West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 15 Jun 1899, p. 2

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- _v_°v-- He needed a hiange of xvii-ice and scene; and as she could not return to Arthur‘s desolate home, whither the Maude knew that so far as Charlie was concerned, her uncle had Spoken truly. Charlie was greatly changed, and his eyes had in them a scared look, as if every detail of the horrors of the fight on the mountain had-stamped it- self indelibly upon his mind. and was never for, an instant forgotten. “I always wanted to travel North,” he said, “but my affairs kept me at home“ Now I have no affairs, My neighbors have relieved me of such ccmmodities, and I want to get away from a spot where I have witnessed such dreadful things. We ail need change. You, Maude, more than I. and Charlie more than either, I don’t know what has come over the boy. That horrible night and morning were too much for him.” by the startling events which had fol- lowed e.:ch Other so rapidly, Paul was hardly able to counsel for him-elf, and assented readily to the plan which had really originated with Captain Carle- ton, who had another scheme under- lying that, but who suggested both so skillfully that Paul Haverill fancied they were his own ideas, and gave them as such to Maude. They would go to Knoxville with the Soldiers, he said; thence to Nashville. They had some relatives living there. and. after resting for a little, they would con- tinue their journeyings North, going, perhips, as far as New York. Over Paul Haverill, too, a change had passed. The attack upon him by his old friends and neighbors, though long expected, had been sudden and terrible when it came, and as he watched the burning of the house which had been his so long. he felt that every tie which bound him to the old place was severed. Then came swiftly the fearful tragedy of the mountains, when Arthur was brcught to him dead. Stunned :inzi bewildered by the startling events which had fol- lowed egzch Other so rapidly, Paul was was passmg around her, and offering no suggeonn or remonstrunce when told of hpr uncie’s pl 1n to accompany Captain Si nuns and his men to Knox- ville. Maude was not iliâ€"only exhaustedâ€"- both physic‘tliy and mentally, the ex- haustion showing itself in the quiet, listless state into which she lapsed, paying but little attention to what was passing around her, and offering Very kind, and gentle, and pitiful was Tom's demeanor toward Maude. During the day ani the nzght, when she had sat by Arthur in Lois’s cabin, ho. had not been near her; but, after all was over, he went to her, and, 11 ith the authority of a friend and brother, insisted that she should take the rest she needed so much. And \Iaude ga1e 11 a) at the sound 6f his soothing, quieting voice and, with a flood of tears, did what he bade her do. And then TLID sat by her, and bathed her throbbing head, and smoothed her be1utiful hair, and paid back in part the ser1ices she ha (1 rendered him when he lay sick in Squire Tuna bridge’s hous’e. But the dead come not to life again, and the next morning they buried Ar- thur Tunbridge in the grassy enclo- sure where Paul Haveriil’s wife was sleeping with the infant Sun who, had he lived,wouid have been just Arthur's age. The blue coated soldiery, who had been his deadly foes, paid him‘ every military honor possible within, their means, even marching to his; rave b hind the stars and bars which} any up his coffin; but when they; came back from the burial, they bore: the national flag, whose folds that peaceful summer night floated in the breeze from the top of Lois’s Cabin. - She had not loved him so very much, but his violent death and all the hor- rors attending it had shaken her Ler- ribly, and could he have come back to life she wouid have tried to love him, and with her iron will would have crushed that other love, the very knowledge of which had made her heart throb with so much joy. him so very much if" Charlie 'said, in broken sentences, and