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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Apr 1903, p. 2

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* ^ • . 1 • - _ jSE^i^'^,-- • '?••£; ' • - • • • • : • • • • - - - . ; : • " . • / • . - > / • . > . . ' • . • • • • • . ' . . ' • - - . . - • • . . • > p , < 1 i i i " i • mv ranthnr? Tint hov rut Tt T hiM Church "Allotment*." Th« Prnrlnrt Inn nf ftiiu Vniitkfnl Rinlr D«mIi<>iu XiffS-T**? THt FAST TRAIN8 TO CHICAGO. fftw Vork Central's Express Service • Added To. % Ctoorgt H. Daniels, General PasBen- •r lir Agent of the New York Central Road, talking yesterday of the com­ pany's fast train service* said that, in Addition to the new twenty-hour train there are now four twenty-four-hour trains to Chicago and two Empire Bute expresses daily. The Twentieth Century Limited, twenty-hour train, leaves New York ^yery day at 2:45 p. m. and arrives at Chicago the next morning at 9:46. The I.ake Shore Limited leaves New York at 5:30 every afternoon, arriving in Chicago the next afternoon at 4:30. The Fast Mail, a fine twenty-four-hour fnin, leaves New York at 8:45 a. m. ^rery day, reaching Chicago the next Sorning at 7:50, by both the Lake 3orc and the Michigan Central. The noonday Chicago Limited leaves New York at 1 p. m., reaching Chicago by the Lake Shore the next morning at 11:50, a twenty-four-hour train, really tyenty-three hours and fifty minutes. The Detroit and Chicago Limited leaves New York at 4 p. m., reaching Chicago the next afternoon, a fourth «?enty-four-hour train. -- From the Hew York Times. Note--The New York Central also «MMl 15 trains a day between New York 4Hd Buffalo and Niagara Falls; 5 trains a day between New York and fit Louis and Cincinnati; 4 trains a day between New York and Montreal AOd by its Boston ana Albany Dlvi- fjoa 4 trains a day between New York Boston via Springfield. The King to Be a Colonel* It Is reported that King Edward has ted a barrel of Kentucky whisky sent Windsor castle. If King Edward's physicians sanction his use of some •Itch stimulant he may as well get the Defiance Starch ild be in every household, none so good, ee 4 ot. more for 10 cents than any er brand of cold water starch. Ifoderatlon is the silken string ran' etng through the pearl chain 'of aT Virtues.--Bishop HalL Kaay who formerly smoked lOe dsns, I0W smoke Lewis' "Single Binder" straight The best combination of the best Always reliable. No man was ever discontented with the world tt he did Ms duty in It-- S&uthey. All Up to Date Housekeepers •pi Defiance Cold Water Starch, becanae ft H better, and 4 OL more of it for same •WWaey. Monkeys are great Imitators of <&en and men are great imitators of isonkeya. . Tonsillne Cures Sore Throat. Money makes the earls go. s r D O Y O U f* DO NTT DELAY T A K E . i r f C P K & • • BALSAM- t Cures Colda, Concha, Sore Throit, Croup, Infln- Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Afthma. certain cure for Consumption in first stages, nd a sure relief in advanced stages. Uee at once. Ton will see the excellent effect after taking the |pit dose. Pold by dea era everywhere. Largo ottlea SS5 cents and 50 cents. k } ! 1 rr A" •* ALABASTINE The Only Durable Wall Cwtlni Wall Paper is unsanitary. Kal- somines are temporary, rot, rub off and scale. ALABASTINE is a pure, permanent and artistic wall coating, ready for the brush by mixing in cold water. For sale by paint dealers everywhere. Buy in packages < v.4ad beware of worthless . ^ imitations. ALABASTINE COMPANY, Grand Rapids, Mich. THE MAID af MAIDEN LANE • A L'OVE STORY BY A/nElllA £. ttAGft (Copyright 1900. hr Amelia E. Barr) i' CHAPTER I. The Home of Cornelia Moran.* Never, in all its history, was" the proud and opulent city of New York more glad and gay than in the bright sprirg days of Seventeen-Hundred- and-Ninety-One. It had put out of sight every trace of British rule and occupancy, all its homes had been re­ stored and re-furnished, and Its sacred places re-consecrated and adorned. The skies of Italy were not bluer than the skies above it; the sunshine Of Arcadia not brighter or more genial. These gracious days of Seventeen- Hundred-and-Ninety-One were also the early days of the French revolu­ tion, and fugitives from the French court--princes and nobles, statesmen and generals, sufficient for a new Iliad, loitered about the pleasant places of Broadway and Wall street, Broad street, and Maiden Lane. They were received with courtesy, and even with hospitality, although America at that date almost