The Lexington Leader. (Lexington, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 34, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 21, 1891 Page: 3 of 4
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SHE CRIED. OH. MY!
THE WHITE ELEPHANT
Surprits In
i
1
i
V
...
"(I
111
I
At ti if Harvest of DcntU
Much grata is prematurely reaped Lv tbo
scythe ofdlbeuse thiit tul^lit have ripened to
a goldeu maturity if "lulnur" bodily ir ..hi. *
had beou attended to lu time. Koth .1,' ••
truer than this—bodily ullan-iits not .11 ,•
prow apuce, but l «««*st ono mother. Tims '
biliousness. cunstlpmiou, tiv ^p 1.1 . v
clow onthoheeltfuloiiu auothci. tl> -di 10-
f;o, bor, the oue perpetuating the <<Ui< and
legettluffauumeroua ptoguny « f luicr nil-
monts mora or less severe us their cause is
moro or ie-s dlsrcjrarded nod ue:;leeie«i In-
cipient rheumatism, malaria nnd • light"
Inactivity of the kidneyof wliaW.lrv on-
astcr they are theeausu when 110 or but slight
attention is paid to tin .r onrly wor.dnes.
Check tlie*o •'minor" aliments with H01-
tettei'B Stomach Hit tern and foresialt the
IMionble ronper, wbn exacts t:• f. if .t«ire
pemdtjr for dizroo'ardiui tho
('2111 tied < hi nmrn.
A western newspaper c o«es an nr.
tleio nbout the cnr-M. 11 ■* enorpriaos ol
Yuba City by Buyrg: 'No Chin.-c
are employed, and 14.000 are pui ur
daily."
A Pleating Sense
Of health nnd strength renewed and
of ease and ■ .mfort follows the ui-e
of Syrup of Figs, as it acts in har-
mony with uature to effectually
cleanse the system when costive or i
b'.llou*. For sale in 50c and $1.00 A L1 \ \| I I V 4 ll II A I R
bottles by all leading ilruriirists. il 1 iliulli 1 ill 121.Ill*
Mrs. Malouoy. im inmate of the St
Peter, Minn., hospital, committed auieidi
by setting her cloi iitnir f t lire.
TEACHER.
Prsarhert have preached me sermon^
1 have «l"i t their sermons through}
All my relatives have lectured,
My friends have lectured too.
My foes have given me warnings, J
And I have taken them not;
Friends aud foes and relations
1 have never heeded a jot
Their words woro the c^st?nce of wisdom.
There was nothing they didn't foresee;
And not one atom of all they said
lias ever remaiuod with me.
They were staid and pallid and solemn,
They were gray and wrinkled aud old;
My teaches* has cheeks of roses,
And hair of tho sun's own gold.
Bis words run into each other;
He stammers uud babbles and cries;
He doesn't know he is powerful,
He never dreams he is wise.
But in three short years he has taught me
More than those graybearls staid
Had taught in the seven and thirty
Before hs cpiho to their aid.
—The Independent
tn.rtof hf r n.tnre •' MIBW \ VI) HOUSEHOLD. ! <-'ive "ow °' m"k ""d J"1",'!®''
irited from Sir Main- MAttJl AiiH liuivoij, kjxj , jQ qUanty. which n.cans moro butter
and better calves.
be old cows can
rEEMINQ U« « THE SO* I ^
out ion of the Guaranty
ioj utiou is in progrotji
The untiual
1 icket Br> ie
i;i St Lou a
The Oeit Way •< Succeed
It U) tlrst t.iUo n Hi r :'i ImMiir-
8t JCUI
C. B. Paul, wboleiiaie lumber, Louis
vdle, Ivy., assigned. Liabilities, fJJJ,0J0
r.ssets, (1 )U,«M0.
i ituslness^
AiUiomV; liryaut a College. Buffalo, N. Y.
, BY IIUOK CONWAY.
j CUAPTEK XX (Continued).
j Curtouaiy enough,ornaturallyenough,
Beatrice had uo looker tlie wish to ap-
prise lior lather ol what had happened.
Dimly she began t< soe the meaning ot
j iIih i-iep she bad taken.
It was *ellletl she h<>uld return to Mm
' Erstiuo's and, an a slight uiiaunder-
Hiauduig is not Millirieni to terminate
the rolatlonahlp between a husband anil
wile ol a for in Ik I''staudlBg.it wasalao
arranged that Hervey should lake lodg-
i lugs in .he nelgbb orhooc, to which lodg-
ings hiN wife oouidcoine as a pupil to a
drawlug-innater. The fellow had by
non resumed his mask, and seemed to
lie trying to efface tho recollection of the
^ ill scene.
But the mask had been dropped «
anil Bo*lrice, except in her conduct,
no toot. Hhe went back to her home
a pain iu her heart, an J teeling years
older than when she had tell a fortnight
ego.
1 he girl felt very miserable; a kind
of dread, which *h« vainly tried
to thrust awav, hung over
.She needed sympathy, needed a con-
tidant. Such a secret us hers
too lirnat for one breaet. So abetold her
main Sarah what nad happened The
woman's (dave-like worship au.l dog-like
lideuty nt-ured her mlence.
Mrn. Miller, who, in | iro of her relig-
ious peculiarities kuew the world, ami
knew aiao ibat nuch a marriage a* thin
meant,suppressed the gr.efShe felt. But
to endeavor to ease her mind she made
such inquiries ns ahe could respecting
Mr. Maurice Hervev. She even watob-
^ . o.l him, waited for him, tracked him in
for tlie relief of the otllfcr, they Will his goings out arid c xmngain. She told
stay so. John H. Foster,
Brown Street, Philadelphia, say3. Nhe found Hervey up to the standard ot
" My wife is a little Scotch, wonmn, ! berre(intr«ine.itator Btmtrloe.Hhfl would
tlilrtw mirsnfi'T and of a naturally ! baV oil'.red lip th ,nk« In Himvou mur«
thirty j ears ol.i ,< anaoi .<nainrau> f ,,iaH u , i„ her
delicate disposition. 1-orfiveorsix
years past she has been suffering
from Dyspepsia. She
Perhaps you do not believe these
statements concerning Green's Au-
gust Flower. Well, we can't make
you. We can't force conviction in-
to your head or tued-
Doubtin^ '«"c into your
throat. We don't
want to. The money
is yours, and the
misery is yours; and until you are
willing to believe, and spend tlie one
Thomas.
Vomit became so bad at last
that she could not sit
Evory Meal, down to a meal but
she had to vomit it
as soon as she had eaten it. Two
bottles of yottr August Flower have
cured her, after many doctors failed.
Shecan now eat anything, and enjoy roii t u vi
it; and as for Dyspepsia, she does not ".r.\vlfv t
know thot she ever had it."
