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Show i TUB TIMES Br Tat Tun M. Pcst-isam- rosi-Asr- ; . , PlhhMk f dltnr auil V tTTAIL COALVILLE, '" facie Sam tatcd at John ia right In filing Hull a taking wa. irri- - -- s. didn't h.ttri under the balcony that pee.Umt a count of fifty vyould have doubtless covered all n the bou If was pretty near the t ys of the war, FOR and ttie people must have been very GOOD SHORT STORIES poor. Fhat would account for the ab- ""VANISHING HEROES. sew, of the townspeople, an 1 as for the j t profs they hadn't been U.ri lung Our Plar lu It. to be settle d, llnd the flat was niUieiiWir ( I enough Batter Mm Rrlternt 'Ilia )iautfig still on arid pci imps the men luldn't - v t i. it of have (amp. and there " of Song Hillutood a U been no re erit pay-dare likely and Blue oil tiny they dl in t have a Ay money; hut what- AT KijFVfd os'VS. vlNff i,(Mi td a ilieie, our little burirh er I'nOCK-iSlo.N'j doxn people made the only solid pah h nn-.. m I is e tsmwe. The- - Sbovifws aiety. a dag ma al and most of It was poor, but it street. f e to us, aci .deeply inu resting ahheaw he, w'aS very1 good There AfTfSSe lute and the In particular tlmt struck us all An old chief marshal man with u tig white beard end tarrygreet out from ing a spade tottered With -- Where is the wings, and came slowly stage tne down our place to- carrying the spade ahead of him an rin f ? trtrf nan might carry aranc; a n'I ,,MT And the marshal it a such Coming down to the footlooked down on lights he sang in a deep.buss voice, a song about a gravedigger. the veterans old. For ail- - I And said, though they numbered but know the song is a famous on, but 1 had never heard it before, and have nine, "There ia but one plate for the lerans never heard it since. The singer had a sterling voice, and he sang the Song to grace, well Indeed. I can give you a verse of And that lithe right of the litre Errhana-llil- a. verse may re right, it "But our numbets are few, the veteran or it may be that as I give it to you R- -I mud up of lines front Various verses said, "And we wear no feathers or lio". but this Is It as I remember JC And the people may sa, " vvhen tiny Mp 'Nar to the grave that was newly us ahead, made, " That we the proc salon disgrace the sexton old on bis and h)i said, shat But the chief mat worn spade. A relic of bygone days was h. grew dim. As he looked uin that seut.l numnd bis !o hs were white as tin btr nine, ing (tea. veterans for the And these word came from hi "There Is hut one place to grace. thin: 'I gatiscr tbcin In, 1 gather thm in And that Is the right of the line "How well lie did sing it And we all And I said, s I saw them march braveeat Tdtontly to thwendf and then when ly that day, he hi to off we all called for and torn, more. panHe totterback With their Hag, shot-riveand he sang It fame, hare shall "When the Jast of that hand over again, three or four times, till we , passed as ay, could reasonably ciill for It no more. The nation hath1 need to mourn Then the show w$nt on, and we enjoyed rode And I blessed that (hlef, a he It all and stayed to the end, but the one that day. tiling thftt we remembered, and that ha Ahead of the honored nine, sunk to one of the party, at ait, 'ever Whff have hut one place in our nation since, was this, heard amid strange surto grace, a and at when Death time roundings And that is the right of the line, yas very active: I gather them in, I gather tl cm in. " Why ll Has tvUt. ' Col, Woodworth told some good Bla and Gray. stories about tlen. Butler, He said that The and war record of Major pedigree 1SM Butler himself told him as iate as Lenwick Perangton was never unknown that he never knew the real reason why to any person five minutes after being he was deprived of his military com- Introduced. The way of It would be mand by Gen, Grant, It was only a few that the major generally explained that got the facts he was not really entitled to be called years ago that Woodworth Major from Grants brother-in-law- . major because be had been merely adLent who was the staff officer rent jutant of the Twenty-thir- d Vhglnla He relief. Butler order for