Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 25 Dec 1884, p. 2

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 ifpnw*""^^!^ m r i "35 i AGATHA. Three ladies were seated, in Agatha Forester's pallor Miss Fortescne, large, dark and o! uncertain age, who. monor polized the most comfortabie arm-chair Mrs, Becker, shronken and sandy, who iras constantly sliding off the aofa and re- instating herself with a jerk, and Miss Agatha herself, who sat apart from the others, glancing uneasily out of the window, as if distr assed by their garrality. Miss Agatha was a fair young woman, with a noble head and a countenance ex- pressive of all grace and goodness. Yet at this moment she entertained feelings decidedly hostile to her callers, who had run in with the familiar freedom of fellow- boarders in a family hotel, to chat away the afternoon. At heart they were im- mensely sorry that Mies Nannie Foster had not yet returned from a suburb, where she had gone the day before. Miss Nannie, Agatha's cousin, companion and chaperone in one, was far more to their taste she was more attentive, more easily impressed, more sympathetic, they thought. She never sat looking out of the window when they were retailing their choicest bits of scandal for her especial benefit. But then she was a woman of years. However, they stUl lingered it was a pleasant place. The Fosters had the handsomest suite in the building â€" and furnished with such taste 1 Such carpets 1 Such decorative art And the Fosters were tip-top people. There was four of them, Mias Agatha, her bwo bachelor brothers, ten and a dozen years her senior, and Miss Nannie, who, since their parents' death, had kept the children tajrether. The winter day drew to a close* the room grew dusky, and still the ladies lingered. Agatha comd endure it no longer this, of all days, she was without patience. She rose quickly. " Ladies," she said, with an indignant quiver in her sweet contralto voice, ' you must excuse me. I cannot listen to such coversation " There was silence a moment then IVIiss Forfcescue lifted her cumbrous frame. " Oh, certainly. I quite understand. We will withdraw, ^e do not wish to oflFend." •'Oh, certainly," faintly echoed Mrs. Becker, sliding from the sofa for the last time and preparing to follow. Agatha's impatience only increased. " And allow me to say," she exclaimed, with no compunction, " that I thiak ladies might be better employed than with their neighbors' affairs." "Good afternoon," said Miss Fortes- cue savagely. "Good afternoon," sneered Mrs. Becker. " Good riddance " cried Agatha sharp- ly erw the door had closed. " To-day of all days," she siiJ, as she waliitt' to and fro iu the dusk. Presently the dnor operied. " "All in the dark, Agatha " asked a cheej-y voice. "1 thought you would nev.r come, Ivannie," was the swift, unnerved reply. Then f-he lit the gas. '• Why. what is the matter, ray dear'J" ' 1 have juat put Miss Fortescua and M-s. Bd-ker '-ut, of tie rK-m, and it â€" ic has »uno)ed rae " 'â-  D^ar uie What hid they dons 1 ' " TiiPi same old sickt^ning aoasip Miss â- Rruce tlirfc^ '.n the street Mr. and Mr.i. Efuwi. have shown no m»rn»g»i certiti- cat3 Mrs. Gray holds her stepchilu to the furnace to bura it, and so on and to on ' " Tfiey get their ideas from the morn- ing papers,' said IQannie calaily, uncla-ip- ing fcer fur lined circular.- "The step- mother holding the child to tho fi^e is a favdr.te paragraph when news is soai-ce. Sometimes fthe tieata the flat-iron. For my part, I would never go to that trouble." But Agatha could not respond t- her staia humor She helped put away the wK^ps, iiin ii.quired after the aubucbia friesida. '•You lock T,'aie ar^^n'n you •well'" asked Mias Nannie when they were seated The !.'irl dropped her eyes. "Nannie, I havH same news for yxu," »hs said with an etf ru. " â€" Sast night â€" promised Mr. I'duraâ€" o â€" to marry him.' Then she s'ghtjd a? if rdiisved of a great bur- den. Th»- room was still, utterly sfcill. If M.ss Nannie were surprised or shocked she