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THE LEDGER: GAFFNEY, S. C., SEPTEMBER 29, 1898. 3 Notes from Union. fCe r r f.jy o ml an c« of Tt* Union, 8opt. 2l>.—This is a busy seftion in and about Union. Men en gaged in the various eallings of life appear to find their leisure time limi ted. The September term of court was in session last week, with Judge D. A. Townsend on the bench. Several cases were disposed of. If people would spend more of their earnings towards educating their children, th# lawyers fee would be effectively reduced. What think ye. readers? The movement of cotton has fairly begun. Ticking, ginning and selling are being hastened with all activity. The farmer has learned by experi ence, which is the best school of all, just when to sell cotton. There is one more lesson that four centa cot ton and seven cents bacon will teach him then the diploma on farming for profit maybe issued. The average farmer is in better condition than what he realizes. The corn crop is fair, abundance of roughness may be gathered, domestic animals are plen tiful, garden vegetables and potatoes, etc., are above the average, the continued drought last spring cur tailed store accounts and there is only one connecting link required to awaken the tendency to active pros perity, and this is by increasing the acreage for grain this fall and de creasing it for cotton next spring. A motion for volunteers is in order. The most complete ginnery in the county is operated here by the Union Oil Mill Co. Four eighty saw, self- feeding Munger gins with a double box revolving press will turn out a bale of five hundred pounds in about fifteen minutes. This company gin ned eighteen hundred and seventy- lire hales last season, and have al ready turned out one hundred and forty-one this season. The entire plant is under the management of Mr. E. Hancock who is very atten tive to his duties. Union a few months ago could boast of three weekly news-papers. The light of the •‘Palmetto Voice” the negro organ, has been extin guished. Thu Times and the New Era have consolidated under the man agement of Messrs. L. G. Young and W. E. Cook from which we expect one good paper for the town and county. In other capacities Union continues to assume a city appear ance. Respectfully, Ukdiwck Reader. Unclaimed Letters. Lis' of letters remaining in ofiicc- unc illed for to duto : Mrs. Mattie Cham hers. Johnie Coil. Frank Coley. Mrs. Mary Dornkow. (--ley I'VrimfLin. Miss Anfiiu Foster, cure Johnie {i r:i m h.! m. (ivis Gur Ion. Mrs. Annie !fa:n. Mrs. II. ilawKins. Halii It .1 eli’rio'. Mrs. Ella .limesing. ]’. G. McLean. 8. F. LemLey. X. L. Levis. W. 15 Milholen. Jim Jdonogumnia. Mrs. Della Moore. 15. B. Morgan. Mis-s Lania Moulty. W. E. Owens. W. A. Parker. M. J. Ray. John Bchuliehl. Joe Turner. T Wiikss. James Williams. A. L Wood. N. I).—Persons calling for these letters wiil phase say advertised in The Li.nuKR. T. H. Lm'T.K.ioiiN, P. M. Sept. 5>1), IS'JS. Social Gayetfss. To be entertaining when one ought to lx; asleep. Tt> ot sweets/ and salads v/l>en thv Btatjiach crsrCs the sinijdest food or isooe at uli. To len jh when one wints to cry- All this and ouch more society de- KianOocf her followeis. What a strain on tlie rerveo of dedi cate wo- taCU I The dreadful hond.vchefl. The enrshing pains in tlic bacit and loins. The bines. Ail each symptoms in dicate serioos de* vamjetm-nts of the deucste Ruuale or- ganhet. and nmst be overcome at once. Remove the cmw;. Strengthen eahacsted nature. Eradfl^Ts Feirtchj Uegvriator Is the ntandard remedy for the weaknesses and irrcgularitioe peculiar to wonven. Bradfield'n Regulator is not a mysterious tninturu of mythical ori, .n, but a stitnd- eiM remc«ly oompouiidad in accordance wiA scientific principlea from npurovtd vegetable ■HKhflal nnvbuooh, Jlrarliicld’s Regulator hi endorsed hy physicians who have eKutnimvl it, and nar been hi •‘-uc- cessfal uss cm* a quarter of a •entui y. It is sold by druggists at one dollar a bottle. “ Perfect Hearth for VAxnem ” mailed live, upoa application. jkiii iCRAOFlSLD RC<5«L»W 00.. OttMtl, C«. HRS. GRAY’S REV BOARDER. II VM Christmas night. And such a glo#my night ft was! Outside, white flakes of snow were falling swiftly und the wind was raging as thonfh it were dsstvastion itself. The little town of