Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909, July 31, 1906, Page 4, Image 4

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    I Wrfe II nil
Tho Kind You Hare Always
in use for over 30 jears,
and
ffl-f'zjfs sona
All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-grood" are buff
Experiments that trifle with, and endanger the health, off
Infants and Children Experience against Experiment'
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing1 Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcoti
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures . Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep
Whe Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
S7
Bears the
The Kind You Have Always BougM
8n Use For Over 30 Years.
... TH8 CENTAUR COMPANY. TT
m to dji mm per acre.
If you have 125 loads of manure to spread and
or have a 25 acre meadow we will tell you bow you
irom .uo to w.uu per acre or more than enough to pay for a spreader. We issue, a 48-page book
entitled "Practical Experience With Barnyard Manures." which explains the whole situation.
Our Flan is not a theory. It is an actual fact,
a period of 18 years. To give you an idea of what
ments maae wttn various crops wtaere 5 loads of
ana o loaas Dy tne new metnoa, on corn ground.
another field and in another state, it shows a gain
meadow, a gain of 18.00 per acre.
This Book will be sent free to anyone writing
yoo a cent, u it aoesn't do you any good, it won't
t to you. it is orimming lull of valuable information.
Endless Apron Manure Spreader
Spreads all kinds of manure, straw stack bot
toms andcommercial fertilizer remrdlessof their
condition. Spreads as much in a day as is "en
can by hand. Spreads the largest load in 2 to 4
minutes. Makes the same amount of manure cro
three times as f:.r and produce better results;
manes em manure uue ana immediately avail
able for plant lite.
(Non-Bunchable Rake forms a honnpr hnlris
all hard chunks in contact with beater until
thoroughly pulverized.
CnClCSS ADron 1 one enntinnnne inrAii Inn
a hi apron) therefore always reidv to load. Yon
don't have to drive a certain distance to pull it
back into position after each load or wind it back
by hand ; it u a great advantage in making long
mauis.
There Is no Gearing about our Endless Atn-o
to break and cause trouble, it is always up out
of the way of obstructions as it does not extend
below axle. Spreads evenly from start to finish
and cleans out perfectly clean.
Hood ana Lnd bate keeps manure away from
beater while loading : prevents choking of beat-
win witwniug uui a uuuu viieu situ uus una
acts a? wind shield when spreading. It has a
graduating icorr oaacati regulated while in
motion to spread tnick or thin, 3 to as loads per
acre .
Li ghi Draft because the load is nearly equally
Write just these words on a costal card or
perience with Barnyard Manures' and catalogue
Do it now before you haul your manure or prepare
Smith Manufacturing Co.,
All The World
Knows riot II in f.i'ji s iow Liniment has
no sneii. r r R'ipiiiiuni-m. Stiff Joints,
Cuts, SpoiiMH LnnitiRiO. and alt pains.
Buy if. 'ry ir. ami you will nlwa.-8 1166 it.
Anylxviy ti.i has used Bill-Til's Show
Ltime-t i ' proof tf w'-mi ir. does AH
weask of y- M w t . .rut i trnl hotit.
Prices Uoi. ujc a. i t 1.00. Graham &
Wort ham.
rc
50 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
Trade Marks
JttfO Copyrights &c
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
Invention is probably patentable. Communiea.
tiona strictly oonOdentlaO. HANDBOOK on Patents
sent free. Oldest ajrency for secunncpatenta.
Patents taken through at turn & Co. reoetva
sswetai aotfcs, without ebargu, In the
Scientific American
A handsomely ntastrmted weekly, taiwsst ett
eulaUon of any setenufie JoaruJ. Terasa, t a
year ; four mouths. tX SoM by aO silsslsis.
rand.- wiAoev Oft t fit. WaMfcixsrtoa, IX 0
Bought, and which lias been,
nas borne the signature of
has been made under his per-
supervision since its infancy.
Signature of
UUM STREET. NEW YORK CITV.
That's what la Spreader will do if
used as it should be
yon are coiner to olanf 25 aeres'of corn or vhiui.
can increase the value of your crop this year
backed np by actual experiments extending over
this book contains, we show results of experi
manure were spread per acre by the old method,
The latter shows a gain of 14.80 per acre. On
of $5.60 per acre, and on a clover and timothy
us. It is worth $ 100.00 to you. but it won't cost
do you any harm. Write us now and let us mail
tUgsfern
balanced on front and rear axles. The team is
as near the load as it can work. Front and rear
axles are the saute length and wheels track;
beater shaft runs in ball and socket bearings,
therefore no friction. Beater is 23 inches in di
ameter, seat turns over when loading. Machine
turns in its own length.
