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Flesherton Advance, 25 Nov 1909, p. 7

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. ? • â- â™¦ • <* 3= Bad td Life and Love OR, WAITING THROUGH WEARY YEARS. CHAPTER VIII.-<Cont'd) Marie thanked her rude hostess, and went into the hut. The woman soon set before her a bow. of tea and a piece of corn bread and fish ; and pointed to the only bed in the room, saying: "Arter you done eating you kin go to bed dere, if you want to. Me hut. tempted by the offer of money, and conseated to shelter her for that goods, brought over in the emigrant Bhip from the old country, and part- ly by articles made by the master's own hand. Carl and Anna Berger, the mas- ter and mistress of the farm, were German emigrants, who had come to this country some twenty years before, and h.ad purchased the place upon which they lived from the bankrupt planter, whose people had owned it for a century before. The Bergers had a very large family of thirteen children, that i^, five grirls and eight boys. Of the girls, two were married and gone away ; two were in heaven ; and one, the fifth and last, was a night ou condition that she. would buby of ten months old. • - So that the overtasked mistress of the house and mother of the go away in the morning before their "masser and missis" found out any- thing about her bi-ing tiiere. Early next morning, according to arrangement, Marie paid her dar- key for her lodging and left the family had not one daughter at home to help her. The boys were all at home ; but, however much they may have help- ed their father on the farm, they and de chilFun can "sleep "unln la r"siie spent that blu.stering March j certainly only made more work for lof, and jmy ole man, he gone ober day in wandering through the town Butterfield's to work, and U" search of any s(a-t of honest s?r home 'till to-morrow to Mr won't be â-  sight. â-  '_ Marie availed herself of this per- mission. And after eating a little of the frugal supper, she laid down to rest, and if possible to sleep. The ne.xt morning she went back to the prison where she had left her clothes. They were so few that she tied them up in one small bundle. Then she went from house to house in the village, to try to get a place in service. She thoughtâ€" poor girl !â€" that her the mother in the house. !♦-♦•>••♦â- â™¦â™¦â™¦â™¦â™¦ ♦♦♦♦.â-º ♦♦♦♦^♦^.^ : About the Farm : â- â™¦ â- â™¦ SCRATCHIXG FOR HEXS. increase the life of ft^ w!iit«wa8h. I' convenient, they should be 41^- aed, but boiling is not essential '.vher'i light coats are put on often as indicated above. When once un- derstood whitewash can be made "AWFCL NOI-SES.** Hotel G~iies(:t* CuniplHiiifH Were Never Pressed. A story used to be told fifty years and applied with little trouble, ' **" ,"[ * '"^"''j' ^^'^^' overdressed, yielding a large return in the !„,. I '""'^"oediamonded dame who proved condition of the stable Best T"."*^'='> angrily into the lobby of a satisfaction, is obtained i)y keeping! fashionable hotel, land demanded How many at this time of year stop to think how necessary it is to provide a supply of scratching ma- , fcerial for the hens during the win- i ^**'*'' mi.xtures. we venture to sug- ter months. How few take advaiit- , '^''^*- "" *''<' strength of our own age of the opportunities that are e'^'Pennnce. that a much helte the mi.xturc- well agitated and liiak- t"'!.'^'*^ '^'^''^ that her room be chang- ing applications." .euatonce. The clerk told her po- Nothwithstanding the author's 1 '' ^ ""'•' "' """''"^ ^ impoes.bla criticism of more elaborate white- presented from now until snow comes of harvesting a supply. There are in some communities meadows and runs that can be cut for the asking, or for a small sum. tc do so, as there was no vacant ri.oin available : but that if anything were amiss in her present room which could be rectified, tiie man- agement would attend to it. It was considered one of the most de- sirable in the house ; sur-^ly nothing important could be wrong. "Important! Wrong!" echoed the woman, indignantly. â- 'Well important necessities to cessful poultry plant. Buckwheat is an easy .