- a i ee i memes OA = Al 4 e Vl ¢ ¢ yf O--00-- 1-00-00 - 00-00 | the growing attachment between hes 5 : ATTY = : Man Shall Not | niece and young Paxton. but from the ! WHY INDIANS PAINT. ALF RY D SPEER, x by I.ive By Bread Alone! That is what our Saviour said when the devil tried to tempt him on the mountain WA Ae A 7 Ee AH ET 5 top. No one wants to live by EAL 2 ! bread alone. Good MEgar is 1 ) wanted by all us, and even is preferable to & Ate 14 mm ri oatmeal because &| The Devil Wheatlet is rich § : a i. & ~ Bia | : in ghaten. Ou '| Is Going About meal is starchy. @ > : : i Many people : like a roaring lion, seeking cannot eat Oat- © whom he may devour. But "meal. Anyone don’t let the devil put it into caneatWheatlet. your head that you can buy ] better Mear than is sold at my TT \ 3 TRY IT. : shop. I kill good cattle and al- : If your grocer does not keep it, send us res Soll. ae TOW #8 t his name and your order—we will sce w nys sel as low ns curren that you are supplied. i Ea Bos The juice of the Portugal Port + - : tion, the gay little bride went with the | felt strangely comforted. ‘That night td # en 2 ail Ti Wine grape grown in N. J is thick ET La saves Somerset, Pa... angle an tie ei hg thew met in the im corridor left the blood to dry on his face and and rich same as the juice of pears y that hi a vide é € | Jean slipped something into his hand. never washed it at all, but left it until andother fruits grown here. From 3 THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINECO | > . had entered a trust or combination; we wish This college is now open. Piano, Vo- to assure the public that there is no ruth in | eal, Stringed Instrumental, Parson’s such reports. ave been manufacturin \ : r4 Q 5 ey Dy quarter ofa Mymg Musical Kiedergarten System, Elocu- ry, and have established a reputation for our- | t ion und Physical culture are taught. selves and our machines that is the envy of all 1 tie others. Our * New Home?’® machine has Harmony, Theory and Sight Read- never been rivaled as a family machine—It | { 1g a specialty. For further informa- stands at the head of all High Grade sewing | .. machines, and stands on its owen merits. tion address The “ New Home?’ is the only really HIGH GRADE Sewing Machine ’ on the market. It is not necessary for us to enter into a trust to save our credit or pay any debts as we have no debts to pay. We have never entered into competition with manufacturers of low grade cheap machines that are made to sell regard- less of any intrinsic merits. Do not be de- ceived, when you wantasewing machine don’t send your money away from home; callon a “ New Home’’ Dealer, he cansell you a better machine for less than you can purchase S———— Savor, If there is no dealer near you, te-direct to us. Nyiia gd) roct tons are the most fatal of all dis- eases. THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO ORANGE, MIASS. Ne ork Sar SAR SA FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE Is a Suaranteed Remedy ALL or money refunded. Contains E. A. Cook, Director. EXIT THE CHAPERON eess.By JANE MEREDITH 9 0 aman v 9 ange 0 § hgh 0 0 db an TTIW Ww | Copyright, 1901, by A. S. Richardson PRY PREY TNR VY NRE CY SOR NC) l ooarm o amc 4 40m JOS0R 4 JOE 4 40) Laan 4 aide 0 alate 4 altho J 0 Tw Every one at the Beaconsfield inn had begun to talk about it. This did not make Jim Paxton feel any more cheerful. To be outwitted at every turn by a lynx eyed and indefatigable chaperon was bad enough, but to real- ize that all the boarders at the sum- mer hotel.were enjoying the game was adding insult to injury. Up to the third Saturday in July Mrs. Davidson had been an ideal chap- eron. She averaged three headaches a week, and these demanded seclusion in her darkened room. During the hops she chatted contentedly with other dowagers in supreme indifference to the fact that her charge, Bleanor Mont- gomery, was sitting out every other “extra” on the dim and shadowy porch. She declared that cone chaperon on a sailing party was sufficient; so, as novel on the hotel porch. day in July Mrs. Davidson underwent a curious change. Vigilance was stamped upon her usually placid fea- tures, and she watched Eleanor as if | she expected the gixl to be kidnaped | and held for a ransom. Simultaneous- ly with the appearance of these symp- toms Jim Paxton, joyfully anticipating three weeks of Eleanor’s society, ar- rived at the Inlet. Eleanor, clad in a fetching frock of white mohair, with a spreading collar of decp blue that opened to show her graceful throat, was on the porch when the wagonctte drove up from the sta- tion. The other girls, whose elaborate but diaphanous gowns had yielded to the inexorable sea air, looked limp and colorless beside Eleanor. Jim Paxton recalled with a certain pride of posses- sion that he had never seen her when she was not well dressed. He could imagine her in lustrous velvet presid- ing over his dinner table. with the old Paxton plate and the damask that the Paxtons had for years imported from a certain Dublin firm. “ After he had greeted her, and inci- | moment of his arrival she devoted her- self to foiling