Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, June 13, 1895, Image 3

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    ISK. BARTON'S PATIENT.
y°u don't even
know her name!" said
vf( Mrs. Itenwlck. "My
<• V JW/ ||3 dear Kenneth, there
H never was anything
SO ridiculous."
UKJH ' jflS The captain of ar
tillery shifted his feot
ITT It 1 * a moro com for ta
\ 1 R° sition on
"Of course I know
ef\ * ier nam e," said he;
ill " anc * a ver y pretty
° nC Perry—
"But who is it you are talking
about?" said pretty Joyce, who hail
been preparing a mustard paste for her
brother's chest.
Capt. Renwick answered promptly;
"My sweetheart!"
"Kenneth, dou't be ridiculous!" said
his mother, somewhat tartly.
"The sweetest, prettiest blossom in
all the Adirondack wilderness!"' pur
sued Kenneth. "Tho fairest of—Cat
nip tea! I declare, Joyce, I won't drink
it. What do you take me for?"
"It's the best thing in the world for
a cold on the chest," said Mrs. Ren
wick. "Oh, if you had only kept away
from that camping party!"
"I* mistook her for the boatman's
daughter the flrst time," said Capt.
Renwick. "She—"
"Kenneth, dou't talk—please d'ont
talk!" urged his mother. "It's the
worst thing you could possibly do, with
your lungs all congested, and—"
"But I must talk!" said the captain.
"Consider, mother, Joyce hasn't heard
a word about it. She only came last
night. * Fancy, Joyce, my being fool
enough to mistake her for a boatman's
daughter!"
"Why, aren't boatmen's daughters as
nice and ladylike as anyone?" said
Joyce, readjusting her apron ribbons.
"Oh, but tliis boatman lives in a per
petual state of shirt sleeves!" said Ren
wick; "and he is a living fountain of
tobacco juice and talks abominable
grammar through his nose. And his
wife is a low class of Meg Merrilies,
who takes too much bad whisky when
ever she has an opportunity. How 1
ever made such a blunder I can't imag
ine. Hut Jenkins sent mo up to the
lake head to hire a boat, and when I
saw her sitting there among the water
lilies, I jumped at once to the conclu
sion that this was the boat to hire.
'My good girl,' sa3*s I—fancy my idiocy!
—'if you will just row me up to Needle
point, and call for me again in the
evening, I'll give you a dollar.'"
"And she?" said Joyce.
"Rowed me up, of course. I wish
you could have seen the way In which
she handled the oars. Hut it was
Dolph, the tobacco-soaked old boat
man. who called for me at sunset
'Why didn't you send your daughter?'
says I. 'lt wasn't my darter,' says he;
'it was Miss Berry.' Well, then, I met
her at tho picnic. We talked together
half the evening. She is as beautiful
as she is graceful, and as intelligent as
ihe is beautiful."
"Did you apologize?" asked Joyce.
"Of course I apologized," said Capt
Kenneth. "And we had a good laugh
over it She had been after water
lilies, she said. She paints 'em in
water colors. lam to have one when
thoy are linished. Joyce, you must
!<n nv her. She is a beauty. And she
dances like a svlph, and sings like
l'atti, and—"
"Nonsense!" said Joyce. "A farm
er's daughter, seen through the big
end of the opera glass! You were al
wys a victim to delusions, Kenneth."
"My dear Joyce, I assure vou—"
"Children, children!'' remonstrated
Mrs. Renwick, piteously, "do have a
little common sense. Kenneth, you
know you ought not to talk. Joyce,
d >:i t you hear how hoarse your broth
er is? If pneumonia should set in after
this exposure—"
Capt. R. awick made an expressive
gri'.r.ice. Joyce looked a little appre
hensive.
".Mamma," said she, "you always
were a pessimist. It's only a cold that
ails Kenneth."
"Hut it is settling on his lungs, my
dear," said Mrs. Renwick, plaintively.