universally sympathized with the French Republicans, whom they believed to be the pioneers of po­ litical freedom on the aged side of the Atlantic. Love for France, hatred for Efngland, was the spirit of the age; It effected the trend of commerce, it dominated politics, it was the keynote of conversation wherever men and women congregated. Tet the most pronounced public feeling always carries with it a note of dissent, and it was just at this day that dissenting opinion began to make ty I thought her--hut I knew her not. Is she then a stranger?" "A stranger! Come, come! The lit­ tle one is a very child of New York. She is the daughter of Dr. Morait-- Dr. John, as we all call him." "Well, look now, I thought in her face there was something that went to my heart and memory." -"And yet, in one way, she is a stranger. Such a little one she whs, when the coming of the English sent the family apart and away< To the army went the Doctor, and there he stayed, till the war was over. Mrs. Moran took her child, and went to her father's home In Philadelphia. It was only last month she came back to xtew York. But look now! It is the little maid herself, taat Is coming down the street." "And it is my grandson who is at her side. The raBcal! He ought now to be reading his law books in Mr. Hamilton's office." „ "We also have been young, Van Heemskirk." "I forget not, my friend. My Jorls sees not me, and I will not see him." Then the two old men were silent, but their eyes were fixed on the youth and maiden, who were slowly advanc­ ing toward them. She might have stepped out of the folded leaves of a rosebud, so lovely was her face, framed in its dark curlB. Her dress was.of some soft, green ma­ terial ; and she carried in her hand a bunch of daffodils. She was small, but exquisitely formed, and she With Respectful Eagerness He Talked to Her. winter Rootbeer gallons for zft Charles You can buy of us at whole­ sale prices and save money. Our 1,000-page catalogue tells the story. We will send It npon receipt of 15 cents. Your neighbors trade with as--why not you ? E WANT YOUR TRADE C H I C A G O The house that tells the t> & & GINSENG Fkriuan CSD MAKE SS.3UO off of ^ *cr< II ihey will follow the direction of our Httls book­ let; telMnjf all tljotn tt)« uioit taloabl* oro|i lb*t van l>® n row a. Send I'lo to le>rn bowu»t>e*Ui IMPKKI XL GlNSKNll CO., ttltt Uir BldK., INDIANA POL. 18 I NO. sy iw «<£ A i F?-- One - third original •£; . • kU C(J8t. e»»y tnrina, kfV'v. MSO.OOO Urlck Plant In KOUD order, OD 15. I' »i. H..M miles north ot SL Haul. Aiao Jmp" Md Rnri Wild Lxtid. Write me. •» LMndmn, Rum It City, m i . .. ;C. . .. - . .. Itself heard. The horrors of Avignon, and of Paris, the brutality with which the royal family had been treated, and the abolition of all religious ties and duties, had many and bitter oppo­ nents. In these days of wonderful hopes and fears there was, in Maiden Lane, a very handsome residence--an old house even in the days of Washing­ ton, for Peter Van Clyffe had built it early in the century as a bridal pres­ ent to his daughter when she married Philip Moran, a lawyer who grew to eminence among colonial Judges. One afternoon in April, 1791, two men were standing talking opposite to the'entrance gates of the pleasant place. They were Capt. Jorls Van Heemskirk, a member of the Congress then sitting In Federal Hall, Broad street, and Jacobus Van Aliens, a wealthy citizen, and a deacon In the Dutch church. Van Heemskirk be­ lieved in France; the tragedies she bad been enacting in the holy name of liberty, though they had saddened, bad, hitherto, not discouraged him. But the news received that morning had almost killed his hopes for the spread of republican ideas in Europe. "Van Arlens," he said warmly, "this treatment of King Louis and his fam­ ily is hardly to be believed. It is too much, and too far. After this, no one can foresee what may happen in France." "That is the truth, my friend," an­ swered VanAriens. "The French have gone mad. We won our freedom with­ out massacres." "We had Washington and Franklin, and other good and wise leaders who feared God and loved men." "So I said to the Count de Moustier but one hour ago. Yet If we were prudent and merciful It was because we are religious. When men are ir­ religious, the Lord forsakes them; and if bloodshed and bankruptcy fol­ low It is not to be wondered at I am but a tanner and currier, as you know, but I have had experiences; and I do not believe in the future of a people who are without a God and without a religion." "Well, so It is. Van Aliens. I will now be silent, and wait for the echo; but I fear that God has not yet said l^et there be peace.' I saw you last night at Mr. Hamilton's with your son and daughter. You made a noble en­ trance." y* "Well, tlyfen. the truth is the truth. My Arent,A is worth looking at; and fo^. Rem. he was not made In a day.