Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Dec 1900, p. 2

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k' Py ELTON HARRIS X X X VIII.--(Continued.) Mollie, will you--won't you awfully. I have Just the chance of seeing you, could not stay away any tad I hate to think of you these people. Won't yon |e? Do!" persuasive voice was Reg- til Mollie's eyes were fixed on of her shoe, and she put her Ind her when he attempted to tifegltiem. le time to think," she whls- , subdued tone. "I can hardly it you are here. How did tae?" lie Dubois in town, but they me. Rode straight on and le kiddie, who brought me ^ her that I wanted to speak f** particularly alone; and she promised to keep watch aril of the enemy," said Reg- £<V' »Utile Kittle!" you "say, 'Dear Reggie,' too, Mollie?" he suggested, eyeing her wist­ fully. **I have come all the way from Ireland to aak you." Then, as she flashed a t<dck. half-smiling glance at him, headdqd. " 'She who hesitates is lost;* fDfence gives consent.' How these ancient copybook say- ins CM#** in ii* one's old age, don't thsf.** "They oertainly seem to," allowed Metlle hesitatingly J And ti§tihiire> seemed no opposition offered to thft arm Reggie had utolen round' lMr,k«Uyed there, while, two not being able to sit with any comfort in an American cane chair, they re­ paired to the rustic seat, and were as tappy and forgetful of the world as 1 could be for the next half aa til# sat in the sunshine, in Springtime of youth, hope, and "Ok. Reggie--Madam Dubois!" ex- «toimed the girl at length. "She will never, never consent; she m«»n« me to marry Henri." ' "Then we will pay Henri's country ipompllment of taking French leave, leer child," he returned gaily, she shook her head. be of age in 18 months," she •T. ' . ituries! Why, Ihate now#? v- ieave my poor 111- tti|imed, raising her itingly. 1 "By then I better, stronger. Oh, ft you bargain with them ttie? It would be so you cannot think me the little ^into his ear Kd* tilat hot been standing biting his nails gloom­ ily, in direful dismay. "It is well to pay court to the heiress, but she has protection. I--" He paused uneasily, yet Reggie had only stooped to pick up the riding whip which he had dropped, and then looked at him. But it was enough-- he said no more,, while madame, go­ ing a shade paler as.she watched the two young men, aastenod to ciose the interview. ' When Reggie left things were only what he had expected. Madame ab- solutely refused her consent, and de­ clined to see him at Chalfont again, so far losing her temper as to utter innuendoes and insults, which she could say with impunity, as a woman, but which would certainly have brought Reggie's whip across the shoulders of her adored son. Reggie, for his part, courteously re­ peated that the engagement was a fact, and would be known all over Rever- ton; he was sorry for her decision, but it would alter nothing, only cause, a little delay. Then, after a few words with Mollie,-he reluctantly tore him­ self away, and she heard the gate clang behind him and watched him down the road until she was blinded by her tears. you h could his dep <truc pale as he and he gave (a low whistle of Whatever he thought he wi® too wise to make his sweetheart tows uncomfortable than she already was. But she had to promise that on no account would she even listen to Henri, against whom Reggie's senti­ ments were Car from peaceful, and that if matters became worse she would take refUge at the White house, ffhltlter his mother returned in yeek's time. And then Kate came run­ ning back to announce her aunt's re- torn. • Reggie!" ejaculated Mollie, ris­ ing, and turning very pink. Sit down, child," he said calnfty. «Xgng her back to his side, and tak* ing Kate on his knee. "Let them come/* |. Kate pushed back her curls and re­ garded him with a» frown. She wai _*ery fond of Reggie, but-- He under od the look, read the dawning jeal »y of any one coming between Molli© herself, in those sharp hazel eyes, had already dlscovereu the truth; and as this tall, merry young officer's heart was as tender as a girl's towards those he cared for, he hastened to dissipate it "You are going to be my sister, kid- ling," he said gently. "I know," she answered, with tremb- Wng lips. "You will take her away." "But she tells me she cannot be happy withput you, so we shall have to manage for yon to come, too," he continued. /"Now if you think that will be Jolly, and we shall be the best hwjher and sister going, never Jeal- *#us of each other, signify the --•mm In the usual manner by a kiss." he was more touched than he liked to •how when the little girl threw her arms round his neck in a