g*ve no toke.i She only sat quietly looking at the girl and taking time to co-iecr, ner thoughts. Agatha never lifted her t/ 1 " until, after some momenta, her cous !i cleared her throat and tranquilly in^ .ired " Well, dear, are you satisfied thar you will hs happy " Thea tne girl rose and threw upou the sofa. "O, Nahuie, inow ' can't tell." More silence. Then Miss asked if she had told the boys To these women George and Lewis would be " the boys" as long as they lived. " I told George at noon," replied Agatha in a voice heavy with tears. â-  Lewis was not here. I wish you would tell him." • "And what did George say"' "He only said, ' I congratulate Peters.'" Mas Nannie leaned back in the chair and meditated, bringing Peters up for a mental review. Poor little whiffet 1 To be sure, he had money, some social stand- ing and a fair educatioBf. They had known him a loi^, long time, and even felt for him a sprt of distant relatives' affection. They would do anything in the w^ldfor him. He often took Agatha abon^ to places of amusement, to church, or riSng. But he was at least fifteen yeara her aenior, and they, had never dreamed of his aquini; to many her. His appeanmoe was pitifnUy aoidnBt him. MiaB Nannie revieved his badbaildihis bowed legB.#i 'nM eye,' aa she oalled it, asuspidouseyethat seemed to skir- mish about the room while ita n»l« "' gaMted you with steadfast respect. Mhen die turned her thoughts to Agipa^â€" Agatha, perfect in face and figure,aiW^- nobled by edoeatiAi and advEfctages-- Agatha, toe whran a Benatw had propoaed and a CJongresaman languishsd, to say nothing of her lesser adorersâ€" Agatha, who had rejected the Senator beeauas he lacked principle, and the CkmgreBsman because he was a widower. i. j Nannie remembered that the girl had suffered and shed tears over refusing these and others. She had a curious dis- position, as the boys had said. At length Nannie roused and spokfe. " I will tell Lewis and now; dear, you had better dress; it is near dinner-time. A little Florida-water will cool your fill QftltB â€" â€" "Hark!" cried Agatha, "there he is now â€" gone into his room." Nannie recc^nized the clumsy step. Lewis has never yet come up tliose steps without tripping at the top the rushing, impetuous way of his boyhood would, al- ways cling to him. " I am going at once to tell him, before Geoi^e comes," said Nannie, rising. " Yes, do," sighed Agatha. And when her cousin had gone out across the corri- dor, and her tap had been welcomed by a careless " Come in " the young girl stole after and listened at the crack of her brother's door. "Lewis, I have news for you," said Nr.nnle gently, and there was a hidden sob In her fond voice. "Agatha has promised, .to marry Mr. Peters." " O Lord " cried Lewis in open- mouthed disgust. Agatha crept away from the door her face was burning and her heart beat hard. But Miss Nannie remained awhile in her cousin's chamber. "Lewis," she said quietly. "I sup- pose we all feel the same over this â€" matter? Agatha says when she told George he remarked that he congratu- lated Peters.' " " Well, this is too bad," said Lewis in- dignantly. " It is a shame if a girl with her face and brains can't do better. She is altogether too soft-hearted. She would have married all the men who ever pro- posed, if we had let her, and out of sheer pity, not because she cared for them. That is why she accepted Peters couldn't bear to hurt his feelings â€" didn't want his strait eye to suffuse with tears I We must do something to prevent." Nannie smiled deprecatingly " We must be very careful. Agatha has a curi- ous disposition, and if she thought we wers all against him, she would picy him the more." "If there were only some way to dis- pose of him," exclaimei Lewis grimly 'If we could send him out with the next Arc'iic exposition' '-r- Nannie rose. "You will be very care- ful what you say, Lewis ' " Oh, of course. " She jingered at the door. "Agatha has not a lorceless nature by any means," she said " she can get angry if she cares to. She tells me