Simplicity. There are only two levers on our
machine. One which raises the hood, locks it
and throws the machine in gear at the same time.
It can then be thrown in and out of gear without
lowering the hood. One lever which changes
feed to spread thick or thin, making it so simple
that a boy who can drive a team can handle it.
Strength and Durability is one of the most
important points to be considered in a manure
i spreader. The Great Western has a good, strong,
durable wheel. Extra strong spoke and rim,
heavy steel tires. Strong, well braced box with
heavy oak sill. Oak tongue, hickory doubletrees,
malleable castings, rears and sprockets all keyed
on. Galvanized hood. Every part is made extra
who wants tht best, made in four sizes, 35, so.
strong, regardless of co-t. It is made for the man
70 ana m 00 ousnei capacity.
Guarantee Should anv oart hrcoV
get out of order withi- one year we replace free
of charge. Send for free catalog; showing latest
improvements. It tells how to annlv mannrA -.
secure best results.
in a letter "SnH m
No.W7S M They will be mailed to you free.
for any crop. -
162 Harrison St., Chicago
The 5mlie
That won't come off, appears ou bahy'd
lace after oue bottle ot White's Cream
Vermifuge, the great worm medicine.
Why not keep that smile on baby's
fare. If you keep this medicine on hand
yon will never iee anything else but
smiles on his face. Mrs. S. Blackwell.
Ukla., writes: "My baby was peevish
ami fretful . Would not eat and I feared
he v o-ild die. I used a bottle of White's
Cream Vermifuge and he has not been
sick n day since. Sold by Graham &
Wortham.
On:y 82 Yet rs Old.
"I am only 82 years old and don't ex
pect even when I get to be real old to
feel that way as lona as I can net Elec
tric Bitters," says Mrs. E.H. Bruneon,
of Dublin, Ga. Surely there's nothing
else keeps the old as y ouns; and makes
the weak as strong as this prand tonic
medicine. Dyspepsia, torpid liver, in
flamed kidneys or chrom constipation
are unknown after taking Electric Bit
ters a reasonable time. Guaranteed by
Allen & Woodward, dmcsists. Price 50c.
CASTORIA
For Infants and rnfrfw.
Tta m Yea Wm Always egbt
T H -S i I Louis Tracy, il
PILLAR of '
) TT IT "IT Ty '. I Korrtin- i
U m If - R ' If M I Copyright. 1904. by C
H -J Ja Pa, A f 1 J Edward J. Clode f j
That she was "a young person ot
some maritime experience was visible
to the connoisseurs above at a glance.
She was busily engaged in packing the
spacious lockers of the Daisy with cer
tain stores of apples, oranges and veg
etablesranging from the lordly new
potato (an aristocrat at that time of
the-year) to the plebeian cabbage and
her lithe, active figure moved with an
ease born of confidence in the erratic
principles of gravitation as codified
and arranged by a rocking boat.
Pollard, too, was overhauling his
gear, seeing that the mast was secure
ly stepped and the tackle ran free.
While they worked they talked, and, of
course, tne critics listened.
"Do you think the weather will hold,
Ben?" asked the girl over her shoulder,
stooping to arrange some clusters of
daffodils and narcissus so that they
should not suffer by the lurch of some
heavy package when the boat keeled j
over. , , . .
"The glass be a-fallin', sure, missy,"
said the old fellow cheerily, "but wi'
the wind backin' round to the norrard
It on'y means a "drop o wet."
"You think we will make the rock In
good time?" . -.
"We'm do our best, Miss Enid."
She. sat up suddenly.- .-. ,
"Don't you dare, tell me, Ben Pollard,
that after all our preparations we may
have to turn back or run for inglorious
shelter into Xamornau" :: i -; -
Her mock indignation induced a mass
ive grin. "A mahogany table break
ing into mirth," was Enid'sv private de
scription of Ben's face .wheq he smiled.
't'.'Ee knaw the coast as well as
most," he said. "Farther .go,, stronger
blow, 'ee knaw.".: .,:.