transport of relief, happily unconscious of the ob staclep that might come in their way. It was this group that madame, fol- lowed by her son, came in sight of; great was her wrath. Nor was It to, ary way mollified when Mr. An rf&uther advanced politely, and, after tf* usual reelings,. informed her that Miss I/Rstrange had promised to be his wife, and he trusted that he should have her consent; he was sure of that of the trustees, who were old friends his father's. Madame was verj i*uave at first, though Molile knew the effort it must have cost her. She un- . Jf"t00d the firmly-shut mouth, the vIMalf-opened eyes; but, suave or not, J fre managpd to convey plainly her de- I «sion. She not only could, not sane- « the engagement, but Miss X* Estrange must be considered quite free. "I don't wish to be free," said Mollie •odly, over his shoulder. "I have given '. Anstrnther my word, and will not Mb V |"My k it: «w««t child, yon are young, you know your own mind. Mr. An- >r has taken advantage of flnd- 'Ou alone in my absence--** wished co find Miss answered Reggie, Heti, who had a§ CHAPTER IX. Mollie, it-is so bad again!" Is it, my pet? What can I do foi you?" said a sleepy voice, as Mollie roused herself from the slumber into which she had fallen by the side of the bed. "Kittle, it is striking 12 by the hall clock; I had no idea it was so late! I will go down to the drawing room and get the cloves; we left them there, and they may ease the pain a little." Kate sat up in bed, looking as mis­ erable as a child with teeth ache can look, and Mollie slipped off for the cloves, closing the door softly behind her. It was Easter eve once more; not balmy and soft like last time, but cola and frosty, witn a cruel east wind howling round the house, like the night two years ago when Leonard Barlowe had so mysteriously met his death. The months that had passed had been full of trouble and ahciety to Mollie L'Estrange, and she looked paler and thinner; but the gray eyes were as fearless and sweeter than ever, for the trials had been bravely borne, and if she could not quite love her enemies, she had at least endeavored to follow that splendid precept and re­ turn good for. evil., Henri had been away for some weeks now; at first much to her relief, but latterly she had almost wished him back, for his mother's sake. Ever since his departure she had seemed con­ sumed with restlessness, growing daily more morose and gloomy, and break ing into fits of passion for the merest trifle, while she watched Mollie with suspicious eyes, never allowing her to see the Anstruthers, through whom alone she could hear from Reggie, for both knew that the ordinary post would not be safe. Stealing quieUy down toe dark stairs, Mollie gained the drawingroom, and, possessing herself of the bottle of cloves, was returning, when as she got to the door she saw a faint light at the top of the stairs. Who was abroad in the house this night of all others, when no servant would stir alone, when they vowed that the ghost of Mr. Barlowe walked in his haunts and a light had been seen in his study? Drawing back against the heavy plush curtains in the hall, she watched with beating heart as it came glimmer­ ing nearer, not exactly frightened, but with a ourious awe and dre$d, a feel­ ing that something was going to hap­ pen. A moment later, and madame-- a lamp in her hand, a str&nge, dazed glitter in her great blatk eyes--swept noiselessly past her and went straight to the study. , The girl's first thought was to steal up stairs again, her next to creep across the dark hall after madame, and look in at the half-open door, and so, unthinkingly, she witnessed a sight 'that froze the blood in her veins ano that she never forgot For had she followed her first impulse and gone upstairs, neither she nor Kate would have been alive when d&ylight dawned that Easter day. On such slight things as this do greaj. events hang! Madame put the lamp on h table close by, and then stole with cat-like step to the back of the chair before the writing table, where the detectives said that Mr. Barlowe must have been sitting asleep at the time of the at­ tack. Suddenly she raised her arms, holding them as if she had some heavy weapon la them, and went through the motion twice of bringing it down with terrific force on the back of some one's head. It waa, awful to see her face as she stood there, wild, fierce, watchful, her features working convulsively as she eyed the empty chair as if it were oc­ cupied, her dark hair streaming down the light dressing gown she wore, her breath coming In heavy gasps. ' After a minute she began muttering to her­ self, and leaned over