- God is good, who gives us boys and girls to sit so near our hearts!" ".Ind such a fair, free city for a home!" said Van Heeifikirk as he looited up and down the sunshiny stre'«L "New York is not perfect, but we ijve her. Right or wrong, we love ber; just as we love our moder, and our little children." :'That, also. Is what the Domine •*>s." answered Van Arlens; "aflfc yet, h* J'kea not that New York favors the French g0 much." "He ig a good man. With yon, last Might, vas a little maid--a great beau- my mother? But how can I? I have no words to explain--I do not under­ stand--Alas! if l should be growing wicked!" | The thought mads her start; she ! hastened her steps towards the large ; entrance door, and as she approached 1 it a negro in a fine livery of blue and | white threw the door wide open for r her. She turned quickly out of the hall, into a parlor full of sunshine. A lady sat there hemstitching a dam­ ask napkin; a lady of dainty plain­ ness, with a face full of graven exper­ ience and mellow character. As Cor­ nelia entered she looked up with a smile, and said, as she slightly raised her work, "It is the last, bf the dozen,. Cornelia." "You make me ashamed of xby idle­ ness, mother. I went to Bmbree's for the linen thread, and he had just opened some English gauzes and lute­ strings. Mrs. Willets was choosing a piece for- a new gown, for she is to dine with the President next week, and she was so polite as to ask my opinion about the goods. Afterwards, I walked to Wall street with her; and coming back I met, on Broadway, Lieut. Hyde, and then he walked home with me. Was it wrong? I mean was it polite--I mean, the proper thing to permit? I knew not how to prevent it." "How often tore yon met Lieut Hyde?" "I met him for the first time last night. He was at the Sylvesters'." "And pray what did Lieut. Hyde say to you this afternoon?" He gave me the flowers, and ho told me about a beautiful opera, of which I had never before heard. It is called Figaro.' He asked permis­ sion to bring mis some of the airs to-night, and 1 said some civilities. I think they meant 'Yes.' Did I do wrong, mother?" I will say 'no,' ipgr deax; as yon have given the invitation. But to prevent an appearance of too exclu­ sive intimacy, write to Arenta, and ask her and Rem. to take tea with us." "Mother, Arenta has bought a blue lutestring. Shall I not also have a new gown? The gauzes are very sweet and genteel, and I think Mrs. Jay will not forget to ask me to her dance next week. Mr. Jefferson. Is sure to be there, and i wish to walk minuet with him.** "I told Mrs. Willets, and with such a queer little laugh she asked me 'if his red breeches did not make me think of the guillotine?' I do not think Mrs. Willets iikes Mr. Jefferson very much; but, all the same, I wish to dance once with him. I think it will be something to talk about when am an old woman." "My dear one, that is SO far off, Go now, and write to Arenta." (To be oontinued.) ..' * walked with fearlessness and distinc­ tion. Of all this charming womanhood the young man at her side was profoundly conscious. A tall, sunbrowned, mili­ tary-looking young man, as handsome as a Greek god. He was also very finely dressed, in the best and highest mode; and he wore his sword as if it were a part of himself. Indeed, all his movements were full of confidence and ease; and yet it was the vivacity, vitality, and ready response of his face that was most attractive. His wonderful eyes were bent upon the maid at his side; he saw no other earthly thing. With a respectful eag­ erness^ full of admiration, he talked to her; and she answered his words-- whatever they were--with a smile that might have ' moved mountains. They passed the two old men without any consciousness of their presence, and Van Heemskirk smiled, and then sighed, and then said softly-- "So much youth, and beauty, and happiness! It is a benediction to have seen it! I shall not reprove Jorls at this time. But now I must go back to Federal Hall." When their eyes turned to the Moran house the vision of youth and beauty had dissolved. Van Heems kirk's grandson, Lieut Hyde, was hastening towards Broadway; and the lovely Cornelia Moran was