Cleveland County Leader. (Lexington, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 26, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 29, 1895 Page: 4 of 4
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Teaa* Justice—You admit ynu stole
the pijj out of the pen'.'
Colored Prisoner—Yns, 1 admits I
stole de pig-, but 1 wnz hungry, 1111' I
didn't have liuflBu' tor eat
••Pork readier," said the judge, with
tears in his eyes, as lie ehalked him
down for two years. — Tammany
Times.
Tobacco Stinking Hreath.
Not pleasant to always carry around, but
II don't compare with the nerve dr«tn>ying
power that tobacco keeps at work night and
!lnv to in a u e you weak and impotent. Dull
eyi-s j, -> of intercut in sweet word* nd
lioks tell the story, brace up-quit. No-
To-bac Is a sure, quick cure. Guaranteed
by DrugKists evcrvwhere. Hook entitled,
"Don't Tobacco Spit or tsmoko Your Lite
Way" tree Ad. Sterling Remedy Co.,
Sew York City or Chicago. ^
A Letter to IIIn Mot liar.
A gentleman in New York was clean-
ing out his desk the other day and tear-
ing up his old letters, when the pack
man, a son of Erin, who was lu the
oftlce, spoke up:
"Sure, sir, an' yo might glmma ont
of them letters."
"What do you want It for?"
"! promised to write a letter to my
old mtther In Cork, but as I hasn't
learned to wrlto yet I can Jess send her
one of them letters you hain't got no
use for. Hit will make her proud, hit
will."
The gentleman gave the affectionate
eon a patent medicine anti-fat circular,
which was duly posted.—Ex.
Your
Health Depends
Upon pur®, rich, healthy blood. There-
fore, see that your blood is made pure by
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
The* only true blood purifier promi-
nently in the public eye today.
Hood's Pills Ky*8£ KritTSi
Blood poison
A SPECIALTY'S?.
tlnry lll.OOD I'OISON permanently
•u red In 16 to 36 days. You can be treated at
home Ttr•«me pru e un.ler harne suaran-
tjr. Ifyou prefer to come here wowlllcon*
tract to p:iy railroad fnieand hotel blllii,and
•ocharge, if we full t'> cure. If you have taken iner-
r, iodide potash, and still have achea and
• M iK-niia Vat rhea In mouth, Sore Throat,
r Colored Spot*. t'leer* on
The Gunmaker of llion.
JEFFERSON M. CLOUQH RE-
FUSES A TEMPTINQ OFFER
FROM THE CHINESE
GOVERNMENT.
(From the Springfield, Mas*., Union.)
There Isn't a gun manufacturer in the
United States, who does not know Jef-
ferson M. dough. He nas been Intimate-
ly associated all his life with the de-
velopment of the Remington and
Winchester rifles. For years he was su-
perlntendent of the E. Remington &
Hons" great factory at Illon, N. Y.
After leaving there he refused a tempt-
ing offer of the Chinese government to
go to China to superintend their gov-
ernment factories, Mid accepted in-
stead the superlntendency of the Win-
chester Anns Co., at New Haven, at a
salary of $7,500 a year.
it was after this Ion* term «f Ultlte
labor as a business man that he found
himself Incapacitated for further service
by the embargo which rheumatism had
laid upon him and resigned his position
more than two yenrs ago, and returned
to Relchertown, Mass., where he now
lives nnd owns the Phelps farm.
Relng a man of means he did not
spare the cost and was treated by lead-
ing physicians and by baths of cele-
brated springs without receiving any
benellt worth notice. During the sum-
mer of 1893 and the winter of 18114 Mr.
Clough was confined to his house In
Helchertown, being unable to rise from
his bed without assistance, and suffer-
ing continually with acute pains and
with no taste or desire for food, nor was
he able to obtain sufficient sleep.