then Maude shivered from head to foot, but made him no reply. ”Poor Maudeâ€"poor sister! I am so sorry. I never thoughtâ€"I did not know; you used to laugh about him so to Uncle Paul. I'd give my life to bring him back for you. Did you love Crouched beside Maude, with blue eyes fixed upon her with a 1 ing,_ remoyeeful look, was Charlie grey uniform, with a little flag of stars and bars across his breast. This was Charlie's thought, and it was very mete that he who to the last had believed in the righteousness of the Confederacy should have her sign above him. There was no other spot except the cabin where Maude could stay, and the entire may and night she sat by her dead Artur, who-m, now that he was dead, she cherished in her heart as a martyr and a hero, ques- tioning even the ground on which she had hitherto stood so firmly. and askr ing herself, if, after all, the South was so very far out of the way, or if the Union were worth the fearful price the Southern people were pay- ing for it. Maude. did not know her- self in this mood. It was so unlike, all her former theories, and more than once she pressed her hOt hands to her still hotter head, and asked if she was going mad. Of aL' Paul Haverill's ccmrortable buildings, house, stables, barn and negro quarters, there was left him only one cabin which the fire had not consumed. That StOOd a little distant tram the rest, and had been occupied by Lois before her husband died. It was superior to the Other cabins then; it was neat and tidy now, and there they laid the dead lieutenant, in his (6! \!I W $€<§éeéxéx ' ' ‘ --'I\\\- - W’WZ Love and Wares“ g5; CHAPTER XXXV. “iith 2} pity- v_â€" vâ€"v vyfivu at New London, and that other night of more recent date, when she sat with Jimmie Carleton beneath the Rockland sky and heard his passionate words of love, and saw his soft, black eyes kindle with earneszness and. ”then grow sad and sorrowful with disap- pointment. There was no kindling in them now,â€"no ardent passion or heat of love,â€"but a certain softness and brightness, and even sauciness, linger- ed still and told Annie at list who it} ‘1"; n ‘ - C_‘â€"J w..-“ “Hub so loosely, the eyes opened for a mom- ent and were fixed upon her face. There was no consciousness in them,â€" no recognition of her presence, nothing but the strained, hungry, despairing look Annie had seen in the eyes of so many of our prisoners, and which to a greater or less degree was peculiar to them all. Annie saw this look, and then underneath it all she saw some- thing more, â€" what it: was she could not tell, but it brought back to . her‘ those moonlight nights upon the beach; _~â€" â€"-â€"v ”u“ . â€" e on a thread. He had been there four days, and only a faint, moaning sound had given token of life or conscious- ness. But at the close of the *Iourth day, as Annie sat chafing the pulse- less fingers where the grey skin hung “A ‘AA-A'.â€"_ L‘- He wasâ€"helpless as an infant, and Annie nursed him much as she would have nursed a baby whose l_ife hpng n“ n Olaâ€"”-3 his It was the figure of a young man, who must once have been finely form- ed, with handsome face and hair and l’eyes. The latter were closed now, and only the lids moved with a con- vulsive motion, as Annie bent over him. The dark hair, matted and coarse and filthy, had curled in rings about the bony forehead, but had been cut away when the bath was given, and the closely shorn head was like many other heads which Annie Gra- ham’s hands had touched, gently, ten- derly, as they now moved over this one, trying to infuse some life into the breathing skeleton. He was to be her chargeâ€"he was in her division and Mrs. Simms' keen, grey eyes; scanned Annie curiously as she bent over the poor fellow. ' James Carleton had never been heard from since that letter sent to her so long ago, and hope had died out of Annie’s heart, when at last, with Widow Simms, she stood by the out where lay the insensibie form of which the physician had spoken so dis- courugingly. A STORY OF SLAVERY DAYS. By MARY J. HOLMES. w” H r . I V.., \.../ NW”. \. 