Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Or.) 1903-1931 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 30, 1906)
The Trail of the Dead: THE STRANGE EXPERIEilCE OF DR. ROBERT HARLAND Dy D. fLETCHCn ROBINSON (CepjrlCht, ISOS, by CH.U'TKU XXV. (Continued.) I was nervous that night, niiJ nliout one In the morning 1 thought I heard a i) ie in the passage outside. Very can t ouly I opened my door ami peeped out. My father's door was the next to ml no. mill between the two Iny Heskl In a lr.'t fur rujj that he lmil. He waved h it hniul to me with a littio Htulle, as If 1 were a ch.Id he wax bidding to be of jooJ courage. 1 8lcit undisturbed after tint. It was as we took our place for n twelve o'clock dejeuner that wo received t e second telegram. This Is how it I Cad. "If danger proxies, communicate fully pul te. We started on receipt of your i ics i Re, and will be at Thims by three. i h ui.d be at PotureIan at one o'clock t -a.it. OnUr rooms. Orailen." I called in lteski at once; for he had r fu-i.l to have his meals with in, though i y la, her had Invited him. lie looked very grave, ludced, when I translated the U.C s.ige. "oa Kent no telegram, l'rauleln?" ". i. Herr Heskl." 'Xnr you, meiu INrr?" "No, Heskt, no," said my father. 'Thui someone hat sont h in your triue. I do not like It. It would seem n trip." "A trap?" 1 stored at him with ftnr gathering r'j ut my heart. Who bad done this tu ng? Ami why? "It would seem, Trauleln. some scheme of the old grey dovll. What he intend", 1 ca in it guess; nor can 1 think how he discovered that we are here. Hut there la n thing plainly to do. I will start for 1 litis s, to warn thoe who are hasten i.ig to ii'." "I will came with you, Heskl," said tu? father. "You know that cannot be. I have in fear, with Heskl to protect me. 1 i.l go." Iovo gives great strength to woman crd I spoko as one who expects to be o) eyed. It was much trouble to per suade them; yet from the !irst I did not iT.caa to y.oid. My dear father had Iwre ly r.-corered froiii the fatigues of h! I u? jiuruey; to let lum take this drive cf t rty nnles would lie the gravest folly. i" Ir was tut r.ght that we both should I ve our duty to a man of whom we li td u j real knowledge. Mr. Ilarlahd and li s couR.n had endangered their lives to nave us; now that peril seemed to be chsing round tboe gallant gentlemen. t.o could not both sit Id.e. Plainly it nes 1 who should go. Ami so at last it was agreed between us. It was shortly after one o'clock when Ilci'ii and I rumbled otC in our pot-car-rhge arrjsi the saow-bound slopes of t .e v illey to I'onte. Then began a climb of lr-ary monotony. Up and up we drag f ! i .ru after turn through forests of I r .i nud pine, with the Kagadine grow I; w.ler, aaj its house sinking Into vi - '.s beneath us. At last we reached t a cr -t of the Albula I'm, and trotted i rw trd ver the saonv level till we I I ge-1 djwn the steep deecent of the rock-strewn Devil's Hall as the moun taineers named it of oid. The snn bad Kct ere we rattled Into Itreda, and the m on had swung out from the southward r, 'jc:i llrrgun was reached. Half an hour later we had passed through the forests into the shad jus of that black and dan gerous gorge the llerguner Stein. I'r.'sh snow had clogged the road on t' e Albula, and we had made slow pro-(,.