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sssee By GARRET1 [ . + . . . io There was excitement at the Alleg county penitentlary. Plctters had suc- ceeded in tunnelling into the enclosure from a housc directly oppesite the massive walls, The strange actions of inmates of this house aroused a w suspleions and the authoritic ra on their guard. The cel diately, and the up In front o officials that feot in length au the b Several men enter, but after adva t nee | wera forced by the sti 10 ratreat The authorities next dec to sink a shaft from the street to t el. To de termine the exact spot to dig the hole was necessary to secure the scrvices of exporienced mining engine Robert Masters, a well known you gineer, was communicated “ day came prepared for bu | “This 18 a very dirty plece of worl maid Warden Wrex to the engineer vise you to don this suft of conviet's cl It 1s strong and cannot be Robert Masters attired himself in the pult without hesitation. IHe was intent .m‘ the work befors him Ity was inter ested n the extent of the'tunnel and his | Buccess or failure would be made public in | the papors. He determined to eed and | the donning of, cor 100 for the .- casion 14 not cmbarrass | ‘ The warden and two conv who were to | assist in the o omj Beer across (he street 1o the Jarge crowd ! gathered to watch operations | Holen Morse and two of her friends were | smong those who were watching the work Bhe could not help but notico the ence In the convicts. Two were pale anl listless, cowering and abashed, while (h third, who to h Wwith the warden, w alert, indifferent to t emed un ally tamiliar & bright, energ he staring crov thau eonvict evidently interosted her more | 414 th. tunrel | “What a handsome man.* said Telea to her friends te cortainly must a desperate chara His face shows too much intelligence and shrewdness to Lo | classed among 1he lnary criminals, f wonder who he Helen wa iting frl he Bhe lived In n small town, where she popular and 1t ognized ader of clety. She was young and her studies hud thus far, prevented her from becon: familiar with inci which oceur In a great city proposition to v the penitentiary and see the tunnel & been accepted with enthusiasm, The young engiveer remained underg und for hours: the crowd was thinning out Helen's friends wantel to go home, but she | fnsisted on remaining. She had become in- terested {n a convict and wanted to see him again When Robert Masters reappeared he was sssssssscsssscsssPPrssssscsssssassssssrsace IN STRIPES, BUT NOT A CONVICT. A Case of Love and Mistaken Identity. B e ¥ T e o, 1 will not sccept his Invit | darce,” she said (o herself, but cepte Wa# she dancing with an escaped | = convict? She cxcused herselt and re- | And—I'm going home tomorrow 4 “But what has a woman's heart to dc ¢ |with your going he asked Helen § | pervouss 9 . behind the but, do you k w. Helen A $ [that a wifo need not testify agaiast hor ® | bust ' Helen," said her h 1 advise yeu to| “T sbert, 1 ) 1ty prepare for the jou | ean r fcel obliged to And we buy the Vittsh papers | agalust you.” ere asked Helen DRESSING WINGEIR WINDOWS, tound up to this time had looked forward to the | ¢ and Fasy Weass of Adjusting bathing, danctag and other pleasures of Nevr Drapenien. the seashore as the cvent of her y | Mo room la it ' Now her pleasure depended upon the pres- | aro prettily > Bunfy AP0 LN ence of a ne | nde ate and Inexyp at e i RURRE A o b that n ¥ Robert Masters had just received an ap hardly to Le forgiven i )« pointment as chiet engineer of a mining | wisely all funds sh ompany. His prospects were ver on fresh curtalr n curaging. Before engaging upon the autuma renovation § tive dutles of his new position he had |and the houscholder ‘ joined the throngs for a few cks' re inel 14 he n « rcation at the seashore, nalder of tha cherp He would not have been attracted to|damask imitation Oriental Mies Morse, but why did she shrink from | blaze colors, but go ba him s0 when they were introduced. Mr. [ the heap denim, chee Masters loved a contest and he deter- | Soft nin | crea d to win her esteom at least