mmmmm tjr% ̂ • * * < * > "'.*.i: Mistress Rosemary Allyn By MILLICKNT E. MANN Copyright, 1904, by LUCAS-LINCOLN CO. MM CHAPTER XXilt.--Continued. "Open or shut it matters not to me," sbe returned curtly. "You know, that I would not leave her alone in your hands. All this fuss, too, over an old bit of paper, that you know well enough was never a love letter written to her." "How do you know, Madame?" he questioned eagerly. "Know? Who better?" she said. "Since I have it." "You?" he cried. "Yes, I." she replied, amused at his •ehemence. The missing paper was discovered. I started. 5and in- my agitation, grasped the curtain, which moved and gave out a sound that had they not been -so engrossed in defying each other they must have heard. She unpinned the paper, hidden un der a lapel on her bosom. "Give it to me," he commanded Ik a still voice. . "To you--why?" she inquired. 1 have a right to any clandestine letters of my' daughter's," he "replied, evasively. "Clandestine' Nonsense!" she cried indignantly. "You know as well as I do that it is an old letter written be fore Rosemary was born--so much Raoul told me. The letter, as I said, I bave never read." "I would read it then." he muttered. "I will read it to you, if you have not heard it before, since you take such an interest in it," she said, and tier voice was quite as sarcastic as my lord's own. While saying, she had put up her Class in a deliberate manner. He watched her with a diabolic expres sion on his face, and his fingers tapped the snuff box he held in his band. She read: "Elaine!" (my own name) and she sniffed disdainfully; then began again: "Elaine--adorable one. The hour will be eleven o'clock. K.-W. will be on duty. Je t'embrasse. "R." "Em-m-m, the King's signet--it Crows interesting--and the date is for him, in fact, as the opening shows, it was for a woman. He half smiled, thinking of the page's stupidity, and that he had happened upon a liaison of that most virtuous King. He was giving it back to thelad, when some thing in his craven face made him in quire to whom he was to deliver it The lad hemmed and hawed ancj then refused to say--but the man com pelled hiih at last to admit that It was for--Lady Waters." I continued slowly, so as to give her time to grasp what I was saying --she was so anguished. "She was the man's wife." "He thought that of me!" she wailed.; It.was the cfy ,of broken heart. "It was a kingly assignation--but he was more fastidious than the men of the present day," I went hurriedly on. "It drove him mad. He fled the. town without verifying the note-- without seeing the King--without one word to his yoiing Wife. The man who planned the" dastardly deed . was only too well aware of his sensitive nature. Lord Waters joined CromP well's ar;my, and thus obtained a di vorce from his wife, who had in the meantime gone to France. He loved his first wife so dearly that, believing in her infidelity, she was dead to him henceforth. Later he married again. His second wife soon died; and the lonely man, oppressed by the thought of his first wife and the wrong he might have done her. dragged out a miserable existence in solitude at Long Haut. The outcome of this brooding of many years was to feel that he had Jbeen too hasty; that the page had purposely deceived him. These thoughts so rankled in his brain that they were his death. I am the offspring of this second marriage; Lady Dwight, and before my father died he sent me to Londbn to dig out, if possible, the truth of the matter, and to make such reparation as was possible and ask forgiveness of the woman he was sure he had most grievously wronged." "How could he?" she faltered, "how If-' •• I . ^ I stopped and looked at Lord Felton. Jfffitiary--Tftn-January." Site stopped and held it closer to her nose and re adjusted her glass as she strove to make out the faded figures. "January 16th, 1639," Lord Felton, engrossed, supplied the date. "Yes, that is it. January 16th, 1639. tHow did you know?" she quick ly asked. "Ah! there is more in this than I thought," she gasped, and sank back into a chair. "January 16th, 1639! The date Is stamped upon my brain--it was the night Lord Waters left me!" CHAPTER XXIV. mur- The Ties of Kinship. Yes, my eyes questioned--how did you know? To this question I read the answer in his eyes that met mine for one fleeting second. Run to earth by his own inadvertent words, he acknowledged himself guilty. Should jl expose him? He would not ask for ipity, that" I knew full well. There .was no cringing in his attitude. We had stepped from our hiding place when Lady Dwight began to read the note, but they had been so absorbed in it and themselves that they had not heeded us or that other spectator, Raoul Dwight. who had been standing in the doorway, unt}I now. , There was a sardonic, devil-I-care look upon Lord Felton's face as he :took a pinch