Chancellorsville was ablaze with fire-works the night previous, but now no one thought of a better refuge than his own home- circle where he could be safely sheltered from tHo cold, boisterous wsalher. On the outskirts of this thriving little town, in a quaint old residence lives a Mrs. Gray and her sixteen year aid daughter Fanny. In the spring-time when the flowers were 'oveiiest and the brilliant colors of the season gayu fresh beauty to the old place, it watf a center of attrac tion to every paSscr-by, but now as the snow was fast obscuriag from view much of its former beauty, one would observe at a glanee that the old Gray residenea looked very gloomy, indeed. Mrs. Gruy was a widow and sup ported herself chiefly by taking in boarders. Now all the boarders had gone home to .spend the holidays, wild Mrs. Gray and Fanny were all alone. However, they did not seem very lonely for the cioi'yc on the man tle hud already struck ten and the fire was still burning brightly and cheerily as though it were trying to spite the snow. Mrs. Gray and Fanny were seated near a small ta ble on which was a lamp, and a copy of “Pilgrim’s Progress.” which Fanny had just finished reading. Mrs. Gray had been sewing but she had put that away and had read a chapter in her Bible, as was her usual custom before retiring for the night. So she drew her large, cush ioned rocker nearer the fire and le- marked to Fanny that the time was very near when the morigage on their hom would be fore-closed, leaving them without a home und with no visable means of obtaining one. She feared she could uot pay off tiie mortgage although she econo mized in every conceivable way. She had taken in boarders hoping that in tbat way she might make enough to settle it but her expenses were nearly as much as her income. It seemed that her lot was indeed a hard one, although she always looked on the bright side of every thing and hoped and prayed that their home might he spared to them. Mrs. Gray was beginning to look old. She dul not now look as though Mie was at one time the belle of Ghancellorsville. Her face was wrinkle# and her jetty locks wer# fast giving way to streaks of white. One watild take her to be more than vrty years of age. But how soon ii jes the beauty of youth fade away vih'-ia tn.e heart vodures aftiietioAs .-nil irtaiS! Mr:?. Gray cleanly io- tueinn-irtd her sores; trial oi life. it. brought fresh fatal Gijristm.is f hi* C'hvfiSt uias in • ua-iaories >»f thal aHii-u-wn years ago. Is it any Wonder that they break down ? IkUpb. her Llllt sou, when only Guam, year* of i.ge, was out playing :.t iitJo ,!*».• !. unit tfcC „.i!o being left open, no h/.d gone out i.ilo t he street, H>o ttiUng and innocent to realize any danger. Mrs. Gray was almost wild uitn excitement when she dis covered Ills absence and began an immediate search for him. She brushed a tear idorn her eye tonight us she r*called the tracks of those tittle bare feet which she discovered in the sand as she hastened up iho road to fix;! little Ralph. But alas! als.s!! no little Ralph could be found. .She r.larmed the whole town starching lor him, inserted notices in several papers offering large rewards for his return and continued a diligen; search for years but to ny avail. Shu had not glimpsed him since that fa tal day, the suddetd in her memory. Her grief was indescribable and she f'iWi trever entirely leased to mourn the death of her little loved one. Was it not suiilcient to cause that • | old look on her young face? i Fanny bad never so«» her brother j but she and Mn. Gray, had often : talked of iiim and wondered if he , wo<t- iWi l or living? Mrs. Gray tliought thfcf if she were tvtfn to see ifetlph siui wuhI i reognize him by bid auburn hair and brown eyes, if sMtl uilvo, he had now grown to mnr ‘lood. But she had given up uli hopes of ever seeing him again on this earth. And now to night as she and Fanny sat by the cozy lire Mrs. Gray’s thoughts play truant and often wander back to the uueer and childish sayings of her li;- flWjxk. lAdldMOi years ago. A clatter wf horse’s feet coining down the frozen road caused a suil- den start from Fanny She wont to the window to listen thinking per haps she might have been deceived, but sure enough coming at great speed, was a vehicle drawn by two halves. It was dark, very