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How long will it take the man to fill the sack if lie does not stop the leaki To attempt to nourish the body when the stomach is dis eased is like try ing to fill the sack with the hole in it. When the stomach and other digestive and nutritive or gen a are di*-i eased, there is s constant lorn of nutrition. j Enough is eaten! but tne body] loses fiesh,-plain proof that the food eaten is largely wasted because it is not digested and as similated. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It stops the leaks by which nutri tion is lost, and •nables the building up of the body bv the nutri tion derived from food. Yhe gain in weight proves the cure. j "Three years ago I was taken sick with what the doctor called nervousness and indigestion " writes Mrs Warren E Parker, of Orange Street. Nantucket. Mass "He gave me medicine for the trouble but I could not eat even a little toast or oatmeal without suffering severely. Ina few months I began to have distressing pains right in the pit Olay stomach I called the doctor again and he said I had catarrh of stomach; five me medicine but it did not do any good loot >S pounds in three months. I then com snenced tsking Dr Pierce’s medicines and soon began to feel better 1 have taken six bottles of ' Golden Medical Discovery.' two of ‘ Favorite PTMertptioa' and six vials of Dr Pierce's Pel lets. I have gained ten pounds Can eat every thing " Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con •tipation. RAILWAY TIME TABLE. G., H. & S. A. Train No. 7, from Houston, arrives at 5:45 p. m. Train No. 8, for Houston, leaves at 12:15 p. m. Train No. 9, from Houston, arrives at 7:30 a. m. Train No. 9, for California leaves at 9:15 a. m. Train No. 10, from California, ar rives at 7:30 p. m. Train No. 10, for Houston, leaves at 9 p. m. . Train No. 11 (Sap.-Katy Flyer), ar rives at 8:15 a m. Train No. 12 (Sap-Katy Flyer), leaves at 8 15 p. m. M„ K. & T. Train No. 13, from Smithville, ar rives at 8:30 p. m. Train No. 14, for Smithville, leaves at 8 a. m. I. & G. N. Departures for the North: Train No. 10, 7:30 a. m., tor all local and North Texas points. Train No. 4,‘12:30 p. m.. for St. Louis, Memphis and the East. Train No. 8, 8:15 p. m.. for Waco, North Texas, Santa Fe and Frisco points. Train No. 16, 9 p. m., for St. Louis and East. For the South: Train No. 5, 9 a. m., for Laredo and Mexico. Arrivals from the North: Train No. 5, 7:30 a. m., from St. Louis and the East. Train No. 7, 8:45 a. m.. from North Texas, Santa Fe and 'Frisco points. Train No. 9, 6:30 p. m., from local points. Train No. 1, 11:45 p. m., from St. Louis and East. From the South: Train No. 4, 12:10 p. m., from La redo and Mexico. SAN ANTONIO & ARANSAS PASS. For Boerne and Kerrville leaves daily, 9:15 a. m. Arrive daily, 7:30 p. m. For Cuero, Victoria, Yoakum, Ma this, Alice. Houston, Galveston and the east, leave daily at 9 a. m. Arrive dally at 7:20 p. m. For Cuero, Yoakum, Beeville, Cor pus Christi, Aransas Pass and Rock port—Leave dally 2:40 p. m.; arrive daily 2:05 p. m. For Alice branch points—Leave daily 9 a. m. Arrive daily 7:20 p. ra For Giddings, Rockdale, Cameron, Waco —Day train leaves (Sunset de pot) daily 12:15 p. m. Arrive daily 5:45 p. m. For Waco, Fort Worth, Dallas, St. Louis, Kansas City and north —Leave daily (Sunset depot), 8:15 p. m. Ar rive daily, 8:15 a. m. S. A. & G. Train No. 1 leaves San Antonio at 8 a. m.; arrives at Stockdale at 10:35 a. m. Train No. 2 leaves Stockdale at 11:50 a. m.; arrives at San Antonio at 2:30 p. in. Do your Children ASK QUESTIONS? Of course they do. It is their way of learning and it is your duty to answer. You «may need a dic tionary to aid you. It won’t an swer every question, but there are thousands to which it will give you true, clear and definite answers, not about words only, but about things, the sun, machinery, men, places, stories and the like. Then, too, the children can find their own answers. Some of our greatest men have ascribed their power to study of the dictionary. Of course you want the best dic tionary. The most critical prefer the New and Enlarged Edition of WEBSTER’S International Dictionary. ®lf you have any question* eahout it write ns. G. & C. MERRIAM CO., PUBLISHERS. SPRINGFIELD. MASS. POOL TABLE POCKETS. They Ara Mada Per Iter Moat Part II Farmer** lluMMra. “An Odd occupation, surely,” said * man acquainted with the business, “It that of knitting pool table pockets. A few persona find steady employment at It. but the greater number of thoae eu gaged In It take It up incidentally tc some other employment. “Of all the pool tmck ’ts used the Inr goat proiHirtlon Is made in farmhouso by farmers' wives and daughters. Tin women who d« this work are mostly Germaim and Swedes. 