Onedny wtieu Byntri'.-fl was paying a
vl.U lo her husband, tin turned to Ijer
suddenly. "I must have money," ho
said, "theie'n no good healing about the
bush."
"Have you no money ?"asked Boat rice.
"1 have tweniy pounds,the remnant.ol
a laiKer-um I borroweo."
She said nothing, but 'aking out her
purse, sr ook its content?* on the table.
I'he man laugned scornfully*
It isn't a driblet like that I want. 1
e a thousand pouuds this dav
by tell me so? I cannot get It.'
sovereign* would seem to ascbooi hoyt
The reineu brance of her secret marriage
haunted her im a the remnautof a ghast-
ly dream. Five years Five long veare!
Surely aomethlug must happen before
they were speut. Something did hep-
pen.
What were her feelings when the truth
tirst came home to her? When she kuew
bt could cheat herself nolengerf When
uo imaginary ailment would aoconnt for
her condition? Wlieu in plain word* the
fact that ane was t. bear the burden com-
mon to womanhood was forced upon her?
i'ht-n Beatrice prayed thalsbe tnlithi die!
The child was born, and none save the
mother and tnaid knew the truth. The
elder woman arrautfed all. She lett her
mistress as a servant leaves; she prepar-
ed a plane, and when thellmecame Bea-
trice found her grief lightened by all a
oving woman oiu do for another in such
plight. Of course there was deceit—oe-
o it seemed to have forced Itself Into the
girl's life! There was a long visitto pay
-omewhere,a visit from which Beatrice
returned a suadowof her former self.
Hut uoue kuew, noueeven guessed the
cause.
t he child was born, the tiny head Best-
led on the mother's breast, aud a strange
feeling awoke within her—theover-
oowering iustiui t of maternal love. Her
thoughta winch had once been, iu case
ihe child lived to hale it lor be«* father's
sake, turned to pure sweet affection for
tno Innocent helpless little thing. So
' • from .wishing it dead, she would not
tow ha .-e wished it uuboru. When
eturned to her homo she left it with
iiauy tears in Sarah's cha ge.
For years she saw it hy siealth, saw it
grow more aud more the picture ol perfect
cUildnood; loved it aud worahipped it
uiore each tune sue saw it, aud at last
when she returned to her father's house,
and lelt that her visits to her treasure
would now perlorce oh lessaud less fre-
quent, a wi!d craving to bavett wiln tier
always, to see it every day, e*ery hour,
-twoke in her passionate h^art.
Then oune the second quarrel, end the
new home. And even as slie settled to
go dowr. to her uncle's, the nucleusot
tue dst ing scheme of regaining her boy
framed itsell'ln her brain,aud waaeveut-
uaily nhsped into form aud acted upon
with perfect success.
But the five years were passing, pass-
ing. At the end of them stood what
Beatrice shrunk from picturing, a
vlct v. bo would come aud claim bis
Beatrice had indeed,expected that when
ti rat arrested he would find some way of
proclaiming his mat riage if only in tul-
tillmeut of his threat of dragging her
uaino in the dirt.
Yet he ma 1" no sign, He was crafty
and calculating. The term of bis sen-
tence was not to him an eternity. When
led he knew that hy keeping the
secret he should he In a more ad ventur-
ous position to turu matters to his own
oenefir. Beatrice would be well past
twenty one, and in command of a large
income. He meant to bo thoroughly re-
■etiged for the obstinacy she had display-
ed in refusing to perjure herself, and so
llud him means to buy up the forged bills
but he meant to have money aiso.
This W the history of the life of the last
five years upon which Beatrice looked
tisi'k that afternoon, these are the pic-
tures of the man and the womau-tbe
husband and wife, who were to meet on
tho morrow like foes iu a deadly duel.
ITS INFLUENCE.
I much sooner and with more profit.
1 lho manure pilo will bo much larger
j and of better quality. One man
I in Ontario a few years ago
' raised 20,000 bushels of turnips.
I A neighbor said to him: "Mr. F..
you had bolter soli 1 000 bushols.
They will bring you fl.OuO." "No."
he says, "I want them all fed on the
farm, to go into manure." And be fed
all of them, l as ins on which root-
i., nisei aud fed are gelling root*
productiveevevy ycar- The dairymen
ay i cy would dispose of their cows
if thev co.ild not havo tho roots for
them. Those lhat feed cattle for ex-
port tay they could not do it with a
the profit without them. One man says:
far j 1 could uot educate my children as 1
down ■ cultivation enables tho air do it it were not lor root.." And
absolute y bwarm. with number, ot otliei-s tell us they have
.'get&blo and animal, lifted morteaje* ihm they ooiild not
hav done otherwise.
A short time ago a modestly worded
advertisement appeared In tlie dally
papers, says tho San Franeiaco Argo-
Tou probably have not hoard how
Bamura secured tho indorsement of
tho New York press on his nlle^d
Why a Vegetable Mulch la Talnatd.
•ulU of Feedlug Booti-lw t
leeir l §«■• I—lTaru* NoUS
an I Hume 11 at*.
Some of my leaders i.uiy say that
this is a strange term to apply to the
iown clods which the rudo swu-in
turns wit'- his sharo and treads upou."
niles W. F. Massey iu tho Pract. ul
it-mer. They see that living things
row out of this brown toil, and are
pp.tren; to tho eye. but to speak of
1 o t-oil as living, they do not cum pro-
end. But tho term may bo truly
sed. This brown mould
upper surface of our fields.
nauU to tho efTect that a French pro- I* "' " , •" H
feasor desired to give language lessons bite
t^«uniudvwho would b wtUInc "bead of 1 a-t Mad to .,
n jru .uK .... *n musla Mexico IntolUg« ncer in in. ••tTpon
charm- ll,e ^ of lh" whl.,M •l«!Pl>:"*t,s arrival
da.iEhter. of Ur. U. who had '? New York lltt.-n.im en., .am.-d all
considerable musical ability, and who. V " ""
In conclusion.
to penetrate,
life, both
in such minute form.i that Xo Ihe ^ )ot lhu( ,,00l crup ,)ut,
J n161""', ' 11el..M These tow lion* ol dollars into the rockets of the
opc, all seems llieiess. incse iow , \ni\
: nis of life liavo a wonderful intlu
ONLY
BUffcrlnj; it
11^.
Complexion.
Hold everywhere. All genuine *ri>i ''« hear
"CrosriMit." betid ua'Jc-jut f tauip for 32-pngo
pamplilet.
DR. HAI1TER MECICIHC CO.. St. Louis. Mo.
HERS'l
FRIEND"
Mothers •
Wakes Child Birth Easy. I
Shortens Labor, |
Lessens Pain,
® Endorsed by the Leading Physicians, g
° Bookto*'iiIotharM"in<tlh<l FRET'. ^
n BRADFHEL3 REGULATOR CO. o
O ATLANTA, CA.