with the He had seen, plenty of ae- - j openly Infantry, said that while no reason and old under hero the tlon, however, given at the time, Butler was actually A, Jubal (Jen. scholarly gentleman," was not a gradudisplaced because be he alwaya told an anecThen Early. r notap-peawould ate of West Point. This dote of general. With this beginon the face of It to be a sufficient ning youthewould know 1ji five minutes cause; but Grant explained It to Dent that the niajor was a!yV." F. V.; that one day In the course of a confidential he came of Rcotch-Iris- h ancestry; had interview, been In business in Baltimore, but lost If," said he,I were to send Butler his wife and had taken to a s pet Itlc order to do something with drinkcharming and his money and fcli army, he might obey and he might was now squanderedbut stranded, every Inch a nut too and able was original not. He soldier and a gentleman. Thomas O. that belief the Into himself to reason Speedy was quite another sort. He was might have given different InstrucItions very brisk; wore chop whiskers, was alof the knew he If I knew all that ways making large sums of money, but almost local situation. He. therefore, tastes d own that he unfortunately his always bd a plan of hi mine or any- caused him to spend rnor.e that he made, thought was better than and he was always poor. At least that body else'; so that I eouhl never tU wa his explanation. He despised titles, Just what he would do or where he but everyone w ho knew him knew that would be at a gtvn time. Of course he had been a war telegrapher at a that was fatal to any systematic cam- tender age. Ills patriotic ardor had a with him to had I and replace paign caused him to carry a musket In a hunWest Pointer whose first lesson In war dred battles and sktrmlRhes with the la the necessity of prompt obedience to Army of the Potomac. The major nd was Butler the commanding general. Mr. Speedy were both book agent.,. They too brilliant to be reliable,5, worked about one hour each day and their battles over the rest of the fought Beadt withstood a Bela time. When they met the first time and bravest It has after happened that the each unfolded his story to the other, men escape In the hour of peril. I shall each other'a bosoms and fell never forget a bright morning In June, they It upon was such an affecting reunion wept 1MJ, We were in the valley of Virginia. of the blue and the gray that spectators The sun had sunk the night before look scene Uo": T!'n a '!? his pn last with glance tngdowu id the same that of strife, lie cose again in beauty, The battles, and as one fought up a rem- brought preshis eastern sky-w- as gtowlngwith lniscenee the other would remember the ence. The slumbering world awoke. The circumstance, and they discovered with leaves were dripping wet with pearly mutual Joy and Interest that they had field theIn blossomed clover dew, The scene engaged in even the same skirmishes. we marched. The which through Mr. Speed related how he had One was one of peace pn arth. But the de- seen day a rebel adjutant carry a wounded saw n dow on it. I came mon of strife through a burning brush brake Braver men soldier the coiumnadvanclng at Wilderness. "I drew a bead on never facVd death. FlrsLa jtlngle Jlfls htmthe'but was too did not shc-oshot Was heard; another and yet an- brave a man! declared Mr. He "He other. The whole forest, into which the was the bravest man I everSpeedy. saw! The troops had entered, was on fire. The major had listened with breathless incannon thundered forth it voice. Men terest. He folded Mr. Speedy in his were falling by the score. arms and wept. "I was that rebel adOne figure I distinctly saw in advance. he said. Then another day the He rode a chestnut colored horse. The jutant," told of how he thrust a Union solhorse wa a warrior as well as the rider. major back over the parapet at the night I admired the rider in tTme of peace dier attack on Petersburg, When he was never I had before friend. was He my about to give the soldier a second sabre seen him In battle. The leaves of the stroke to finish him the prostrate soldier as hi over down shoulders trers rolled