'Tool table pocket* are all hand made. The largest producer of |>ool pockets is a concern In New Yprk that employs at thia work about thirty fam Illes, these mostly residing on Long Is land. The bundles of material for the several families thus employed are made up in the shop and delivered to them, the finished pockets beiug at the same time collected. ' “The knitting is done with a needle twenty inches in length, and the jmck eta are knitted with a peculiar knot that will not pull out. You might cut a hole in a pocket with a knife, but the hole would go no farther. As the |iock et is knitted It will not pull or draw apart. . ■ 'Tool jiocketa are made of cotton, ot wool and of silk. The first are sold for 31.25 or thereabouts a dozen. Silk pockets sell for about 810 a dozen. “I should say that of all the pockets made perhaps half are of cotton, three eighths of wool and one-eighth of silk. The pockets are most commonly green, but they are made in other colors ns well—In maroon, for example, and in yellow and in blue for tables with cloths in those colors. “Output? Well, the production of them Is somewhat scattered. I should say that it might amount annually to about 10.000 dozen, valued on nn aver age. roughly estimated, at $4 a dozen, making the total value of the output somewhere about 340,000."—New York Sun. THE HOME DOCTOR. A soft linen bandage saturated with a 1 per cent solution of carbolic acid ia excellent for a blistered finger. To relieve a nervous headache apply hot water to the temples and back of the neck. A hot footbath will also ma terially aid. Earache can frequently be cured by wringing out a flannel In boiling water, sprinkling a few drops of laudanum on it and applying it to the ear. A small quantity of vinegar will gen erally destroy Immediately any insect that may fimFIts wny Into the stomach, and a little salad oil will kill any insect that may enter the car. When your feet are very tired nnd hot, plunge them into a basin of cold water and keep them there until a sen sation of warmth begins. Then dry them and put on fresh stockings and shoes. A writer states that a teaspoonful of finely grated nutmeg in a teacupful of cold water taken night and morning the first day and then missing a day, repeated on the third day, is a sure cure for boils. A Four Footed Bird. There is a four footed bird, the Opis thocomus cristatus, which has such anomalies' of structure that it is im possible to class It along with any oth er family. It is one of those survivors which tell us of extinct groups of whose past existence we would other wise have remained forever ignorant. These, the only species of four footed birds, inhabit the island of Marajo in the lower Amazon. It is only during Infancy that this remarkable feature of these birds is seen, the two fore feet appearing early in the development of the embryo and continuing perfectly formed for several days after- hatch ing, when they are gradually shed. It is also known as the hoaetzin or evil smelling bird, the flesh having an un pleasant odor, making it unpalatable to both man and carnivorous animals, which is probably one cause of Its sur vival. Feople Who Used to Kat Spider*. The enjoyment of particular kinds ot food is, after all, a matter of custom, and the African who revels in white ants is no more peculiar in his tastes than the European who eats cheese mite*. A lady whom M. Reaumur knew was accustomed to devour spiders as fast as she could catch them, and a German lady gave it ns her opinion that these creatures resembled In taste the most delicious nuts. A fellow coun tryman of this lady was in the habit of regularly hunting spiders in his owu and his friends’ houses. He used to spread them on bread, Rozel tells us, and vowed that they were far pleas anter to the palate than butter.