Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Apr 1902, p. 2

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'.;&• •!;iii--? = =•'•?.-' >*" .- • v.'••'"*'• -" { Vs;S'-'" v • ;&£•<->"•• • WBWP *k||AA A >;> A A. ; * j ; ; * j * * i » » • » • • » • • • » • i#!5 M&&. At Swords' Pointy OIL. A SOLDIER. OF THE: RHINE. By ST. GEORGE RATHBORNE Oopyrtcfct, by Snur * SMITH. Ntw York. ••••••••• CHAPTER XII (Continued.) Three against one ta always heavy odds, even when the lone individual is built in heroic mold, and Paul was not averse to calling for assistance from such a source. So he strolled up and down, nursing a cigar and keeping close to the line of carriages. A singular thing happened, which gave Paul cause for much speculation later on. Glancing down the line, he saw a woman's head projected suddenly from the window of a first-class carriage. It was so quickly withdrawn, and somehow he was under the impression that the sight of him so near at hand had been the cause of its disappear­ ance. More than this, Rhinelander was al­ most ready to take his oath.that he had seen something familiar about the head. In fact, he had good cause to believe the party was no other than the Coun­ tess Aimee. When he walked slowly past the compartment be-- found the shade drawn down and all dark within, so that he could discover no confirmation of his suspicion. ~ At any rate, it gave him food for thought. He really needed something qf the sort to take his mind away from his troubles, which at times threatened to overwhelm him. All aboard again, and they were off. Paul saw no reason to regret his lit­ tle saunter, since, besides giving him an opportunity to enjoy a good cigar in the open air, it had also settled his convictions regarding his fellow trav­ elers. and at the same time opened his eyes to the possible presence of the countess. Several times, from the adjoining compartment, had come the sound of a gruff laugh, and there was something very familiar about its genial nature, though Paul could not manage to just place it. He wondered whether these men meant him ill or If he had drawn large­ ly upon his imagination in thinking so. They appeared to have settled down and were all locked in Morpheus' arms --somehow the air seemed to grow heavier, and Paul's resistance of less avail, until finally, half way between midnight and dawn, he crossed the borderland of sleep. CHAPTER XIII. ' In Durance Vile. Perhaps half an hour had elapsed, when the stout Teuton merchant raised his head and with eager eyes surveyed the corner where Paul was sprawled out asleep. Convinced that everything was pro­ pitious, he gave the foot of the young­ er tourist a sudden kick that brought the scholar erect at once. The merchant pointed and grinned, whereupon the other arose and ap­ proached Paul, who still slept on, ut­ terly unconscious of impending woe. . They seized upon the American. Paal struggled desperately--alas! he was taken at such disadvantage that he found himself almost powerless against these men. One had a knee upon his chest and was choking him, while the other gathered his hands together and pro ceeded to tie them in a most ignomi nious fashion. When this had been accomplished thiy suffered Paul to rise, which he did with alacrity, at the same time demanding to know what such an in dignity meant, and threatening them with all manner of punishment when their destination was reached. But all that had no effect, so Paul lay back in his corner and thought Again that laugh in the adjoin­ ing compartment Like a flash it came to him where he had heard that cheery sound before. It was the English surgeon who bad stood at his back in the student duel, and whose words of genuine sympathy and good luck he could distinctly re­ member. What would not the big Briton do to the pretended keepers once he was let loose among them? Then Paul considered that the Eng­ lishman might fail him--might prove a myth, after all, so he set about to free himself from his bonds. * It was hard work, but at last--how he breathed a sigh of relief when the stretched bonds fell off his wrists. Free again, thank heaven! and ere he would allow those ignominious vcords to be again wrapped. about hii he would die. to lay hold of the weapon. Steady! one of the fellows was eye­ ing him in a suspicious manner, and it would not do to let the game be dis­ covered at this stage. As the man rose from his seat and drew back the traveling rug, the Am­ erican struck him with all his force, at die same time springing to his feet He reached now for the firearm. The situation took a sudden turn, however, from the plan of campaign which he had laid out, for just at this interesting moment there came several shrill pipings from the motor ahead, then a crash, and a tremendous up­ heaval that betokened a serious acci­ dent on the road; and, of course, Paul found n* Immediate use for his little persuader. • smash-up