as if to examine what was in the chair; then she went to the table and turned over the papers in a strange, troubled manner, her eye ev®r returning to that empty chair. "It is only what you deserve--what you deserve!" she muttered in a harsh, strained voice, addressing the chair. "You are a hard, bad man. I begged to you for' mercy for my child--my •on, my beloved--and you only laugh­ ed. What if he did forge your name? It was not for much. You are rolling in wealth your wretched wife's money --and we are poor, and Henri is young and extravagant But you shall not punish him. I helped you In the past » , . r JSSfcp***- mat I her* taken Unlaw into toy ova hands. I would die a thousand times rather than that you should expose my boy. Now you cannot say a word, and I take the proofs of his guilt and burn them!" She went through the motions-- phantomwise, yet strangely real--oi taking papere and thrusting them into the grate, apparently holding them down with the weapon she thought she held, doing it all in a strange, dull calm, which her twitching face belied. For some minutes she crouched over the empty grate moaning and wring­ ing her hands; then, when she evi­ dently thought the papers and weapons destroyed, she rose, appeared to drag what was on the chair to the window --which she threw wide open--and, before Mollie could move, she came swiftly out of the room, and, lamp in hand, went towards the kitchen. To describe the feelings of the hor­ ror-stricken girl watching her would be impossible'. As one act aftef'" an­ other of this terrible drama was played out before her she felt powerless to mbve, almost to think. All her senses were bound up in the effort to keep her trembling knees from giving way under her, for well she knew that to make the leart sound might cost her her life! No need to, ask again who killed Leonard barlowe. She had been how it was done; she had seen every­ thing--knew it was by his own sister's hand that the blow was struck. Yet frightened as she was Mollie's courage did not desert her. She de-* termined to see what took this wretch­ ed womah, whom she felt persuaded was mad, to the kitchen; so, with chat­ tering teeth, she gathered her skirts together, and crept silently through the d^irk passages after her. The lamplight guided her to the but­ ler's pantry, and there stood madame, holding her hands under a tap which she had not turned on, and muttering incessantly to herself. As she wrung the imaginary water off them and rubbed them on her skirt, it occurred to Mollie, with a cold chill of fear, that she was action by action following out Just what she must have- done that terrible night--that it was she whom the servants ,took for a ghost, who had frightened Kate by brushing past her in the dark. Suddenly madame's glance fell upon some knives lying on a table, and a gleam like fire flashed into her eyes, a gleam that had neither reason nor sanity in it, only cunning and fierce exultation. "iWhy not kill, them both?" she mut­ tered, standing still with a meditative look. "They are no use to Henri; the girl will not marry him; the child had better follow her father. Yes, yes; that will be best!" (To be continued.) To 1*urtfy Greater JVetou yorKg Bishop Henry IX. Potter deliver­ ed a most sensational address on "God and the City" before an audience of 2,500 persons in* St. Paul's chapel. New York, in ^hieh he suggested the organization of a vigilance committee of 25,000 reformers to cleanse the city of vice. He favored a central com­ mittee of three or five men, under whose orders the public committee should act. The (bishop said in part: "If in New York tomorrow there could be organized a vigilance com­ mittee, such as was organized in 9an Francisco of 25,000 men sworn to ser­ vice for three years and pledged by night and by day, wljen their business and their opportunities gaive them the freedom for it, *o see for themselves whether our souls had been smitten m DISPOSAL OP IDIOTS. Suetoty Caanot Shirk Its Responsibility • for Criminals. Now, of course it is the easiest thing in the world to pick out indi­ vidual cases where this highly effect­ ive and economical plan would seem Justifiable, but the obstacle which must everlastingly keep all such ob­ stacles out in the realm of purely vis­ ionary and impossible propositions is the fact that no man, or group of men --no, nor t)iat of angels, probably-- could ever be trusted to decide that such and such a person could not be reformed, but must die. There is the crux of the whole matter. That little word "very" which is supposed to de­ scribe the kind of vicious and crimi­ nal persons who are to be "gently and