tired to her room At this moment he may be dancing with | some other girl,” thought Helen she | tried to close her eyes in sleep | But what do I care for him--it's the girl. | Lo must not dance with him! Sho would | ot it ghe knew “No, thank you," she sald next morn he refused the eng s iovie | o for a ride. “I'm afraid he'll mur- heracit | ler me,” she said t A fow minutes later the “other girl" re- turned from the , uphurt and r t Helen wa v “other girl" was criminal i f he knew the secret which I possess | would mot treat me thus,” sald Helen tears o her eyes. “Yet, he glves preference,” and her face bright- the thought evening she again refused a ride cn the bay with the engineer. How- she did not retire until the “other ever. 4 wos landed in safety. 'n desired the compauy of the sup ed convict. He was cultured, well ed ucated and popular. She did not trust him. He had designs for he was a crim- inal, but in spite of this she did not want TWO USES OF the “other girl” to receive his attentions. |- < One 1 in a curt note she declined cretonnes and chintz, denim in solid, rich Robert Masters' invitation to joln a plenic | F€d8, blues and greens or relieved by stripes party. He seemed Indiferent, when an hour [ 80d figures and u durable and agreeab later Helen saw the “other girl” and the | f18Ured cotton goods known as upholsterer’s englneer walking away from the hotel, gaily | 110In& This last is printed with patterns | swinging a basket of lunch between them, [9f DIE white empire wreaths, or a small Helen was in a rage. She had already diamond design, on a ground of forest lost her heart, now she lost her head. To | E'¢en. pompadour red or mandarin yellow the chief of police she told her story. Then | "““\" “‘("' th i OF #n00 g e “' she went to her room and cried. ‘:""N““}(‘:w"\”“;n: i ”(\’\‘”V e o “Mr. Masters, we are obliged to detaln | yingow then the dresser thereof has no you at the station until the arrival of a| rigny (o feel herself an astute or success ittsburg police officer. We have con- e covered with mud, but there was u eparkle | ©° LR » & N ful person. . clusive evidence that you are an escaped | gimile graceful lines of drapery a in his eye, denoting confidence that he il £Hace P . could determine upon an opening in the | SOPYICt” was the greeting which the en- | ggoq color is what sets a window off to t e e [ . SUg street which- would communicate with he | KInCeF received upon his return from the | groatest dvantage and Four suggestions tunnel. Some calculations were made and | Pichic that night. He was angry and ob-|are sketched In order to give any one of an speedily two conviets with pick and shovels | 9Urate. The officer was perslstent. Had | onginecring mind some ideas as to which were digging a hole i Masters watched the progress of the dig- | gers; fust as intensely did Helen waich the features of the youug engineer. He gave orders, talked with the reporters and re- celved courtcous treatment from the war- den. All this convin no ordinary prizoner more closely “They have struck (he tunuel!’ denly exclaimed the engineer us & volume | of cold air rushed up from the openiug. Robert Masters' calculations were correct; | ho had made no errors, and. proud of his | success, he joined the warden and convicts as they returned 1o the prison | Helen concluded that the handsome con- | vict bad earned his liberty; if not, then he he certainly was 4 dangerous criminal. Jack Thibet, w life prisover, was one of | the men who had assisted the eagineer in determining the windings of the tunnel While in the hole ho had advanced beyond his companions and found that the opening terminated within six inches under the prison yard. This ha knew, because he heard the convicts crushing stone above. Quickly returning, he stirred up the pools of foul water as he went, which emitted such an odor that his companions gave up the work for that day. That evening the warden visited Thibet's | cell. He was worried about the attempt which had been made to liberate the prison- ers and was anxious to gain Information from Thibet, who had been in the