on the railway is Beri- ooi enough at any time, but it seems to possess an added horror when one is ao situated that the freedom of limbs la denied. Rhinelander felt the carriage tIo- lantly upheave, then toss to the right and left as it In the grasp of a hurri­ cane. All manner of horrible sounds burst upon his ears, very nearly deafening him. * Thai came a tremendous trash, Col- loweu by a shock. I When he crawled out from tKe week he found quite enough to en- •jjf? ^tpntion in rescuing those Swords t< suns he Now, less fortunate than himself from the wreck. One good turn this accident did Paul --he was free from the unwelcome at­ tentions of the men who had watched him so closely, and who had been tak­ ing drastic measures to gft him into their power, at the time the smash oc­ curred. Just then Paul heard a voice from close by, a voice that calmly begged assistance, a voice that showed no trace of fear or alarm. He knew it belonged to the English­ man, and with all speed he made for the spot, eager to render Sir Noel what help he could. No doubt the other was surprised to hear an English voice address him, but under the conditions he did not ask any explanation until his limbs had been extricated from their pre­ dicament. "Any serious damage. Sir Noel?" asked Paul, seeing the other make a cursory examination. "Thank heaven, I have come out better even that I might have expect­ ed. A beastly piece of business, isn't it? But yofa seem to know me--we have met somewhere. I am glad to shake your hand and thank you for the help you gave." As he did so, he leaned forward, en­ deavoring to see Paul's face. "I am Paul Rhinelander--we met under peculiar conditions at Heidel­ berg," Paul said, quietly. The big Briton squeezed his hand some more. "By Jove! You cut out some brave work for us--thirteen stitches, my boy, it took to cover that fellow's cheek. A rare mark he'll carry for life. Glad to meet you again, doubly glad to be under obligations. But I may be the only doctor at hand. See you" later, my boy." He hurried off to where a fire was burning, and in which quarter they were carrying the injured as fast as rescued from the wreck. Just then a shriek from feminine lungs somewhere in the distance re­ minded Paul of what he had seen. Was the Countess Aimee on the train, as he had some reason to be­ lieve? He hurried to the carriage where he remembered having seen her, but when he looked the nest was empty. A man with a lantern rendered him some assistance, since by tbe aid of the light he discovered certain articles in the snug nest so recently occupied by a lady as served to prove her iden­ tity. Then his suspicions were not over­ drawn, and she had been the genius whose hand manipulated the strings by which he had been trapped. The accident had, unfortunately, taken place at a lonely part of the road and this assistance could hardly come before dawn. Curiosity caused Paul to draw closer to the fire and survey the groups near by. He was searching for the countess, and though the women were hardly in a condition to appear presentable, still Paul believed he could have recognized the adventuress in any guise. To his surprise he failed to discover her! Then he turned to make inquir­ ies of Sir Noel, and in this way dis­ cover the truth; but before he reach­ ed the doctor, the female assistant, who was flitting about like an angel of mercy, binding up wounds and car­ rying water to parched lips, came be­ tween his eyes, and the blazing fire, and Paul was stunned to discover in this tender-hearted sister of charity the woman he had looked upon as a cold-blooded adventuress, CounteaB Aimee. The sight of the countess In the role of charity gave Paul a queer sensation --he had seen her rope In the dupes in Paris, men with titles and fortunes falling into her net galore, but this was a new feature which he had never dreamed could exist in her nature. It only went to show that she was a woman after all; with a tender heart beneath the exterior--perhaps, had fortune been more kindly in surround­ ing her with luxury she might have been a blessing rather than a curse to mankind. At any rate Paul found himself con­ doning her faults and feeling more charitably disposed toward her. She had seen and recognized him, and instantly came to his side. "The doctor told me you were un­ hurt," she said, and he knew then that his safety had been upon her mind while she worked. "I regret to tell you that one of your friends has vanished and the other has a broken leg--possibly you have found him yonder," he remarked. She did not blush at all, but simply laughed. "Yes, I have attended to him. He groans horribly and has not the nerve of a child. No doubt you condemn me for using such heroic measures to accomplish my purpose, but I am a be­ liever in the adage that the end justi­ fies the means. You know that which may ruin me should it come out, and I am surely at