Weekly Northern Vindicator, The (Newspaper) - March 16, 1899, Estherville, Iowa ESTHERVILLE EMMET f ItOO Lords day u n a at 10 Senior Prayer Tuesday at Bandar aad u Sunday school f m Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 First In 11 t r prayer 0 Dally morning i Rally Hi JCM Banday m t Sunday school 12 M m Prayer meeting Thursday South well Sunday H f Bandar school m Y meeting Thurs and m Sunday school Wednesday alternate Residence corner of Mib street and Armstrong tele pamie line PROFESSIONAL AT Es Prompt attention given to all leg post office THE STREET CALLED BY The By And down Mil H And he who cure for Bat at the to Here away Fw down street By and tlw called Merer I TIM stands below A grim and Whose broken Shattered root And turrets While trott the grant despair A warning shrieks forever Take heed The street called By and to the boose Called Never What natter though the street be And tempt my though strife be hard end rest be sweet And easy the If at the end t sorely And That hope end I mast When down the street called By and By I reach the house Never t in ONLY A AT 1 O Prompt gU o all legal Office over First ALLEN Attor neys at Beat Collections and Havo abstracts of to Emmet County and P will treat diseases ot all from a Office at Morray Wags training stable un Lincoln Smith Bouth Seventh Calls answered day or M AMD Office over Turner Miller promptly night or f ot Ikla AND surgery a Office orer clothing Residence fourth house north of Bup Calls promptly attended dav or Office hours from 10 to 12 and from 2 AMD Office over across tb street north west from tUe new school Calls promptly attended to either night or examined and glasses Tel phone No A St OBIce over First National D 9tb WAV DAVIDSON Loans and D In 8W i YOU HAVE BUT ONE PAIR Let me flt them with tbe kind of IEAL ESTATE BOUGHT AID SOLD Mow U the time to list your farmi for M 1 many prospective I a specialty of In DOCTOR Albert Opened his HOSPITAL a Specialty of Oper Diseases of the K Donahue tor Carp The afternoon son biased down on the brown roof of the little railway sta and train puffed forth great bil lows of black smoke into the white heat ed A group of lounging farmers was outlined against the un wall of the the stolid look of indifference upon their faces seeming to make them akin to the shriveled grass and drooping That they were really hopeless was not without The rammer had been hot and wretched and The corn had dried before it came to a the wheat had rusted and the meadows browned before the haying Caine Denton took off his jaunty straw hat and leaned from the His quick eye took note of the expres faces of the loungers and their attitude of he murmured to 4 Wonder what they have to live for anyway The keen eye moved on past the un pointed buildings to the glare of the sandy A child stood her little bare feet into the dust and watching him shyly under the shadow of her Caine whistled softly tinder his breath he loved a child and Was rewarded by a shy quickly suppressed by the insertion of two little brown fingers between the red only bit of brightness in the land he and as the train moved laboriously and now that is and he leaned back in his seat He a handsome women would and really they are the judges the world most honors and depth of his chest making one forget that be was a little short in Perfectly with the muscles of a he was a delight to the Then bis with a noble fore head crowned with brown the square the keen blue eyes full of fire and intelligence under straight dark was remark ably One studying it would He is a firm born to but in the there was a contradiction of this a certain full lipped tenderness Which in a struggle with the kind which flings reason to the winds and gloats in Was there anything wanting in his life that waa necessary to happiness t the world would sta hosts of and All children loved him and many women He bad sown good seed and brought many a broken life out of darkness into light He had never the because of the nonappearance of his Several years ago he bad met a and several times during the progress of their acquaintance he bad imagined that be loved There was in her flashes of intellect that he admired there was the under ground swell of passion that be secretly loved in a woman there were the little loving ways of speech and manner that reminded him of his dead mother there was the desire to be helpful that touched him and the patience that hurt for he felt bis incompetence to act as she would have had him act Tet there were moments but she was not he was an artist by The train whirled on through the meadows barer and Caine turned his tired eyes The crisp pages of his opened to a Wearily his eyes traveled over its first page as they had traveled over the dreariness of earth parched He turned the second page and a frown of perplexity knit the dark This description How it brought back days of long Caine laid down the magazine It brought it that time when al most he loved a He read Twas a simple little story of love and faith and the love and the faith belong ed to 4s it not often sot The man