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About Heppner times. (Heppner, Or.) 1???-1912 | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1904)
she Planter s Daughter 22 FATE'S , By MRS. ALICE P Author of "A Waif from the Sea," "Her Brightest Hope, 5? "Wayward Winnefred," etc. REVENGE CARRISTON CHAPTER III. Continued.) It simply seemed incredible that it was the haughty, high-spirited Sylphide Cour amont who obeyed the nonchalant com mand with the submission of a lamb. What power did this rudi fellow exert ever this defiant girl? Had ahe met her master in him? He pointed to the easy chair which she had left but a minute before, aa fhe Bank Into it, he carelessly tossed his dripping hat upon a dainty sofa coTered with pale blue satin embroidered with apple blossoms, and braced himself against the toilet table, the muslin drapery of which became crushed and soiled by contact with his muddy boots. "First of all," he began, sneeringly, "your tragedy airs are out of place. So long as you do not bring us face to face I do not care a pin to meet him; what Is more, I no more , want to kill him than I want to marry you for k)Te." He paused abruptly, and little by lit tle she raised her great, dilated eye to his face like two burning stars. "It may touch your vanity In a vul nerable spot," he continued, sitting down upon the edge of. the table and crossing one foot oTer the other, "but I don't love you a speck and never did; so you may ag well know, firrt as last, that if you hadn't been worth your weight In gold, I wouldn't hare looked twice at you. You're not my style. I'm hot-tempered enough myself, and bringing a fire brand into my camp wouldn't have help ed matters." While he spoke the defiant look had been creeping back Into Sylphide's face. brightening her eyes and curling her red lips. "So you sought to marry me for my money?" she murmured, looking him teadily in the eye. "Most assuredly; for no other reason." "You have lost me and my money, too!" she cried, springing to her feet. "You, yea; but not the money. Your father left a will, did he not?" "No." It is doubtful whether, bad a bomb ex ploded at his feet, Oscar Couramont would have started more violently. "Left no will?" he cried. "I tell you, no," tyiphide replied with a steady, level glance. Couramont shrugged his shoulders and 'reseated himself upon the edge of the table. "In that case," he rejoined, "all the property comes to you. Well, so be it I must change my tactics. You must hand over to me the naif of the estate. which by right your father ought to bare lert me. The indignant reply that quivered for utterance upon Sylphide's lips was check ed by a sudden knocking at the locked door which communicated with the cor dor. "Missy Sylph, Missy Sylph!" called a woman's voice from the other side of the door. not believe it. With hands cramped like the talons of a bird of prey, she sprung at her tormen tor, uttering shriek after shriek of rage, horror and dismay. . "It is a lie, a lie, a lie!" she panted; "out of my sightl Yon you I " She staggered, beat the air for a mo ment with her arms, then with a low moan of fathomless agony, fell, face downwards, with a dull crash, like one stricken with death. Too late Oscar Couramont discovered that he had over-reached himself. - Syl phide was now incapable of signing the instrument which would make a wealthy man of him; besides, her cries had arous ed the household, hurrying feet were mounting the stairs, already they were knocking at the door, and a man's voice in excited accents was calling upon her to open. In less than half a minute the barrier would be broken down! Snatching np his hat and revolver, Couramont sprang to the window. "We shall meet again, my lady, never fear!" he hissed, menacingly; "we shall meet again, when my grip upon yon shall be stronger than It is now! CHAPTER IV. Four years have elapsed since the events narrated in the preceding chap ter, and the flight of Courtlandt and bis bride has ceased to excite commeut and gossip long since. Already the year 1S02 is pregnant with its greatest day, Sept. 22, when the martyr President issued his immortal proclamation declaring the freedom of all slaves In