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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Nov 1900, p. 7

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5?" Hjiî mmxxx f CHAPTER III.--(Continued.) i "He Is considered very handsome," jnlsehierously after Reg- . ,s i:fig&*e; bat whether doubtful, and 'her frank, plain face looked very fre, as she picked up her wools, lame is a clever woman," she ar- to herself. "Henri is under her , ib---that is, he always seems to to® tfraid of her; and Mollis is inex- peHenced and impetuous. It is little IBftte than a fortnight 3ince she re- ^irned. Can Reggie mind already-- Biggie, who does not care for girls?" JJtat personal experience, in connec­ tion with the naval lieutenant to whom she was engaged* called loudly | that a fortnight might make or mar a life, and she could not disguise from herse'.f that Reggie had shown more I-interest in beautiful Mollie L'Est range thin he had ever exhibited for any woman--save his mother and herself --before. A fresh, matter-of-fact girl, of three- •nd-twenty, Joyce, though fond of j Mollie, was inclined to look upon her •8 a child, and did not give her credit ; for half the sense and observation she possessed. Cor Mollie had learned a great deal , In that past fortninght, though Reg­ gie had not always been her teacher. I Bhe knew that the good country people I round, who had been her parents' friends, while wishful to be pleasant to herself, looked askance at Madame Dubois, whose great object in life was to get Into the charmed circle of their I acquaintance. With _ UMs end she irogld drag the reluctant -girl to any j nopal gathering where she might meet Itlmu,, and endeavor to force herself [upon item until poor Mollie was bit­ terly ashamed of her; while her Ismothered exultation when Mrs. An- Istruther did violence to her feelings by ft stiff call showed Mollie more than I words would have done how the resl- I dents of Chalfont House were regard- led in Reverton. Kate was a great trial to her sister; Idle was delicate, nervous and excit- Iftble to a, degree; and, as her aunt [never checked her, she was almost un- >10. A11 Mollie's efforts at friend- !p she regarded with suspicion, as lade to the heiress of Chalfont, and ftew into ft rage if her sister tried reason with her, or attempted to the part of the unfortunate daily >verness who for a couple of hours ich morning endeavored to teach ler. Mollie was very forbearing with trying never to forget that she the baby whom she had seen in *er mother's arms. But she was firm >, declining to be .driven about, or l«ay rudeness; and Kate, finding tempers disregarded, her imperi- fttrs laughed at, began to treat her with sullen respect. Mollie was thinking of Kate after eggie had left her at the gate, and walked briskly up the graveled th, swinging her empty basket. She promised some flowers for the ^rch on Sunday, and wanted them for wreaths for her parents' fes. Should she take them boldly Chalfont, and incur her sister's 1, or should she order them else- rfceiip? It seemed a shame that her iother*8 wreath should not be from |he place she . loved so well; and yet He could not bear that anything for ter should be wrangled over. There used to be a great clump ot (arcissi growing almost wild in a idy corner beside some laurels at lie far side of the house. If Mr. Bar- awe's vandal hand had spared them, le might surely have some from Itere; and, intent on finding out, she lever paused until she suddenly found leraelf nearly opposite the window of fatal study where her stepfather met his death by an unknown id nearly twelve months previously. Since her return she had carefully otded this 6pot; it had a nameless ror, yet fascination for her. Mrs re's name was rarely mentioned the house; no servant would go past |ifr aftndy door alone after dark. It not only madame's hard and mean |ile that caused rarely a week to pass ithout some of them leaving--they lightened each other; tales of things Bn and heard were rife among them, id it must be owned that Mollie was proof against the gener&l whisper- 5, the unspoken fear, that seemed to over the place, especially ftfter | She was half Inclined to tarn back BW, even though the sun was shining ft whole colony of rooks cawing ily in the tall trees further on. this very path the assassin must h^toltyu that bitter March night he had done the deed, leaving the low wide open; ftnd ----. Why, window was open now! Voices |I1 upon her ears. No one ever en- that room but Madame Dubois, igh it was unlocked. Who could it H Taking an Impetuous step forward, eyes fell on madame herself,stand- erect with one hand on the table, |r face haggard and white, her thin drawn away from her strong white Bth, her dark eyes gleaming under ir heavy brows with a strange wild i; while her . voice,harsh and high, *e clearly towards Mollie. "Are there no other apartments In i house but that you must come here ere--here?" she screamed. "Why do torture me like this? Have I not igh to bear for you? Ah, me! How iy mothers would have done as ch?" ilm yourself, mother,** cried ft reedy voice. "I had merely a icy to view the chamber where my . tender-hearted relative shaffled off |s mortal coil last Barter Sunday, is the harm?