University of South Carolina Libraries
w- 1 ' F ?? I IN THE RAIN. I In the rain I Perched upon my window-pane Sat a sparrow sle?k and v&in. Wondrous wise, .all sound and sane, Chirping sharp a pert refrain: "Let me in!" "Let me in!" Fast the rain Dashes o'er the window-pane; Why should sparrow not complain, Scarce a foothold to retain? Bolder now hej" shrill refrain: "Let me in!" "Let me in!" How the rain purees 'gainst my window-pan?, I will breast it might and main, Open wide; now, not in vain! Soft the wee thing's glad refrain; "I am in!" "I am in!'* , Fierce the rain Straggling at my window-pane. Hark! mid city's roar and din (Voices of human waifs in sin! _r ?. i. J IVUL OI ine uai'KMiuitr surct auu iaiic, With moans of anguish, cries of pain, Bobbing like the sobbing rain, This, 0 God, the sad refrain: 'Take me in!" "Take me in!" ?Frances Fenton Sanborn, in the Boston Transcript. THE TOBOQQrtN. A Tale of the Italian Fisht ing^Fleet. ^ By BERNARD BARRY. mN the little cottage on the southern elope of Tele* graph Hill, Nita was re jfesn |j=jM peating many Ave Marias eL-Llli before an atrocious lithograph of the Madonna. The fog-horn ^ had been growling all morning, and ber father and her lover were out ? with the fishing fleet. For every Ave ; she offered up for Louis, the lover, she offered two for lier father, the Padrone. Every one connected with the fishing industry in San Francisco knew the Padrone, and bis advice was the law of the fishermen. Even those who had incurred his disfavor at times bore him no ill-will, for the heart of that gentle, gray-haired giant was as soft as his biceps were hard. Nita P loved him as only a petted but unspoiled child could. Even Louis was not half so dear to her as the father? fber method of praying showed that. Just at that time Louis and tb? Padrone were greatly in need of prayer, or perhaps more, material assistance. A tug-boat?certainly steaming much faster than the half speed prescribed by law for vessels in the" fog?had made matchwood out of their k liitle boat Louis and the Padrone plunged almost simultaneously into the M cold water just in time to avoid being jy entangled in the debris. The tug may W or may not have returned to investif gate the damage. At any rate, it did not find Louis or the Padrone, who were left floundering in the sea. "Boots off, Louis," called the Padrone, almost cheerily: "we must swim till we reach the islands, or till the fog lifts." He wanted to keep the younger man from realizing how hopeless was their condition. In a short time they divested themselves of their boots and ^ their outer clothing, for they were both p good swimmers. "This way. The Farallones are this ' 4 way. Follow close, but save your strength/' said the Padrone. He was completely lost, but there were volumes of confidence and hope in his voice. The men struck out. breasting [. the waves with strong, sturdy strokes, k . They swam for several hours, but & the fog did not lift or thin in the least. B ^ Louis began to tire, and the Padrone Piheard him gasping for breath. "CourP ???p hnv fnr Nitfl " ho pried. But -4 Louis's strength was fast giving out. I "Put your hand on my shoulder," r ventured the Padrone; "I can tow yon." "No," panted Louis; "I can not last Save yourself." "It is for Nita. boy. You must be saved," said the Padrone, sharply; "in the name of God, listen!?the breakers! There is land ahead." -The young man struck out desperk ately. and the Padrone, swimming behind. with one powerful arm pushed v him forward, holding him by the hair and the other hand. A heavy roller caught the pair, hurling Louis up on \ an exceedingly 6mall area of sandy | beach. But the Padrone was not so | fortunate. He was dashed against a I high rock on one side of tbe beach. h and though he managed to crawl over ? to Louis, his left knee was painfully ? crippled. They lay breathless on the *2 sand for some time. HH&I A ati -J n n 1lri fgfl ./lypui ru 117 iuv4? %?nc iu a. huk Kg jfully^with walls running porpendicuH larly, and the floor sloping upward at ||| . a sharp angle. 8| "Holy Mary!" whispered the Padgg rone. Out of the mist above came the sharp bark of the seal. Louis S|| was too much exhausted to realize mm what it meant. But the Padrone knew. W The seals would soon become alarmed ^ and come eliding down that narrow elope seeking the water, after their custom when alarmed. Several more commenced to bark. The Padrone looked upward in despair. Several feet above, on one of the walls, a little ledge of rock jutted outward like a ehelf. ' Thank God!" muttered the Padrone: .?i can pave you for Nita. Yes. the old 1 man will save her Louis for his little ' girl." He dragged himself quickly to his I feet, though the sharp pain in his knee . made him wince. The seals were thoroughly aroused by this time. Rapidly gauging the distance with his eye. the Padrone seized the unconscious jroung man in his arms and tossed him softly up on the ledge. The Padrone could hear the sound ?f the seals' flippers as they began their T-T a li 5 o lino rl tn ro. Iucatrm. nr ww?? ?u uio .<vuU iv ?v eeive death, with a prayer on his lips. But in the kaleidoscopic flashes of recollection that come to men at such times, came the momentary remembrance of the days when lie stood shoulder to shoulder with the redshirtcd men in Italy to receive the charges of Pio Nono's troops. He lifted his head with fierce pride and shook his fist defiantly. "Viva Garibaldi!" shouted the Padrone. raising the old battle cry with his last breath. For the seals slid down upon him in a frenzied mass, crushing him to death and rolling his body into the sea. . * $ i Xbe storv of Louie's rescue covered nearly a page of a certain enterprising journal, for he was found and brought back to San Francisco in a specially chartered tug by two of tlieii reporters. After they had photographed and interviewed him to their heart's content, he hurried off to Fisherman's Wharf. "Where is the Padrone?" was the first inquiry hurled at him fiercely. "Dog! Coward! Where is the Padrone?"' And the fishermen gathered about him with their fists. Louis seemed not to see or fear the angry looks. He had been thinking of the ordeal of facing Nita with the news. '"It was at the little cove on Saddle Rock." he replied doggedly. "I was half dead, and he threw me up on the ledge. Then the seals slid down and killed him." "Dog! Beast!" came the angry chorus. "How dare you come back to toll it. l>?atn to tne cowara: ahu several knives were drawn. Manuel, a tall, wiry Italian, who, next to the Padrone, held highest authority over the men, pushed Louis into a shed, where the fish were stored, and blocked the doorway. "Wait!" he cried sharply. "Listen to reason. We will leave the matter to the daughter of the Padrone. If she desires it, we will send him to her. If not?we will punish. Pedro?go and find what she wishes.? A stalwart young Jshermnn quickly started on the errand, and returned with an expression of savage joy in his swarthy face, for he had been an admirer of Nita. "She says that she does not wish to see him again," he panted. A cry of approval rose from the crowd. "jjeatn to xne cowaru: mey insisted. "It is decided, then," said Manuel, calmly. "We will take him back to Saddle Rock, to die a coward's death, where he might have died a man's. We want no cowards in the fishing fleet. Pedro, we will go in your boat." Four fishermen, turned exeeutioneers, glided out through the Golden Gate in Pedro's boat. Louis lay in the bottom bound, sullen and silent with bitter resignation. A fresh northeaster brought them to Saddle Rock just before sunset. "Good." said Manuel, eagerly, "the seals are there. Quick, boys, before they become frightened." The sail cluttered down, and two of the men bent to the oars. Manuel picked up the helpless Louis and hurled him up on the beach with all his strength, then pushed off with his leg. The men backed desperately with the oars, and the little craft drew off. none too soon, for the foremost seal collided forcibly with the bottom of the boat. When the men looked at the little beach again it was deserted. In the little cottage on Telegraph Hill, Nita offered Aves to the Madonna's picture for the repose of her father's soul. No one prayed for the soul of Louis, whose only crime was ill-luck.?San Francisco Argonaut. The Dimensions of a Whale. Captain Davis, one of the most famous of the old-time American whalers, gives these as the dimensions of a right whale yielding 250 barrels of oil: "The blubber of such a whale," he says, "is half a yard thick, and if put together in a strip would be sixty-six reet long ana twenty-seven ieei wiue. The upper jaw would make a room nine feet high and twenty feet long. The lips and throat of the brute, with the supporting jawbones, will weigh as much as twenty-five oxen of 1000 pounds each. The tongue alone will often weigh as much as ten oxen. "The spread of the lips is thirty feet He can take in fifty barrels of water at each mouthful. When feeding a whale as big as that sifts a track of sea a quarter of a mile long and fifteen feet wide in one run. Then he raises his head, forces his mighty tongue into the cavity of his whalebone sieve and drives the water out with immense force. "The tail of a right whale is twentyfive feet broad and six feet deep, and the point of junction with the body is about four feet in diameter. In it lie tendons as big around as a man's leg. "The greatest blood vessels are more than a foot in diameter. The blood that is forced through them by a heart as big as a hogshead runs in torrents ber.ted to 104 degrees. "The respiratory canal is more than a foot in diameter. The rush of air through it is as noisy as the exhaust pipe of a thousand horse power steam engine, and when the fatal wound is given a cataract of clotted blood is spattered over the hunters, so hot and nauseating that the crew of a whaleboat often becomes helplessly siel;."? Washington Star. Why She Cooked It. The happy faced man swung on to a College avenue car. and this was the story he had to tell as an explanation for his good humor: "I have a good joke on my wife. We have a new girl, a German, just over from the fatherland. She is a hard and willing worker, but is greatly in need of judgment and common sense. Yesterday my wife ordered fish and in structed the girl to serve it for dinner As soon as I tasted it I knew thert would be something interesting when my wife discovered it was not as frest as it should be. Her first mouthful caused her to ring for the girl. " 'Mary, is this the fish that came to day?' " 'Yes, ma'am.' " 'Didn't you know it was not gooc when you cooked it?' " *Yes, ma'am.' 44 'Then why did you cook it?' " 'Well, you bought it, and I though you knew it, too.' "?Indianapolis News Tlio Wombat nn<l tlie Anfo. At last an animal has been foun< whose fur is suitable for automobih coats. Bearskin, the fur ot foxes lynxes, minks and other animals bnv< been tried, but they were not durnl>I< when exposed to the pelting of dus and gravel, and they were easily soiIe< 1 rpi,, uy gasoline, grease nuu iam. im wombat is the animal which has eomi to the rescue of auto cranks. It is i member of the marsupial family, an< 1 hails from Australia and New Zealand ' The fur can tie dyed nearly any color but brown has been found to stand th 1 test better than any other shade. Si valuable are the wombat pelts for aut coats that they are not used for an; I other purpose?New York Press. ! IkTta?jpp > New York City.?Shirring of all sorts make a notable feature of the 6eason'p ? 6tyles and are never more effective i f than on the waists designed for young I MISSES BHIK1 WAISI, girls. This exceedingly pretty Mny Manton model is suited to the many soft materials in fashion, but is shown in white mull with bertha and trimmings of lace. It.can be made simpler by the omission of the bertha if a plainer waist is desired. The waist is made over a fitted lining and closed with it at the centre back. Both fronts and back are shirred to yoke depth, then left free to form soft folds between that point and the waist line. The bertha is arranged over the waist on indicted lines, and is finished, at its edges, with narrow bands of the mafferial held by fancy stitches and is further ornamented with small ornaments of crochet. The sleeves are shirred to fit the upper arms snugly and form soft fulness above and the drooping puffs of fashion to the wrists, where they are held by narrow cuffs, but can be made in elbow length if preferred. When a transparent effect 1s sought the lining is cut away beneath the yoke and omitted from the sleeves. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and one half yards twenty-one inches wide, four yards twenty-seven inches wide, two and three-fourth yards thirty-two inches wide, or two yards forty-four inches -wide, with one and one-eighth yards of all-over lace for bertha, collar and cuffs. Woman'* TVniot. Waists made with square yokes are much liked and are peculiarly well adapted to the season's fine and soft materials. The very stylish May Manton model shown in the large drawing includes that feature, and in addition, MUCH LIKED T the epaulettes which give the broad shouldered line now bo much in vogue. As shown it is made of white batiste with trimming of Valenciennes lace and tiny white bands, but it could be reproduced In any of the washable "* ~ 1? fnehlnnnhlo laurics anu jusu m wc simple silks and soft "wools. The waist is made over a fitted foundation and closes with it at the centre back. Both its front and backs are gathered and joined to the yoke, then allowed to fall in soft and becoming folds that are gathered again at the waist line. The epaulettes are arranged over the shoulders and held In place by the bands. The sleeves are i new and graceful. The full portions extend to the elbows, where they arc > gathered into bands to which are ' Joined the drooping pointed frills. If I the transparent effect is desired the I lining beneath the yoke can be cut away and the sleeves made quite un ' lined. The quantity of material required s for the medium size is five and threei fourth yards twenty-one Inches wide, ? five yards twenty-seven inches wide, or I I thrpp vards forty-four inches wide, with one-half yard of tucking for yoke. Rent Lace Mitt*. While silk gloves, with or without I lace insets along the wrists, are to he the thing for general summer wear, the real lace mitt will he the height of chic. These are to he had in various t real laces, Point d'Alenoon being ;i L prime favorite, in black or in cream white, as best suits Ihe dress with which they are to be worn, the mitts j are very attractive. Just how pretty i a lovely arm and hand look clothed in , these affairs, with the lace frills of e the elbow sleeve falling over tlie tops j must be seen to be appreciated. Ilet pofosse lace in cream is used to great ] advantage. "Whether womankind will t have these mitts dyed to match the s lace of her various gowns or not rej mains to be seen. 1 For the Cornage. Among the embellishments of the g corsage are some pretty trifles made of 0 brocaded silk or satin ribbon, trimmed c with lace and daintily perfumed with p grated orris root. The fan-shaped pad Is useful for tilling out a blouse front o on an undeveloped figure. It Is made n of heavy satin ribbon, two inches wide, I J1 made up into ruffles and stitched in J o the shape of a very -wide open fan. h There are four tiers of ruffling on the : 6 ribbon fan. The "hearts" are pretty | p conceits measuring not quite three d inches across. They are flat sachets, * neatly bordered with lace edging. n t< New "Nighty" Sleeve. Tl Quite the most charming excuse for a sleeve is noted on a new French night- P gown. This dainty affair in nainsook, a beautified with real Val. and some of P the most exquisite hand-embroidered sprays, shows sleeves which are noth- t< ing but little round tabs that fall near- d ly, or at least half way, to the elbow, h The trimming is a continuation of that i tl adorning the yoke. Under the arms 1 L there's only an edge of the Val. This ^ is a6 pretty as it is new, and in It the woman with pretty arms will find a wonder of becomingness. g <i?? ~ . s; /2/tnrna Pnr the Street. +, Street gowns for summer wear show i three or four quite diverse styles, all of ' a which are attractive. The positive i tl rule for the everyday skirt is that it d must be short. Not short enough to c show the feet, but to clear the ground, d It must also have a decided flare around the foot and fit neatly over the -n hips. The coat of three-quarter length or short, with a short skirt, is the o favorite style at present d Attractive Sunshades. E Extremely attractive in their simply refined effect are sunshades of black moire, absolutely plain, lined with shirred white Liberty silk. Only a a half-inch edge of the white shows when the parasol Is closed, but when Sl it is open the softness of the white lining formB a very effective frame for ^ the fac-e. The combination of black ^ and white is very pretty. Parasol Colors. 5 Blue and black constitute one of the a newest and most desirable color comt.i xt f nl/lnm A r*1n!n hi no UlIIcl IIUL1S 111 pnidOViUViAJ. 4A J71U1M ww? ^ taffeta sunshade, omameDted with ^ black lace medallions Is one of the a most desirable effects of the season. Clnny Lace Walsti the Voeue. _ White waists of Cluny lace are the v vogue this season, and when made over ^ a separate lining of China silk are dainty alike for evening as well as day wear after noon. P Girl'n l-oat. \< Loose coats that can be slipped on b 8 0 0 s ROMAN'S WAIST. . without difficulty are always In de- I raand by growing girls, wbo seldom * have leisure to give to the tighter sort, and at the present time are in the height of style. The very stylish May Manton model shown is adapted to cloth, to silk, to pongee, to mohair, nnd all the cloaking materials of the season, but, as shown, is of tnn colored cloth with facing of silk and trimming of fancy braid on the fronts that roll back in revers. The coat is made -with loose fronts and hack and is shaped by means of shoulder and under-arm seams. The back is laid in an inverted pleat, that means fulness and grace, and the fronts can be turned back to form the rovers or buttoned over as shown in the small sketch. The sleeves are the new bishop ones finished with roll-over / nfVc. tVinf nt*o c+l+rilinrl with i silk. The neck in the ense of the model is finished with n deep collar that gives a cape effect, hut, If preferred, the coat can be made simpler and the strap collar, shown in the small sketeh, used in its ste.id. The quantity of material required for the medium size (ten years) Is Ave girl's coat. i ( and one-half yards twenty-one Inches j wide, three and five eighth yards forty- < four inches wide, or three and three J eighth yards fifty-two ineher wide. I " f %y-n r-^vv' r . ' < * v A Borrowed Dinner* Away out in the suburbs of Brooklyn n anecdote of a borrowed dinner > gt\ng the rounds. It seems a ceriIn thoughtless husband brought three ien borne to dinner one night without iving due notice to the wife of his osom. Cookie had left the same day. s ill luck would have it, and there ras nothing but cold meat in the ouse. The hostess confided her woes a the handy man who did odd pons round the place. She knew he was a lan of ready resource, ingenious and lever: but when he assured her he rould serve a dinner fit for a king ' she left the coast clear for him to perate in she could hardly believe im. At the proper time, however, oup was brought in by a boy he had ressed into service, and was followed y fish, entrees, joint, and. in fact, verything comprising a perfect diner, the only fault being that the inervale between the courses were ither long. When the well-fed fp eets had dearted, their hostess ran to the kitchen nd asked how the repast had been rocured. "Oh. the cook next door Is engaged ) me." he said, beamingly, "and she'd o anything for me. Her lady was givlg a big dinner party, and quick as ae things came out of the kitchen my .ottie sent some of them here."?New ork Press. Afraid ^he Wanted, to Flirt. It was a hot day, and when the girl ot on the "L" train at South Ferry be was about ready to drop. She *ied to open one window and couldn't, 'hen she tried another and failed gain. There wasn't another person in tie car. She sat down mournfully and ecided to wait for a conductor. Of ourse he was not forthcoming?conuctors never are when they're wanted -so she decided to ask the first man rho came into her car to help. She had not long to wait, for soon a il.. 1?-P lit ui llitJ JUIUO U1 ucauvu cuicivu, "I beg your pardon," said she. "But o you know if this window opens or ot?" He looked at her with the air of one' rho would say: "My goodness! Who ? this young person who dares to so ddress an unprotected man?" "No. I ^n't," answered he, and then ettled './ack in his seat. The girl ushed scarlet, looked, and then, as be humor of it dawned upon her, she egan to laugh.?New York Press. Some Maine Epitaph*. She lived with her husband fifty ears and died in the confident hope of better life. John K. (killed in the battle of Shiloh) pas born in the State of New York, rhere the wicked cease from troubling nd the weary are at rest. Here lies Barnard Lightfoot, who ras accidentally killed in the fortyfth year of his age. The monument fns greeted by his grateful familylew York World. The Wealth of Mexico. Statistics for 1901 snow that Mexico roduced corn worth $104,000,000; cheat, $24,000,000; rice, $2,333,333; eans, $16,000,000; chile, $6,000,000; ugar, $11,000,000; dark sugar, $7,000,00; syrups, $6,000,000; tequila, $4,000,00; pulque, $5,500,000; henequen, $22,00,000; ixtle, $1,000,000; cotton, $6,00,000; cocoa, $1,500,000; coffee, $9,00,000; tobacco. $3,000,000; vanilla, $1,33,333; chicle, $1,000,000, and rubber, 334,000. The Largeit Tree. "What is the largest tree in the world? it Majunga, in Madagascar, there is tree eighteen feet in diameter and ifty-three feet in circumference, and ne of the pods or seeds from it measires eleven inches long and over forty iches in diameter. This tree has enorqous branches as big as an ordinary rep; and from these branches the aissionarios were hnnged some years go.?London Express. Auk Yonr Dealer For Allen's Foot-Eane, . powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, unions, Swollen, 8ore,Hot, Callous, Aching, weatlng Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's oot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. .?t 11 Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Acapt no substitute. 8ample mailed Fbee. ddress, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. It is better to be on the level than to ravel down hill. Weak? \ " I suffered terribly and was ex- I tremely weak for 12 years. The I doctors said my blood was all I turning to water. At last I tried I Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and was soon | feeling all right again." e > ?? - 1 wr T"*.' -1 - U.JI..I. r? I mrs. J. w. rmiu, niuiymt, v>i. | i No matter how long you have been ill, nor how poorly you may be today, Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the best medicine you can take for purifying and enriching the blood. Don't doubt it, put your whole trust in it, throw 8 away everything else. f I 11.00 ? bo(lle. All droniiU. | Aik yonr doctor what he think* of Ayer's I Sarsaparllla. lie knowi nil about this frrand B old family medicine. Follow Ills advice and I we will be satisfied. | I J. C. Atzr Co., Lowell, Mass. K L AlinP all bowel troubles, app< fl 11 P L neM, bad breath, bad bl lill n r stomach, bloated bowels, UUIIL ache, Indigestion. pimple Ing, liver trouble, sanow compiexu When your bow els don't move regulai slek. Constipation kills more peon! diseases together. It is a starter roi stent* and long years of suffering that I'o matter what ails you. start taking lay. for you will never get well and be until you put your bowels right. 1 start with CASCARETS to-di*-, ui guarantee to care or money reluude I A Canadian inventor claims to hav< invented a system of telephoning be tween stations, utilizing the railroat tracks instead of a line of wire for th< transmission of messages. Experi ments have been successful. A self-made man is one who hai taken advantage of self-made opportu nities. N. Y.? 21. FITS permanently cur?d.No fits or nervous cut after flrit day's use of Dr. Kline's Grea NerveRestorer. $2trial bo ttleand treatise f re< Dr. B.H.Klise, Ltd., Ml Arch St., Phila., p? Some men are bo lazy that they even es f>ect some other fellow to push the buttoi or them. '"The Klean.Kool KitohenKind" of stove keep you clean and cool. Economical am always ready. Sold at good stove stores. Some people have more money thai brains and more conceit than either. All creameries use butter color. Wh not do ai> tbey do ? use .Jura Tint Bui ter Color. The manager who is looking tor a clea; play will have to scour the market. Plso's Cur? for Consumption is an infallibli medicine for coughs and colds.?N. W Samuel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17,1900. Some men are such scrappers that the; will pick a quarrel before it is ripe. /? in Just what it v St. Jao is The prompt SORENESS A Price, 21 i - - - Sic^lJ iMERSONS /d~ Aw* WMtlZE# ID CENTS. TZI OHM fjt yjE4DACHES. SOW ft = J^^PNK CANDY CATHARTIU endicitlM, bilious- AllllllkM lood, wind on the I * I B A U fl Ml I fonl mouth, head- If 11II K U IH t s, pains after eat- UUTHIfllll in and dizziness. world. This la absoli ly yon are setting; moniul. We have fa u (hnn *11 nthor niiWed to cure or mo . ?u * ? Kl?e tuem ? fair, 1 r the chronic ail- jf yot art. n0| gatSsfle come afterwards. usedSOc box and the CAMCAJiJETH to- from whoin yon pi.rc ) well all the time our adv SS? Sr.SJJSti a. 488 | Bl'ikKLI^tr iULOX? I -$? A Beautiful Young Society Woman's Letter. TT IJ St. Paul, Minn., ) Iff 521 Wabasha St. J w\ Dr. Hartman, Columbus, 0., jr" | Dear Sir: "I took Peruna last summer when L was all run down, and had a i headache and backache, and no ambition j for anything. I now feel as well as I ever did in all my life, and all thanks is due to your excellent Peruna." ? n n rr 7_. dgss t. xzeacy. ir The symptoms of summer ca- H tarrh are quite unlike in different cases, but the most com- H mon onea are general lassitude, H played-out, tired-out, used-up. | run down feelings, combined D < with more or less heavy, stu- fl pid, listless, mental condition. I .Relish for food and the ability II to digest food seems to be lost. H Skin eruptions, sallow com- H * ' plezion, bihousness, coated H tongue, fitful, irregular sleep, help to complete the picture which is so common at this ' season. Peruna so exactly meets all ' these conditions that the demand is so great for this remedy at this Beason of the year that it is nearly impossible to \i supply it. y\\. If you do not receive prompt mVW and satisfactory results from \?\\v this use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and \\\\ he will be 'pleased to give you III his valuable advice gratis. M Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanita ^^f^Tun$ Columbus, Ohio. jj p ' ==== ^ ' |9 fflBt J^JtwppMansMt noth. ' HI HHhR: lont^old ererrwbcre. iHS ^^3BI 9lU IRffllfl- or t>7 Diall torn cent*. :|Bm B<?h8 I hftillBDlHl CiUUtS I. H1RBS, CO. flWHW ; BEDBUGS. I If you would know the right way to fret rid cf Bed Hugs tend 10 cents for recipe. A C< ire Thli*. You can do a rood business yourself by putting u* n In bottle* and sellincr In your own town. Tfce Hygienic Co., 38 Central St., Boston, flsua. v nDADQY KEWDI?COVB*T:?h? y I quick rallaf and ootm wont cum. Boos of tMtimoBiala aa4 10<a?> traaria?t Free. tn. m. m. 8UU II01I. I? 1, AUutt. a*. nfii cmiun Li'Tsr 5 |3 Bast Couch Syrup. Tastes Good. Use H . fl in time. Sold by drucglsta. Ml y*JI'?.V^iSThompMB'?iE|*>*t? 1,11 1 11 1 " 1 VI I /as 25 years ago, rVh? Oil now. t, sure cure for ND STIFFNESS 5c. and 50c. , ervous | euraltfic auawiiM 5 ICKLY CURED BT VfRYWf/ERE. AfjT SJ33^^WEVER SOLD IN BULK rrrn ^pWfaBKHWS I P* ^ 11 pold. Now it i? over?ii million LLU boxes year, ereater thia I wmwmw0 any similar mcdicine In the ite proof of Meat merit, and our best testl1th and ?eUXA8CARKX8 absolutely rw ney refunded. Go buy to-day, two ftOcboxlonest trial, aa pei simple directions, and d, after uglne one SOc box, return the un? empty box to us by mail, or the dru naAod It, and ctt your money back for Both ice- na matter what afis you-start today. iffiStt 2ai!*M2iSr III' CO., HEW IOSH ?r OIUCAM . :> ' ' 'i iim V"