the States and parts of States then In rebellion. Since that memorable night of dark nees and storm, in October, 1S58, the face of the mistress of Rosemont has never once been seen upon her hereditary estate. Having been left In competent hands, the plantation has yielded its ac customed Income, all of which has been transmitted through the bankers at Mo bile to Lucian Courtlandt in whatever part of the world he chanced to be. For a year the young lawyer and his beautiful wife traveled from place to place in the Old World, following the fashionable season from London to St Petersburg, returning along the shores of the romantic Mediterranean. It had been a term of unalloyed delight to Sylphide, and when, at the close of the year, a lovely baby boy came to join their party at Nice, the young wife trem bled at her happiness. The horror of her wedding night with its appalling rev elation now seemed ao far away that sb often wondered whether it had been re ality indeed, and not the delirium of a fevered dream. In the peace and joy of her maternity she persuaded herself that cruel Fate had forgotten her, and that henceforth she was destined to live in the auspicious light of favoring Fortune. Oscar Couramont had given no sign of life; perhaps he had repented; perhaps Her hand set like a vise upon bi arm. "Discoveries!" she gasped, "what dis coveries?" That some one climbed the pillar of the veranda nearest your window by means of the vines, and that the print of a horse's hoofs is fresh in the soil of the lime-tree walk that lends up to that side of the house. Which facts Incline me to your belief, that thieves hare en tered the house." "Lucian, 1 told you so," she cried wildly; "it Is true. There must have been a plot to rob us while we were at church. Don't vou see?" Lucian Courtlandt pressed his lips up- ,c Co,tl t.rae House. on the damp, pallid brow, and gently de- " "o "ny Tanners conatuer an ic positing the graceful form upon the ouh- i house a luxury that U net for them, ions of the sofa, he rose with the words: a building such aa Is shown In the cut "lou are over-excited and tired, poor , may be erected at suinll cost, and If child. You had better rest here tonight. , nn ). im.i fnr h nittlnir and We will leave Rosemont at daybreak. !rtrawn , lt wlll be foU11(l profitable. Shed.'r ' rtlo... where tee Is scarce one dared not remonstrate lor fear nl i . , , , ... ., ,,, rousing the suspicions which she had 8,u n -miciure woutu ue wort.. u i lulled Into oblivion. So she closed her coat to a fruit grower who desired to eyes with well-feigned weariness, and hold back his products In cold storage. Courtlandt left her to summon her. To make the house cheap bulla it maid. of an lumber obtainable, the csseu- No sooner had the door shut his roan-, tial tblnir Wins to have It with au In- ij ugure irom view wuen cyipniue start ed np upon her elbow, her dilated eyes burning with that deep red fire that one sees in a hungry wolf's.. She held her breath and counted his retreating foot steps, till they fell awny into silence at the extremity of the long hall. Then she sprang to her feet, her pallid face aflame with animation, every nerve vi brating like the rudely swept strings of harp. "Saved!" she panted triumphantly; "saved! But what a narrow escape. I have bridged the abyss with a straw, and passed safely over. I shall be on my guard In future; it can never happen again. Were I to meet Oscar Coura mont a hundred times, I should never be such a fool again." The exultant soliloquy was cut short by the abrupt opening of the door, and a young mulatto girl, with a remarkably pretty, keen face, entered. She patMed at sight of her mistress pacing to and fro so excitedly, and Sylphide paused also, fixing a sharp, questioning glance upon her maid. "What Is it, Diana?" she demanded, swiftly; "yon have heard something; I see it in your face." "I haven't heard anything. Missy Sylph," replied the girl, "but I've seea something Mass' Oscar." Diana did not draw a breath for fully a mlnnte after that unwelcome announce ment, for Sylphide's small hand was set upon her lips like a seal. "Hush!" she breathed, "do not dare to lisp his name until we are gone. My