2 SOLD E>Y ALL DRUGGISTS. 2
•he could not help the growing eold
Ol her voice. ,
"Y -h you can if you will. Will you
do so?"
Mh« looked nt him Htcsrtliy. "You are
my husband," shoaHi«l,"l will it I can."
"I know it," lie said, with a uervous
laugh. "All you will have to do ih tu
mi^ii Hn undertaking promlMlng to repay
the money and iutt-roHt nut ol your in-
come within a certain number of yearn.
You will do thiM?"
"Ye-4,1 will do this. Yon aro my hus-
band." .. ,
"It is bIro necesaar.v," he went on,
with a revert glance at ti -r, "to make a
d«'clarntion--H mere matter <•! f
You muBt dfelareyoUiHMil to Ua tw
uuh years of ajrt>."
"1 do not quite understand, hhUI
trice. She wouldn't underataud.
"A«< a mere matter of forni, my dear
girl, it can do no one harm. It Isonly t<>
bwear you aie twenty-one. i'm sure no
i'ne would doubt it."
Beatrice covered tier faro with her
hand", and The tear* trh aleil through
her linuer*. Hei vey attempted toearex*
her. Hadly but llruily alio puahod hl
arm away.
"I can't do it," aha a,\icl.
Hi* brow gr«-v black. "Damn itl you
must," he saiti, roughly.
She roue. will not," who asid in
accents which told him ahe meant what
she said. "I will do tills much, I have
Borne Jewelry, it ahall be p acsd in your
hsndS' i'be only favor I
money may he raised on it In
that tome day 1 ea
it was my uiother'i
she did a a alio promised. That even-
ing Mrs. Miller brought him the packet
' «r je*eirv. There v ere some valuable
nrticlts in it, as Sir Maingay, who had
great inlth ill ids daughter a discretion,
and who perhaps had feaied that il not
given at ont-e they would never no given,
had entrusted her with some diamond*
which hatl belonged to her imo mother.
No It was that llervev was able to raise
some two hundred pounds on the trink-
ets. To his credit bo it smd t.hathe sent
j certain myaterious tickots to Heatilce
which, upon inxulry, -ho found would
enable her to redeem the things of which
she hinl deprived her*ell
Three days alter this Sarah made ad is-
;erv or rather completed her Inquiry
CH APT Kit XXI.
MAKING t'KOUD KNKfcS HKND.
Hervey inspired by an tquitdie retine-
meutol'malice made biarooms as untidy
and anoleasant looking as poasible, and
gaveorders to the servant uot toattend to
them. He proposed to bring Beatrice
down nn her kneea and to oue ol her
tvpe, he Telt that the process would be
doubly dlH'igreeable, when it took place
In euob a place a> this. Bis personal
appearance, too, he ariMoged to corres-
pond with hla surroundings and then
gaveorders that it a lady called she
10 be shown up at once.
Promptly at 2o'clock the door opemd
and Beatrice Hin. d before him. Hervey
looked Ht her, aud lu asneeriug tone
«aid:
••Wf.ll, my affectionate wife, you've
groTVn into qui e a fine piece of goods,
nuite h tip-topper, no «ud or a swell"
you haven't pined much for
nee upon tho fertility of tho toil, and
j i the health of tho e living upju it
.1 in loug ugo showed tho wonder-
.ill ptr.ount of work done l y the eart.i-
wonns, which every ono can see. but
t i < only in roceut \ ears that tho work
i.' tho microscopic fo n of plant nnd
: n'mul life in tho eolt has boon ma ;e
■ I parent Tho animal life in t.;o s^il
i mostly apparent in earth-worms,
. o larvio and pupa of insocu etc..
ut tho unieen forms of vejota ^lo life
oil- niiuito y moro nutno o is.
yur. i, wbo«o reproductive organs
aro of 1: size. li«<c tho mushrooms
: ti jm'T- bui'.s. aro, of course very
parent, but low dawn in tho scale
of v<; t::b c life, countless millions of
plaut o ,animations, occur in this
unper soil, makin'j it ono mass of lifo.
in'nf.us forms of plants are dividod
i ,o t 70 general division . 1st Ttiose
which (.ot their sustenance from living
or, . tiiiia. and which aro ca'lod para-
s;lc f'.agL -;d. Those which feol
tiuou < oc'iiylng organic u.atter, and
iiled saphrophytic fungi.
farmers of Ontario evory year. And
lho individual benefit cannot bo esti-
mated.—11. Williams in Ohio lurmer.
U*e Srleclod Sm'cl Only.
Tho importance of using i; >od seed
was ai^o demonstrated last year lu tho
caso of oats, when tho heavy seed
yielded some six bushels moro pe
aero than the common seed. Itshould
also bo noticed that tho crop from th i
best seed weighs more to tho struc'.c
bushel than is the case with tho crop
from the light seed. Although it h:m
not been demonstrated by experiments
extending through a Biidlciontly long
scries of years, there teems to bo no
reasonable doubt that a crop ra'sed
from select seed will, when usod for
seed again, if tho practice of selection
iu kept up. maintain tho good charae-
tors of rny given variety of when- bet
tor than inferior or even common toed.
Natural laws polr.- in that direction,
and it has been shown to bo bo over
and over ngain in tho caso of vegeta-
bles. If our farmers would use
only selected grain
oph nt- it vohemo
i'iverti '
of tho boys had
herself in French aud obtain tho true i t it
Porliinn necenu Sh« ausworwl tho : " % ° " ■
advertisement, and tho next day u ' ,
dapper little Frenchman made his host J visit* u v
bow at tho 1* mansion, where arrange- ni"
monts were per eeted for Miss Nellie j ^ ' or'
exchanging lessons with this recent lhem
importation from (Jallic shores.
All went well for u time. and. al-
though Miss Nellie did sometimes
wonder whether the strong nasal ac-
cent of the profes-or was tho highest
type of Parisian o egance. and despair-
ed of ever attaining that pitch of per-
fection horse;f. she did very well
while the professor puzzled his head
over the intricate differences between
the chromatic and diatonic scalos.
Recently a friend of the family call-
ed during lesson time and wus pre-
sonUid in duo form to lh*painted lu ll.id Iho'work
" l""1 011 !,10 tioan lelt to mo. I ^;.o I., would
aocompany hlai to un ontoitulnruiiit ; Bc.,n ,y T.Tho
I:,tier in tho week nnd bavins ob- , ^ illttHl lll0 mtle„0,.},
talnod her consent lie depar ed. ! which resulted m t:,e entire pre-« n(
w o?;o"rb.:v;;v u^;vuofol,i^ tbo,cityi.„- ^
inont ad.ourned to Swain's for re- K«rs white elephant
freshmants before returning homo.