hole. Dur- | ing the conversation the convict complained | of severe headaches. This the warden at- tributed to the foul odors which the men had encountered and he gave Thibet per- mission to exercise for a short time in the prison yard Armed guards stocd upon the massive walls and no prisoner had ever attempted to scale them. Thibet walked briskly to aud fro and atter repated steps was con- | vinced that he had located the spot where | the tunnel terminated. The difference in| sound told him s0. Until now he had been resigned to his fate as a life pridoner -} but he had a chance. Ho paused. Ho | would wait for the rumble of a street car | or a passing train. Just then a steamboat on the Ohlo river blew its sonorous whistle, Thibet leaped iuto the air and then went | crushing through the earth. I Helen that he w and she edged up sud- | The guards | had seen nothing, neither had they heard. | | every cent he owed and could borrow to | | no | Rohert he consented quietly to accompany the offi- | {x attainable with inexpensive upholstery cer, he would not have attracted attention. fabrics. One of the pictures shows how in The polished gentleman of an hour ago was | 4 room that boasts four sun-admitting now a blackened scoundrel. He was placed | windows the curtains can be arrayed to behind the bars. temper the glare and convey to the in Helen insisted on going home that night, | terior of the room a most delightful air of but in spite of her protests she must ap- | IDViting coziness, pear as chief wiiness on the morrow, Cottage Drapery. Warden Wrex arrived early next morn- | This fashion of hanglog a window i ing. His reputation had suffered, but he [ properly called ‘cottage drapery” anl would redeem himself with his superiors | warm red denim is one of the best goods it the convict could be landed in his cell | for the purpose. A single width of the once more | heavy fabric is enough for the Great Schtt! Mr. Masters, you here,” | fall at right and left of the sash sald the astounded warden as the engineer | — was brought from his cell. “Yes, 1 am am accused of having taken hasty departure from your hospitabl roof,” sald the engineer angrily. “But this fs surely a case of mistaken \dentity,” said the warden “I wish people would make their mistakes fn cold weather so that the {nnocent wouldn't have to lose thelr weight in ad- dition ‘o their reputations,” said the per- spiring engineer. In the meantime Helen Morse had been sent for. Masters was determined to spend punish the party who had brought upon him this Indignity. When Helen appeared his flerce resolves vanished. “She belleves I am a conyict; wonder she repulsed me,” thought “Miss Morse, you have made & very serlous mistake,” said Warden Wrek. “This man was never an inmate of the Allegheny county penitentiary. The girl was embarrasscd. She knew then a mistake had been made, but believed that her error would be excused when a statement was made, “1 did see that n in your company at the penitentiary, Mr. Wrex, and at the time he was wearing a convict's garb. That | same nlght a prisoner escaped. When I saw Mr. Masters I recognized him as one ? COLLEGE DRAT age cdges at the ms only at to yard length uld be about ) 1L I8 mer gives sel sitates h the three bottom sl and at th of the convicts and reported the factt | HhIch Lo run Robert Masters laughed in such an un- | (10 CHREIRS | | bocoming manner that the tears went | iheY YU - | coursing down his cheeks i 4 “Miss Morse,” suid the warden, “permlt | jareer rod than the first to me to Introduce Robert Masters, an engl-\ g1/ in g flounce lambrequin wop neer of Pittsburg, who was of great serv-| or the curtains proper. The ¢ais of th fce to me In locating the trend of the) THE OM AHA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY, and room are lofty, ponderous wood with large rings and balls considered in good taste 1 would not for -xample be utilize #. sach b RS are ropresented in | of a tall window draped with | g y shutting out an ugly prospect 1 v all For | p tion itk I : ma unt- | er : widthe, woven | p ed in bands of fed and mend In this