husband does not know of his existence, and must never know, if we can help it. Where was my cousin?" "In the lime-tree walk. Missy mount in' his horse." "Thank heaven, he's gone, then, for the night! Are the trunks ready pack ed, Diana?" "Yes, Missy, packed and strapped." "See that they are loaded on the wag on to-night; we start at daybreak, and you go with me. I may have need of yon in more ways than one." Scarcely had the eastern horizon begun to flush with the promise of day, when the family coach, followed by the bag- gug wagon, rolled swiftly down the road that led Into the river valley; and two hours later Mr. Oscar Couramont rode don during the open days of winter ( which wlll, at least, save time In the spring, Broken limbs may be removed and many of the Inside limbs which are overlapping the fruiting twigs ran be rut off during the winter as well as in the spring. The work of pruning should always be done with a snw on limbs too large to rut with a sharp knife; In pruning saw from the under side of the limb first, sawing up n quarter or a half through and finishing from tho top. This wlll result In a clean rut and there will be no splintering, ns would be the ruse If a heavy limb was rut through from the top. In the winter pruning of orchards keep your eyes open and note tho condition of the tree, so that at tho proper time any remedy for any trouble found tuny bo apfillod. GREAT LUMP Of IRON OflE. i BIMl'LK 1CK HOI BE. Cost of Kelalna; Corn. The present low price of torn und tho enormous qunutlty which Is piled up In bins and warehouses everywhere in this country Is the most emphatic evidence, that corn can be produced at n very low cost, and lt Is plalu from the experience of hundreds of eoru raisers that there Is a profit In produc ing corn on a large aeale, even ut the present low prices, for ninny thous ands of farmers have ninde a good llv Ing and laid some profit by from their corn In mis. lt Is perfectly truo thnt the man with n small farm, devoted exclusively to corn raising, ran get only a very precarious living out of com when the price Is under 25 rents on the farm. Hut even tho small farmer can assure himself of a substantial surplus with the prospect of a substantial surplus, YTelahe tlOO.OoO.OOO Tone anil Is Worth an Imminia fortune. One of the greatest natural curiosi ties In Mexico Is a big hill consisting of a solid mass of Iron ore. It stands beside the railroad track, iiesr the sta tion, In the city of InirntiKO, In the cen tral part of (he republic, Nothing Just like It Is known else where except In North Sweden, where there Is another hill of Iron ore, which the miners are beginning to tear down to feed the smelters that have just been built around It. The Durango hill Is simply a tremen dous lump of Iron ore about a lulls In length, nearly 12,000 feet wide and rising above the rock-strewn plain ii round It from 400 to 050 feet. When Humboldt visited Mexico In .1003 he did not see the hill, but sam ples of the iron mass were shown to 1 1 i til. and from them be deducted the erroneous conclusion that the plcrea (nine from n colossal aerolite, the larg est on record. Urologists wiv that some time or oth er a big opening whs made In the earth's crust, nml thut this enormous iiimmh of ore wns thrust up through the rift nml piled high above the surround ing plain. That Is to sny, tho Iron hill Is one of the dikes thst sre supposed to be the result of earthquake action. Cracks or fissures hare opened from (he surface deep Into the earth, and through these fissures molten matter has been forced to the outer air, where it has been hardened Info rock. So the Durango hill whs formed by the same process that made tho Pali sades along the Hudson. The ore Is ner wall a foot from the outer wall and this space tilled In hard with saw dust, straw, leaves or any similar Ina terial. Then pnek on the bottom of the floor a foot of straw or hay or sawdust and on this lay t tie rakes of Ice, filling In between them cracked Ice, and. If the weather Is freezing, pouring water over each layer as lt Is tilled In. Di vide off a portion of the apace for a cold storage room, as shown lu the lower part of the Illustration and one