\nd, untU the engagement of Ma- vice, from that of a nurserv gover- "c Serafinne, there had not been ness to that of a scullery mail. !» hired servant, male or female, on But to her bitter grief she found , the place- that her drcr.dful storv was as well j But, after the marriage and de- known at Wendovcr as at Pine parture of her last grown daugh- (;iig3_ j ter, a strong, healthy girl of eigh- And from every house where she teen, who had takeu the largest half j Buckwheat is an easy crop to dared apply she was turned awav of the household work upon her-! raise. It requires very little fertil- with more or less of harshness. " {self, Mrs. Berger saw the great jizer, a thin coating of wood a.shes She was thus confirmed in the dis- need of getting 'help," and so she ; will answer, and it grows and covery that tliough she had been ' closed with the very first offer of j thrives upon land newly broken acquitted by tho jury, she was not service; that was made to her, and | up. The crop ripens in a few months pardoned by the communitv j which happened to be made by Ma- 1 end can be harvested and stored That night, sinJang with' fatigue ! rie Serafinne. awav with or without threshing, and despair, sho f.und shelter by I She fully intended to get her hus- ! A^ ,I'tter_ it wears well and the I whitewash, one that will stick and not rub off, and that is very easily brushed on, even over roiieh-board surfaces, is prepared as follows : Take one-half bushel of lime. The hay, though it mav be too poor ! ''*'''«' 'y",'^^' ''"'''"« ?''^f' T'^'J"" ' ^<'^- I should just' sav there was. t) feed stock, is ideal for scratch- i ^V '^ "" 'r,^ » ""lu^'" *'"'''-"Sh a fine ^ j j i,^,.^ y^^ ^^ know I'm fond of ing purposes. It can be cut any time V"^'^; v"'* ^'^ "^'*' * l"''-"'^ <^' ««'*• music, and I have a sensitive ear, before the frost comes in the fall ; I '"^''°';*''' '" f^'"'?' "'".^•^r/ , *^'^'"''« and I'm staving here on purpose to cured and hauled to the poultry f"""''^ ground rice boi'-d to a i g^, to the opera: .ind if vou think, house, where it can be stacked y^p'P^^t^^nd^Urred m while hot, half I ..^fter hearing Patti at night, I'm until ready for use. It costs bare- j P'^"".'' ^' "^'".^ ami one pound glue i ; ^^ ^. ^.-^^ ^ .souealing Iv nothing except the tune and U- P'^e^ '"»'^'>- ''•^^olved in a glue pot j amateur on the other .^ide of a Uiio bor expended in securing it; yet T^^*" * slow hre. to this nii.xture partition next morning-well, vou how few avail themselves of this I ?/*•* "^ S*"""" "/,'»"' "^'^ter stir|,,o„t know chance of supplving one of the most-l^ '*•'"• '''"'''''â-  â- â- Â»"'' ^"^ >*f^"'l f"'' a : i__i ;_:».: t. *u» „..„ lie Madame Patti has me : »^"^"-f!^";'t^â- !•,:^I'i^J^^lTil^'^!^•!I'J-"^^^ the derk. suavely. "'She is your ne.xl-door neighbor." The late Madame Modjcska, the Polish actress, u<=ed to relate a I Somewhat .-similar anecdote. Among I her friends she numbered those bcoundrels Siiid to Dave Wny That! other distinguislied natives of un- .\p|teuls to Moiueu. (happy Poland. Paderewski. Ma- plied hot, with a brush, and a pint will cover a square yard. DO WO.HEN LOVE ROGlESi "There is in England a most sin- gular dearth of men, and the oppor- ling and even an.xious many fami- lies had been to take her into ser- vice, she believed that, now she was acquitted, she might surely get some humble pla,'e. She soon found how bitterly self deceived she had been ! She was literally and scornfully turned away from every do<jr at which she dared to rap; until late in the day, her limbs sinking with fatigue, her eyes streaming with tears, her heart nearly breaking, she appeared once more at the ne- j hut acquittal by the jury was also her i -"â-  ""j'^;".; i^';^,;^^^; .^^gV^.'huT. ' band to ^rit^^ to Mr."Worth. to I f''^ If And -nuch pleasure in picking , t„nities that the 'avera"ge"Vspect- perfect vindication before the j "^ ^j^/,^^^^ ,„.,rning, with her bun- ' whom the girl had referred, and in "A the kernels of gram. able woman has of meeting a pro- woriu. And, remeoibering how wil- | ^j^^ ^^^ j^^^ .^^^^^ ^,^^ j^j^. -^Vendover the meantime, while waiting an an- ; Oat straw is a more expensive ' spective husband are, in many cases bv the high road neither knowing swer, to keep a strict watch over litter, for it is valuable as a food extraordinarily limited," says an nor caring where it should load her. ; the strangtr, who might be a thief. If'^r stock and comniands a good English weekly. BO that it should take her awav I So, for the first few weeks, she j j""-'' '" the market. Likewise bar- I Hence the otherwise absolutelv V locked up all her pantries and,'*^'-- ^vhcnt and rye straw are also incomprehensible success of the ma- and gave out all the pro- ] ?