"And out hero in tho wilderness there
isn't even a drug store short of ilfteen
miles. l)h, dear! Oh, dear! why did 1
ever allow myself to lie persuaded to
coine to the Adirondacks?"
"The scenery, mamma!" said Joyce,
soothingly.
"Hut one can't cat aud drink scenery.
And this woman knows absolutely
nothing about omelettes and French
coffee, and she never broiled a beef
steak in her life until I showed her
how. As for her soups, they are simply
uueatablc. And tho beds arc as hard
as the nether millstone, and the
mosquitoes are unendurable!"
"All these are trivial annoyances,"
said Capt. Kenwiolc, skillfully contriv
ing to tip over the catnip tea. "To me,
tho Adirondacks are the garden of the
world! I shall never be willing to go
anywhere else in the summer. And
she says it is even liner here In the
winter, with the frilling exception of a
little solitude."
"Kenneth," cried his mother, in
agonized accents, "you must not talk!"
"My dearest mother, I am all right if
you only won't fret!" declared the
prodigal son.
Hut Capt. Ren wick's eyes were un
naturally bright, the hot flush of
fever burned on his cheek, and his
breathing was alternately hurried and
laborious.
It was undoubtedly the fact that ho
had taken a severe cold during the
camping-out expedition from which he
had just returned, and that this
cold had been proof, so far, at least,
against all the remedies Mrs. Ren
wick had used.
"Oh dear! oh dear!" sighed the
mother. "Why doesn't tho doctor
come? Joyce, look out of the window!
See if there are any signs of him."
"The doctor?" ejaculated Capt. Ren
wick, raising himsolf on one elbow
among his pillows. "You don't say
you havo sent for a doctor?"
"Why, of course I have!" said Mrs.
Renwick—"for L)r. Barton, from Nyles
burg."
"A snuff-taking old llend who will
dose me with calomel, and experiment
on me with every one of the hundred
year-old drills in his saddle bays!''
cried the captain. "I won't see him I"
"Dear Kenneth!" pleaded Joyce.
"My son!" sobbed Mrs. Ilcnwick.
"No!" ejaculated Kenneth. "I'll IHJ
hunged if I do! I despise doctors, any
way! And what sort of a medical iunn
do you imagine would perch himself"
up here on the boughs of these ever
lasting- pines?"
"Kenneth, you must see him!" said
Mrs. Renwick.
"Mother, I won't," stoutly declared
the rebel.
"But what will he think?"
"What ho pleases. It will matter
little to you or me what he thinks,"
said Kenneth. "All 1 know is that ho
shan't cross this threshold. Give him
his fee and tell him to go!"
Mrs. Renwick and Joyce looked de
spairingly at eacli other. Undoubtedly
the captain was master of the situa
tion. If he chose to set the doctor and
his gallipots at defiance, what was to
be done?
At that moment, however, there was
a slight rustle downstairs.
"The doctor has come!" cried Joyco,
excitedly, "with such a pretty little
horse and phaeton. Oh, Ken, I'm sure
he isn't old, and he doesu't take snuff.
Oh, I'm so sorry I didn't catch a
glimpse of him."
"lie has come, has he?" said the cap
tain. "Then tell him to go about his
business."
Mrs. Ogden, the fat landlady, put in
her head at this juncture.
"Please, mem, the doctor," said she.
"Tell him—" hoarsely shouted Ken
neth, flinging the pillows right and
left.
But before he could complete his sen
tence the door opened and a tall young
lady, in a blue cloth ulster and a pretty
plumed hat, camo in, with a flat mo
rocco ease in her hand.
"Miss Perry!" he exclaimed, staring
at her from the sofa, with a face sud
denly lighted into new brightness and
enthusiasm. "How kind of you to re
member me! You are acquainted with
my mother, are you not? Joyce, this
is Miss Perry."
The tall young lady looked composed
ly around her.
"I am sorry to hear of your illness.
