Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE WORLDi SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 11, 190%, NS “SHERLOCK (ofr5. Carter Harrison's Fairy Tales, PARTRIDGE SITS |DESPOTIC 1S HOLMES” |S REAL Which She Told to Her Own Children. Al WALSH'S DESK P IPERS RULE. ‘Henri Chegnay, a New York ae poo, Commissioner Calls Unexpect- Dyer, Can Give Sir Conan’s ; i ye edly at the Tenderloin Police , Hero “Cards” and “Spades” : : } f wey Station and Reviews Platoon i and Win. J ‘ in Absence of the Captain. ee WREAT FEAT OF DEDUCTION.| (> > ‘siege “SMILING DICK” NAPPING. ‘Accomplished Amateur Sleuth Tolls i Soe. s “ Y ra my i ti : oe The Precinct Commander Did Not {The Evening World How-He Con- is 2 <p. torn ae ae § i! / Appear Until After Midnight, but | @luded that Paper-Hanger and % py EDIT ys y aaa! we ae: Hie Chief Spoke Well of Him | Roofer Robbed His Fiat. J “A y+ ‘4 ¥ (a Baty i, After Brief Interview. Bent! Chegnay, of No, %1 ‘West i Marat h Tt i ot] , CE ¢ a yi amet Rea The Tenderloin was thrown tnto a ity-elghth street, is modest or noth- " anes i RSs j ¥ ‘ i 1 state of excitement during the night by \nos(df oad rtd Ue ac rane cre tate d sight a 4 . ts Same f, | y a) eo ee Ieee y the unexpected appearance in the dis- tendon, he thinks nothing of EeeGLIRG “) " : i ’ , ¥ egg 5 us , h trict of Police Commissioner Partridge. ‘Whe credit of unravelling a great mys- Lae P ' = No one quite knew what the visitation ery. Chegnay is a dyer and haa a might mean. Some were curious, aome place of buniness at No. 97 Bank etreet, felt honored, while the great majority Dut now and then, Just for love of . oe y bead ruses 8 in the Tenderloin cafes 5 0 be fi b ‘ (i " r ji felt apprehensive. he “@herlocks’ in « edie as . x a i ees, a ‘ j The Commissioner did not seam in the least anxious to conceal his move- the police are much ; $ ‘ aia ay of 5 ments, bul wl Nia pat , but walked straight toward the @mazed over the logical manner in es " " ‘i Thirtleth street station, where he oc- Mmhich he unravelled the myatery of the coupled hi heft from his own house of jewelry to aban of Cae veun oe es the ear Ha. ibe ties It was then that the Commissioner "Sher! cof does not like the honors had an opportunity of studying the that are being showered upon him, and Decullarities of Tenderloin work when ‘would have one believe that all the & small tarceny case was examined. He Negligent Policemen Find that Loitering, Uncalled-For Con- versation and Soiled Gloves ~ Are Crimes in Deputy’s Code. MANY TO FACE A TRI Captain's Morning Rounds Result in Exposure of Unmilitary Habits Common to the Weary Patrolman but Hateful to the Soldi From the number and character of eases on the blotter for trial by Com- missioner Partridge it ts evident his new deputy, Capt. Rose Piper, who waa for- merly in the United States Army, h brought militarism into the Police D: partment with a vengeance, When President Roosevelt was a Po- ce Commissioner he waa in the habit of waking up policemen who fell asleep on their beats and giving. them good advice. But none of that for Capt. Piper. According to hie ritual a man who goes to sleep on his beat ought to be hanged. He has not found one asleep yet, but he {s searching diligently and expresses hope. He has found, however, a police- man committing the almost unpardon- ‘Was done by “My friend, Wat- made no comment upon the actions of gon," who in this case is Detective the sergeant at the desk, but seemed Gehendler. Chegnay says he only re. highly interested in the proceedings. Perted the robbery, and that Schendier He afterward approved of the despatch b . i 4 i y X ’ Wisined the mystery, eee ay Pee 4 y - Roba HaliceNete Gi % abe 8g PRE cs which the case had been examined Teste 20 a8 to complete the job. a, 4 J fi : : i oe } y “Foes and disposed of. iG Nored by Lack of Excitem a: Dt it i . mplimemted in Court. Things got rather dull after that, Capt. Magistrate Cornell, however, knew to Walsh had not appeared and the Com- ywhom honor was du nd complimented od missioner loolad tired, He saw two fhe dyer upon