1 3 be \Vhile we in the m nessee were tracing I Will Mather and C Mrs. Simms and Ann tiringly at their post CHAPTER XXXVI This seems to be one of 1 cases we» have had. I (10!. mind will survive the horro: endured, even if his body do: fellow! his mother would 13 mm: him now.” So for a time longer, they lingered in Tennessee, while Rose waited im- patiently for the-1m and fretted at the “I will think about it by and bv," she szud to her uncle; “but for {he pyfisent it is nice to rest here in Nash- V1 8.)) Maude had never known the umpfin‘ ionship of a sisterâ€"had never had a ;single intimate girl friend except Nettie Tunbridge, who died. Inde- pendent, strong willed and self-reli- ant, she had cared but little for any society except that which she found with nature in the wild mountains of Tennessee ; but now, broken and shock- ed, and shorn of some of her strength, er’s sprightly letter made her heart yearn toward the little lady who had written it, and the pleasant home which Rose described as beautiful with the summer bloom. Charlie should accompany him. “They saved “'ill’s life as well as yours," Rose wrote, “I have a right to them all, and especially to the noble Maude. Bring her to me, Tom, and let me coax back the color to her dear face and the brightness to her eyes, I shall come myself and get her if she refuses.” ThlS was sad news had been sent at once, Maude ; assented to the Nashville arrangement, l and in three weeks was comfortably; ,settled at a Nashville hotel, with Lois 5as her attendant. Her uncle, Charlie,’ and Captain Carleton were with hen? the latter ccnsmntly putting off his; journey to kaland, where they were ' so anxiously waiting for him., He hadl written to Rose immediately after his! arrival at Nashville, telling her of all that had transpired, and speaking of ‘ Maude De Vere as one whom he hop-'. ed to mike his wife. This time the” letter went safely, and Rose replied at I‘ once, urging Tom to come, and insist- 3‘ mg that Mr. Haverill, Maude and.1 Charlie should accompanv him. 5 s to be one of the worst .ve had. I doubt if his be in Vain. :d never been ‘_ _..--_ out“ gauger ner SIOWIy and with Ion pauses Ilike a school-b g ' . 0y trying to say a half- learned lesson â€"'v- 5: She had many a ,Words in his ears {impress them [1pc] ghad succeeded, for gafter her slquly a1 I121- ‘ Did h-2 think 1 wizh that star 8 did he? take her though: was not one, bUt Annie he? joy, qt this reason. “Jimmie," she bent her face so lips touched his don’t You know t napolis, with me, Your remember . “The star. it’s rise thought it had set 1 as a good omen, Bill face again." he. poinEed to file Whispered, Half an hour pass Annie’s head was I from langour and C sudden exclamation she looked up to see fixed upon her. whi vVlL UK,“ U] The summer rain was f upon the. streets of Annap cool evening air came ‘ L fhe room, where Annie Gr her patient. There were tune for Jimmie, by ’ every leisure moment was was sitting by him now, w as he slept, and 1' ' to his low murmurings as to be talking of her and ‘ prison-life. Than Inn ~ - m.-- m it COOK half an hour to revive the pa- ' lent: some. respects there was a ch _ ,1 ' nt. She awoke to intense pain, cry-lonly that his bed was not the filthy sandl' - bank. nor his covering the pitiless 81:57.; ‘ I’m on fire! I'm on fire!” isimi Gradually, too, there came a‘different. She was as intractable, as slow to! to tr 100k upon his face: the “0101‘ wasireceive ideas as a; nerson recoveriana 'An changing from th? dingy gray, to affrom the effects oftanaesthetic. Not blood more life-like hue; flesh was ' _ . showinga : for ‘10 minutes or more could she lie-nerve little beneath the skin. and the dark . . . imade to realize th'it she was not. real- 5 ms 1 hair began to grow, and Annie water-g 13' on fire. Then she remembered the ‘ thus ed the. tiny curls with bitter tearsfor, i lightning, and terror crept into hex-gaffer as proof of the terrible