Capt. Renwick," said she. "Wo must
see what we can do for you."
"But," added Kenneth, stretching his
neck to get a look at tlio door, which
was still slightly ajar, "where is tho
doctor? They told inc he was coming
up."
The beautiful lady sat down and
gently took Kenneth llenwick's wrist
in her delicate fingers.
"I am the doctor," said she. "Ilave
the goodness to remain quite still for a
few moments while I ascertain tho
pulse and temperature."
Capt. Renwick was struck dumb. An
electric thrill-seemed to dart through
svery pulse and vein. But Jocyco'sej'es
L;All
"I AM TIIE DOCTOR."
sparkled, and the dimples camo out
around her mouth.
"You!" she cried. "A doctor?"
Dr. Barton nodded, still inteiit on
the enameled face of her watch.
"Pernella Barton. They call ine
Perry for short Capt llcnwick always
called me Miss Perry. I don't believe
ho knew 1 had any other name."
"And you arc really a doctor!" said
Joyce. "Oh, Kenneth, how fortunate!"
Dr. Barton examined her patient's
tongue, listened at his lungs and mado
some abstruse hieroglyphics in her
note-book. Then she measured out
some gray powders in infinitesimal
papers, and loft her directions in the
most business-like way in the world.
"I shall look in uguin this evening,"
she said. "It seems to be nothing more
than a severe cold. But I do not in
tend that it shall gain any headway."
"I put myself entirely in your
charge," said Renwick, with a
contented air. "I'm perfectly certain
that I shall got well."
"I thought you were going to send
the doctor about his business," ma
liciously whispered Joyce.
"But 1 didn't know what sort of a
doctor it was," retorted the captain.
Pneumonia did not set in after all.
Dr. Barton proved a true prophet, and
soon dispelled the heavy cold. But
Capt. Renwick had yet another ailment
—in the region of the heart.
"Mother," he said, coaxingly, "wasn't
I right? Ain't she lovely?"
"The sweetest girl I ever saw," Mrs.
Renwick warmly answered; "and the
most talented."
"And if, mother —"
"You will be the most fortunate man
in the world," said Mrs. Renwick.
Capt. Renwick made the best use of
his time, and, although Dr. Barton's
summer vacation was over, she lingered
i at picnics, and in the peurly shadow of
j water-lilies he still continued to make
I many appointment* for seeing her;
, and when he returned to the Seventh
artillery he was an engaged man.
"And after the flrst of November,"
lie says, "Dr. Barton will be my family
physician for life."—'Saturday Night
—Every bad man in a town strength
ens tho devil's mortgage on tho city.—
Ram's Horn.
MOTHERS OF GREAT MEN.
SCHUMANN'S mother WAS gifted in
music.
CHOPIN'S mother was as delicate as
himself.
GOUNOD'S mother was fond of pai it
ing and music.
JOHN QUINCY ADAMS said: "All that I
am my mother made mo."
Sponn's mother was an excellent
judge of music, but no musician.
RALEIOII said that he owed all his
politeness of deportment to his mother.
GOKTUK pays several tributes in his
writings to the character of his mother.
MILTON'S letters often allude to his
mother in tho most affectionate terms.
WORDSWORTH'S mother had a char
acter as peculiar as that of her gifted
son.
MOHAMMED revered his mother and
inculcated similiar reverence in his
teachings.
ST. AUGUSTINE, in his books, speaks
of the debt of gratitude he owed to his
mother.
IIAYDN dedicated one of his most im
portant instrumental compositions to
his mother.
SYDNEY SMITH'S mother was a clever
conversationalist and very quick at rep
artee.
VON RANKE'S mother was literary
and the author of several essays and
other works.
Tme character of Washington's
mother is too well known to need more
than an allusion.
FORECASTS OF FASHION.
RIRBONS, In all the pretty new Dres
den designs, will be much used as trim
mings for gowns this summer.