*'»*"'«*• ""^' =*'â- " not often used trimonial advertisement. Our from the neighborhood of her bit' miserv. presses. It would be weary work to follow j visions herself, and counted all the clothing when it went into the wash poor Marie Serafinne in her months v.wu..,.,^ ....^u â- . „. .^ ..,„.. v..,^ «.*„,. i ^k„ ,„ake of wretched wandL'ring over the and afterwards when it came out. ' country ; for one day \vas like an- j But the letter was never written other. Every day was spent in ♦*• Mr. Worth. The. farmer was not walking on farther and farther ' if the habit of writing letters; and, from the scene of her sorrows, aud after putting off the ta.sk from day â-  every night was spent in some poor | to day. and then from week to „„ „„ â-  I . * u • w 'negro's log hut, until three weeks j week, he put it otf forever. gro woman s hut to beg a night s.c° i-ii i ji 1^ ri»^'.,.r. .»-..„ *. c -^ of wandering had pas.>cd, and her lodging, offering to pay for it ever o i • iuid are not often scratching pens. Corn fodder, leaves, stalks and a little that is dur- able .'ind is not easilv reduced to a powder. The butts may b" and above the furniture she had al ready given. Even on those terms, the favor was grudgingly granted, for the woman's husband had come home, and he said he "didn't want no in- terlopers, 'specially sich as she." And Aunt Sukey barself gava it •s her opinion that, 'The young gal had better go 'way some 'ers, a long distance off. case it was sartin' she nev^r could do no good here, where she was known." Poor Marie had come to the same •orrowful conclusion. The ne.xt morning after partaking oJ the frugal breakfast set before her by her rude hostces, she tied up her little bundle and left the hut to seek her fortune away from the neighborhood. Marie Serafinne had never been five miles away from home in her life. .\nd to her rustic thought the neighboring town of Wendover, dis- tant only ten miles, was as if it h^d been in a foreign country. Yet to that plai-e she determined to go. She knew the turnpike road leading thither, only because it was called the Wendo\er road. I This was to be regretted on Ma- worn out, her clothing ' rie" s account, however, for it ^-iit shoes were all soiled and spattered with mud, her off the knowledge of the only and her money dwindled to the last friend she hatl in the world, dollar. I Gradually the strict habits in re- in this wretched plight, late eue ' gard to Marie were also abandon- afternoon she approached a lonely ed. It was tiresome to the mistress farm-house, situated in a deep fer- - 1^" be always watching and counting in remov- ed after a time for they "vill readily v.-ork up into desirable litter Pine needles, which can bp pro cured by the cartliiid in the pine fi'-i'sfi. make a good material CNpcciallv for .vounii pullets just cniiitnencinc to .scratch Thev are reduced to a fowder and i.ften to be repI-'-nished soon need so- 'cial life is so constructed that hun- dreds of .voung men and women never meet others of their age. "Then it has been .said that no man is so miserable but that he can discover some woman who will be more miserable still for his sake. .And on this principle the worst of criminals must find a wife. ".\nd when all is said and dune, the chartered scoundrelâ€" the biga- mist, the forgerâ€" may be scarcely more objectionable, may, in many dame Sembrich and the two Do Beszkes. .\t a time when she had been ill in London, they were all there ful- filling professiiMial engagements. -As her convaieseii'<e progressed, tiiey visited her with affectionate as- siduity nearly every day, and de- lighted the invalid with imiirMinotu ccncerts. at which Paderewski piav- ed ruvishina; accomnanime'its to the t;oldeii vuices of the He Rcszke brothers and Madame Sembrich. But other persons in the hotel soon sent in complaints of the 'awful noises" proceeding from Madame Modjeska's suite. They were greatly disconcerted when thev were informed of the source of the disturbance, and the complaints were never pressed. In- stead, it became noticeable that Piost of the hotel residents soon Ifiound errands which took them tile hollow euch»sed