painlessly" assisted out of this world, contains the whole range of subtle, unknown and unfathomable qualities of character upon whose possibilities no human wisdom is competent to pass the final word. With Dr. McKim de­ claring, for example, that John Jones, aged thirty, whom he has carefully examined,, is incorrigible and should be executed, and John Jones' mother, who,' presumably, also knows some­ thing about him, declaring that there is that within the boy which, bad as he is, can and may reclaim him to useful manhood--where Is the Judge or jury that would venture to pass upon the awful issue? Oh, no!. Society has long since^ passed >th« point where it can shirk its share of original respon­ sibility for its criminals and Imbeciles by killing them--no matter if doing it is a little more "gentle" than our sav­ age forefathers' custom of stringing female babies because 'they were an incumbrance to the tribe.--Gun tip's. N early rising society. BISHOP H. C. POTTER. with the sorrow of that little victim of five years who was picked up in the street the other day in broad day­ light and ravi$h$d by some brute who had lived here, w&uld such things be possible in a God-fearing community? No, men and brethren, ndt if you and I had our eyes open and kept them open and stood where God calls us to stand today. And then finally we must have not only vigilance, but per­ sistence. Wind Oculist Honored. The famous blfnd oculist Dr. Javal, a, member of the Paris Academy of Medicine and director of the Sorbonne Ophthalmologics! laboratory, has Just toeen simultaneously promoted to the highest rank In the French Leglqn of Honor and decorated with the Black Eagle. This double decoration has met with enthusiastic approbation from all quarters, and the distinguished special­ ist has been fairly deluged with con­ gratulations. On* of booth's SotdiwJt. * The Countess of Tankervllle, one of the most devoted members of General William Booth's Salvation Army, has arrived. She is accompanied by her' husband, who was also a member of the Salvation Army at Tacoma, Wash, where the two first 'became acquainted and were married. At that time t^e Earl of Tankervllle was third in suc­ cession to the title. The countess Was Mtee Lenora Van Marter, a resident of iWoma, and it was while engaged) in army work' there that she attracted the earl's notice. He was so smitten Jay her rare beauty that he abandoned the gay life he was leading in order to be near her. Together they worked for many months in the streets of Ta- coma, doing good to all with whom they came in contact / Finally the young man, by the death of relatives, came into possession of his estates and SMkepp ..tor UMlih, Enjoygawt aid .1'.Y,. Long«»ltJ. •^England is the home ot queer socie­ ties, some of which have been satirized by Dickens. One of the strangest is that called the Early Rising Associa­ tion, which recently held its annua! meeting in London. The organization adopteu resolutions declaring that ear­ ly rising was conducive to "healthy, enjoyment and longevity, which .are longer words than those used in the nursery rhyme, although there is no promise of wealth or wisdom. No defi­ nite action was taken in regard to the hour at which persons snouia rise. The general opinion was that sunrise was the proper time, although that made the hours of rising earlier in summed than in Winter. It would have been adopted, probably, had it not been that by the operation of the rule some peo­ ple could stay in bed later than 6 o'clock in the winter. The' general opinidn was that that was entirely too late to get up. Rising at sunrise in summer would mean going to bed at about 8 o'clock in order to get the traditional eight hours of sleep before getting out of bed at 4. This would seem a hardship to most people. It would mean deprivation of those pleasures that can be enjoyed only In the evening. However, enjoyment is purely a matter Of taste, as Sam Wel- er said.--Chicago Tribune. OOUNTiESS OF TAKJ&RVILLEL title. He at once married the young army lasts and together they set out for England. General W. P. Draper of Mllford, Mass., has received from the king of Italy the grand cordon of the Order of SS. Maurice and Lazare as a token of appreciation of the general's ser­ vices .during his mission in Italy. The grand cordon is one of the highest decorations conferred by that court Ksric* Mid Frnl* In 8toH|% If eggs kept in cold storage are In the vicinity of spoiled fruit they 'will taste of spoiled fruit, because the shell of the egg, being porous, absorb* odors rapidly. "4: La Gerarchla Cattolica states that during the pontificate of Leo XIII.