A VERY captivating mourning para
sol is trimmed with chiffon flounces
headed by a border of black violets.
LIGHT summer velvets, In all the new
and lovely colors, are being imported
for warm weather wear.
SPRING hosiery displays exult in an
unusually large variety, Indulging all
the new fads In plaids, checks and
stripes.
WHITE and ecru linen collars and
cuffs, hemstitched or trimmed with
laco, will bo used on heavy gown ma
terials this season.
SOMEBODY says Impertinently that "a
woman Is a creature who can wear a
feather and a tin buckle and call it a
bonnet."
SLEEVICS are to be either long or
short, and tho newest silk blouses for
housewear have elbow-sleeves trimmed
with lace-flounces.
IT is stated that M. Jean Worth has
inherited his father's clover artistio
originality, and that he will success
fully continue tho paternal business.
ALL SORTS.
MISS MARY PROCTOR, tho daughter
of the astronomer, will leoture on as
tronomy at Chautauqua during tho
coming summer.
PROF. MAX MULLEB knows eighteen
different languages to the extent of be
ing able to speak or write in any one
of them, and a considerable number in
addition less perfeotly.
IIENRY ARTHUR JONES' latest play
holds the record for length of title. It
Is "Tho Triumph of the Philistines and
flow Mr. Jorgan Preserved tho Morals
of Market Pewbury Under Very Trying
Circumstances."
THE littlest woman in tho world,
Miss Isabella Pindar, of the Bahamas,
is on a visit to her brother, Gen. Abe
Sawyer, of Key West, Fla. She Is 35
years old, 80 inches high, and weighs
GO pounds.
EDDIE THOMPSON, of Clarksville, Ind.,
Is a little more than 4 years of age,
ind weighs 124 pounds, lie measures
3 feet 0 inches in height, and measures
40 inches around the waist. It takes a
shoe about the length of a No. 3 to lit
him, and he wears a man's hat —a OJtf
in size.
COMMON MEDICINES.
TARTARIC acid was flrst extracted bj'
Bcheele, in 1770.
OPIUM IS tho juice of tho unripe cap
sules of tho poppy.
BROMINE was discovered by Ballara,
of Montpelior, in 1820.
PHOSPHORUS was discovered in 1000
by Brandt, of Hamburg.
CHROMIC acid was flrst employed as a
caustic by Sigmund, of Vienna.
SULPHURIC and nitric acids were
known to Gobcr, the iHchemist, in tho
eighth century.
CREOSOTE was discovered in 1830 by
Reichcnbach, who extracted it from
the tar of wood.
VINEGAR is mentioned In the Egyp
tian records as a medicine in the tenth
century B. C.
POTASSIUM, the basis of many medi
cines, was discovered in 1807 by Sir
Humphrey Duvy.
ALCOHOL was first distinguished as
an elementary substance by Albucasis,
tn tho twelfth century.
AT A RIPE OLD AGE.
THOMAS WILLIAM WINNIETT, who
died in Williamsburg, N. Y., recently,
In his ninetieth year, superintended tho
construction of the isthmus railroad
from Asplnwall to Panama.
DR. WILLIAM IIOTCHKISS, who died
recently in St. Louis, was averse to
water for cleansing purposes, and rare
ly permitted It to touch his skin. Some
of his acquaintances claim that lie knew
the secret of longevity, and that his age
was one hundred and forty years.
DR. G. W. SAMPSON, who died at
Tiffin recently,-aged ninety-three years,
was tho first white physician among
the Indians of northwestern Ohio, and
was also president of the first medical
convention ever held In that state.
ANDREAS HAFTAB, the last veteran of
the Greek wars of liberty of 1821, died
In Athens lately at the age of one hun
dred and sixteen. One of the btrects in
Athens is named after him, and bis fu
neral was a public one. lie had often
expressed the wish to live till 1001, In
order to say that ho had seen throo
centuries.