* * * "No, no, my beloved!" she answered, in a gasping voice, evidently struggling hard to recover Iter 6elf-command; "but coming in suddenly and seeing a man--so near the tWifc---" And she clasped her hands as a visible tremor shook her from head to foot. "Every one was out; I wanted amus­ ing," he said. "How dusty the place is. Why not use the room?" "Impossible!" panted she. "How can you expect it, Henri--you, who saw 1 have it cleaned sometimes, but no one will do it alone, nor will they come near it until after Sunday." "My uncle seems as much loved In death as in life." And there was a fine sneer in the young man's voice. "Now, why did you send for me in such a hurry, mother? I was having a good time in Paris--music, pretty girls!-- and then you insist that I must return to this dull hole. 'Tis absolutely cruel!" "You have no thought for your own interests. You are incorrigible!" she cried angrily. "I told you the reason plainly enough; and you spend so much money, the sooner you fall in with my intentions the better far you; then your future is assured." "So y«u have dragged rne away from a thousand engagements and pleasures Just for this!" Mollie heard him ex­ plain grumblingly. "What is she?" , "Oh, Henri, my adored!" cried Ma­ dame Dubois, her voice vibrating with intense feeling, her eyes fixed with deep, passionate lore on the other . un­ seen occupant of the room; "I feel that at this time I must have you with me-- that I must see you.--to feel that my sacrifices have not been in vain--that through them you are prosperous. Is it nothing to yo* to be with yeui mother?" What reply the eon made Mollie did not hear, for, recovering from her as­ tonishment, she stole quietly away, thankful that madame's keen glance had not fallen upon her. That Mon­ sieur Henri Dubois had arrived before he was expected--that he had come, not because he loved his home and wished to make her acquaintance, as madame had repeatedly declared, but because she had sent him an impera­ tive summons--was clear; but why had she done so? Nor could Mollie, having seen the mother's hard face, softened and beautiful with feeling, doubt that this invisible son, with the thin, sneering voice, was the passion of her life, the being for whom she would go through fire and water. CHAPTER IV. It was with conflicting feelings th&t Mollie brushed out her sunny hair be fore lupcheon, staring absently the while into the glass with a perplexed frown. ' ; They were strange people, these Du­ bois, and she uneasily felt that she could not fathom them. Henri's cynical tone she considered unfeeling, for Leonard Barlowe had been his uncle after all; while madame never showed the leaet-respect for her dead brother, though any allusion to him would visibly upset her self-fcon- trol. And Mollie shrewdly guessed that the extravagant affection she heaped on Kate was but on the surface. Evidently madame had sent for her son, and there was a "she™ in the case --did they mean Kate? Already Mollie had not a very high idea of their probity, &nd wondered how much power they had over the child's fortune. But she did not think of herself at the moment, except to be glad that she was no relation of. theirs. And then her thoughts drifted off to Reggie, and there was a smile on her face as she flung open the door, nearly running over Kate, who was advancing conse­ quentially down the eorridor, a huge box of distinctly Parisian bonbons in her arms. "I shall not give you one because you would not take me to get moes," she said, with solemn spltefulness, as she displayed them. "You should have gone with pleas­ ure had you asked nicely," returned Mollie, unruffled. "But I will not take you anywhere wfeen you are unpleas­ ant." And before the irate mistress of the house could find anything bitter enough for her poor little tongue to litter, the elder girl had passed her, and, descending the stairs, entered the dining room, where Madame Dubois and her son were standing