life whose thor-z' tortured face_ This is the effect most {other rors Will never half be. written, the; to be feared__the nerve. blight forlgreat once black hair was com'ng out streak- ; which science has no other name. than Lone 0 9d \Vlth grey. They knew in ROCk- g’ " shock," From “that few xvords she ‘ \Yllli land that he was at Annapolis, but ; c V ' , . . , ould utter it. was gathered that she!"than A_nme had pere-mptorily forbidden could remember that lightning flashgglecon either Mrs. Carleton o . ' ‘ ; but not in” that followed it. It is s- E Vitus "Thpy 0011” (1") no good,” she wrote h F" p0 .. , , . - é sible that she never will remember any- #3191111 Jmlm‘?’ woultl “0t know them; and} thing else. It. is thought that aim {a:f1n'n r thPY might be in the wav-” - l l I ,uon,â€"done too much in fact, and as‘eral impr 11, the result he suddenly fOClllnd himsetlef; When an " shorn of his rivileges, an an mma "' again of the pdreadful prison. EYengverneur I 't then he clung to and cared for Jim-:11er away d mie, until the pangs of starvation and f ery was 1 e the pains of sickness made him forget; the opera b ful of all but: himself. And theregr'ic that , they pined and wept and waited untllé ' ' the. day of their release, when Bill was { crumbled 3 too ill to be removed. and was left in t area of i1 ‘ charge of a hum’ane family,“ who kand- one in in 1 1y promised to care for him until he was better. From a Rockland sol-'and it D3 ' dier who had been taken prisoner attton under; ' the battle of the ”Wilderness, Jimmieg’htad also ,had heard that Mrs. Graham was at‘ ' t 5Annflpfllis, and than! oh, how he long-; h: Eye C _e'ed for the time when it might 'be his, n .at he walked again with Annie, and felt ture. The th’ clasp of her little hand, and the upper part light of her blue eyes. She was 31- ed and so: ways present with him.â€"â€" she or the , ragged wo little Lulu. of Pequot memory. Som9-; they had b how these two were strangely mixed,fpon. Then and when his mind‘ began to totter as; ters in stra the physical strain on it became tnofiwere large great, the two faces were united in E colored, fri one body, and both. bent lovingly over l in a regula him. just as Annie Graham was doing 3 burns on t now when he was past knowing or 081“ ; been hiddei ing who ministered to him. A vague 5 were not s suspicion he had at' intervals that in It took h; some. respects there was a change. tient. She that his bed was not the filthy sandfing; ‘ bank nor his covering the. pitiless sky.‘ " I’m on Gradually, too, there came aidifferentt She was look upon his face: the color wastreceive ide: changing from the dingy gray, to agfrom the e more life-like hue; flesh was showing a ,v for ‘10 mini little beneath the skin. and the dark . , , ,made to reg hair began to grow: and Annie water-t1), on fire. ed the, tiny curls With bitter tears, for l - « - ' Ilg‘fhtnm , a as proof of the terrible life ‘f’hOSe’horfi - g rors will never half be written,- the: o ' ‘ ‘ once oblack hair was com'ng out streak- ; which scient ed w1th grey. They z:ne.w in Rock- t n Shock." F land that he was at Annapolis, but' scould utter Annie had Deremntnrilv fnnktan-_ . to be fea re ; Her words were not very encourag- ‘ing, and Annie’s tears fell like rain upon the face of the man who 'gave no Sign that he knew where he was, for who was bending over him. Oh! how he had longed for the air of . the North. as his face grew thinner, grey- er. and more corpse-like, while his {I'sh seemed shrivelling and drying on his bones. Bill Baker had done what he could to ameliorate his condi- tionâ€"done too much in fact. and as E “You know him, then. I was won- 'dering that an old woman like me should see clearer than you. I mis- trusted from the first," Mrs. Simm answered, and then to Annie’s eager questioning she replied, “It will be almost: a miracle if we do get any sense into that brain. or flesh upon these bones, but we’ll do the best we can.”, She had expected him so long, and grown so weary and hopeless