K lew TI T Busing
"It do seem funny tome," complained
the Georgia mother, "that you will
stick to that Si Lovingood, that
ain't got notliin' on earth but that
there little ten-acre farm that every
body knows is wore out, when you
got a chance to marry that there
rich man from the north. What is
the matter with you, Polly, anyway?
Throwin' away a rich man for a com
mon, ornery cracker! What ixcuse you
got?"
The maiden smiled a wan smile.
"Polly wants a cracker," was all she
deigned to say.—Cincinnati Tribune.
AM Kxperlenrfl Taught film.
The Silent Partner—That bargain
sale in dress goods don't go at all. I
marked 'em: "All wool, entirely new,
worth two dollars a yard. Reduced to
ninety-eight cents!" But it does no
good.
The Head of the Firm—You've got
lots to learn about this business yet.
Mark 'em: "Damaged! Damaged!
Were worth five dollars a yard, now
going at one dollar and ninety-eight
cents!" and they'll sell like hot cakes.—
Puck.
lhe Sain a Old I'wl.
A little thing, hut ine, oh my,
It made mo see stars in the sky
Most awful quick;
I touched the thing with my boot heel,
It was a small banana peel,
But oh, so slick.
—Philadelphia Inquirer,
W1 1.1.1 F. WASN'T IN IT.
"Willie! have you been in another
fight?"
"No, mamma. This feller outclassed
me, and I wasn't in It."—Brooklyn Life.
It Must Have Been Washday.
"There's no place like homo," droned
the organ.
Tears sprang to the eyes of the
man with the dusty liat.
"There's no pluee like home."
"I hope not," sighed the man, for his
thou glits were with the bare, wet floors
and a dinner of cold potato on the
top of the sewing machine. Washing
ton Star.
A Look Ahead.
There before Crusoe's eyes was the
print of a human foot.
"Suffering Christopher!" he ex
claimed. "Neighbors!"
His brow clouded with anxiety.
"I wonder," he mused.
Hastening to his home lie changed
the combination of the lock on the coal
bin. —Puck.
A Paying Talent.
Mrs. Literati —My little son has the
most remarkable powers of imagination
I ever know in one so young. Ho will
surely be a writer, and a successful one.
Western Guest—Successful? He kin
jist roll in wealth. Quick es he's old
enough you take him out west and start
him in real estate. —N. Y. Weekly.
No Comparison.
Cobble—The tortures practiced among
the Chinese must be terrriblo.
Stone—That's nothing.
Cobble—Do you know of anything
worse?
Stone—l guess you have never seen a
young mother giving a baby its first
bath. —Brooklyn Life.
•lust No.
Wife (affectionately) How's your
rheumatism this moruing, John?
Husband-Pretty bad, my dear, pret
ty bad.
"Why don't you try the inlnd cure?"
"There ain't anything the matter
with my mind; it's my joints."—Texas
Siftings.
Wasn't She Cute?
Miss Passe —How much did you pay
for that hat?
Miss Freshly—As many dollars as you
are old in years.
Miss Passe—ls it possible that you
A*ill wear such cheap things?— Syracuse
Post.
HA Knew Hi* Business.
Proprietor—Why did you treat that
woman so coolly?
Clerk —You noticed I sold her an ar
ticle that didn't really suit her?
"Yes."
"She bought it because I treated her
us if she couldn't afford it." —Pearson's.
After the Ceremony.
Bride (discussing the event) —It seemed
to me that there was a slight hitch
while we were taking our positions at
the ehuncel.
Groom—Possibly. But it was noth
ing compared with the hitch that fol
lowed. — Brooklyn Life.
No Help for It.
Miss Summit (lunching with Castle
ton) —I really don't feel us if I could
eat a thing, Mr. Castleton.
Castleton (resignedly to waiter)—
Bring in the whole bill of fare.—N. Y.
Herald.
Recommended.
Clerk—How was that underwear I
sold 3'ou?