of snuff. Then he leis urely closed his snuff box and flicked with his lace kerchief the floating particles of snuff, which he imagined adhered to his cravat. He seemed rather to be enjoying the situation .under the scrutiny of our pairs of eyes. It was as if he had known that the time must come when his carefully-guarded secret would out, and he had studied how he should act when the time came till it fitted him like his skin, and the acting of an Ignoble part he would make glorious. I went up to Lady Dwight, who sat to her chair, wonderment, curiosity, •ad the demand to be gratified in them, written on her face. '1 have a tale to relate. Lady Dwight," I said, "about that old bit of paper you hold in your hand, and which seems to hare been equally felicitous in being in demand. On the day of January 16th, 1839, my lord is right as to the date"--I bowed to him--"a man high in court, so high that he made men envious of his standing--one so much so that he planned his destruction--was waiting for an audience with that unfortunate Kin£ Charles I at Whitehall. A page come rushing up te him and handed 'him a note--you have it in your hand The man took it and read It, before he realized that It was nft intended . s&.jAf.. J could he--I loved him." "How could he, indeed," I mured. "Did you succeed in finding the per son who did this infamous deed?" Sir Raoul Dwight asked. His voice was as hard as the nethermost stone, tfnd a dangerous glint was in his eye. I did not answer him immediately and he explained: "You must know, sir, that this Is the first intimation I ever had of my mother's sorrow, and that my father did not die before I was born. It was a fond solicitation on my moth er's part, if, perhaps, a mistaken one. In not letting me know all." He kissed his mother's hand as if apologizing for blaming her in the least part. "I could not--I could not," she whis pered ; "my pride would not let me tell my child that his. father had left me." "The name, sir; the name of this person," he demanded; "if alive I would meet him, if dead I would know his name to curse him." "The man who drove a loving hus band from his home, and broke the heart of a beautiful woman--a woman with an unborn babe, the man who did this deed--" I stopped and looked at Lord Fel ton. He stood as a courteous man of the world might, displaying only an interested curiosity upon the hearing of an old bit of gossip. Ah! he was brave enough, mad man that he was, and he Waited the blow as he would have the ax of the headsman, with an inward flinching but, an outward com posure. The man is--dead--and I cannot divulge his name," I finished. Then Lord Felton's face flushed, saw him open his mouth to speak; felt the words, "He lies--I am the man," trembled on his lips. He looked at his daughter, Rosemary, and saw fear and relief commingled; at Lady Dwight, who "had trusted him for years,- and saw suspicion dawning there--and. they were unuttered. "Lord Waters died without know ing, Lady Dwight, that he had another son," I continued. ,"I was imprisoned although promised safety and rein statement by the king, immediately after I found it out. Thi^s I was un able either to convey to you or to my father the word I desired. I struck upon the head and lay for a time sick. When I recovered it was too late for me to receive Lord Wa ter*s blessing and give him the tid IngB that might have made his pass -age into heaven easier. "He is dead!" she exclaimed. Rosemary, kneeling at her side, took her shaking hands in her firm young and fondled her. - . . "Lady Dwight, my father left vn*t • states, and to these your son, Raoul Dwight, as his father's son, succeeds." She made a motion of protest, and her son Raoul raised his head with expectancy. "I shall not be exactly poor," I smiled and safd, for I read her wom anly heart. "My mother was Squire Hadley's daughter and heiress. As you know, her mother was Elinor Sackett, and brought vast estates to her country squire, whom In marry ing the world thought she had taken a step backward, but she thought otherwise." I dismissed that subject with a wave of the hand, while I turned to the two men. "Lord Felton and Sir Raoul Dwight," I said, "I have a request to make to each of you. I am a bold man--it will cost you much. Of you," I bowed to Sir Raoul, "that you will take my hand in friendship for our father's sake. Of you," I bowed to Lord Felton, "that you will give me Rosemary to wed." I had said what • I wished, and I waited the result. In each face I read the conflict going on in their souls. Lord Felton, having nothing to lose (Rosemary had been nothing to him for years), was the first to speak. "Lady Dwight," he said, "you have Occupied the place of mother to Mary for years, ever since her own mother died. Are you pleased that she should marry Quentin Waters?" "Indeed yes, an she love him," re