sauntering up the garden of her home, stooping occasionally to examine the pearl- powdered auriculas or to twine around its support some vine, straggling out of its proper place. Then Van Arlens hurried down to his tanning pits in the swamp; and Van Heemskirk went thoughtfully to Broad street When he reached Fed­ eral Hall, he stood a minute in the doorway; and with inspired eyes looked at the splendid, moving pic­ ture; then he walked proudly toward the Hall of Representatives, saying to himself, with silent exultation as he went: "The Seat of Government! Let who will, have It; NewlYork is the Crown­ ing City. Her merchants shall be princes, her traffickers the honorable of the earth; the harvest of her rivers shall be her royal revenue, and the marts of ail nations shall be In her streets." GOOD CUSTOMER OF FRANCS. England Makes Heavy Purchases from Her Old-Time Foe. Jean Flnot, editor of the Revue des Revues, recently put the relations be­ tween France and England In a most striking fashion. He said: 'Great Britain deserves the name of the richest and most Important of French colonies. France is so bound up with her fate that the disappear­ ance of England's economic power would cause her incalculable mischief. Our total exports In. 1901 were only 4,155,000,000 francs, of which Eng­ land took 1,264,000,000 francs, or more than 30 per cent of all the mer­ chandise which we cast on the world's market But even of more im­ portance is the fact that the amount of English purchases in France is constantly growing. From 1,032,000,- 000 francs in 1896 it rose to 1,132,000,- 000 francs in 1897, to 1,238,000,000 francs in 1899, aUd to 1,264,000,000 francs in 1901, thus showing an in­ crease of 232,000,000 francs, or over 22 per cent in five years. Now the purchases from the mother country of all the French colonies, Including Algeria, 259,000,000 francs, and Tunis, about 3*,000,000 francs, together with those scattered all over the world, about 183,000,000 francs, did hot amount in 1900 to more than 476,000,- 000 francs. Besides this colossal amount of purchases, the English yearly spend considerable sums in France. The money left in our coun­ try by Englishmen visiting Paris or their favorite resorts is commonly estimated at 500,000,000 francs, thus making 1,800,000,000 francs as the formidable total yearly paid by Eng­ land to France." REED A8 A LOVER OF PBACE. CHAPTER II. This la the Way of Love. Cornelia lingered In the garden, be­ cause she had suddenly, and as yet un­ consciously, entered into that tender mystery, so common and so sovereign, which we call Love. In Hyde's pres­ ence she had been suffused with a bewildering, profound emotion, which bad fallen on her as the gentle showers fall, to make the flowers of spring. This handsome youth, whom she had only seen twice, and in the most for­ mal manner, affected her as no other mortal ever done. She was a little afraid. "T have met him but twice." she thought; "and It Is as If I had a n«rw. strange, exquisite&Hfe. .Ought I t*U Church "Allotments." • novel method for the, provision of a church is being put in operation at Norwood Green, near Leeds, Eng­ land. A plan of the proposed site has been divided into allotments, and these are offered for sale, those in the chancel at £1 each, those in the nave at 10s. each, and those outside the church at 6s. each. When the site is secured purchasers will be able to Identify the particular plot they have chosen. If all are sold, the sum. will be just sufficient to cover the cost of the site---£201 5s. New Editor of the State. The new editor of the Columbia, S. C., State to succeed N. G. Gonzales, assassinated by ex-Lieut. Gov. Tlll» •man, is the brother, W, E. Gonzales, who has been actively identified with the paper for a dozen years. He de­ clares and resolves: "To its old prin­ ciples and its old faiths the State Is pledged and for them it will stand, by the help of God, beyond this genera­ tion. No name will appear as editor at the head of these columns. That space Is dedicated as# a perpetual memorial to him whose spirit' lives with us." Statistics of a Big Hospital. Two million five hundred thousand pills and three tons of cough lozenges are dispensed every year at the Lon­ don hospital Ninety-two miles of lint, 476 miles of bandages, also six tons of cotton wool, and nine miles of plaster are used annually. Every day half a ton of ice and 400 siphons of soda water, and in a year the eggs used, if placed end to end, would ex­ tend to six and a half miles. 