—Corn hill Magazine. Who He Was. “Wait a minute, John. Don't read so fast Who was it that there crowd turned out?” “Eh? Turned out?” “Yes; you read it there that the crowd turned out N. Mass. Who was N. Mass?” ’ "Why. I suppose he's some French man. You ought to listen closer.”— Cleveland Plain Dealer. He Coaid Cook. “Can he cook?” asked the proprietor •f the restaurant. “Cook?” echoed the caller, who was rooting for a friend out of a job. “Can he cook? Say, I've seen that man make four squab pies out of oue old pigeon!” —Chicago Tribune. 'Apropos of the money question, nary * man in public life or out has yet de veloped a scheme which will give ev erybody all the money be wants.—Phil adelphia Ledger. —Pure Jersey butter, the best that money can buy or skill produce. 30c per ;>ounu. Green, the Grocer, 225 E. Hom ton street. 1124 11 _ SAN ANTONIO DAILY LIGHT, SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS. SATURDAY, DEC. 28. 1»0L The Gossip of Fashion from the French Capital Mid-Winter Hats and Opera Cloaks Now Occupy a Prominent Place in the Realm of the MMe Variety and JSoildty in the Mid-Winter Hats QUITE charming are the mid winter millinery samples that are being seen in Paris at the present time, and they show quite as much variety und novelty as did the huts that were offered earlier in the »enscn. These pictured notelties are made up of laces, flowers, feathers, velvets, silks, golden appliques and furs. I send with this letter a few illustrations of some of the best se lections that I have seen. One of these pictures shows a pic turesque affair of velvet. 'This hus an upper brim of guipure lace richly edged with mink, while a group of roses, shading from light to dark mauve, lifts the brim away from the face at the left side. The velvet crown is high and is edged w ith mink. SOME OF THE MIO-WINTER HATS SEEN IN PARIS. Another shows a pretty hat, called the marquise, made of black velvet almost entirely covered with cream guipure lace. The brim is full, and has folds inside of black tulle. This extends a little high at one side, with three black tips surrounding a bunch of black asprey. A large picture hat that was es jieeially becoming to the women I saw wearing it was of turquoise bine pnune. The rolling brim has an ap plique of black lace, with gold threads. Resting on the hair at the left side is a loose knot of the panne, with a cut-steol buckle. The-crown has n pompon of shaded blue silk with 'the panne, from each side of which is a large bunch of black osprey. Another striking picture hat is of goloen brown velvet; this having a rolling brim, edged with gold r.p pHoue trimming. Under the brim nt the left side, are three wh’te tips. The crown is of the vehet in hand some folds. A dainty little toque is of tucked panne in cream. It has a high roll ing brim, with fancy feather at the left side, and two large shaded pink roses resting on the hair. A picture hatsof black velvet caught my fancy for a moment. It has a large crown that is dented here and there The brim is of black, jetted net over white satin. One white ostrich tip falls gracefully at the left side, nnd la caught with a jet buckle. — + _ The French Woman Docs ffot Failor “Rational Dress WITH the trend of fashion car rying us backward to the day* of our grandmothers, when frills and ruffles and laces were in order everywhere, when even the modish tailor-made was a thing un known, it seems strange to read of women who still persist in resisting the popular will and continue to r.iove in the direction of a more man- j uish attire under the caption of ra tional dress. We have but little of such agitation in Paris: the French woman loves the beautiful too much to attempt the rational in dress: she would prefer to , add another ribbon rather than tike one away, and sin- cannot understand the motiie that prompts the women ; of other lands to advocate such a change. To the French woman so called rational dress is associated wiih [ the peasant classes, with the woman who follows the plow in the field. 