plied the sweet lady,. She kissed tM blushing Rosemary at her side. "Then Mister Quentin Waters--I be lieve your title on your mother's side is Lord Sackett I nodded. "Lord Sackett--it is no more than right that you should be called by it-- I give my daughter into your Iieeplng, and may you make her happy." He finished with a great show of virtue, and put Rosemary's hand in mine like the fond parent on the stage, bowed, gave a French shrug to his shoulders, and stepped back. He had to his sat isfaction paid the debt he owed me. Sir Raoul Dwight, with a good grace be it said, for no doubt he thought he loved Rosemary--with some men love of money and love of women are not distinguishable, they are so closely woven; one is the weft and the other the warp of the loom--now came for ward. With a low bow he said, ex tending his hand: "I would we had known before, sir, tljat the ties of kinship bound us--I request your friendship." We clasped hands heartily. "As for you, sweet coz," he said to Rosemary, "I am as ever your, devoted cousin"--and bending over her he kissed her cheek and took the rose f:om her hair, asking," May I keep it?" And She answered lowly, "Yea." THE END. VENEERED FURNITURE RIGHT. When It Stands for Additional Beauty and Expense. "Despite the talk which seems to indicate the contrary," said a promi nent Chestnut street furniture expert to a Philadelphia Record reporter, there is really very little solid wood used. Take, for instance, mahogany and the various oaks and walnuts, the pieces that set people exclaiming over the marvelous figures of the grain, and the ways in which they are matched up. All such pieces are veneered. Any flat surface of any size is usually veneered, the veneer being at first about one-twenty-eighth of an inch, and when wcrked down to its final state of splendor not over one-thirty- second of an inch. In these fine sets which I've shown you the only solid mahogany in sight which is not ve- neered is the legs and frames of mir- rors and the like. Look at the great solid back of this bedstead. It is ol solid mahogany. But it is very tame as compared with the front, which is veneered with the most exquisitely figured and matched pieces. 'Some people have an idea that ve neer stands for shoddiness. In this case it represents both additional beauty and expense." Coleridge the Soldier. Subsistence could not, however, be made on the reading and writing of pamphlets, nor the means of livelihood obtained by the most eloquent and en trancing of conversations, and Coler- idge, finding himself both forlorn and destitute in London, enlisted as a sol dier in the Fifteenth (Elliot's) Life Dragoons, says the English House Beautiful. 'On his arrival at the quarters of the regiment," says his friend and bi ographer, Mr. Glllman, "the general of the district inspected the recruits, and looking hard at Coleridge with a military air inquired, 'What's your name, sir?' 'Comberbach' (the name he had assumed). 'What do you come here for, sir?' as if doubting whether he had any business there. 'Sir,' said Coleridge, 'for what most persons come--to be made a soldier.' 'Do you think,' said the general, 'you can run a Frenchman through the body?' 'I do not know,' replied Coleridge, 'as I have never tried; but I'll let a French man run me through the body before I'll run away.' 'That will do/ said the general, and Coleridge was turned lntc the ranks." Reformer in Trouble. Isldora Duncan, a California girl who has revived the dances of the Greeks, was fined $30 by a German court recently for insulting a govern ment bailiff. The official called to hand some documents to Miss Dun can, who called him an insolent per son. Isidora Duncan appeared in court in a pure white costume, her hair in a fillet, her bare feet in san dals, and told the jtrdge she was ner vous and hysterical from overwork. The Judge admitted her plea, inflict lng a line only. Characteristic Portraiture. A young man in a neighboring town started in the livery business a few weeks ago, and the first thing he did was to have a sign painted represent ing- himself holding a mule by the bridle. He was particularly proud of tLls stroke of business enterprise, and asked of his wife: "Is that not a good likeness of me?' "Yes," she replied, "it is a perfect pleture of you; but who is the fellow >»Hing the bridle?" it#* THE MONTHLY TRIAL HEADACHE, DIZZINESS, BEA&QTCh DOWH PAINS. A Woman Tells How She Has Become Well •ad Strong after Years of Misery Due to Irregular Sanctions. The fact that one woman is bright* eyed, rosy-cheeked, strong and cheerful, while another is pole, weak and do* pressed, is due more often than other* wise to the regularity in the one case and the irregularity in the other of the functions that are peculiar to the sex. When these are disturbed everything goes wrong; pain and discomfort are fell" all over