8TATE or OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, l__ LUCAS COUNT*. F Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he ia the >nlor jartner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing jusiness in the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay tho sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and even* case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use el Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY* Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. r_ . , A. W. GLEASON. , ISEAL.J Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acta directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of tho system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO* TalniU, Ohifc Sold bar Drueeists, 75c. Hall's Family. Pills are tho beat. , _ - Growth of Pacific Trade. With the exception pf the Bin- presses, built for the Canadian Pacific railroad, there was not until the Span­ ish-American war a first-class steamer on the Northern Pacific. Now the largest steamers ever constructed in American waters, and with one excep­ tion, the Cedric, the largest steamers ever built, have been ordered for the Pacific ocean traffic. Rebellion a Reflection Against Com­ mon Sense of the Race. The late Thomas B. Reed's make-up, mental and physical, fitted him for conflict, yet he was a lover of peace. The American Friend, the organ of the orthodox Quakers, publishes this week extracts from letters which Mr. Reed wrote during the Spanish war and since, which are very characteristic of the man. It seems that in a letter written to his Quaker friend In March, 1898. he complained that be had re­ ceived so little credit from peace so­ cieties for his consistent service as a peace man, while Mr. Long, secretary of the navy, was the idol of the socie­ ties. He said in a note at the end of this letter: "Does thee remember the book of Jonathan Dymond? I have never forgotten it, and have It yet.' Thirty-eight years before when be was student at Bowdoin this Quaker friend had given him a copy of "Essays on the Principles of Morality," writ» ten hy the English Quaker, Jonathan Dymond, In 1829. After President McKlnley had made a speech assigning to Providence re­ sponsibility for the war with Spain, Mr. Reed wrote to this same friend, "No. It Is the devil," and he also add ed. "There Is something better tbpn the fat of rams or even going to meetr Ing regularly." In 1901 his Quaker friend Kent him a pamphlet on war, to which he replied that he would read It, "although Jonathan Dymond made up my mind on it a good many years ago." This same correspondent also quotes Mr. Reed as saying that the fact that the North and the South had to settle their conflict as they did, "Is a tremendous reflection against the common seope el &fe» t*?e."--Boston Transcript. " The Production of Silk. Stlk Is known to be the secretion of two glands of the silkworm along­ side of the digestive canal. These glands, which consist of tubes In nu­ merous colls, terminate In the spin­ ning wart and open In a common ori­ fice from which the secretion, of the consistency of honey, issues forth# promptly hardening into a thread on exposure to air. Bones of Human Skeleton. - ^ '.j ' The human skeleton, exclusive ef teeth, consists of 208 bones. Youthful Bank President. . Wade H. Negus of Greenville, who was elected president of th*i First National bank in that city last week, succeeding his father, the lato1 Major James E. Negus, is probably i the youngest bank president in th«? United States, being but 24 years old. Will Not Write Remlniscencee. "Senator Frye once refused to writ*' his reminiscences for a magazine, de­ claring himself opposed to the tell* ing by public men of "(ales out of school." 1 CLOSE TO THE PEOPLE. n*fe Kidney Pills have leaped into Pshlic favor because the people can Write to the makers and secure a trial free. Thus has been buiided.the greatest and largest sale known to any Kidney medicine in the world. CtTBTica, O.-^-1 had &cb severe pain in my back that I could not walk. I used the sam­ ple of Doan's Kidney Pills with such good re­ sults I sent to Toledo for another box, and they cured me.-- SABAH E. COTTKXLL, Cur­ tice, O. FAXMOUTH, VA.-- I suffered over twelve months with pain in the small of my back. Medicines ana plasters cave only, temporanr relief. Doan's Kidney nils cured ma.--F. 8. BBOWW, Falmouth, Va. Aching backs are eased. Hip, back, ani loin pains overcome. 