fustance the fringed ‘ meet in center ot ¢ the window and loose knot. Drawn from nd big iron hook nails of the window fringed able | 1 in h w. Here 3 all t and yet view of a nelghboring back- yard ilfully and at the expense é SCARF of $5 tho upy r glass of the sashes were, of the room, painted in leaded panes. Below this icets of clear glass width vellow India silk was draped like from frame to frame, and made roset of nerrow yellow ribbon nd ribbons soil they are taken | in a bath of refined | ed in place, all in the Down in the Dumps. with a heavy ,anxious feeling The liver ne quick attention Casc Candy Cathartlc at once! All drugglsts, 10¢ the blues! s Take ots SHORT RECORD O CATASTROPH e United States H Fire, Water atest vonflagrations tates has ever had, were the one in Chicago in 1871, In whicli §190,000,000 of property was destroyed; the fire in Doston in 1872, in which the dam- age and the blaze in New York in 1835, 8 were | 0,000,000, What i The g United Weckly s Suffered Wind, which Leslie's the says was £80,000,000, in which 600 warehou destroyed p As the poj at that time | ahout like that | . now, the loss was severer rtionately than one many times larger would be in 1900. Chicago's fire, though— and Chicago had a population of only a little over 200,000 at the time—was the most only about K, of pre 230,000, or approximately $10,000,000, and the loss of 150, he destruction at Galveston 00 in life and about $30,000,000 The bursting of a reservoir in Mill River valley in Mas destroyed several litile villages and drowned 150 persons. Floods on the Mississippl have frequently destroyed from 000,000 of property at a time, and more than once drowned from 1,000 to 1,500 people, The most destructive tornado which ever | $ita was was over in prop ty. husetts in 1874 000,000 to $10,- which destroy property in € ho second Unite d $2,500 000 of propert ravaged the coast of G | olina $ 1 400 iy Louls in nd $10,000,000 1n 1898 Loulsville, truck in the lost 90, $iatis by o 100 lives A tornado rgla and Scuth Car- in 1853 which destroyed 1,000 lives and 000,000 ¢f proper The most remarkable n of tornadoes which ever United States at a 9, 1884, visited one time was on cted Virginia, Carolina, South Carolina, Georgla, pl, Tennessee, Kentucky and 11i- distinct storms being traced on A in those states, In which 1,000 per-~ s wero killed and 15,000 buildings de- which OCTOBER 18, 1900, » PA YA T AV A VA VeV oV 4Vy Ve ¥ There’s No Excuse for lgnorance In this enlightened age, with such a multiplicity of books at so low a cost it is a crime to ke ignorant, You can get a Standard Dictionary | For $7.00 and a good dictionary is a prime necessity for the intelligent man, It s neededin every household. When you buy a dics tionary you want the latest and best, and that is The Stan- dard Dictionary. If you want to see the book call on the Megeath Stationery Co,, 1309 Farnam., If you want to know something in regard to the Standard let us explains The Standard Dictionary is published by Funk & Wagnalls of New York, a firm well known in the publishing business, This gives stability to the publi” cation, The Standard Dictionary is the work of 247 ed- * itors, These editors were chosen from the front rank of American and English scholars, This gives breadth to the work, Each man was a specialist in science, art, literature, or an expert in the handicrafts or trades, The Standard Dictionary cost nearly one million dollars before it is placed before the public, This was no extravagant sum, but the publishers were paying for the best brains money could command, The vigorous, thinking, hard-working scholars who made the book were well paid, The Standard Dictionary contains over 300,000 words, showing its completeness, as this is 75,000 more than any other dictionary., The Standard Dictionary contains 2,338 pages. 