Both were intent upon tho menu
card, when a waiter bustled up, and.
giving tho napkin hanging over his ,
arm a Hip with tho airy grace of his |
COpyHiOHT^TMl
You can't believe
me dealers always. Tbey want to
he«-;.- 'it sell the medicine that pays them the
■r of a mi largest profit. What you want to
had agreod among| |,,iV j;, the ono that does you th«
most pood.
Which < ne is it?
S mu tinies, it mny bo a matter
of doubt. Hut, in the case of
Pr. Pierco's Favorite Prescription,
tin re's no room for doubt, it's a
matter that can bo proved.
With tho facts before you, it'i
od among
Mr. Bar nu m u
genuine old "roast" Harnura had a
l.ttle story to tell the hoys in order to
put them in a good humor. II" said
lhat there wiu once a big social gath-
ering given in honorof a great 1 :• uy.
When tho beiuty arrived wilh the
usual flourish of trumpets all eyes
were turnod upon her and the general
remarks were. 'l>n't she lovely.*'' uud
•How beautifully she is painted!' It
Is tiue she was paint -d. ii"t by hand,
ihowever, but by (iod. 'Now. gi ntle-
i men.' said Mr. Barn urn. tho color of
this animal 1 am about to show you is
an insult to your intelligence to
have something else offered
" just as good."
ry bod
f Ionization Is
n*trHllH,"Boy*
1 acf dare not
v, Mt-r.il t h -v
k Pr. Bull'*
o . .,^1 saimropujii. w.tt', nftoP V0Ivr, we should hoar
tins e ... boloutj this mightj nultitudL . u,u Of that kind "ruu-
t , living soil. \\ e tiro till IamUiai ro ,
that
i uct it b.iek. Sartor
into rterve\ real naltire. Hv pertinac- and careles-n
ituin tr.ii-klni? .-tul w tchtnif; by ques- .whio IikihI Ht la
Itv in tracking and wi tchinti; by i|
i tlons asked in eertain bouses In a neitfh
borhood ta vhieh -bohad itdlowetl him,
^;ie found the man li id t" en lor mime
, space of time, and w ^ < ven now, rnr-
1 '■ • .....I. .. fir I With
'J
gueftk."
Hhe shivered as she heard his voice
and coarsH, mocking compliment, but
she kept lior proud eyes on him. "You
have something to aay to me—say It.''
She spoke aternly.
••Say! 1 should think it was lor you
to say r.omeihlntf. You who sent ni« to
nty-1 herd with felons tor ti ve years. You who
would not stretch out a hand tosave me.
- What have vou to say? He spoke with
vicious bitter Intonation.
Hhe said nothing. 8he might have told
him of the misery w hich sha nad under-
none-misery which elie had to undergo
o whtcB Ins well meilted i unishmMiit
irss as nothing.
••Nearly tiveyears," he wenton."think
f that dull dead drudgery* Week after
week, month sf'.nr month, year after
year tho same. All through you —
throuah you! And now, mv nweet wife,
which uo you expect me to do, to stride
you or to Kiss you?"
••You bavw done both to me," she said,
slow I v and bitterly. "The memory of
tho kiss Is to-day in >re degrading to
than that of the blow." Ho eeowle
her acorn stung htm—scowled and took
another step toward h«r.
There was a -harp pointed knife lyinij
on the table. Usatrien's lingei s mechan-
ically rested themsflhes
handle. "Ifyou touch me," she said
quietly, "I think I shall kill you
The man knew aha meant it. He t ti row
himself into a chair and laughed seer •
fully.
••Come," he wr.id, ".ot us go to busi-
ness."
"Yes. Business is tho only'question
between us now."
"Sit down. I can't talk to you whil
you are standing there. Ail-1 I've lots
To'show how little she fears! him she
obeyed.
"Now," he said, "to come to the point
w hat proposal have you to makeT 1 an
vour husnand, nd with all vour put-on
J 1 ■ —-***>-- «««« ir. .<v 1 have
P0LICF
LADIES
H.E2.ni3'ilj5
'v TOR U3Y3
® 1.75
J*|,
• Sarah," she said
1 v -v, and it needful you will see him.
' Heir in niuid that il your charges against
him are false, you leave me at once*
She took Sarah with her, told her to
wait in ihe street and then entered her
husband's room, ohe told him coldly
's3E3 and without apparent emotions what she
had learnt d. sho gave cite name of a
L DOUGLAS TBV.tr,ce
r-j^p then said she would (• tcli his ubeier, who
$3 SHOE cEfjfPeMEfj .boowb.,=I,^, ..';v,"y.
HIE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD fOR THE MONEV ? ™|"ropp'ed ti... n.-.n.'. II
SENTLRMEN iiinl LAIMES, turn your'iul- , |.yoai.* « if«l" let bin! Ill
H " i:-1- t-i"i „nVir ..i tbai f-rt m bi
mo.t the nil J"""- ' t?Thl ino °v llealli™ knew l'l..t "
economical foot-wear ever oin-r«iliot t h moucy. nd with this
Uewnroof dealers who ulier otla-r ninkt-s, M >« he trulli. AHU
ing juit as good, anil be sure you have W. I . love for tills
Doitplus Slioes, " "
. he whip hand at last
••I will do thi-," she said, "on certs
conditions I will «iveyououe-haifof u
Inooine."
•'And how much mav vour income tie
••Tw„ tboussnd live hundred a year. 1
old."
' paid Llervev coaisely. "It
- price ytatnpi
bottom. \y. I- Dotlglos, Brockton, Muss.
tSTTAKE NO JHUBHTITrTK
n-i*t. nn locnl ndrei 1 ' -
Cream Balm
QUICKLY CURE
COLD IN HEADr*
Arpir n^i
<Z>y 50c
^.BltOS> WarrcoKt.Ni
driven out was replaced by a leellngof
absolute hate an ! c« utempt.
Once more ami only once slie saw him.
a lew days later he wrote, hade her come
to him, and threated iu case of refusal
to come to her. Hhe went. Shescorued
him to much to fear him.
He renewed his request that she would
Hgn the I else decla utiou.
•'I will not," she said.
"Will you telegraph to your 'ether,and
say yu must have a thousand pounds—
tell him it means life or death '
"You 11
^Beatrice flushed. She half arose from
her seat, then returned to it without
troubling to reply.
"Take t hat for argument's sake,ti is so,"
said the man, "now lor the conditions."
" That you never seek uie,uever trouble
me neve, make know n to auy one that I
am your wife."
•• You have kept the secret, then?"
"one other person knows it,my faith-
ful servant."
'•That hag! Of course you hoped I
should die in the ttve years."
"No," ►aid Heatrice simply; "but I
hoped I might."
The duel w*s progress!nf. The advan-
brutally told I tage as yet had been to Beatrice, iler-
nage hisown | vev's turn was yet to come.
wn way, Sol ••Listen," be said; "I havo also a pro-
hud spoken I nosal to make, and conditions." Bea-
now ledge the I trice bent her head.
h h«d already been "You have two thousand five hundred
a year. The hundreds are quite enr ugh
for a woman toliveon, the thout.ands
shall be mine."