liberty to defend my­ self. Besides--I had other reasons for my actions." Paul knew what she meant, and his old feeling of repulsion came back. Such determination appalled him-- was it possible to escape from the clutches of this wonderful woman once she set her mind upon his cap­ ture? * A less stubborn man might have yielded to what he was pleased to call the inevitable, but Paul was saved from this fate by the memory of a face. Though Hlldegarde might be lost to klm forever, he could not forget the charm of that modest blush which sig­ naled the condition of her heart to­ ward him. By that memory he was ready to steer his craft, whether dire disaster or the favoring winds of fortune over­ took him. "My visit to Berlin," he said, "is. one of pure defense, but in clearing the cesft ft will t the blame Just where it belongs, understand what many is no place for you, and If you are as wise as I take you to be you will pass over the border without much delay." She looked at him strangely. "I am unable to quite fathonju the motive that influences you to warn me. I had imagined that you hated me," she said, slowly. "Not that, Countess; not that I only regretted that I was unable to re­ turn the unfortunate regard you ex­ pressed for me. A man can not force his heart to act--that is, beyond his control." "Then, in spite of my work, you say you have not despised me, Paul?" with a vein of eagerness in her voice. "I am afraid I was beginning to when suffering the indignities your agents chose to heap upon me; but as I saw you ministering to these poor suffering wretches all that passed away. I would not have harm come to you, Countess." "Then turn back to Heidelberg." "I have too much at stake to do that Come what will I shall go to Berlin." "There is war In sight" "I know it, and perhaps I may be given an opportunity to see some ac­ tion. In my present frame of mind nothing would suit me better." She looked troubled. "Surely you would not take up arms against my beloved France?" "You forget that German blood flow­ ed in the veins of my forefathers. And, in truth, I am utterly Indifferent as to the cause that takes me to the field, since it is only the excitement of battle that I desire." "You grieve me very much, Mon­ sieur. I would see you fighting for the lilies of France with the keenest of pleasure. Perhaps a commission--" "Do not mention it. Remember, Countess, I have given you ample warning of my intentions once I reach the capital. If you are wise you will vanish immediately. At any rate, I shall not hold myself in blame should something unpleasant happen to show you the interior of a gloomy German fortress." "Have no fear. I am well able to look out for myself. Perhaps I have influential friends closer to the throne than you may suspect." She was called away at this Junc­ ture by Sir Noel, who had need of her valuable assistance in binding up a wounded arm. A remarkable woman! Yes. Paul was compelled to ac­ knowledge that he had never met nor heard of her equal. He hoped he would never see the Countess again; but fate willed otherwise, as future events would prove. His next concern was to reach Ber­ lin. (To be continued.) BEAUTIES FOUND IN INDIANS. HMdiom* Faces Found Among Woman of the Five Tribes. Women of the five tribes of the In­ dian Territory, also of a number of tribes of Oklahoma and Kansas, are highly civilized and educated. Fur­ ther south are several remnant tribes who have accepted the manners o( their paleface neighbors, and among these people social life is indeed quite lively. Many of the belles of the five tribes of the Indian Territory are of quarter, sixteenth or thirty-second Indian blood, but the red strain dominates in all cases, and while it may not show in color, it holds good in the molding of the face, the color of the hair and eyes or the dialect of the tongue. How­ ever, among them are many blondes, whose golden hair a&l soft blue eyes appeal in strong terms to one's sense of beauty. And one of woman's best gifts do these possess--clear and low voices, rich in tone and without a trace of the gutteral so common withV|.he average redskin. Raised amid scenes of bloodless con­ quest of their race by the whites, it is little wonder that inwardly they h&te the sight of a white man. But they look without concern upon the thin­ ning out of their own people and seem to advocate the destruction of the In­ dian government. While white men are social favorites and invariably become the husbands of these women, it is a matter of fact that when one is first introduced he will receive a chilly re­ ception. There are among them many impulsive girls, as there were in the South during the war of the rebellion, who hated the sight of a Yankee and who yet came to marry one in later years. Others there are whose preju dice has fallen away with more inti mate association. These are leaders in the social functions at Tahlequah, Muskogee