8welling of the limbs and dropsy signs vanish. They correct urine with brick dust sedi­ ment, high colored, pain in passing, drfc bling, frequency, bed wetting. Doau% Kidney Pills remove - calculi and gravel Relieve heart palpitation, sleeplessness headache, nervousness, dizziness. PMI'^CRAME FOR' SPRINC 'KIBRIEV itXS • m. * Rubber Is Easily Killed. There Is no reliable method of pre­ serving rubber except by keeping It in a damp place and away from the air. Exposure to the air and dry atmosphere will kill the best of rub­ ber In time. Oil of any kind is its deadly enemy. •other 'Gray's Sweet Powdan for ClilMr--• Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurss in the Children's Home in New York, cure Constipation, Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy W orms. Over 80,000 tes­ timonials. At all druggists, 25c. Sample FEUSiB. AddreeaA. S. Olmated, LeRoy, N. Y- Illinois Rattlesnakes Thriving. The Illinois rattlesnakes seem to be multiplying greatly, for, whereas, in bygone days the pigs roamed at will --in the absence of any stock laws-- they exterminated the snakes to a large extent. Edison's Patente. Edison has taken out upwards of 400 patents, an event of real signifi­ cance in America, where thp accept­ ance of a specification is in the nature of a certificate of novelty. Has Posed Many Presidents. George G. Rockwood, photographer, has posed every president since Van Bured. He has been a photographer over fifty years. A thing is worth precisely what it can do for you, not what you choose to pay for it--Ruskin. Money refunded for each package of PUTNAM FADELESS DYES if unsat­ isfactory. Fair weather friends are often ene­ mies In disguise. Ask Your Doctor If he knows of any better lax­ ative and stomach remedy than Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin If he is not prescribing^ it tn his practice, he knows what it is, and if he is honest, he will satisfy you and us with his reply to your question. Dr. Caldwali's Syrap Ptptla is not sold in bulk, but all drug­ gists sell it in 50c and $1.00 bottles and refund your money if you re­ ceive no benefit. Fair, isn't it T T- E. Covpy, M. D., Sivannah, Tenn.. write# under dute of Aug. J, 1U00: "I hsive used Ur. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin In both my own family and In my practice, and unhesitatingly state thut, I have trot better results from it thnn any other form of pepsin I have used. 1 consider it a most excellent preparation." Dr. T. Jones, ot Ossrood. Mo., writes under date of Oct. 28, 1899: "I have used Syrup Pepsin for some time and fltid It gives most excellent results and it is one of the jtretitest •elling preparations I have ever carried in BMMtb i do not hesitate to recommeaa Your Money Back IV It Don't Benefit Yo« PEPSIN SYRUP CO., Nontioado, IB. * West HAVEN, CONN.-- Eight months sgo I took & severe pain in my back. The sample box of Doan's E!(duey Pills helped me eo much I purchased two boxes; am on my sec­ ond bo«. My heart docs not >othei mo as it oaed to and! I'feel welL--SARAH E. BBADLBT, K®. S77 Elm Street, West Haven, Conn. HOUBTON, Tfcx.--I took tho sample of Doan's Kidney Pills -with such great benefit I bought a box at our druggist's. Used over half and stopped, because my urine which before had only come dribbling, now became •o free. I had medicine enough. I had lum­ bago and the pills rid me of it. I should have written sooner, but you know how soon a well person foigets about being sick.--Mr. C. H. Boxsont »a 2810 McKenny Houston, Tex. Foffrsm-MiLBUKN Co., Buffalo, N. Y Pleaso send me by mall, without trial box Doan's Kidney Ptlls. Poet-offlca- State (Cat oat mamon on tatted Bmud nuril to ~ gter-Milbt Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. T.) Medical Advice Free--Strictly H I HEE CATALOGUE EGO 8 (or from lea<l]iw **rleile» of tuor«'Utfhbrecl poultry. b*r . In I'ou trjr« Turkeys, (reefic, DacK®, Gaiuea iu<i Pea­ fowls, CHI«» L«fnl»» AUD Ctlve®, D0C&-- l.eu'llng breeds, blooded BubHt. Ci*>o, Biood* bounds, <.