his every effort to be i alone with Eleanor. Her headaches | mysteriously disappeared. She assum- i ed an interest in sailing that was dili- | gently supported by a newfangled cure for seasickness. At the hops she no longer chatted in the dowigers’ cor- ner. but her eyes watched Eleanor’s every movement. Clambakes became a source cf delight, and her capacity for long walks discouraged the resourceful Jimmy. Two weeks were almost gone, and the ring still lay in his pocket. He was sitting cn the pier, talking with Jean Brown. Eleanor’'s most intimate friend. There was a twinkle in Jean's eyes, and. taking courage, he poured his trouble in her sympathetic ears, finally working himself up into a fine fury. “Diplomacy, diplomacy,” urged Jean when he stopped at last, only, how- ever, from lack of breath. ‘You're go- ing on the wheeling trip to the Point tomorrow, aren’t you?” “Yes, but Mrs. Davidson even rides a wheel.” “Well, I'm going down to the village now. I believe I can find a cure for her wheeling fad. Personally I think | it’s bad form for a woman of her age | It was a gray cube and it felt like But on the nizht of the third Satur- | pasteboard. He glanced at her curi- ously. “The antidote for an overdose of chaperou. I'll leave the rest to you.” When the bieyclers started out the next morning, something was wrong | with Eleanor’s wheel. With commend- able patience Jim tinkered at it, while Mrs. Davidson, looking remarkably patty in her English made suit, watched the rest of the party steadily growing dimmer down the firm beach road. At last the “rio started, and at the first smooth stretch of road Jimmy of- fered Bleanor a “bax of the Dest” if she’d beat him to the party now round- ing the cliffs. She was off like the wind, never looking back to see whether Jimmy was gaining on her. Once she thought she heard a feminine scream: not unlike Mrs. Davidson's, but she did not dare to look back. When she dashed into the merry group at the Point there was a chorus of questions. “Where is dear Mrs. Davidson?’ And Jimmy Paxton, tear- ing breathlessly after her, explained A Legend of the Red Men Explains the Strange Custom. Once an old Apache Indian when asked the question why his people painted their faces told this little leg- end: “Long ago when men were weak and animals were big and strong a chief of the red men ¢/ho lived in these moun- tains went out to get a deer, for his people were hungry. “After walking all day he saw a deer and shot at it, but the arrow was turned aside and wounded a mountain : lion. which was also after the deer. Wher the lion felt the sting of the ar- row, he jumped up and bounded after the man. who ran for his life. “He was a'most exhausted. and when he felt his strength giving way he fell to the ground, calling on the big bear, who, you know, is the grandfa- ther of men, to save him. “The big bear heard the call and saw that to save the man he had to act quickly. so he scratched his foot and gprinizled his blood over the man. “Now. vou must know that no ani- mal will cat of the bear or taste of his blood. So when tke lion reached the man he smelled the blood and turned away. but as he did so his foot scraped it peeled off. “Where the claws of the lion scraped it off there were marks that turned brown in the sun, and where the blood stayed on it was lighter. Now all men paint their faces that way with blood and scrape it off in streaks when they hunt or go to war.” THE CARIBS OF DOMINICA. Fierce Savages Who Have Dropped Their Man Eating Ways. A recent colonial report on the Caribs of Dominica is interesting. Very mys- terious is the origin of the fierce sav- ages, now almost extinct, who were in possession of the smaller West Indian jslands when the first white man burst “into that silent sea.” They showed a distinct Mongolian character, and it would be hard to distinguish a Carib in- | port Grape Wine Producer in America. The figst native wine solid and used in San Francisco and Sacra- mento was from Speer’s Passaic N. J, vineyards, was shippe around Cape Horn before there was any railroad to California, and are now being used by physi- cians and first families there as the richest and best wine to be had California pears you can squceze water as from a sponge; so with all fruits grown in Califor- nia; wnile those grown in New Jersey are solid in substance— less juice but thick and richer. The New Jersey apples, for instance, make a cider that was always popular the world over. If you want a wine for sickness or for entertainments don’t take cheap, watery wines but choose a fiis. class old, full bodied, high grade wine from Speer's Passaic vine- yards. _ Sold by Druggists. / fant from a Chinese child. Some twen- | ty years ago a Chinaman who had drifted to Dominica declared the Caribs to be his own people and married a pure bred Carib woman. The resultant child showed no deviation from the na- tive type. » ™ : shamelessly that Mrs. Davidson's tire . STEVENS RIFLES AND PISTOLS remedies recognized by emi dentally and perforce a numberof oth- | 1534 Leen na at the first bend in Jos hy i Se dh ARE GUARANTEED { er people of no consequence whatever oad 1 , eating ways, but in the sixteenth cen: 9 ARANTEED TO BE nent physicians as the for | er peor q vhatever | the road and she'd decided to go back. | gor M6 FAL CG Ce hinich main in SAFE, DURABLE AND ACCURATE, Kidney and Bladder troubles. THE FAVORITE RIFLE PRICE Shcand $200, _ Eugene Field’s Views on Ambition and Dys- pepsia. {is an accurate rifle and puts every shot where you hold it. “+-'ht 44 pounds. t Made in three cali: : Rim Fire. 22, .25 and .32 “Dyspepsia,’’ wrote Eugene Field, L PRICE: “often incapacitates a man for endeavor . Ro. (7, Plain Sights, . . $8.00 S04 Sonchizfies Srinenltnay the fire of A ES ambition.” ough great despite his i Mo. 13, Target Sights, . . 