She was silent for a minute. "\es,"
she said, "i wi.l even do that—at least
for many years.
Hervey laughed niallolously. "How
ni'-e to lie so beted! I neve' made an7
thing out of a woman's love, but her hate
is profitable. Now hear the conditions."
"I have named them already," eaid
B atrice coldly."
[TO BR CONTINUED.]
the elect produced by tho
. : o.vth of ono of those raphro-
. vies, known us tl.o yciv.it plant the
•ftpid growth of which, i.i solutions
coir, alii injy sugar. i.i the cause
ol elcoholio formeu'.ation. All through
this living soil. uncounted mil-
lions of similar plants uro pro-
ducing fermentation of other t liar
actor, particularly what U known us
tho nitric ferment, producing nitric
.- •id in the soil. These, nnd forms
atill lower and more m'nuto. aio ac-
tively engaged in promoting this 111-
ric formentutioa Bacteria, t o small
that ono thousau 1 co id pass ab:east
through the holo made by a fine sow-
ing needle, increase in ferti oloam with
a rapidity a'most inconceivabio. and
aid materiully in tho process. But tl.o
greater part, probably, of tho nitrifica-
tion in soils cultivated in regu'arrota-
tion of crop*, is caused by a vegetable
fun.us of highor order than a bac-
terium, and at loast of a partly para-
b tic character. This is a small uni-
cellular fungus, found to inhabit cer-
tain tubercles or swellings upon tho
roots of clover and other leguminous
plants. This is tho organism which
gives this class of plants their great
value as renovators of fertility in tho
soil. But the lower forms of bacteria
are found to bo wonderfully active in
soils abounding iu decayed organic
matter. Theso aro truly sapro-
phytic, and their action in keeping up
nitric fermentation furnishes an-
other argument for tho practice of
burying vegetable growth in tho soil.
A crop of Held peas or clover, by
means of tho higher ferment associ-
ated with them in their roots, accum-
ulates a largo amount of nitrate, main-
ly nitrate of potash, whilo tho decay
of their tops buried in tho ground fur-
ni hos food for myriads of the bacto-
rial forms to continue the process.
'Ihe presence of theso bacteria in de-
caying vegetable matter accounts for
the benefit derived from tho covering
of the soil with a vegetable mulch.
h as w heat straw. Many farmers
in large wheat growing districts, have
found tho most profitable way
to uso their straw is to spread
it at once on the surface of tho
soil. Land covered in this way
during tho latter part of tho warm
fisasoa and the following winter, is
found to havo accumulated a much
larger degree of fertility than can bo
accounted for by the mere decay of
the straw. The abundant food given
to tho nitrifying bacteria promoted
their growth, nitric acid was produced,
and this seized on tho otherwise in-
soluble potash in tho soil, and two im-
portant elements of plant food were
formed. On the other hand, we see
how a soil, kept exposed year after
year in tho clean culture of cotton,
becomes dead poor literally. There
is no food for the nitric ferments, and
tho term dead poor is truer than we
mny think, uud nitrogen must bo
bought in expensive fertilizers that an
intell gent course of culture would
have provided almost free.
uing out," losing prostigo and nee
tilting a change of seed. It is true
there aro other factors to consider in
liio problem of maintaining or of im-
proving tho standard of excellence of
any given variety of grain. 1 he soil,
culture, elimato. all itilluonco tho re-
sult; but whatever the conditions,
thore are few. if any. farm operations
that will give oottor returns for th
labor oxpended than to select ant
grade tho socd grain with tiio best o.
euro. The laws of s d breeding an-
na iuoxo a bio as aro tho laws o :itoc:i
breeding, and all admit that in tho
operations of tho latter "like produce
like," and that to improve wo must
••brood from tho best."—Bulletin No.
20, Kansas Experiment Station.
A novelty in
announced fro
li"der eighlei
-took* !" and
ra'rh rn|d, have to t ke
Hough Bvrnp. «s the legislator* regard
It iheouly safe remedy for coughs ami
aolds.
TTie water famine at Kew York, beplni
10 loo It a nous, aud rainmaker* will be usli
d lor unless relief com * > -n.
I have used Silvation Oil for chil-
blains in my family, and a few applica-
tions procured not only entire relief, but
n permanent cure. -J. Town-bend, 102
S. Charles hireet, Baltimore, Maryland.
TM> head of John Kendall, an 8-year-old
hoy resid.nj at St. Joseph, Mo., luuaaurui
W lucliea in oireumf-.-reuce.
I Throat orCi.ugli, If snm re«l to pro-
ilass. ho. in familiarly nnsal tones.
asked what they required* Miss Nol-
lio raised Iter head—there was a little
shriek aud the exolamat on, "Oh.
my?" Her escort, at tho siitno in
stant. seeing the waiter's face, re-
lieved himself by uttering ono long
word beginn ng with a 1>.
Tho waiter, with bulging eyes and
shoulders touching bin oar. s'ood
paralyzed, with a sickly smile upon
ins face. Tho French professor stood
confessed a professor of spoons nnd
potagos. Tableau: Kapid exit of
lady and gentleman; waiter holding _11."i* *VV.'i,IVhf,i l.ir'in<-i ru >ie throat or
hands aloft; uttering devotional "nog'mmbio. •• brown's Bronchial Troches"
phrases with Parisian fluency l not j give lni
And li« tc's the proof: Among
all tho me li'inei that claim to cure
woman's peculiar weaknesses, irreg-
tilari : s, ami diseases, the "Favor-
i;o Prescription" is the only one
that's guaranteed.
If it doesn't do ail that's claimed
for it, if it doesn't give satisfaction
in every case, you'll have your
money back.
There's strength and vigor for
every tired and feeble woman,
h« :lth ami a now lifo for every
ih-licato and ailing woman — and if
there's no help, there's no pay.
Miss 1^. now has another
A NOTED PLAIN.
Tlio Grand Lodge of Missouri of tha
Knights and Ladies of lloiior la in auuuaJ
bussiou at Ht. Louis.
It tin
Twenty-five years ago not one firm-
er in ono hundred knew what ov «• "J
;ooked like, fow having hoard of tho
plant First-class hotels in tho ci'..
hud it occasionally. To day tho cro;>
is worth millions of dollars annually
and is in use throughout tho land.
At Kalamazoo. Michigan, tho crop wn •
first grown in 187.). in a very sma'
way. In ten years tho crop grown ai
this placo alone was valued at om
fourth of a million of dollars, am.
laud comparatively worthless bo or
celery was grown is valued at, from
; 30 to $500 po. acre. —K. C. Live Stoci.
Indicator.
