vessels
loaded with arms to the colonists, the
patriotic leaders were sorely straitened
to equip the men who rallied in de-
fence of their dearest interests. At
every available point throughout the
colonies shops were established for
manufacturing weapons of war.
From childhood William Denning
had been a cunning worker in iron.
At his ingenious touch the rigid
metal became a facile agent obedient
-to his skillful fashionings for use or
beauty. Thismanual dexter ity caused
his transfer, probably early in 1777,
to Philadelphia, where a band of
artificers was placed under his charge.
Howe's approach sent them to Carlisle
and Mount Holly, Penn. Here, with
ore from the Sonth mountain, ILieu-
tenant Denning forged bayonets, gun
barrels, ete. Here he accomplished
what is believed to be the sole suc-
cessful enterprise of that kind any-
where —the making of wrought iron
cannon. The courage, skill and ex-
hausting labor required for this work
can only be appreciated by consider-
ing the meagre mechanical appliances
at his command. For a time he could
this experiment, his
helpers being deterred by the intense
heat required to weld the massive bars
and bands. Upon a section of a tree
he practiced his men” in wielding the
sledge until confident they would
strike in regular order, then when the
metal was ready the five men plied the
great sledge in rapid succession. He
succeeded in forging a number of four
and six pounders which did good ser-
vice against theinvaders. Hisefforts,
however, to complete a twelve- -pounder
failed on account of the great heat re-
quired, which he described asso in-
tense as to melt the lead buttons from
his clothing. It is said that this un-
finished pisce lies where he left it, at
either Carlisle or Mount Holly, Un-
less this be so, oblivion has hidden all
‘trace of Denning’s cannon.
It was long believed that the Tower
of London held one, taken by the
British at Brandywine, but Rabert T.
Lincoln, when minister to England,
searched there in vain for any stol
trophy.
While the intrepid smith, in the
white heat of his forge, wrought his
patriotism into-the glowing metal, the
British government songhtig vain to
barter large emoluments for skill.
He elected to continue sharing the
privations and vicissitudes of his
own people. :
We may wader if ever to him in
hishumble home on the.Connodoguinet
creek it sdemed an irony upon his
devotion that, in the pinching poverty
of a life prolonged far beyond four-
score years, the government - whose
needs absorbed the powers of his
earlier manhood delayed all financial
or
most
until ‘needed, safe from the depreda- recognition of his fidelity until that
tions of any other thievish bir d or
four- footed animal.
- The first place ini which this curious
Babit was observed was on a hill in
the midst of a desert. The hill was
covered with yuccasand magueys, but
the nearest oak trees were thirty
miles away; and so, it was calculated,
these industrious birds had to make a
flight of sixty miles for each acorn
stowed thus in the stalks!
An observer of birds remarks:
“There are several strange features to
be noticed in these facts; the provi-
inct which prompts this bird
to lay by stores of provisions for the
winter; the great distance traversed
to select a kind of food so unusual for
its race; and its seeking, in a place
soremote from its natural abode, a
storehouse | so remarkable.”
Can instinct alone teach, or Have
experience and reason taught, these
birds that, far better than the bark of
trees or crevices in rocks,or any other
hiding-place are these hidden cavities
they make for themselves within the
hollow stems of distant plants?
This we cannot answer. . But we do
know that one of the most remarkable
| birds in our country is this California
woodpecker, and that he is well en-
titled to his Mexican name of El Car-
pintero—the Carpenter-Bird.
The Patriotic Blacksmith.
- On a border of the quaint old town
of Newville, in the beautiful Cumber-
| lan valley, Pennsylvania, lies a church-
yard of more than ordinary interest to
‘the antiquarian. Far off upon the
“| South mountain the eye may trace the
: forming Doubl
life waned toward its close.
For sixty years the grave of the
artificer was nnmarked, notwithstand.
ing repeated efforts of patriotic New-
ville citizens toward Some fitting
memorial. - In 1890 the ptate of Penn-
sylvania honored herself by placing
above his ashes a massive monument
of dark Barre granite. Surmounting
the die, which rises from =a double
base, is’a cannon, pointing eastward,
havipg four cannon balls piled about
it. Beneath this is a bas-relief medal-
ion of a primitive smithic forge, and
below, this inscription: ‘‘The Stage of
Pennsylvania Erected this Monument
to the Memory of the Patriotic Black:
smith, who Forged Cannon for the
American Revolution. Born 1736.
Died 1830.”> Upon the polished face
of the upper base appears the name,
William Denning.—New York Ob-
server. :
A Greedy Little Fish.
The little fish known as miller’s
thumb—the fresh water sculpin—is.
one of the natural checks on the over-
production of trout and salmon. Tt
ea!s the eggs and the young fish. It
is found in all trout waters as fast as
examined. It is very destiuctive.- Af
an experiment once made in the aqua.
rium of the United States fish com-
mission in Washington a miller’:
thumb about four and one-half inches
long ate ata single meal, and all within
a minute or two, 21 litle trout, each
from three-quarters of an inch to an
inch in length,
th some of the farming districts of
China igs are ‘harnessed |
made to’ draw
PEARLS 3 OF, THOUGHT.