has a place where fruit, milk and but ter may be kept In good condition dur ing the warmest days of summer. Try an Ice house, even though It be but a small one, and you wlll be sur prised to see how little It will cost and how useful lt Is. Advantages of Farm Life. It Is the farmers' boys who are most likely to succeed, whether In business or In professional life. Spending most of their time under the open sky. breathing fresh air, and eating simple food, they are more likely to have vig orous health and strong constitutions than are their city-cousins. Brought Into constant contact with nature, they absorb a great deal of useful knowl edge, and acquire habits of observa tion. Then, too, the regular farm work, the "chores" and numberless oth er little things keep tbem well occupied soino years, If ho devotes a part of his land to raising the products which hematite and one of the richest Iron he needs for his family, and raises .ores In the world. The best ores In Kngland contain fi7 per rent Iron, -r-nk Superior ores contain from 61) to 115 per corn, well cultivated and carefully cared for, on the rest of It. It must not be forgotten that the , rent Iron and the Durango hill Is from present low price of corn Is duo to two,ll to 07 per cent pure Iron, more than years of very extraordinary yields, and three-fifths of this mass, which Is eal though this year's crop Is moderate, dilated to weigh over t)00,0X),000 tons, by comparison with those years, tho 'being Iron . of the best steel-making surplus In the country, added to what was produced this year, makes the sup ply In the country about as large as ijunllty. This Is the only psrt of the inasa that appears above the surface. No and enable them to feel that they are Into the court yard at Rosemont, to be earning their way, thus giving to them informed that. If he had come to break- a sense of independence and rumval It was ever known to be, and the cost one knows bow deep It may jienetrste of production of the corn which most j Into the earth. New York Sun. farmers have on hand at the present' .. .... i . , . TITO Permanently urea. lo nuor Berviwaneal time, must be figured on the basis of i ,rt,r nr.Lr'.uM.fir . xiine-a ureal n are lurge yields, so that, even at present . '"'"'"T "V."'1 fl" .r f ' ii1 "I'.'J!." ''ST" , , ....... I h. 11. Kline, 1.UI..W.' Anb Hi., rhtlaualubla, i'a, low prices, the great bulk of the eorn In the country represents a good deal; fast, his meal must be a solitary one. (To be continued.) With a wicked glance in her eyes, he was dead. Sylphide could afford now Sylphide turned upon Couramont. to wish him no evil, since his baleful "It is Diana, my maid," she said; shadow bad not crossed her sun-lit path, "she will secure my release!" Of course an explanation of her in- "Bah!" growled the rascal, "tell her sensible condition when found In her to go away; I'm not half through talk- chamber at Rosemont on that fatal night tng to you. Do as I bid you; it is worth WM Inevitable; she owed It to her hus- our while!" band, and she gave It him according as Taking a step toward that thin parti- he thought be.'t. 'tion that ceparated her from deliverance, "Vou see, I scarcely know how It was," -'Sylphide raising her voice, said: "he murmured as she lay In his arms "I do not need you, Diana. Continue "Pn ner recovery, to consciousness, "but with the packing." Then, with the dar- when I entered my own room for the Inst Ing gleam again shining In her eyes, she time and glanced about me upon the fa- suiiDleinented. "and if in half sn hour I miliar objects, it seemed as if father . am not down stairs, ask Mr. Courtlandt "ame bark to me from the grave, bis face to come up for me!" wan and pallid, his two eyes burning like "Fool!" sneered Ouramoiit: "welL a coal "f fire. I was terrified, and, fall woman always will have the lust word. ' Pn my knees, I besought him to ao I suppose I ought not to blame you me in what I had offended him, but for what you can't help. All is, we shall he only snook his Head and slowly van have to talk fast, ss I see no occasion to Ished; and then I shrieked and fell faint soil my hands with this fellow's blood, 'ng." So, by packing up, you intend