his astutoness, at th Plain-clothes m: king in th Ll PSorpeadata tela signee Mrs. Carter Harrison, the beautt/al wife of the Mayor of Chicago, has been tulling fairy storles to her children for a number of years. | tain's room, and it Is thought te aa at of 6. Holmes. The fame of the beauty and charm of these stortes soon spread beyond the Harrison household, and there were many requests for a repelition| °° ke this for the mon left the room suddenly a few minutes later, a ad ye dabei Gnd the tellowing | OF fhem to larger audiences than the spellbound boy and girl for whom they were originally invented, and to Ywhom they were at first exclu-| 1t was now 12 o'clock, and the mia- @istogue is the remult: sively related. In response to these requests Mrs. Harrison at last consented to the publication of some of the stories, and these will appear in Weubte eee te ice =o é senerar Bees ela atiactiva lA fe days in an elegant volume handsomely illustrated tn colors, which will be issued by A. C. McClurg & Co., of Chicago. The three| sence, so Commiasiones Partsitee Gok Lid Srivate detective! stories reprinted here in part are from an advance copy of the book which Mrs. Harrison kindly sent o THE EVENING WORLD, peed BIA Feviewthy the, mien, ‘won 91 rew out his \scoatAge tage Sire ponds ath (Copyrighted 1902 by A. C. MoQlurg @ Co.) [beam that struck across the window. | Iyved the Sea King, who controlled the| wife. ‘The grief of the mother at part-| tried hin utmont to n AR “From remar} oO effect," “Ob, {fT could get a Httle sunlight on | winds and the waters of the world. He/!n& would be lost in joy at the knowl-| ign of ‘Bmili Di fres the calm response, PRINCE SILVERWINGS. he murmured, | fell tn love with the Princess, Ney OA a ef cance heat Dis Py Cormmisslones nodded aobreviosiy TBM Joking aside’— a da few. moments, oF Sie nee eee Pee. |, When the mother and sisters had| The platoon was hardly dismissed be- ‘And you seldom use the pon, but the etl ra away cre ee ee “Dear me," he sald to himself, “I wish| He forgot to give the winds thetr pate tiie, iittle girl farewell, ey eae fore Capt. Walsh hurried into the sta Palepbone a great deal?” continued the] land. where the sky has nearly always )iy4 7 sould help him, but I cas hardly | orders, and thoy, Ike naughty children, | lil her Jato @ deep sleep, and then lay} ‘ 5 jouth, the deep-blue tint of the ocean and the| siiige ine course of the aun” did not do thelr duty, but spent their | Neh, the breast of a great broad ion, He some $0 .have Benn forwarned j ‘Explain, please." sun seems brighter than anywhere els} Suddenly an idea came to him. Did| time fdly playing about in the ocean| “While aleeping, the fish's tail mould Dreaence and es Alauppear, and in its place ‘two tittle | Sreeted him with a smart salute, gt the “The tops of 7 -|{n the world—far away tn the midat of @) you & re aalean vareilars ral ayilie hen the wave|#&me time ushering his chief into tus s Woate that you use the typowriter, while| 6reat magnolia grove dwelt a little band ‘ad {the glossy condition of your left elbow, | f fairies. soupled with the inclination of your] Now, & fairy te @ tiny creature, you that {s just about what our lit-| very warm. At last {t grew terribly |cared for Bead while Ustening to me, would point} — B. {tle fatry did. hot, and @ great peatilence visited tha hen next you hear of some ‘baby Approves of “Smiling Dick. tie tn ibe! ‘ 9 . you to a frequent, if not almost habitual, He opened bie beautiful wings, that | clty. ‘The people died at a Cearful rate. | Kir! belng rescued from the octkn. vol oupterviewed afterward regarding, the r have any one catch the sun in eat look itl ow v : kwhite legs grow out . ot oking-glass and throw {t NDE ielmlids were misbehaving tn|\WOuG Oar cher gently te the: shore, | private room, ‘There they remained. ta of course, became) where she would eoon be found end| close conference for fifteen minute, mane of the telephone.” shone Nke spun silver, and waved them|No breeze blew in from the ocean to] {s the little ester of the mermaids. Pigs eciare® Visit, Commigsioner