Customer—Fine. I gave it to our
night watchman, und he basnet closed
his ej T es since.—Clothier anil Furnisher.
A Law Lyric.
"Delay mo not, I'm oft to court,"
The hustling lawyer said;
Then oil he went to court tho girl
That ho was going to wed.
—Detroit Free Tress.
T~P nUREAU DRAWER.
F : ' to ' '•>> Rerolatlon of a
VT •tn i . iraoter.
Harriet II /itC.i'.i rn says tlint a wom
an".# bureau drawer- —tlio t drav- r,
tlr.it either is or is not n < it h-all re
veals character More than any of ln t
possessions, and I could almost tell her
fortune by looking* into it. Is it a pot
ponrri—gloves, laces, hairpins, friezes,
collars, letters and a lmndred other
things? This denotes an uneven, un
systematized, liappy-go-lucky life, on?
that fate loves to pursue. The orderly
woman who establishes a standard for
people to live up to always keeps this
bureau drawer in order. Ilcr life is of
the tranquil kind. The woman who
fills her bureau with boxes possesses an
excess of order that makes life a burden
to the ones who live with her. She is
conservative ami not very adaptable
nor tolerant. While order is the first
lane to Heaven, order does not by any
means produce Heaven. However, the
bureau drawer never poses. You may
profess sentiments that are not yours,
and your milliner and dressmaker lend
you a personality which you do not pos
sess, and pose successfully for what you
are not; you can buy correct books and
pose for a litterateur by living up to
their bindings. In your house and its
furnishings you can buy artistic effect
and harmony of color and grand pic
tures, and even the atmosphere that
belongs with these evidences of culture
will hover about. You can have a Louis
Quinze room without knowing why you
have it, and you can buy your coat of
arms and your antiques and your an
cestors, and you may escape the soul of
all that they represent and the world
will be none the wiser. But let the
world have a peep in the top drawer of
your dressing table and it will find out
things about your real character of
which it has never dreamed.—Philadel
phia Times.
FANCY WORK BASKET.
Two Medium-Sized IConch Baskets Con
stitute lm foundation.
A standing work basket is such a
comfort when one sits down to mend or
sew. Ficst of all, because it is more
capacious than the ordinary little
basket. Then it is such an independent
sort of an institution, being able to
stand ulone, that it quite relieves its
A FANCY BASKET.
owner of the many little attentions she
must bestow on the unpretentious
small basket. A very convenient and
attractive basket may be made at
home, using two peach baskets, as
shown In cut. The lower one may be
left unfinished inside, merely serving
as a support. The upper one should be
lined inside, and furnished with nu
merous pockets and a cushion or two
for needles and pins. Cover the out
side with pretty cretonne or silkoline,
putting a band and bow where the two
baskets meet. The top is made of a
long, straight piece of the right width
to gather up in the center with a draw
string, the other edge being fastened
under the upper frill. The draw
string should bo long enough to let all
the fullness out, so that the top may
be turned down on the outside when
the basket is in Use.—Rural New
Yorker.
INTRODUCE THEM.
lloja and Girls Should Bo Presented
I ormally to Adult Visitors.
It is a common oversight in too many
households not to introduce the chil
dren to visitors. Guests are formally
presented to the adult members of the
family, but the younger boys and girls
are cither ignored altogether, or else
introduced In a'general way without
giving their individual names. This
course is almost certain to result in
awkwardness and constraint on their
part when grown. There is a differ
ence between putting children forward
unduly and giving them their just meed
of recognition. And pray take pains,
in making introductions, to speak the
names distinctly, and, above all things
else, do not omit their mention. How
many of us have been annoyed to have
a hostess greet an intimate friend, to
whom we were entire strangers, with
j sonje such salutation us: "O Henry, so
i pleased to have you meet Miss Blank,"
I leaving us to discover his surname us
best wo may. It is not a bad plan for
I the family to rehearse by themselves
! some of these little social formalities.—
1 Congregationalist.
Chafing Dish Parties.
