Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, February 03, 1896, Image 3

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    Feed
The nerves upon pure blood, and they will
bo your faithful servants aud not fyraunicnl
masters; you will not be nervous,but strong,
oheorful and happy. To have puro blood,
and to keep it pure, take
Sarsaparilla
Hood's Pil!s cure all Liver Ilis. 20 cents.
Enrlieat Vegetables Always I'ay.
That's so, tho editor hoars Mr. Markot
Gardner say. Well, why don't you have
them? Simply because you don't plant
Bailor's Northorn grown seods. His vegeta
bles are bred to enrlincss and thoy never dis
appoint you. Halzor is tho largest grower ot
vegetables, farm seeds, grosses, clovors, po
tatoes, ote.
IF YOU WILL CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO
the John A. Sttlzer Seed Co., LnCrosso, Wis.,
with 10*. postage, you will get sample pack
age of Early Bird lUiisli (ready in 10 days)
and their groat catalogue. Catalogue alone,
sc. postage. (A.)
Educate men without religion and you
make them clever devils.
FITS stopped tree by DR. KLINK'S GREAT
NERVE RESTORER. No Ills nftcr first day's use.
Marvelous euros. Treatise und $2.00 trial bot
tli frir. l)r. Kline. VM Ar. li St.. i'hila.. I'a.
13 ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the tn-te, and acts
fon; ly yet promptly on tho Kidneys,
liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is tho
only remedy of its hind ever pro
duced, pleasing to tho tnsto and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
mauv excellent qualities commend it
to all and havo made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50
cent bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP COL
SAN FPANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. HEW VOSK, N Y.
1* N U 3
Hundreds of ladies write us that
they " can't find good bindings in
our town."
It's easy enough if you
insist on
Bus
VELVETEEN
SKIRT BINDING.
Look for "S. M. & M." on the
label and take no other.
If your denier will not supply yoi
we will.
Send for samples, showing labels and mate
rials, to the S. H. & M. Co., P. O. Box 699, Nev
York City.
CSQJIKteJES'SS
NKW DOMESTIC
COFFEE BERRY.
BETTER THAN A GOLD MINE.
Rated your own coffee at less than 1 ceut n pound.
Let hlah tariff store coffee go. The poor man's irlend
nut i Ich inante dollghr. Matures .North or South iu
four mouths. Plant any time up to tho 20t : < f June.
80,000 farmers supplied and every one prulses ir.
Has produced over sixty busliels per acre. Home
prefer it to storo coffeo. Produces two crops a year
In the South. Largo packet postpaid 2) cent?, or
enough to plant 200 hills. 50 cents or stamp?. Will
make 200 pots of most delicious coffee, good enough
for a king. Is superseding store coffee as fast as Its
merits become known. Large catalogue of fitly new
var'eties of seeds and testimonials from patrons all
over tho Uuion sfeut free with each order bv
CC IET SEEDSMAN.
• wUI-.Cf Buckner, Mo.
Ur 7GteMte JH-ircs to faimer* and mei
chant*, who clear from $lO to JSO per month eel/inn
this wonderful teen during the winter, tree Sample
and Large Catalogue for 5 eta. in Stamps.
A SONG OF LIBERTY.
Icross tho laud from strand to strand
Loud ring the bugle notes,
Ind Freedom's smile from isle to islo
Like Freedom's banner floats!
Che vol vet vales ring "Liberty!'*
To answering skies sorene;
The mountains sloping to thes*a
Wave all their flags of green! !
The rivers dashing to tho deep
The joyous notes prolong,
ind all their waves in glory leap
To one immortal song!
One song of Liberty and li^o,
That was, and is to be,
Till tyrant flags are trampled rags
Aud all the world is free!
One song! tho nations hail tho notes
From sounding sea to sea,
And answer from their thrilling throats
That song of Liberty.
They answer, and an echo comes
From chained and troubled isles
And roars like ocean's thunder-drums
Where brave Columbia smiles.
Where crowned and great she sits in state
Beneath her flag of stars,
Her heroes blood tho sacred flood
That crimsoned all its bars!