with ex- pectations unfulfilled, that she could scarcely believe it now, or realize that the half dead wretch before her was once the lively, humorous. teasing J immie Carleton. Bow she Pi’L-i‘ld =h7m and how her heart throbbed as she §thought of the suffering he must have Tendured ere he reached this State of ’apparent imbecility. Then, as she gremembered what the physician said {about his mind, she dropped upon her E‘knees. and clasping her hands oyer “Dc; you think he will die?" sheask- ed Mrs. Simms who had come for a Inf-{gent to her side. her face. prayed ‘ annestly that God would ré‘mave the darkness and wholly restore the man whom she loved so dearly. “0h, merciful Father! it is Jimmie!" she said, and unmindiul of any who might be looking on, she bent down and kissed the sunken cheeks from which ixhe flesh was gone. .w m.)ment was passed. She by him now , and listenin murmurings watching him 0- breathlessly as he seemed we Iorgot everything in ths evidence' of returmng ink himself in wâ€" v â€"u "zu- ne, with'Annie‘ Graham. 31‘ Annie?" for he .repgated them It. a...) ___ _7...,. xyuu was beginning to drcop and drowsiness. when a lation startled her, and to see her patient's ‘eyes r, While with‘ his finger 8 window opposite, and ' rain was falling softly ,ts of Annapolis. and the air came stealing into re Annie Graham saf by There were not so many [TC], and, she had more Die, by whose bedside Mb__ shining oâ€"verr -him, and for Bill 33 ker? ,The . a very complimgntaxjy risen again, when I forever. I take it Bill. I shal} see her Prison still W85‘. and extinguished by pealed and lightnino flashed,.but O in the canoe paddled on. " Then they landed. Eight r0: legve the canoe, but. the thief sa w1th hls dogskin tnat and the Gc â€"-~- .\- “any“, EGVU 1‘; L0 111m. at he was good as well as great. They were shocked that a grown-up Maori stole a piece of calico. i “ They paddled away," Taniwha con- tinued. “ The Goblin went down in- t0 the hOId Of the ship. but snnn nomo a great age went aboard of name was Taniwhza. When Capt. Cook’s ship the Endeav- our lay in Mercury Bay, New Zealand, in 1769, a brown boy of eight, who af- terward became a chief and liver! in "0W Capt. (300k ‘0: U , - ‘7 v-a- qu “5.), vuL tuuojj ulnâ€" colored, fringed with‘ shredded cuticle, in a regular pattern. There were also burns on the wrists, where they had been hidden by her“ sleeves, but these were not so important. . It t00k half an hour to revive the pa- .tlent’ She aVVOke t0 iNiQNQQ nain or"- \Vhen 0:11 pt And at last, under all this burning of fabric was disclosed, the lightning"S most. dreadful hlndiwork. It had burn- ed and torn, deeply, fantastically. The victim’s flesh' was an arabesque of tor- ture. The lower part of her trunk and upper parts of her legs were lacerat- ed and scorched. There were deep, ragged wounds that looked as though they had been made with ablunt wea- Pon. There were collections of blis- ters 1n strange and varied forms. 'l'here Pending the arrival of an ambulance * a druggist tried simple restoraiives and .stimulants, but withofit effect. The- girl showed no Sign of life. The genâ€" , eral impression was Lh1t she was dead. iwhen an ambulance came from Gou‘? {verneur Hospital, the surgeon hurried :her away. The first singular discov-i fiery was made when she was laid on 'the operating table. Portions of fab-’ ric that had looked perfectly sound crumbled into dust at his touch. The area of incineration was an irregular one in front of her waist and skirt, and it pasged clear through her cot- ton undergarments, the fabric of which had also been undisturbed, so far as the eye could determine. a thunderstorm felled her to the ground. On running to h‘er assistance it was at first supposed that she was merely stunned, as no marks of the current were vis‘blo. laSL week. A small Italian girl was struck by a bolt of lightning. She was Passing along and narrow stréet at twilight when the opening clash of Peculiar and Terrible En‘ecis of the (fur