"And not so slow,..eh, Ben? Really,
you and. the Daiy .look, more, tubby ;
every time I see you. .. . v s .
Thus disparaged,: Pollard defended
himself and his craft. - -- :
"Me an' Daisy '11 sail to ulf light
qulcker'n any other two tubs In Pen
zance, missy. Her be a-long run at
this time o' year, but you'm get there
all right, I 'xpect Wi' a noruard breeze
we'm be safe enough, ,; If the;wind
makes 'ee c'n zee et comlnf, 'ee knawT
She laughed quietly.. Any reflection
on the spanking powers of, his pilchard
driver would rouse Ben instantly, i ' '
"As if I didn't know all you could
teach me," she cried, "and as if any
one in all Cornwall could teach me bet
ter." The old fisherman was mollified. He
looked along the quay.
"Time we'm cast off," he said. "Miss
Constance be a plaguy long time
fetchin them wraps."
"Oh, Ben, how can you say that?
She had to go all the way to the cot
tage. Why, if she ran"
"Here she be," he broke In, "an she
b'ain't runnin', neither. Hcr's got a
young man In tow."
What announcement would straight
en the back of any girl of nineteen like
unto, that? Enid Trevillion turned and
stood upright.
"Why. it's Jack!" she cried, waving
a delighted hand.
'So it be," admitted Pollard, after a
surprised stare. "WTien I look land
ward my eyes b'ain't so good as they
was."
He stated this fact regretfully. No
elderly sea dog will ever acknowledge
to failing vision when he gazes at the
level horizon he knows so well. This
is no pretense of unwilling age; it is
wholly true. The settled chaos of the
shore bewilders him. The changeful
sea cannot.
Meanwhile, the dawdlers Hninsr the
wharf, following Enid's signals with
their eyes, devoted themselves to a
covert staring at the young people
hurrying along the quay.
Constance Brand, being a young and
pretty woman, secured their Instant
suffrages. Indeed, she would have
won the favorable verdict of a more
6evere audience. Taller than Enid, she
had the brown hair and hazel eyes of
her father. To him. too. she owed the
frank, self reliant poise of head and
clearly cut, refined features which con
veyed to others that all important first
good impression. Blended with Ste
phen Brand's firm Incisiveness, and
softening the quiet strength of her
marked resemblance to him, was an
essential femininity which lifted her
wholly apart from the ruck of hand
some English girls who find delight In
copying the manners and even the
dress of their male friends.
Her costume was an exact replica of
that of Enid. She walked well and
rapidly, yet her alert carriage had a
grace, a subtle elegance, more fre
quently seen in America than in Eng
land. Her lively face, flushed with
exercise, and, it may be, with some
little excitement, conveyed the same
transatlantic characteristic. One said
at seeing her: "Here Is a girl who has
lived much abroad." It came as a sur
prise to learn that she had never
crossed the channel.
The man with her. Lieutenant John
Perclval Stanhope, R. N., was too fa
miliar a figure in Penzance to evoke
muttered comment from the gallery.
A masterful young gentleman he
looked, and one accustomed to having
his owa way In the world, whether in
love or war. True type of the British
sailor, he had the physique ot a strong
man and tho adveotaroosr cheerful
JXbt JktorotbJta face, and band.xUT
tin tea witri exposure, his uarK hair and
the curved eyelashes, which drooped '
over his blue eyes, no less than the ar- '
tistic proclivities suggested by his well j
chisled features and long, tapering fin-'
gers, proclaimed that Stanhope, not- j
withstanding his Saxon surname and ;
bluff bearing, was a Celt. His mother, J
,a 1 II' . iitworuieu m ornwuii,
in local society.
One may ask, "Why should a youth
of good birth and social position be
on such terms of easy familiarity with
two girls,one of whom was the daugh
ter of a lighthouse keeper and the other
her sister by adoption?"
Indeed a great many people did ask
this pertinent question. Among others,
Lady Margaret Stanhope put it often
and pointedly to her son without any
cogent answer being forthcoming.
If she were denied enlightenment, al
though her maternal anxiety was justi
fiable,: the smokers on the pier, as rep
resenting the wider gossip of the town,
may also be left unsatisfied.