Hail to our country! strong sho stands,
Nor fears tho war-drum's boat;
Tho sword of Freedom in her hands—
Tho tyrant at her feet!
—Frank L. Stanton, in Atlanta Constitution.
THE PHANTOM BELLS,
BY MRS. 11. L. BAYNE.
BE ladies of the
• V V' 0-'" Chateau Froute
uuo invited
v^v! IwEr-"* t'leir brother's
I fiancee to make
them ft visit in
order to explain
to tier tho strange
* shadow which
hung over their house for- nearly a
hundred years, aud to whose baneful
intlueuee sho must become habituated,
when a member of the family.
When they first saw Clotilde, she .
was so young aud timid they made up j
their minds to wait until Gaspard him- '
self came, but one night as they sat |
around the great hall-tiro there was a
great jingle of eleighbells and tho
found of swift runners on the crisp
snow outside, and then that muical
clash at tho door which announced
the stopping of tho turnout, and the
arrival of gnestr. j
Surely there was nothing uncommon
iu this, the coming of a party of merry ;
people to a country house, and on a |
magnificent moonlight, night when !
tho whole landscape was us light as
' day ! Yet instead of looking pleased
or surprised, tho ladies sank back iu
their chairs, and covering their faces
with their hands, murmured a
prayer.
Clotilde, the little one, clapped her
bauds, aud asked earnestly :
"Might it be, my friends, that it is
Gaspard, who has como with a sur
prise?' 1
"No, no, Clotilde, it will not be our
Gaspard. Mo.u Dieu, how then shall
we tell her? Child, go you not to the
door? Those sleighbells you hear are
not of tho flesh aud blood—l mean
the driver is not—"
But the littlo Clotilde had run joy
ously to the great hall door, "aud
though lie servant stood there to open
it, she swung it wide on its masßivc
hinges. A bitter blast of cold air
rushed in with a dreary, wailing
sound, aud no sleigh stood outside,
but even as the startled girl watched,
ft clash of musical bells and the swift
sound of the steel-shod runners filled
the area of snow. Sho turned whiter
than a lily in the somber moonlight,
and flung the door to, affrighted.
"Como to the fire, little one; yon
have seen, then, our skeleton iu tho
closet?"
"I saw not any skeleton—nothing—
nothing, but I beard tho bells -oh,
what does it mean ?"
"You tell her, Agatha," said the
youqgor sister.
"I would greatly prefer that she
should hear it from your lips, Cecile,"
answered the other.
"I um not afraid," said tho girl
proudly. Tho color was coming buck
to her lips aud cheeks, and her eyes
sparkled. It could not bo worse than
tho legends of tho Loup-Garou which
her unclo had told her siuee sho was a
child—not to very long ago that—but
now she was a woman and would not
show fear.
"You will now know why our Gas
pard has dark spells when not even his
sweetheart can eoml'ort him, why tho
shadow is never lifted from our lives,
and wc cannot be quite like otherpeo
l>le. Perhaps you will not then like
to marry our brother, who is tho best
and dearest in the world, but like us,
under the ban."
"It is the more I would love him if
I might, when he has tho trouble ; but
tell me, please, is it that sorno wicked
souls come back because that they can
not rest?"
"We know not, petite, but tho story
is like this: So long ago, maybe, that
not our oldest relation can remember,
there was unotber Gaspard do Frou
tenao, a brave, good man like this one,
but hot-headed and fiery. And you
know, tho steop hills than shut us 111
with the big ravine—tho
precipice on either side? And in tho
winter thore was ahvays'snow, and tho
people went coasting and sleigh-riding
with swift horsesdown those long hills,
but nover could two meet, for the
road was just the width for one sleigh,
and the pe'oplo all knew this, and they
waited at the plateau on the top, and
each took his turn.
"It was my great uncle's pleasure to
take his youug wifo aud go out on
these steep hills and drive her liko the
wind with a swift flying horse, and
she loved the sport and wrapped iu
turs, with her curls lioating in ihi
wind, ft fine picture the country folk I
thought her; anil that Gaspard was j
much admired, too, for so the story
has come to us, and their pictures are
in the salon, though some think us 1
not of the right mind to keep them
there.