as his last words, The cried, weakly, Ten though touched by a heavy frost.' Union forever!" thousand bullets cut the branches snd "I held my sword," said the major. leaves from the tree about his head. That soldier's notifiratrlotlsm made The rider wa calm, and quietly led on me proud of being an American. I hi troops. Many fell to rise no more tin God's trumpet call them forth. But still passed on with tears In my eyes." Mr, Speedy had listened with grimaces the rider held hi place. He 'seemed to In clad In Invisible armor, , Last year of emotion. At last I have found you, some of us who had been In that battle noble adjutant and spotless cavalier, met together. What strange, questions he cried, "I was that soldier!' And so on. were asked! I asked him how It came one day the major and Mr, Speedy that le escaped death In the place he j fellButout while talking politics. They was, and he replied: "A soldier Is never so safe as when he grew heated and furious, "You are a narrow-mindePuritan la at the front in the Hue of duty!" Another , asked: "Oh, Gen. Ketfer, blcot," shrieked the major, You are worse." retorted Mr. Speedy, what became of the sorrel horse?" The general answered him minutely, "You 1 tell lies. I have simply led-yodid not serve in the army of the telling of the horses life, I liked that on, soldier. He cared for hi beauts as well Potomac. I wa with the army of the as men, W. T. Meloy, Ik L., In the Tennessee! "You are a liar yourself!" United Presbyterian. yelled the major. "It la I who led you OB to tell - - A your outrageous Hew I was not In the , Mrmmry ml th Theater. of Virginia. 1 served ia Texan!" - "Once In a captured city," said ha old army 'Sutler's clerk." soldier to a New Tf .ykv Funtnwk--4 ' "Bounty jumicr!" : went to the theater. It was a small city Major Fenwick Perangton andMr. but a big theater, Not Just a hall. Speedy were never reconciled balcony and boxes and scer.jry and foot- Thomas major explained con- -, lights. It was dimly lighted, but it had after that. The all the fascination or th? theater about fidentiy that he had really served In Itr-tfascinatton that every theater the army of the Virginia tll4 had md has, bght or dim, filled or empty; snd his statements simply to prove Mr. this theater was donhly fascinating to Speedy altar. Mr. Speedy made a simus because It was the first one we had ilar confidential explanation. Somehow tree In years. There wasnt a turn everyone smiled at their war stories In the gallery nor a supporting pillar; thereafter and If they did not die of not a curve In the front of the boxes alcoholism they nKtst have died of broknor a touch In the drapery of them that en hearts. did not fix our attention; and not a gas Origin of Ora Storms. . jet flashing or flickering above the line of footlights that did not fill us with the Capt. W J, Wharton writes that ocean storm originate delight of the theater The home wa chiefly in reslim, very slim. We had seats In th gions where warm and cold current mret. One of these werebalcony 'because they cheaper. region, u COuth of From where we were w could count Newfoundland, where the gulf stream meet the seventeen. Noi Another is including were some In the orchestral doubt th tIi, mipic and AnisreSureU mret FOR OLD VETERANS. c i 1 - Man may want little l.r hit he take a qu-- r way of ffeif sSssaos jcr.m tt-- rf Mow. prmjcg The xpreidiin, "by the beard ttf the prophet," has been revised In Nibrasko to "by the beard of the legislator." A Michigan cot respondent ha' found man who la flvlng without Grain, and actually publtHhes his dtscovery as a pine of nr we. time-honor- ed Inkhort, the bdy kbtg of Fpaln doesn't tar to put cm Ore gloves with Facie Pam Just yet nor. for that matter, for several year to tome. r revolution Cntur'WtltTTnrgir-nvp.habit till It Is annexed to the United Plates, and there ia no absolute certainty that It will pet over it then. -- the- Chicago has an alderman who rt-- ji Ices in the name of "Hlnky llnV of Her la a rhance for Hrother the New York Sun to spread himself. Ina an imThe reported appearance-o- f ea serpent In a Florida rivtr indicates that the failure of the