dark, but by the patter of the house’s feet, and the wheels rolling swiftly over the hard ground she knew that it was some one coming toward the horse. She became very much frightened when she remembered they were all alone, and Mrs. Gray shuddered us sko thought of how many robberies and murders hud been committed recently. But she tried to culm Funny’s fears by telling her that whoever it was, would pass on and not harm them. Vfe lAftf-’t? l-urwct jumped as she heard them stop right at the front ga>e. Rite listened. Yes, she heard the gate open, she was sure, but neetiK* Vminy bm- her mother could speak. Mrs. Gray felt very much ns though she would like to scream, but she knew no one could hear her, save the partta or perpoan eqmiag up the walk. If hat would she do? Ah! the floor bell has rung. Funny begged her mother not to go near the door, but, ring! went the bell again. Mr#, ftraydrew up Iver^tar; shawl more closely and getting a pis tol in one hand, with Fanny clinging to the other, she started to the door. She concenltd bar pistol under htr shawl but she nerved herself »p to ire if anyone dared enter without her permission. Very cautiously she opened the door, not daring to speak, but the silence was already broken by a strong trembling voice, saying: ‘•Madam, I have traveled far to-day JowoIs win be and just arrived in your town. I had4 (Mr. Van Hooso liiMl nearly all of Ms wealth the driver to take me to some nice boarding plate as I detest Hotels. I am very cold, and am about half sick and voul4 be under many ob ligations to you if you’ll consent to nay staying here tonight.” Mrs. Gray hesitated and almost decided to refuse him. but she thought it woald-seeiu cruel to turn oil anyone on such a night as thie. so almost before she was aware of it, she had invited him in and was showing him the room that she wished him to occupy. But after she and Fanny had gone- 1 to their room Mrs. Gray said she felt that something dreadful was going to happen. Perhaps she did an unwise thing after all to let the man come in when she did not even known his name nor frooj whence he came. But ske locked and thumb-bolted nil her doors and barbed all her windows so that she thought it would be im possible for anyone to enter. She had no wtapoh in the house except the pistol-she caaried to the door, but she felt that she would he power less any way if any one tried to harm them. She and Fanny reUred but Mrs. Gray could not sleep for ever so long and when she did finally get to sleep she dreamed hewlble dreams of be ing murdered. However, when she awakened the sun was shining in brightly at her window and all the earth was adorned with snow, which looked very lonely in the sunshine. She awakened Fanny as early as possible atuj they hastily dressed and began preparing breakfast. They nev*r cnee heard a sound from the rr.an tha f came last night and Fanny began wondering if it were not a dream. When they flaished breakfast Mrs. Gray rang the bell us loudly as she could and hardly had it ceased ring ing when the’gentleman appeared. He was very handsome and was ele gantly dressed. He took a se; t- at the table at live place nearest him and Mrs. Gray and Fanny sat on the opposite side. lie began to talk. * telling Mrs. Gray that his name was Van House, and that he had no relatives living that he kne v of. He was in wretched health and his physician had recotn- < mond'ed Chaneellorsville us a health resort. He Uld Mrs. Gray he mould like to board with her while he re- maitml thi-iro and s-he consented. Early t hi/t morning he had neavy brought d he seetneo so pleasant Mrs. Gray did not agreed to keep him. in a few days the lie uown, and at his id as cable began regret having other boarders to return. None of them seemed su:prised to see Mr. Van 1 loose as some one hud probably in- fonrmi them of* “Mrs. Gray's new Boarder. They all seemed to re spect him very hi; hold machinery tematically. Mr. Van I loose had. no occnpalion so he was ralner sooluded from "dovni town gossip,” generally st fy- about over !y and the house- proceeded S v S- ing in Ids suenn, or roving about the i' Irriv urch regu- rm. lie attended cl; often accompanying Fanny, and it was htutou iiiaoug the bould ers that; Mr. Van I loose loved I'.in t>y Gray but Mr. V’an Hoos-- never spoke a word of