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Show opposite door, and entered the mysterious chamber. Whilst Margaret O'Reilly was thus prying Into things which, "apparently, did not concern her, Sir Frederic Flower and Mr. Ruthven were closeted in the library together.; ;, if , "I have something of Importance to tell you, Mr. Ruthven," commenced the baronet,;5 "and which you must learn without delay; I should have told it you before, but that it is a painful subject to enter upon, and I did not expect your nephew to arive quite so soon from Rouen." . "It concerns Hamilton, then?" "It greatly concerns Carmen and no young man shall court her, with my consent, without his being informed bf it There is Insanity In her family!" - , ; .; CHAPTER XIV. t ARQARET did not t mention what she had seen to any one.; It kept' her awake for the Ruthven started with surprise. greater part: of the "Impossible!" he exclaimed; "the night; but, when the morning dawn- name of Flower is too well known" "Excuse me, Mr. Ruthven, it has ed, she felt ashamed of the great alarm nothing, to do with our side of the which, she had r family. It is through the mother's blood that iny poor niece inherits such a Ruthven had laughed at her when she fearful taint." ; had alluded tp the ghost,; and Sir Fred v "I am deeply grieved to hear this; but eric and Carmen had evidently been an- Miss Flower exhibits no sign of such a noyed. She would not risk a repetition heritage?" of the scene that had taken "She does not. I trust she never may; place at the dinner table the night before. and must not be Her still the fact brain was full of this thought as she concealed. I remains, told you borne little time descended to the breakfast-roosince tfiat I had lost my dear wife and Hamilton and Carmen were there before her, child under very painful circumstances. flirting manopen They are connected with this subject, ner.,;, Hamilton looked rather shy as and I am about to relate them to you. Margaret appeared, and1 he could not My younger brother, George, and I were help comparing her Innocent loveliness the only children of our father, and with Carmenjs flashing charms. But when he died, leaving his title to me, Pearl's attention .was all given' to her he bequeathed his wealth to us in two guardian now, and it was comical to equal portions; to go to the child or chilnote Hamilton Shore's look of dismay dren of each, or in case of either dying as sue passed him by with a careless without issue, to the child or children of nod, to place her hand with a bright the other. We both married. Lady smile in that of. Ruthven. The young F'ower was a fair English girl; but people were planning a country excur- George, who had been traveling abroad, sion as she entered," and asked her to brought home a Spanish woman as his accompany them, but she refused. She wife a proud, haughty and had not quite) arrived at the point of creature, whom nobody could get on her with but himself, and she made even faithless admirer making watching love to his nw flame. She heard Sir his life wretched with her mad jealousy Frederic ask Mr. Ruthven to join him and uncontrollable passion. My wife in the library after breakfast on busi- and she could never become friends. ness, and she was glad to think they Florence was as gentle and timid a girl would all be $afely disposed of, as she as ever lived; a harsh word frightened was desirous pf carrying out a'design her, and the manners and conversation of her own which she could not accom- of her foreign sister-in-lawere altoplish unless tljie house were clear. gether uncongenial to her nature. So, Carmen had told her that the rooms though we lived close togetherwe could next her own were occupied by Sir never be said to be intimate. Well, the Frederic Flower, but Margaret knew Spanish woman had a child this girl they were not the same into which the Carmen who was named after herself. baronet had introduced Ruthven and That was the first triumph for them, herself. She concluded, therefore, that for my wife seemed unlikely to bring they were sjtting rooms, and she me a family. .Mrs. George Flower thought that if she could summon up knew all the conditions of the will, and courage to enter them by daylight, and triumphed over her rival accordingly. examine themj for herself, she would She became twice as offensive after the lose the supernatural terror they in- birth of the child, speaking of it openly vested her with now, and be able to as the heiress of Abbotsville, and otherrealize how foolish her fancy of the wise behaving herself insolently toward night before had been. So that when my poor little wife, who