and Vlnita, three society towns of the Indian country. Airship* May *Race in City of <<• A to be held as a preliminary event to the 9200,000 aerial steeple­ chases at the St Louis world'fe fair of 1903, has been sent to Santos-Dumont at Paris, France, by President Theo- philus Williams of the Chicago Ply­ ing Bird Airship Company. Rules and regulations similar to those that are to be the vogue at the St. Louis fair grounds will govern the contest The race will be held above the Calumet region, near South Chicago. It is no untried flying machine of and ready for public in races around the clouds any time that Mr. Dumont may decide to accept the challenge; From beak to tail the bird-flying airship, which is to be named Chicago, measures twenty-six feet. When ex­ panded and ready for flight its lattic­ ed, perforated wings are twelve feet from tip to tip. Beneath the cylindri­ cal. cigar-shaped body is the car In which passengers and the chaffeur win ride. Here is installed a gasoline motor that has been found the most iA Noted Knight Templar' " ̂ ̂ . * ; & Owes His Health to Peroni. the type which flies only in fancy that the Chicago challengers are to enter for the aerial racing tournament against the Santos-Dumont dirigible balloon. It is an airship already built, tested successfully but secretly WILL LABOR IN THE PHILIPPINES. First Episcopal Bishop Now on His Way to the Islands.. The Rt.-Rev. Charles H. Brent, the first Episcopal bishop of the Philip­ pines. Is on his way to Manila, where he will assume his new duties. Dur­ ing his stay in Chicago Bishop Brent will be the guest of Mr. Rockwell King.' Bishop Brent's ecclesiastical career began in Boston in 1888, when BORN AFTER MOTHER'S BURIAL successful power with which to oper­ ate and steer this mechanism. Under all are two pairs of small wheels, on which the machine takes a little run on earth before soaring away into the empyrean. has been called the "prince of the tropics,' because it takes the same place, only to an even greater de­ gree, in these hot countries that wheat, rye and barley take in West Asia and Europe, and that rice takes in India and Chinas-Longman's Magazine. KEENE GIVES VIEWS ON CHARITY. he entered as % novice the clergy- house of the Society of St John the Evangelist, popularly known as the Cowley Fathers. Here he lived for three years, ministering to another race. St Augustine's church Is a monument of his zeal for the colored people. Phillips Brooks, bishop of Massachusetts, placed Mr. Brent, who withdrew from the Cowley Fathers, in St Stephen's church, Boston, and there he labored until less than a year ago he was elevated to the episcopate. Can't Find Any One of Her Children. Mrs. Mary Elvira Gillespie has been admitted to the ^hospital in Denver at the age of 84. She is tbe mother of 37 children. She is very reticent about her life, but says all her children were born in twenty years following her marriage to Col. William Gillespie of Virginia. During the war and but a year before the death of her husband In the battle of Vlcksburg the fifteen pairs of twins were born. An but a few of them lived, she says, but as soon as they were able to go they were turned loose to shift for them­ selves. Mrs. Gillespie does not know where a single one of her progeny lives.--Pittsburg Dispatch. Celebrated Personages Who Hate Unique Experiences. More, than one celebrated personage was actually born after the burial of his own mother, as the following au­ thentic Incidents will amply attest: Ebenezer Erskine, one of the foun ders of the United Presbyterian church of Scotland, was born after the burial of his mother. Mrs. Brskine was bur led in a trance, and on one of her fingers was a valuable ring. The gravedigger knew of this, opened the coffin, and waa in the act of cutting off the ring-bearing finger when Mrs. Ers­ kine awoke with a cry. She rose walked home, and went upstairs with­ out having encountered any of her family. The footsteps overhead caused her husband to remark "If I didna' ken my wife was lyin' in the kirk-yard, I wad say that wis her fltstep." Mrs. Erskine lived to become the mother of Ebenezer. It is not generally known that Rob­ ert E. Lee, the confederate general, was born after his mother had been burled. That lady was a victim of catalepsy, and during one of her pro­ longed trances was pronounoed by the physicians to be dead. The burial ser­ vice was over, and the sexton was txNEF at his sad task, when the loud crying and knocking of the awakened wossaa happily resulted in her dS8veraao| from an awful doom. A year laftsr Mr youngest son, afterwards Qeassat was born. Mew York Finanoior Is Very Liberal In His Idea*. James R. Keene, speculator and sportsman, gives these as his views on charity: "I believe in giving money lack of character that they come to want. These are the persons who need help and the ones I seek to as­ sist when I give money, so far as