all bat loved woman who was poor and who had naught to bat fall at sympathy far inn of tor het ter foil of an ungovernable Idolatrous worship for that which not The man had left knowing she loved in his own the woman loved How was hid bare in the story What what pressed was 9 one in every tears into channels long nn What mattered Wall the fashionable friends He conld give them all Love such as this was worth any He buttoned the into the pocket of bis and reached for a time At 4 oclock they reach the Then 800 miles away was that woman who loved His evenly pulsed life should calm the fever in her the story would have a different How the hours seemed to crawl from J this time He caught himself the telegraph poles to keep himself from He must not turn even in the ho wna Another one was before in which theie was only one No more careless no more silent worship of his ideal ow wife of that so rosy and when bis heart should waken from its long slumber and know real Duty should hereafter ever A night and a day had passed before he arrived at his He sum moned a carriage at the station and drove rapidly to the beautiful where the woman He conld not rest or sleep until that poor heart was eased of its and t then he shut his teeth he rest then With what a commingling of glad expectancy and ho mounted the terrace and stood ut the door of the cottage where she The evening sunlight was tuining tho waters of the lake into a sheen of glory and touched the leaves of the fading foliage into roseate Toward the south tho leaves ing the whispered together of secrets sweeter ever and tho katydids culled glad tidings to one Tho peace and the beauty of the firent It in an store on Main before tUe auctioneer mount ed tho Goods being sold pri rately to those who desired to A was examining a bit of What is the price of this she That will Cost yon re the yon shade that figure ft bit 7 No possibly take a cent Brit Ill Ill you will wait a lew the auction sale will be and Ill place the article under the You may then bo able to in for almost Tho woman Ae would wait Ton minutes later on the auctioneer the There some half doKon people in The bit of jewelry in question wAs placed on the counter and bids Some one of then was followed and then This last bid made by tho who had sought to bny tho bit of before the A gentleman came looked at the ar mid calmly like that Ill giro yon quickly shouted Five Then the bid fling ceased and the jewelry was over to the li She had refused to ntos but she went homo to tell bargain sho got at the a d beat a few min that and dear what a store for Cash StareJ New Silks and Dress We are showing the newest and best things in silks andj jjj dress Early buyers get the best Joseph Jefferson waii playing a one night engagement in ft small np in tho part Blp Van which he has 90 often ably imper At the hotel where he there wan an Irishman who acted us general Judged by the great sunset stole into his j interest ho in tho he heart and it still more OP it framed kind words for his lips to titter to her who had so suffered for Yet the door and he WHS si A worn figure stood lie fore Mechanically ho took tho hand of the woman and drew her ont to the light his voice unsteady in greet You welcome For a moment the fire of glad youth and passion shone in her tear faded I have come a long distance to HOC my poor The have it must have a different end ing The story The light which hud transfigured tbe tender faco faded The Slender form for a mo ment trembled toward him as grasses bend to the warm that wooes stiffened and drew You said the haughty that it is only ft therefore tin And so was love laid and Was the laid at tho door of its boon token to bo tho pro At a to 6 in the morning Jefferson was not to say by a violent thumping on his When that ho had left no orders to bo called eo ho His for that so ho soon his appearance before I Demanded of this I called at this unearthly I dont bat Ill Said the no call for this you woken him I ftl Love In When a young Laplander is in love with a he and run Ho is heavily so that nmy win if she and if she outrun him he cannot propose Of she suffers overcome if nho cares for but the of her parents be obtained before she can be The law of the land is very strict on this and in olden times tho man was subject to capital punish ment if he married without tho consent of the girls After a Laplander has chosen a bride he sends her a present of a tt and a quantity of Ho goes as far as the door of her but remains outside until invited when a bumper of brandy is offered to the girls If he drinks it it is a sign he consents to the marriage und the young lover then promises to give the girl some and pays a mini of generally a hundred copper on the of Js a remnant of marriage by which iii primitive times suc by Banns are published once in and the marriage ceremony in short The bride wears her hair and has a gold band around her head Her presents and her dowry are general ly and she and her bridegroom remain with her parents for a year aft er A Specialist In On Pennsylvania not far from tbe is a sign announcing