to leave Lucian Courtlandt smiled a trifle un- ltosemont?" psk'IT a be replied: "I d0," "I don't believe in visions myself; 'Then we will proceed to business your, however, must have been some- and settle everything op before you go what out of the ordinary run of unlaid Sylphide, I want my share of the estate, ghosts. Were yon aware that your airy and I wsnt it now to night!" visitor wore muddy boots and a wet "How dare you?" she demanded, turn- hat?" Ing upon hint, imperiously; "your slisrei "Lnci.in!' What do you mean?" "It is a fact. The print of his hat "Just what I say I want my rhare." h" 'eft n indelible stain upon your "There Is no share for you; I doubt "fa. nnislin drapery of your ti- If my poor father ever thought to leave let table is soiled and torn." you so much ss one cent." With ready tset. Sylphide glanced np, ' "Thst Is quite possible," retorted terror stricken Into her husband's fare. Coursmont with his imperturbable "Then burglsrs must have entered my smile; "the old men never loved me, but room while we were st church !" she he feared me. And I intend that you cried. shall stone for his lack of common sense "!' J00 hsve burglars in this p.irt of and your want of forethought In marry- the country. Sylphide?" asked CourtlanJt ing this Interloper." with sn amused smile. As he spoke he sdvaoced upon her "Well if not actual burglars." was where lie stood In the center of ths the Innocent reply, "thieves st lesst. and chamber, and drew from an Inner oocket plenty of them." a slip of paper. I "Ah! But It strikes me ss a little "I am not attmid eoouirh to auoooaa strange that you did not notice these thst ytu have a sum of money upon you signs of disorder when you entered your ' to-night sufficient to sstisry my demands. I ensmoer. Therefore, this letter, addressed to vour "Now, Lucian, what an Idea!" she ex executor, and staling that In accordsncs claimed; "is it likely that, in the dim ' with an einressed wish of vour father candle light aud considering the excite- thst bis estate be equally divided be- mcnt I wss laboring under, I should be tween us two, bis only heirs, yoa will struck by the sight of a few rain drops aiim " and a smouco or mua 7 now BMurd "Never!" I Why should the damage not hsve been Ha drew bark a step and stared udoo done by one of the dogs? They sre fond ' her so bslefullr tbst she recoiled and of me, snd often come op to my room." canght st a chair for support "Dogs do not climb veranda posts to "Do you refuse to sign this piper?" second story windows, my desrj and yoor be asked, steadily: "be warned In time! doors were locked." I know the secret of roar life, a secret "I locked them!" which csn crush you forever, even Invali date your ruarrtsget" "What do you mesa?" "Sign this piper, or I Inform your Ing a spirit of self-reliance and manli ness. The erformnnce of a deal of drudgery Is an indispensable prepnra Two Famous Negro Women. tlon for all real success In life, what The old head-handkerchief negro Is ever the occupation. A loy who Is the aristocrat of her race. Aunt Dicey I afraid of work or of soiling his hands belongs to this type. She Is a product I need not expect to accomplish much of the eighteenth century, and recently In tho world. Country loys have their celebrated her one hundred and sev- full share of fun. but there are many enth birthday. Aunt Dicey Uvea In a I disagreeable duties on a farm w hich little cabin standlne among pine trees I farmers' Ikvs learn to accept as a on a spur of the ragged mountains of I matter of course. Edward Eggleston Virginia, In slavery days she be- speaking of the value of bis farm longed to a relative of Thomas Jef- training when a boy. once said to me: ferson. I "I learned one thing of great value Aunt Dicey Is a constant smoker, and that was to do disagreeable thing and has been one from her youth up. cheerfully." Joslah Strong. In Success. Her cabin walls are covered with mag- more than what lt has cost the farmer to produce lt For Mttlna; Hens. Mrs. A nm nchi Wilson writes to the Iowa Homestead: "I have been very much annoyed at times with persistent sitting hens. I have tried several meth od a of preventing theui from becoming broody, and have at last bit upon a simple coop about two feet aqunro and two feet high made of lath, and attached to a rope, as shown In the Illustration. Place the ben Inside the coop and let It wing alsuit eighteen Inches from the ground. The excitement of the curl- s chickens which stand around on the outside will quickly dispel the hatching Idea from the most persistent Ittlng hen. Feed and water should be given the same as usual." Motion Overruled. "I say," said the captain of bache lors' hall In the boarding sehoql, "let's be swell and call our dormitory the Latin quarter." I "No! No!" shrieked the rest of the crowd. 