"It comes soon now, petite, tho j
tragedy of those two. One night, just '
such ft night as this, they went riding j
in the so gay spirits, and going up
hill for tho second or third time j
what should they see but another
sleigh coming down ! It was coming
fast, and my great unclo knew it was
death for one side or tho other, since
pass they could not. And ho shouted
to the other driver to halt I
"Ah, it was too sad. On, on, enmo
the other sleigh, fast liko the wind,
und my great uncle Gaspard saw that
it would into him crash, and he
quickly drew a pistol, aud fired to
kill i tho horse, before it was
too late. And his own horse,
ho get such a fright he plunge over !
the side, throwing him out, but taking
his bride down to death!
"Ho lived, but like a man in a
dream, till some one tell him the
truth that on that night there was no
other sleigh but his own, and that ho
saw the shadow was of his own, in
some way I know not tho exact, the
moonlight make that effect by what
you call projecting the shadow, and
when he know that, he take again tho
pistol and with it end his misery and
his life."
A long silence succeeded this weird
tale and then Clotildo asked in a
broken voice:
' 'ls it then that the sleigh is a ghost ?"
"Yes, petite, a—what you call phan
tom."
"I am not afraid. I accept, and
will pray to give the poor ghosts
peace."
It was not like tho Loup-Garou, not
to tho mind of Clotildo half as dread
ful, but she w.is nou really afraid of
those because her old uncle had much
sense, und ho did not bclievo ono of
these stories, although tell them ho
did, und most graphically.
Again on tho following evening
came the sound of bells, aud this time
Clotildo went not near the door, but
sat moving her sweet lips in prayer.
Then tho door was flung violently
open and a brusque, cheery voico
called:
"Hello, there, Victor, Alphonse, you
varlets, where nro you hiding?"
Certainly this was no ghost, and the
three women who clung about his neck
gavo frantic evidence of joy at his
coming, Clotildo was not one of tho
three. A big old rum in a fox-skin
coat had taken her in his arms, and
, was talking to her iu gentle burr, the
old uucie who told her the dreadful
: stories, and then she slipped one small
| hand into her lover's and looked at him
with shy, happy eyes.
"It was so good of you to como in
stead of tho ghosts," sho said, when
later they sa': cooing ic. a corner, whilo
the uncle, who was a great favorite
with the youug Gaspard, was making I
himself agreeable to tho ladies.
"Then you know, dear little one?"
eaid the young mau. "Aud you are
not afraid to mako your homo in the
Chateau Frontenac?"
"Hot with my Gaspard," came tho
solt answer, "out I like it better if tho
ghosts caaio not, and your sister?,
they are sorry, too. Hut afraid—no!"
"What of this so much being 1
afraid?" asked a gruff voice, und the
old unclo o? Clotildo hobbled over to
tho corner where snatches of their
conversation located the two lovers.
Then ho was told tho story of tho
ghostly sleigh, and looked wise and
thoughtful for the re : .tof tho evening.
The shrewd French Canadian was
filled with marvelous stories of ghosts
which ho loved to relate, but none of
which ho believed, not even his stock
fright-story, tho legendary Loup-
Garou.
Tho next morning Uac'.o Pierro wa3
missing from tho cliateau, but no ono
was disturbed, ho ha 1 taken his gun,
and would return when ho pleased,
j which was at nightfall, and simultan
i eously with his coilaing rang out tho
| jangling, invisible bells.
He found tho family shivering
around the great lire as if thoy weio
stricken with deadly cold. Even Gas
pard looked troubled and tho littlo
Clotilde was trying to assure him that
sho was not—"Oh, no, not tho least
afraid !"
"Fiueis the night," he said in salu
tation, "an I tho air is tho clear, so
you hear-r-r, oh, so far! Heard you
not, my Clotilde, tho slciglfbells that
como me with?"
"Ob, oh," cried the ladies of the
chateau in a faint chorus; "the bolls
do mako our hearts to shake," and
thoy said nu audi bio prayer.