| So great is the rivalry among the
owners of fine chafing dishes and choice
I recipes to be cooked in them that
j cooking clubs, of both men and women,
frequently meet and prepare a luncheon
or ton o'clock supper entirely over the
chafing dish. Each person brings or
sends his dish and the materials for
making it in advance, and the feast is
; cooked course by course by the different
chefs. To prevent a superabundance
of one kind of food, each guest is noti
fied of the dishes that will compose the
j menu, or permitted to send in word of
: the concoction at which he is most
skillful. In this fashion a chafing dish
party may have "much of tlie delight
and terror of a summer picnic.
Toothsome I ly Call A.
Two cups sugar, 1 cup butter, 3 1 f
i cups flour, cup sour milk, tea
j spoon soda, teaspoon cream tartar, 1
| pound figs, shredded, 5 eggs, tea
l spoon vanilla, little mace, whites of 2
i eggs for frosting.—Mrs. J. L. It. Trask,
ia Farm and Home.
ICASTORIAI
for infants and Children.
MOTHERS, DO VOU KNOW N„A
Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and
most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine ?
Po Yon Know that opium and morphiue are stupefying narcotic poisons f
Do Yon Know t hat in most countries druggists arc not i* ruitted to sell narcotics
without labeling them poisons r
P° You Know that you should not jiermit any medicine to bo given your eniid
unless you or your physieian know of what it is composed r
Do You Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of
its ingredients is published with every bottle f
P° Yon Know that Custom Is the prescription of the famous l>r. Samuel Pitcher.
That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold tlian
of all other remedies for children combined f
ott Know that the Patent Ofllce Department of the United States, and of
other countries, have Issued exclusive right to l)r. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word
" Castoria " and its formula, and that to linitutc them is a stuto prison offense ?
Do Yon Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection was
because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless?
Do You Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35
cents, or one cent a dose f
P° You Know that when possessed of this jterfect prejMiration, your children may
be kept well, and that you ntay lmvo unbroken rest T
Well, those things are worth knowing. They are facts.
Tho facsimile ** on every
.■ignatnre of f-CWCwbt wrnppor.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria*
W c impart ft thorough knowledge of the COMMKIICIAT, STI'DIRS nt the cost of less
ti'r.p Hit.l nioilCN II in nthei s- liools. TH-HISAMiS owe thi |i|.- ,*,> they • ;.M
to ;.m training tliov r.-v-ival hero. We in de HRKA t>W iN N KltSui 11.. ni. We want \on
' know lis. write and we "Hi tell von alia -out tni - I.iVI--c|in.t . |;. \v,.„><i-i gra.i
sto positions. I'AL.MS IIUSINKSS OLLI.t.•;, I7oS-I7 U> <IK Mliul St., I'II ILA.
Printing
and
Paper!
The TRIBUNE'S job printing;!
department now contains the j
best facilities in the region for |
turning out iirst-class work.
The office has been entirely ro-,
furnished with the newest anil I
neatest type faces for all clas-1
ses of printing. We liave also \
added recently an improved
fast running press, which en-;
ables us to turn out the best |
work in the shortest time. Our ;
prices are consistent with good j
work.
We carry at all times a large
stock of flat papers of various
weights and sizes, as well as
colored, news and cover papers [
of good quality, cardboard, cut j
cards, etc., which we will sell !
blank at low rates. Our enve
lopes. noteheads, letterheads. I
billheads and statements are
made from the highest grade
stock used in commercial print- j
ing, whilst our prices on this i
kind of work are as low as I
any. Having a large and pow- j
erful cutter, we are in a posi
tion to do paper cutting of any
kind at a low figure.