1 "Because," ventured one of the pro i testing mob, "all the other fellows wlll I be coming here trying to borrow the i quarter." i And ho It waa thus that the dorinl I tory went nameless. Baltimore Atuer- lean. azlne pictures and acrlptural verses, many of them tacked wrong side up. In the days of her youth she was a I seamstress, and her neat sewing Is the wonder of her many visitors. The flnent needle Is not too much for her them on, after they have become dry. wonderful eyesight without breaking or splitting them. The fame of "Aunt Jinny" has gone The Illustration shows how the trick for beyond the borders of Mississippi. I Is done. A teakettle full of boiling Aunt Jinny enjoys the distinction of water, poured on very gradually while tx-lng the only negro woman depot I the sole Is being sprung. Is all that Is master In the country. Aunt Jinny I necessary In almost every Instance. has lieen a railroad employe for thirty- The stream should be no larger than six years. She belonged before the a lead pencil, and poured on contln- war to some people down In Alalwma, ually. Any one who has never tried and was with them throughout the this method will lie surprised how struggle. She says she warned thero more than once of the approach of the 'enemy." But I found your window open? "Upon hearing my approach, the dog might bavs escaped by thst mtias!" You say the dogs are fond or yoa, sad husband that your mother wss a slsvs." dogs la general are too Intelligent to Like a flash of lurid lightning all thst risk sny such jump as that No, my lovt, bsd been Incomprehensible to bar la her It wss no quadruped tbst entsrad foor father's behavior burnt uooa the onhso- chamber to-night It wss a manl" py girl; his nervousness, bla straage de- He fslt hsr wtlght grow hsavler la sire to marry her to Oscar Ooursmont, 1 ble arms, but she msosgsd te preserve Ms wild etitrtsty for her to believe no I consciousness enougn le rsiieri ..it ....In of har daad mother alL all I "Whit makes yoa think SoT ...... h.rk to har la thst dresdfnl me- "I bavs Instituted a search of the ment with the overwhelming force of s plsee, and bsve made eertala dUoov Hlf-oHna the led. Soles made of poles are almost a thing of the past since the sawed ones have come Into use. There are still some who do not use the sawed soles because of not knowing how to put Apt to Its Charitable. "The Impromptu speaker may be all right In his way," said Deacon Jones, but as for me, give me the minister who writes his sermons every time.' "Why?" asked Deacon Smith. "He la more likely to realize, their length," was the significant reply. As Otbara Aea t'a. You always say the wrong thg at fhe tight time, Henry ,T said Mrs, ack em, is 7, c BEHDIKO TUB SLED BOLE. quickly the sole will bend down Into "Now, I always think twle be- ju place. K. A. Galllber, la Farm and fore I speak." "Ye. my dear," replied the meek and lowly Henry, "but you are one o those rspid Are thinker.' Aa It ftbould lie. Home. The Mllhaaan'e Maady lob. A veteran New York State dairyman who baa been In the business over half a century says that commencing In "I euppose," said the visitor to police 0 " W from, Loi but quarter,, "that every offlcer know. ft10- be a rogue when he see him. "Sure," replied the desk sergeant; "but every officer domn't eele a rogue when he knowa him. always used to do his own milking. His average for many years waa not less thsn twenty cows night and morn Ing. He milked one cow nineteen years and about ten months In the year. In the year 1870 twenty cows gave him 100,000 pounds of milk, which netted blm from the cheese factory $1,000, be- Ample Kicbk. jah I s' too Silas Is mad at the fel It thet sold him the borne. Illram I dunno why be should be. I sides having bis whey to feed to th If yer look at the horse yer won't bogs and calves. 