the body; the sensations are often terrifying. " For four years." said Mrs. Davis re cently, "I suffered indescribable misery from sick headache every month, ac companied by fainting spells, shortnesi of breath and severe pain in my left side. There were also bearing-down pains, at times so acnte that I could not stand up, and niv head was full of ringing sounds,- It seemed as if everything was going to hit me in the eyes. I was compelled to lie down with closed eyes for hours to get a little relief. When I attempted to arise everything would whirl around and it would grow so dark that I could scarcely see any object." " Couldn't your doctor help yon?" " Five doctors in all treated me, but I got no lasting benefit. Besides I used a lot of advertised remedies. The only medicine, however, that had the de sired effect was Dr. Williams' Pink Pills' and they are truly a godsend to women. I did not have mnch faith in them when I began to take them. I found myself, however, so much better after using two boxes that I began to believe in them. They checked right away the decline into which I was going. My troubles kept lessening and finally disappeared altogether." " How long did it take for a cure ?" "After I bad used several boxes my health was all right. I had taken on flesh and was strong and hearty. I feel today in spirits more like a girl of six teen than a woman of my years." Mrs. O. H. Davis' address is Carmel, Maine, R. F. D.f No. 2. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are confidently offered to women for the cure of anaemia, chloro sis, painful and irregular periods, and all forms of weakness. They are sold by every druggist. WARSAW'S BLOODY HISTORY Massacre. Fire and Sword for Centuries Have Marked Story of Polish Capital Captured by the Swedes, taken and retaken by the Poles, occupied twice by the Russians between 1764 and 1793, besieged by Prussians and also by Russian forces, ceded to Prussia in 1795, occupied by the French in 1806 and finally seized by the Rus sians in 1813--such is the war history of Warsaw in modern times. If to this were added various uprisings from 1831 "to 1863, in which hundreds of lives were lost, it can be seen eas ily that the • old Polish capital is a Church of the Holy Cross dates from 1695, and the old royal palace, that centuries ago sheltered Polish rulers, is new the residence of the alien Rus sian >vernor. The Lazienki Palace is an imposing structure, but is coupled with associations repugnant to the feelings of patriotic Poles. It Is merely an elaborate memorial to the Polish generals who fell in 1830 while fighting under Russian colors against their country. While it can be said that In the HER BURDEN IS HEAVY. Running a 140-Acre Farm and a Hus band Is Tiring. 'I was recently riding my wheel along a hot, dusty Jersey road," said a cyclist, "and becoming tired and thirs ty stopped at a farmhouse for a rest and a drink of water. As I sipped the cold, refreshing liquid the woman of the house, who had five children play ing about her, was complaining of be ing overworked. "I run this hef'b whole farm," she said, in a tone which indicated that she was ready to resign. ' 'How many acres hate you?' I inquired. ' 'A hundred and forty--twenty In wheat, sixty in corn, ten in medder and paster an' the balance in wooffs.' "Got any stock?' "Ten head of cattle, six hogs and work critters for the place.' ' 'And you run the whole business?' ' 'Indeed I do; every hide and hair of it' she sighed. ' 'Don't you hire some help?' " 'Of course; but 'taia't hired help that takes the load offen one's body.' "Haven't you got a husband?' I asked, sympathetically. ' 'Yes,' she responded, very slowly, 'but I have to run him, too.'" Proved Beyond a Doubt. Middlesex, N. Y., July 3.--(Special) --That Rheumatism can be cured has been proved beyond a doubt by Mrs. Betsey A. Clawson, well known here. That Mrs. Clawson had Rheumatism and had it bad, all her acquaintances know. They also know she is now cured. Dodd's Kidney Pills did it. Mrs. Clawson tells the story of her cure as follows: "I was an invalid for most five years caused by Inflammatory Rheumatism, helpless two-thirds of the time. The first year t could not do as much as a baby could do, then I rallied a little bit and then a relapse. Then a year ago the gout set in my hands and feet. I suffered untold agony and in Au gust, 1903, when my husband died I could not ride to the grave. "I only took two boxes of Diodd's Kidney Pills and in two weeks I could wait on myself and saw my own wood. I dug my own potatoes and gathered my own garden last fall. ' Dodd's Kid- nely Pills cured me." Rheumatism is caused by uric acid in the blood. Dodd's Kidney Pills put the Kidneys in shape to take all the uric acid out of the blood. An Indication. "It is easy to tell a pessimist,*' said the man who assumes profound knowl edge. "How?" . "As soon as he picks up the paper he looks for the weather news/' Important to Mothers. *""Im carefully every bottle of CA8TOIU, a safe and snrs mudj for Infsats and childrm, aad SM that it Bears the Sign stare la CM For Over 30 Years. lbs Ktnrt Toe Have Ahraja Booght Much Better. It's all right to bring children up in the fear of the Lord, but it's better to bring them up so they won't have to fear Him.