drooped under Hamilton and Carmen had wandered the oppression like a broken blossom. away into the wood together, and Ruth- However, our turn came to win. ven, with a farewell smile at her, had (TO BB CONTINUED. followed Sir Frederic to the library, Margaret sought her own room, and, SMALLEST VILLAGE. waiting until the corridor seemed clear of servants, sa lied fortn upon her tour Fireplace Is Sixty Years Old and Has of Inspection. There were three doors Only Two Houses. upon the other side of the corridor be Out at the east end of Long Island, yond that which opened Into Carmen's not far from Montauk Point, where room.1 Pearl timidly tried the handle ocean steamers are to land some day, is of one after the other; but they were all situated what is said to be the smallest locked. At the! further end of the long yillage in the world, acording to the passage, bowevier, was what apeared to New York World. It consists of two be a screen1 placed across the window. stone houses about sixty years old and She advanced and peered round it. It arrogates to itself the name of Fireconcealed nothing more than a baize-doo- r. place. One of the old houses has been .As she sltood there, however, the occupied ever since it was built by two sound of an approaching footstep made generations of an old Long Island famher start, and, in her fear and dismay ily, who have dwelt there contented at being discovered, she opened a door with their quiet life, satisfied if they It was got their mail and groceries from the just behind her and dartedshein.could see Point once or twice a week. This little a servant's bedroom, but nothing but what occurred in front of- village became known as Fireplace in a her. Some one pushed open the baize- curious way. It is now over 200 years door, and stood with it ajar, while he since Gardiner's island was bought fumbled with a jangling bunch of keys; from the Indians by the Gardiner a voice behind him said, "Never mind family for a ridiculously low price. The the keys; you won't be long." and his descendants, lived there "Not five' minutes," was the answer; buyer for many years, coming to the main"and you'll be here?" land to do their shopping or to attend "Of course l shall," said the other balls and parties In the near-b- y vilvoice, which was evidently that of a lages. "When they came over to Long :'' V' woman. island to make any stay their servant in the door, took the boat back to Gardiner's Island were left . Then the keys ',i and the man came out into the corridor. until it should be needed.' Pearl recognized him at once as the In the absence of any better means person whom Carmen had called "Mr. of communication the family when they Brown" In the days gone by, but the wished to return home were forced to woman, who was stout and elderly, she fall back on the rather primitive cushad never seen! before. She longed to tom of lighting a fire to attract the atescape from her hiding place, but afterf tention of the servants. The place the man had walked away the servant where this fire was j always built was as at the baize-dokept her position opposite the homestead on directly wer4 friend a out for she looking though Gardiner's island. It was admirably to speak to. Atjlast one appeared in the situated and years afterward became person of Mrs. Webb who emerged the site of these two old houses. In from a sleepingjchamber with her arms' casting about for a name for their little full of clean linen. the owners of the houses natur"Good" morning, Mrs. Bryant!" she village ally hit upon that of Fireplace. ' exclaimed. "All quiet "Particularly so," replied theaother; The Cnre for Paralysis. "which is a mercy, as we've had night The liveliest passenger on board the ;i: ; : of it" T steamship City of Pekin was Humphrey ! Have you had be mu3t It trying "Ah, '" Kendrick of Los Angeles. He had just your breakfast yet?" returned from Japan, a country that he "Not I. I'm only Just at liberty. Mr. loves because a few years ago it comBrown's' gone down to his, and not paralysis. pletely cured him offound Vhe needs it.". that he had Kendrick When a have room and over to he" determined limbs my "Step lost control of his f all ready." cup of tea; it's to spend all the money he had to get I what but know "Well, I don't It "was easy enough to tell what on the out- relief. the can iurn I key mightn't; had brought the paralysis upon him, cam'e soon after he i. side." for the first stroke on And horseback. The had a bad tumble "To be sure. All's safe enough. a no one can't expect you to work fasting animal fell in such way as to catch for hours; besides, it won't take you Kendrick squarely beneath it, severely spine. wrenching and spraining hiswas half d minute." much he as that found Kendrick "All right," replied Mrs. Bryant, him led and this weather she turned the key in the lock and left better in hotHawaiian was He Islands. prepara- to go to the It on the outside of the door, was hot of her friend. so much better there when it warmtory to accepting the offer to a still to go concluded he As Pearl watched the two women disap- that Somebody told him that the er of the end place. pear together at the further coast of Japan in summer was came coridor.