love to any girl. One r.iglit about, midnight, after Mr. Van Hoose hud been there about awakened a month, Mrs. Gray was by ^ strfmge noise which seemed to come from wis room, quickly as possible to tne mutter. He told her to send for a doctor as quickly :she dressed us set; what was please as she could that he was in a critical condi tion. Mrs Gray awakened the board ers at once and one of them wen; for a physician, liie doctor came in due time and after working with him faithfully for about two hours he pronounced him out of danger, bn# it was many cloys before ho whs about, again. Ho looked very’ pule and thin, and not long afterward lie relapsed. He hovered between life und death for about five weeks amt then death came ms u relief. Just before he died he called in all the boarders and Mrs. Gray and ewpted oul the contents of the box and in the txittom was a letter ad- dr#sied to hersuif. She nervously tore open ihe envelope and in a frenzy of excitement began reading the let- ClIAXCKI.I.OHSVII.J.E. 1)00. 38th, My Pkah Mother:—! only came last night bat for feu r Kometlitn/r may happen 1 will write to you this mornimr. Klrst, let me tell you how delighted I sin to tn> with you. I would like so much to tell you that I am you- son but. if I were to, tills fortune would belong toothers. Mr. Van Hoose was very, very wealthy and havlnirno children of his own be left hi i fortune to bis wife and myself; but mine was on this condition: 1 was to tro by the name of Van House all my life, and was not. under any circumstances to tell you that 1 am your son. Mr. Van Hoose was a v.-ry strange man and without agreeing to this promise. I would now be penniless. These jewels will bo yours when you read this. iVlfl whwh oonifofc'De eaten. T-k# cache#, or monkey nut, is also peculiar and consists of a large, juicy fruit of -ioiT pulp, v, ifh its nut or kernel attuolud to tLe outahle of thv ir-uit at the tint fartimst from tire stalk from which it hangs.—London rifwudard. Fanny and rtMjuested Mrs Gray to I-ale to Jmd and curly to rise pre take possession of his room ' amt , [V ir, ' H :i,im f, ’ r ,,is !u,mt! ,n ,ht * ski ^ its contents just as soon us lie was "‘ ri v i '’ l ’ 0 ' 1 u ’ u ‘ “ Ll,tlt ’ EarI y Kisor - dead, askiog particularly that rlu- search his trnnk immediately after his death. Mrs. Gray consented un.l only a short while after and he was dead. They all were very sadly affected at his death. At his own request be was buried Glen wood cemetery tin* nicest in town. The day after his death,' Mrs. Gray went to fulfill his lust request. Sne went into his room and began to search his trunk. It seemed full of clothes, all of which were of the finest quality of £*m?1s and very tf . Very near ttys bottom of the trunk she discovered a small box and as she lifted it from its resting place she tin-, pill that makes life longer and betti-r and wiser. Cherokee DrugCo., Gaffney. It. 8. Withers it Co., Blacksburg. The poverty of a girl’s father has caused many a man to remain a bache lor. NATURE’* EPITAPH. In .iemils and iirecious stones of all kinds.) Mother. Imre mo buried rijtbt by my father’s.sido and have a handsome inoitu- mant erected over both of us. Tills is all I ask of you. Hut. before closing. I must toll you how I came to be In Mr. Van Hooso's possession. The day 1 went through the jrate out into tlie street Mr. Van Moose found me and took me with him to live. He and his wife have been kind to me and treated mo as their own child. Mr. Van Hoose lias lioen dead over a year ami his wife died only a few days sijfo. I determined to come to I'li.ane ‘Uorsville, thinkimr 1 niijrht find some clue as to the whereabouts of you and my fai her and I Und myself now in the very bouse in which I use to live and while i am *< try to liud my father dead, i am triad that I have found you and Funny. So forgive me for deceivinjf you. Four devoted son, Ralph Gray. Mrs. Gray could hardly contain herself. She culled Fanny, who came in looking frigthened. When shesaw her Mother with tlie box of jewels in her lap and the letter on the floor, she was speechless. •She picked up the letter and redd it. The excitement that followed I shall not attempt to describe. In due time, the mortgage was paid off and many improvement# made on the Gray residence. Funny was sent off to