she put Miss Fortescue and Mra, Backer out of our parlor to-day, b?cause of their vile gossip. I have no d ubn she did." " Huenph " poor darling ,.' Why are yon feeling so has been saying snch herself I don't Nannie Agatha came down to dinner with her face composed and her manner gracious as ever. Her inward defiance was not outwardly manifest. Of her family, George was shade more digniried than usual; and Lewis appeared annoyed, while Nannie put on a regretful look and oc- casionally eighed. When they left the dining-room Agatha swept haughtily by the table at which sat the Fortescue and the Becker. She was done with the twain, and intended they shoold see it. Up in their own pirlor, George sat down by his sister. "Agatha," he said slowly and with an evident dislike to the subjec" "do you think you did well to engage yourself to Mr. Peters before consulting your family?' "I was of age three years ago," she said, regarding him with calm dignity. "Yes, yoi, of cotirse. Bat there is sujh a thing a-s advice. Mr. Peters is cur good frif nd, but is he a suitable hus- band for you?" "What is there against him? ' she ask- ed, untiinchiugiy. She was not blind to her lover's bodily imperfections. She had lain awake aU night, mentally endeavor- ing to straighten his crooked limbs, and control his recreant orb. But with day- light they dawned upon her as uncom- promising as ever. But George would not stoop to peraon- ali'ies. "Nothing," he answered quiet- ly. "Only we have looked very high for you. We want you to be happy." "Then do not speak against Mr. Peters," she said in a way that seemed to dismiss the subject. George betook himself to his own room and Lewis took his place by Agatha. "I suppose I am to congratulate," he said with a careless disregard of Nannie's in- j unctions. "You do not seem very enthusiastic," responded his sister calmly, recalling lus secr£tly -heard exclamation uponfirst hear- ing the news. "I can't help it if I don't," he answer- ed half -impatiently. "You know how proud we are of you, Gath, and we can't be expected to think any man good enough." She smiled. He went on recklessly: "I don't believe yon knew what you were doing. Yon don't love Peters, you only pity him just aa you used to pity the Senator and all the rest. Tlui crooked little curmud- geon 1 Why,he is old» than George,and cross-e^d" â€" She sprang np in a rage: "Lewis, yon have saU qnito enoog^ Never spcNik so again to me; I forbid it I" Then ahe soa«|ht her own chamber and threv herself upon .the bed. Nannie came to hm after awhile. **llw '^fLl•n^tt quite euro yon have made: no-^i«taker j\ ^-*fT' I* "Quite sure." ' t/i*n. She rose and arranged her todet Mr. Petras was to come that evenuig. He arrived eaily. Nannie endeavored to be gracions, but soon excused herselt, leaving Agatha to her lover, theboys hay- iSeSeout. And Agatha, with Lewis ctScI criticism still ringing "» her ea«^ felt as if in a dream. Fortunatdy Peters made no inquiries as to her brothers opinion of the marriage. Miss Nannie had congratulated him as though aU were satisfaotory. .. Agatht accepted his adoration quite passively, and, at last, when he was gone, retired to her room to pity him and weep for him, and tell herself how much she loved him. ,. xi. „„ But as the winter slipped away the en- eaeement was announced, and haiimg re- miuned unbroken, Agatha's brothers be- gan to feel resigned. The quiet, intense devotion of Norman Peters was touching He worshipped his betrothed; to him she was a very god- dess. J "IE," thought Nannie, with a softened regret, "if he were only a half-inch tell- er, to be of even height with Agatha I Meanwhile poor AJgatha was frettmg herself to death. A thousand little heart less sarcasms and glances of ridicule, to which Peters, in his great happiness, wm utterly oblivious, were constantly stab- bing her. Night after night she in wakeful agony, the idea of breakmg the engagement never once occnring to her. She was sure she loved him, and she realized the depth of his devotion. She endeavored to