by high hills. | and locking np. As usual she went up to the house j "One might as well live in a pri- and rapped at the door, not that I sou," she said, "us to spend tfie she had the slightest hope of being ^ days of their life in turning keys; admitted, but because she left a chance, untried. A hard-featured, care-worn wo- man of about forty years of age, came to the door and asked the visi- tor what she wanted. ''If you plea.se. ma'am, a place," falteringly answered the w:eflry traveller. and, besides, the .cirl 's honest enough, as any one might see." So ill time Marie grew ti> be en- tirely trusted by her emi)loyers. But they were not kind to her. They were a money grubbing set. hard to each other- liarder still to her â€" their one white slave. They overburdened her with heavy ta.sks, and H \;irvc (pia..>titv I:: reouired to keoM 1.-, the desire-l supply. Whi^"' -r is iisf>d 'or ""-atohip^ M.;>*»-;,i.l. .,„ pfr„rt .:i.oiild he made (•> !>.-irves* (he aMODlv in scson. A good suodIv of litter os the b»st in- >estn>ont a noiiltrvnian O!?" h.t\-.' if h" evoeets oggs from his dock dur- imr the winter months. «re, of course, now-a-davs. manv ['^.^^^ ^â- "'**' Perhaps, because a key- ,ot us. far too sentimentallv jnclin- '"'f "/â- 'â- """""''"^*''* ^""^ >» ^"\^'c ea"-. ed toward the scoundrel. ' : """ *:?*"'"'' "."â- â€¢" "" >'\* "" .'""'n'^ f""" "While fully believing in a .sane , ''"'''^'''""'^'' '" <^-->vfsdropping. and firm justice, the necessity of i puni.shnient and its usefulness, it ; may be conceded that not infre- REMARKAIJI.i; INDIAN »I{I()<;K (juently the scoundrel, whose sins bring him within reach of the law. IJiiilt by (he Iiidiiins AVHITKWASH COW STABLES.. in Urilish An "M'hat's your name?" asked the for which they paid iier too little to woman, in a slight German accent. ' supply her with necessary clothing. "Marie Serafinne." answered the! She did not mind this so much in 'girl, trembling with fear of the ' the summer ; but when winter came, harsh rebuke that had ahvavs fol- she suffered with cold. Whitewashing the cow should he one of Che re;{iilar Cohimhia. interesting bridge, said to stable chorjjs lowed the mention of her name. But the tlcrman woman had evi- dently never heard of it before. 'â- Where did you come from i" she inquired. I "Fromâ€" Pine Cliffs," answered j men and boys, two ithe girl, quailing at the question, child to be \7iiitcd on. She labored earlv and late. There was a large house of many rooms, every one of them occupied, to be looked after i;nd kept cloa-n. has soinetaincs a way with him that appeals to women. "The same im.-iginatiim which has' starteil the bigamist on his career ' have been built by Indians, is situ- of adventure, gives him, perhaps, a ated about iOO miles east of Prince e\ery fall ou farms where cows are syinijathetic insight in dealing with , Rupert, B. C, near the propo.sed milked. lu the neighborhood of women. j line of the Grand Trunk Railway, some cities, milkmen who supply "liverything is relative, even vil- ; says the Engineering Xens. iUiilk. are required to have their lainy. so to fleece a voung man of! It is built of round poles, fa.st- ! stables whitewashed with lime means of a considerable portion of ened together with telegraph wire each vear. Whnt they a-e com- his belongings, or even to entrap and wonden pins, tlu- floor being the pelled to do it .should be 'vdl f'lr c young woman into a bogus mar- only part where nail every farmer to oerform of their riage. is hardlv worse than the go- own free will. Whitewa.shin!; with ing-back on a friend in trouble, or A ni.offo- ,f ., ..,;i.>-. *" ii "Don't know the place. Must j washed, ironed, and deanc I for, .A quarter ol a mile s walk across ', , , , r^ . ' rru . i i -n There was a largo faniilv of eight i-..^ „„ ., ., . ,, , ,, , â- â€¢,. , . , , , „. „ 7 , '""" sweetens the st.-ible and adds dealing ntfUV.U- with deiieiid.-nts. wo.nn and at,, ^he .satisfaction and self-respect, " ' ,..ked for. ,„f fh^. farmer. The following di- the fields brought her into the road. 1 bo a long way from here ^ . _, , ., rect;r'.'>s for prenariiiK whifi'w.ish Got any. There were seven cows to be milk- nre tHk^n from a bulletin fo the 11- She knew that the stage coach, 1 'â- ^°?'"!"*^"''''''*\".