Part- gently tn the au Back they flashed ook re antici air. ‘ “E Sui alled to Capt. Walsh the golden sunlight Ine pertést flood! ‘The King and Queen of the clty aant! about @ matter upon which I wished ine over the child's face, and the little erip- ema to lay the complaints of the THE CLOUD MAIDENS. erate oreaeaee ee Sale baa} bole laugheaiwith isa: suffering people before the monarch of omen ‘Over an oN, bi » 3 complimented the captain on thelr up= io, I have not; no more have you. Nore} he eorss) ell sil ite the deep, but he would not recelve! ne Cloud Maidens are beautiful be-|ponrance, I think Capt, Walsh 1n°% gand + * SBxplain!” “Because you stammered over the Game.” “@xcellent! Now, will you tell me how you deduced that the paper-hanger and foofer, who are held for the Grand next Monday, might have stolen nt by and Silver Wings | them. Jish swam boldly out toward} ings who dwell close up to the stare|man, and, being young, he ty what this t. He had done but] the green walls of thi . y 5 y- | precinct needs, i e palace, but they | just under the blue ceiling of the heav-|Ofrrinet Meade. Partridge ons, They are the daughters of the old) nad left the district spread Ike fre In'a Storm King, and lovely as they are|dry gale, but the mystery surrounding they have n great deal of work to do, |the visit will remain a nine-day wonder, ‘The Storm King is a stern father and Fequires strict obed) :nce from his daugh-| TO BOOM EDWARD M’CALL. began to lose he: one good decd of the thirty that he must| got no further than the coral reefs report to hie Queen. ach day he} outside the gates. Lobsters crawled would go to the boy'# window and flash) slowly and painfully to the palace, fe2l- the suntlght over hin f {ng that thelr ago and dignity would os 8 8 8 6 8 surely entitle them to a private audl- | Two weeks Ww your jewelry Slowly and sadly he approached his! ence, only to be met at the entrance r Nev beau- ect of thelr work “Tt is very elmpie. Queen. Never had she looked s0 beau-| by a solmgn old porpoise, who reported | ters. ‘The slightest weglect o Fareed titul, Clad in @ dress of moonbeams, | hi Erdteraiy oe A makes him very angry, and then his|Candidate for ee warner vaio business.) voice thunders and his eves flash iight- At last one day in despair the King} 226 Slances through the sky. Edward Everett McCall, one of the and Queen assombled thelr subjects on| of gentleman oe pole wad thy maa | Tammany candidates for Justice of the the beach, and with pale faces and{ens are cautious of making him angry.|Supreme Court, was one of the dest s#asping brath, implored the hard-heart- |] But when he is good-natured he aends|amateur baseball players in New York ed Sea King to send them a cooling | the Mice gentle rain to cool the earth, |twenty years ago. He played right feild Watson, as Sherlock would wel'at your lack of perception. Hew He Deduces Facts, “The painter and the roofer are both working in the house. Mr. Chegnay, whom T must regard as a third person, SSS | (eu Js out, and Mrs. Oheg also goes out. so he is not altogether bad. , breeze, and thus relieve their at] Now, vely on the Leos, an organization that held calling out to the Jaintress: ‘I will not be| “oN THR TIP OF TOUR SMALLEST FINGER." nilsery. eee EO ART eee eee Cat eae ad | the lodad ehasmalonship tor keserel ys Wack for some time.’ ‘The workmen ne — = Ho spoke in a volce of thunder: fhe earth. jan thes beating auch ambitious teams a6 thoi Béar and ask the jaintress's daughte He spol ce of thunder: 5 ave that |captalied by Charlie’ Murphy, now which is Chegnay's flat eee, | know: One could stand on the tip of| 1 want but one Jewel In your crown, | hi re to perform. They let down | leader of Tamman d by State Bena- hand, vs and 4f that] your smallest danger and you would not oh, King—the Princess Selphan for my | seat golden buckets, held by long silk- | tor Featherson. See Ce cane gee Cheney. Ob-| tel tte weight. So this band of fairies, vrider"* JAH Seen anor dea ee fare er otly oualmEl: | hel wpe. Have few. reorganised. to werye the . on J ces, and