8.50 complaint Field suffered from indiges- § tion all his life. A weak, tired stomach can’t digest your food. It needs rest. You can only rest it by the use of a preparation like Kodol, which re- lieves it of work by digesting your food. Rest soon restores it to its normal tone. Strengthening, Tue J. Stevens Aris axe Tool Co. Satisfying, 4 20. po A nvigorating. g 0 2p Ber {D> CHICOPEE FALLS, MASS, Preparcd only by E. C. DEWITT & CO., Chicago. The $1. bottle contains 2% times tho 50c. siza, a ~usilr BYE. 1H. MILLER, Where these rifles are not carried in : stock hy dealers we will send, express t prepaid on receipt of price. Send stamp for catalog describing complete line and containing valuable information to * shooters. : B. WILLIAMS CG. FROSTBUIRG, MD, Cr ape. place to buy Sagar DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. =. ENL cohen from his point of view, he retired to his room. The first thing he did was to take from his grip a small package wrapped in heavy white paper. Next came tissue paper of faintest blue, then a deep blue case. just the color of Eleanor’s eyes, and last a stone that blazed against its mest of satin like a comet in a starless heaven. “It’s nervy, sure enough, to bring this down,” he said, turning the ring to the light. “But I.don’t believe she’s Sn AST run TY eh % vi A Ny W FE VU Hi HE WAS SITTING ON THE PIER TALKING When the Paxton-Montgomery wed- ding occurred, the groom did the un- conventional thing. He presented the maid of honor with a souvenir of the occasion. for, as he explained: “Jenn, you gave me a five cent box of tacks once, beside which this mea- sly sunburst pales into insignificance.” A Story of John Randolph. The Philadelphia Times tells a good story of Join Randolph, that descend- ant of Pocahontas who figured so bril- lantly in congress as a representative of Virginia. He was once accosted on the piazza of a hotcl by a young blade who had been boasting of his acquaint- ance with Randolph and who thought he could bluff the Virginian inte speak- ing to him before the admiring guests of the hestelry. He planted himself | befcre Randolph and saluted him with: “Good morning. senator!” “Morning!” replied Randolph with- out the faintest sign of recognition. “Fine day. senator.” “X% fact apparent to everybody. sir?’ came from the Virginian. “Br — what is going on. senator?” persisted the cad,, flushing under the rebuffs of the senator. “1 nin. sir.” Wild with indignation, the accoster made a detour. met Randolph face to face on another part of the porch and, sneaking. contemptible puppy!” “I alwavs do.” said Randolph mildly search of human food, and from Porto Rico alone are said to have taken more than 5,000 men to be eaten. Though Spaniards, Frenchmen, Dutchmen, ne- groes, or Arrowaks, were all meat to them, yet these Caribs seem to have shown preference for certain’ national- ities. Davis, for instance, in his “His- tory of the Caribby Islands,” tells us that ‘the Caribbeans have tested of all the nations that frequented them and affirm that the IFrench are the most delicate and the Spaniards are hardest of digestion.” Laborde also, in one of his jaunts in St. Vincent, appears to have overtaken on the road a com- municative Carib who was beguiling the tedium of his journey by gnawing at the remains of a boiled human foot. This gentleman only ate Arrowaks. “Christians,” he said. “give me the bellyache.” Queer Qualification. The enthusiasm of the thoroughgoing lover of Browning takes some surpris- ing turns. The author of “In a Tuscan Garden” tells a story concerning Dr. Furnival, one of the founders of the Browning society. A young relative of the Englishwo- man in London was looking out at one time for bachelor chambers in a block of flats. The secretary of the company to whom they belonged intimated that lishwoman’s name as one and Dr. Fur- nival for the other. Victor Liniment Takes Soreness out of Wounds »nd Sprains, destroys fire in Scalds and Burns, Cures Croup in children, relieves Rheumar rm, and removes all Callous or {ard Lumps, Felons, Lumbage, Pieurisy, Sciatica, and all deep r.”—Chic id a DETER Se : : re SALISBURY, PENNA. | o Wb mae A pice new stock just ol Mrs. Davidson had been abroad dur-" | gv it the better.”—Chicago | ynd I didw't wish her to feel mean || Springfield, Mass. Office corner Grant and Union Streets. | ceived oj npthey inter and knew nothing of over it.—Smart Set. I RO IATE Foo