•" , . , , led, and all the butter and cheese to l.'no.'s H.xperiment .Station : which ran daily between the town! Mane paused m confusion before , be made All the bread wa.^ to be "Tal-^ a half bushel unslak.-d and village would pass her on its i ''^"^ replied. And then suddenly [ made and b.aked, and all the soap lime of good qualitv. slack it with -- ' - '^ 'thinking of Ishmael Worth, she , and candles manufactured. | boiling water (cold will do) cover took his card and handed it to tne ; Think of the immense labor! | during the iimcess to keep in woman, saying : -Viid Marie received but little help steam, and add water as the nro- "That gentleman gave nie leave from her mistress, who. .as the cess aroes on. To do this, the lime How often in the countries of dowerless women are not the ver.v wives of quite rich men more stint- ed, and in that sense poorer, than the laborer's wife. way to Wendover ; and thanks to I stinking of Mr. Worth's kindness, she had means to pay her fare ; but she dared n<it wait for the stage and stop it. lest she i.liould meet the eyes of some one who might know her, for, from these, the last day's bitter experience had taught her to shrink with a shuddering foar. She therefore determined to walk the wh<de way, no^great undertak- ing for a robust woman, but weary â- Work for the poor girl wasted to a skeleton through sickness, sorrow and imprisonment. The day, besides, waa a bluster- ing .March day, aftsr a deep spring thaw, so she toiled along the heavy, muddy road, whose clay clogged her little old shoes, and al- most dragged them of3f hor feet; and Rgainst a high I cad wind that near- ly blew the bonnet from her head and the thin shawl from her shoul- ders. I'requently slic had to sit down on a stump or a stone to rest and recover her breath. So it was nearly night when, ready to faint with fatigue and fast- ing, she reu?hcd the outskirts of \V(!ndover. Warned by bitte» experience, she dared not apply for shelter at tho dwelling of any white people; but jhc went to the first negro hut she Could find, and offered money for •ome supper and a place to sleep. Here, thi ugh her face was not known, she was lookt d n|jon with degrading suspicion from the more t ) appl.v to him. The name and fame of the great months and years passed, sliifted should be placed in a tiirlit barrel more and more of this burden upon jurist and barrister had reached i her already overtasked ser\ ant. But Marie Ser.'ifinne, helpless and 1 friendless in her ci re u in stances, meek and patient in her temper, never complained. I What, indeed, wer? the trials of ! her present hard servitude to the , . , ., , ,, at the far- 1 agonies she had once suffered and begins to stonm More w.-it-r should ' , be add;Hl and the b-»vr''l k»nt eov- and wnter cjiongh added to onrtly Cover the liine. Xever cover the lin><> entirelv with water, else the slaking nro^'oss will a;o on too sIdw- b' .?4<on aft.'"' the water is addi^d, the lump's of lime which are expos- ed to both .lir .and water bpcin to crmnbl;? and soon the whole mass even this remote farm house : and the woman after reatliiig the card told tho girl she might, come in. .\nd Marie SoraliMiic, tluankinfi Heaven for the prospect of a home, : followed her new mistress into a long, low ceiled room tlier end of which was a broad fire- 1 outlived . i i ««» ,i , , • , 1 1 • u 11 I V 1 1 1 J Ti eied. .\fter the sl.TkiiiK iirocess la place, around which were gathered' And she never smiled. The mem-; „ ., •, » .' , ,, , ,. , , , ^ . j ,, 1 i u over, several iinils of «-;itpr should half a dozen boys, of ages varying, ory of her sorrows lay too heavy on : i,^ „,i^p,) ^,,,1 t),„ ,^.i„,i,. thoroiisrb from two to ten years. I her heart. Her present life was ]^. ,tiired' This mivture sh.oihl be The woman then told Mane Sera- ruined, and of her future life she strnincl through a fine sieve hofore finne that she wanted a girl •and never thought. | placiiia in th° barrel to which the would try her ; that she would write She lived and labored a grave, pump js attached, !»nd, if necessary, to Mr. Worth, and if the reference sad, silent woman, a mystery to'innre water may be added to se- proved satisfactory, and the girl â-  all. even to those who were in daily ! cure n mixture w'^Hi the nozzle suitable, she would keep her. j communication with her. -nlW deliver well. The contents of Then she directed her to take off (To be continued.) her