-- 1878 to 1900--no fewer than 134 of the cardinals have died. Only four still live Who were his fellow cardinals un­ der his predecessor, Piuq IX. The normal number of the college is seven­ ty, but thirteen of the seats are at present unoccupied. Thcf Prince of Wales has lately amused himself by collecting pens of famous writers of the Victorian era. He has one that belonged to Tennyson, one of Brownings, one of Swin burne's, of Hardy's and fifty or sixty more, including a curious inkstand once the property of Robert Louis Stevenson. • Murwctu CMiff. Captain William M. Meredith of Chicago has been appointed director of "the bureau oi e n g r a v i n g . a n d printing by Secre­ tary Gage. The ap­ pointment was ail the more surpris­ ing because it was fiercely opposed by ex-Senator Quay a n d G o v e r n o r Stone of Pennsyl­ vania, and because President McKin- ley permitted Secretary Gage to make It, notwithstanding that the office by tradition and practice heretofore has' ranked as a presidential office. Cap­ tain Meredith had: previously heM the place and was a veteran of the late war. He is an expert of, the highest rank. Whose services are in demand by private corporations, and he undoubt­ edly had the strongest as well as the best backing erf all the candidates. He was originally appointed by President Harrison and served throughout the last term of President Cleveland. The saJary of the offloe is (4.500 per year. Capt Meredith Actor S'otJbem Tononed. ; So serious has become the condition of E. H. Sothern, the actor, that it is probable he will not ibe. able to appear on the s£age for some time. A month ago< the actor's foot was painfully wounded in the duel scene of "Ham­ let," while he was playing at the Gar­ den Theater, New York. A falling sword struck the member and inter­ rupted the play for a time. Mr. Soth­ ern appeared a few times thereafter, but was forced to abandon his work. Severe inflammation set in and blood poisoning was developed. All attempts to stop the progress of the malady were futile, and the small bone of the big toe was removed. • Other opera­ tions have become necessary, and it is J ^ VaVivn 2ft ~MiN&rini confession. 7* IM< ot Tkmolocf --It* History* In the year l«43 the Long Parlia­ ment appointed the celebrated convo­ cation known as the Westminster As- •tkbtir, or Assembly of Divines, ffef the purpose of settling the doctrine, UttogRltod government of the church of England. It consisted of 121 clergy­ men and 80 laymen--10 of whom were lords and 20 commoners--together with four clerical and two lay commis­ sioners from the Church of Scotland. Thirty-five of those whose names were contained in the ordinance calling: the Assembly, whioh was dated June 12, 1C43, never appeared at the discussion, one or two of them having died about the time of the first meeting, and the others fearing the displeasure of the king. To supply the pipe of these ab­ sentees, some additional members, called the superadded divines, were summoned to attend. This notable assembly held its first meeting on July 1, 1643, and continued to sit till Feb^ ruary 22, 1649, during which time it met 1,163 times./ Its most important work was concluded long before. The Presbyterians formed a large majority, and exercised a corresponding influ<- ence. In doctrine the members were almost unanimous; but on the subject Of church government opinions ex­ tremely opposite were maintained with keenness, especially on the question touching the sphere and limits of the civil power in matters ecclesiastical, The principal fruits of its deliberation^ were the Directory of Public Worship, the Confession of Faith, the Shorter Catechism,, and the Larger Catechianj. These several formularies, which coite* tain a clear and rigid embodiment or Calvlnistic theology and Presbyterian, church government constitute to this ,day the authorized Presbyterian standi* ards. The Confession of Faith consists- of thirty-three chapters, so you can very readily understand that It would be inadvisable to publish it here in full. Beginning with the canon of Scripture, it surveys the entire field of theology, deals also with the rela­ tions of the state to the church, the constitution of the church itself, and concludes with the topics of death, the resurrection, and . the last Judgment Its precise logic, its clear, dignified and ^powerful diction, and its constant ref­ erence to Scripture in proof of Its statements, tended greatly to beget that influence to which it l*§ GFraad Duit gins Ttttted Qussto •:09m. her granddaughter's oomln* t* mono. The eharmtet wmw#$ mfrt Grand Duke Sttegius made Iffii gfefb lar when he was last at BalaMcal, kit it to no secret that )» to apt a great favorite of the queen, who haa aiwaqm felt distressed that the married tito eC her granddaughter, his wjtfa, ha» i£| preved a happy one. . my* known f, l 1ft mn sua MUmldft ft alllm^luum lniUMflll to «sny oat uv obH F. J. We, the mi Cheney -for the perfectly hondrsl and financially i tionsmsde by tbolr i West * Truax, JT ©.; Waldinp, • Hit DrnsKiats. Toledo. Ohio. Hail s Catarrh Cure Is takdn Internally, **** Ing directly npon theblopd innl iimi innmi fiins of the ayatem. Testimonials sent fn TOo per bottle. Sold'by ail druggist* Hall's Family Pills are the beak DUEL IN AUfc. There is a movement on foot in Bos­ ton for the erection of a monument of Edgar Allan Poe, which will be put up in the public gardens which adjoin the historic common. One good action Is. worth morethib a hundred good intentions. Jf'J Merchants in London are still sell- tog Boer relics, and, however little their intrinsic value may be, they bring high prices. H. SOTHEffttf. impossible to say how soon, if ever, the actor will be able to appear in public. 7 ' KtlU and ftttcroBtf. That the microbes of contagious dis­ eases lurk in the carpets is admitted and it can be real­ ized that their ex­ termination is an end worthy of at­ tainment. It would jalso be of advan­ tage to destroy the .moths and otter Insects which find their way into the carpet. With these ^objects in view an inventor has de­ signed the antiseptic broom here shown. It consists of a bag to be at­ tached to the end of the broom han­ dle before the straws are wired in place, with a hole drilled in the handle to a point above the straws for the insertion of the chemicals, etc.* which form the microbe destroyer. The an­ tiseptic Is preferably made in the form of hard balls, which readily roll into the <bag through the channel, and to promote the> dissemination of the com­ pound through the straws for the in­ sertion of the chemicals, etc., which form the microbe destroyed. The an­ tiseptic is preferably made in the. form of hard balls, which readily roll into the bag through the channel, and to promote the dissemination of the com­ pound through the straws a quantity of water, alcohol or other solvent may also be introduced through the agency of a can, or the balls and liquid may be replaced by a semi-fluid antiseptic,, which will slowly filter through the fabric and dampen the broom. SreaJf AW JiaUy %*cord$. Captain F.' W. Dickens, who has been ordered to succeed Captain F. F. WlBcte in com­ mand of the Ore­ gon, is a man of action and a fight­ er. When the de­ partment put the Indiana and Mas­ sachusetts • in re­ s e r v e C a p t a i n Dickens was In command of the former ship. Ho Capt Dickens, lay at anchor in a BTfij.il stream back of the League island navy yard near Philadelphia. An order was received to put to sea. The Indiana had to wait forty hours for her crew and provisions and In less than forty-eight hours more ehe had taken on 1,000 tone of coal at Newport News and was steaming to Join the fleet off the Rhode Island coast, a feat without parallel In the annals of the navies ot the world'. v Two women hav ̂ been killed by a bogsllde in County Clare, Ireland. ' *; Ab*«t lady Settled byr ants in Balloons. Somebody has asked whether a April has .ever been fought in the ail-. One of the most curious of duels^ says Tit- Bits, was the balloon duel in France^ which was fought In 1808. The com­ batants were M, de Grandpre and M. le Pique, who had quarreled--about a lady, of course. .This lady was one Mile. Tlrevit, an act Ass at the Imperi­ al Opera. On the appointed day M. de Grandpre entered the car of one bal­ loon, with his second, and M. le Pique, with his second, mounted the other in the Garden of the Tuileries, before an immense crowd of admiring spectators. When all was ready the ropes were cut, and the balloons shot upward for a dis­ tance of about half a mile above the earth. The wind being light, they were able to keep the distance of about eighty yards between each other, with which they started. On reaching the • Igreed altitude the signal was given to fire, M. le Pique missed, but M. de Grandpre*s ball went through the silk of the other balloon, which immedi­ ately collapsed. The car descended with frightful velocity, and both M. le Pique and his second were dashed to pieces. The balloon of the victor con­ tinued to ascend, and M. de Grandpre came back to earth some leagues from Paris. * The Ma4 Dog Bugaboo, What the newspapers so essentially report as cases of "hydrophobia" are, in reality, nothing more nor less than instances of people who have been bitten by dogs and frightened into hysterical conditions in which they