"Whal: you make afraid? Not tho
bells of echo, that tho wind do bring
to your door for tho too sweet music?
Pah ! .Ghost is it, not at. all, but tho
r-r-ravine, and tho hills, they do mako
of tho bells of tiie sleighing compauie,
the echo which for the minu-t-o stop
ut your door ; 'tis echo always this so
many years that you think it tho
ghosts!"
Uncle Ficrre was compelled to es
cape from tho room when the family
had accepted his scientific explana
tion, which ho further elaborated in
their native tongue, ho was so over
whelmed with thanks and praises.
So the shadow was lifted forever
from the house of Froutenac, and tho
story which had so sad an ending aud
was accountable for tho ghost, is no
longer related as tho cause of such a
dreary effect, aud it is now tho pleas
ure of tho ladies of tho chateau, as it
onco was tho abhorrence, to ask visit
ors to listen to tho "so strungo echo,"
and out of tbe materials of a tragedy
they have really evolved a comedy.—
Detroit Free Press.
A Chcstervillc, Maine, couple re
cently celebrated their goldqn wedding
in the very house into tfhich they
moved on their wedding day,- fifty
years ago.
WIND VOICES.
Wind, that art wailing through the nigh'
With the voice of a soul in pain!
Thou hast waked tho waves that slept 011 tho
shoref
I hear them rise, and dash once more
'Gainst the sullen, fixed, aud changeless
rock,
Which has stood unmoved through many a i
shock
Of tho raging storm, aud the breakers
white
That must sweep to the sea again.
Wind, that art wailing through tho night,
With tho voice of a soul in pain!
Thou hast waked tho passion of wild regret,
Which slumberod so loug—to rage and fret
Gainst tho pitiless, fixed decrees of life;
As well Jmay tho waves with the rock hold
strife!
Back—to tho tide of the Infinite,
Poor heart, that hast cried in vniiff
Wind, that art wailing through the night,
With the voice of a soul iu pain!
Thou hast gathered up each cry of earth
That from mortal anguish ever had birth,
At the door of the living to enter iu.
Weeping for sorrow and death and siu;
Yet heart, make answer, "God's will i
right,"
And rest iu His peace again.
-Mary Gorges, in Chambers's Journal.
HUMOR OF THE DAY.
"She has married the man she want
ed." "That's nothing to marrying tho
man some other girl wants."—Lite.
"Every time I soo you lam remind
ed of Herr Bumrael." "How so?"
"Ho owes mc S2O." —Fliegende Blaet
ter.
"You never told me Miss Fairgirl
was an athlete." "Well, is she?"
"Yes; she has thrown me over."—Tit-
Bits.
There is a difference between'a cold
and tho grip, but you will not realize
it until you receive the doctor's bill.—
Truth.
Nell—"Jack Soft-lcigh doesn't know
his own mind." Bolle—"I never knew
ho was as ignorant as all that."—Phil
adelphia Record.
"I tell you what, Sharp, marrying
an heiress has its drawbacks." "Yes ;
but think of tho greenbacks, Bond."
■ —Harper's Bazar.
Wo.stumble on tho gifts wo prize
All other thlugs above,
For over since the world began,
We've fallen into love.
—Now York. Recorder.
Scene: A schoolroom in the year
1900. Teacher (to new boy)—"Hans,
have you got your certificate of vac
cination against smallpox?"— New
York Sun.
Fussy Old Lady—"Now, dou't for
get, conductor. I want the Bunk of
England," Conductor—"All right,
mum. (Aside). She don't want much,
dq she, mate?"— Punch.
"If you will give your hand to mo,
I'll toll your fortune true."
'No doubt, dear count," the maid ron'.iod,
"Aud you would spend It, too."
—New York Recorder.
"Tho world owes mo a living," ho
said bitterly. "Of course," replied
tho other sarcastically. "But I don't
seem to get it." "Well, you never
were much good as a collector."—Chi
na J Post.
She—"So there aro the Alps at
last!" He "Must be. You don't
suppose a first class tourist company
like this would work off any substitu
tions or imitations on its patrons?"—
Household Words.