by the fire. There they stood, these aliens and strangers, giving themselves all the airs of proprietorship in the house that ought to have been quite aiB much her's as Kate's. Standing, too, right under the painting of her father In full uniform that hung over the mantel­ piece. It would have been removed long ago but that it had cost some hundreds of pounds, and, Mr. Barlowe secretly thought, added distinction to the room. A hot wave of indignation and wounded pride swept over Mollie. What business had these people at Chalfont using everything as their own, while she herself was but a guest; and it was a very frigid and haughty bow that she gave in the direction of Monsieur Henri Dubois when his moth­ er introduced him. "What am I to call you?" exclaimed madame playfully. "Is It to be cous­ ins?" "Certainly not, madame," she broke in quickly, with a polite smile. "I am a L'Estrange, and the only relation I have in my father's house is my half- sister Kate." And her tone clearly implied thai no other would fee al­ lowed. The elder woman's face dftflrehed visibly; but before she coulJ speak Henri said, with a gWflgfgL sleeping bow: "Mademoiselle is I trfst rilfc "•fcidir- to #othe same aandw oomptexion. ftnd quickTuack eyes, he iras indeed a contrast to the young officer who already held a large place tn her heart A thorough Frenchman was Henri Dubois, both in thought and appear­ ance, though his BngUsfc was very good; and as he sat at tite foot at the table onraaslng J&is small. Made mus­ tache and endeavoring to make himself ajgreeahla, Mollie privately came to the conclusion that she disliked and dis­ trusted him only a little less than she did his mother, and that might only be because ahe did not know him so well. Indeed his high voice ftnd cynical air contrasted badly with Reggie An- struther'a hearty tones and easy, well- bred manner, though it was plain that his mother thought him perfect, and rarely took her eyes from his face. "Where have you been this morning, Mollie?" she demanded at length, when there came a break In the conversa­ tion. "She has been for a country walk with Mr. Anstruther. -I saw her," broke in Kate's little voice, maliciously "And she would not take me." Did a swift glance of meaning paw between mother and son? Mollie could not be quite sure, for this unprovoked attack was disconcerting enough to make her blush furiously. It was very annoying, and madame's eyes were turned upon her crimson visage with unmerciful scrutiny. "Kate knows why I would not take her," she said, breaking the pause with a somewhat haughty ring in her young voice. "But this Mr. Anstrutiier " began madame coldly. "I met him when I was going to gather moss, and he accompanied me" --rather defiantly. Madame's lips went into the thin line that gave such a very unpleasant expression to her face, and Mollie con­ tinued her luncheon with but a hazy notion of what was on her plate, and a vague, uncomfortable presentiment that picking moss in the bright sun­ shine with Reggie for a companion would not be allowed to occur again. Two or three times already, when her opinion bad not agreed with madame's, she had been obliged to yield, and as the scene of the fragrant earthly mosa, the flickering light through the bud­ ding branches in the shady lane, and Reggie's laughing brown face rose be­ fore her, so also did a feeling of her own helplessness in Madame Dubois* strong, shapely hands. r (To be Continued.) i m m „.... i cost yon ft* 16 cents to BtartgHttlng healthhaek. CA6CA|UBTd candy Cftthftrtic. the genuine, pit w> fn metal bona, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on It* ot imitations. ,v.: -levins TRAVEL ALMOST FRtB. mbm.: Cbeape^ttK BaUwray Fare*. The Russian government is now pro­ viding transportation to emigrants from European Russia who are willing to make new homes in Siberia at rates of fare that have probably never been equaled for cheapness. The third-class tickets sold on the Russian and Trans- Siberian railroad were believed to be about the cheapest in the world; but the fourth-class tickets which the gov­ ernment has recently caused to be of­ fered make the others a costly luxury by comparison. These tickets are sold to any one of 114 stations in Siberia, and they are good from any point in Russia. The fourth-class passenger, for example, from Moscow to Tobolsk, pays for that long journey only two roubles, or a little over a dollar. On the other hand, if he wishes to go clear to Vladivostok by the railroad* and its steamer connection, now com­ plete, a distance of about 5,000 miles, he has to pay four and a half