in­ voluntarily reproduce all the supposed symptoms of "hydrophobia." It is a pity that our newspaper editors can­ not have a more careful regard for the feelings of women during the summer months and agree to suppress the re­ ports of cases supposed to be "hydro­ phobia." They make the public mind nervous, and do more to spread the silly notion of a belief in "hydropho­ bia" than anything else. Women have had their feelings played upon long enough by this foolish notion of *'hy- drophobia," and enough unnecessary suffering has been inflicted upon the dog, who is often killed for pothing but a popular fallacy. It is high time that common sense shoujd rule; that we should believe the fact that there is no such thing as "hydrophobia," and rid ourselves of this bugaboo of the mad dog. '!• . ^ f, Electric fountains have become very popular, especially as attractions for amusement parks. In es­ pecially, they have lately been jnat*n ̂ in large numbers. It Is easy to recognize those who use Garfield Tea; their'complexions are good for their blood is pure and they are nqt troubled with constipation--the glow e£ superb health Bhines in their faces. The quality of the essay Is not Im­ proved by writing with a gold pen. MRS. PINKHJUI Able to Help Sick W< When Doctors Fail* "Bow gladly weald men fly to " wo* man's aid did they but understand a woman's feelings, trials, sensibilities, and peculiar organic disturbances. Those things' are known onlj t* women, and the aid a man would give to not at his command. .. ... To treat a case properly it to sary to know all about it, and full information, many times, cannot be given by a woman to her fa Mas. g. H. Chafpbu. iMH. 8he cannot bring IieA^li tell everything, and the physician to at a constant disadvantage. This to why, for the past twenty-five years, thousands of women have, been con­ fiding their troubles to Mrs. Pinkham, and whose advice has brought happi­ ness and health to countless women in the United States. Mrs. Chappell, of Grant Park, HL« Whose portrait we publish, advises all suffering women to seek Mrs. Fink- ham's advice and use Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound, as they enred her of inflammation of the ovaries and womb; she, therefore, speaks from knowledge, and her experience ought to give others confidence. Mrs. Pink- ham's address is Lynn, Mass., and 1) advice is absolutely free. M Care* CoMs, Cougiw, Sore Thra«t» Croon. Is- Vuenza, Whooping CoMgh, Pronchltisand Asthaia. A csrtai i curs lor i oflsumptlon in first stsgea. sad a sure relief in advanced a'ages. Use si dssee. You will tee the excellent eReet, slier taking tin first dose. Sold b| dealers every- Large bottles 28 cents sad BO essta RINGHART8 * Indian Calendars 190I--- Statu* of Robert Korrla The Falrmount Park Association Of Philadelphia has decided to erect a' statue of Robert Morris, to cost $15,-, 000. His home was a meeting place of the celebrities of colonial days. From friends and from his private funds he raised over $1,000,000 to up­ hold the supremacy Of the confedera-. tlon. After establishing the Bank of Pennsylvania and the Bank of North America, through which Institutions he lent to the government $400,000, he failed in a great real estate scheme in 1798, and was" imprisoned in the old Prune street Jail for debt His per­ sonal honor, .however, remained un­ sullied to the end. Swltaerlan<rs Popular Academies. Switzerland's universities are still the most popular academies in Europe for women students from all parts of the world. Of 850 students at the Uni­ versity of Zurich 218 are women. One hundred and twenty-eight 'of these are studying medicine, fifty-eight philos­ ophy, twenty-one natural scienoe and eleven Jurisprudence. Only eighteen are of Swiss nationality. Ninety-seven are Russians, twenty-nine Americans and as many Germans. To poke a wood fire to mam aolli enjoyment thaa almost anything els? In fchi warlA rovB KiACTirvL iiioias lAisna •r the rul'S irASOna HAS t'SIBTiL Seraala*, Sri CimC Mttlag Ball mmm In colon aad native coatnm*. Sack eat endar l« four sheets, lOxii, on heavy mar Mad with silk eord. CMItt mt rlta«r tmtmm SSe yMtpald. n-page lllnatrat^d ln<Uaa Iscae 10 cent*. F A.SIRIB4Bf, •ilDoaclsaSt. PfeslatnwhWi SmIw, na DcBulIs COUCH SYRUP Cures a Cough or Cold at onoa. Conquers Crotip, Whooping-Cough, BtoncMtla Grippe and Consumption. Quick,lurcWSlltt Dr.BuU's Pius careGeaatlpstlea. Mpflteia* FREE! HIOLESAUa BOOK 0ATAL00 Kdlttos for 1NO-MU, gafr-asaaff.saga;» . --n at wa*--i» r»im, All books e&nted la aaoak. * catalog ever printed and aaat Ares of ekarvaT^ SUPPLY CO., M -

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