"This is a nice thing," he cried when
he came within speaking distance of
the girl in the boat. "I manage to bam
boozle the admiral out of three days'
leave and I rush to. Penzance to be told
that Constance and you are off to the
Gulf Rock for the day. It is too bad of
you, Enid."
Eyebrows were raised and silent
winks exchanged among the human
sparrows lining the rails.
"So Master Jack came to see Miss
Trevillion, eh? Wliat would her lady
ship say if she heard that?"
"Why not come with us?" The au
dacity of her!
"By Jove," he agreed, "that would be
jolly. Look here. Wait two minutes
until I scribble. a line to the mater"
"Nothing of the sort, Jack," inter
posed the other girl quietly, taking
from his arm the waterproof cloaks he
was carrying for her. "You know Lady
Margaret would be very angry, and
with very good reason. Moreover, dad
would be annoyed toO"
"The old girl is going out this after
noon," he protested.
'And she expects you to go with her.
Now, Jack, don't let us quarrel before
we have met for five minutes. We will
see you tomorrow."
He helped her down the stone steps.
"Enid," he murmured, "Connie and
you must .promise to drive with me to
Morvah in the morning. I will call for
you at 11 sharp."
"What a pity you can't sail out to the
rock with us today! Tomorvah is so
distant"
The minx lifted her blue eyes to his
with such ingenuous regret in them
that Stanhope laughed, and pipes were
shifted to permit the listeners aboye
their heads to snigger approval of hei
quip.
"Dad will wig us enough as It is,
Enid," said the other girl. "We are
bringing him a peace offering of the
fruits of the earth. Jack."
"Will you be able to land?"
"One never can tell. It all depends
on the state of the sea near the rock.
"Tomorvah is so distant."
Anyhow, we can have a chat and send
up the vegetables by the derrick."
"We'm never get there thiccy tide if
we'm stop here much longer," inter
rupted Ben.
"Hello, old grampus! How are you?
Mind you keep these young ladies off
the stones."
"And mind you keep your tin pot off
the stones," growled Pollard. "They
was a-sayin' larst night her were
aground at Portsea."
."The;.- s:::d right. Father Ben. That
i:5 why I am here."
Enia ;vnced at him with ready anx
iety. 'Ihei- was nothing of the flirt in
her now.
"I lir you had no mishap," she
said, ' Connie muteiy echoed the in
quiry. Both girls knew well what a
serious thing it was for a youngster to
run his first boat ashore.
"Don't look so glum," he chuckled.
"I am all right Got a bit of kudos out
of it, really. We fouledlhe Volcanit
and straine.! our steering gear. That
is su
it was not all. He did not mention
that during torpedo attack on a
foggy night be, ran no to. tbre& tettlev!
Biiips unaerenaed" by et?and stenciled
his initials within a white square on
five different parts of their sleek hulls,
thus signifying to an indignant admiral
and three confounded captains (dic
tionary meaning of "confounded") that
these leviathans had been ingloriously
sunk at their moorings by torpedoes.
"It sounds unconvincing," said Con
stance. "You must supply details to
morrow. EuiJI. that horrid pun of
yours ruins the word."
"Are we r.lso to supply luncheon?"
chimed in Enid.
"perish the thought. I have lived on
l Eandvv-icls ;:ud bottled beer for a
wecli. There! Cff you go."
He gave tlie -boat a vigorous push
and stood for a Uttla while at tie foot
of tho steps, ostensibly to light a cicjar.
lie watched Constance shipping the
rudder while Enid hoisted the sail and
old Ben plied a pair of oars to carry
the boat into the fair way of the chan
nel. They naaroj the harbor lighthouse.
; TJle ur0Wn sail filled and the Daisy
Then she sped round
the end of the solid pier and van
ished, whereupon Lieutenant Stanhope
walked Slowly to the promenade,
whence he could see the diminishing
speck of canvas on the shining sea un
til it was hidden by Clement's island.
At last the devotees of twist and
shag, resting their tired arms on the
railing, were able to exchange com
ments. "Brace o' fine gells, them," observed
the acknowledged leader, a broken
down "captain" of a mine abandoned
soon after his birth.
"Fine," agreed his nearest henchman.
Then, catching the gloom of the cap
tain's gaze after Stanhope's retreating
figure, he added:
"But what does that young spark
want, turning their ' pretty heads for
them, I should like to know?"
"They didn't seem partie'lar stuck
on 'im,'? ventured another.