orange crop has driven the Floridians to drink. mense Upon the meeting of eongresa each member will find on Ills desk m button, a pressure upon 'which will be promptly answered by a page. Oscar Wilde resemble Emerson In al- ways having pencil and paper handy to Jot down bis best thoughts. Hut the resemblance goes nil to smash when he begins to w rite, Advertising I the bait that attracts customers. Your treatment of them tBitWi That holds thent. Tour halt ma? be all right, but If your line Is rotten the you lose fish. The trouble with a good many states- men in the leading nations of the earth is that they think patriotism consists of playing a bunco game and following it up with a Jingo bluff, There t datigerihat the heretofore meek and lowly potato will become puffed up with pride and hauteur owing to the importance being given it from a humanitarian standpoint. It I proposed to name a new street In New Totk city Parkhurst avenue, even if U does break the rule that honors of this sort shall be conferred only . upon people who are dead. It is well a man should have a mind of Ms own. But when be has three wills, there's sure to be trouble. That' why the Frisco lawyers are nailing In uch Fair weather Just at present. x- lt hi Flung Chang will only come to this country to induce the Chinese laundry men to stop their war on American - collars and cuffs, he will receive the thanks of a long suffering community. T President Clark of the New fork. New dlaven & Hartford railroad, testifies to the fact that business .la improving Factories throughout New England. and tradesmen are doing Increased bust ness. It was a great mistake of the late Senator Fair to die before carrying out his matrimonial contraejt- - with Miss Phoebe Cousins. Not many men have a chance la marry agcutttneMissouil " colonel. Boston ia to put on two express trains to Halifax each day, making the Jqur- hours. It ney in less than twenty-fou- r is by Itttie business arrangemcntsTIke this that Canada is getting a foretaste of annexation, f - But, after all, the great question cernlng the young woman who has Just been admitted to the New Turk bar is as to whether she will insist on wearing her theater hat while engaged in the trial of cases ,r Various speakers at the Sunset club in Chicago the other "night tried to answer the question, "What will the com lug woman be?" but none of them got e violate no confidence In It right,--Tsaying that she will be a daisy. The statue of Oliver Cromwell to be erected In London will be paid for by. the government tf the dominant party in the house of commons carry through their plan. This is magnanimous con-- si iretng what old Noil did when he had an undesirable parliament on his hands. V - - n, f aSAjk Tllsmari V bhyri'dan-say- A Jluil prince will live to be ninety I tut should refrain ftom acting like sUty. - j The man who shuts oft the advertising solicitor by saying that bla good are the test advertisement may tneayj well, but he makes a serious error, ostyly all the gold that has been taken from the California mine since IMS would be there yet were it not" for the fact that the newspapers made known the discoveries. An unmarried woman In Chicago has rent In a bid fur cleaning the streets of the Nineteenth ward of that and as she 1 a large property ownercity, and her bid is low she will probably get the cum tract. The ward named is full of teneT meats where typhoid fever lurks. The - bidden has studied- the g -- Systems lnGIasgow and Manchester. ang believes that she can perforin a public service by introducing new ideas. street-cleanin- - Experiments can ure aald to. show that a profit on wheat "farmers make at seventy cents a It to hogs. Bakers profit on If at fifty feeding tt to men, hasn't anything to question. bushel by feeding can also make a tints t? Busnel by but wnhap that do with U;e bog - The Exposition of Industries and Fine Arts to open in the city of Mexico In April of next year will be held on ground embracing some too acres. --It will be a fine opportunity for the manufacturers of the United States to make thfir products better known to th pro-Fi- e of Mexico. . . y, pSXLiP-rtif- ihk