II o
> Hint
velvet cover a hot
and ho'.d t ho velve
elvet quickly whilo
r Twenty Y«
Little Iteptli.
Until about twenty years ago the j
, ;ist gra-sy plain lying between < wiine -
ville and Micanopy. and known us
Payne's prairie, was ono of the mo t
noted localities in Florida* Stretch-
ing ti f tee ti miles from east t wo t.
and six miles from north to south, it
pre ente 1 a grand and beautiful spec-
tacle. when waving with green grass
ind herbage* The old Indian chic'
i\ing Payne, had his headquarters in
the neighborhood of it. and it onmo to
i • known bv his numa But in 1*71.
luring a violent storm of several day
FITS—Epilepsy >
■ t,-e ii nu m. mo 1rui, uotim.h
•pall*. Epileptic Itcnmly Co., *6 Uroi
I St.,Now Vork.
me code of regulations of tho Iowa na-
tional guard is to bo rovlsed aud liio
ua be brought nearor to the standard of
the regular army
1 hv r.R. KMS' 'H RRKtl
FITS. All I*
Nt-rvo «■
in rt« i
volloua cure*. Treatl«e nml J" 1
Vltrasea -cm tn llir. k IIho.-.m:
Charley Johnson, ou behalf of Sullivaj.
has posted a forfeit of $-2,510 for a ttghf
with Siaviu. to tukb pi ic • in S iptcmber.
Dr. Footn'a new pamphlet on Vartoona
tolls all about it, and w ut all men oug^t
to know. Sent (soalod) for la ceuta. liox
New York.
mlsaionera
.1 , , T o missourt rauw.iy t iuiiim
dir.'ution, the subterranean outlet to pustaiI1 tj,0 Missouri Paeiilo rate of 7i
tho waters of tho prairie, known as c(Mlt8 oa coui ilum Hich Hill to Kuusas
the grput sink, bcca uo clogge I v.'ith I (jay.
moss and other debris that drifted i mri*t
into it. Then tho water rose over the dremoot
prairie to a depth of from three to
twenty feet, and for twenty years the
prairie romained a lake.
Such phenomena are not rare in
Florida, aud they prove that tho sub-
terranean features of the slate are HALL'S CATARRH
ullttja
u r->i up, for Chi I
>* «.lo.
Tho Missouri railway commissioners
have ordered that bulletin boards show
lue tune of delayed trams s^ail be orecteii
uud used at"1*
rr?1? Is a liquid "nd ti
the bin-"
W'rlto f-
i
ibUmonliilh, fre
face* of tho ny
F. J. CUENKV CO., Toledo, O.
To rai.,e tho pilo '
fron with a wf i-'.ot
over it. Brush tho
damp.
Plaster easts which aro properly waxed
may be wiped olf with a «lam;> c.oth, an
will last for years without beinr; iu.uretl.
while an unwaxed ono soon becomes
soiled, and it is practically inipossib.o to
clean it.
Fresh 6sh. if In good condition, wil
feel tlru. under pressure of the flnge.% nn
the smeU. though '-lishv" Is not unpleas
ant. Reject any tho ficsh of which feela
soft, and which has lho least objection-
able odor. Tho sooner fish is eaten after
it is taken from the water, the better!-
will be.
Don't "dowdy up" your lamps. It
dangerous. A broken lam? chimuoy, an
accidental movemeat which un^hi over-
turn a table, a strong current c f air o
rmy oue of tho thousand accident* or inci-
dents of daily existence might set tho
lamp's ' tea gown" ou Cre, aud thou—
When you feel tho pricking pain on the
eyelid that announces the coming of a sty.
use as an application, very strong Mat-
tea. or simply the tea leaves, moistened
with a little water, put in a small bag o.
muslin aud laid over th® eyelid. MoUtt n
again as it dries. Ihis, if used beforo thj
sty gets under way, will, it issuid, euro it
One of the most agreeable of dentifricoa
is to be found in a fow drops of tincture
of myrrh in half a glass of water. It no-
only cleanses the mouth, nia'dng it fresh
and sweet, but it is an oxcellont tonic for
the gums and arrests decay. It n ko haa
the merit of being very inoxponsive, a i
ten cents wid buy enough to las: a year
or more.
on more remarkable than those
the H irfaco. Lot a tourist travel fr
Marianna to Gainc.villo. and the;
southward to Brooksville, and ho The engineers unci llreu.en of t o licit
could not fall to bo convineod that mo in East St. Louis havo. b< n ordered
that portion of tho state at least has uy i niefa Arthur and Sargent to go
an extensive system of underground j urike.
waterways. Through theso bottom- jhrOnly One tv«r Printed—Can You Find
less well-like holes at Silver Springs! the Word t
one looks down into a subterrane an There is a 8-lncb. olnplay advertise-
river. "Tho Devil's Hoppor." "The ' ment iu this paper this week which has
Devil's Punch Howl." and thousands I10 lwo words alike except one word
of other depressions or "sinks'' are . f|je ittme la true of esoh new
caused by the cave-in of tho earth or 'peering each week, from the Dr. liarter
soft rocks that spanned some hidden Medicine Co. This h
rivef or creek. Tho outlets of some [.fintn on everything they makeantlpub-
of those underground streams have for jt| H nd them the nam
been found on tho coast, tho fresh t|,fl WOrd, and they will return
water boiling up out of tho sea-— Roo|(f QeKUiiiul Lithographs or Sample
Jacksonville Times-Union. rte.
ONE THOUGHT STRIKES TWO.
xae report oi 1/enOrr. «e<rretary-Trcas
irer Hayes shows the knights of labor ti
An I Tiioy ut Ones Arrange to Make !! i,0 jn 0 flourishing condition. The coLven-
thn Two One. ioa continues in session ut Toledo. O.
An interesting MM tninspii-.'.l at ewile5i«i I. w"
tho resideno# of nn uptown clergyman «i««v
on liio W.wt sido tha other evening j|H,rton;. ,.rui ppopi. .lu n.it k
which was not "on tho bills. it was ,nM,,,<i H ten sere fl *i«j. They go eeroi
U o'clock and ho was just leaving tho i,,h. that Is why tli« Santa l(,e H >u
homo 10 take a short walk when ho i" t'hloaiio i. *o popui.r. It I* the abort
was acco«ted on the steps hy a v. i-y JJJ, ,'Shilr.* Thirty mil™ 1h distam
well dressed couple with tho question: | ,.,,ver(j between Kansas I'lly andt 'hleaa
••('un you toll us if a minister lives than any eomnetitor. Equipment is all
it hat can be rtquir«d lor comfort ami
•1 am tho minister," was tho reply. 1 J7u7oTroV'rulViiia"%«1ae«'l-'lo.^ppr-I,
• What can I do for you?" library chair earn, dining ears aud day
••We havo docidod to get married coachec.
nnd wish to kcow if you will perform I L-ave Kansas City 6:25 r. m. or 6;40 p
here?