IS but skin deep. There arc thousands of ladies I
I who have regular features and would be ac
corded tho palm of beauty were it not for a poor
complexion. To all such tvo recommend DR. |
HEBRA'S VIOLA CREAM as possessing these
qualities that quickly change the most sallow j
and florid complexion toonoof natural health
and unblemished beauty. It cures Oily Skin, '
Freckles, Block Heads, Blotches, Sunburn, I
Tan, Pimples, and all imperfections of tho
skin. It is not a cosmetic but a cure, yet is bet
ter for the toilet table than powder. Bold by
BruKgists, or sent post paid upon receipt of 60c.
Q. C. BITTNER & CO., Toledo, O.
Fortunes Made and Saved
by following the advice of the
Wall Street Daily News,
(established 1H?.)
In speculating or investing in
Railway Stocks and Bonds, i
Subscription, "> per year. Sample copies 1
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I'htrlientor'* J'nglMi IMnmnml ltrnnd.
Pennyroyal pills
£1 ~a. Original oml Only ticniilnc. ,A
(M WllllT. Rtftttf. l/ulll/i'riilin V
I W I" ftnmirfi for purilouliira, tiwiimoniaU au.i
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I -A IT Mull. 10.000 i -tiinonUN. /'./ • r
% 1 ('hli'liclrrf iu nihulrvoMuilUiiHSiiuito |
"* u I" Local Urucisitin. . . l'itdoUu.. *'*.
I
I ANB P"*T'vi A3SOIUTUY
SAVE-.. The Host
P'f 2 pM\ SEWINGS
MONEY .Uj '7 \
MADE
WE OR OUR DEALEEIS con noil
you innrlifiieH cheaper than you < u
get ( Nptvlicre, TTIio NEW HOME Ph
our bontjluitwe mukn chrnpcr khnla,
MI eta am the O&KKIAX, nrrd
other FHla Arm Full Nickel Fluted
Keivfna: Machines for $15.00 and up*
Call on oj;r agent or write us* Wo
want yenr trade, and Wprlees, toriiie
and square dealing; will win, wo ivill
have it. Vs challenge the world to
produce f'i IJEjT'iTEIL $50.00 Sowing
Machine for $<"0.00, or a bottrr $ Jo.
Sewing; USat'hfno for i? 20.00 than you
can buy frori tvi, or our Ageiiti*
THEREWHOHR MMCHIRECO^
L „ . 'Troa BALi EV
r>. S. Ewing, general agent,
1127 Chestnut street, Pliila., Pa.
CAN I OBTAIN A IVATENT? For.
an.nvcr and an honont opinion, wrlto to
Itl I NN A' t'O.. who have had nearlyllfty years'
experience In the patent business. Communica
tions strictly confidential. A llandliooU of In
formation concerning Patent* unrt bow to ob
tain t hem sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan
ical anil HcientiHc books Rent free.
Patents taken through Munn ft Co. reeelvo
special notlceintho Scientific American, and
thus are brought widely before the public with
out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper,
issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far tho
largest circulation of any scientitle work In tho
world. S;t a year. Sample copies sent free.
Building Edition, monthly, *-.f>o a year. Single
copies, ri.l eents. Every number contains beau
tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new
houses, with plans, enabling builders to show tho
latest designs and secure contracts. Address
MUNN ft CO., NEW YOHK, 301 BHVAUWAY.
t!- I V
A 16-Pagc Weekly Newspaper
ILLUSTRATED.
IK. K. BKOKAW, - Editor.
It gives the single tux news of the world
besides tt large amount of tho besl propaganda
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free. Address:
JOIIN F, FORD, Kindness Mgr.,
507 Fttgln Building. St. Loin's, Mo.
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'OUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE *
Jand we can secure patent in less time than those J
d remote from Washington. c
£ Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip-F
Jtion. Wc advise, if patentable or not, free of 5
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t A PAMPHLET, "HOW to Obtain Patents,'' withf
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I 4 sent free. Address, c
:c.a.snow&coj
F ° PP - P-ENTOFF.CE. WASHINGTON,