- a desperate resolution what south the place. Into her mind to see for herself For many months during the hottest contained. roomr locked, the mystery once or of hot summers Kendrick engaged in corridor the She glanced don most unique attempt to regain his was a Mrs. sure Bryant a time he would twice, to make health. For days at to the skin in the not yet returning, and then, witha hld ng lie positively stripped left she impulsel Chronicled Francisco sudden of the hot sand. San lock the in the turned key place j : !: 1 9 .yrr.R -- - XIII.-fCdxTiN- 'fflSi UED.i How can they little goose. Unless vou tell "take my Come them with your arm, and let us But tell me, first, Is "'together. 3eor not?" '''she answered in a very low at her for a moment looked he said: S they were met by Carmen., think is here, Margar- - do you Guess." , and led her of threshold At the tie bouse. rary ; in sij you, Pearl!" We 13 triumphantly her waving in e uew ad to war a had fallen at nis Hamilton Shore could hardly have than he did more astonished II perceived his' uncle and Mar- ha, O'Reilly. But he soon recovered 11 With his natural coomess ne 2 1 thunder-bo- lt fi -- since Ruthven had licaed hi3 visit to Abbotsville, he "approve of all he had done be- -t It; so, with a bold air, he profthat, oded band to his uncle, who his re-- ?i u Tery indifferently. To greet 'jret was a more difficult matter, Frederic was not slow to no-- 4 tie awkwardness with which it was i Sir : .xrp listed. - raea, however, took complete pos--a- of her admirer, and saved Mar- niEuch annoyance; btit between the Ruthven's burning glances the Hamilton's . . ione3, il-es-of half-avert- I 4 ed j cMId hardly knew wnicn way to Wki thankful for the first ex-I- s ta ran upstairs and hide her blush-- f decks. But she could not go to was patiently for up-- :i to Carmen's eulo-z- 3 ca Hamilton's appearance, and jpered compliments and protesta- all of which she repeated 1' her friend's benefit; and not :J she had left her i had .nret leisure But to think. ;rfcer thoughts came in upon pouring Htiga! It was all too wonderful to that whilst she had been beslag the loss of Hamilton's pink t site face and curly hair, her guar- A whom she had never dared to .i of except as a being of superior :j to herself, should have loved her fJnnted to make her his wife. She She listened of an hour jl ) 1 - T8 f f (reas wife; the in 3 life-compan- of ion cleverest and the ;-t-t best-know- n The idea was too stu England! im 'for the girlish brain. - She felt f 2 she couldn't comprehend it iathe four walls of her bedroom, tender romance impelled her to j the I1" '- bench where Ruthven had truth to her, over and try to realize it this, marvelous -' 'l - night, though dark, was 3?; there was no need' to do more 1 throw a shawl about her head, for The to i perfect seek the Monk's .Walk safety. Iccad the seat where they had f ather, and threw herself upon it j air of the most perfect con- -; How strange and gloomy; the, 'Uocked at : . midnight! '", , i garet turned and gazed at' the ib!e old The pile before her. bai seemed wrapped in dark- u sis left it; but now she saw, .that part of it that .surprise, ; "ch joined the sleeping apart--- J Carmen, and which her friend ' i . i3 . I ' t m, in-a- ri boy-and-g- irl V Vani" said Margaret, who had no ! Hamilton Shore had been invited "them at Abbotsville. . Rathven's nephew are you not JJfced! And here he is!" continued f ; Sir Frederic was ,t brllIiantly that the blinds What transparencies. baronet be doing at that time 10 render such, an illumina- . . saiary? Marparpf Mt watch' rJterious. chamber in fasci- occupied oy , . high-temper- f, rf It moved up and ;;":;zi the blind for a few -- i , fjf, mln--.casl- y, then It commenced to at ?; Uat 11 ok hold of its folding them- out, danced - cp and down,; wagging Its the while. A second .tlcally -- it of a man approached the hands upon It, which It 3entf shaklnS off the touch Tile sec""d figure, how-CQ- e V.I".' to persevere until the violent, and, turning, the two ij"11 him,aad and fell upon each CiIeapei for some minutes, ccJ a sudden, the light was :r;!v the window was wrapped V " 3, and the figures disap- " rj' had watched the scene fascination, hardly y osiievea it to De, oe-- ? , invested with a sense of i.r!:l "ing out, '"The '.ghost! 