]\ljTGm^SCEBACK-
Yea don't want comfort. II you
don't wish to look well dressed.
II ou doa't want the but, then
oil don't want th« Lace Back
...jnpniW. 1 our dealer has >t *f
in it alive- II ho isn't h« shouldn't
bn your tlealor. Wo will mail a
I ur on receipt ol $1.00. Kone
I;, nuins without the a'amp as
"iiASOH & HAMLIN.
■ now MiKOi) A Hum In Piano and
. .,>nt !i-i-r to any addrcM. Tb«
ii <, rami uikI t 'prlvht I'Uno* are
.,!i la,,nu7ed Method of 3trlnila*
purit;
llity ii
Tile MUton s imumu ov •*■*••
,'! a'wa-J'<'Ioiv.'1standtaivert^
lonilih for Amorlcan lugeuulty..belna pro-
niB8,ni • f th« century*
nn PUnnt and
... Mimr.ii h Manilla
1.1r• 11bo « orid over.
MASON a H4ML: , w ' BU*S ©O,
JJO- I ON. X L.W * "Ut VUivAMO.
PiAHOS;
to nil ot he
r^s v
■■Kli urM h
ilpaiioa*
ureeCout|>i xiuu
n aae of l^oat
f} FOR MEN
ONLY.
Faille* Manhood
Servoti* Debility, weaknaaq ol
iin.I. tiie elTeotaoferror*or ezoenat
i. .in* Unit we ciiunot cure. We
ii Htitee «n«My ruse or refund every dollar
I i vii it iva trml treatment ti. full oouraa IS
I ,,,..,•,I ..-li. ivfltn rn.llrpd In tliree daya
GRIND sSSSaS
ifiSs
f* 1 Fir rULKS REDUCED
/ \ Mr. Alice Maria. Or««or.. Mo . write.
(V AH I'M .^J" w " i '"nd . now It i. 1*
, - 1 ■ r in i" -I'iraaa .with to.
|,r.UH 1 HN .I I " -■••"• Ohtca#o.IU
I'leaae mention thla paper.
II* V rrt/CD CURED TO STAY CURED.
HAY FEvER
& ASTHMA p. Birold H yss,l.D . Bnffala, ??
Book free!
T)1 f«'"
K. O. lnlu-ul end Snrajeal Hi
AGFNTS WftNTFO ON SILIW OR
i . i . the New Pi«t**ntPhem-
i. i, |,:)« K'n-inir Pencil. Airenta mafclng 180
p, r we-It. Monroe Eraser MfgCo.,LaCroaae,
wta. liox ►SI.
D11 C C1N ST A N T11 r; \AV¥*o ^^J11 «
J 8! V ' - 'r • .rr.'ni-mwirMailed
I I;i ! aMilr ' * "" N. y.Qty.
the ceremony. A M
Tho clergyman ro-ontered tho house .BVt-s I
ftiid under the gn«light found that tho j ChirnRt
applicants woro in u placid sluto and i Madlaon t« ( hlcago,
rive Chioaiio fc::j0 a. m. -.r9:l
H next dnv. A alow«r train
ip «h fity 8.85 a. m and arrive^
:50 a. m., with fcleepor, Fort
ng no fign of having eloped or
Poultry houses ahould faco the south o.* anything like thnt.
southeast. j 'lho lady gave her ago. as •>.! and
Turkeys and guineas aro great foragers i tho man as :>3. 'l'hey fcaid they had
for insects. j .rone for a walk that evening withou
The nature of the soil should delermino h-tiy thought of matrimony, but both
its treatment. I .u'd by somo occult process reach' ti
A good range means everything for tho | > no same conclusion in regard to :t.
growing stock. | 1 hey were made one without delay.
Ptd'ets rarely make good mothers. Savo nd tho grooiA paid a very rcspoctable
some of the old heus for hatching. ! -o from a not at all depleted pockot-
Btock must be supplied not only wlt'i ,,aok. 1 hen the couple continued their
what they eat, but wuat they can digest tVa.k.
Too much salt or salty food at ono tiiuo , j ;l0 policeman on the block subso-
injurious; a small quantity L.
S'n't*p It 11s 113 a Goo I Bualneaa.
"Whatever may bo said of tho
price of wool.' says tho Rocky Moun-
tain Husbandman, "there is no gain-
saying the fact that so long as mutton
commands its present figures sheep
raising will bo a good business. It
will in reality pay to grow sheep for
mutton alono nnd tho money obtained
for wool is all clear gain. One of tho
chief advantages of handling sheep is 1
that it is practical to keep thorn con-
stanlly under your care and much los* beneficial.
may ho prevented which would occur while it is an item to keep all of the
i' this was not the case. Another im- ^ .^tho farm will carry, overstocking J
portant point is that they will Nourish should be avoided.
on a short range. Then they yield Guineas aro kept largely for their eggi.
readily to will in the matter of 0f which they lay a largo uumber in tho
breeding. You can chango in the spring and early summer.
shortest possible t;mo whenever tho Good digestion la the result of feediuj;
fashion in wool or flesh changes, enough to sustain tho animal, but no:
I T .11 under the present demand for enough to overload the stoma '.:. (
mutton there i 110 necsssity for over ! Animals that seem to eat all that they .
! ha log any Old Sheep on hand, as this can get without gaining anvtuin.' in sizo j
cluas fan bo worked oil from year to or weight, .Uoold b. go; rid o. a .000 a.
| year aud the flock kept young and
I thr.fty. It is also possibio to build
| sheds of capacity to hoiwe as large a
' number as a givon range will feed.
j and. being prepared to house a flock
properly, winter loss is not only pro-
Revolutionist Garza's wheroahouts
not known, but he is believed to have left
the Texas border, and it is exnoctod
RUPTURES
OPIUM
ie«re fly fall, aeeled
M'Xnw.**.
-a eras
«rs**f
nv uox a.
Thome^on's Eye
lil ucatiouaJ
W.U.Tflfpraph find Hiorl (Itid I uilfjra
1
WN U—WinfleHKiVol *. No 47
Wlii ii'-«"H.,' aJVPrUi" .UplcM.
inlormed tho clergyman I)
lie pair had asked him ••whoroa liiin
iter ii\*d around there " and ha<!
icon diroctod by him to the house.—
sew York Commercial Advertiser.
Telegraph era' Feat*.
Telegraphers' feats for working on
oil'.;' circuits when short circ iiiu have
ice 1 broken was Illustrated during the
r-t days of tho bli/. ard of three
int from
I will not; nor would bo send itlfl wiiera Work Is Pleasant.