the owner as an Advisor on Mens Ap He is not a though be will consent to make clothes for a con He as a pur veyor in expert knowledge of masculine He claims a scientific knowledge of a certain department of the He gives advice for a as does a and undertakes to steer his clients iii safety among the so cial rocks and shoals of bad form and bad He will tell congressmen who do not know at what hour they should put on a dress suit whether it is proper to wear pink shirt to an afternoon tea aud how long a congressman must have been one before he can wear a ruffled He will advise fat men not to wear checks and will show lean men how to look robust in under takes to make a Brummel oat of a jaj on two days It is said does good Washington Good God thought Can only woman tow emotions be the in a BJor fie wor snorin loike ft nn Oid heerd about how ho wor for soOi Buys to Its im an its yer tho out o yor at than ono explorer in cold cli mates has tho curious phenome non of n snowball It is arc not very the average being tho of n but they nro snowballs for all compressed globes of not little lumps of ico or A fail of tho kind occurred in north London in and at tho time it was observed that the balls seemed five times na deuno and compressed nary snow and iu no way to bo told from handmade They had fallen during the night and strewn many layers thick over a very largo No a doubtful electric al for the strange nud mountaineers are apt to discredit tho stories of snowball showers told them by the old guides till suddenly in the midst of an ordinary storm they t assailed as though by of mischievous SUks Our line of silks in np to dale io every The lot includes fancy polka dot black and taffetas in changeable and A large and choice as to select We place on sale this 100 yards Austrian pat for shirt at yd A few pieces of fancy trimming I Qn silk worth 75 cents at per Drem Goods We have the newest creations in dress goods which every body in the city who contemplates a new spring not fail to inspect All wool serges usual 65 c goods at per yard All wool checked novelties taste jjj ful at per yard Brocaded mohair 46 in fancy a bargain at at a V 1 Muslin Underwear Corset covers 15c to 35ts Rubbers This snow Will soon go and you need RUB BERS We have everything in this a specialty of Snag Proof Pure robber goods They will wear twice as long us any other rabbet Gome and see as for rubber keep B pare rolled edge rubber snag proof adapted to Railroad Men They will outwear two pairs of any other Price 00 See this before yon Any overshoe in the house We wish to show oar line of muslin underwear to every lady in Emmet We can then prove to you that we will save yon money when Regular 50 cent night dress 1 arS 5 cent Right 00 night dress Some be gowns Notions Ribbons for belts 5o to 40oper yard All the late things iu buckles Beauty 6 on a card Side per Rubber hairpins a dozen Shoes 25 C 106 5 to 50c lOc 39c m Si We are receiving new goods every day add you may depend on us to show you the finest line of shoes this spring ever in Sizes from 2f to widths A 16 This is a big range of sizes widths find we oan fit Remember specialty ot dont fit their feet Are you among dome to the servants hall of baronets who api had not noticed that he the only dne who with his lone while at chanced to cut the owner ipf bia ftjs then at the knife felt bis then in an aggrieved the back of thu knife w aa It haa been supposed that in Egypt the practice of embalming the bodies of tho load and forming them into the moat ancient of but Flinders the well known Egyp has by recent excavations thrown quite a new light this question of the ancient method of dis posing of the At a place about ou miles south of he has discovered u series of in the of found complete skeletons from which the flesh has been carefully evidently previous to burial The coffins are of admirable wo made of sycamore und are perfect preservation not withstanding years burial in the It remains to be proved by further excavat ions whether the mutila tion of tho was performed as a ceremonial rite or whether thia removal of flesh from the bones points to canni on the part of the ancient peo Journal Tbe Ueat of And you eay you gave me no en t what I No I Why even your father thought it all father f What proof have you of your extraordinary statement Proof t the best of He bap rows money from ma Cleveland Plain Union Hurrah Boys fle Wear the ORK corduroy And all other kinds of to Any and all garments sold by us and bearing the name of S and UN ION LABEL will be replaced with a new if not as represented by There are CHEAPER GOODS in we have them but consider the fit and my what a striking difference He Was The I haf your taire from w fairst time Her Who told you that I was Our i Prices S Co the A STRIKING DIFFERENCE UNION MADE SUIT 1NOHHJMIONMAK SUIT shaft or the ia London mw et are very low Consistent Shirts from 45 to Jackets O if torn with I E Good stamped C on them Wt daily Spring slock from the it is 1 you the mod and best ia the market in the line ot and gents furnishing Viking Clothing E 75Q Pants 759 Twit