rent on a Child. Some very cuiious phases developed in a case whi ch occurred in New York IaSL week. A small Italian air] was: “Clean face, clean handfs, soft pil- low and bed, with the hunger, and thirst. and homa-sickness gone. This isâ€"yes, this must be God’s land, and she is there with me.” eyes fastened themselves upon Annie with a wistful look; then they took in gher dress, her hands folded in her lap, ithe decent covering on the bed, the furniture of the room, and then throwing up his arms he felt of his flesh, and examined his linen, and patted the pillow, while still the look of wonder and perplexity deepened on his face. Suddenly he let his 'arms drop helplessly, then stretched them feebly towards Annie, and while both chin and lip quivered touchingly, and, the tears streamed from his eyes, hei whispered. J STRUCK BY LIGHTNING. k Looked t9 :1 Brown Boy or ‘10“ Zvalaml. _- -VU , butvthe ‘tBipf s_at still To be Continued. l gnat and the Geblin’; hls feet. His. compen- n“L L - ‘. ‘ a chief and lived ship, but soon came .ck in his hand 0811109, Thunder f the canoe, his clothing not answer rose to those thief -_- “fr-v""" .â€"a It: need scarcely be added that Mr- Tarvea‘ is a. man of birth and breeding and that he is treated as such by W5 emplqyer. But his engagement IS Ogrtainly a. rather startling innova- .t}°n 1n the methods of instruction of The new tutor, a Mr. Tarver by name, who was educated at Eton, and is an Oxford graduate. has been 811' gaged at a salary of $3,000 a year. and everything found, to take charge 0f the lads during all the time that they are not engaged in studies. He is 'Stj’led their ttitor in athletics, and 11.18 duties Consist in teaching them 10 “de' drive, play the various {InmPSa Such as football, cricket, tennis. calf; 63:6" and also to train them in gymnas- tics, running, jumping and swimming. He has already Started in by teachns’ them the game of bare and houndfir and may be seen with his two young charges clad like himself in flannels and-sweaters, sprinting across fieidSa leapmg ditches and clambering over 1133888 i9 most approved style. ‘f,- lLord Rothschild Engages an Athletic In- stru'mr for His Boys. Leopold Rothschild, brOIher of Lord Rothschild, and the sporting member Of the great Hebrew banking firm”? in England, has recently en'rngPi he services of a second tutor fox his two bOYS, whose duties are of a rathex un- usual nature. The boys have already one tutor, who has charge of their m- struction. 81 ,‘ -_. J."U l “reekg ago she CLémm‘Pl’lCGd I!) ”fiend ; school alter an absence of nine months. 5 "I want it distinctly understood,” said iMrs. Tucker. “that the. physicians all agreed that my daughter was afflicred with St. Vitus’ Dance; that the treat- ment of the medicil attendants did not benefit her and the: no other medicine was taken after commencing Dr. \Villizzms’ Pink Pills, so that there is no doubt her recovery must be attributed to the use of these pills. Her state of health is now most excel- lent, her appetite is grmd and I am only too pleased to be able to certify to the above facts in order that others similarly afflicted may be encouraged to try Dr. Williams Pink Pills.” young. lscious the treatment she wa {was doing her no good. I 1 ‘a box and the effecr. of; the almost marvellous from 1 beginning; before the. first used an im-prcn'emem wr 1y discernible. Five boxes have been used and Myrzlc able to run and enjwy l; a manner she could not months 'and munzhs buck weeks ago she CU‘IDID‘PHC'Gd 1 school after an 31199an “f m“.- for nearly a year, and learning that she had betxhe Rev fully benefited by liams’ Pink Pills for Pale. People a reporter to hear her E called at the res‘ ° best local physicians were called and prescribed for her, but they . peared to be unable to afford relj \Ve made a trip to Buffalo last Jal ary and a specialist was consult who recommended that Mvrzl her but the nurse. ln fact the (10m insisted upon her being sent * the city hospitals. Amman Her Bang]. ‘0? Dance and “'lllianu‘ Specialists NEW WAY TO TEACH. “v!