rise above morbid sen- sitiveness, telling herself that people would cease their cruel ways when they saw that she was determined to stend by him. But she grew thin, and her f«ce wore a hunted expression. Mesdames Becker and Fortescue now began to cir- culate pretty little stories about herâ€" in- geniously constructed but untruthful ro- mance" Nothing very bad, for Agatha was a woman to whom no doubtful mist could cling for a moment; but whispers of "co- quetry," "bligated hopes," "girlish folly" and " last resort," which, blown from lip to lip on the dubious breath of friend- ship, came at last to vex the ears of the Fosters. Agatha only grew more pale. Stormy Lewis, however, one day con- fronted Miss Fortescue in the hall before his sister's room. "I can tell you, madame,thal! you must discontinue your talk of my sister," he cried angrily. Agatha came out. "Oh Lewis, dear." He took her by the arm. "Go back, Gath. I've a matter to settle with this lady. She knows what mischief she has been trying to work, and I intend the talk shall cease, or I will take measures she may not admire." Without a word Miss Fortescue turned aud fled. "I was sorry for her," said Agatha, "she looked bo guilty and helpless." "I declare I haven'tmuch patience'with you," exclaimed her brother, "to think that you would defend her, and she every day assailing your good name. But all your ways of late are provoking. You are going to marry a man you don't love because you pity him. For God' sake, why didn't you pity some one suitable"â€" She trembled with excitement and pas sion. "Lewis, if you have the least particle of love or respect for me, you will never speak so again I do love Norman, and it would kill me if anything should break the engagement!" Lewis quit her presence quite crest fallen. The days slipped by. There had been n-^ date fixed for the wedding, nor was the subject disscussed by the fam- ily. None but Nannie knew the terrible tremor in which the girl existed. She was ever moving about, her hands con- stantly occupied. Day after day, rain or shine, the two women were out of doors. They had always an errand, usually one of mercy. Nannie, however disinclined, would have felt it a sin to oppose, and s) Agatha dragged her off through the flit- ting sunshine, the moodiness, the chill or storm of the springtime, until one last morning. It had been raining for three days, and so steadily that the sidewalk flags were cleaned and whitened. Agatha said they would not be hamper^ ed with a carriage,and they took a car for a mde oi so, alighting to walk a few squares or so to another line.' The atojm had abated, and the rain was buta list^ra drizzle. Agatha slipped and slid once, and Nan- nie save a frightened exclamation. "My oven^oes are useless," said the girl carelessly. "I must soon have an- other pair. I have a good deal of shop- ping to do soon." "Your outfit" â€" ventured Nannie, and stopped. Agatha sighed but her sigh was lost in the noise pf the street. A poor little yellow dog limped ontfrom under a passing vehicle, holding up one paw and yelping pitifully. "Oh, see!" cried Agatlui, with her eyes weK "Poor, poor doggy! I am so sor- ry " The yelps died away in the distance,and the ladies went on. A blind man, cryuig,*'Conghlozenge8l" upon the oomer detained them for a mo- ment. In the nest block an old bnilding had been torn away to gire ptaoe to a new one. Oatdeu workmen had left the side waft unguarded in (me plaee, a step from whieh wqold have landed one in a deep Just as they had reached this spot they were brought to. sadden halt 'â€" ' awfnl^ries andoo^fcn. Down ?llnddirecdyt«P^them, cai ,:way team d^g# «g^i' ed lilag^'t the sidwalk •tbalromen were^hns s^aratod, and m a second Nannie was reaohmS lOTwawi. oold with horror. _v "Aath*! " she eri«d, bdttpo l«te. Tlie airltod lost her balance, and had faUen backward from the unguarded sidewslk down into the deep cellar, and there lay iqwn the stones limp and unoon- Bcious. HlSTORlcii;; :. J .t Woman occupied the space of BIX aien. Boleyn