-cs, to our increasing anxiety. It was ii'jiv Impossible that we should reaeh 'i huis before they started; but we bad emulated that uear Tlefeukastell we i it meet them. That the snow had Uu! fallen so deeply on the lower slope, nud that they bad moved more quickly, v. o could not know. We had passed the last bend that turn rl upward, leading In a long slope to tl.e entrance of the gorge, when we stop ped suddenly. Iteskl sprang out; clam b rug after, I found him by the driver, vtbo was pointing with his whip up the r '3d The man had been warned to give us ii"t ce of any approaching vehicle. "It i a post-earring," he said. "They liavi stopped to breathe their team." The road had boeu carved and Jointed n!org the cliff side, and where wo stood. u wcr tho mighty wall ol rock, the shad ows wero gathered darkly. To our left t e rugged barrier rotfe dimly Into the tiig'it, clear only where Its battlements bruke the pearl of tho sky at some great height above us; to our right, a low stone coping hid tho grim uncertainties of the I re ipiee. Hut fifty yards up the slope tie cl 0 fell back, and tho road steppod cut into the silver moonlight, mounting the h 11, through a border of stunted tree, In a simple curve, as white and woil defined as a chalk mark on a black board. On Its crest I could see the patch on the snow carpet that marked the wali ng carriage. It was, perhaps, tho half cf a mile away. OIIAPTKIt XXVI. The patch of shadow moved slowly for ward. Suddenly, though distance hid the sug. grail .n of tho cause, the pace Increased, Faster and yet faster it swept down the road, in the white alienee of the night the muffled hoof-beats, came thumping to our cara. The carriage grew clearer. We could see how it rocked; It, might have been some- great ball that flew bounding ta wards us. ! and J. MALCOLM fRASER Joseph O. Bottles) For some moments wo hnd stood mo tionless, help!', before this imi.ixliig apparition. It was Heskl who II rut un derstood; It was he who seUed u(o by the arm, screaming In hi excitement to run to run down tho way we hnd come. And In my panic I obeyed, tlylug wildly towards the sharp bend In our rear. I had nltnost reached It when there came a thought to me that Jostled out the re membrance of my own safety, turning me back, with heaven knows what anx iety lu my heart. Hubert aud Sir Hen rycould they be the trivelers that came galloping to almost certain death? Tho runaways hud but one chance to hug the cliff, thereby glvlug space to clear the turn without charging the low wall that guarded the unknown depths of the curge. Hut to my horror, I saw that this was a chance our driver was preventing, for It was he who had edged his team against the cliff. They would have to pass him uu the outer side. I started up the road, shouting to him; but as 1 d.d so, 1 saw Heskl spring upon the box. I heard cries of furious alter ratijti, aud then the driver was thrown from Ills place. He dropped on hands and knees; theu rose and ciime ruiinlug past me round the bend. The whip cracked, and our team swung ncrtMs the road, drawing up on the edge of the preclpici If the man who drove the runaways were not struck with terror, they had jet a hope of safety. They were not one hundred yards away. 1 could see lu the bright moon light how the horses hounded forward, the traces now slackening, now tighten ing to the desperate plunges. Seventy yards aud the driver had gone mad. He was waving his arms ninl shrieking, not in terror, but rather lu w hoops of joyous exultation. It was a fearful thing to see those gestures and to hear those wild Imprecations when death was so very near. Another second, and they were lu the shadows, close upon us. Ami Heski? I had almost forgotten him. Stiff as n soldier upon duty lie sat, the reins tight In bis hand, looking neith er to right nor left, waiting the fate that might come to him. It was only time that he could bold his team in their place only thus, at the risk of instant annihilation. Did ho dare this for the simple love of his neighbor? Did Instinct tell htm that they wero indeed our friends? God rest him, whether or no! for by whatever rank men knew him, he was a most honorable gentleman. Like a flash of light striking through darkness, I realised that the runaways were still holding the outer edge of the road; that It must happen that there was no escape. And as I did