roubles, or $3,60. The government thus prac­ tically gives free transportation to those inhabitants of Russia who will move Into the fertile agricultural and industrial regions that have recently been opened in Siberia. The czar and his advisers are anxious to secure the rapid development of Siberia., and so great efforts are making to fill the new regions with an industrious population. In the last three years about 600,000 Russian peasants, stimulated in every way by their government, have re­ moved to Siberia, and today its popula­ tion is about 6,000,000. This growth in numbers and the improving condition ef transportation are giving a great impetus to the agricultural, mining, and general industries of Utt fpwatry. --New York Sun. - ^ . Taxpayer* Squeezed by Awtrbk The taxpayers of Galicia have many grievances against the Austrian gov­ ernment, says Michael Henry Dzle- wicki in the dhicaso Record. The chief complaint is that the assessors of taxes will not admit the declaration of income drawn up by the taxpayer as what he really gets, but substitute a sum which they say he ought to get. This is flagrantly unfair and contrary to law, and makes ttte taxpayer liable to rates for what does not exist. When challenged as to this arbitrary pro­ ceeding the assessors answered tfaat they had merely raised the taxes, and maintained that In order to raise an action against them the complainant would require to prove a false state­ ment This deprives the taxpayer of any legal remedy, except going before the commission of complaints; but, as the commission is supposed to deal with 12,000 appeals within a few weeks it can be readily seen that it cannot possibly go into the details of any Hon. U. H. MeCord. Hon. Myron H. McCord, Ex-Governor Of New Mexico, in letter to Dr. Bart- man, from Washington, D. C., says: DearSir---At the suggestion of a friend I was advised to use Peruna for catarrh, and after using* one bottle 1 beg an to feel better in every way. It helped me In many respects. I was troubled with colds* coug'hs, sore throat, etc., but a« soon as I had taken your medicine I began to improve and soon got well. I take pleasure in recoetmen&ing your great, remedy to all who are afflicted with catarrh.--M. II. McCord. Thousands of cases of chronic catarrh have b*en cured by Peruna during- the past winter. There are no successful substitutes for this remedy. Send to Dr. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio, foe • free catarrh book. Anxtoea to Pleas* Old Lady (sternly)--Is there a bar attached to this hotel, young man? Summer Hotel Clerk--No, ma'am; but we can send out and get you any­ thing you want--'Philadelphia Press. Society Provide* Marriage Dow He*. Paris has a novel provident society, intended to provide marriage dowries for all its members of both sexes. Monthly payments of 10 cents for ten years insures a "dot" at marriage after that time of $75. Larger payments bring a corresponding increase of dowry. The grants, of course, we considerably in excess of the sums ot the premiums accumulated at com­ pound interest the difference being made up out of the society's funds, de­ rived from patrons* subscriptions, do­ nations and legacies. The institution, founded in 1895, has prospered won­ derfully, having a membership roll of girls and young men of 162,000. The present year of grace, being the fifth of the society's existence, has witness­ ed several departures from the associ­ ation, members having claimed their dowries at the expiration of the pre­ scribed time, and got married at once on the strength of them, frequently to other recipients of similar portions from the "Donation," as the society is called. FREE--A TRIAL BOTTLE. , The winning of a million of people from sickness to health is a noble pur­ suit. Our enormous mail is the wonder of the age. We are flooded, simply flooded each morning with letters containing orders for 5 DROPS " the wond­ rous cure for the terrible painful diseases, Rheumatism, Sciatica and Neuralgia. Rheumatism, Sciatica and Neuralgia, withstand every other medicine but yield on the instant to "5 DROPS." Within aday of getting* 5 DROPS" and using it, your disease begins to disappear. ! Thousands of men and women, who see their friends gladly relieved of their terrible buffering, write us in haste. Hundreds of testimonials from grateful correspondents reach ns daily. To enable all sufferers to test this wonderful remedy, we will send free a trial bottle on receipt of two 2 cent st amps to pay for mailing. Large bottles ©f 300 dosea #1.00, sent prepaid by mail or express. 