r gloves. She hiA turned up at the sides, aXt"^-*^ "'i ^Anne Boieyn was remarkahW .i • light of Queen CatWrnTto"?.!, play at cards without her gwJ^^ that the deformity might H^f' """ Henry Vm. ^** '^^S"' Kijg It is not generaUy known that tl, torn of keeping birthday. „ ^nj She would Uve, sadly crippled and helpless; the spine had been injured and one hip dislocated. So said the best of surgeons. She would henceforth requure all caire and tenderness. "Thank God, she is not poor! cned Nannie. As for the boys, George was completely crushed, and Lewis paced the floor for hours, crying for "his poor.poor, sister!" • ^v Agatha insisted upon hearing the worst, and, when it was made known was very silent. By-and-by Nannie could see great tears trembling under the long, dark eyelashes. ,. "I would not mind." faltered the suf- ferer, "but for hun. Wh© will love and care for him now?" Then she asked that he be sent for at once. When he arrived, Nannie and the boys were in the room, but they with- drew to the window. Peters face was pale as Agatha's own. "Norman dear," she said without pre- face, "I am a cripple for life. I may never walk again. I sent for youâ€" to give you back your freedom." A frightened expression overspread his countenance; his lip quivered, and he sank on his knees by the bed and buried his face. "Agatha, darling!" he cried with real pathos, "don't, don't cast me off! You are a thousand times dearer to me now. All 1 ask is the right to care for you"â€" his voice broke, and he fell to weeping. By the window three persons heard it all. They looked in silence at each other, then Lewis strode swiftly across the room. "Peters," he said, "we havn't done right by you. I, myself, have acted de- spicably. But if you will forgive and f «rge4-., it will be very different in the fu- ture." Then Peters, who had risen, stood si- lent and bewildered till, througl\ the mist, the room grew suddenly bright, for they had encircled him and were clasping his hands with loving warmth. ^nd as Agatha lay watching she raised a feeble hand to stay the tears that cours- ed her cheeks. "I never thought;" she sobbed aloud, "I never dreamt I could be made so happy!' The Sponge. To understand this subject you must have a sponge before you. You will see that it is of a brownish color, is soft and will absorb water very readily. It is made up of fine fibres which easily bend and are very elastic, or will spring back when pressed, and is pierced with many holes or pores These fishes are made of three different substances â€" silex, which is an earth of wbiich flint is formed, lime and a horny substance, (horn is compos- ed of glue, phosphate of lime and albu- men). The home of the sponge is the ocean,but it grows to its greatest perfect- ion in the tropical waters. It originates from the mother sponge, and firsb ap- pears as a pear-shaped jelly-like body ab- out as large as a small pea. This is called a gemmule, from gemma, a bud it looks very much like a drop of the white of an egg, without head, feet, arms, eyes or ears. This young sponge floats about for three days it moves by means of a l^rge number of fine threads, called cilia, which cover its body these are whirled about rapidly, making quite a commotion in the water, and with the roundest part of the body foremost off the little thing goes. These cilia are not used to pro- duce motion wholly, but by them the food is drawn into the body. After about three days it becomes tired of wander- ing and prepares to settle down upon some shell or rock, from which it never moves. The narrow end is attached to the substance they have found. Their cilia continue to move for some hours after it becomes fixed, but then they grow quiet and lay down flat on the rock and quietly suck in their food. After a short time dark spote are seen in the sponge these are the sponge fibres be- ginning to grow in the live jelly and are what the cUia have drawn into the body out of the sea water. These little spots of sponge soon grow together and form a sort of framework