1,1a ma intlaati far aollln' blm I " Winter Frail Tree frail.. The man who originated the motto 1 While the early spring pruning and "Lire and Let Live" didn't take the the summer plm&.tig hack of the email undertaker Into consideration, bat fell shoots covers the msln pruning of the Into bla bands just tbe same. I fruit trees, much good work ma be For enns-ha and ooiria tbare Is no better medicine than 1'lao'a (Jura fur Consump tion. 1'rlee 25 cents. Deserted In Hummer. The villages near the north Italian lakes are In summer Inhabited almost entirely by women, who till the fields, which do not yield mu h. Tbe men go to Switzerland and bring back their nil nus In winter. (iroomlns: la Valuable. The proper and frequent grooming of work horses Is too little done by farm- rs who io not appreciate the Impor tance of the work. It may aptcal to ou when we nssert, without fear of ontradlctlon, that a well-groomed lorse works better and requires less ood than a horse kept In a filthy con lltlon. Proper grooming means proper Irrtilntlon of the blood and opens the pores of the skin. Where circulation ins become Impeded, and the pores of the skin are blocked up with the filth, he animal Is out of sorts and cannot work with normal vigor, nor can It derive the due amount of nutriment from Its food; hence It Is tempted to at more than other horses. Indiscriminate feeding. On some farms all kinds of poultry are fed together, old and young, and geese, ducks, turkeys and chickens. There are always domineering Indl vlduals In all bnrnyards, hence It wlll be an advuntage to separate the older from the younger stink when feeding. The natural consequence of promlscu ous commingling of fowls Is that ths Inrgest and strongest take their choice and leave the refuae to be eaten by ths weaker, whereaa the best should be given to the poorest In order to help them to a condition of thrift and growth. It Is also more economical to make some distinction when feeding, especially when a profit la desired. Relation of "Ige to Ave. There Is no fixed relation lietween size and longevity In breeds of llv stock, though It Is a well established fact that generally, small or medium sized animals live longer than very small ones. Also breeds that have a marked tendency to take on fat are shorter lived than the leaner breeds, These fscta are recognized by live stock Insurance companies, for they refuse to Insure the heavy and fat producing breeds to as great age a othera. , Kreod Hena. If broody hena are properly treated nine out of tea will begin to lay a gal within two weeks after Mug removed from the best But If they are half drowned, starved a week, or bruised and abused. It Is more than likely they wlll get even with I heir owners by de clining to lay a single egg until they have fully recovered from their Ill treatment and acquired their custom ary tranquillity. Practical Application, lis sought s job In s restsursnt. When in financial straits; For he'd been told that everything Comes to the man who walls. Mothers will flnl Mre. Slnilna'l SontMna i-Trsp mi ibjm rwmeur 10 naa Hir ueir cnuarea ma leemiua Mason. Valuable Life-Having Hervlce. So effective Is tbe llfesnvlng ser vice of the United States that from disasters to 2 HI documented vessels on the coast during the yesr, having 8,802 persons on board, only twenty Uvea were lost, and of the IU.Oiio.ouO worth of property put In Jeopardy, but little more tban f 1,000,000 was lost Perrin's Pile Specific The INTERNAL REMEDY No C.e EiiaU It Will Not Car MEET ALL NEEDS Ktperlsnre hoe eslaMUIied It ss Sfxit. Hold by ell dealers. Von aow-they arow. I04 Heed Annual postpaid free losll au- lillc.au la. D. M. FERRY k. CO. DBTROIT, MIOH. VS Waterproof 'ffBYjl l4l OILE.D SflnfiAYl 'fcflWN CLOTHING 'Wxl HU mens vert mmmtM fWJ A- I Jrm m, m law. U I A. fjJXKJ I9m fctluMSjl . hBSaa 1(WT bsA I fL aA-VT Gfc H4 I ! ssui u tut uiii. est Umtk Syrup. 1 miU,rL U in lime. siti hp (tmatftata ' sV