4<B DROPS" h a preven­ tive as well aa a curative, for the following diseases: Rheumatism, Sciatica, Neu­ ralgia. Gout., Dyspepsia, R a c h a c h e , A s t h m a , H a y Fever, Catarrh, Liver arid Kidney Troubles, Sleeplessness, Ner­ vousness, Nervous and Neuralgic Headaches, Earache, Toothache, Heart Weakness, I^nGrippe. Malaria, Paralysis, Creeping Numbness and a long- list of other ilia Write us in haste and stop your suf­ fering. Agents wanted. 6WAMSON RHEUMATIC CURE OCX W Lake Street, Chicago, III vt # TRADE MARK We > Have tor DaaMCt? Tills question arises in the every day. Let us answer it today. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared In two minutes. No boiling! no baking! add boiling water and set to cool. Flavors:--Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. Ataekt .Alas! . If all motives were apparent More blessings would arise^ But false pretense oft ruins": A blessing in disguise. Thoughtful people are realising more and more the folly and danger of taking tnt* the*r systems strong cathartics and poisonous «?»ugsf and for this reason Gar­ field Tea--which Is a mild but riotent laxa­ tive, composed • entirely of HERBS--has taken the highest place 5n the esteem of the medical profession and conservative people throughout the world. It Is a posi­ tive cure for Constipation and Sick Head­ ache. , A married couple living near Throop, Pa., who were childless, haye Adopted fourteen children. * TO CURB A COLD IK OKI DAT. Take LAXAIOI'K BBOMO QUININE TABLETS. All druggists refu«(1 the money If it fails to euro. £. W. Grove's signature is on the box. 26a. We oftn more easily avenge an in- Jury than requite a kindness.--Cicero. MI PMWWMIMT CMH. Wjflnormn arm Si*t (tar's aa*_ef Dr. Kline'* Great K«m Itertorwv Bead tor FBEE K.OO trial bottle and trwucta* Da. H. H. Kuxa, Ltd., tti Arch St. miwlelphia, Fa, Solomon when arrayed in all bis royal glory never wore a shirt waist BAIT'S CAPS FOR COLDS. Are recommended by the best druggists. They cure safely and quickly. 8ft cents. Good advice is often suspected when given by a disinterested person. B(«> Soothing Sjmp. ftreWidm tMthtag, Mftena the gam*, reduce* ttr gamin >tloa. gltey patn.cnra* wlafteoHo. Keabettl* Gold may be the key to society* but^ ^ poverty is its strongest barrier. Coe^s Cdogh Balaam »ft> oMaataad hat It will break np a oold fBtckat titan anything elee. It lit alwaya rellafal*. tt. 5The worst Christian watchers are those who are taking cat-naps. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure.--J. W. O'URIKN, 322 Third Ava, It, Minneapolis, Mian., Jan. 6.1900. The clothing of a growing boy re­ fuses to grow with him. Some articles nyiat be described. White's Yucatan needs no description: it'a the real To repel one's cross is to malte heavier.--Amlel. It PUTNAM FADELESS DYBS do not etftin the hands or spot the kettle. Words are the blossoms and deeds are the fruits. A* a drectlng and color rwtorar, PAJUCX*'S BUS BALSAM never fall* to tatltfjr. HUUMCSOOBSS, the feast care for cons, ttete. The dice of God are always loaded. --Emerson. How shall a mother who is female trouble hear healthy chilc How anxious women ought to-1 the blessing of a good constitution! Many women long for a child ? cause of some debility or displ they are barren. Preparation for healthy mat Lydia e7 Hnkham'sV©get cessf ully than by any other mc r and strength to the puts, curing flammation. Actual sterility in women is yeryl thinks she is sterile, let her write " Mass., whose advice is given free be pothers. ̂ ̂ D. Janet, Belmont, " DEAR MRS. Pnoouii S--X no table Compound haa done for me. Befo to carry babe to ttiatairttgr, having loat seven. Ihe doctor said neat tone 11 Pinkh&m's Vegetable Compound, IpL mother of a six months old hasnevsK atanadck day in her life. StmiMtii Mrs. Whitney's DRAB MR. Pnonuii :--From the tfettil was twenty-three 1 was troubled with wea pains when my monthly peilodacaiaooB. Vegetable Go T3ao doctor aaUl fait time awl P MR&.L.Z,WHITNEY totakeyour want my full bad that . to May any I*dla R " oess In the future as in tee past, and maj mine has been."--MRS. L. Z. WBimXT, 4 ] The medicin* that cures th* lydia Em rarm* for sale on ea*r term*, or exehaam. In 1ft., STeb., Minn. orB. D. J. Mulhall, Bloux City, Iowa.