for the live jelly to rest on, and as this frame grows the jelly grows too, and fills up the tubes and pores in the sponge. After the sponge has ^rown to a pretty good Biz3 a great many fine spikes are seen to shoot out of the side of the sponge tabes it is thought that these are te pre- vent the weight of tiie growing spong from pressing too heavily ppon the jelly As the sponge grows on the recks it throws up inany round heads with large holes in them. The water from which the sponge obtains ite nourishment is sucked in through the little h3les or pores in the sides, and after numlng through the whole struotuie, is thrown out through these large holes with consider- able force. Spongy grow in niaiiy different, terms. Some grow like shratM, some like tubes, we and toompets. In some parts of 'if?fS ^*»^ ** 8K*« like the most beantanu InandieB of trees. ^Chej are fastened so and years old. It in recordeSfr" tieth chapter of GeuesU, tweSiSh « '«'• "And it came *• â- â€¢ » noble lot. .great Btrongta """Jied obU contsdjj pot ame to pass the thili]i"" which, yas Pharaoh's hiithdavTh.fV- made a feast unto all his servantV' Bushrah is the name of tress in Syria, once a but now abandoned, but occupied o«,j by roving bands of Arabs. if^J" withm Its enclosure a great theatrB tions of which are still perfect jin?' w dates, without doubt, LmUoZ^ It may be of interest to those whomoV the subject a study, to kLowthatZ are only five genuine sig Shakespeare known to be in exiat6t.v One is in the London Library, the nfi, in the BritUh Museum, one^ttwhedf his will at Doctor's Commons, and two ,\ posession of private collectors. In President Lincoln's last imm address occurs the following insta^ involuntary rhyme Fondly do we hope. Fervently do we pray, That this mighty scourRe of war Mav speen iiy pasa away; Yet if it be God's will Ttat it contiaue untilâ€" And here the rhyme ceases. Cicato prose shows, in places, sitnUar instance of involuntary rhyme. SATEP BY â- ^p£o TiineVy W Catarrbâ€" A New Treatment Perhaps the mot't extraordinary euooea (k has been achieved in modern science hu C attained by the Dixon Treatment of Csto Out of 2,0o0 patients treated daring them six motiths, fuUy cinety per centTiaveba oared of this Stubborn malady. This ig m the less startlins; when it is remembep^th not five per cent, of the patients prBsentii themselves to the regular practitioner a benefitted, while the pa^nt medicines ai other aaveriised cares never record a cnie all. Starting with the claim sow geueaj believed bj^ the iDost scibotific men th the disease is dne to the presence of lug parasites in the tiesiiea, Mr. Diioii oDoe adapted his core to their ajx mination; this aoooinplisbed tiie catai Is practically cured, Rnd the permaneacf iii: questioned, as cures effected by him fonrfea ago h^e cares etUl. No one else hag even tempted to core catarrh in this manner, aii i oth»r treatment has ever cared catarth. Tl application of the remedy is simple and can done at home, and the present season of i year is the most favorable for a epeedr u permanent cure, the majority of esses wi cured at one tsreatment. batterers should GeergeJoni Sonba, N. " '^MA his moth4 netting womi :^bBi »he would %^ey any Ion ^neighbor's, *1 ^^ wasabceni tetained her s Jones Ik very n cpt to begin w( lie^rkitehenwti eftUodherawaj come in to bori ther. Vhile B for her the chil from the handl abeam directly iflg straight do? the muzzies of t The little girl ci tion to it. I must be wron man Tisho was w on a chair and t gon. Both bar Hammers at fu led from the ha fastened to the movement of th charged the gur barrels would h; body of any one llrs. Jones a\ this deadly trap her, but she sai picions. At no He looked surpi was getting dini up to her and e are you alive yel kicked and beat the floor. Her by. Her son fle against him, an and held to anew ing to murder. -^..i... t. ieourely to the Milk has been ease. Cows eati dron get, writes 1 giene, the "treml duces serious gasi children. The n herbs or spurgew disorders. The i from