Karly In the year 1894 Mr. Clougb
heard of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for
Pale People. He began taking these
pUla about the first of March, 1H94, and
continued to do so until the first part of
September following. The fits! effect
noticed was a better appetite and he
began to note more ability to help him-
self off the bed and to be better gen-
erally. Last August (1894) he was able
to go alone to his summer residence and
farm of 163 acres on Grenadl r Island,
among the Thousand Islands, In the
River St. Lawrence, where from the
highest land of his farm he commands a
view for thirteen miles down the river,
and sixty of the Thousand islands can
be seen.
Instead of being confined to his bed
Mr. Clougb Is now and has been for
some time able to be about the farm to
direct the men employed there and be is
thankful for what Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills have done for him.
These pills are manufactured by the
Dr. Williams' Medicine company, Sche-
nectady, N. Y., and are sold only In
boxes bearing the firm's trade mark and
wrapper, at 60 cents a box or six boxes
for $2 60 and are never soli In bulk.
They may be had of all druggists or
direct by mall from Dr. Williams' Medl*
cine company.
f'iuipicH, C'opp
any part of th* '
out. It la th
e gnaritntce
JEALOUSY IS A DISEASE.
Ci IMeil<tli
(1 <-li.illei<L
. Wenohcttthon
'H ti-
Id fc
hrtinlwnys
incut phyiil-
kill of the
0,000 capital behind
tlonal jnmrautv. Absolut e proof* went aenlod on
application. Addr.-« COOK RKNIIUY CO.,
807 Jkla#onic Temple, ClllCAUO, ILL.
Cut out and ncnd thin advertlaament.
ir ASK YOUR DRUUUIST FOR *
★ The BEST ★
INVALIDS
* JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. *
| KIDNEY DISEASES, 1
Diabetes, I {rights disease, —2
5^ Painful, suppressed or copious
urinations, pains in the back ^2
or loins and all the various
symptoms of these complaints ^3
P radically cured with Collins ZZ2
Ague Cure. We have thou- ^
sands of testimonials of cases
cured.
g-*- If All druggists sell It.
Rev. John lieid, Jr., < I
Great Falls, Moot, reeon
mended h'ly's ( ream Ilalm I
km ftMtmptarfl ' ••• KmhSH
eOitemcnt, "It it a / titIce
cure for catarrh if u* d as I
directed."^ hf h'ratu t< II", f
/We, Piutor ('rntral Pre*.
Church, Helsiut, Montana.
CATARRH
ILV'S CREAM BALM op -im and <l<-an os (h«
Nil-.il I'!.-, Alla>• l ..ill i
the 8otm, prwtcit«tha Membrane from foWs Ite.
•torwuh# Brute* vf tsai.! and Smell. The ltalm it
qojckly abturbvd aud gives relief at once.
particle i« apiih«'d Into ear It nostril an.I Is agree.
ELT BR0THEBS, 60 Warren St ., New York.
&4M BAt#
Metal
Wheel
fop your
Wagons
rWiTuT"
Empire nr«
A French rtiyalrlnii Ascribes an Under-
fed Ilraln as Its Cause.
If we are to believe the recent asser-
tion of Dr. Maurice de Floury, a French
phyrflean of some experience. Jealousy Is
a disease, dependent upon physical con-
ditions, and amenable to physical meth-
ods of treatment. Dr. de Fleury as-
sures us that the Jeulous man has al-
ways a brain that Is Insufficiently nour-
ished—he Is In the early stages of that
common form of Insanity In which a
man Is subject to the hallucination of
being followed by enemies; he is mor-
bidly suspicious to the last degree. lis
may be suffering from Incipient brain
disease, but very likely ttls malady is
the result of temporary conditions; he
Is overtired, he has been weakened by
long Illness, or he has been on an ex-
hausting spree. The peculiar weakness
that the grip leaves behind Is responsi-
ble for morj Jealousy, so says the
French authority, than any amount of
really Justifiable suspicion. Can Jeal-
ousy be cured? Certainly It can; that
Is, It may be treated with the same
chances of success as any other ail-
ment. And ther > Is the Justification for
Insisting on the physical character of
Jealousy. It wIT be hard for most peo-
ple to accept what Dr. de Fleury says.