3' though there was none the quickly back to " ;:a"i into her bed. ' ;;,;53 ?raa Progress of the bknplou 'lunnel. FINE HOSPITAL. Built for the Use of Santa Fe Railroad Employes. In a few days the largest and mosi complete railway hospital in the Wesl will be formally opened at Topeka, Kansas. The structure is the finest in what Is everywhere acknowledged ag the best hospital system of any railroad in the United States, and it wiD be exclusively used by injured and sick employes of the Santa Fe system. The building has just been completed at a cost of $125,000. The lower half Is biiilt of Colorado sandstone and the upper of red pressed , brick It is located in a quiet portion of Topeka and is surrounded by spacious grounds. Its seventy two rooms are furnished with all modern conveniences and will be heated and ventilated by the system. An electric system will automatically control and regulate the heat of the wards, thus insuring an even temperature and a constant change of air in the severest weather. In the main structure the and the rooms, dispensary operating the offices of the association and of the chief surgeons and assistants, while the wards occupy the rear wings. The dispensary is a complete drug store, without the Kansas feature, and is in charge of a registered pharmacist, who will fillthe prescriptions given to the employes by the company's physicians. The hospital is in charge of the Santa Fe Hospital association, which was chartered under the laws of Kansas in 1891. Its object is to provide medical and surgical treatment and care for the injured and sick employes of the road. Its board of trustees consists of the general manager, general solicitor and chief surgeon of the road ind two employes of the company. At, present the association Is operating a small hospital at Ottawa, Kansas, and larger ones at La Junta and Las Vegas, which will all be continued. Every employe of the company is assessed monthly for the maintenance bf the association. Those earning $30 or less contribute 25 cents each month; between $30 and $60, 35 cents; between $60 and $100, 50 cents; over $100, $1 a month. From these small assessments has been built up a handsome fund, out of which the present building was paid for, and which will continue a system of service which is at once economical and highly beneficial to the em--, r ployes. . -- hot-bla- st are-foun- d !'iJas. Gi.-O0- Sem bright, Mifflinburg, Pa., Dec. O 11, 1S35T ''That millionaire yonder has cheated da?ghteJ?"WOUldn,t he!Iet T)U marr. mi out of a fortune." . "Worse than that he never had a LU daug-h- - All Fits -- FITS. freeby rPr. Kline's Ore IServe No Fits Restorer.stopped aftf the lirst day's Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial bottle free to It cases. beuUto ir. KUne,93i Arch ttt.,l'ial.,l u. Sebastapol "Was Not Impregnaole, For It was taken by assault, but a physiquea built up, a constitution fortified by Hostet-ter'Stomach Bitterst, may bid defiance to lothe assaults of malarious disease, even in macalities where it is mDst prevalent and lignant. Emigrants to the sections of the West should bear this In mind, and start with a supply. The Bitters promptly subdues dyspepsia, rheumatic and kidney complaints, nervousness, constipation- and ague-breedi- Catchou an artistic home?" are imnsj eo low t pictures Ue dWn n thQ oot to look Plso's Cure for Consumption is thft'onli cough medicine used in mv hons- -I c a - . 3lr. "es;VS her t0 The agreement between Italy and Switzerland regarding the construction of the Sip-plo- n tunnel has been signed by their official The Italian government representatives. gave the company a concession for ninety-nin- e years, and an annual subvention of lire $13,000). The Italian cities, which have material Interests In the building of the line, have guaranteed- a subscription of lire. The new railroad is mainly built to relieve the Gotthard railroad of part of the traffic, which has become so Immense that it Is impossible to attend to It properly. The new road will bo completed Inside of five years. ; I brought Maud roses beautiful to see With dollars I'd been for an age; And oh! that evening saving bitter grief to me She flung them to a tenor on the st&jfs. If the Baby Is Cutting Teeth. Be sure and use that old and remedy, ng well-trie- d "Vixslow's Soothing Svevp for Children TeetMn. - "Isn't Scribbs a ; biliousness. Miss Alfalfa Who's dead, . ma? Mrs. Alfalfa No one as I knows on. What makes Miss Alfalfa--P- a ye think some one .. Is brushln' his., hat., A. '..in "Hack-writer- ? earn Hi m I, j of " fare." street-ca- r v "Hanson's SXagrio Corn Salve. AAk ? t hack-writer?