"The ways of women is curious,"
pronounced the oracle. "I once knew
a gell" '
But his personal reminiscences were
not of value. More to the point was
the garbled, but, in the main, accurate
account he gave of the rescue of an
unknown child by one of the keepers
of the Gulf Rock lighthouse on a June
morning eighteen years earlier.
Stephen Brand was the name of the
man, and there was a bit of mystery
about him too. They all knew that a
light keeper earned a matter of 70 to
f SO a year not enough to maintain a
daughter and an adopted child in slap
up style, was it? A small villa they
lived in, and a governess they had,
and ponies to ride when they were big
enough. The thing was ridiculous,
wasn't it?
Everybody agreed that it was.
People said Brand was a swell. Well,
that might or might not be true. The
speaker did not think much of him.
He was a quiet, unsociable chap,
though Jones, a Trinity pensioner, who
kept the "Pilchard and Seine" now,
wouldn't hear a wrong word about
him and always called him "cap'n."
A pretty sort of a captain! But, then,
they all knew what an old slow coach
Jones was. They did. Jones' pints
were retailed on the premises for mon
ey down.
Then there was Spence, lame Jim,
who lived at Marazion. He told a fine
tale about a fight with a shark before
Brand reached the boat in which was
the blessed baby that very girl, Enid,
they had just seen. Was It true? How
could he say? There was a lot about
it at the time in the local papers, but
just then his own mind was given to
thoughts of enlisting, as a British ex
pedition was marching across the des
ert to relieve Khartum, and cause Gor
don's death.
No, Brand and the two girls had not
dwelt all the time in Penzance. The
light keepers went all over the king
dom, you know, but he had hit upon
some sort of fog signal fad Brand
was always a man of fads; he once
told the speaker that all the Polwena
mine wanted was work and the Gulf
Rock was the best place for trying it.
At his own request the Trinity people
sent him back there two years ago.
Some folk had queer tastes, hadn't
they? And talking so much had made
him dry
Then the conversation languished, as
the only obvious remark of any im
portance was not forthcoming.
Meanwhile the Daisy sped buoyantly
toward the southwest. Although she
was broad In beam and stanch from
thwart to keel, it was no light under
taking to run fourteen miles out and
home in such a craft
But old Ben Pollard knew what ho
was about. Not until the granite pil
lar of the distant Gulf Rock opened up
beyond Carn uu was it necessary to
turn the boat's head seaward. Even
then, by steering close to the Runnel
stone, they need not during two-thirds
of the time, be more than a mile or
eo distant from one of the many
creeks in which they could secure shel
ter in case of a sudden change in the
weather.
Thenceforward there was nothing
for it but a straight run of six miles
to the rock, behind which lay the Scilly
isles, forty miles away, and well be
low the boat's horizon.
So, when the moment came for the
final decision to be made, Pollard cast
an anxious eye at a great bank of
cloud mounting high in the north.
There was an ominous drop in the
temperature too. The rain he antici
pated might torn to snow, and snow Is
own brother to fog at sea, though both
are generally, absent from the Cornish
littoral in winter.
"Ben," cried Enid, breaking off a
vivid if merciless description of a new
disciple who had joined the artistic
coterie at Newiyn, "what are you look
ing atr
He scratched bis bead aod gaaed
fixedly at the white battattooa weep
ing u aeffua coooaest arts tie land.
"fihejdejook Ilka aria w. aadmlttto.
"Well, what does that ier5"
Without waiting for orders,' Con
stance had eased the helm a trifle. The
Daisy was now fairly headed for the
rock. With this breeze she would be
there in less than an hour.
"It be a bit risky," grumbled Ben.
"We will be alongside the lighthouse
before there can be any serious down
fall," said practical Constance. "Sure
ly we can make the land again no mat
ter how thick the weather may be."
Ben allowed himself to be persuaded.
In after life he would never admit
that they were free agents at that
moment .
"It had to. be." he would say. "It
wur in me mind to argy wi' she, but I
just couldn't An' how often do us zee
snaw in Caruwall? Not once in a blue,--7
moon." And who would dispute him
No west country man, certainly. "
At a distance of five miles one small
fishing craft is as like another as two
.lilliputians to the eye of Gulliver. In
a word, it needs acquaintance and
nearness to distinguish them.
As it happened, Stephen. Brand did
happen to note the Daisy and the
course she was shaping. Rut, during
the short interval when his telescope
might have revealed to him the iden
tity of her occupants, he was suddenly
called by t'phone from the oil room
to the kitchen. When next he ran aloft
in a wild hurry to signal for assistance,
he found, to his despair, that the
Land's End was already blotted out in
a swirling snowstorm, and the great
plain of blue sea had shrunk to a lead
en patch whose visible limits made the
reef look large by comparison.
With the mechanical precision of
habit he set the big bell in motion. Its
heavy" boom came fitfully through the
pelting snowflakes to the ears of the
two girls and old Ben. The latter, mas
ter of the situation now, announced his
intention to 'bout ship and make for
Mount's bay. .
"'Ee doan ketch me tryin' to sail
close to Gulf Rock when 'ee can't zee a
boat's length ahead," he said emphatic
ally. "I, be sorry, ladies both, but 'ee
knaw how the tide runs oyer the reef,
an'.'tes easy vto drive to the wrong side
of the light. We'm try again tomor
row. On'y the flowers '11 spile. All the
rest"
Crash! A loud explosion burst forth
from the dense heights of the storm.
The Daisy, sturdy as- she , was, seemed
to shiver. The very air trembled with
the din. Pollard had his band on the
sail to swing it to starboard when Con
stance put the tiller , over to bring the
boat?s head up against the wind. For
an instant he hesitated. , Even he, vers
ed in the ways of the se."., was startled.
Both girls positively jumped, the sud
den bang of the rocket was so unex
pected. .
"Mr. Brand must ha' zeed us," pro
nounced Ben. "That's a warnin' to we -to
go back." 4
The words hady scarce left his lips
when another report smote the great
silence, otherwise unbroken save by
the quiet plash of the sqj. against the
bows and the faint reverberations of
the distant bell. '
"That is too urgent to be intended
for us," said Constance. "We were
just halfway when the snow com
menced." "I did not notice any vessel near the
rock," cried Enid tremulously. "Did
you, Ben?"
Pollard's slow utterance was not
quick enough. Before he could an
swer a third rocket thundered Its over
powering summons.
"That is the 'help wanted signal,"
cried Constance. "Ben, there Is no
question now of going back. We must
keep our present course for twenty
minutes at least and then take to the
oars. The bell will guide us."
"Oh, yes, Ben," agreed Enid. "Some
thing has gone wrong on the rock itself.
I am quite sure there was no ship near
enough to be in trouble already."
"By gum. we'm zee what's the mat
ter," growled Ben. "Steady it Is, Mis
Brand. Ef we'm in trouble I'd as soon
ha' you two gells aboard as any two
men in Penzance."
At another time the compliment
would have earned him a torrent of .
sarcasm. Now it passed unheeded.
The sitr.tlon war? !?ilc1.ei-ing, alarm
ing. There were three keepers in the
lighthouse. The signal foreboded ill
ness, sudden and serious illness. Who
could it be?
In such a crisis charity begins at
home. Constance, with set face and
shining eyes, Enid, flthed and on the
verge of tears, feared lest their own
beloved one should be the sufferer.
To each of them Stephen Brand was
equally a kind and devoted father. He
never allowed Enid to feel that she
was dependent on his bounty. Only
the other day, when she hinted at the
adoption of an art career as a future
means of earning a livelihood, he ap
proved of the necessary study, but
laughed.at the reason.
(To be Continued)
A Hard Lot
Of troubles to contend with spring
from a torpid liver and blockaded
bowels, Hnlets oti awaken them 'o
thfir proper actio'i with D". Kin'-
Lif-- Pilf, the olaat-ant atfl m i eil'c-i-i-IV!?
cure for Constipa! itn. Tlif . p event
AppenHirirtS and tone ni the nvste in.
zoo at Alien & Woolard' linj store
Abraham Lincoln
Was a man who, against all odds, at
tained the highest honor that a man
could get in the United States. Ballard'
Horehound Syrup has attained a place,
never equalled by any otber like remedy.
It is a sure cure for Coughs, Colds,
Bronchitis, Influenza and all Pulmonary
diseases. Every mother should keep
supplied with this wonderful cough medi
cine. Sold by Graham & Wortham.
Foley's 0 Kidney Cur
make tidaeya nm4 4wUr right