^Second Cousin parali
BY m e AL TUO* o r
~Anne j v d * e . s r n s r n r “ l i t t l e ma te h e b t . «
ETC .. ETC.
C H A P T E R X X V L — (Continued.)
“ Who is with him?**
“ An old sweetheart, who will marry
Thia was the man whom she had »*#n
at her father’s house, who had lodfod him whan his legs get better.“
“ Is it Mary HollandV
with them at the button factory, and of
“ That’ s her name. The woman who
whom she had caufht a flimpee eren at
Sedge Hill.
Tots and John Jennings was at Sedgs HilL You know her well
were in the main thoroughfare of Hol- enough.’’
“ And she is with Edward Paterson at
borae, both interested in the shops, when
Worcester?“
ke touched Tots on the arm.
“ Ye«.”
*4Don't you know m e f he asked in a
Reuben Culwick waited for no further
husky Toice.
news;
he had learned mors than he had
Tota gave a little scream, and clung
anticipated; he thought he saw all very
ftiore closely to John Jennings.
“ Oh! don’t let him take me away!” clearly to tho end now. snd where his
duty lay. He darted from tho friendly
•he cried at once.
“ I don’ t want to take you away, Res shelter of the “ Magpie,** and hurried Into
ale— I only want to ask you how you Holborn. snd from Hoi horn through sun
Lane,
•re, after all these months.** said Thomas dry back turnings into Drury
Bastbell. offering a very dirty hand to where he met John Jennings, who passed
s great deal ot uis time »«alkiug up and
the child to shake
“ Come, you let her alone will you?** down the street in which Reuben Culwick
resided.
•aid John Jennings sharply. John did
“ John.” said he, seising him by tho
not admire the looka o f the man who had
forced himself upon the notice of Reu arm, “ you must go to your sister’ s house.
ben's adopted child; John held Tots in Find Sarah Eastbell. Tell her I bars
trust, and was watchful o f his char/e. discovered that Miss Holland is in W or
The man before him was a forlorn speci cester, that I hare left London in search
men of humanity, ragged and dirty. John of her, and to end all suspense at onco—
did not know Thomas Kastbel! at first her suspense as well as mine. I hops to
sight, but he was a judge o f diareputa- be back on* Monday.”
“ Is that all?”
bility— he had seen so much of it In
“ Yes. Now be off at once.**
Hope street— he had become so disreput
Reuben hurried to his lodgings, beg
able himself.
ged his landlady to be careful of Tots
“ I hare as mnch right to the child as
till his return, looked in at Tots sleeping
you hare,** said Tom in a surly tone,
calmly in her little crih, stooped over
“ or aa your master has. for the matter
her and kissed her without awakening
o f that.
The child's shtole, and you
her, snd then hurried away to the tail-
know it.**
way station, in the hope o f catching •
“ I don't know It.**
night mail that should carry him on a
“ And its father will come to claim It
portion of his journey toward Worces
precious quick, too— see if he don’t— and
ter.
you can tell Mr. Oulwick, too. direckly
you get home. Say Tom East bell told
C H A P T E R X X V II.
him so— or Vixxobini.
You ought to
Reuben Culwick was in the loyal city
know Vixxobini o f the Ssxe-Goths.'*
early
the
next day. The cathedral bells
“ You are Thomas Eastbell, then?*'
“ Yes, snd I don’t care who knows it. were ringing when he was searching in
You can give me in charge if you like Mitcheson’s place for Edward Peterson.
— say for coining last year— I shall do it The man who had leaped from the top
myself In an hour or two. if you dou't window of the button factory and broken
— I hate the workua. and it*s awful cold both his legs was not difficult to find—
the inhabitants o f Mitcheson’s place
•utside the prison. Where’s Sally?**
knew all about him. who he was snd
“ Your siater. do yon mean?*’
“ Yea. of course I do.’’ answered Tim ; where he was, and the country polic# had
been
watching for his convalescence for
“ she ain’t at Sedge H ill.”
weeks past, in order to conduct him to
“ N fre r mind where she is.’*
Edward Peterson was
“ Oh, I don’t mind. She won’t h*»lp aafe quarters.
me— I ’ m her only brother, snd starving too ill to be removed at present— indeed,
In the streets.
Rut you can take my of late days the police had not been vigi
compliments to her, Mr. Jennings, and lant. a turn for the worse having taken
place in the sick man’ s condition, snd it
I ’m to be heard of at the ’ Magpie.'
RenbTn T m h sri St Trumpet work W in* ,ol" * b|y «M a in that he . . . drift-
when John Jennings and Tota arrived I j f * f™m th* law» of hU countrj in un
home with the news of their meeting due haste.
Reuben understood th# position before
with Thomas Eastbell. He was working
against time somewhat, but he set his he had reached the house— a policeman
pen aside to listen to John Jennings' on duty in the street gave him the full
recital and Tots’ scared interpellations, est particulars. It was the back room
paying particular attention to Mr. Eaat- of the first floor to which be had been
bell’s information that the child would directed, and where he knocked softly
5V>me one crossed the
bo fetched away presently by her father. for admittance.
“ And he said that Sarah might hear room lightly, opened the door, snd looked
hard at him, with the color flickering
o f him at the ‘Magpie?* ”
faintly on her cheeks. It was Mary Hol
“ Yes.” answered John Jennings.
“ John,” he said suddenly, “ yon must land. pale and thin, who faced him on
the landing place.
take a letter to Sarah at once.“
“ You have found me at last, then?”
“ Very well, Mr. Reuben.”
“ Don’t say anything of your meeting she inquired.
with her brother.”
They did not shake hands— the shadow
“ Trust me for that,” said John know- of the past mistrust was still between
Ingly.
them, and there was no getting from it
“ She is not strong enough for any freah in the first moments o f their meeting.
“ You know that we have been search
trouble,” said Reuben, as he drew a sheet
o f note paper toward him and wrote very ing for you— advertising for you?” said
reluctantly an excuse for not being able Reuben.
to see her aa he had promised. He alleg
“ Yes; but I did Dot care to answer
ed no reason— he would explain when he yet.” she replied.
saw her, he said— and he re-read the
“ You are attending upon Edward P e
letter somewhat critically after he had terson ?**
finished the writing o f It.
It was a
“ M y husband— yea.**
brief epiatJe; he should see her to-mor
“ Your husband!” repeated Reuben
row, he hoped, and that would be time slowly.
•sough for explanation of his breach of
“ He is wholly friendless now— ha is
promise. Sarah trusted him implicitly,
and would know that only business of terribly alone— and at the last I have
Importance could keep him from her. She found the courage to do my duty,” he
did not expect a long letter from him, said.
“ Then the little girl— Tota----- ’*
and a heap of reasons, at that busy hour
“ Is mine. It was his promis« that I
o f the day. I^et the letter go.
should
have the child back— it w aa the
In the evening, somewhat late. Reuben
revelation
that she lived— that kept me
Culwick» not too fashionably attired, was
at the “ Magpie.”
It was eight o’clock silent when my suspicions might have
or later, when Thomas Eastbell'* pock giv*»n a clew to the truths which per
marked coutnenance peered round one of plexed you. T o have betrayed him at
the swing doors.
The “ Magpie” was that bitter hour was to kill my littlie girl.
Tom ’s forlorn hope.
l ie had sent s He swore it— and I knew how desperate
message to hia sister, and ahe might at a man he was, years ago." she added.
tend to it.
Who know.? H . caught
“ W h* n he ,fir,t c,me. *»
■¿«Ht
iOnK..n Culwick. . .nd r hi. « tint
— H
sight of Kroben
“ ill
“ * I * wrote,
wivte. warning
warning you
you o
o f f uknger—
dhngei
Impulse w s.
b.ck into the .tree,. Then * *
1
1 ™ «
w“
which
threatened
Sarah
Eastbell.'
he wavered; and while he was hesitating
“
I
see.”
murmured
Reuben
Culwick.
Reuben came from the public house and
“ I was a woman in the toils, and knew
confronted him.
not what to do,’* ahe continued. “ When
“ You need not rnn away, Tom Eaat- Sarah had disappeared, he said she
bell,” said Reuben.
should return in safety to Sedge Hill if
“ I haven’ t done you any harm
*** I would keep my peace— and I was forc-
returned: “ 1 haven't done nobody any ! ^ t0 tr„ , t
Ah, sir! do not blame
h a r m -n
- -------*
*'—“ th .t you
“■ have heard me too h, « hly— it was my child', life,
o rc r. " All
about me h »« been « pack o f lie*. I ve mT child', happiness .gsin .t Sarh East-
been a . honest as I could he and thi,
and j , c ted like a mother, in the
Is wh ,t cornea of it. 1 m hard np I m ,,nt. hope o f clasping her to mr heart.
■
„
hope o f clasping her to my heart,
starring Mr. Culwick. I haren t taated i could not hare hrought your cousin
food to-day.
j ,,ack hs<1 , own,.d that man for my hua-
“ Where are your friendsT’
| hand— I was in the dark with you— and
"T h ey turned me out of their ht»use. my little Bessie lived.”
They said I was a blundering fool. One ' “ And you love this man?”
of them kicked me, last time I saw him.’* 1 She answered: “ He killed my love
“ The Captain?”
years ago.
I do my duty in cairn ap-
Totn Eastbell laughed sardonically.
«thy, that ia all. Years ago he was my
**No, he can’ t kick.
l ie broke both hero. H e was honest then, and I was
bis legs in the country, jumping from a very young,” she said. “ W e were mar-
window of the button factory to g**t out ried secretly. When he grew tired of
o f the wsy o f the police. He can only : me. when he went wrong, he abandoned
swear and cuss me now.”
me without remorse, and took my child
“ Is this Edward Peterson the father with him. in a spirit of revenge that
o f the little girl you met this morning?*’ nearly broke my heart. My marriage and
“ H e says he is. He gave me money that child's birth were not known to the
to take care o f her altogether But It world I found at Worcester— although
wasn’t enough, so I lost her.” said Tom your mother always doubted me. I tried
coolly— “ or rather.** he added. Interpret- hard to live apart from the past, when
Ing Reuben's look o f disgust correctly, > I believed my little girl was dead, but
“ my old woman lost her. It m as her | it all came back last autumn. This,”
fault. 8be never had a mite o f feeling she added, almost bitterly, “ la a strange
In her for anybody save herself.”
| time for explanation.”
“ And I found the child when she was
” 1 have not come for explanation— I
leet.”
j have no right to demand it.” said Reu-
“ And then Peterson turned np. and ben; “but let me ask If my father knew
•formed and raved at me, till I told him o f your marriage to Edward Peterson? ’
where the child was. and he stole it from
I dared not tell him. I was very poor
you back again. H e was fond of that — I was a loos la the world, without a
child when he was In a good temper, friend, and he had confidence in me, snd
which wasn’ t often though.”
liked me for my dead father's sake.
“ Hia w ife— ia she dead?”
Would he have wished yon te marry me
“ Long ago. he telle me.”
had he dreamed o f this?” ahe added,
“ W here la Edward Peterson now?”
with an impressive gesture toward the
“ In W orcester — MU eh soon'» place, door of tl»e sick room.
near the river— end yon cen put the
“ W hy did he wink this marriage **
bobbies on to him. i f they’re not taking said Reuben.
“ H e told me on the day be died that
care o f him already. H e he* treated me
he had rutaed my father— hu ndred him
bad enough.”
w m « * * * * » * ,1 M ,M i *J
' ia some w ry of business and got rich
by hia disgrace,” she said.
“ Hegven
MEETING “ OtD EPHRAIM.”
J
knows if this were true, or the wander
Ml
ings o f a demented mind. It te beyond
our guessing at. and belongs not te our
present Uvea.”
In an article entitled. “ A fte r Big
“ Mary Holland, it waa true.” said
Game In W yom in g,” a w riter In tlie
Reuben, solemnly; “ 1 bring s proof of
P all M all Magaslne tell» o f an »le ttin g
it in his atonement— reparation.”
meeting between hlmaelf and a large
| “ Impossible.’’
grizzly bear. T h e Interview w a i aoms
“ H e has left you aU hia money.”
Thera was a wild scream— an awful j what unexpected on both »lde», and
yell from the room which Mary Hol- ' it laited only a minute or tw o; but
j land, or, rather, M ary l'eteraon, had while It did la «t It occupied the undl-
quitted, and Mary ran back into the
I Tided attention o f all the participant«.
chamber, followed by Reuben in hia
I chanced to be riding ahead, aaya
haste to be of assistance to tha affright
tha author.
—There'» ■ bear!" whim
ed woman.
It waa only a cry of delight. Captain pered Jack. » » » big gray bead ap
Peterson had heard all the news.
peared over tha fallen tree. W h at fol
“ Ia it all true?” he gasped forth, turn lowed In the next few mlnutee take»
ing te Reuben as if to a friend on whoa, longer to tell than It did to bappan.
ia this crisis of hia life, he might rely.
Aa I »prang down from the aaddle to
“ A ll the money is left to Mary H ol
»b o o t an enormona grizzly o f tha
land.” answered Reuben.
“ How ia it— how ie it that— that— this largeat kind Jumped up on the trunk
can be?” he inquired, catching at Reu o f the tree, behind which he had been
ben's hand and clasping it with hia trem feeding on a dead elk.
bling fingers; “ you see bow excited I
Aa I palled the firet trigger
be
am. but 1 can bear good news. Good eprang down, all claws, hair and teeth,
news mill save me yet. please heaven.”
and charged au-mlght at ua. The »hot
“ There has been discovered another
I wilL signed by my fsrhsr tbs fley hofnr* waa a clean mlas— orer hia back aa he
i hia death. In it my father bequeaths Jumped down; and h er« waa grizzly
tht whole o f his property to his faithful not thirty yarda away, on a down
friend and housekeeper, Mary Holland.” hill run, and obrloualy Intent on get
“ That’s my w ifs.”
said
Peterson, ting first blood.
quickly; “ don’t forget «he’s my wifs.
Tha second bullet went home, right
W e were legally married year« ago, upon
In the center o f the broad, furry
my soul, I swear it— it’s easily proved
— ian’t It easily proved, M ary? Tall him b reast «a w e afterw ard ascertained.
H e turned a complete som ersault and
so— don’ t stare at ms liks that.”
“ Yes. I am his w ife,” said Mary, thus lighting on his feet again, came on, ap
appealed to; “ I am not Mary Holland.” parently uninjured.
“ Oh, that makes no difference,” cried
M y rifle was now empty, and there
Peterson; “ you were Mary Holland, you was no tim e to reload. Th# next few
have always been known by that name secondi w ere a kind o f nightmare. I
to old Culwick, and it’s your money—
turned and Jumped at the saddle, but
I know law enough for that. A ll youra
— and all your husband's— why, it’s as my horse, seeing tbe bear close behind
clear aa daylight
This brings me— me, sw erved and bolted before I could
m ount G rizzly, now only a few yards
back— to— lift ! W here ia the will?**
“ I have brought It with me.”
away, was rising to strike with a gi
“ G ive it— to me.” said Peterson; “ it gantic, claw y, sinewy paw that could,
isn't safe in other hands. I — I will keep with a single blow, break a buffalo's
It till I ’ m— stronger.”
back o r tear out all bis riba.
“ Let him h ive it.” said the wife, care
W ith a cold thrill down my back I
lessly; “ it will calm him, and rust is
also sw erved and bolted up the hill
necessary.”
“ I would prefer your taking I t Mrs. fo r all I waa ever worth In what Jack
described
aa
ten-foot
Peterson,” said Reuben, producing the afterw ard
will; “ better still to leave it with a trust strides. He. meanwhile, with unload-
worthy solicitor to act upon. There will ed rifle thrown on the ground, sat on
be no opposition to it in any way from his horse fifty yards sw ay, and emp
Sarah Eastbell.”
tied his six-shooter at the bear with-
“ It will be safe enough In my hus
band's keeping,” said Mary, with strange out apparent e ffe c t
I glanced nervously over my shoul
listleasuess.
Reuben gave her the will,
and she der ts I ran, and then saw that the
crosaed with it to her husband's side and fight waa done. G rizzly, obviously mor
placed it in his hands, which with groat tally wounded, harin g missed his blow,
difficulty began to unfold tha paper on wss
blundering on d ow n h ill, cot
which Simon Culwick’ s last teatamant
knowing where be wenL Even an old
waa written.
" I — I »hall be glad— when I'm better,” king o f the divide, w eighing a thou
Edward Peterson whispered at last; “ you sand pounds or ao in sinewy, muscular
flesh and bone, could not long with
can put it under my pillow— now.”
“ And the child?” asked Reuben, curi stand the effects o f a half-inch ex
ously.
panding ballet, propelled by five drams
A gesture, quick and deprecatory, from o f black pow der through a good rifle
Mary Holland cams too late to arrest the barrel.
qnestion, or to check the excitemeut of
the prostrate vagabond, who half raised
A BOYS’ COOKIA6 CLASS.
himself in bed in his vehemence.
“ I'll never see the child again— I'd j
T h irty-tw o
stalw art
young men,
rather die than see her. She shall never some o ver six feet high, have formed
be mors than the beggar's brat sha ia!”
themselves Into a cooking class, which
he shouted.
1» probably tbe only Institution o f Its
“ W hat has sha done?**
“ She turned against her own father— kind In the world.
A ll o f the boys belong to tbe Orange
when there was a chance of making
money, it was she, that cursed child, who N. J., high school, and the cooking
betrayed me.”
class meets a fte r school hours.
In
Th# color vanished from hia face again, qulrles have come from England con
and once more the leaden hue suffused
earning I t and similar classes are to
it, snd the eye# closed, as by the pres
sure of the hand o f death itself upon be started there. The class has been
them. Mary was at his side, when life j in existence over a year, and the pu
seemed coming slowly back again, she pils are athletic young fellow s who
said to Reuben:
“ Leave me now. You aes what he is
— what he has ever been. I would pre
fer to be alone— to the end.”
Reuben passed from the room and
left the dying man to his strange wife'^
care. H e had done his duty, he had sur
rendered his father's will into the hsnJs
o f thoee it was to benefit, and It had
l>een coldly, almost unthankfully rvceiv- j
ed. Ix#t him get back to Sarah Eastbell 1
and to the brighter life wherein she
moved.
(T o be continued.)
Chronic S o r
r
H a d e F u e l S u p p ly .
T h e 7-year-old grandson o f W illia m
Dudley Foulke, the C iv il Service Com
missioner. went w ith his grandm other
to the Senate to hear Senator T ill
man's speech. T h e y had fine seats In
the fro n t o f the m em ber'» gallery, and
tbe little chap made a brave ahow in
his v elv et suit and lon g curly hair. H e
listened Intently, but didn't make out
much o f It until Senator T illm an re
ferred. with much emphasis, to “ an
thracite coal.” Then he piped up Joy
ously. so be was beard all o ver the
chamber:
" W e ’ v e got some; w e 'v e got som e."—
N e w York W orld.
Eating Ulcers A C
ons,ant
Upon the Sy
Nothing it a source o f » 0 much trouble as an old »ore or ulce
tieularlr when located upon the low er extremities where the circa
U weak and sluggish. A gangrenous eating ulcer upon the fe,
frightful sight, and aa the poison burrow» deeper and deeper U
tissues beneath and the »ore continue» to spread, one can almost ,
fleah melting sway and feel th . strength goin g out with thel
ening discharges. Great running «ores and deep offensive ulcer,]
develop from a simple boil, swollen gland bruise or pimple, J
a threatening danger always, because while all auch .ore. are J
ceroua. a great many are, and th i. ahould make you au.picou.
chronic, alow-healing ulcer, and .ore., particularly ,f cancer J
your family. Face sore, w e common and cause the greatest
ance because they are so
W h e e lin g , w . V s., k > ; as.i
persistent and unsightly Bern# y e a rs ago w h ile st work, I f*u over a
J
so much from end severely In ju red both of way shin».
• n d d e t r a c t SO
o n e * » p erson al a p p ea ra n c e.
v , ; j d u aired an d o ld p eo-
M id d le a g e d a i
}
b e e * « » « poisom ed a s a resu lt, and tn * doe to
m# l WOu id h a v e r u n n in g so re » fo r h u . *3
I f t h e y elo eed up th e r e s u lt w ou ld ba faJJ
d#r th la d la a e u r e e in * r e p o r t I le ft off tha"
p ie an d those w h o se b lo o d M a t aad ra a ortad to tha a u e f S. 8. B. Itt
fa c o n ta m in a ted an d ta in t- w e r e p ro m p t en d g r a t ify in g . I I t o o k only,
IS c on ia iim iu
w h lle fo r t h e m e d ic in e to ou re np the aorar
d with
__ the germs sort ¡mi-
„ m . l e o la r r ' ifl
;, n
om e D
re-
„ f f m
or r r s som
some
pro-
son o
a la ria o
e pin-
rious sickness, are th e c h iet
¿si
—j s not
c ; i z i i zz !hs uv.--.-r
doctor intlnatsd i I wo
.the
r broken
on,
, neither
om. 18 hava
year.
ha„ » o e « i i n i . p v ^ . d
since w h
et aa,
scribed occurred.
_________
n e ith e r h a ve the »o r e s e v e r b rok en on,
JO H N w
sufferers from chronic sores
Care Bchm ulbeoh B r e w in g Co.
and u lc e r s . W h ile the
blood remains in an unhealthy polluted condition, and the „ „
continue to grow and spread in spite o f washes and salves, for th
is the outward sign o f some constitutional disorder, a bad condit]
the blood and system, which local remedies cannot cure. A blc
rifier and tonic is what you need— something to cleanse the i
quicken the circulation and invigorate the constitution, and S.
is just 6uch a remedy. It counteracts and removes from the L
1
all the impurities and poisons, and|
ually builds up the entire systeiJ
when the blood has been purifij
healingprocess begins and the uld
sore is soon entirely gone. S.
contains no mineral or poisonous
o f any description, but is guan
purely vegetable, a blood purifier and tonic combined and a sa
permanent cure for chronic sores and ulcers. I f you have a slov
ing sore of any kind, external or internal, w rite us about it, s
physicians w ill advise you without charge. Book on “ The Bic
Its Diseases " fr e e .
THE SW IFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA
D iffic u lt H o r s e b a c k F e a t.
One pound o f cork is aufflcienti
There are no better horsemen In the port a men o f ordinary size ia the.
world than the cavalry officers o f the
Italian army, yet even among them
there are Tery few who could perform
the feat recently achieved by one of
Tha INTERNAL REF)
them.
Na Casa Exut» it Will Not <
T o run an ordinary foot race la easy
enough, but to run at full speed for
several hundred yards holding In one
’
hand a spoon on which rests an egg
and to reach tbe goal without dropping
on ipod
the egg la a feat which must be prac
HEALTH RES 7
ticed carefully a long time before It
can be performed successfully, and as
a result there are not many who can
be sure o f accomplishing It whenever
they try. G re a t therefore, waa the
surprise when an Italian officer mount
ed on horseback perform ed this uiffi-
cult feat. Moreover, he selected a
Qsiting Wall
course in which there w e re tw o or
Otl or Coal .
AUSTIN
WELL
three high fences, and these he cleared
Made
in all
at full gallop without losing the egg.
■tjrlas. Write ft
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der
(G
B
Pun
YOU CAN EARN
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J
loruea and lut a
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Y eit.
A Sure Protection.
Barton, N. Dak., M ay 9.— Many cases
are being published of how diseases
have been cured and lives saved by
Dodd’ s Kidney P ills, but there is a
fam ily in this place who use this reme
dy as a protection against the coming
on of diseases and with excellent re
sults.
M r. W. A . M offet says: “ W e have j
no very serious illness or complaint for
we always use Dodd’ s Kidney P ills the l
very moment we feel the least symptom !
of sickness and they soon put us right.
I f we have a touch of lame back or
think the kidneys are not right, we
take a few Dodd’s K idn ey P ills and the
symptoms are soon all gone.
“ M y brother had d :abetes and the
doctor told him he could not live until
spring. I got some Dodd’s Kidney
P ills for him and although that was
several years ago, he has lived through
all the winters and springs since and is
still living. Dodd’ s K idney P ills are
a wonderful m edicin e."
FROM
Beall I
B U
YO UR
DEAJ
R ig h t In B is Dine.
_Ine I
have no Idea o f taking the places of
Mother— I don’t know what In the
r PI SO S C U R E FO
world
to
do
with
my
son.
He
is
a
born
cooks, but who want to shine at sum
mer camps, where the gentler sex is rover.
Neighbor— Why not make s Methodist
not present
N CONSUM PTION
minister of him?
r» I
Good, plain, old-fashioned fare It
prepared and tbe dishes are made up
In the most appetizing manner. Every
kind o f vegetable and fruit that grows
In the garden, bread, biscuit old-fash
ioned buckwheats, stews, roasts and
soups are prepared by the boys.
S tr ic tly P ro fe s s io n a l V iew .
T h e fact that the good things cooked
“ W h y don't you tr y to liv e down
are eaten by the chefs, sitting com
vour past?” asked the visitor at the
forta b ly at a table where the lady
jail.
teacher does the honors. Is one o f the
" I t 's no use,” answered the prison
reasons w h y the boys enjoy their nov
er.
el lessons, and a larger number of
"N o t If you’ re sincerely sorry."
"B e in ' sorry don't do no good. When boys than can possibly be instructed
H ways K«u<rht has b o rn e th e sigi
dey'Te got your picture In de rogue’ s are clam oring fo r admission.
„ ,,p „ A.has. H . F letch er, and has b e e n m a d e under 1
ga llery you’ ve got to git out o' de busi
L ite r a r y Names.
Fo d l c c L SUpervi?,0,lwfo r o v e r 3 0 F r a r s ‘ A llo w no o
ness. It's worse dan bein' up agin a
Iiir »»»
U1 ti*,9* _ ( ' ,,n n terfeits. Im ita tio n s a
"T e a ," says the fond mamma, “ I
tru st."— W ashington Star.
h c a l t h ' n f ® re r Ut E * P e r in>rnt». an d endanger t
think w e picked real pretty names for
health o — f Children—Experience
st t E
xperim
——u p i m u t e a ga
g a in s
r.x
p e r im c en
iiv t. .
the tw o twins. P at got them ont o f a
H a r d F a ll.
book.
I
alw
ays
did
like
a
name
with
T ea «— D id he seem hard hit when
a literary tone to It."
yon told him I waa m arried?
*tO rÌA IH A )l !)
lo c a e i i k c « ! » . . » . A*__ AN.
____/Vl l n «
fo r in t,
a harnL ° 'iV s u b s titu te fo r C astor O il. - -
“ An d w hat do you call the little
Jeas— Not exactly. It took him by
conta'ina
oTnb“
"
'lw
!
°
'
hinf
SF™P*-
I
t
Is
Pleasant.
darlin
gs?"
surprise, though, and ha waa inter
b.
Opium , M orph in e n o r o th e r Narco
“ Fauna and Flora. It's from a book
ested.
and MU?,! f I ? S C L 1* 1,8 ff'tarantee. I t destroys TV or
Tewa— W anted to know how the w ed In the library downtown that tells
Collc ^ t r e n c lI^ m
D ia rrh oea and W i
about T h e Fauna and Flora o f the
and « " - ! - ■
T eeth in g Trou b les, cu res Constlpati
ding came off. and all th a t eh?
I
t
assim
ilates
th
e
V o o d , regulates 1
Jes— No. he m erely asked. “ H o w did W estern Hemisphere.' " — Judge.
» Pl" ’ * iTLnJ f h ealth y an d n atu ral sle<
It happen?” — Philadelphia Dress.
th e Children’
o th e r’ s F
rie n d .
---------
-
» s P
■ a » « n » a c c e e a a - -T
i n h e e M other’
Friend.
A Discovery.
R x t r e m e lv l a i p r * b » b l w
T h e y had been discussing the baby's
“ Another thing about these apples.” ears, eyes and noae.
tbe dealer said, opening tha barrel fo r
“ .And I think he's got his father's
hlx Inspection. “ Is that If yon put them h air." said the Joyful young mother.
In a cool place they w ill keep all win
"Oh, le that who's got It? I no-
deed It was missing.“ said the girl
*1 am quite positive they won’t " w h o knew her before she was mar
said the customer, who happened to ba ried.— Exchange.
What is CA STO R IA
The Kind You Haïe Always Bouj
the father of a half grown boy. "hat
I'U taka them.”
E ve ry one deatras to liv e long, bat
ko on « would be o ld .-S w ift.
S p e c t a c le * N o t D r e u y .
P olita Chinese consider It a breach
e f etiquette to wear «pecUc.es In com-
w
- w
—
-----
ln Use For Over 3 0 Year
Ct,'* IW ****** I. **
sr sm . RM v a o am.