Mr. Goodheart "My income is
$2200 a year. Don't you think your
daughter could live on that?" Mrs.
Spend well—"She probably could, with
economy ; but how would you live.
New York Weekly.
The safe flow open, and there inside
A receipted gas bill lay.
Tin bnffh.l burg ar shook his hea l.
"I've come a little to late," he said,
And ho mournfully turned away.
—Chicago Trlbun*-.
Thoughtfulness: Magistrate—"lt
you broke into the house with honor
able intention, as you say you did,
why did you take off your boots in the
hall?" Burglar—"l was told by toy
mate that the master was lying ill in
bed." "Six months."—Dorfbarbier.
Fully Explained : First Detective—
"Strange that I didn't recognizo him!
I thought I'd kuow him in any dis
guise." Second Detective —"But
when ho was caught- he had no dis
guise." First Detective —"Oh!
that accounts for it."—Puck.
New Use for Corncob*.
Frank Shafer took to Lacon, 111.,
recently, a sample of sirup which a
number of experts pronounced genu
ine maple sirup. It was nothing more
nor less than corncob sirup, made ai
follows: Twelve clean cobs wero put
in a gallon of water and boiled until
soft. Then tho juice was strained off
and a gallon oi' dark brown sugar so
lution added. This is boiled a littlo
while, resulting in a line quality of
sirup, hardly distinguishable from tho
maple product.---Chicago Times-Her
ald! ~
A Bargain at Ten Cents.
A horse was sold by tho Sheriff at
public auction in frout of tho court
house and was bought by Flint Hen*
drix, tho only bidder, at ten cents.
The horse was the property of B. IT.
Morris, and was sold to satisfy a mort
gage, amounting to about $65. Mr.
Hendrix afterward refused au offer of
$2.50 for his bargain, if such it might
I be considered.- Aiken (S. C.) Journal
and Review.
A Foxy Fox.
Tho fox's reputation for smartness
was well sustained by a member of the
tribo near Falmouth, Me., the other
j day. A couple of houndß and a hnn
[ ter were after it, and the fox led the
hounds to a frozen pond, and out ou
ico so thin that it just supported tho
| fox, which escaped, while the hounds
went through aud were dro.vne.k—
New York Sun.
Returning to Old Customs.
California lias gone back to mult
teams for the transportation of freight
just as in the old days before railroadi
were built. A regular line of big Wag
011s, with six-mule teams, bettteei I
Stockton and Fresno, has just beet
started, and It will connect at Stocktor
with steamers to and from San Fran
Cisco. The lino has been started in op
position to the Southern Pacific rail
way, with the object of forcing dowr
the rates. The experiment was madi
once before and successfully. The mull
teams, in connection with the steamers
can carry sugar, for Instance, fron
Ran Francisco to Fresno for $3 a tot
less than the railway charges, and it ii
believed that a similar saving can bi
made on other freight. The merchant!
in the valley towns are Interested It
the project, and say that it is an ever
thing for their Interests whether thi
railroad cuts down its rates or theii
freight is in future hauled by mull
teams.
A Missionary Ship.
About a year ago a party of Seventh
Day Adventists chartered the brigau
tine Pitcairn and started out with her
from San Francisco 011 a missionary
expedition in the South sens. Word
of the vessel has just been received
from Nukualofa, Aonga. The party had
visited Tahita, Rorotonga. Rurutu, Pit
cairn and many other islands, stopping
long enough at each one to distribute
tracts and pamphlets and Bibles and to
do missionary work in various ways.
The vessel took (o Pitcairn a number of
the Islanders who had been visiting
Ban Francisco.
'lite Absence of It.
Jf there is any truth in the raying that bap
pi iters is the absence of nil pain, mental ami
physical, the enjoyment of it can only bo
found in heaven. Rut so fur as the physical
is concerned, it is within easy reach; at least
measurably to, as far as ure will go. The
: um of human misery in this line is made up
of greater or lers degrees of nhysh al suffer
ing. The minor aches ana pains which
afflict mankind are easy to reach and as
< asily cured. There are none in the whole
category, which, if taken in time, cannot be
cured. 'J hey must in some form afflict the
nerves, the boner, the muscles and joints of
1 lie human body. They are all more or less
hurtful and wasteful to the system. St.