He points out that defective brain nour-
ishment can be met by stimulants and
nutritives. Take a man who is unrea-
sonably Jealous and Irritable early In
the morning and give him a good
breakfast or a cup of coffee, and ten to
one he will sit down and talk the mat-
ter over sensibly with you. According
to Dr. de Fleury, all Jealous persons
have sensible Intervals, the malady be-
ing In some degree a periodic one, Just
like chills and fever. In short, Dr. de
Fleury's treatment Includes everything
that can be done to Rive strength and
confidence to the Jealous wretch, to
spire him with a sense of his own pow-
er—to make u man of him. Exactly
how and by what drugs this is to be
done the French authority does not ex-
pressly say. I3ut there Is where the In-
genuity of the versatile and Inventive
patent medicine man will comc In. We
are on the high road to the abolition of
disease. May it not be possible that a
branch of the snme road leads to the
abolition also of disagreeable and an-
noying state of mind? Cheer up, y«
despondent, ye men with blues and
dumps, ye wrathful, ye sad. ye Jealous!
Science will compress tablets for yui^
all nicely put up in a bottlel
I'm All Unstrung.
Is tbo remark of many a nervous individual lis
or she will soon cease to talk that way aftor bo
gmniug and persisting in a coarse of Hostetter'l
Stomach llitters. Nothing liko it to re no*
Strength and appotito and good digestion. II
checks the inroads of malaria.
it. constipa
jody.
It i
dyspe
DROPSY
i, ... . JRKATKII I'itBK,
d wl,h Vegetable Hemedle*
days n\least two thirds
ti r® r
It you urdur
"Is this drinking water?" asked s
stranger in Kentucky. "No, 'ndeed,
sah," replied the colored man who wai
standing- by the spring. "Dat's jes,
washin' watah. Dah ain' no aech t'ug
as ur.uUi n' watali."—^Washington star.
ik *|. • Cold <iulcke>
rvlUble Try It.
* Suicides in 1'aris average 11 a day m
December and irt u dav in .Htly.
Gladys—Since you diacharged your
dining room girl, how do you and your
jrounf sister get on with the work?
Constance Oh. nicely; iho sett the
table and I set the clock —Trnth.
"Kanson's Magic Com Balve."
PA&KER8
HAIR BAL8AM
c"r,r..v xX?.uLhKlrft! *
ft--.Vn.lC7-at hnrttUtt""
Due de Morny, the first amate
8 K COBl'RN, Mgr. Clarle ^
"I tind Hall's Catarrh Cure a ralus
Druggists aell it, 75c.
SW;
VIRGINIA W.JOHNSON
f^^SoPYRIGHT 1892 BY RAN^D-MCNA1-1-Y fe CO.
.
IN66RK TIONAL PRE6S AKS'N,
W. jx, Jr
CBAPTKR VIII.—(Continued.)
M1 have polketl and jigged in my
time," quoth the Ancient Mariner,
briskly rubbing his hands together
at tiie reminiscence. "I recall
plainly the time when I was stationed
off Barcelona on board the Centaur,
with your father Admiral Jack, and we
all went to a carnival ball." Here he
glanced in the direction of a certain
pair of little feet, encased in black
satin slippers, as if directing the at-
tention of the younger man to the
delicate proportions of ankle and
arched instep.
A rustling movement of dresses be-
came audible beyond the miniature
forest of plants.
"Who is this girl?" questioned a
Toice.
"She is a bold creature, certainly,"
added a second speaker.
"Lieut. Curzon founi her somewhere
about the l'ort, I fancy, for the part of
the Phoenician," explained the silvery
tones of Diana, lowered to a discreet
murmur. "She is not at all the type.
My laundress is much nearer the Ori-
ental or African original. We had so
little time to look about for a really
good one."
"Oh!"
"llow very odd!"
"I am surprised at Mrs. Griffith, \
confess."
"One should draw tho line some-
where in these places," supplemented
Diana, smoothly. "Yes, I have been
waltzing with the Grand Duke. lie
dances very nicely."