foot-and-rj( frequently drunk sionally produces mouth â€" apthous derived from cow werage farms, is, g any other, and its rmpond â- with ft e»«r». A. K, D X '" {fSON.i tendency to becoi EingBtreet West, Toronto, Ct 'iRda, k. ecdi rived from an w r^f 1 stamp for their treatise on caUirrl. -i..,..tt "^*** ^™™ "y O' ^.r- danger m respect The bread baked at Naples is the m ing mixed with ta size and weight and shape as was bai^ absorbing foul ode 6,000 years ago, but we are glad to lea ous but possibly le that (street beggars are a new gene dons from drains i tion. 6d in an ill-ventij impertant* lorptive power of When yon visit or leave js ew xork City, a itg neighborhood ii ^PrthlT^n' ht^rSZX " atmosphere Orand Central Depot 600 eiegantroomsffl sarbolic acid vapoi np at a cost of one million dollars, H wa, astea of thn aoirl wWb per day. Kuropetin plan. Herat ""fs oi tne acicl. Restaurant Bupplied with the best Horseci lorptive power for stages and o.evated raih-oaQs ta all d«H jalk lends to und( Families can live better tor less money St .v. «r.o^,-„n„ Urand Umon Hotel ihan at any other a 'nanges. especially class hotel in the city. (Then tainted by tr The female base ball club of Phila^ nal matter. Diar phia is now in New Orleans, andtlisg luently due to auc are receiving BO many offers of.marri apid decompositio that the organizition will probably fjU ectly-cleaned bottl pieces. aution always to 1: HOTT They do it ier: and it should So-called respectable Peopl^ .,!" S^f-f ^^ff " hesitate considerable before piHa ossibil ty of the n your pockets in a crowded thoroughfi 'or ought it to be i That would be too too. The my essels^ ^, crimination is not indicated by the v««wsi called respectable druggist when i wonderful corn cure, Putnam sP^^ Here, now we ha CoknExtkactoe, is asked for. He Wonderful product pilfer your pockets in the most gen ttuld thmk that manner by substituting chaap and da^ ought and highly ous substitutes for the genuine Puto he cheapest thing Corn Extractor. Watch for these g ve cents will buy men, and take none o;her thanPutE^ nllbrmg it to yuui Com Extractor.. Sold by dru|Je year. And yet everywhere. N. C. Poison Co., b- re men "too ^oor sconf proprs. ^J «*^, P^y ^J* J i. ^„f.r kreely ' **'» or ten cents Opium and f ^^J^^jf 'iS, ?own composition, the ingredients of tf t, h by can pay a ha: these things were never known t J y any bad effect on the soft-heaae he^t^^^^^^ ^j^^ ^^ who suck cigarettes. ewspaper, wnich h The Raw ""*ting « »« j^ j the great " Gl Of whiter bring to the sumceere; ^^^ ^^.^^^ pain. It is one of the str8D„ rhose curtains are i Bociated with our physicuweu j^ ^^ ^^^ necessa the very air, without which we ssponaibiUties whi( exUt, is heavily laden ^^^^f^J:. » the control of s ' â- * «ay that the »pprehendstheiii bring to it a re care. The hi into son •ritative messe Id outside; its c and its i of law. The pulpit know '•^er has a e I the senator t ^«le hedge in t] «« the pari But there it is the p of one thai 'o' aU acroBi 'P«»i speak; oivilization i PMe with onoe said: ' ««^pte88,a wPtoioeof i toaUth oom in f» disease. Rheumatism, bago, and, other complamts^-^^ ^j character hold revel at th«B««r j,a, year amongst human nems j^ muscles. There was ^^tl^Ue, tude alone could "^»ke life to «» new with the advent of power ,_ trating and nerve soothing re' Thel becomes a tnmg oi » ~^ cert^ the most powerful and raostoor^^^ cure is Poison's .^^ekviw^x^ equahi Nervillne for P^^f^J^^the?' l?ervilinei.beyopdcomp»r«°J^ est discovery for the rehef o P^ to the public. »™£Utles « bottle for 10 cents; large"" cants at any drug store. .^ ^^^ An Indiana t«rtfe scald' divorce claims that his wifej^, 0i f truth. as* eigbty-fo«' occasions. There are some with the teapot on fpatieat in this country. t^t «« V- ,ou can getsomethmg t» ""^torifc"" Ttogrest SoentOousnw g^ An Italian Count ° coBfi' ^OhioguJ.ifl^^f'^S theji^ with 150,000 mcasb^o ^^^pei thinks that he ^.ig';^" from an American ii" mm ^^â- "-- â- â- '-••'

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