bonnet and tall right into work] ^^^ and help to get supper, as the men ~ would soon come in from th" field. Great Britain's loss by wrecks is In this manner Marie So ifinne the least of all the principal ship part wliere nails arc used to anv e.xleiil, and uo two joints are made alike, but it seems to do the work requiicd of it. that is. as a means for pack trains to cross Bulkley River. Looking at it from a distance, it seems to be nothing but a collec- tion of poles and 'viie stuck to- gether any way. with no jjarticu- lar reason for its not falling; the floor is very uneven, and the joints < f the different members are madn by lapping and binding them wi(h wire. But bv lookiuu at it closely a person can see that the party who built it had a prett\ good idea of engineering, for the bridge is an ii.genious combination of cantilever and suspen.sion construction. The River Kistuah. in India, has across it tlu; longest span of tele- graph-wire in the world nam»lv, lilX) feet. was installed in the house that was destined to be hor home for inauy years. CHAPTER I.X. The farm, occupying the whole of a small hollow enclosed bv high hills, was called "Witch Elm," from the trees that overshadowed the farm bouse. The house was very old. built of uwniii.g countries. There arc nearly ,'),000.()00 wonu'n bread-winners in the L'nited States^ twi>-thirds of fhciu beina; unmarri- ed. WAIT. Since wc moved in here, two] In, some parts of t^hiua, if a man the barrel or buckot must be kept ' days ag<>, it's been a puzzle to me fi'ils to pay his debts, his creditors well agitated for the linip tends to j how that water got iiitu the banc! '! carry awav oiie of his doors, thus settle upon the bottom. The snrav i â€"Life. 'pcrmiiiing evil spirits to cilter. must be fine, and nn( .TJli.wed tn â-  play upon one ))l;>"e until the wcishj begins to run. When a))plied with brushes, a slightlv heavi;'r w.<ish | ,„, , . lean be used as it is i?encrallv wojl rberearealways lO.OOn trnmp.siniyi.bbed down. Light coats fre- Great Britain, while in winter-time the number is often doubled. Tbo phrase, 'living on tick" dates back to the seventeenth cen- tury, when !\ tradesman's bill was known as a ticket. Bewaic of the man who has , c,<.( d story to tell you in .a whis PM-. red sandstono in an oblong form, (fact of her having; to apply to a nc- | of two stories with an attic and a arc hut for shelter. .\nd when on i sloping roof. There were four rooms r^l!!^r''?d^'r Y'^r'"'''-' "â- "'''â- "" """'' •''^"'â- â€¢'' ^'V'"'"^/'" " '"V^'^'ri -S'^ f«^<^^ =n his boots!" exclaim- govc It tbA look of suspicion was j^assage running from front to back L^i old Mr. Flatiron. " X on .sense ' ehanged tc» one of fear and dis-'and containinR the staircase. I'A'ly. thev mistht as ii'te- I It w;vs furnisbed plainly and sub- If), T^hi n:»y slaves were, however, jstcntially, partly from houseliolu feat y. ftiey mi.stht as well tell mn ( the man has si.x heads in lis quently applied are better than heavy ones, as the Latter nre more apt to scale off. While still wet a light coat seems to have failed in its object, but when drv the whole be- comes perfectly white. One bushel of lime will make thirty gallons of whitewash. M.iny formulas for rrnking whitewa.;'.! .are published in- vrlving the use of salt, oil, grease, glue, rice, etc., together with the boiling of the material at different stages of its preparation. These arc too much involved for the or- dinary man, besides taking too much t ime. The addition of a sm.\ll quantity of salt and oil ii lald to THE mmi 1 In .,11 c.i^i-^liil OISTCMPCR. PINKEYE,|INrLL'r.NZ.l, COLDS. ETC ot .ill horsoti. broodmuiv-., colts, si.illi.ins. i» 'to "SPOHN THEIVI" on I heir toniriiosor in the fcort piitSiiohu's T.;i;n..,l Comiwund. liivo tlui ivra^ly to all i)( th,>in. It •ctson till! blcxid and alaiiil..<. It rmii!,thr <li..<..-i«. bv c.iprlllnK the div;iw g.-i ms. It w«r<lK iMT t h,- tniiiblo no niattrr lioiv I hey are "rxiH>«i.J." .VIv solulrljr (n-c from anyiliinir iniurious. .\ <ihi!ri can s.i(ely t.ikr it. 50c And $1.00; to 50 an.l Jll.l\. thedoten. Sold by dtngcists and bainess doalcts. DiKlrlliillnrH; .\ll Ubolranlf^ l>rn>iKl>if •• SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Cbomista and Bacleriologisf a GOSHEN, INO., t. S. A.

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