draw siowly U . | pre ccean Of rr " aatuteness. You follow me?" though there were hundreds and hun- At those terrible words the Queen| filled with water. ¥ up egainy | Sid comrade, Among the ‘old Leos were ans dreds of them, could all creep Into tho fell to the ground in a faint, the King[ Day !n and day out the Cloud Sisters mn Edwar uADhy, ex-Congressma: draw up thelr fowelled pails until the] "Billy" Grimths, one of the best bate- ned deathly pale, and the people | cloud palaces are fled to overflowing, |men of the early “ss; John J. Kell looked at each otner in horror. and then, carefully locking and closing |Edward J. C id ater, they awatt th inthe _midst_of the excitement the| Hingis oniers for main, me OG Storm ——|, The cloud palaces are very. beautiful. They lie white against the blue oy, ike Rtvhoonday, ine seech patches” WIFE SAVES JEWELER’S LIFE feamal robes ana then every” coior-of th estal robes, and then every color of the | Myre. i Tainbow seems to mingio with them, °| “tw Pulver, Novelist-Playwri, "Good! ‘They have some object in| heart of a great magnolia blossom and Seine Mhis question. ‘That object must] sleep there ax comfortably as you do in jeduced. Later, certain articles of your own white bed. Wave He missing from Chegnay'a fat.| "The Queen ot the fairies was very pon le floor we find @ ploce of blue deautiful and kind, but also very strict. melipaper and ® particle of mica, One thing she required without fail, ‘Mica, as you may observe, js not aland would never excuse her subjects Particularly adhesive substance, and|for missing, ‘This was that each day eould not have been transported far every fairy of her realm must perform from its original resting-place. Oya. ‘atur-| one gocd deed, Should any @ubject fail t ally we make a search. Floors are not | once in this duty, he was not allowed ti Pow nite, Cloud Staldens tive tn nth es] Hestana jUaceneess Serpeted with mica. What is mica| join in the nightly revel or dance, thelr long streaming skirts float behinag| aol 18 Tareey, Clty 18 ¥e. ‘uspd for? How did mica come upon the | Should he fall more than once, he was them when they sail across the sky, |¢ler. was found unconscious in his room y , ‘At night, however, when they have|at his home, No. 61 Storm avenue. ‘The wearpet? Hal the roof! The roofing} made to pass the night in an ugly a ALL DA “ neetaa ent palace wates and given. tis|room wes Rilel with ear which hed ov ©ompound. We search and find traces; marsh near by, under the leaf of a er Sear gen aa keya into the keeping of the Storm King, ef mica there. How did {t come from | tlger-lily. ormamentgd With golden stars, ahe stood iat trom thelt labore, dnd chose |¢aped from a burner turned on. Mrs. the roof? Hud some one been on the| NOW the tlger-Illy grows out. of ehe|in the ceitre of her brilliant court, She Pulver, who slept in an adjoining room i Foot that morning? Had a workman | °°ld, dreary marsh; tho slime oozes up, |Comamnded silence from her subjects Rwakened bye @uffoonting feeling ena, : ‘been there? Yes. Good! the snakes crawl around, and the bugy| With a way Hee Wades The Pie: fuing Into her husband's. room, “found y v ding Sliver Wings to give a count him unconscious on the bed. She threw 1 Nothing Escapes His Kye. And monquitoce buss and quarrel aor his deeds she awaited his answer Der earta le ee pelt UE be x night long, No sensible falry woul sre re 4 Af panes there, waa the blue wall-paper. | care to spend the night in euch a hor- teighlan!"” he sald, “I have only one to Citar removed to the City Hos- Caretul examination reveals that tho| ria place. But one ittle chap had to go | lot « Mis hry seule Une pitti, where he now les in w critieal Paper has been cut with a sharp in-| there a great deal. ng role hem Ory see condition. His wife sald she did not be- lieve that he ‘had Intentionally tumed fi ‘aw ae know to attempt to end Nts a] he Ite. Mrs. Pulver ls the author of eral books and lays. And how Ne had helped him and made jent and is in no way frayed.