* On a clear day a pigeon can see 200 miles. - Carter's Inlt is Just- as cheap as poor ink and u the best ink made. Always use Carter's. An active tool never acquires rust ! i Siberian Express Electrically Ugh ted* The Siberian express, running from Moscow to Irkutsk, is electrically lighted throughout, even unto the rear danger signals. The current is sup­ plied from a generating plant carried on a composite car coupled directly back of the engine. The forward part of this car contains the baggage room, the middle section the electric light plant and the rear section the for the buffet V The "second-story flea" has been discovered at St Joseph. Heretofore the Michigan fleas have been all ground floor fleas and there is no rec­ ord until this Bummer of fleas which Inhabited people on the second stories of houses. William G. Haberkorn of Benton Harbor, has been bitten by one of the second story fleas, and he shows the bite to prove it St puts him to considerable trouble to do this, but he Is willing to go to that trouble when he finds doubting people. The question which puzzles him is how do the flees get to the second story? Dt they Jump, walk upstairs, take the ele vator, or are they earrifd up on peo« pie's clothing? •lOO ftewafetf, *T0D. ;"<:- The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at feast one dreaded disease that science haa been able to cure in all its stages and tlutt is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu­ tional disease, requires a constitutional treat­ ment. Kail's Catarrh Oare is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous stir- faces of the system, thereby destroying- the foundation of the disease, andgivin« the patient strength- by building up the constitution and as4sting nature in doing Its work. The pro­ prietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they «nr One Hundred Dollars for any ease that it fails to eon. Send ter list ef restlmonials. _ Address F. X CHBNBY * CO., Toledo, O Sold bydmgglBta7&c. Family Pills are the best Bettor Than Manted. "Married yet old man?" "Na; but I'm engaged, and that's as good as married." "tt'a better. If you only kne# 11" I*ae's Family Kcdlelaa Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy thie is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. il iFoBigPains ii to bs the heritage of the " " afiuaity av4tywhefe,vtt: *; Rheumatism and Neuralgia bat then Is one sure and pranpt cara for both, vis: St Jacobs Oil I! PALMS | decorate bouseor store We have th* largea* dealer for Wittbold Palm THE 6E0. WTTSOLI SHOES UNION MAM! If you have been pay­ ings* to $5 for iiluies, atrial of W. 1* laa S3 or 1840 ihm will convince you that they are just as good In every way and coat from *1 to 9UIO less. Over t ,000,000weare r*. 11 VAN'S" BUCKWHEAT Finest Flavor. Mother--"Tommy, what makes you so late?" Tommy--"Had some. words with the teacher, and she kept me af­ ter school." Mother--"You had words with the teacher?" Tommy--"Yes, mother, f couldn't spell 'eŝ "--Tit- Bits. We have no gratitude for those re­ formers who would force upon us a doctrine which has not, sweetened their own tempers or made them bet­ ter men than their neighbors.--W. £. Ca nning. . ̂ A man should have plenty Of fc&ik- bone tor himself--and plenty ef ham- T mm V T - », i.- &*J 6eti Packtft Proa Your Grocer. f&STOO [•»> sfcogln Jk« wmrid. wl»a iMUsaorati ndMM shoes Sfcaa m Mftkn Icawe i alw«r> MM nt «lMwhtrt. WT Tour dealer UNM ktap exdtujra aala la MCB town. haviat W. L. a bottom, direct to aairitfe, W.W. (is*, and width, plain or cap tea. reach joa anywhrn. Catalog* fbce. - iOa.BrMkiaa,MaM> KEEP YOU DRY tar fn the bard LOW RATES SOUTH VIA CHICAGO & EASTERN !U4£iOIS RAILROAD. . \ Water Tourist Tickets are oo sale -dai}^ via the above line to all the winter resorts in the South and Southeast. ThAe tickets are sold at very low rates and are limited for return until May 81,1901. Hemeseefcsrs' Tickets are on sale on first and Third Tuesday each month, to all the principal points South and Southeast, at one fare plus $2.00 for the round trip. Tickets are limited for return 21 days from date of sale. _ One-Way Settlers' Tickets are on sale First and Third Tuesday each month, to many points in the South and Southeast at greatly reduced rates. If you are contemplating a trip to the South or Southeast advise any agent of the Chisago & Eastern Illinois Railroad, who will be pleased to quote you rates, send you time tables, make sleeping ear reservation and give you any further information you may degre. O. L. STOKX, Gen. Pass. & Tkk Agt, OUeago. TO THE - " SiSsf *• The Oreat N« run - W« October 16th',49(j TIIMIFBFF NAN! •u2* "Wff: • Bates froiifCI Washington, oa» trip, Frwa.. aDolic. ona »^00. fSp< Dakota, low rates. 80 days,a*d FARMERS* LUMBERMEN 8hottfdtai*l ity to iw fertile iotti of the Great ' ticket agents, er Cat * ,5 - S'.'tt'S tMmi rsMMs Mossy: satisfac gnarantaa.'/

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