wa-eu- -- 1 .l n I w-- a -- high-tone- -- d u -- h fr -- -- -- reLllc-cTfn- CURIOUS BURIAL CUSTOMS. always had a poor My little girl given her Hood's Sarsapaappetite. I La rilla, andfjafe I have given It to her she had a tfood sppeti'e and she looks weH I sufferer-wit- h headlche aud Jjprfe been a great Hood Sorsapa- taken I hate Il0c8l rheumatism. built health the bodily up. now well and have gained in japaiillx Is the only true blood wrnfier rilla. I am strength. My budumd was very ls and a'l Sromlnentlv in the public taa dsvst i.42(sSi,.bJ..j;tv,e t-- n llood -, medicine to take in the ipriuJt will Sarsaparilla od he Ixgan to pn, sad now he has got so be works every d.iv." Mrs. case of in weakness, wonderfully help S Boston, nervousness and 11 diseases caused by im- Axkib Dcxlaf, 3x5 E. 4th Ft , because Hood's, Get Mass. only pure blood. Remember F'' ic-f- e we te .orth Srin&rlcan In linn and ChPr'se than Fjptnh or ripanlhh, they have .LP1 of them W. after a man ha been dead a year or so. to tkc nphis bot)es,and Ihrovy all, t S pt the Viunr'loto a gr-- u pit flu in the floor of the chapel and grated o'-- r The Skull they put Into a qurer little box with a steeple on It, that look like one of those bird bouses you fee pen-beup among the hranAh , tii f.niq rr 'u:?' y, .T"fo . hriir fiopt of the Kmng outZiI atourid the bare little chapel are shelve from Jlooy pg veiling with these little houi neatly arranged nlde by side, the oi v.upant of each staring fixedly through hi little front door at It nclghtxtr If the skull crurrblci, the dud i shaken Into a little pit. and sl-- to-da- c- x-- foods Sarsaparilla 8stheOnly cirrt-Pdi'jii- eye-sock- True Blood Purifier Bears Kobbing th Farmers. Story of th Frlnceot of Wales Three bears belonging to a band of The following pretty story is told of th STrl neessof AY ales," to TH ustrateh er pant They Jive a o.ualnt custom in knowledge of housewifely duties; The ern part of this county, and great exthis .same queer country on Atl Hatnl princes visited an old protege of her, citement prevails among the farmers, A great many of the relative Day considerable damage ms as last living in one of the cottages at live at a and jm have nu timj - The good dame was knitting done bynight the bears entering barnyards to (unie and s.iy a prayer over the s stocking, and the princess took it and feasting on pigs, poultry, etc The Mavt, or e ure ihournVh and find out of her hand, saying: "Voa cant bears, it seems, got unruly and the kneeling oil He d.enji chilly gioumlJ4o the heel a fast as I can." And she Italians could do noth ing with them, rot conducive ti (ornl.at, Mo they hire sat and chatted with the old lady, the result being their escape They a small lin tni o much us a quarter thn nattiest heel possible. It are said to be in the' Lowry woods of an houi oi to to muc thel piavets knitting is needless to say that sacred stocking andusky (0.1 Dispatch. f n them In (on (im nee, all over the is treasured in a drawer with the Hanson's Maglo Corn Salve. n i siiml1 ((. etrry you boys devoutly needles just as the princess left them. Ak yoas Warrantee 10 car or piimey rvfuoiri s Imie little to into the The story is all right enough- in its dregxit tor ik Pries W ceuu. 'tigging tloli omi eepeftHtig the prayers m a way, hut the pessimist would he inLeo XUlTis the two hundred anl f ftybuslie esllke manner (hit mas; give the clined to beliete that it was an exceleighth poi. abo.e a ( urlo.- Impression of lent display of advertising poHir For sal human In rami n numbi jn i In Baris on the part of the good dame,enterprise Billiard lable, second-han- d and that cbeADt A piil t to or ulilrws.H. C. Akis, they have tie jrat t v, toni of exhumbeen that has already royal stocking 511 S. 12th St.. Omaha. Nek- sing 'he boriLS ,vtt. r a ctitaln time, but void to at least a score of relic hunters ti( le th. y throw Ho m all in the i Ask A til, trend:, where the mr are crowdCream Balm are II you are troubled triU tualuria, constipation, Ely's ed together in dealh, us they rushed together in life There is also LUiousueas, kidney truuuie or dyspepsia, ol Ql'ICKXY CUBES a