- Not much; he doesn't evea Warranted to cure or money refunded, druggist f.or it. Price 15 cents. in yxs Creek." "History Cripple These are not dreary days ah, no The most wonderful gold mining camp In the That slander will not do; world. Fully illustrated; the only authentic gay when $15 coats book of the kind. To Introduce our big Are all marked down to 2. illustrated weekly family paper we will send a copy of the above book free to all The more ou- - ush Parker's Ginger Tonlo who send us 25c (postage) for our paper 3 the more good qualities are revealed in dispellmonths trial. All the latest mining news. Ad- ing colds. ItsIndigestion, pain and every kind of dress, Illustrated Weekly, Denver, Colo. weakness, , "James, here's a letter from Cousin Julia j A man thinks less of gossipers ' whenever his wife returns from-aafternoon tea and she's had a son drowned." "What did she have him drowned for?" tells him all about it. would often be a ileasare Throat Troubles.' To allay the irritation were Walking for thecoma. These nests are easily not it Bronuse "Brown's that Induces coughing removed with Hixidercorns. 15o at drucririBU. chial Troches." A simple and safe remedy. "How could you tell Marie that she Is a Look before you leap, girls. It Is not al- finished player?1' "Well, one has to say something; I meant ways safe to take the first man you come to. , that she Is finishbd when she gets through." 56-colu- , ' n : . Xo MASTER Q 44 J AGUES Master ? Cure.'' is to OVERPOWER and SUBDUE. ';.';. Is the master , .' '!: cure for fS - ., ,.;'.;. .:Xvr-- Jk - U O I k rfilNOi is --3 j w ; j 1 ; : :: or : to-day- ?"; - ... Hot-Weath- Q'Hhe blind upon the opposite clad In a long garment ed a er ' :. : H ' i be-befo- re :". ,,H. GROW RICH, EVERY FARMER. The editor thinks it to be the wish of ftverybody to grow rich, not for the sake of the money, but for the good that can be done with the money. Now, there are three new cereals recently created that will make money for the farmer. One is Silver King Barley, the most wonderful creation of the age, yielding 90, 100 to 116 bu. per acre in 1895, and there are thousands of farmers who believe they can grow 150 bu. per acre therefrom in 1896. Then there is Silver Mine Oats, yielding in 1895 209 bu. per acre. Every farmer who tested it, believes 250 bu. possible. Then there is Golden Triumph Corn, which produced over 200 bu. per acre, and 250 Jbu. is surely possible. And potatoes, there is Salzer's Earliest, which was fit for table in 28 days In 1895, yielding tremendously, while the Champion of the World, tested in a thousand different places in 1895, yielded from 8 to 1,600 bu. per acre. Now,! In' Salzer's new catalogue there Is a wonderful arrayal of new varieties of wheat, oats, barley, rye, potatoes, grasses, clovers and forage plants, and the editor believes that it would pay to get this every farmer a thousand-fol-d seeds. before buying catalogue If you will cut this oat and send It with 10 cents postage to the John A. EJalzer "Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., you will receive, free, 10 grain and grass samples, including above and their mammoth catalogue. Catalogue alone, w.n. 5 cents nostage. L I The Personal Side Of George Washington Not the General nor President, but the lover, the man, the husband and neighbor. Three of such articles by General A. W. Greely, the famous Arctic explorer, will shortly beginin the ; LADIES' HOME JOURNAL OVER 700,006 COPIES SOLD Ten Cents on All Wl AIVTFFO , ; t - . t One Dollar s. a Year Agents to look after renewals and new subscribers. Profitable employment offered. The Curtis Publishing Company , Philadelphia v Henry M. Stanley, in an article on the "Development of Africa," which is to appear in the February Century, recalls the fact that troubles with the Boers in Southern Africa, first induced David Livingstone to travel to the north, and so led the way to the openLivinging of Equatorial Africa. stone, who was a missionary at Kolo-benaccused his Boer neighbors of cruelty to the natives. They resented his Interference, and threatened to drive him from the country. He published their misdeeds in the Cape newspapers, and his house was burned in revenge. This led to his leaving Southern Africa and going to a region where he could follow in peace his vocation as a missionary, unmolested by the g, COPYRIGHT, 1899, BY THE It 9 n "Tis pure CURTI8 PUBLISHING COMPANY Sum Be 25 Cocoa y I SV I 5i so-call- and not made 1 by Mi ed chemicals. U r fx u Dutch Process?9 Walter Baker & Co?s Break fast Cocoa is absolutely pure no the WALTER BAKER & CO., Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. 