I am able to control its disposition. I want them to have food and clothe3 and coal and other necessaries if they need them. I don't give money for books. There are plenty of books to be had everywhere, but when poor peo­ ple are in need it is not books, but when people need it and to people who are in actual want, regardless of the causes of their want. If a man is hun­ gry he should be fed, and at once; If he has become habituated to drink and his system demands a drink it should be given to him. Never mind what his past has been. "If it be a woman who is in need it is of no importance whether she is bad or not. The question whether she is hungry or in need of clothes or shoes or coal is of importance. "That's my Idea of charity. I con­ fess I am not as a rule much of a be­ liever in what is known as organized charity. Many of these organizations require a certificate of character be­ fore assistance is given, and there are too much red tape and delay before assistance Is rendered. It is not the resolute, capable man who usually needs help. Such assistance is gen­ erally asked by the man or woman who has made mistakes of one sort or another. It is frequently due to this food and clothing for their babies and coal to keep them warm that they want If I could give whatever money I am able to spaf^jdo persons who through adversity have been reduced from prosperity to want I'would prefer V The Banana. The banana was named musa after Antonlus Musa, the freedman and physician of the great Augustus of the Romans, says, Linnaeus. Thei, saplen- tum--the wlseypess--in its naine is a graceful tribute to it as the "wise man's food," for, incredible as it may seem, it is perhaps the best food prod­ uct of the earth, being far more pro­ ductive than either wheat or potatoes --the staple food of other nations. Long ago it was calculated that it is 133 times as productive as wheat and forty-four times as productive as the potato; in other words, that the ground that would give thirty-three pounds of wheat or ninety-nine pounds of potatoes would, as far as mere space is concerned, give 4,000 pounds of bananas, and with a frac­ tional amount Of the same trouble. It Australian Black Trackers. Some interest has been, aroused by the scheme for sending Australian black trackers to South Africa for the purpose of tracking down fugitive Boers, and the usual wild statements are being reiterated about the marvel­ ous powers of the aborigines in this connection. One writer, posing as something of an authority, relates how the black trackers "worried the notorious Kelly gang by their unceasing tracking, and kept them ever trekking until, ex­ hausted and nerve shattered, the mur­ derous band was destroyed- at Glen- rowan." The fact is that the blacks employed in the Kelly hunt failed at every point. The gang swooped down on Olenrowan "from nowhere"--the ""police had not the remotest idea of the bushrangers' movements or whereabouts, and they would hot have stopped them on that famous occasion If the outlaws bad not got drunk while waiting in the public house at Glenrowan all night for the arrival of the specie train they were planning to capture. 1 it, but these are the ones who are too proud in most cases, to make their wants known." T. P. »rv city i United States west of Buffalo, N. Y., as a Jeweler's Auctioneer. In the city of Chi­ cago as a prominent lodge man, being a member of the K. T.'s and also of the Ma­ sons. The cut ehows Colonel Moody in the costume of the Oriental Consistory Masons, 32nd degree. In a recent letter from 5000 Michigan avenue. Chicago, 111., Mr. Moody says the following: " For over twenty-five years I suffered from catarrh, and tor over ten years / suffered from catarrh of the stomach terribly. "/ have taken all kinds of medi- cines and have been treated by all kinds of doctors, as thousands of my acquaintances are aware in different parts of the United States, where I have traveled, but my relief was only temporary, until a little over a year ago I started to take Peruna, and at the present time I am better than I have been for twenty years. " The soreness has left my stom­ ach entirely and I am free from indigestion and dispepsia and will say to all who are troubled with catarrh or stomach trouble of any kind, don't put i t off and suffer, but begin to take Peruna right, away, and keep it up until you are cured, as you surely will be if you persevere. "My wife, as many in the southwest can eay, was troubled with a bad cough and bronchial trouble, and doctors all over the country gave her up to die, as they could do nothing more for her. Bhe began taking Peruna with the result that she is better now than she has been in years, and her cough has almost left her entirely. The soreness has left her lungs and she is as well as she ever was in her life, with thanks, as she says, to Peruna. Yours very truly, T. P. Moody. • Catarrh in its various