5.000 illustrations, The Standard Dictionary is noted for its sim- plicity, accuracy and comprehensiveness, These points make it a pleasure to consult and makes it popular with the younger students, The Standard Dictionary has dropped most of the obsolete or dead words. As the publishers say: “If a word is dead and sl dom found in English books, why fill up our dictionaries with such? Why not leave them in their graves? The Standard Dictionary is the most modern work in the matter of spelling re- form. If one follows it he must spell correctly, v The Standard Dictionary has received the highest praise from scholars, teachers, professors, theologians, scientists, editors and men of letters in all countries. The Standard Dictionary is the cheap- est dictionary published. You can buy a volume now for Seven Dollars Could money be invested to better advantage? You have sons or daughters in scheol. Could you equip them better than by placing a Standard Dictionary on the study table? The young man or woman who is in the university or college will ap- preciate a Standard Dictionary as a gift, What People Say of the Standard Dictionary should impress the thoughtful person. to speak intelligently. Here are some of the opinions of thosz in a position ) flounde rod should be finlshed off with|stroyed | Walter W at, the eminent ety The Critic, New York: “The illus Edward Everett Hale, D. D., Bos- Thirty minutes later when the kecper|tunnel dug for tho purpcse of freelng & | gl brass balls and if a touch of cxtra| Charleston, S. C., In 1586 had the Savareat | mologist and professir of Auglo- trative quotations are not merely ton, Mass.: “It is the blessing of oup went to 100k for his prisoner the hole was | PFisoner from the penitentiary. At the entation !s desired the flounce may | earthquake ever oxperienced in & clty of | Saxom: “A spolling reform in the credited to the author, as in all other breakfast table. 1 have been sur- discovered and the wlarm given. A rush|t!me he wore a suit of conviet's clothes |y, of red deaim that is striped or| the Ur ates, in which the destrustion | | Euglieh language is certain to come American dictionaries, but their ex- prised at the fulness and accuracy wag mado for the opening to tho tunmel |80 83 mot to soil his own.' | figured of life v ty and that of property $5.000. | and Dr. March is a man thoroughly act location, by edition (with pub- which show themselves to anybody ross the way, but the prisoner had es-| Helen would that she had never loft her | ‘Fyuciy (n y of can be 000, A irid, Mo., and the lower Mie. | qualified to preside over this depart- lisher and date), volume, chapter, who uses it constantly caped. A sult of clothes intended for the Guiet home. The efcers looked upen her | gajncq s wnd |8 pl Lad a series of earthqu \' ment of the Standard Dictlonary poge. etc., is added. This I8 an im The Philadelphia Inquir Philas man whom the plotters had planued to % contempt h 8 C¥CS | jining the pl ' 0 (ehorks in 1811 which destroyed m Lt Palmer of editorial staff provement which will be particularly delphia The arrang is nd- rescus was missing and a convict's garb |Bleamed with pleasure oy Lo was writing - |1 BUEBS akateuhthtomns oaaL Yl of t iy Dictlonary: “I do not appreciated by teachers and critical mirable oclally 10 be commend- Iying in its place [ up the sensation of the season | | greats ‘owing o the resion belng perr o8 Lesitate to say that the Standard students ed in the giving of the definition im- Early next morning Helen was on her| ' Very well, warden, I'll o to your hotel Pec e g esiae M R | Dictionary 18 triumphantly the beat S il mediately after the word, leaving the way to the peultentiary. She purposed | ] Imasine they won't entertain me at the C o ey ReaplD at of all English word-booke; that fn its Prof. Il 1. Phelps, ex-minister 0 oymology to follow later, and the distributing a basket of fruit among the | botel at which I have been stopping.” na af (e Atlantis oy : surprising complotene ud accura Great Britain I'he ‘:"'h I8 ex grouplug of the divislons and subdi- prisoners, or rather o & prisoner. When | the engineer 6 BaS LaA ans R nd K Ahp GVIE it ts without a peer tremely well dome throughout. I yigions of a subject under a general the arrived at the prison she was told| “Of course they wili Mr. Masters. 