--Detroit Tribune. More Flexible and Lasting, won't shake out or blow out; by using Defiance Starch you obtain better rw- fults than possible with any other brand and one-third more for - money. One way of training yourself not to mind hot weather is to own a farm in the corn belt. I do not believe Plso's Cure for Consumptloa has an equal tor c-oughs and oolds.-- JOHN P. BOY EH, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 16,1900. The true university of these days is a collection of books.--Carlyle. Superior quality and extra quantity must win. This is why Defiance Starch ia taking the place of all others. A woman simply must lora some thing--be it a man or dog. &Q r̂vv3rjSenerals fte&ce, Wkrs&r' town with a sanguinary record almost unparalleled in the annals' of Euro pean cities. Massacre, fire and sword are the principal words in fts records. ' Warsaw is beautifully situated on the left bank of the Vistula on a ter race that is 100 feet higher than the navigable river. It now is the capital of the government of Warsaw, is 405 miles east of Berlin and 650 miles southwest of St. Petersburg. The city has two large suburbs; Praga and New Praga, and is defended by a score of detached forts. It continues to be the gay and active metropolis of Poland, whose literature and arts it dominates. The newer part of the town is well built, but the older sec tion contains quaint, ancient houses and narrow, sinuous thoroughfares. The center of life is the Palace square, near the river and the ter minal of the Alexander bridge, an Imposing structure that spans the Vistula. Near by is Theater square, with the town hpll, the latter flanked by the fine Grand Theater, the prin cipal house of amusement in Warsaw. There are well-kept boulevards and a number of gardens, and along the river in Praga stretches the magnifi cent Alexander, Park. The city is rich in historical struc tures. All told, there are six Russian and over thirty places of Roman; Catholic worship. The Roman Cath olic Cathedral of St. John was found ed in 1360, and a new Russian cathe dral has just been completed. The matter of public improvements, such as waterworks, transit facilities, etc., Warsaw is backward, it still remains the great industrial and commercial center of Poland. Its manufactures are extensive. In the printing trade alone there are over fifty book print ing establishments. Leather, coal and wheat are the leading commodi ties of trade, and Russia is the chief consumer of these products. The ar tisans of. the city are estimated to number 65,000. The superior courts of the district are located in Warsaw, and there reside also the principal dignitaries of the leadihg religious faiths. While the head of the city adminis tration is a magistrate, over him al ways stands a Russian general, who virtually is the chief of police. The population of Warsaw is about 650,000, of whom one-third are Jews. There also are thousands of Germans. A Russian garrison of 30,000 men is kept in barracks to awe thp people. It has famous university, a noted medical school and art and educa tional establishments of various kinds, but a drawback to these insti tutions is that instruction generally is given in Russian. Warsaw is first mentioned in 1224. It was the residence of the mediaeval dukes of Masovia, and early in the sixteenth century it superseded Cra- coa as the capital of the Polish king dom. It was made a royal residence in 1550. MAP OF DISAFFECTED REGION FL\LA*ib MOSCOW POLAND i JERMM -- i LITTLE RUSSIA USSiA SOOTH ^ "sv C R I M £ A f K I S H I H H * | MMnMuiMrr at I /(oa Nearly every industrial city in Rus sia and Poland has been the scene of ioodshed and revolt. The map shows the wide area affected and the power- industrial centers. Lode, the of the latest carnage, has a population of 325,000 and is called the "Manchester of Poland." This city has a textile industry whose annual production is worth $45,000,000. There are over 300 manufactories, 30,000 men being employed in the cotton Partridges as Housebreakers. Awakened by the crash of breaking glass at 4 o'clock in the morning, James Murphy of Jefferson, Mass., went on a burglar hunt. Softly de scending the stairs to the dining room, he listened to £he intruder as he scratched round in the dark. He could get no answer to his demands for an explanation of the invasion of the Murphy domicile and finally lighted a lamp. It was then seen that all the noise came