forms is rapidly becoming a general curse. An undoubted remedy has been discovered by Dr. Hart- man. This remedy has been thorougly tested during the past forty years. Promi­ nent men have come to know of its virtues, and are making public utterances on tbe subject. To save the country we must save the people. Tp save the people we must protect them from disease. The disease that is at once the most prevalent and stubborn of cure is catarrh. If one were to make a list of the different names that have been applied to catarrh in different locations and organs, the result would be astonishing. We have often pub­ lished a partial list of these names, and the surprise caused by the first publication of it to all people, both professionals and non- Srofessional, was amusing. And yet we av6 never enumerated all of the diseases which are classed as catarrh. It must be Col. T. P. /Moody, of Chicago, Had Catarril Twenty-Rive Years asd Was Cared by Peruna. confessed, however, to see even this partial list drawn up in battle array is rather ap­ palling. If the reader desires to see this list, together with a short exposition of each one, send for our free catarrh book. Ad­ dress The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. Burma Pays for Itself. Burma lias already more than re­ paid all of England's outlay upon it during and since the third Burmese war. Remarkable Krror by a Governor. The Palatka (Fla.) News relates a remarkable story of an error made by Governor Jennings in filling out a warrant for the execution of J. B. Brown, a negro murderer. By some unexplained blunder, the governor omitted the name of Brown from the document and inserted in its place that of Noah J. Tllghman of Palatka, a Methodist minister, a white man, and one of the most respected citi­ zens of the town. The sheriff was directed in the warrant to hang the Rev. Mr. Tllghman on Jan. 25. Of course he did not do so, but the min­ ister is very much annoyed over the incident and feels that an apology is due him--a view which, strangely enough, the governor refuses to take. O CI 'T T T A Suddenly. It in|ures the nervous system to do so. Use BACO-CURO and it will tell you whon to stop as it takes away the desire for tobacco. You have no right to ruin your health, spoil your digestion and poison your breath by using the filthy weed. A guarantee in each box. Price $1.00 per box, or three boxes for $2.50, with guarantee to cure or money refunded. At all good Druggists or direct from us. Write for free booklet. EUREKA CHEMICAL CO., - La Crosse, Wis. ALABASTINE? THE ONLY DURABLE WALL COATING Kalsomines are temporary, rot, rub off and scale. SMALL POX and other disease germs are nurtured and diseases dissem­ inated'by wall paper. ALABASTINE should be used in renovating and disinfecting all walls. m hare thra* hen. Baby My noont, oanaot thrive." ^ ALABASTINE COMPANY, Grand Rapids. Mich. * AN OIL LOT FREE-FORTUNES IN OIL With every 825.00 purchase of ouij stock, at 2><c per share, we give FREE a Warranty Deed to one lot of Oil Land, 25x75 feet in size, in the heart of the great Texas Oil Field. The greatest oil proposi­ tion ever of fere0. AGENTS WANTED. For prospectus write to GOLD STANDARD OIL CO., - Houston, Tex. Aa«Mma Bittera In England. A specimen of a very rare visitor to the British isles, the American bit­ tern, is reported from Ireland. The bird's breeding grounds are in and about Texas, and in the autumn It mi­ grates in great numbers to the Ber­ mudas. It has onlj^been seen som« twelve times in Ireland. r * HAS NO EQUAL. a n DtrlANCE M l̂cSTAieH ̂ Yellow, musty looking linen can be avoided by using Defiance Starch, which whitens the goods and makes them like new. Ask for the 16 oz. package Defiance Starch. All other starches weigh 12 Don't forget it--e better qual» ity and oacthird more of it* CATTLE COMPANY 13,000 ACimS of the richest )und iu thS West, and will receive applications from tenants desiring to loase land. We also want men with families to work in beet fields. Correspond With STANDARD CATTLE COMPANY, Amea, NebraakM. THE STANDARD 5I6N5 PAiLIN A DRfTlME Of THE fi5fl HEftt FA1I3 IHAWETHML THE FiSH as ft <ktn has & history. Tni& is told in ftn Mterestiho booklet which ia /ours for the asking. A. J. TOWER CO. BOSTON. MASS. Maker* of WBT WBATH&R CLOTHING 'tJSWEtjj OUR GOODS AIB lOW 3ALfc BVBBYWHStt •Sim GhNMriae Oeaf. Monty for Slj IH» tat SOS. 9«UW B. L DKITRICK, LornOM. Tk 6 Bwutlful T«»-Ru>ei SSa 6 Pr!z«-Wlnnln|c Chrysanthemums..SS« S Fragrant Carnatlon-Plaka tie S Assorted Gerantume Me S Flowering'Begonias |M The above 5 collections for $1.00 Strong plants, plainly labeled, snd gusrea- teed to arrive safely at enjr poatofflce In the UntteS State*; also our beautiful new Catslogm mailed FRU to auy addre*. WriUTO-DAT. PURVIEW FLORAL CO., Butt), t. WRITK TO 1** BORDEN * 8ELLECK CO. 46-SS LAKE ST. CHIOAQO. &

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