,I,,1 • Hervev. who by now was getting ,
to know HomethiiiKot Ida wito'a charai - Neglected wife —"Why don t you g%
; r, felt «liat nothing would make her ^ work?''
hend to bia will. Willi an oath i.h rai - Husband (a ne'er-do-well)—"I ain'l
ml his baud struck her. Ho covered her I ••
vitb reproach.'-*; lie reviled her, he told got no tools. omifK
her he bad never cared tor her, told he ( Neglected wife—"Deacon Bmith _
had but married her t'> atave off ruin offered you $6 to fix his fence, and you an(j a fair pi-Ice for wool when mutton
tblnking the atnall sum he needed w<uM i huve aBavv aQ(] a pian0i and a ham- ftlone wouid pay expenses, there U
possible.
It is not so muoh what we rciso, ai what j
wo sell that supplies tho Income. Havo
a« much of the products marketable oj
possible.
When moro food is token than can 1k> ,
disposed of healthfully there is a doublo
ented, but tho best success is assured |os,. the f00ii js wasted and tho animal I
in lambing. With successful lambing js weakened by disease.
whon n>'
Now Yc
le. but tin
Portland. Or
and wintering, a flock mado certain
ed upon her prospects.
LADIES Only!
n/t A nm ^MALK UB(ilil'ATOn
AVi xa-VJ 1 yJ Huft-nnd t't-i .i :i t > a daj* i
iTiouey refunded. J y mall f-'. ireh-
*d from nbi-orvalion COOK Iti lEDV t'D
O in aha.fy <•'••■
Plan's Remedy tor CaUrrh la the M
Port. Esutcst to f«e. and Chsapest. Jg*C|
i-wiifl
have a saw. and a plane, and a ham*
vowed to be revenged f<r her obatinacy. naer, and nails. What moro do >ou
He would make her life a hell. Ho would want?
- drag her name through thj dirt. Bhe Husband—"The saw ain't no good.
hould rue until h*r d<Mtii the day on , j ain't got no file to sharpen it
i.i.k .im tn #lo iiim hidriinir. , . . , • . ,,
Olo 6mlth can fix his fence himself, j
Same husband (ten years later)— j
50c. & T. Haseiltoe, warrru, ra.
a. « aeuiaaiui a sum, u**i«a*u, o. s 1
which she rdfuned to do ni« bidding
When Beatrice got awav from this
storm of -vordP, ahe walked b ck borne
n ith a buzzing in her head
Three day a afte* ward she read that
Maurice Hervey bad been brought be-
ore the maglatiatea on a charge of for-
. roy, and committed for trial. She ton ml
means to send t im a imasage, asking
if lio had money to pay for his del. use.
II sentb ok word thatheshould plead
gulltv. He really did ao, and aa the lor
g-rv waa a crafty, premeditated, cruel
uff i- the juduo very properly oent him
tn poaal servitude for five years. His
wile km aho read the sentence gave a
groan ol relief.
"HUt! Say wtfa I've escaped trom -uoe aui good appotite.
the penitentiary. Gimme some other _ «
nothing topre/ent our flock owners
from becoming rich in a few year*"
Basalts of Faedlac Roots.
Carrots are better adapted for
not bes, producing a sleek coat, healthy
If a feed cutter is not used, plan to feed
a lar^e proportion of the corn fodder in | " 1
racks In the feed lots, feeding the hay or ! 1 ' '
straw in the stables or sheds.
It Is not the breed that thrives with lit- j 111 /
tie care, but tho ono that receives caro mnoiat
that pays A good breed permits tha :oe-.
farmer to convert his labor into profit at relav.
oxtcn cd
FACTS AND FIGURES.
clothes so I kin light out agin."
Wife—"My, my! How did you gel
out?"
Husband— "I dug forty feet under
ground with a two-lined fork, and then
cut my way through two feet of stone
wall and ten inches 'if boilor iron
with a saw made out of a tin dinaef
plate."—Detroit Free Proa*
horso getting a mess ot them every
night seldom requires medicine. Sheep
that have a fair share of turnips or
mangels through tho winter and spring
seldom lose their wool before shear-
ing. The owes have stronger lambs
and a better flow of milk thut brings
them on faster and earlier for tho
n,.-'eili.i! Associated Press '
<•* from tho Mast were sent to
and ti I'-'i to S' PatiL Ho-
>rt and. eat'.le, Tacoma, San
o. ncramoato and l.os An-
Thc dispitc'ios woro repeated
, nutomatically. Tho circuit
•otn tho extreme North to
I the extromo oath and from tho Atlan-
t.c to tho Pucllic.
Tha ruins of Bluebeard's castles are said <
t« st ll remai i in a lon^soma mountain linos. «.*■>. >•
rcatl near lnt,>rlaken, SwiUerlatcL , Ty official i thl^wholc
cnnlo .Tone, were moro than one-th id of tho whole
.1 on the charge value of house# and tenements in hng-
, tho highway. | land and Wales and more than one-
..j, i4 what may | fourth of tho entire United Kingdom
typical name of a are foun«l In London. Ihe rent for
Lawrence. Kans., Aug. 9,1888.
George Patterson fell from a second-story
window, striking a fence. I found him using
ST-JACOBS Oil
ffl I Ie used it freely all over his bruises
7 i.ii next morning at work. All tl-C '■ o Q-
tin niii ug .
rapidly di appeared, leading n«t pw
car !K.r swelling. C. K. NbUMAN M.D.
"ALL RIGHT! ST, JACOBS OIL DIOIT.
of Ion
for Infants and Children
□per.it
'•Caatorla is BO well tochlldrenthafc
I recommend It as superior to any prescription
known to m<*." If. A. Aacnr.11. M. D.,
Ill bo. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
"The use of 'Casti
its m-i itsso well km:
of 8ii| «'ivrok;ati'1
ija -lii««ut fnniiii
withui easy roacli
Is
I versa! anil
Joseph ik>oqy and
arrested in < 'nihjden, n
of klssiug oai-h other 1
Alfred Edward l>
, roperly t « called tho
market and the whole flock go upon pn tar whoav mytue adoiu* l'iaet street, Lyndon last year was $170,000,00ft.
jjrass in good condition. Milch cows
who uo uot keep t'^>u ria
Caaujs SLiRTY.-vD.n,.
New 1 ork t. ity.
Late Pastor Bloomlngdalo KeXormod Church.
T.-, C«rr.m. CtMPAUT, 5T MD.IUT SraMT. N.w Yo«.
res Colli". Constipation,
,. sinn nu-a. Eructation. ,
Ki\cs sleep, aud inuxfiotaa a*
jujurlous tnedicatloB,
For H'Ti-ral yearn I In'.
n-suiU." . u _
EpwinF. rtSDBB.M. D.,
-Shi wujlirop," S«"J ~<b
hew York CiKf.
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The Lexington Leader. (Lexington, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 34, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 21, 1891, newspaper, November 21, 1891; Lexington, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc110056/m1/3/: accessed May 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.