curious survival of Freni h feeling in Hostetler s blomaih Bitters, and tt wilt be Men ousuess, loss ol tortbeoming. our own country in NewOt !can; -- on speedily and COLD ix HEAD sleep, uud a loss ol vigor, are also this very same subject There they have uppeme remedied Ly tais restorative. Bnyaltlana ol stone. catacomb above ground, and the eminence indorse tt, a vaiuatde eonnrmauon el tne verdict oi luu people aud tne press, take coffin Is put in one of the niches which Apply Blm JMo esefc nortrfi. u rexuuuly is then tilled vcnh iiuicklime and sealed Warden p.vani Double. up. Just a soon a the lime shall have A purse of gqld has been presented destroyed the content of the nieh-- , It i opened and made ready for the re-- i to a warden upon his retirement, after option of a new occupant. forty years service, from Birmingham jail. He thoroughly deserves it if, as it is stated, he was the original of the REVERSED BY A COLLISION. Warden Evans in "Never Too Late to Mend.1 It is now the fashion to ignore An Old llrakeman Tells of a Queer AcReades wonderful romance. The scenes in the jail are somewhat too tercident in the West, rible, none the less so that they were "The most remarkable wreck ! va real life and were the cause ever In, said an old brakelhan.uujt-pene- d taken from of quite a tumult in the theater at on the Short Line between of more than 133 jrears ini under the title of Gold, the and Beards some years ago. It w.is which, was diamatized. the manufacture of tobacco' story l'hiladelphia a freight wreck. I had charge of the Press. us to produce the vvts and enables La Orange accommodation I can reeommendk Piso's Cure for Conbound Into Louisville. We Were followvery best article possible. sumption to sufferers from Asthma, K. ing hard upon the trail of No. 32, AH. V. Ft. AVis., Howard, 4, 'ioaxsENu, May Consumers of tobacco defor Louisville. Train No. 14 w.i coming in our direction. It had been . A woman's train decline in weight alter rive the benefit of this exdelayed some minutes at Pewee, but the age of thirty. and to the time make up perience, and injusing the expected liegeman's Camphor Ire with Glycerine. and The Pewee between sidetrack onxlnsl and only genuine. CumCbapped Hu ml 'celebrated ml ace.C-olBeard' on schedule time, so that train Sore, c, P',U. Clara CoJ01aven,tA- No. 32 would have the right of way. Thls Means Uullnen. The delay wa what caused the trouble. On the principal fine of the Chicago, The sldetiack Ham telling you about & Bt. Paul railway passenger was Just behind and under a hill. Ttain Milwaukee train are electric- - lighted, steam heated No. 14 had Just backed on the sidetrack and protected hv block ith signals. and before the switchman could shift these modern appliances, railway traveling Jhe switch train No. 32 came dashing at high speed has reached a degree of around the hill. The engineer saw the safety heretofore unknown and not attainon roads Where they are not in use danger. He turned (own the throttle able Electric lights and steam beat make it poswith a hard shove and whistled down sible to dispense with the oil lamp and the brakes. Ills efforts were of no use, car stove. Block signals have reduced the 32 turned in on the chance for collisious however. Train No. to the minimum by sidetrack, and went crashing Into No. maintaining an absolute interval of spate 14. Ail the cars of the train, 14, were between train. stripped off the track as clean as if they Kissing a woman's Ups is a gross insult in had been pease in a pod. The shock Finland. of the two trains meeting was, of Winter Tourist Ticket Via the Wabash courpe. terriflo. The whole of train No. Xtatlroad 32, Including the locomotive, toppled off Ars now on sale to all the winter resorts of th Bouth, good returning until June 1st, are assured of the highest only the car of No, 14 Were thrown off bo. Also Harvest Excihsion Tickets to the track. When the two trains struck, ail points south on excursion dates. In adquality. Tis a rich, lastthe engineer of No, 14 had hi hand dition to above, RaUroad and Bteamship and delicious chew tickets to all points in the V.nitio States on the throttle about to stop his train. The shock threw him out of his cab and Eceofe, at lowest rates. For rates, excursion dates and full informaand the wrench threw open the throttle tickets, tion or a copy of the Home Seeker Guide, When and reversed the engine. again call at W abash Office, 1502 Farnam street, the cars had been stripped off the track or write Sold Everywhere. down went wild' the locomotive the G. N. Clattov, N. We W. of the Lm track toward la Grange, P, Agt, Omaha. Nth P. Simplon, Wa.sbln?rto Grange accomodation had by this time for Stamps - atty'bfcf marking goods were in use in PATENTS unUl PaisHitoto- neared the cure. I was at the head WritefurluventoraOuklo irtstian era. of the tFain as lookout. I heard the sound of a locomotive approaching and signaled the engineer of our train to reverse his engine. He had hardly time to jump to the throttle when the wild I was locomotive crashed into-u- s. thrown, I reckon, 50 feet, and came out of it with two broken legs. No one else wa hurt, but the La Grange acWilt cure Bruises , Backache comodation was a day late. No. I dont railroad any more." Sand-rijgha- ul-- , iin-m- Ail Experience " also-boun- d V Lorillards ing Its LORILLARDS EJ- Other remedies may ST. JACOBS OIL and a Sprains, FIVE.QR MORE COWS ? HAVE-YOA Patient Model. The other morning an English lady If so a "Baby Cream Separator will earn its cost for who desired to make the portrait of a .you year by continue ia Inferior system another year at m rrtat a loss? Dairying to now the ragged but"piettiresque" Moor, whom only profitable feature of Agriculture Properly conshe met on the street, got him in posiducted it always pays well, and must pay you. You aod you need the BKSTtbe tion, but found upon examination she Ev All itylct and capacities Mlaby, ? prices. had neglected to bring an important upward. Send for new 1895 catalogue. part of her kodak. So she ran back to THE DE SEPARATOR CO., the hotejwo blocks away. She there Breath outcast met some drir friends from London Gnrel Office t who had just arrived; co she forgot all 74 C0RTUN0T ST, NEW YORK. , ELGIN, ILL about the Moor and the kodak. After dinner, 8 oclock she remembered; so, with an escort, she hurried to the spot. There the old Moor sat, just as she had left him. facing the instrument. "Long time take, picture, he said. He had been there since 10 oclock a. m. of that thrive on Scotta Emuleion when all the rest of day, but the business of sitting still .their foodJ suited him. Letter from Algiers, - seems to go to waste, Thin Babies and Weak Children grow strong, flump and healthy by taking it, , Tkln freon ut loin FIvrn In Jail. A rvconf arrlv aT, just before retiring the first night, looked out through the door, very carefully scanned the walls to see that there wore no panel rackets to fear, squinted up through the then carefully folded his pantaJ -overcomes jtoherited weakness and all the tendencies toward loons and vest and tucked them under Emaciation or Consumption. Thin, weak babies and hi pillow. Wonder whom he fenreL" growing , or was It force of habit? Minnesota children and all persona suffering from Loss of Flesh, Weak Prison Mirror. U MS UHl OaSiios and Children Scotts Emulsion entilator, Longa, Chronic Coughs, and Wasting Diseases will receive untold benefits from this great nourishment. The formula for making Scotts Emulsion has been endorsed by the medical world for twenty years. No secret about it, Sett ft EmuUiem. FREE. SenJorfamfhtet Scott & Bowrte, N Y. AII Druggists. 50 cents end S I. - Th Peacock' loro, The peacocks spreading train I not the bird! tail, but a qorona of feathers above the tail. The true tall consists of eighteen feathers beneath the corona. curious The latter t provided with set. of nntsetek, by which ttcanbe - - 11 Spring Pruflure of France in WhUh Skulls Are I'at la Hoi. Think of a land so crowded that only the rif h can afford to have a gravel AuJ that land in not in China or India, but modern, prosperous France Down In the quaint little Baique Frovime, cenamong the pe,pl that lived t turies before the rest of France j.nd li4in settled, and whose lan- - cfect-edatwt- iL' - - - - - |