school and Mrs. Grey was no longer dependent on her boarders for a living. Not long after Ralph Gray’s oeath » costly monument was erected in Glenwood cemetery and every one that went there would cast his eyes more times than one to the elegant monument on which was inscribed the names of Ralph Gray und his father. Annie B. Chalk. Th» Troplcnl I)»fiTity «rf I’orto Rico-. Edwin Enjorsou, Jr., contributes an article entitled “Alone In Porto Rico” The Century. Mr. Emerson thus de- ecrilies one of his rides in the intericr of tko island: A cool sea breeze blow from the coast and stirred up the fragrance of the trop ic*! foliage covering the htls on either fjide of the road. Bright humming birds darted about, and from the woods came tbe incessant cooing of ho mountain dove, the palonia, relieved occasionally by tbe song of warbling vireos. My heart sang with them as I rode, and I felt altogether too well to worry about the fate hanging over my friend at Ponce, nor did I bother to think of iny own uncertain destiny. A11 round mu hlrtella burhee were flowering criiifsou. and the stately sabino tree, vrithjits im mense white flowers and silvery leaves, perfumed the wnt air. It seemed to , l had iotind the liveliest spot oil earth. Who knows whwo the Kw.-rcyord Vi Wheru (he foe null tbe cn({lo lief Who has seen the obsequies Of tlto red deer when they iliof Wrth death they s)cnl sway Out of the sliiht of Iho ‘an, Out of tlm of tlio iiviBii; lii"f Pay tlie dubt and are doue. Ko marble marks the i-t:»ca; Tho common forest bi own Covers them over with (Junker grao# Just where they laid them down. But a few years, if yon see In summer a deeper groen Hcro^nd there, it is like to be The spot whore their bones have been. Thvs, not mere, to the poor dead year. 2fo grave nor ghoetly stone, Bdt a. greener Hfs and a wiymer ebeer Be the only sign tis.t he's goue. —Christian Bogtotea Metthed. “No,” fluid iwnator Sorghum, with flBiiphuflta, “looa'i talk for publicatioa today. ” “But, senator, hi all tbe years of oar Roqtaugfausu this fc» tho first time you ever (TOHrod to let mo quote yon. ” “I do!rt want yoa not to qnote ma I want you to aay I decline to be inter viewed. TOm is oeoAdential. I’ve con cluded it’s time for me to act as if I’d got to bo so important tbat I dasn’t talk for fear of giving something big away." —Washington Star. BURNE-JONES. Roaeettl’e Influence In Cimelncc the Artlet to Hyphenate His Knine. It may or may not bo true that it was Rossetti who urged Burne-Jones, when at tbe outset of hia career, to connect with a hyphen “Burue” and “Jones,” says William Sharp in The Atlantia “ ‘Jones’ is nobody,” Rossetti would declare, “only a partide of a vast mul tiple ! But Burne-Jones—that is unmis takable!” It was an amusing trait in Rossetti tbat bo was wont to designate the good work of this or that friend as fhe work of—and be would mention tho most distinctive name or part name of tho person concerned. Thus be would say, “Yes, tbat is Burne-Jones, but this, this hero, you know, is only Jones,” or “That now is the real Holman Hunt, but this hero is oaly Hunt,” or, “You •an hear Tennyson in that, but Alfred wrote the other lin^s. “ I recall two amusing instances whore Burne-Jones more or less unconsciously adopted tho same method. Ho was asked once if be thought William Boll Scott more eminent as a poet or as an artist. “I never thought very highly of Bell,” ho replied. Then, seeing a look of sur prise, added, with a humorous twinkle, “I liked old Bell Soott—old Scotus, as we always calle<!Mjim—immensely, and I think William Bell Scott wrote some very line verse, but I always thought it wan a pity that Bell took to painting I" The other instance occurred when somo one remarked to him that “Par nell was only an agitator.” “Charles Stewart Parnell,” ho replied with em phasis, “was one of tho greatest public men of our day and far and away tho ablest Irish leader.” “But Parnell,“ etc., resumed tlie objector, to bo again corrected by tho other disputant, “Char'os Stewart Parnell,” etc. Painful Operation. “Is that fellow aeally a painless den tist?” “Almost. Tho only pain I suffered was whuu^bo ectratfed his fees.’'—In dianapolis Journal. Gov. MacCorkle’s Endorsement fen. W. A. Kaoeorklr, Ex-Gov. of Wert Ylrptota, aflAt Mi wuno to the lung Hat «# Sirtwien.h—oiited by F?-ru-n»—Ho haorttif i imioQoi wSi Pe-ru-na as a ea- torvti remofly and tonic. Hob. W. A. MAcOomu.E, Et-Gooi of Wtrt Virginia. c*f Antawrojf, W. Va., March 9,1898. Pe-ru-na Siedictn* Co., Columbus, O. G.Ewn.BieHJN—Your Pe-ru-na, as a tonic, is eeekatnYy unexcelled, and in a number of coses that have come under my observation where it lias been used for uatornh. or any disease which has Rs origin in that malady, it has been of grvot benefit. Pe-ru-na has my hearty recommendation, both as a tonic and cnltovrh aemedy. W. A. MacCORKLE Pe-ro-uc is a permanent and .scien tific. cure for catarrh. It it. purely vegetable and works ih harmony with nature. Ail diuggisia sell it. »-ii!$rw 9d IpifS PI felidliy fed!! rablll i i Goosubt-rrios on Trees. Travelers in Burma .see many strange things, and perhaps one of the fitrange.'T is tho way in which somo kinds oi’ fruit grow. For iastanco, gooseberries that at home grow on small bushes in this part ef tho world grow on trees over 25 feet high. Tb?iy a»o not a soft, pulpy fruit, but arc as Lard as marbles. Tho real Berman grapes also grow on high treoa and not on vines. They bang from the branches and trunk ol the tree in clusters on a long stalk and aro covered with a thick outer skin, I havo just received hi rue lot of Guano and Acid Phosphate for ornin. Remember, mv line of Groceries, Drv Goods, etc., is com])!et('. My stui-es ;ii Gallney and the Goforth place are well supplied with all the ncewsshh’s you need and the prices aro just riyhi. Get your baggina; and ties of me a:'.d you will no. be (lisr.ppointcd. | Cjj • JMl • 5ARRATT. A L«olt<al Coaclutiioa. In a *ecer:t Walla Walla divorce suit, in wiikb tlx 1 : defendant failed to ap pear, the refere# made tho following »a-■ port: “The pktiutiff appearing in person and t^’ her attorney, and tbe defendant Dot. app<Hiring and no one appearing for him, ti\ ore fore be did not i^pear. Wa»* Walk Statesman. Guo Mi:iute is nut lung, yet relief is obtained in half that lime by the use of One Minute Cough Cure. It prevents consumption and quickly Cun's colds, croup. branehitLs, pnou- nioira. la grippe and all throat and lunj ’.roubles Cherokee Drug Co., 1 1 * fluey. R. S Withers »vr (jo, Ul.icksnury. L 'gi<- p- >ves ( r disproves all t hings, but I; d•.ie»':i* aeeiiinp!ish any of them. <S> Build in" and Plastering Lime, Coal, Shingles, Laths and Plaster Hair, Dynamite, Blasting Powder, Fuse and Dynamite (hips, call on THE LIMESTONE SPRINGS LIME WORKS, TFolcjCLone f>7. CARROLL & CO., Lessees —— — a- — 1,..- —.f r m 1 The GlIsj City Lurid and Improvement Company Offers f. ■ s:i!i iluil.linL’ I.>t ^ in this (ton ri-hiiiL’ town. GaiVniy City: Also I'arms near i y and ,n reacli <0 , he S hoois of l.iniesloae Sprinirs and of ibis iila.’H’. In inis of from :«i !<> K'l acres i,a ld;eial time ialt s; a.so A^riculturai I.uiiuk to rent for Farm pur poses. For full y.u! ieiilai ; apply to AVOOIK Afjceiit- N. it.—All tressn issinc on lands..f i his company. euUiii^ and removing timber, fishing or liuntiiitr. are ioilddden under p( naliy o' law. - —. rr ^ Money to Loan. The Citizens Building and Loan Association of Gaffney has money on hand to loan and can meet any demand. The rate of interest is <S per cent, per annum. For further information apply to N. H. LITTLEJOHN Secretary and Treasurer. •—wr- —— — ^ •- . ■ i. ?-j “One Minute Cough Cure is the best preparation I have ever sold or used and 1 can’t suy too much in its | praise.”—L. M. Kennon, Merchant, •i.Odell, (ta. (therokee Drug Co.. tiaff- ; ney. R. 8. Withers it Co , Blacks- cwdy. blirj?> A laboring be# produces honey; a „ , — . belaboring is uften productive of u spied bvr otvn^numu on the lid printed blaek eye. Suspended by a 1 to open It. She in pofden faodftrs cord was u key __ __ hastily unlocked it and ‘it proved to be full of tho rarest jewels which were worth a King’s ransom. Hhe Indtk’ckt ion N (lie din ct km cause of rilM<u»<>s tlnil kill tliou.iuiMN of |>i’ri«iii-. iiititiniHy. Stopthe trmitile at tlie mitsiet with a lltilu orlekljr Ash liittcrs: it slrenuihein. the hluuuteh uud fljds dtireiitloii. .Sulil hy t ie m- koe Ui ug Go. With your name attached to ii> and putin this space would be seen and rend by every reader whe reads this ad. We believe it would do you good. Try it and see if it would uot.