Me who forasess calamities suffers
them twice over.—Porteus.
“Getting into flebt is gettingrinto . a
tanglesome net.——Franklin.
our actions make us worthy of. —Chap-
man.
To live is not to live for one’s gelf
alone ; let us help one another. —Me-
nander.
Accuracy is the twin brother of hon-
esty : inaccuracy, of dishonesty.—C.
Simmons.
When we are out of sympathy with
the young, then I think our work in
this world is over. —G. Macdonald.
Make but few explanations. . The
character that cannot defend itself is
not worth vindicating. —F. W. /Rob-
ertson.
Let us be of good cheer, remember-
ing that the misfortunes hardest to
bear are those which never come.—
»Lowell.
If there is anything that keeps the
mind open to angel visits and repels
the ministry of evil, it is a pure hu-
man love.—N. P. Willis.
‘When a man has been guilty of any
vice or folly, the best atonement he
can make for it is to warn others not
to fall into the like.—Addison.
The meanest, most contemptible
kind of praise is that which ‘first
speaks well of a man and then guali-
fies it with a ‘‘but.”—Henry Ward
Beecher.
Let yourselves never think that you
grow liberal in faith by believing less 4
always be sure that the true liberality
of faith can only come by believing
more. —Phillips Brooks.
Choice and service—these were de-
manded of the Israelites, these are
demanded of you, these only. Choice
and service-—in these are the whole of
life. —Mark Hopkins, D. D.
All the possible charities of life
ought to be cultivated, and when we
can neither be brethren nor friends
let us be kind neighbors and pleasant
acquaintances.—Edmund Burke.
Where God becomes a donor, man
becomes a debtor. The debt of sin
is mercifully discharged for him, that
the debt of service might be willingly
discharged by him.—Thomas Secker.
Tt is a sad thing to begin life with
low conceptions of it. It may not be
possible for a young man to measure
life, but it is possible to say: ‘I am
resolved to put life to its noblest and
best use.” —T. T. Munger.
Men avho look on nature and their
fellow men, and cry that all is dark
and gloomy, are in the right ; but the
sombre colors are reflections from
their own jaundiced eyes and hearts.
The real hues are delicate and need a
clearer vision. Charles Dickens,
ICE SKATES oF GLASS.
Much Faster Than Steel Blades, and Ex
tremely Slippery.
“I believe the death knell of metal
and wooden skates has been rung.’
said one of the largest skate manufac-
turers to the writer recently.
‘“‘Several practical inv entors have
been experimenting on these articles
a skate made of glass, hardened by a
recently discovered process tothe con-
sistency of steel. The entire skate is
‘of this substance. the upper part re-
sembling a slipper, opew behind, with
u split ‘lacé-up’ heel-cap.
‘Among several advantages stated
are, that they are much faster than
steel blades, and so extremely slip-
as well over rough, snow-covered ice
as upon smooth, and also easily over
inequalities, broken twigs and other
obstructions. They are made very
sharp, and owing to their extreme
hardiness, it is impossible to blunt
them; and, unlike steel skates, they
never want grinding, and cannot rust.
“These ‘crystal’ skates are really
beautiful in appearance, being nearly
transparent; the substance also has,
while in the liquid state, been various-
ly colored. They have already been
privately tested. A famous skating
champion recently tried a pair at the
Niagara ice rink, using mahogany
colored ones, to avoid attracting atten-
tion, the time being hardly ripe for
exhibition. | A private trial has been
made in’ Paris at an ice rink espe-
cially hired. for the occasion,
ladies-«emong, them a celebr ated con-
tinental lady skater — taking part;
their skatés were colored blue, crim-
son, brown, etc., to match their cos?
tumes.”’—Pottery Gazette.
The Secret of New York's Greainess.
Ernest Ingersoll writes aa article
for St. Nicholas on the Greater New
York, his paper being" ent: tled *Rea-
soning Out a Metropolis.” Mr. In-
gersoll says: The 'secr et of New
York’s proud greatness—why she is
and alw..ys will be the Imperial City
of North America, in wealth and in-
fluence and commercial power, even
though some other town may some
inhabitants is found in the word trans-
portation.
New York stands in the best place
for the distribution of people and
things; the raw material for manu-
facturers, the products of mills and
furnaces and shops, the yield of farms
and mines and forests, and the goods
going and coming across the seas.
roads open out south, west, north and
northeast, like the folds of a fan, and
the resources of a great country flow
naturally along them toward her
coffers. In front of her is the ocean
gateway, open to the fleets of the
world.
New York is New Yark Yecaush she
stands where the wealth of the New
World and the treasnres he Old
1 ‘World most easilyand naiaially eh
We inherit nothing teuly, but whai
place.
for years past, and the latest result is’
pery that they will run almost equally
several |;
time in the future count a few more.