| y1e waa not exactly bad, but he was|his lite more happy. This was all, and ¢ overcome with shame re is only one instrument that can va lay awfully lazy; he wanted to play andjas je thought that he had spent the Bake thie: clean, straight cut—a pair of| nave an easy time and at night he| whales month inating oni ele’ Bee fetlssora. And the paper has been cut} would remember, too late, that he had| tho next moment the Queen spake. recently. not done his good deed se MSAvS urate Nt ‘ “ 0 ve bro (How? interrupted the reporter. He was a handsome little fairy, too, ich and. happiness one nae mare “THR CLOUD MAIDENS DRAWIN "The cut is fresh, for the edges are|with wings more beautiful than any and your one great deed ts worth |—————-—--—— mot yet curled, @ smal! plece of |save the Queen's; indeed, so brilliant many times thirty smaiier ones. | princess Selpan herself arcse pals I) * It ta of no avail for deductive pur-|_,2h® Queen no sooner Jatd eyes upon fear.” . Pieces may have been lying on | SUver Wings than sho knew that bel @ITYOR THE SEA KING) «© * « ¢ st 8s floor in the hall, Mrs. Ch tg] Agel Dt Oubie: "Have no fear for your daughter's ; fons ey taveiateagea’@ cite rite When‘ he admitted that he had ‘no good OF couirve sou have heard of the mer-| happiness and safety, I love her wit Phthevboom. But the discovery tecomes | 2° (2 TePort for the day, sho lost all|malds—those queer creatures with @! ai my heart, and as long aa she lives ing a pretty wait Chere until morning pot in which to’ sleep, they Mra. Chegnay goes out. ‘They his horses, and the car disappeared be- month she would sentence him to ban-| thelr shining halr and singing strang interested in her movements, neath the waves, Ss ‘ . | ishment f eet songs to charm the ea | ‘ lyin her residence, ie Eat LAR Pamir tae an een Rae LL GH CLR ed dass] At the same moment a delictous coo! Oop | HA T “Ap clear’that the roofer carried the| It was @ weary fairy that finally}down to thelr wonderful palaces of i the room, which fact sur- . I Piece of wall-paper with ae ny Ayehues of deduction; ui pars rer with suspicion rene weal reached a Girty housetop in the city,| coral and shells at the bottom of the 2 curling Dimselt up close to a chim-| ocean. But 1 doubt if you ever heard ney fell asleep, too tired and sad to look the story of the first mermaid, and why Mether fer’a more comfortab'e resting-|\¢ 1s that they are liaif human and halt place. fish. This is the way {t all happene the two) lived very: happily tolethe: He was just about to My uway when} here cace lived a king and queen Fe WAS & pauve for a mo. |he heard beneath him a sigh. Peeping | wno ruled over a stately city bullt upon {of Whom were half human and half sare over the edge of the root he saw alttiog {ine shores of the pea, fish, that I, they were born with the Kt one," he ejacu.|ear a window below him a pale, sad-| ine icing and Queen had but one chia} body of a. human ‘belng and with the peepee {}fmced ttle ‘boy. A pair of crutches! the Princesa Selpan. She was a lovely'| tail of a fish In place of ioge=— nalogy a food) near by, and the room tf which | girl, as fair and statel™ as the lilles in| At regular intervals of eeveral -years fie bor nad ee and poorly furnished, |her father’s gardens, and as pure andj the King would allow one of Sls little plagweatiaken ity wan whe rel AGAD GOLD Jn 10 Minutes, The Sea King told the truth when he said that he loved his human wit. | orie-win“ Tai ‘ davelop into” chronic’ Catarrh), Dr In time they had many children, ani] Aguwe Catarrhal Powder yawned and reiit hig sweet as the dew on the roses, daughters to retum to thet 2 War out a. the epiha ‘of the; e¢ean workd. trot. whlch he, a he Lace and Embroidered Evening Slippers, an entirely new and attractive style of footwear. for dress occasions, —B. Atman & do. able offenm of having a soiled white glove, and that, too,:at the very en- trance of the Manhattan end of the Brooklyn Bridge. That man goes to trial next Thursday. And.another policeman had his hand tn his pocket! The new Commissioner met him at Beekman street and Park Row. Of course the policeman did not know the new Commissioner, but