“ similar complaint. I the firSt box w Indersmod,” said 1e physicians all {91‘ was afflicted ; that the treat- attendunts did than no other "ed “1|h ‘ as an Inn. km n.‘ “'3 S RS PI‘S 1'wo litend X Was plain- DOW for . t8 16 1V “1C9, “Vu-c ‘ .- down my output, Without, re- ber of daya or nigms onrk, to as littll or less than 1 ' ‘1: days work, bc- state of pezpe a- fat; that no SPrin-‘g_i5 . meXh3.USLiuiaj: and if we keep on. dipping“- after 133.: must is low we’dlp up mud wi: 11 1 m; and it doesn't pay; it's beam 10 water. . hance to £111 up and ‘ive the spring a C to give your bagel: .a chance, 100. mm:- 1.: fm and? trim can do isn’t he’s only giving 5" [111115011 21cm.” v: to fill up. Let him‘ keep calm and w, Then w that period of idleness; and i: i: ' really idleness, 11’s recupcxafigm hen the time comes to work 1w. him! inch in for all he knows how; 1;. can’t w tainly does not pa or]: too hard then, but; it cer. y to work: all 111: ting .guod results from the gymnastxc exercxses I I‘e0«.,:mâ€" mended, and Mr. Pneer’s medmul a“, Well, I’m npt, replied Mr. ,P“e"r' j â€" gnu-r‘ v_ ‘1‘ n..q1 1"). 71.1. VV Ell-g oâ€" â€"â€" ' __ They have ruined a good Didn’t you take your c Certainly, but the exex larged my shoulders so it any more. Coat was new, too. Amateur Sportsmanâ€"u hat bring down, Pat? . Patâ€"Yer dog, sur; blew 1115 be: off. Amateur Sportsman â€" \Yhere.’ bird? Patâ€"Picking at the dog, sur. 0.113. Station, Mona-01. Cousin George â€" They tell me spent the afternoon with Tom La; 18 it a fact that he has raised moustache? I supposed you had he the report? .Oous'm Jane -â€" Really, I didn‘t hoe. Am sorry I didn’L ask him. European Finn. Ra “ate. carSlake’ from $1 a. day 1;; ‘ f . To qua: A com; m on: DAY the Laxatne Bromo Quiuiue Ts‘oezc AL IN: refund the money it it fault; to can. 950. I see they have a new cgem'fi‘g} 0V:e In Germany that 15 calleu dyumi... - . 3 ‘ nocollamidoorybenzoesau r e m c m} leather. Gee, I’d hate to go aftex: a dose ‘0‘ that for a man whose hie depcnam ll13011 having it in a hurry. “Pharaoh 100. Miss Wafflesâ€"\R'hat' s the longes :39 you ever gOt along with-H1 Professorâ€"I once lived three dr-Y 0n my wxfe's cooking. La'l'oscana, 100. B What’s the matter with Shingle? He doesn't know; he's so thin. What do you mean by than? _ ‘ S‘mPly that he can't tell whether 1t itomach trouble or backache. FOr 0v<~r fivdtv Years ~meLOW-s soormxa nsz‘P 5! mothers for their chia 7011 that". ,. .0 dmd' ”fleas the gums. aha; :~ 2.5 ; min. 'm’ ‘9‘ i- the best remedy for dam-z: ;:.a 85m by all dru,gis:s throughout .Lln: “k 101' “ Mn. Wins.nw‘3 .soouzzug Mr 1. .t a! h V o "I?" .1 6 V4). 1.8 k. ,\ 533th you were at Pinchele .t night. Does he serve a 8‘- dla’qer2 . 9inch 1 ”IF-he served the dinner 11 better than he did the diners. Â¥ "Inks-W ell, I’ll say this much f1 work v WHERE THE BIRD Vs AS UN EXPECTED EFFECT me ruined a good 00:11 my mg. ; you take your com 0112 1115*, but the exercise has en- my shoulders so 1 can’t wear more. Coat was as good as 7k in six days than a Lin-d in seven. The man that Ll‘ia-s me out of bunself by work- 18 time really gets less. 11‘ be ad for money and “'21an A0 learn it, the tempLaLiun is keep right on at work all the Learn all he can, and if he Limself to stop at all, he thinks rim Limée; but, blcbs us'; he DINNER FARED WELL. that is THAT NE'W DRUG. HIS EXPERIENCE HARD ON TOM. POOR FELL 0V3. me; but, bless usi in: giving himself ache-.11 6 him keep calm and ('11- .oi idleness; and it i: gfit: and! trim can do week, and all that _ Mr. Bifferly, "with nature woul<i make y case, and that I at, whether anybody tut I find it doesn’t y that nature didn’t I: in my case. 1: mtly on me at the :ing of its establish- persist it gets Stern r to me" that I mum; Ge'ofé‘itslhke 8. 0 fl Payne, 6»! Granb; . Que Cheat Lunumczurerr. _ RELIANCE C‘IGA FACTOR} .Man're‘ ,â€"-"\\' ha t his head '0” Prop a Au Brut 's the

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