Jacobs Oil is ir.ado to cure them, to search
c ut hidden 1 am spots, and to cure promptly
in a true; remedial and lasting way. Very,
very many have not known happiness for
ycais till 1 hey used it. and very many are
jutting off euro and happiness because lliey
don't use it.
To bo happy is of far less consequence to
the worshippers of fashion that to appear so.
Ilurrah For Pennsylvania*
Tho farmers of Pennsylvania are to bo j
congratulated. M. M. Luther, East Troy, '
Pa., grow over 203 busliols Salzer's Silver :
Mine Oafs on one measured acre. Think of |
it! Now there aro thirty thousand farmers
going to try and boat Mr. Luther aud win !
S2OO in gold! and they'll do it, in New York, ;
Ohio, Pennsylvania aud tho oast. Will you
be one of them?
Then there is Silver King Barloy, cropped j
on poor soil 11G bus. per aero in 1805. Isn't
that wonderful—and corn 233 bus. and pota
toes and grasses and "clovers, fodder plants,
etc., etc. Freight is cheap to New York and
the cast.
IF YOU WILL CUT THIS OUT AND SEND it with
10c. postage to the John A. Salzer Seod Co.,
La Crosse, Wis., you will receive their mam
moth catalogue aud ten packages grains and
grasses, including above oats, free. (A.)
When the State is most corrupt, then the
laws are most multiplied.
BTATE OF omo, CITY OF TOLEDO, T
LUCAS COUNTY. \
FRANK J. CHUNKY makes oath that he IS the
senior partner of th fl rm 0 f F. J. CHENKY JFC
i 0., doing business in the City of Toledo,
County and State ufore*ai<l, ami that said lirm
} Vl 'l Urn sum of ONE HUNDRED DOE
LA Its for each and every ease of Catarrh that
cannot be cured by the use of H A LL'S ( 'ATAIUUI
nß * * 1 r FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before mo and subscribed in my
presence, thi.i(hli day of December, A. 1). lfetil).
< — 1 A. W. (ILKA SON,
t SK | X L" f otaru 1 'ub'te*
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and
acta directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of tho system. Send for testimonials, free.
***-- c 111 b J * & Go., Toledu, O.
Mr bold by Druggists. Tie.
A crowd always thinks with its sympathy |
never with its reason.
SINGERS AND ARTISTS GENERALLY are users
of "Brotnt'x Urtnwhial Troches " for Honr.-enpss
and Throat Troubles. They afford instant relief ,
Prodigality is the s ico of a weak nature,as !
avarice is of a strong one.
lam entirely cured ot hemorrhage rt lungs !
by Piso's Cure for Consumption—LOUlSA LINO- !
AMAN, Bethany, Me., dan. 8, HI.
Mrs. NVinslow's Soothing Syrup for rhlldren
trethitig. softens the gums, reduces infliunn
tic.n.allays pain, cures wind colic.33e. übottle
lie who has health has hope, and ho who
has hope has everything.
Br. Kilmer's SWAMP-BOOT rnrei
ell Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet ami consultation free.
Laboratory Binghampton, N.Y.
Fear nothing so much as sin and your
moral heroism is complete.
Wesson
||{Ml in
(113 Cooking;
Two Cupfuls of
Hecker's Self-Raising
Buckwheat,
Two Cupfuls of
Cold Water,
Stir a few times.
Bake on a hot griddle.
Takes about a Minute.
imCKWITEAr.
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR
W. L. DOUGLAS
3. BHOE BEE MO THE
If you pay 84 to ©3 fur shoes, cx
amine the \V. 1.. Douglas Shoe, and 25
see what a good shoe you can buy for ■
OVER ICO STYLES AND WIDTHS,
—S. CONGRESS, BUTTON,
At \ and I. VCE, mail, Sn till
EBk-. \ kinds of the selected
] leather by skilled work
price is stamped on the bottom.