he goon became acquainted, It was3 A. M. “Attention! shouted the new Deputy. “Who'n the devil are you? Brush by hruah by, young fellow." sald the police: man, waving his superior aside. “I am the Deputy Commissloner,’’ sald Capt, Piper, ‘Attention! and the policeman stood ike a clothing store dummy, ‘Nhe Deputy drew his manual of rules of the Department from his povket and after @ brief consultation with the book said: “You are gullty of the offense men- tioned in rule 199, section 6, paragraph M. Appear for trial noxt ‘Thursday morning.” But when he found Pollceman Denals Shea, of the Bridge Squad, at the Bridge entrance at 3.15 o'clock the same morn- ing wearing @ golled white glove, the indignation of the disctplinarlan was in- tenge. Looking it up in the book Capt. Piper found that Shea was guilty of violating rule 31, paragraph 1, ordered him to appear for trial and confiscated the soiled glove as evidence, Going on up Park Row the new Com- missioner found a policeman at Chat- ham Square who was lounging, along and not walking etiff and straight like a soldier on dress parade. Capt. Piper gave him a vyerbal dressing dows, showed him how to keep nis shoulders thrown back, his head up, his chest out and his eyes forward, and told him he wanted him to walk thet way, even at 3 o'clock in the morning. Turning back the new Commissioner went to the Church street station and was about to open the iron gate in the railing to get back of the<desk when the sergeant, who did not know him, commenced anu oration in yehement swear words that Illustrated his opin- fon of the stranger. “But I am the new Commissioner," eaid Piper. Py I, why didn't you say go? IT don't know you. You can't come around here like that. It doesn't make any difference who you are. Wirat do you os “Where's your authority?"" ineton The Commi: er had to whow his brand-new shield and then the blotter was handed to him. He fourid seve! ety wae for the officers to sign, and he said: This jg in violazon, of rule No. rh ragraphs B to T. I will have Ti Eapiain prefer against you,’ and he did. ‘The next time the new Commissloner appeared on the street he found Pollce- man Charles 8. Boll standing at the cor- ner of Franklin street and Broadway for ten rolnutes without movin; 1d he referred charges of loitering against him, A few minutes later he com! counting the ten minutes which while Policeman les Hasa #1 the same corner and conversed wit! A charge was also mi m. 26 eRee FLUNG FROM A FIRE TRUCK. ‘While responding to an alarm of fire Hook and Ladder Truck No. 18 turned the corner of Delancey and Attorney streets this Es Ay with such that Patrick Qual, the fireman in charge of the tiller which gul he rear truck, was thrown from his seat, strik- ingon His head on the widewalk ten wi feet a Partially unconscious, he was sent to Gouverneur Hoepitel, where it was said that he had sustained @ conoussion of ee pres and possibly a Precturs of the skull. BATTLE-AXE FOR; EX-STAR BOARDER, Christian Gabriel, Angry and Jealous Husband, Gets Re- venge, but May Suffer. - . Up to two weeks ago John Rotheite was the star boarder in th? douse Christian Gabriel, of No, 1112 avenue. Then he and Gabriel had. and he went away. A week later Mrs, Gabriel disappeared. The next day her husband got » letter from her intimating that Rochelle Knew | more of her than her husbami, Gabriel found out that Rochelle was tying, Ck No. fri behdey arers Dag urg. Last night, with a knife hip pocket and a small pattiogke ts hand, he went over there. Rochelle met him at the door. There vi falxcup The oa > @ conspicuous part a ininuves,” Chairs Broken, smashed, bric-a- terrible ‘uproar started, boarder managed to et the ax from the angry husband, but on knives was Fonorted to and je was badly sliced before cam, ‘el and Rochete te Gabriel was angest sent to the Eastern Distr! He {fs In a dangerous condition, briel was held without bail in the Street Court to-day to await the | of Rochelle’s injuries. 