Valleys that form easy and natural |
No. 088,
This hij hiy Pol-
ished solid oaks Be
drawer is
furnished with
the best locks,
"$3.39
buys this exact
piece of furni-
ture which Je:
tails for $8.00.
(Order now and avoid disappointment. )
Drop a postal for our litho hed
Carpet Catalogue which shows all es
With exact distinctness. 1f carpet sam-
{le 28 are wanted, mailus fc. in stamps.
hy pay your focal dealer 60 per cent.
more than our prices when you can buy
of the mill? The great household educa-
tor—our new 112 page special catalogue
of Furniture, Draperies, Bamps, Stoves,
./ Mirrors, Pictures, Bedding,
Refrigera) oS, Baby Carriages is also
yours for the asking. Again we ask,
why enrich your local dealer when you
can buy of the maker? Both cata-
rgd Lied] you nothing, and we pay
Julius Hines & Son
BALTIMORE, MD.
Please Mention This Paper,
Land and a Living
Are best and cheapest in the New South. iand
83 to $5 an acre, Easy terms. Good achools
and churches. No blizzards. No cold waves,
New illustrated paper, “Land and a Living,” 3
months for 10 sents n stamp, W. C. RINBAR-
BON, G. P. A,, Queen Crescent Route, |
Cincinnati.
The Austrian Minister of War has
{ssued orders for dogs to be trained for
service as messengers and sentinels,
and also to assist in discovering the
wounded on the field of battle.
To Cure A Oold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 2c.
There is an immense garden in China
that embraces an area of 50,000 square
miles. It is all meadow land, and is
filled with lakes, ponds and canals.
The Castle of Heidelburg
largest in Germany. -
is the
Chew Star Tobacco—The Best,
Smoke Sledge Cigarettes.
In Cheshire about 31,000 tons of cheese
are made annually.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for shikiren
leething. softens the gums, reduc ng inflamma:
ays pain, cures wind cole. Z5c.a bottle,
Parisian Lady Wears Men's Clothes
Mine.- Dieulafoy is one of the best
known women in Paris and one of .the
most - famous archaeologists in the
world. She discovered the superb ruins
of the Temple of Darius, now in the
Louvre, at Paris, and for this notable
achievement the French gave her the
decoration of the Legion of Honor and
the privilege of wearing men’s clothes
at all times. She avails herself of this
freedom; 4nd is said to wear the mosi
stylish trousers, coats and hats in Par
fs. She and her husband have the same
tailor. The couple are thoroughly coa:
genial, and have a most beautiful home
and salon, where the savants assemble
and many brilliant discussions take
Mme. Dieulafoy wears short
hair and conducts herself like a man,
though showing many little fesainins
ays.
PROFITABLE SPECULATION 1 GERTAIATY
OU DEP
We acce pt 3 $100 and skin hl i 38 per
Shes bil dopaeitors beatnet Joss. WH KELER d&
WHEEL, +» Room 63, 29 Broadway. N.Y,
09300000000880088000008
5 FOR 14 CENTS
We wish jogain 180,000 5 new ous
om and hence
oe, Pr £. 1s Day Rudich, »
o . Ear ring Turnip,
* Earliest. Red Beet,
“ Bismarck Cucumber,
“ Ques Victoria Lettuce,
0 londyke Mo lom,
"of Gia Onion, \
*“ Brilliant ¥ hihi Seeds, 1bo
Werth $1.00, for 14 cents. ¢
bove 10 pkgs. worth 1.00, nl
Aboye Io Pir 3 with eur
160
1bc
3k
of this notice and
We invite your trade o ead
1zer's
G A a Bbi. eaters
“JOHN A. SALZER BEED C6. Li CROSSE, we
“B16 FOUR” ROUTE.
BEST LINE TO AND FROM
. CINCINNATI,
Direct connect) oLiens, In Central Ux Union Station
INDIANAPOLIS,
PEORIA, TERRE HAUTE.
ST. LOUIS,
Avoiding the Tunnel.
“ SOUTHWESTERN LIMITED.”
Buffet Parlor Cars, Wagner Sleeping
* Cars, Elegant Coaches and
Dining Cars,
Be sure your tickets read via “BIG FOUR.”
E. 0. McCormick, Warren J. Lynch,
Pass, Traiiic Mgr. Ass’t Gen’l Tkt. Agt
= 7 CINCINNATI, 0.
AND TUMOR
croc
re
without ie 2111 or pain.
©“ All forms of BLOOD DISEASES
thoroughly eradicated from the system. . Six
rovouily or Treatment for $10. Book of
Information free.
NATURAL REMEDY CO. , Westfold, Mass.
PATENTS
E. Coleman, E -at-Law and Solicit
0 Felents. 02 ¥ St.
references in all parts of the AE
PEEREET CLAIMS.
; rine
CSyhia Ah
NAT O ET LE FOR YOU.
‘200 cent. profit and a chance to win hundreds of
fy A
d and a Fine Gol For parti-
: enderson.
W.T.Cheathawn, Jr., Bi
PNU 68
d Watch.
N.C