Ask your dealer for our 85, /v3ij v g
84, *3.50, 83.50, 83.35 Shoes: /£#• \iljT
83.50, 83 and 81.75 for boys. a
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. I f your dealer /
tory, enclosing price and 36 cents
to pay carriage. State kind, style I Jy
cf too (cap or plain), size and f dir
width. Our Custom Dept. will till
{rated Catalogue to Box It.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, (Vlass.
Kubeoe, TIMKW
The "LISKNE" are the Ileßt and Most Economk
Ml Collars and Cuffs worn; they are mail? of fmt
cloth, both Bides finished alike, and being r. verse
bio. one collar la equal to two of any other J.inil.
The,/ tit i cell, we/tr well an I look well. A box ol
JeiYCollarß or Five Pairs of Cuffs for Twenty-Firs
A Sc.mnle Collar and Pair of CrifTfc by mall t*a Ms
Owata. Nume style and size. Address
REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY,
•f Fcanklia Bt New Fork. 87 Kilby Bt.. Bosios.
THE AKRMOTOR CO. does half the world's
windmill business, because it has reduced the cost of
Wind power to 1/0 what it was. It has many branch
f houses, and supplies Its goods and repairs
and Fixed Steel Towt 1
Frames, Steel Feed Cutters and Feed
of these nrtlcles that It will furnish until
January Ist at 1/3 the usual price. It also makes
Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send for catalogue.
Factory: 12th, Rockwell and Fillmore Streets, Chicaxo*
CDCS: 10c. trial package FLAG SA I.T.
r IT C. lu. Safe, sure cure for II LA I) A < II K.
Address FLAG SALT CO.. Savannah. N. V.
omKmssss^ui
IT: ■ ;
PUJG IN themu^^^
WAS JUMPED INTO PUBLIC FAVOR ON
ACCOUNT OF ITS SIZE AND OUALITY.ITS
a GREAT BSS PIECE
OF TOBACCO
C~\ i It's # a slow process,
/CJf / usually—education, development, and
/ growth. But it hasn't been so with
K Pearline. Pearline's success has
been a wonder, from the start. All the
I It] /'I \\ more so when you consider the
I I \\ many poor imitations of it, which
l/K 1 \\ claim to make washing easy.
\ 11 \\ These things tend to confuse
0 !■ JJ \\ people, of course. They're
t// \\ forced on the public by
prizes, substi
tution, etc. No doubt
jaSpfr?''Tr'-r t ~; v —*—' they're often thought to
"y i i..be the same as Pearline.
We protest. Don't judge
' Pearline by the company it has to keep. in
BHBMS DMBN
"Thrift is a Good Revenue." Great Saving Results
From Cleanliness anil
Mr. Wra. .T. Carltou, of Elizabeth, N.
J., says: "I consulted a physician in
the country this summer where I was
spending my vacation, about a
chronic dyspepsia, with which I
have been a goo I deal troubled. It
takes the form of indigestion, the
food I lake not becoming asslm
j ilated. After proscribing for me for
some time, the physician told mo I
would have to bo treated for
several months with a mild laxative
and corrective —something that
would gradually bring back my
normal condition without the vio
lent action of drastic remedies. I
recently sent to the Doctor (Dr.
Thomas Cope, of Nazareth, Pa.)
a box of Itipans Tabules, and wrote
him what I understood tho ingre
dients to be—rhubarb, ipecac, pep
permint, aloes, nux vomica and
soda. Ho writes back • 'I thiak tho
formula a very good one, and will
no doubt just suit you.' "
n pins Tab' les nrc sol 1 by druggists, or by mall It
i tho price i.V) cuts a uox) Is se it to Tho Rlpvii
! Chemical Co upa iy. No 1J Spruco St., Now Tori'
Sample vial. 10 CJUU.
l'N U 3 0
Jf - m * m '
NENSION.\IR.V^
Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
■ >/, 1 i U lan! vv.ii, lo adjudicatingcloluin, tty allies.
OPIUM P? 1 W Y H WOON R R- BOOK BPNT