from a much frightened partridge which was hugging close to one corner of the room. Cold Water Balked 8uicide. Herman Oburn, of Trenton, N. Y., wanted to be a suicide. He walked up and down the streets there and told several friends he was going to put an end to himself. They thought it a joke and had fun with him about his brav ery. Oburn made- the attempt to end his life by jumping in the local canal. As soon as he got in he yelled loudly for help, and two policemen rescued him. When asked why he did not end his life he replied the water was too cold. Malicious English 8parrow. Farmers in the vicinity of Swanton Center, Vt., are out with a new indict ment against the English sparrow. The corn was being pulled badly, it was thought by the crows, but when all the usual remdles used in dealing with that bird failed to bring results it was discovered that the work was being done by the sparrows. The blade Is pulled up by the roots, but as the kernel is not* eaten or in any way appropriated to the use of the tree passer, the charge is simply "mali cious mischief." Ipld New England Fire Engine*. The Kearsarge Independent anc Times of Warner, N. H.: "The hod« company took the little hand engine No. 2, out for a trial Memorial day With only eight men on the brakes 11 threw a stream of nearly 125 feet This little tub is the pride of the War ner fire department, not alone for thlt remarkably good record, but also foi the fact that it Is the oldest hand en gine in New England In service. II was made by William C. Hunneman Roxbury, in 1824." Calumet I*, u y ! : -• • •* ' The only high grade Baking Powder sold at a moderate price. Com plies with tl|e pure food laws of all states* - •Trust bafefas: Powders sell for 45 or 50 centa per pound and may be Iden tified by this exorbitant price. They are a menace to public health, as food prepared from them con tains large Quantities ot Roohelle salts, a daogo* ous cathartic drug. Profits of the Packers. There has been a great deal of dis appointment because the GaTfield re port shows that the profits of the . packing industry only amount to about two per cent of the volume of business transacted. There is no doubt, however, that the report is cor* rect. The census reports compiled by the government in 1900, before the agita tion regarding the "beef trust" began, throw considerable light on this ques tion. It appears from the census that the packing industry is conducted on a smaller margin of gross profit than any other industry in America. The gross margin of profit of 871 flour and grist mills in Illinois, in the census year, was nearly seven per cent on the volume of business. The gross margin of fifty-one wnolesale slaugh tering and meat packing establish ments in Illinois was only about one- third as large, or a little more than •two per cent on the volume of busi ness. The millers have not been accused of beta:; in a "trust," and combina tions would seem impossible in a busi ness where there are several thousand mills in the United States competing actively for the flour trade, but it ap pears that the gross profits of the mill ers are larger than the gross profits of the packers. It may turn out that the agitation regarding the packing Industry will show the same result as the devil found in shearing the pig: "All squeal and no wool." -- A.merioat% Homestead. Those Who Have Tried It will use no other. Defiance Cold Wa» ter Starch has no equal in Quantity or Quality--16 oz. for 10 cents. Other brands contain only 12 ox. Scorchers Are Road Hogs. A "road hog- is what a British mag istrate called an automobile scorcher as he fined him $100. No chromos or cheap premiums, but a better quality and one-third more of Defiance Starch for the same priee of other starches. He who laughs last laughs best, b«h cause he knows what tickles him. WANTED! Millions 1. to know the great merits of Alabastine. th* Sanitary Wall Coating--Not a hot or cold water disease-breeding kalsomine, bearing a fanciful name. LET US HELP YOU. Write for our artists' free color plans--different effect* (or dlffereat rooms--ia white, deliemM g»jra, greem, pinks, blues, and yellow*, njlcg I AjiaL A Destroys disease m HOCK uemeni germs and ver min; does not rub or scale. No washing of walls after on«e applied. Tou cau brash it on--mix with cold water. Otber finish es, mixed with either hot or cold water, do not have the cementing proper ty of Alabastine. They are stuck on with glue, or other animal matter which rots, feeding disease germs, rubbing, scaling, and spoiling walls, clothing, eto. Such finishes most be washed off every year--costly, filthy work. "Hint* on Decorating*' and tint card, fr««. ALABASTINE CO., flnadi Rapids, Mich., or 10S Water St., N. V« Agony ofAsthma Thousands of Sufferers are ftssplagl Choking! Strangling! 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