1| - Tiap hae bad many Mirtisanes: and a | Henry M. Stanley, the African e » hat for g8ers) 083 torm so (et Ghs User 15 Hot peme of the daring escape and when told that| Will €xplain everything and take all the | I nroactiad 1n e ledd AL g of llulm ap= | plorer: “It nearest to my actical rposes {t s the pelled to engage In long searches the convict was one of the men who had | Plame. 1. not you, will be the sufferer." | 1 e Raepg ('mlaym; t “v which h.w‘ tdea of a firat-cla Americ dictionary now avallable Men of every occupation express ansisted In locating the windings of the | 'W!th downcast head and upturned eyes | o Tt S Waame: | Prof. T. W. Hunt L e A D, r gratification at the ratiafactory tunnel she hoped it was not the man for | Helen appeallagly awaited an answer. Srah g iy a0k | English, Princetor College: "Wl cpapcellor Nebraska Un “] maaner in which this particular field whom 1he fruit was intended ““Here are three notes in which you have o S e BRI commile be the English people’s word book.” peljeyve that this dictionary essential. has been covered. The Letter it 18 “I should like to have him free and yet, [ Tefused my company on different occasion, theso Qisatiare from the effects of | Journal of Education, Boston: “It |y fyjfils the high ideal of its pro- Known, the better it is certain to be #ald the engineer as the keeper of the jail disasters. York it tree, how shall I ever see him again,” she mused. more than | doubled in population in the fifteen years | will make the world ita debtor and out-and-out new @ppreciated.” 4 jectors, It | returned his possessions. “Will you refuse tor 5 en \mediately e all who write must praise it ever yroduct and not, ke our old dlce Daily Inter Ocean, Chicago: “Every From tier to tier and from cell to cell | 3%8i0, it I ask permisslon to escort you to | entcatately followlng its great fire in 1835, | more.” Tlomaries. the result of patching and Promise made by the publishers has sho passed. but the basket of fruit re. | the hotel?’ That she accepted the warden it five times as mavy inhabitants The St. James' (Gazette) Budget, gmendment, little by little the diftep. been fully redecmed. It is. indeed, & matned intact. The convict she was look- | kRew, for he left for his hotel alone. [ fiow s it had at the time of its conflagra- | London, England: “Dificult to praise ent pieces often added by many, &rand book. . Thet there 18 & ing for was not there and she concluded | Helen was the first to speak. “Mr. ING A LONG ST WINDOW ‘":“‘ ;‘: "‘w’]" :xvrr the embers of Boston's this splendid Glctionary too highly." many minds.' dritt, conservative yet real, toward A o + b . Y NE AL J U re o «ar later were put out the : , bers & d : that he had escaped. The visit over she \h‘uxm, 1 would leave the hotel tonight . h orty owners of the burned distplot @ prop- The Boston Traveller In point The Arema, B. O. Flower, sditer, ::o simpler I?rml cl_nyclur; )\;- did what could have been done when she | Were it not that I feel the noed of asking | and this season a good uso ls made of du fered moro for the land which were of- of completencus it is without a peer o 00 B0 it ix ALl Red acas en YG(;?IHU?" throughout the arrived—lett the frult for some deserviug | YoUr forglvences for this awful mistake |red or groen burlaps. Doth of theso Tub- | than wan maked o dus enii " (Va8 covered in ‘our language. , . Tho success of .\ oouive’on the one hand, snd yer VO « - prisoner. overs hour of the day." terials cost 1aore, howover ) the dei ted @ gay earller for the land the dictionary is already secured L The American Journal of Educa L the bulld W s0 carefully edited and arranged ag 1 suppose the men whow I consider the That suits me,” said Robert. *“I'll then bulldings which o0 esrefy 8 & carsfully we serut- most deserving the prison management con- Seart nd great Iy were upon ft. A | | No paius have Leen spared to make tion: “The more to elimina | useless Or unnecessury be sure of your company on all occasions.” on Is already rising | qestructive which ever occurred anywhere i | in the world, with the possible exception of that in Moscow in 1812. Chicago's