so, there came a crushing, rending shriek that till ed the whole air like the falling of a thunderbolt. Dimly I saw the great carriage collide, rebound and theu but one remained. The spirit went out of me. 1 covered my face with my hands, crunching axainst the cl.ff, praying to bearen that at least the screaming of the borne might MMtn be ended. How long I stayed there I do not know, but I was roimd by fooUteps parting before me. I started up with a cry. "I beg your pardon, madam." said a well-known voice. "Gad; If It isn't Mary Weston I" It was Sir Henry; but what was that ho carried in his arms? "Who Is It" I asked, pointing. "It Is Hubert," be answered gravely. "He has had a nasty tap on his head I'm afraid. If you will look to him, MM Mary, I will go back aud shoot those pour beasts of horses." They foil ml them next morning, lying close together at the foot of the preci plee. They told me that their fnees wer curious to see. for Maniac still grinned with the vacancy of bis Insanity, and lteski wore also a happy smile, yet one most ilffeltiit, fur It was sueh as those carry who die la a noble effort, covering their memory with honor. Fur as Sir Henry ban explained, It was Heskl who saved their lives. They could never else have eleared the bond of the road. As It was, when their leading horse Jumped the wall, his weight swung their carriage round, ktrikiug the other on the side, so that while they were left, battered, on the edge, with one horse dangling until the li arn ims broke -Hoskl, his carriage and his team, were hurled over tho cliff. Marnac bad already been Hung to do Htructhm at the first Impact. We learned in time the details of his insane scheme. A heavy bribe hud wou the help of the Cornish loafer though, to be honest with lilin, the mail had no suspicion of the evil purpose to which his telegrams would bo placed. From poor Martha, love-lorn and middle-aged, hu had gathered his news. It was Mar line who bad sent the further telegrams to Sir Henry, calculating well the tluio at which they could arrive. Ho had stayed at the village of Alvaneu, mid when the carriage passed it, had begged a lift ns far ns Uergun, a request grant ed readily enough by their driver. The poor fellow had been struck on tho head at tho entrance of the gorge, and so thrown from his place. Ho had not been seriously injured, and, indeed, was of much assistance to us all later In that evening. I must add that Sir Henry dispatched the whole of the great reward be had 1 1 offered to Heskl's next of kin. Tlioy were but distant relative, ns his wife win dead, nud It had been hW only son that Marline murdered. Ho ended tho story that It tlicrt, right ly enough, has named "The Trull of the Held," for Indeed It wits a bloud-stiiliie li path. 1 would hnve hud Unhurt hliu- self to conclude It, but that he Insists ( that there Is no necessity. One thing only doe he nsk that I should mid -though, indeed, It li a matter that will have been already guessed. To please him, 1 will write it down. Hubert and I were married lu June. (The Km!.) SUMMER CAKE OF lJUn3. Here Is mi Kxcrtlrut Method for the Housewife to I'ae. Ono of the spring duties most drosd oil by tho housewife N the putting mviiy Kt winter fur, on nrvotmt of the unsutlsfiictorliu'ss of mi ninny methods. Tli IlouckiHiir publishes mi excellent nud tried method for the cure of fur.s. which will be widely npirecl:itcd. As spring npproiiches It U well to be mi the nlert tigilust the Insidious moth, ns this Is the time uf year she ilewss ber e!gs. It Is the iiiuggut of the moth nud not the little sllver-wlnged Insect with which we ure nil fumllliir, which I destructive to furs. To prevent the ravages of thN Insect, furs liefore being put iiwuy should be lightly tienton with n thin rattan cure being taken not to brenk the hair nml allowed to hung in the sun fur several hours. They should tlieti be eoinlied with n cleiiu comb, wrHpiwd In news jwiier mill put In n droit lined with tin or eeilttr. rubloiuiiod inusllti hags ure a good sulwtltuto when ehests me not available. The two of emiiphor It dele terious, ni In the oife of the dark fur luible. for Instance It has a decided tendency to lniMlr the richness , of Its coloring, and the darker the aaWe the more beautiful ami valuable It Is. The printer's Ink on tiro newsiMper la equal ly effect he a camphor In keeping out the winged moth and will not In the least lninIr the color. When It Is found necessary to clean fie fur before putting It away, the fal lowing method, culled from a grand mother's notebook, has been found nnvt effective: First, bruh with a good, stiff brush. Have ready r quantity of new bran, which Iws been thoroughly heated. This will require constant stirring to prevent Its scorching. When well heated the bran hIwiiIiI be tlmroughly rubbed Into the fur with the hands. This operation should l' rejiertteil two or three times. Tiro fur slwuhl then lie taken and ef fcctlvely brushed until not a twrtlde of ihit remains. Krmliie mid other white furs ran lie cleaned In like manner, substituting tlmir for the bran, and rubbing agnlnat the trend of the fur. If very miidi soiled, the fur slwuhl he laid away for a day or two In a chxsHl compartmeiit after the Hour has been well rubbed In. Our Su-l Hie Siiii- Uls. Kvery few years, eieetally aloi.g th w coaxl nud tiro larger rheri mid Itkea, there la a wave of those .U-m' I, ilHy-huutlng niM-ala tiro snowy ow'. Vlroy nre ureal nalrormcii. tl.e only mm-In to make this rt of bunting a ptactU-e, and may ssairotlmex lie mvhJ h'ttlng. allent aud niotloii'e, MM- ii block of Ice, at the edge f the ommi water, waiting for a chance to lutti an tiiwileiH-etlitt; llsli. Of miiii-m, till I not n ury iwylng way to aet a living, i.nd they also eatch Hold-mice. muk lata, huruH, and even large lilrila like quail or scroti w. Hut there an ouiy two other birds of prey lu our country that habitually eat llsh, and one or t.iW wddotii catches Ita own, prefer r.nx to eat the dead llsh along the ahore or pirate It from the real iWhomian tho oeprey. St. Nlclwila. I'rlnli'il I'mirr. Awim No, I don't know hlin, lait he heoiiw like a very attcvHMful man. Kidder Oh, hi aucce Is nil on pajwr. .Vaciiin ItuleHl? You mean Kidder I mean he's n ropular nov ollst. l'lilladelpblii I'reu. I'miiiliiral I'lnlsli. Mra. Mewl Ami ilhl your himband die a natural death? Mr. Weed No, he died Hiiddeiily. MM. .Meeds What wna thoro uiiimt lira! about that? Mr. Weeds Why, joor dour John wn the Hloweat limn that over lived. VICIiiKtt I'dllllrs. "So you Miteil for tlui Koelnllst cnndl datK I can't uiularitiiud your doing tlmt." "Well, you Me, tlroy may not keep tliwn nny hotter tlinn other, but they mnko ho many moro promlHOB." Jour nal Amusant. I'nssllilllllis. "Hut," protoated tho llrt ilenr girl, "I haven't Rot tho face to nsk n favor of him." "Well," rejoined dear girl No. 2, "you might vlult u complexion HpeclullHt mid hnvo your fnco remodeled." I.'nuse for Complaint. Meeker Yea, my wlfo nlwnya upcnkH her mind, but meeker Well? Meeker I wouldn't object to Hint If oho would only stop when eho gcta to tho end of It . A HARVEST AFTERMATH. ly llov. 1). F. Fox, D. D., Chicago. There are four great ngeueleH Hint have for their pimmso the redemption of Hum the Divine, the mi (telle, the Iminiiu and the natural. We hnve nil heard written on the llrst three, but nt this fall h'ksoii I wish to pik brletly on the ministry of Nature; our own Muster drew most of his lllustrii tbiiiM from the gre.it world of Nil Hire. Longfellow, In his poem entitled "After ninth," exclaim: When the summer fields are mown, When the birds are Hedged kiii' llown, And the dry lenves strew the path; With the cawing of the crow, With the fulling of the snow, Once again the Held we mow And gather in the aftermath. That Is to y, iihuig with the crop of Bruin the wise limn gutbers u harvest of wldoiu. And llmt of nil, let us not forget what n wonderful something till world of Nature Is. Think of the siwer Hint jwlllt us August noons nud DecemUT nights. l,ok at the clouds, lifting iiKibtture from tho sea nml carrying II . I1M111( ,, ,.,. ,, ft le rain iwtters. children dance with glee. As tiro benediction of tiro ruin falls on all the earth, (lie rors) stands forth on the cactus lu the desert, tiro Illy whiten-. In tiro ihkiI nml harvests ikh! their bends lu thanksgiving nud praise. Now those clouds could do their work Just as well by coming and going In Mralght lines, ami they would answer nil practical purple If they were a comber black or n dirty brown; that Is the way man curries his freight ncnew the continent Not ho tiro Almighty. Heboid his carriers, ns lu hiiiii nud niajist they aland in grand array Si? ui iox, n. n. the great banks of orange splendor In the morning, the mngullb-em-e nml brlt llniHv uf the noon, and tiro umtchlcMi nrray of evening sunset. It la great to live out-of-doors, na our Master did. My Ideal of the untiinil, aaue life I to be a nursling of the mountain, to know the wild tiling that dwell lu their reco, the air uf en chantment that haunt tlrom. To have tiro wholexome blood of foreet plnea lu your elns; to sleep all night beneath the star ; to wnti-li tiro day swing Into tiro purple Immuiii of the night; to aoe the lark come down aero tho morning aky sideways on the wing; to follow tiro brook a It wimple through the glen; to listen reverently with uncovered Iwad to the crash of the thunder, like God' grout Amen, falling down the stairway of the skies; to see tiro linked elm aa It shiver pltoously lu the ktorm; to know the ilnuuii of the sou miiis, the rotation of flowers, the mur mur of the trees, tho aolltude of the wood, the wlhluofts of the moor, the height of the hills, tho purple of the uvunlug, tho rosy touch of the duwii, the roar of the aurf, the rush of the waves, the breath of the brine. In n word, to go yonder where things tiro seen nml felt mid hoard; nml there, with mind open, alert mid responsive, to behold tho whole oplc of God's out-of-doora. That to mo I the truly hiiiiu life. "God made the country, mini miiile the town." That Isn't hard to liollovc; that Ih why life In the grout city tuniU to miperllcliillty. People who live lu the city don't know much 1 live lu the city. It Is the mini who 1 1 von nml workM In tho country who know thlnga. City people nro ulwiiya talking. They don't have time to think. The man In the country must meditate, for he often lilts only hi thoughts for company. What Ih tho trouble with your city boy? Ho IitckH tho jniwer of Initiative. Why doe tho lad from the country win? HecniiKu when ho wiiuta n thing he must whip out his Juckkulfo uttd tZfOtm MaL 4saOO&l JeB ilsVSvi3nHMsM&PBsHhFavnWPwe i). r mm PEMTT niiike It. Tlml la why nil lenders lime grown great dose to Nature" heart. In this cradle of eletiii, wholesome isnerty the Merty of the plouer genius hits evermore rocked her gieutiHt dill dreti. Theu nun In, Nature I the great re storer. If there Is n scar of the luittlc lleld left ncros the face of Mother Kurth. Hhe liumedlalely begin to cover It with a ntrlp of greenery. If n tree Is torn mid bleeding, Nature binds up Its wound mill recovers, the gush. If n treiini Is pulmiiied with the sewngo of u great city, within forty miles the IMilsou bus been eliminated, for mill shine I the great germicide. And " the oxone comes from ocean nud mouii t it 1 ii with heiillug on Ita wings. While walking through the woods the other day I chanced upon a dnlsy. Coming uH)ti It uuobseried lu fancy I beard It miy: "1 inn doiwi here hi tho gniNs, hidden nwny, burlcit out of sight lost." Then In my Imagination I heard the iluwers talk. "We, lire not lost," they said. "Our friend are the otT-iitvhlug sky, the iHtmu mid the sun." Tlrou 1 wild. "Hut oti are ruth er cmkmisIvc nrc '! not, nud extrav agant also. Can't ,ou get along with lee?" "No, no," they all replied n In one voice, "nothing It than this will do for it. Nothing h-w than suns and star ami over-arching skies." And. If (iod has taken the measure of tiro How em and lit ted up a world house adapted to their needs, then surely He will not do less for us. Here we are to-day; children of an cteruul destiny, eye longing for beauty, oar j earning for harmony, reason going forth In search of truth, am! the soul thirsting for God! Surely for the erf(H-tliig of this sronallty lie will send us mighty Im pulses, great mothes, Infinite stlmulii tlous. For He who puts the crimson btiHth Into the heart of tiro cowslip will also minister to the needs of the sull . and He who notes tln mr row's fall will also be mindful of Ihcso Ills little one. THE WATEIt OF LirE. Ily Ilev. J. W. Worsnop. Text. "And tiro Spirit nml the bride ny. Come. Ami let hlin tlmt Iroarelli s.iy. Conic. .MhI let him that Is athlrst say, Cotne. And wlanoexer will, let hlin take tiro water of life freely." -Itevrlntloii T2 : I. Tiro exprelon, "water of life," I flgiirathe and Is liitcmlisl to convey to our minds the Idea of salvation. He who drlnka of the water of life takes snhntton lulo bis miiiI; mil vat Ion Is ill i 'He life In tiro soul of man. It Is tiro Mghcr nature of man eotitrolllng tiro lner, It Is the plrlt kejtlng tiro IxMly M !-r. Man' think only of salvation frni hell, ami If It were not for tiro fear of hell they would trot ! Chrt )' ins That la a low runcejttlon of tiro ' brlstlan life. There la no Iroll Hb.-re ln-re I no sin. Let any sin control 'u dominate your Ufa ami you have hell within you, The water of life, lwover. fills the soul with tiro IiIkIkmi hive. It purine human loie lu every relationship in which It I innnlfretisl. The water of life I In the Christian's soul ns n well of wnter springing up Into everlasting life. Wo nro to drink till wnter of life freely. It Is n free gift- from God to us a the light we see aud the nlr we breathe. It cannot l pureliascsl with money, or obtained by proxy. Did you ever feel soul thirst? If you do, then you are the one alluded to lu tiro words, "Iji hlin that la nthlrt come." The water of life I the only thing that can quench thl thirst. It Is tiselea to try to quench It with money, ambition, fame and pleasure. While money Is useful ami good na n menu to mi oud, nml, aa much a we may decry It, we cannot get along without It; yet It can trover quench this aoul thirst. It cnuiiot even ghe bodily health. It mny ptircliiise every kind of medicine preacrlbed, get tho bet hotel lu the heiilthleat locnlltlc mid nil oh tnlmihlo comfort, but It cannot give peiico of mind where there I no pence, mid ense of eoiinclonco whoro there Is n gnawing aenso of guilt. Money run bribe men, but not dentil. Weak nud Unstable Wealth la wenk Itself lu that It I iiiiHtiihle. It hit hue.il hiiIiI that nil of the wealth of tlilx iiullon pnse tbrougli the I'robnto (.'ourt lu each thirly-llve yenr. -Hev. II. A. Diiwes, MethodlNt, I.ottbivHIe. Huccoa and Tiutli To iniil.e if() K with HticceH, one' thinking must be purmuntcd nud ptit-llhxl with (hut which Ih pure. To almm In life to fcllow Hhlp with ahninii. Hev. A. Ii. Ilerrlea, I'roHbyterlnn, Union City, Need u Huvlor Man la n aliiner Mini needs n aiivlor, The Son of Mnry wiih culled JestiH becniisu Ho won to anvu mini from nIii. Ho iiiiiUch bud men good. Hov, II. II. Tyler, DlHclpIe, Denver, ' Nood's Sarsaparilla Has surpassed ll other iiimIIIiiMi l "''". ssles suit cures. lis uere, great It b been, hsi ov psrentlronlf Jt begun. H has rrerlvnl