1 3 Boer- - farmers. Gigantic Bridge Project. A gigantic undertaking, the bridging over of Polks Strait, separating the Island of Ceylon from! the mainland of India, is seriously The Ceylon government. narrowproposed by the e miles broad at its strait is forty-onest point, double the width of the English Channel, but it is very shallow, in many The islands,: reefs places only sixInfeet' deep. been it have and channels recently sur , . over veyed,e and the cost of works, extending Chansixty-onmilesi, including the Pambam nel, and the Adams, Bridge Reef, is estimatbe ed '.at 28,000,000 rupees. The ends will Coconnected by 145 miles of railroad, with one lombo, the great harbor of Ceylon, on the Maside,, and by ninety miles of road, with Indian railroad dura, the nearest point of thenarrow on the other. 'If gauge is system, 1 sed thia can be done for 11,000,000 rupees r jore. nUnnAn. J"MnliItltidl . halt-dye!- " . fUtt - WE PAY $400 IN COLD PRIZES On Oats, Barley and Corn!- - The biggest yield on Silver Mine (Nameless Beanty) Oats In was ZU7 bnsnels; tn next jeuo per acre, x u can oeai tnas in lenotnainifawi unr new tested Barley, Oats, Corn and Potatoes will revolntionise fur rung-- ! 'We are the larreat hi editor of the Rural JNew rrowers of farm seeds in the world! Our seeds produce Yorker says8a1ser's Kxrlj Wisoonsin Potato yielded for ins 739 bushels per acre.. If an early sort yields 736 bushels, what will a late do? Potatoes only 1J50 per barrel. u The Ingenious King. Apropos of the queen's devotion to her husband, a little anecdote is told whichof I believe to be perfectly true. The locks as King black formerly Humbert, be it told, were as a raven's wing, and the pnde of his suddenly charming consort's heart. andAlmost the queenlike these locks turned white, the fond wife she is, quite fretted over the fact. A certain little delicacy of feeling prevented her from referring to the matter with her husband. So, without saying a word, she purchased a bottle of black hair dye, and one morning placed it on the king's dressing; table. The day wore on, andIving Humbert aphis own peared at luncheon, toas"theusual, withsecret diswhite hair, greatly, queen's a owned the Now. queeu per appointment. as snow, and the dos:. iu a little doj,, as the afternoon wore on, failed to come, as usual, to his nils trews' side.. What was her the door opened and he bound.surprise when ed iu with a coat as black as ink. The kinp "You see," he followed, smiling broadly. said, "the use to which 1 Lave put the reFrom that day Queen Margherita presigned' herself to the fact that her lord ferred to leave his locks to nature's own du oration.--Th- e Woman at Home. dHUU I JUY1 madows, producing tremendous hajr yields ( 4 to 6 tons Fine, lnxnriant pMtnrea and rich per cre), ura now md poasiblo on Yery goil, in eTery clime, njreowinc; our Extra Grass and Clovnr Mixture. xouwon need to wait a lifetime for a food start of crass, for liave grasses which- if sown in April, will prodnoe a rousing crop in July. Pamphlet on Grass Culture, etc., 2 cents postage. ! j News-stand- EARLIEST VEGETABLES IN THE WORLD Earliest Vegetables, Splendid sorts, line yields. Onion Seed only 90o. per lb. S5 pk Flower Seeds, 25c JCrerythlnr at hard times prioes. Wholesale Il OO, postpaid. 10 pkgs. Market Gardener's List, 4e. postage. Plaase Cut the Following Out and Send It cents It stamps and get our hig catalogue and sample of the Pumpkin Yellow W. N. Watermelon sensation! Catalogue alows, 6a. pottage. WiUb.12 aoes naif tee woria's it Iw reduced the cost of becaasesj. 'siS wind power to l.'O what it was. It has many branch Mrs a winammb Off. GUM'S - IMPROVED and repairs booses, and suppliescaoits goods and does famish a It at your door. article for toss money than better ,4. - A"""""""7 others. It makes PampiDg andl C, toeared. Steel, OalYantzd-afte- r rutin completloa WindmlH . and ITxed Hteel Towers, Steel joaxz flaw " Veed Cutters and Peed Frames, steel T 't Grinders. On application It will name one of these articles that it will furnish until t,i January 1st at 13ofthe usual price. It also makes ranks and Pumps all kind. Send for catalogue, factory! 12th, Rockwell and FUiaore Streets. Chicago . 4 . irsi IPfULlL Onu Pill Tor a - a vnrmie.. is necessary for Amnvrnmt of the bowels nach tday be iace ht system health. Theae pilU supply trie Headache. bnghta They cureion pyestnnd clear the Oomplei better inan met ihiy neither pripe nor J 'HX f . wmm, ?V. |