Did Dolores hear this conversation
which was so audible to her compan-
ions? Did the Swallow Waltz still
pulse through her whole being, ex-
cluding other sound? She took a step
forward, and, at the moment, a bell
tinkled in the adjoining street. She
dropped on her knees and bowed her
head.
The sound of tho bell marked the
passage of the Host through the town,
carried by a parish priest to tho dy-
ing.
The group of ladies on the other side
of the screen of palms miirht have
found the movement highly theatrical.
Capt Fillineham exchanged a glance
with Lieut Curzon.
"Yes, poor girl!" murmured the
Ancient Mariner. "The women are
sure to be against her. She is far too
pretty!"
The note of the bell died away in
the distance
The weathei had changed. The
night was dark. Storms seemed to
brood over the wild and boisterous sea,
invited the Scotch lady, who belonged
to the Plymouth brethren, and was re-
puted to invariably carry tiny, pink
booklets, printed in several languages,
in her bag, to take tea with her on
board her yacht the following after-
noon. Mrs. Fillingham, as a zealous
member of the Primrose league, and
much addicted to the wearing of Prim-
rose league aprons on occasion, ate
ices with a stubborn radical The
colonel's lady snubbed the major's
wife, and it is to be feared that the
latter retaliated by putting the cap-
tain's meek, little bride in her place.
Everywhere the social phases were
discernible of Charles Kingsley's tropi-
cal forest, in the climbing of parasi-
tical plants disposed to displace a
neighbor by a pushing aggressiveness,
and with much external affability of
manner.
Nor was a sprinkling of Americans
lacking, the western millionaire en
route around the world, accompanied
by a bevy of brisk young sons and
daughters, the slender lady from
New Kngland in search of health, or
the vulgar matron of doubtful ante-
cedents, and much display of
glittering wealth, who avoided her
own people uneasily, while intent on
picking up a husband for her buxom
offspring among the ranks of the
British oflicers present
Mrs. Griffith, the suave hostess, in-
tuitively perceiving the requirements
of each guest, may have been a tritle
puzzled when the New Kngland lady
of Puritan pedigree gave it to be dis-
tinctly understood that she did not
know the parvenue matron. The
hostess was disposed to ascribe len-
iently any gaucherie on the part of
the latter to a transatlantic origin,
ameliorated by a profound respect for
English habits and customs.
A little flutter of curiosity pervaded
these groups when Dolores was led
forth by Gen. Griffith. Why had the
guest of the evening chosen a quad-
rille to dance with so young and agile
a partner? The reason was obvious,
the grand duke wished to talk with
the girl who had personated the Phue-
niciau in the tableaux, and the quad-
rille afforded him all the advantages
of a tete-a-tete. He was a young man
like another, and he amused himself
us best he could. Did he not, quiet
and simple in manner, view
humanity from a terrible height
of royal superiority, which dwarfed
all to a level of complete equality?
Gentle reader, did you ever happen
to pause in a Jardin d'Acclimatation to
note the familiar yet miraculous sight
of a mother duck seated comfortably
on the ground, preening her feathers,
and her ducklings, balls of yellow
down scarcely emerged from the shell
quitting her side nimbly to hop on
the copinr of an adjacent basin, and
launch forth , with a sudden pop, on
the water, paddling boldly and grace-
fully in their native clement? The
further shore gained, the tiny atoms
emerge on terra-Hrma with a bright
glance at the human intruder, as who
should say, "You could not do as
much."
Dolores remembered the downy
duckling. (Juiced by the music, the
movement of others, the hand of her
Let
the wind moaned titfully through the
trees, lightning quivered and Hashed, sl"=. «'cnt through her first
now on the hori/.on, an it forming a 'luadrille without awkward self-con-
part of Etna's bursting flame, and sciousness, and w
again defining somber masses of cloud "hti; perceptible .
overhead. j
Dolores rose to her feet Gen. Grif-
fith, guided by the ubiquitous Capt
Blake, sought the girl to present to
her partner for the quadrille.