1 An Interesting Life History Sup-! ported by Impressive Indorse- ments. + In 1848 Rey, Father John O'Brien, | a noble man, came to Lowell, Mass., to do the Master's work in St, Pat- rick’s Pariah. : In 1854 Father John, as he was fondly known to his people, was attacked with a serious cold which, | developing into a stubborn cough and affliction of the lungs, caused the greatest alarm for the health of the beloved clergyman. , Medical skill seemed unable to stay the progress of the disease,| | Finally an Eminent Specialist was. | consulted, who gave Father John a? | prescription _t o cure the told and remove the lung trouble, ag. well as to build] up and st h- en the body. Clergyman ‘ the prescription to the old ta | store of Carl & Hovey, Lowell, Mass., the firm by whom Father, John’s Medicine is prepared, The cough soon disappeared, and his ple rejoiced when he declared that { had been made as well and strong-@| t ever. tas Ha) Father John recommended the, | medicine to his parishioners and, friends, and thousands. were le * well and strong by taking it. In 4 ting this prescription they called for “Father John's Medicine,” and so it was named by the and advertised—all with the ap- proval and sanction of Reverend Father O'Brien, because he knew, of; its merit and desired that al! who were ailing might benefit by its / | power to cure. ‘ } This old-fashioned, wholesome, remedy 1s unequalled as @ body; builder and tonic. It restores health and strength to all rundown j tems. Its gentle laxative strengthens the stomach and corrects | the digestion. It drives out all fm- purities. It is a food medicine | contains only pure nourishment. ft not a patent medicine, and it f free from opium, morphine or pat: sonous drugs in any form, which are, found in the majority of patent) ral] preparations. While it is not a “cough syrup*ory “balsam,” nothing equals this pre-, scription for coughs, colds, bron-; chitis, asthma, consumption and all) throat and lung troubles. It has a) most soothing and healing at the same time builds up the body, and makes strength. ; We have permiasion to refer tothe: Sisters Superior at the lowing, Homes and Hospital, where John's Laat is in Lee cal ea i Charity, St, John's ; R Mass,; Notre Dame ide Lourdes Hoe-/ pital, Manchester, N. H.; Sisters of; Mercy, St. Patrick’s Orp) ENA Manchester, N. H., and many the names of which we wale pleased to furnish upon appli | When you ask your druggist Father John’a Medicine, rem that the $1 bottles contain times the quantity of the 60-cent { ————>E——————EEEEEEr The Good Book | says that the straight way in-all our, dilly affairs is the best; it Is. also d IL of fairyland, you te t veals the | call ! hrono, and to be our King.” less a now Queen. Melvial fact that some one has bean Set Oi ees lll @: oe And so Silver Wings was rewarded, any eres aye eald, “if it will re- epering tho wall with blue paper.” The fairy Queen had never looked so] Wee taltvls tone tana Reena move the elcknese from our dear sub- rs , i s “Why 4 trivial fact?” lovely as she did that night, siting upon | their subjects always loved their kind| jects, let the Bea King’s wish be WOMEN’S, MISSES’ and CHILDREN’S Discovery Becomes Important. | !ft throne of yellow buttercups. Anema rth granted, I am willing, and have no mmc “| | INE FOOTWEAR. true in regard to quality; . strai goods nee much better for healt proven by the use of 4 LD © CROW — RYE patience ang told him that’he was ban-| young girl's head and body and tho tatt a ; z faces shine out from th Bena: xe lero gaat the AaNea Pees Peace tee Oat SO eLC eta LEME AULRScleaD et ieee. roman ses sUblticeael allies poner end te erie like stars, and. people. on th Shoes, Half Shoes and Slippers, in the newest hor Our BONNIE BRIER BUSH anf si ork= rm y . "| ear oking un and seeing the epar! ii and If on his return he could not tell|read how they rise up out of the sea 3 3 fi SOUVENIR Scotch Whiskeys, sm ne Dall, They are both present | o¢ ahirty. good deeds done during the{and alt all day upon the rocks, combing | , PHYS these words, he motioned to} ine cluster call them the Seven Biste shapes for the present and Winter seasons, H. B. KIRK & CO., N: