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About The Clancy Miner (Clancy, Mont.) 1896-1899 | View This Issue
The Clancy Miner (Clancy, Mont.), 14 March 1896, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/2014252005/1896-03-14/ed-1/seq-7/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
ed er rd ny ut Oy ‘th rill- ays, In neat n it z of Lon- » to stion e all iting This Or m in nder we af t)? A. \% Patric, bea rane ae) ae a ney es ee are THE OLANCY MINER: _@LANCY, MONTANA. fs _ In Delaware. Members of the Delaware legislature are elected in each county on & general ' ticket, but there is an effort by means of @ party arrangement unknown to the law to provide a sort of district representation. Kach party assigns a representative or a sénator to each hundred, as the township is called in Delaware, but as there are more hundreds than the combined number of representatives and senators, some hundreds must always go wunrep- resented. Patriotism. Lisbeth—I hear you have broken | with Ambrose. What was the mat- ter? Jeannette—We fell out about lit- erature. Ambrose is such a horrid Avglomaniac. He persists that Shakespeare is funnier,than Bill Nye. —St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “Her Advice. ’ She—Why don’t you go West and seek u fortune? Mr. Sappy—Someone might try to blow my brains out. She—Don*t telkfolks.you have any. —Truth. Hosts of people goto work in the wrong way te core & Sprain, Soreness,” Stiffness, wea ST, JACOBS OIL would cure in the right way, right The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MALS., Has discovered in one of our common ure weeds a remedy that cures every ind of Humor, from the worst Scrvfula down to a common Pimple He has tried it in over eleven: hundred and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now iv his * jon over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a_perfect cure is war- ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the Jungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles — passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in 4 week after taking it. Read the label If the stomach is foul or bilious it wil cause squeamish feetirigs at first. No change of diet ever necessary. [at the best you can get, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed- time. Sold by all Druggists. LSPEAS If. YOU PLANT THE RIGHT SEEDS My New Seed Book tells all about the best varieties of Peas and Everything ofin- terest im the Geed Line; how to yw them for profit, etc. FREE if you send a postal , mention this paper. H.W. BUCKBEE Rockford Seed Farms Rockrorp, his. P.O. Box @) om. THE AERMOTOR OO, dods naif the world's windmill! business, because it has reduced the cost of wind power to ewes it was.¢ It bas many branch houses, supplies its goods and repairs atyour door. It can and does furvish » better articie for less money than others. It makes Pumping and Geared, Galvanized-after- Com pletion ndmills, Tilting and Fixed Steel Towers, Steel Burs Sa” / Frames, Steel Need Cutters and Peed Grinders. On application it will name one of these articles that.it will farnish until | January Ist at 1/3 the usual price. It also makes and Pumps of all kinds. Send for catalogue. Pactory: 12th, Rockwell and Fillmore Streets, Chicar> 540666600 SMOKE YOUR MEAT WITH KRAUSERS LIQUID EXTRACT ar SMOKE Rou var. E.KRAUSER & BRD. MI(TON.PAL HAIR BALSAM and beantifies the hal frrowth. ir. a jexuriant ee Never Faile Restore. Gray init to'ite Youthful Color. a: & hair falling. Bie. and #1 (Gat Bent out te SWEET POTATOES\... on shares. No cxperience re quired, Directions for spronting free. Address T, J. SKINNER, Columbus, Kan. ‘fore ayn, ase ; Thompson’s Eye Water. Morpbine Habit Oured i 19 to2d r _L.N. U. No.6. 1896. ‘Kindly Mention This Paper Whea You Write to an Advertiser. days. No pay till cured. DR. J.8TEPHENS Lebanon.Ohio | \PAITHFUL ° HEARTS. HEY were in Lady Brereton’s boudoir in Green street, bosom friends and alone. A 5 o’clock tea equipage stood between them and a too brilliant June sun was excluded by blinds of a. be- coming tint and an etagere of ferns, Mrs. Crosbie helped herself to-a | sweetmeat leisurely and with a due re- igard for her irreparable glove. “Of |course, you know,” she remarked, “that Capt. Valence is home from In- had just arrived. But why the ‘of course?’”’ replied Lady Brereton, “I don’t know—if you don’t, Only’’— Mrs. Crosbie looked through the cream jug at futurity—‘‘it’s just the year since poor Lord Brereton died.” “And what of that?” Mrs. Crosbie’s eyes deserted the tea {tray and fixed themselves severely on ther friend. “Blanche,” she said, “you jare in one of your moods, and you | don’t practice 6n me! Are we alene, or | | “Somebody told me yesterday that he | lis somebody hiding behind’ the cur- | tains?” ; “You ridiculous woman!’ “Then why this superlative inno- licence? Why this affectation of coy 17’ | For sake, be a rational being |and treat me like one. As it everybody loesn’t know that Arthur Valence wor ried himself nearly ‘sick over you at time of your marriage. And you try to persuade me, of all people, that you think it means nothing when he returns to England, after an absence lof five years, just as the first twelve months of your mourning expire!” “His movements don’t interest me in the least, and I don’t suppose mine any. longer interest jim You heaven’s the seem to if£- nore the lapse of time since we met, land faithful hearts, my dear, went out of fashion with the crinoline. Besides he wasn’t a man—he was only a nice boy “Anyhow, it doesn’t matter now. He has probably forgotten all about me long ago.” She spoke with a complacent disbe lief in her own words which made her hearer laugh “Tf you thought he had forgotten ritable beyond endurance.” laboring that you would be lz for a moment you I hope you are not the absurd delusion that I in the Mast.” “Am I your enemy that care I should ac cuse you of having a heart?” laughed Mrs your my dear. I know you so well.” You wete more mistaken in your life,” Lady almly [am utterly indifferent.’ Therein she was insincere that she had snubbed him unmercifull in years gone by, and the only feeling his boyish passion had inspired in her had been liking i|mingled with pity,amusement and grat ified vanity But nevertheless looked to the renewal of the shains which bound him to her carriage meant ruffied, Crosbie “I merely amour propre would be never asserted Brereton, It wastrue sisterly afterwards floral wheels with a.truly feminine pleasure eel ‘FORGOTTEN YOU! IS IT LIKELY?” Therefore, with possibility - be- | fore her mind of a visit from her old |admirer, she bestowed sutdry adorning |touches to he# teilet, countermanded | the victoria, and settled herself in the |} drawing room, in a graceful attitude, prepared to be very much astonished | to see him, indeed. | The afternoon waned, however, and jhe failed to put in an appearance. | Neither did he come the following day |nor the one after, nor the next. Evi- | dently he was in no hurry to call on her, and Lady Brereton’s usually sweet tem- per developed inequalities in conse- quence. When within a week of his return he greeted her at length on the neutral groupd of the Hurlington club; she found him a good deal changed—older, improved, nothing of fhe boy she re- membered about him, except his feat- ures, which were good. “Then you haven't me,” she said. “Forgotten you! Is it likely?. My dear Lady Brereton, don’t you remem- ber my youthful adoration? You made }meas wretched as a love-sick boy can be. I was 80 very much in earnest; one takes oneself so seriously at 21. I have eften laughed over the thought of it since.” He laughed now. So did she, very naturally, too. But she was not pleased; for in his frank allusion to the past she discerned that her empire was lost, and no woman likes to make that discovery, even if she has not valued it at the time of possession. the quite forgotten | of the next few j own under | | then one evening their eyes met across | that | them have news for you,” he mur- |mured in her ear when the stage claimed Mrs. Crosbie’s attention, “She | is found.” “Imdeed, and am ito congratulate you?” she } “and is your stay in London to be- long?” she asked. “Oh, I am not going back to India, at all,” he paid. “The regiment will be home next month. I mean to settle down. The governor wants it; fidgety about’ the title, you know, since my brother died, It’s rather a bore, By the way, Lady Brereton, I was intend- ing to call and ask your aid about it, Women are so clever at this kind of thing.” x shall be delighted,” she said sweet- ly. ‘ “I'll look out for you and you must come and see me and report what dis- coyeries you are making on your own account,” But the conversation. was a_ little one-sided after that Capt. Valence chatted easily little nothings of the hour, amusing canversation of a well- bred man of the world with a witty tongue. and shrewd perception. But she did not pay much heed to what he said. She was thinking of the time they met. Ské, was Blanche Forrester then, and he called her his angel, the light of his life, and she had laughed, and bidden him not to be a sly boy. The whole episode had been very absurd, of course, but somehow his mockery of it did not please her. “Thursday is my day,” she said to him, when he put her in her carriage, | “But you like to take | by and by. your chance, you know Perhaps she thought about him more on her way home than she had ever thought about him before at one time, “Tl was young once,” said Capt. Va- lence to the horse chestnut trees, “I was distressingly young—a malady we all suffer from, But I feel better now, thank God!’ he added, piously. And he lighted a cigar and went to watch | the polo with a smile of self-satisfac- tion They met a good deal in the course weeks. He reminded her of hér promise, abd she mentioned two or three desirable damsels to him; but her assistance ended there, and he never saw an attractive girl in her Also he found occasion to ai lude once more to his salad days. “Nothing polishes a he “like an affair with My dear Lady Brereton ept the assurance of my gratitude.” house said, mb,” world ac- She would have been better pleased | if he had intimated that she had ruined his life, better pleased even if he had openly avoided her. I was his grantimother wrathful] reflection in she said to her the toilet glass For a week she saw nothing of him the opera house, amd a faint resent ment—the sequel to the unexplained tears-was fh her strtteless brow, It in the manner of luring the last en his stall for her was perceptible, too her greeting, when, tr’acte, he deserted box, and, on Mrs dropped into the vacant chair between Perhaps it ¢ a trifle prema You see, I haven't proposed yet tell all it it to-morrow if are sufficiently interested.” “Tell me now,” she said. wou ture. I'll you ab< you She spoke quite naturally and she | was smiling. But he did not look at ver face: his-eyes had been on her hand | as it closed with spasinedic force upon the handle of her far You will break that toy if you treat |} and drew back in } her quietly f it had stung her the shadow of the hite teeth pressing t like that,”’ he sai She dropped it a draperies with he lower lip “Go on,” she said ‘Ts it an affair of the heart, or of her forehead?” “She is the only woman I should ever wish to marry,” be answered. “I want her more than I have wanted anything in my life. I hardly scribe her to you rave; I am in love like that, you know wir. ¢ Lady Brereton, you will certainly ruin your fan! But I am not going to tell you that she is perfect. She has variety, she has charm—admirable qualities to attract a man. Ah, she is adorable, she Lady Brereton!’ She was leaning back against the partition, her eyes closed, her face col orless. Don’t laugh if I “Nothing—don’t notice me!’ she murmured. “The heat aie |e I am better already.” ' He bent forward to sereen her from the other woman’s Yilew. His hand covered hers, and it was shaking, like his voice. “You are going to faint! I am a brute, but I want you go badly and 1 knew it was the only way to make you care, If 1 had shown——” “The comedy is finished.” The words weré spoken on thé stage,and the curtain ‘fell, He put her cloak round her as they rose. The African Ivory Trade. A e@aravan has arrived at the east African coast conveying many thou- sands of pounds’ worth of ivory be- longing to the late Mr. Stokes. The Congo correspondent of a Brussels pa- per regards the event as proof of the honorable conduct of the Free State's | agents. a woman of the | “One would think | Crosbie’s invitation, | know how to de- | and when a fellow’s | Theory of Creation. «What makes you think that man was created after woman?” “Just this: If man had been created first he would probably be wanting a woman yet. But woman being created first, and making up her mind that’ she wanted @ man, there was nothing to do but to trot | him out in the’ shortest: possible time.” A Canal Choked Up. Is practically useless. The human organism is provided with a canal which sometimes be- comes choked up, namely, the bowels, through which much of the effete and waste. matter of the system escapes. When they are.obstructed constipated, In other’ words — Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters will relieve them effectually, put without pain, and institute a regular habit of body. This médicine also remedies ; malarial, bilious, dyspeptic, rheumatic, ner- yous and kidney trouble, and strengthens the | entire system. With Glittering Success. Popper, testily—For heaven's sake! What’s that baby how!ing for so? Mrs. Popper—I just spanked him to make him stop crying. —Judge. | YELLOW RIND, BLOOD RED FLESH! A wonderful combination, a tremen- dous novelty, found only in Salzer’s | Golden Pumpkin Watermelon. It’s marvelous. We paid $300 for one melon! You will want it, everybody wants it, 5 kernels 10c., 25 kernels 40c, 35 packages earliest vegetable seeds | $1.00. Our new creations in oats yield- 1,200 bus. per acre! If you will eut this out r ing 201% bu., barley 116 bu., potatoes | Where will it end? | and send | } with 12c. postage to John A. Salzer Seed | packare of above Salzer’s Golden Pump- kin Watermelon seed and our 148 page Catalogue alone W.n. | Co., La Crosse; Wis., you will get free a } | seed catalogue free. 5c. for matling. Affinity is not sufficiently considered now adays in the matter of marriage BETTER WALK A MILI than fav to get a 5-cent package of Cut and Slash smoking tobacco if you want to| lenjoy a real good smoke. Cut and | Slash. cheroots are as good as many | 5-cent cigars, and you get Three for 5| cents, Sure to please. We have always imagined we would as } soon keep a cow in the house as a parrot The largest piece of Sood | tobacco ever sold for BO0G and 9° eh ie is nea rly ‘as k - get of o | high Srades for io cents. | fhe ar. } > >es = * +> THE BOX This is Walter Baker & Co.’s Cocoa — box — be sure that you don’t getan — imitation of it. Wautwr Barer & Cowbtd., Dorchester. Mass. Some persons are al- ways taking iron. If weak and easily ex- hausted; pale and with- Out appetite; if the nerv- ous system is weak, and sleep difficult, what do you take? Iron? . But iron cannot supply food to the tissues; nor does it have any power to change the activity of unhealthy organs and bring them back to health. Cod-liver oilis what you need. The oil feeds the poorly-nour- ished tissues, and makes rich blood. _lodine, bro- mine, and other ingredi- ents, which form part of | | | | | | | | the oil, have special power to alter unhealthy action. i ; ; ; ; : | of Cod-liver Oil, with ¢ Hypophosphites, is the ‘ most palatable way ie take cod-liver oil. The hypophosphites healthy nerve supply action, which controls all the processes of life. goc, and $1.00 at a]! druggists wi Ol i i i i i i i i ied } OW to become Lawful Physicians, course by mail Write AIL. Health Dulwersity, Oblesge, er Sold by Grocers Everywhere. era A