"I am ready," said Dolores, quickly.
"That charming child makes me feel
young again," said Capt Fillingham
to Arthur Curzon. "What an ankle— '
eh? A man might be pardoned for
committing some follies on her ac-
count"
lie chuckled silently at some amus
ing recollection, until a purple glow
overspread his face and neck.
"When 1 was second lieutenant ou-
at Buenos Ayres 1 fell in love with a
pretty Spanish girl, and persuaded hei
to run away with me," he continued
after a pause. "We eloped to u conn
try house in the interior, as a tlrst step
toward matrimony, but another fel-
low was after her. The irate parents
ami injured suitor followed closely on
our heels, and we were brought back
by the ear. Small blame to my beauty
for preferring a fresh, young English-
man to a mud-colored native."
"Then you lost her?" said Lieut
Curzon, interested in spite of himself,
while his gaze followed Dolores.
"It seems she was an heiress. 1 did
not know it Not that 1 cared a straw.
The lover challenged me, and I pinked
him with a rusty horse pistol just be-
fore we set sail for Demerara."
"My cousin is beckoning to me,"
said the lieutenant, crossing the ball-
room.
"Like his father, Admiral .lack,"
mused the Ancient Mariner. "Ho will
run the gantlet of the women's
tongues by dancing with that foreign
girl all the evening, if only to defy
them, and in the fear that she might
have overheard their spiteful com-
ments and backbiting. '1 hey will bo
tableaux, and are ready to go.
me mind the carriage for you."
The old man glanced with his habit-
ual abstractioon around him, and a
cynical smile hovered about his with-
ered lips
"The fool and his money are soon
parted," he muttered to himself.
Lieut Curzon, with a slightly defi-
ant expression, took Dolores on his
arm tc make her adieux to tho hos-
tess. He could have wished the girl
had not been quite so timid and hum-
ble in bearing.
"What did the prince say to you
when he broke your fan?" he ques-
tioned, abruptly, as he led her away.
"Ho wished to know where I lived."
"And you told him about the old
Watch Tower?" imperiously.
The dimp.ed chin of Dolores ac-
quired a saucy curve.
"No, I onl,y laughed,"
Then the darkness of the stormy
night swallowed up this Cinderella of
the ball.
* i *
COOK BOOK FREE.
Every housekeeper wants to know the best
things to eat, and how to prepare them.
"The Royal Baker and Pastry Cook."
Contains One thousand useful recipes for
every kind of cooking. Edited by Prof.
| Rudmani, New-York Cooking School.
Free by mail. Address (writing plainly),
mentioning this paper,
\ ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO.
106 Wall Street, N. Y.
fur
of COt
Tin
them can hold a candU
for beauty, unfortunat
we can only be young <
Here Mrs. Fillinghan
totli
j Spaniard
l lcbs me!
hiu
Slu
stled up to
> a girlish
of sUv-blu
r pho-
have
toile
Maltese lace, ami
play of white t
mltted by a very
you overheated,
ith the lack of ser-
in the Spaniard or
the Italian. Had the grand duke re-
quired her to tread the stately
measure of solemn saraband, punc-
tilious minuet or coranto with him,
inseparably associated with the
powdered wigs, diamond - shoe
buckles and silver hilted
swords of the French court,
Dolores would have bent and swayed
to the same bewitching spell of the
pastime, novel and delightful in her
experience. No doubt her partner
was a very great gentleman, and he
was kind to notice her. Were not all
tho men present great gentlemen to
her, beings of another world?
The grand duke talked with anima-
mation during the changing figures,
and Dolores listened dreamily, her
rich color glowing, and a dewy light
awakening in the depths of her eyes.
A slight accident marred the dance
The prince caught the silver cord of
her card, threw the *fau attached to
the tloor, and stepped upon it He
gathered up the broken sticks with
apologies, and gave them to one of
his attendant gentlemen. Then he
stooped over Dolores, with some ex-
pression of regret presumably, but she
smiled and shook her head.
Among the idle, curious, and deeply
interested spectators of this scene
none followed the movements of the
couple with the keen anxiety and un-
willing fascination of Arthur Curzon.
Why did the royal visitor wish to
dance with Dolores? Mrs. (iritlith had
summoned her cousin to remind him,
in a reproachful undertone, that he
hail not yet claimed tho hand of Miss
Kthel Bymthe.
lie bowed and led tho young lady to
a place. If tho conversation of the
Prince was vivacious, the specch of
tho neighboring couple was dry and
monosyllabic. A frozen restraint was
established between the partners The
lieutenant lacked the finesse, malice
and self-consciousness of Capt. Hlake
under similar circumstances. His re-
plies to the propitiatory remarks of
Mifcs Sytnthe were brief and ab-
stracted. The heroine of many ball-
rooms did not suffer a frown to furrow
her fair countenance as she drank this
bitter cup of neglect aud humiliation.
•The
draught on this te
( apt Hlake, \>
ing to the side
d of
itli ei
«.f rx
my waltzes," said
npresaement, dart-
PATENTS,TRADE MARKS
UtirprUiHi H«is
"Can you tell me," asked the nlca-
looking old lady, Amidst tho bustle of
Washington street, "tho nearest way to
the national bank?" "Whl<h national
bank?" asked the gentleman addressed.
"Is there more than one?" asked the
lady in an astonished tone. "Ix)ts of
them." Thus the gentleman, to which
the lady, before moving away, dazedly
remarked, "Mercy!".-— Jiostoa Traus*
crlpt
••1 do not fe
Si the <1
raiight in the
Hut the gaili
leant," was hla t
esty reju
n n< 1 ri-
no leas a perao
The element*
of this b
al 1 in the old
person, w ho a|
Maltese palace t
>f the Kn
ights Teuiplar
with Florio
comprised the t
isual gu
esU gathered
together on sue
h occati
onh. A hum
shabby coat.
bar of Maitasi
p noble
men, officials
''llow long (
of the govern
mo nt, i
,.nd members
me waiting?'
>f the army
iin.l
navy, formed
of his granddn
the masculine |
portion t
>1 the throng.
Itaux wvir w
The Irish huh
a recc
nt convert to
It is all m
Catholicism, ai
rdeutly
desirous of
Lieut Curzon
ant soldier was foiled by
>n than .lacob Dealtry in
p]H ared in tho colonnade
., Imp m om of th*
Uets of his loose and
et to
eep
inquired, peevishly,
titer. "Will your tab-
finished?"
lit, Mr. Dealtry,"
(Hied to interpose
spreading her propaganda every where, | "1 think we have finished with the
fat
IEUT. CURZON
awoke late on the
morning after the
ball.
He had slept at
the hotel, an^l
must return to
duty on board
v ship in a few
hours. He hummed a strain of the
"Swallow" waltz as he dressed, and
partook of breakfast His spirits were
light, although the weather was
gloomy, heavy rain having fallen from
midnight to dawn. The breakfast dis-
patched, he consulted his watch. He
need not seek the port and the wait-
ing gig for another hour and a half.
Much may be accomplished in one
hour and a half. He smiled with a
sense of boyish exhilaration at the
prospect of a country walk, and rap-
idly made his way through the town.
A yellow placard on a wall made
him pause to read afresh the announce-
ment of the debut of the new singer,
Signorina (liulia Melita, in the "liar-
be r of Seville."
"The very thing!" he exclaimed
aloud.
A few paces further on he met Capt
Hlake, carrying an enormous bouquet
of fresh roses, which he was about to
leave, with his card, at the door of the
young prima donna. j"I am quite gone
ou the little Yankee since the cotillion
of last night," he explained, with a
sentimental expression. "She can hold
her own in international chaff by the
hour, you know."
Lieut Curzon glanced at the shops.
No! lie would not replace the fan
broken by the grand duke in the quad-
rille. A curious and inexplicable phase
of obstinacy withheld him. He bought
a package of sweets instead, and took
the direction of the Watch Tower.
The girl Dolores was tho central ob-
ject of his thoughts, the mental star
whence diverged all rays of trivial
events add evanescent emotions. She
had entered in and taken possession of
his heart and soul. The thraldom was
sweet to him, and he made no effort to
resist the spell, Lovely, radiant, ca-
ressing Dolores! He still felt the
ight pressure of her supple, young
body on his arm as they
circled around the ball-room together
in the mazes of the Swallow waltz,
llis senses were not yet free of the in-
toxication of the previous evening.
For the rest, he was eager to behold
h"r again, to remind her in a thousand
iidirect ways of his own right of pre-
cedence of other men in her esteem,
and yot his mood was tranquil, even
secure.
(to «b contini kd. )
For 1'irlfylng Air.
Another method has been introduced
in some of the English textile mills
for securing uniform moisture of the I
atmosphere. The apparatus consists
of a number of water vessels fed by
pipes from cisterns or other sources,
and furnished with perforated saucer-
shaped covers, rims, or flanges; air
pipes supplied with air under pres-
sure, and terminating in nozzles of
contracted orifices, are fitted above
these vessels, and one or more spray
or water pipes, having similar nozzlec j
to the air pipes, meeting them at the
angle required for spray producing; I
between the spray pipes and vessels
are pulverizing disks adjustable to the
former. Now, the air—fresh, and
boated or cooled to the desired tem-
perature—rushes from the air pipes,
draws the water from tho cisto n
through the spray pipes, and dis-
perses it in tho form of spray, which,
j impinging against the pulverizing
j is thrown off therefrom in a very finely
' divided state, and carried away by
! the air without condensing. The
1 principle aud consequent working of
i this arrangement are therefore ob-
! vious, namely, that by enclosing the
spray-pulverizing apparatus, a consid-
erable auxiliary current of air is in-
j duccd therein, which mingles with
the current produced in the spraying
apparatus, carrying forward a larger
and more widely distributed amount
of water, and, by reducing the size of
the pulverizing disks, the volume of
humidified air is greatly increased.
The introduction of this plan has been
attended with very satisfactory ro-
Milts, it appears, in some of the largest
textile manufactories, and its superior
adaptability to the purpose seems un«
questionable.
PnllttMieiMi of the Knrdfi.
"The unfailing politeness of th«
Swedes is a constant source of wondei
and astonishment to visitors," said
(Serge C. Truman to a St Louis ro por-
ter. "They have a large assortment
of bows and courtesies according to the
age and sex of those who are thus rec-
ognized, but the lifting of tho hat is
so universal that it seems to bo going
all tho time, Kvcn the butcher's boy,
in meeting the baker's assistant, in-
stead of passing him with a careless
"hello," or giving him a friendly
buffet as an American lad mi^ht do,
doffs his hat to him with elaborate
courtesy."
A wife has more occasion to fear a
fashionable club than a high wayman's
j bludgeon.
"What's that?" exclaimed the keep-
er. "Are we out of straight jackets?"
"Yes," replied the attendaut "Well,
put a close-fitting flaainel shirt on the
patient and stand him under the show-
er bath."—Washington Star.
Every mothnr nliould aluays liavnat linn«l
• bottle of Parker's Ginger Tonic, Not hing clie cs
good for pains, wcakueHS, cold* ami Blceplessuu-s.
Higbee—My wife has had consider-
able trouble with her head lately.
What do you think will relieve it?
Doctor—A new hat.—Smith, Gray &
Co.'s Monthly.
r Is the tin
- druggist, li
erfoctly, glvi
rasslng of the liible.
Witnesses in Pennsylvania courts
will not be required hereafter to kiss
the Bible when being sworn. Thi9
change is in the interest of health, to
prevent the dissemination of mlcrobea
•n*1 othv unwholesome things.
Stranger (in Iloston)—Give me some-
whisky.
Waiter—Can't serve any liquors, sir,
except at meals. You'll have to order
something to eat.
Stranger—Um—Bring me a plate of
sugar on lemon and some whisky,
A Mother'* Influence.
The boy's first Idea of a woman is bla
mother, and unless she falls to win hla
love and respect he has a chlvalroua
I devotion to her which will cover hie
whole life. If mothers would give their
j children definite religious lnstructlona
i by word and example and rule them
i wisely, lovingly, methodically and firm-
ly In habits of obedience, self-control
and purity and truth, boys would less
often develop Into uncontrolled, lawless,
unchlvalrous men and selfi3h husband*,
and girls would not grow Into frivolous,
vain, self-asserting, fast women. Homes
would be happier, the world would be
raUed, reformed, ennobled.
The Ladies.
The pleasant effect and perfect safety
with which ladies may use the California
liquid laxative, Syrup of Figs, under all
conditions, makes it their favorite remedy.
To get the true and genuine article, look
for the name of the California Fig Syrup
Co., printed near the bottom of the pack-
age.
"My expenditures never exceed my
receipts," said Hawkins. "Mine do,"
sighed Wilkins. "In fact, 1 am afraid
I shall never have any receipts from
some of my last year's expenditures.—
Harper's Bazar.
Husband—You once told me that you
studied French, Italian and Spanish
while at school. Can you speak any
•of them now?
Cultured Wife—All of them. Why?
Husband—I wish you'd do your talk-
ing in one or the other of them until I
get through with this newspaper.-
Now York Weekly.
I cannot speak too highly of Piso's Cure
for Consumption.—Mrs. Frank MobDS, 215.
W. 22d St., New York, Oct. 2S>, 181)4.
IOTHBRS
I recovering from
the illness at-
tending child-
Wbirth, or who suf-
^gA^ffcr from the ef-
\n fecls°f disorders,
yjy derangements
and displace-
/JKkw ments the wo-
//Vwvfl manly organs,
will finjl relief
permanent cure in Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription. Taken during
pregnancy, the "Prescription"
HAK13S CHILDBIRTH EASY
by preparing the system for parturition,
thus assisting Nature and shortening;
"labor." The painful ordeal of child-
birth is robbed of its terrors, and the
dangers thereof greatly lessened, to both
mother and child. The period of con-
finement is also greatly shortened, the
mother strengthened and built up, and
an abundant secretion of nourishment
for the child promoted.
Father (of large family)—My dear,
isn't it about time you were thinking
of getting married?
Daughter—Land sakes! I haven't
thought of anything else for yeara —
New York Weekly.
HOTEL GEUDA.
GHL'DA SPRINGS. KANSAS.
OPENS JUINE 1,
l'M)EK NEW MANAGEMENT.
A Popular Resort for Health and
Rest.
RATES S5.00 TO S7.00.
WELL MACHINERY
Illustrated catalogue showing WEL]
ATTGXRS. ROCK JpKlf.LS, II YDKAULlG
AND JETTING MACHINERY, et-
«- est Fhmw. Ilaw beoa teetud and
all toarranted.
fiowell & Chase Machinery Co.
1414 \Ve*l I I Lli Strnnt,
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI.
\\. N. U., WIC1
ring Ail vert Isenie
IU<<ULI<HI This Phi
Above
All
Others
There is no soap in the
Id that stands so high
tho opinion of thought
ful women as
iui nwmtu us
cuirette
Soar
wpfihing clothes or doing housework, it can't be
equalled. Try it. Sold everywhere. Made only by
The N. K. Fairbank Company, - St. Louis
f^rrr^rrrnrrrrrn rrrrrrnrrrr^irnr,*, r,,
I Very Latest Styles MayCanton!
"clow la Hem. Alao One 3
CM.
ft I .
ooupo nxr.
eorros |rnt with an order for on« or any or ii* ahtva sj cent patt«rn> fa <^oTTfai
Lock Box 747.
COUPON PATTERN COMPANY,
NI3W YOtlC. w. Y.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Yeargain, G. W. Cleveland County Leader. (Lexington, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 26, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 29, 1895, newspaper, June 29, 1895; Lexington, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc108929/m1/4/?q=%22new-sou%22: accessed July 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.