certainly exceeded the damage at the conflagration in London, which {8 called the Great Fire, which occurred in 1666, Johnstown, Pa., in 1889 furnished the most destructive of the floods (Johnstown's being from a bursting reservoir) of the United States until that at Galveston on September 9, 1800. The property loss at Johnstown was hit a large city In the Unlted States was that | J q 4 ’ s ’ ) TR VLT O VUE DT CLT ALETDLE VoWV aWa S o YV oWV oV V. 0 V V. V.,V V.oV oV oV oV VP V V V V.,V Vo VooV Vo P g V_ o3 A : R FresHE Svation. it ot ‘a standard dictionary,’ buc 10 SLANALe USTeRs OF UATSSSASSRY iniye this work, the more appropriate siders the most undeserviug—if caught,”| “Then I'll never kuow that I'm forgiven.” [ uotooiary. but freo | Has of the old. This is the Amert. ‘The Standard Dictionary." " amined this work the more I haye “2¢in8 to bo the name—The Standard thought Helen. “I'm glad he i free, yet| “With forgiveness you might forget ond | iy excluded, a Obarles Dudloy Warner: “It 18 & oo inoiogged with the bellef that = 1/Stionary of the E Lapr »> It 15 far easier to cateh a man iu a pen- |treat my advances with your former con- [ ent of drapors 5 possih Philug henutityl; book he careful 02 il gcoupy the firat place among SUAKS: itentfary than out of It."" tempt,” he sald Madras, checso cloth, or ov Wallace amination I have tuen wbie to gl dictionaries of the English-speaking Unixarsity of Melbourne, Ausiislia “Why, Hdlen, what an interest you are| "My conduct permits you to treat me | (nt ia sirined In good Loton )hia to visit his brother.in. | thin work convinces me of its very y'oLAnATC] Proft. Bdward E. Morrls, M. A.: * taking in the daily papers. Here ycu|With contempt, I deserve it said Helen ) while it gl Bim & part of & bottie ot | high aad exoeptionsl merit. ... 1t T Fo L 0 ol phliri: up: - SaYmOAEIAIRIY tatafrec b thiei Bianal have a copy of each one published,' sald | earnestly y garnlshed appear Cough Remedy, which I"',: weems to me a #ound and scholarly The )lux‘ on ; ‘m y Traveler N ard on an average more than once a hat hoalees SadianrRint “Very well, your refusals shall be treated | (ransparent to shut off nuy desired daye re on his return home. During the Book, WhICh: WaXegiauch 8B SpRsAl . POR: G SmPleMDeRS 1t e Without © day, e dlotionary, never failsd “Yes, I'm 80 concerncd ubout those poor | In the same manger. Iights A Nberal amount of matorlal s ro. | Bummer his brother-la-law fook & wer ‘i | o practical use (hat It s boutd {0 & eOT in oUT lAngusge. Tiie wuccess ... 1L gien all (b varioties of Bt B 1 s ma g ey Gosslp at the hotel ran wild, but was | quired in the makeup of (ho full cro vere cold and used the Cough Remedy with be popular.” of this dictiopary is already assured.” meaning “What is the latest Dews?' asked her |5topped when Robert Masters at supper that | s ed with carie cream J ruch good results that he wrote to know : — P ———————— P —— e, LT Aokiass evening took a seat at Helen's table ¢ Ince that costm 9 cents a yard |Where could got more. He wan sur: “Oh, they haven't found him yet,” an. 'Mr. Masters, are you not takivg an un- [ Pwo widths of wide goods is nece sary to ised to learn that he could get 1t from 3 P o A, usually long route to the hotel™" she asked | give a gracoful wmplitude to every side|&ny druggist there. This remedy fs ong t a 10 ner O "Pound who one evening after they bad been wanderiug [ of tho hish looped garniture and srall | of the most staple articles that druggiats L4 “Why--why, Andre, the explorer.” and | &bout for bours. 55 rods are again most fittiugly om-|handle and one of the most reliable. A Melen wondered and wondered why she| ~The most clrcultous route on a moon- | ployed here Thosa who once gIve It a trial are seldom 1309 Farnam Street. should have hesitated to tell the truth, |!Eht uight is the most direct route to a| As w matter of fact -unlesw a rich hro- | satisfied with any other. Mr. Wallace in R “Tomorrow we leave for the seashore, woman's heart,” sald (he youug englocer. | cade or weighty stuff is uscd and the win- | & well knows citizen of Grand View, Ala |