4 -r>/ P This signaoire ts on every box ot the genuine Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tabhis // ■he remedy that cures a coM in uue To this class rational dress is neces sary, but fo/ herself she much pre fers her long-trailing skirts, her laces and bright colored ribbons, her chif fons and gauzes, and looks with dis trust upon the motives of women who can afford such tilings and do not want them. The Rational Dress league of Eng land affords a subject for such dis cussion among the smart set of Paris, principally because it is headed by a woman who might be a society lead er if she so desired and would dis card her “notions" and follow the styles. She is described as being a tall woman with a figure built upon grand Unes, who looks unusually well in her plain gowns, but for all this the pullers always describe her gowns as being set off with a bit of bril liant color, either in the form of a vest or other little accessory, and it i* intimated that she is losing her pres tige in the league because of her penchant for this sort of mild femi nine decoration. —♦— Elaborate Opera CloaKr the Vogue of the Moment PARISIAN society hot always been partial to the opera. The world's famous songsters never lack for nn audience in the French capital, and a brilliant audience at that. There are probably more new and elaborate gowns prepared especially for Ihe opera than for any other occasion that comes in the French winter sea son. At the present moment it is the elab orate opera cloak that is in vogue, and for these garments it would seem that the question of expense is never consid ered. The materials used are of the most costly kind. Delicate chiffons and laces laid over the choicest satins for the top and lined with the richest of brocades or cloth of gold. * One of these elaborate cloaks that I noticed a few days ngo whs made of the finest pastel cloth, which was ciit loose, extending to the feet. Thiscloak was borriered round the het. with ap plique tinted Inee Interblended with white caracul, the pattern delicately traced w ith gold, while the collar and revers displayed u similar ornamenta tion. The sleeves of this elegant wrap were cut quite loose, flaring at the wrist and turning bnck to show the handsome lining of cloth of gold.' There arc equally pretty short wraps in the way of capes. These are also quite ns fashionable as the longer clonks. One of these with which I was chaTnied was exquisite in Its make-tip and material, fitting snugly about the shoulders, from whence it flared grace fully to the hem, either side being slashed up a few inches to better dis play the lining of white chiffon, form ing innumerable narrow ruffles over -rose-pink satin. The top. which is al ways secondary to the fining, was com posed of w bite, pompadour silk, having delicate pink and yellow blossoms scat tered over, nnd was bordered with coque feathers. The high collar of material' was lined with quilled pale pink silk bordered with coqhe feathers. SADIE MERRITT. l>lMtln<*t h»nw. Mrs. Cobw rigger— So-they are not in your set? Mrs. Proudfut—No, indeed. They, go to a gymnasium, while we attend a physical-culture class. CUPID AT WATERLOO BY WILLIAM HLOSS Copyright, 11101, by Authors' Syndicate Mistress Marguerite Antionette Carrol was a sophisticated and wholly world!} person of six or seven and twenty years To begin, she had money, more money than any single woman needs; more inon ey than forty millions of American worn en ever dream of in their hopes, or hop, for in their dreami To continue. he; social position was impregnable It hat an edge of gilt and a full morocco bind ing; it was eighteen carat: tlx* rea tiling; a very Kohinoor among social )>o Kitions. Mi*Ue*«| Marguerite Antoinett* Carroll was not only a daughter of th< American revolution but’ is Colon in Deme as well, not only had ancestor of hers Haunted their curls through tin Carolinas al the heels of iIh* hard-riding Swamp Fox and'helped to pen the un lucky Cornwallis into the bear trap a' Yorktown, but other ancestors more re mote had braved red warriors from Vir gtnia stockades and pursued them inti the rank tangles lu«k of the Chesapeake for I Ise greater glory of the king, ami the greater safety of the suckling colonies long before ever a Washington had trod den a cisatlantic shore Now thesr things Is- but vanity, it- may be, but Marguerite Carroll hugged them not th< less to her heart, and held high hei head because of them. But let us pro eced with this schedule of poeoessiona. Item: An edcuation which embraced familiar knowledge with half the capi tals and courts of Europe. Item: A fave and figure that artists raved over: a crown of shining liair tlmt -eemed a thicket to entangle even Cu pid himself. Item: Miss Carroll was her own mis tress. having neither parent nor guar dian nor trustee, to coerce her humors or advise her vagaries. She rotiiled, when she felt like it. with her Unde Henshaw and her aunt, in Washington. Sometimes she paid to New York ami her grandmother a wintei visit long enough to make her an ml mired spectator at the horse show or the opera. Then she would flee to Califor nia or the Riviera; to the City of Mex ico or up the Nile; anywhere her fancy pleased, dragging along by a gilded chain her cousin. Julia Henshaw, and some conventional chaperon of eminent re spevfability and impartial blindness Nevertheless, however much one might think to the contrary. Marguerite Carroll was n* wholly dis-atistied w ith existence as could l>e a woman who |H>«ses«ed neither wealth nor heaun. birth nor lieauty. She did exactly as she wish ed. yet would have preferred to one man's loving slave. She loved the world, yet would rather have lieen shut witiiin some cage of home .subject to the .beck anil eall of u lord and master. Her soul was starved for love. She sighed for the heart ties of an adorer whom she could laTself adore— and found it not. The ennui of a satiety which ha. drunk up the wine of pleasure until one looks upon the very liottoni of the HOTEI >8. ..Menger Hotel.. Rebuilt, Redecorated and Refur niahed, fifty new rooms, with bath Hunting, lawn tennis, golf and th< usual society amusements. The high standard of our table, so w <11 known throughout the West, will Jie main talned. Special attentioi given to the tourist and commercla trade. McLean & Mudge Mgrs. H D. Kampmann. Prop; Hotel... Corner Houston and St. Mary Streets (Center of City.) San Antonio. Texas. RATE $a.oo PER DAY. Modern conveniences. Special Apartments (en suite). Large Sample Rooms. Cuisine a Specialty. L. NIHNCXE. Prop. ELITE HOTEL. European Plan Main Plaza and Soledad Street. Sample Rooms for Traveling Men 2-9-ly. ERNEST SANNER, Prop. SOUTHERN HOTEL. Headquarters for Cattlemen, Main Plaza. . RATE $2.00 PER DAY. I. LOUSTAUNAU & P. BERGEROk Props and Managers. BEXAR HOTEL Under new management. Special rates for the winter. Sample rooms free. ' . AMON BARNES, H. B. KINCAID. 8 9-6m. * 200 Rooms and Bath; Street Cars Convenient. LACLEDE HOTEL. 713 to 730 West Commerce street San Antonio, Tex. American plan »1.50 to $2.00 per day. Special rates by week or month. GEORGE D. HODGES, Prop. & Mgr. Scholz Palm Garden Restauram Everything in season, best style, rujd erate prices. Union Service. Concerti Wednesday. Saturday. Sunday. WM. WARMBOLD, Prop. 4 SEASONS ..Restaurant THE BEST REGULAR MEAL All the delicacies of the season. Blu< Point Oysters received dailjt. Lunche. nut up of all kinds on .hurt, potu-e. Oys let 1 oafs a «pe<’i:illr Open day anf night NEW 'PHONE 1005 NO 318 W COMMERCE ST, 11 26 Im lass |NMsex»ed her resHeas spirit and endered )>etulant her strenuous nature. lUngrv for love. Under the blue ice >f lier habitual demeanor smouldered ■apphire |>assioiis needing only to rise to devouring vulcanic flames. Wooers, yes, in wore*, -lie hud had. ind toyed with archly, but not one had <omc beneath whose mask of words and onventional protestations she bad not ead or fancied she could ri-ad the insin erity «f the hunter of fortunes, the per unrtory laudation of her undeniable but inarlrfe beauty. She had no soul, ill her said as one by one tlwv «elim|uiabed the M-emingly impossible a-k of kindling a tire upon the frigi.l Jtar of Iht heart. Therefore, at last, from the crucible if her discontent, of her cravings of a lature ardent at the core, had emerged 1 woman who sought to revenge herself pon nmnkiml by artfully awakening ■aesions -la- did not return, by arousing ;ope‘ she nurtured only that she might iproot. She declared a secret war gaiu-t the race of what Mme. Sarah .rand has dublied "mere man." and pur sued her campaigns vindictively. Sime t was denied to her. alone among wom n. to find the aoul mate she would se ct -he would at least be happy in th* .inking of mankind miserable Thus it was. as the season warn'd, that Xli-s Carron, her cousin Julia, the di«- reel Mrs. Sylvester Beaumont, their ravrling sacrifice to the proprieties, bur ying eastward from a aummcr voyage .0 the great Muir glacier. Sitka and Al iskan waters stopped nt Minneapolis to at<h their breath, and that Marguerite decided to rest for a week nmid the en hunting nntnmn re»tfulncss of the Min netonka shore- They found at the rreat Hotel St Louis n half emptied lOU-e anil the quiet the imperious mis tress of tlie little company hud so sud denly and capriciously sought It was glorious there. The ozonic lirs .weeping the hill-pinnacled eara- ansery were rarest medicines for wear iness Tlte vagrant shore lines spread ibout the broadening vista of the queen of lakes fed the eye with varying lieau ties to which the wealed margin, touch ■d by autumn's master brush, lent the i hroniaiic splendors of the kaleidoscope. Marguerite and her rod Is-came familiar of the rising sun. Along the winding dirt roads of the old Hennepin she en joyed many an afternoon gallop between lie radiant walls of the turning leaves. \s 1he dav fell, wind-drii'en excursions '.o the tree-crowned dams of Big Island, haunted by legend, or through the nar rows to the rougher waters of the ex imnded lake, lent a closing zest to days with nature. When the copper shield of the harvest moon rose a flaming disc n tlie ea»t ami the many-stringed or <he»fra bidden in the palms of the great veranda wooed concord, they sat in peace under tlie soft influences of moon and star, ami were content. Here Marguerite, the desolate, found beiyin alier. He was a student at the University of Minnesota, a hoy of 20. ipst through his junior year, working his way to education by the labor of his own hands. At tlie big summer hotel he served as an ifnmtcur guide, boat man, equerry, escort, to thole who need ed him It was Henry who host knew where lurked' the bigge-t bass, nnd to what bait they would rise. lie could sail a single sticker with the intrepidity and assurance of a cup Challenger. He could row for hours without fatigue Ite rode like a life guardsman and knew the secret pockets of the woods like a trapper. In addition. Henry la'strange was as handsome as the young Antinous. a studcut who bade fair to become a scholar, a gentleman by instinct, ami within his aspiring breast dwelt a soul whose young ambition had raised a lad der whose higher rungs were hidden in the sympathetic skies. This was the attendant who bad been plated wholly at the service of Miss Car roll’s party—which meant at the pleas ure of Miss Carroll herself. She view ed him languidly at first, as she might have viewed any other domesticated creature assigned to do her bidding. On the* second day site became aware that he was good to*look upon. Then she adroitly delved in tlie depths of his un sophisticated mind and found its native keenness und its alloy of innoeenee a mine of strange gems she had never look ed upon. The task of breaking a heart so simple, so ingenuous, so unsullied, so limpid in its virginal simplicity, seem ed to lier a langurous pastime quite in harmony with lier intention of restful ness. It would he neither difficult nor too exciting, but it would whue the Miu uct'uikan hours. She undertook it. arm ed with tlie softly insidious wiles a deep experience hail liegotten. But it was not long before Marguer ite mniH’ived the random fin' of lier am bushed batteries was ineffectual to dis turb this unconscious opposing force. Henry was studiously polite, unqueneh ably good humored No petulance an noyed him. no labor fatigued Yet when his hand touched hers ns he stead ied her step into a racking boat, or as sisted her to the saddle, or helped her through a ferny boy seeking for wood treasures, she could feel no tremor, could see no mantling of hot blood to his unmoved cheek. Initially thi- pleas ed her. If the quarry were shy. more sjiort ami glory for the hunter. The game promised a rarer interest than she had hoped. Tlie week Miss Carroll had marked for her sojourn passed. fme re-engag ed her apartments, imlelinitcly Min netonka had far more entraneenients han she had known, she said. She re leased her chaperon from attendance, and lefiantly went upon long excursion with {-estrange alone They walked togeth •r in the woods, rode in the dusk, row - ’d in the moonlight, now glow ing faint He remained unresponsive, not mid, hut uiM’onseious, unuppreciative of his eon quest One night she cried herself to sleep, she. Marguerite Carroll, who had thrown over prince* and disdained min isters, and awoke to know that she was hopelessly in love Hei bosom raged :>etween a glowing scorn of her own weakness and a deep new-learned tensier :ie»s for the man she loved. The *itim tion became cruelly unendurable. She .teterniiued to end it. to crush her pride with fierce fingers, to dare all and by one master stroke to gain all. **M'e are going away tomorrow. Mr la-strange.” she said, on the evening this resolution hud Wn formeu “I have a telegram from uncle which recalls u nt once to Washington." They were sitting alone upon the ver inda. whither she bad adroitly summon ed him The young man had attended, as a matter of course. Mr*. Benumoitt and'Cousin Julia were watching the dan ixi a m the bioud dcatuiy of the diuui£ WHEN OTHEfSFfll, CONSULT DOCTOR hetlHick J. fielding TheEmiwrt Ergl sli Specialist Whoso medical trai.i ug in Europe su<>- plementeil by years of st inly in tins Philadelphia Polyelinie Hospital amt College fur Graduates in medicine, tic- Post Graduate School of h w h ik ami the Universitj of the State 0: New York, and the great practiw la- now enjoys, has taught him to Cure \\ lieu Ail Others have Failed. CONSULTATION, EXAMINATION AND ADVICE FREE Office Hours; !> to 11 iW a 111., 2 tv 5, p. m. Office, 'treating Rooms, (linic.il Lab oratory und Drug Rooms, filth floor t HICKS BUILDING. 12 20 e o d tf. ' room. He started sharply. Mar guerite felt her heart leap iMqM’fully. “The news is sudden, isn't it 1 lie fal tered "It is sudden, indeed,* she answered, inclining her gracious body to him un til her tiuir almost brtisiicd hrt fate, and speaking softly in her Voice of rtn sie. "and 1am sorry. it ha* Iss’lt plea** ant here, and all of u* urn loath to g<> But no <me el*e will care, so what d<x-s it mutter?" "But I care.” he cried, with deep e-n bAvi n**nient. "lYoiathly 1 should have told you before, Mi*s Unrroll Iam tu lose " She smiled ineffably, ami h r votru •oumhsl like a cqieM«s die ."Yet, to Is- in love is not a crime. Hen ry. I.'u» lea-1, valid torglyc the emn imil. (JoiiteM . ;iii<l l<t forpivon "lilt!" Ii’ TnpYmured, rising, hi* fa<*' aglow, -ylm really do not know. U>en ?” Her breath fhltbrcd «tml she *ai still and silent. 1 li<tvc ahyady - iwnfwaed, and lum- Icon Mrgiv.n I atn going to nrarry tour ton in. Miss j4< u»lw" !” ; AN EVANGELIST’S STORY. “I suffored for years with a bronchial >r lune trouble and tried various ren< edies, but did not obtain permanent re. lief until 1 commenced us<nq One Min ute Cough Ctire." writes Rev. Janies Kirkman, evangelist, of Belle Rival, Ill. "I have no hesitation in recom mending It to all sufferers from mala dies of this kind.” One Minute Cough Cure affords immediate relief for coughs, colds and all kinds of throat and lung troubles. For croup II unequaled. Absolutely safe. \erv pleasant to take, never falls nnd is really a favorite with the children, rhov like It. James Clavin, C. Scbasse, Wm. Appmann. APARTMENT HOUSE SITES. Thia city otters splendid opportunities for the investment of money in large, modern aoarlment bouses, which will pav big interest. We have several sights cen trallv heated that can be bought elieaii. Ask JNO. T. ILAMBLETON 4 CO. about it at the Daily Light Building. 11 21 if —Ap|>etixina and daintv Blue Points on the half shell. Elite hotel bar. 1) 21 Im 4 Every Woman is ititcreth • M -k \ A fe* X j MlRtlL Whi...«q Spray V S*> J Tl.*>irwlwl»,ls.<rt. f . ' cS- xmrr irwnrkl tt, \ rff if h“ mphiy ibe K*«. Accept ik) \ olhrr. iNiihpi <1 foril- \ J ill•trale■l tmek acakdJt ' 9 Jr full nnd <iirp< hi- L- / valH'tl'Ieiolailk*. M litt 1'1. < O.. J y Room 25 B. Times Bldg., New York. For sale by E. Reuss, City Drug Store, 1C6 E. Commerce St 11-19-3m ; 3 or CM or : i ' I : • • We want to fit your eyes if , J they require qUssea. or wul a » tell you Wiat they need if • J glasses are not ncceMary. , : Veeos 6pVua\ Co. • J 842 W. Commerce. a THREE