>rny Wolf and Fa#t Fox founds, sent OD APPROVAL If you c«O »FI»D bunk r?f* eredccii. Wanted: KMil.ve U«d and Gray Foi Cur>s and old OUPB U«l rl4 Of UIMI U4 rafts# fmcy poultry Addrwaa kiahAiia. Imw, KukivUU, Hill Oa* ECZEMA Psoriasis, Scalled Head, Milk Crust, i, etc. ! Speedily, Permanently and Economically Cured, ; I; when All Else Fails, by The agonizing, itching, and bttrtiihg of the skin, as fii eczema; the frightful scaling, as in psoriasis; the loss of hair, and crusting of the scalp, as in scalled head; the facial disfigurements, as in pimples and ringworm; the awful suffering of infants, and anxiety of worn-out parents* as in milk crust, tetter and salt rheum, -- all demand a remedy of almost superhuman virtues to successfully cope with tnem. That Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Resolvent are such stands proven beyqnd all doubt. No statement is made regarding them that is not justified by the strongest evidence. The purity and sweetness, the power to afford immediate relief, the certainty of speedy and permanent cure, the absolute safety and great economy have made them the standard skin cures, blood purifiers and humour remedies of the civilized world. Complete Enema! aid Internal Treatment Bathe the affected parts with hot water and Cuticura Soap, to cleans® the surface of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle. Dry, without hard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Ointment freely, to allay itching irritation, and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and, lastly, take Cuti­ cura Resolvent to cool and cleanse the blood. This complete treatment affords instant relief, permits rest and sleep in the severest forms of eczema and other itching, burning, and scaly humours of the skin, scalp and blood, and points to a speedy, permanent and economical cure when all other remedies and the best physicians fail. As evidence of tha wonderful curative properties of Cuticura Remedies and of their world­ wide sale, we quote from lie Hi Hr. Mco fiieim's Letter, * I desire to give my voluntary testimony to the beneficial effects of your Cuticura Remedies. I have suffered for some time from an excess of uric acid in the blood; and since the middle of last year, from a severs attack of Eczema, chiefly on the scalp, face, ears and neck, and on ons limb. I was for several months under professional treatment, but tha remedies prescribed were of no avail, and I was gradually becoming worse, my face was dreadfully disfigured, and I lost nearly all my hair. At last, my wife prevailed upon me to try the Cuticura Remedies, and I gave them a thorough trial with the most satisfactory results. The disease soon began to dissappear, and my hair commenced to grow again. A fresh growth of hair is covering my head, and my limb (although not yet quite cured) is gradually improving. My wife thinks so highly of your remedies that sho has been purchasing them in order to make presents to other persons suffering from similar complaints, and, as President of the Bible Women's Society, has told the Bible women to report if any case should come under her notice when a poor person is so afflicted, so that your remedies may be resorted to." ROBERT ISAAC FINNEMORE, (Judgt of tht Natal Sttprtmd Court.) Ffatermaritxburg, Natal, Oct. *9, 1901. C0TICUKA RKMEDIE8 are Bold thronghouttheeWnixed world. PRICES: Catienrft RMOl* •nt. Wo. p«r bottle (In the form of Chooolat* Coated Pills, SRe. per vial of 60); Catleam Ointment, 6O0. por hnx.amt Cutlour* Soap.25c. per tablet. Send for tliegreat work, '• Humour* Of tho Blood. Skin, and Scalp, and How toCureTliem,"G4 paRe*,300 Disfa-es, with Illustration*, Testimonials and Directions In all languages, including .lapnnese nn<i Ch'nese. British Dapot, f7-2HCharterhouse fiq., London, E.C. French Detiot.fi Rue de la Paix. Parfs Australian Depot* R TOWIIH A Co., Sydney. POTTER DRUG AND CHEMICAX. CORPORATION, Sole Pro- prletora. Boston, U. 8. A. , COOK BOOK FREE*. Lzcepi cost of mailing. We will aend our aplendld GOLD MEDAL, COOK BOOK, containing over 1,000 care* fully prepared recipes, to any lady who will send us eight cents in stamps and the names and addresses of two house* w i v e s w h o w o u l d a l s o l i R e o n e o f t h e s e b o o h s * A d d r e s s WASHBURN-CROSBY CO., Minneapolis, Minn.* matters of GOLD MEDAL FLOVR Mention this Pnper* STOCKS, GRAIN AND PROVISIONS! as Boncbt GtbulJ toi cash or mars m. I-orty dollars carries 20 shares of stock or 2000 bushels of craiS "3- ' two points. Correspondence t,olicne<l. E U G E N F M . M U I , * rn.f 119 (A SALLE 8T.t CHICAGO, LEARN TELEGRAPHY." Kuril h l.ar(T^ S;«iary. VK I . I I K men and wumi *«ineil to nil ralliuuil ami government posit Tlwtroiigli liiftrm tloii. Kxpeuse# for iourse,3t)w« tuttluii, tioHrU. room. Including typewriting, only 1 PpKltlou« to ttnuluaten. Cattlogiies fr •ariM T 1/JOOMOTOK ATAXIA CONQUERED AT LAST BT DR. CHA8E'S BLOOO AND NERVE FQOO, wrllatne about your cnae. AJVH-O ana proof or tursi IRIL II. CHASE, 224 N.I OUi St., PMtADttPMA,NL h 4^ \ Is-agraplua BOFC*«t, O.W., Karioa, L

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