by settisl count inuro than iO.OUU tsithiiiiiilsh lu two vinr. It purifies the bliMid, cure sll bleed die eioi,llliiiiiiiri!id sll pruiillnn. it strenatliens tli stnniseh, erestes an tetlle snd builds up tb wlmle rtui- Iteuresthst tlliil (evllug slid lilskes lha wesk strong. la usual llnuldMrtnprlMrheeeliite.1 (shirts kuuHiiwOnra.itnt). itwdtMosti. lleltvren I'rleinls. MnymeJack wiy he admire my fnmknes and Hint my face lu like mi UKII lNik to him. hMytli Well, the comparison I unite appropriate, for you certainly du keep jour fnco oien most of the time. HriTsortmin. Cirrer Tenia, I Lens iiitair. " rns J l lisssv insies oslh Ihst ho Is II In f I'Slllltf ol Ills llliniit Y i ( IISDRVA I'o ,rtnu Mitliien In Ih I llriilTitel.rMn. Ir MilailluiisHt. slid tlislsslil mm will i'v ih sum ill (INK lll'snllCli IMiU-Altaier sell i..l etf fiwot t 1TARNII ttitlesHliat to C-Ulll llf (hstlMUf IUUHTSSII I'l'HS. awnin to Is-Ibi ihs ami sutwei IMsl lu r irMiino. dittCltiiUf nl liwmlr, A li , JMw, 1 . A. W. (It.HAsHlN, J.suj N.uryl'uUla. ItslftCsUrrhOateUlsten Internellr. Ht Mil ilfellr till Ih l.tiMMt suit IHIinrtis ullsrcs ol ll intern. Ht f I IrsllHMHiUls.liee. luidLr iiiHsiuis,n. Ilill'i I'smlh Mils si the brst tlireplloM, "Wo reap as we suiv," said the moral Iter. "I never do." rejalneil tiro demnral er. "I'm uu amateur gardener, jou know." A MISSOUIII WOMAN. Telli a Slorr of Awful Sutdorlnj: and Wonderful Relief. Mis. J. It. Johnson, ol 003 West Hickman St., Columbia, Mo ta;st following an oper ation two years ago, dropsy set In, ami mjr lelt tide so swol len the doctor said ho would have to tap out the water. There was constant pain and n gurgling sensation around my hrart, ami I rould not raise my arm above mv head. The kidney action was dUonlerrd anil passages ol Hie secretions too frequent, On the advice ol my husband I began tiling Dosn's Kidney Tills. Huioo us. log two boxes my trouble has not re appeared. This Is womlcitul, alter HifferliiK two tisis." Kohl by all draler. fiO cents a Iwx. Foster .Mllburn Co., llullalo, N. Y. SHIP US YOUR FRUIT, VEGETABLES roullrr, seal, ln Nra,rlr II tal.ll.Ul 1 )ri. line 1-kIIIi Uise lmil. r.itnrt.riii vsl.siusti ftiui4 re. Iuiim Mlil uf lll llliar ac4l ll1 Isn Alnetlrsn HsllV HP.WIOI. U1CC I CO, CtMtUt! KlItUMl HhoUtsI Meflhantt St Wltf, HASH. f)D PLATES 1 ILY DENTAL CO. "MS" B- He irniMie f.i. r l' 1 1'rlli slid l.li.ten K iil rim iiisi.iiiirir hi i.out .in tsirl atlonsmll.limslr r. W ots tl.e llr.1 1'ilres tl l...nl K.ili.1 m.'I.I I IHWII II III Ills Mill k, Ilhl r 'III l..., ami I nsinel tTIIIMir. l ami iqi Ih ( ll.il'U-r I'lairs Is r (. K11"! Ml l I'aini. I .Irani. ill '' tlilril and Couth Mretlt, I'otllsnil, Oman, WW.m-?)iarm!-Ttmi?m''3&iut!ifQ n TLJr sf TY TT-Sx W T TrTII B O'UJLLI UJT! cancl consider rsit POMMEL nuNDL,ICKER. IIKC AIL TOWI VVATERPROOI aOTHIIIG. Iimadrodhrbtit ,) I imlnulimKgkornilf, 0WED:e hrfOftaW. JTItKTBTHI a.;,o ti. .i SJPJ! or.TMC FISH fV-M.i ,0 " "" inuiioiiJ2 DR. C, GEE WO Wonderful Heme Treatment 'tills w.. (Irfl (hi. re limiu.r Is ikIIvI snsl Iimhiis" lis cur 4 imi.u w.iIkiui i ina lion ilmi an it ttu mi ti Oli-. lis line, hi i ll"'Mi wiiuil. im I In li'ss liuli-, ion , ,.i,a Larks ami vese uile lial nm en 1 1 my mi kll Wli In i.i .11. ul .. , em a iii Una linn,,,, ii,,,,..",.. !7. liarinliiui rni. iitua 'ii.i. .,.?. ... liu ihflr,i, ;..aj:-a rt . u" '""' "" H.. r kiiuwa i '."':." " """Minrrriii rinriihai. v , wlnou Km.n.!,m';:M''',,',,,,'V''"""''' iiniiiiiaiisiii, nmv iia cm, stomal h. Ivur. kl.l J'W, He. lias liiinilra s r ,liiiii.la i. ui ol Ilia tiliy wrli- fur h ansa ami (In Ulan. H..11I (laui L-ONHOM ATKIN "ill L , Aililress Th C. Gee Wo Chlneie Medicine Co. Wi rirst St., S. t. Cor. Morrison Mntlon pajsir I'ortUnd, Oreion Itn MS) Bill I'lMIIII I V III llfV.... a -i .. ... ' .. bKH LlVJlAlli'ia "tjar mm-"' ' " "nt'fl" -"