BREAKS THE RECORD % TW EH TILTH OEFTOBY FLYER Dl THE MEMOAL FIELD. M" >U«1Mtl»m Rapidly and Radically Cuvd. QolckWork of a Famous Remedy. ' - Convenience, comfort, safety, speed are Remanded by the traveling public in our . japid century and the keenest intellects Constantly at work on these problems „.*re making wonderful progress in the Construction of the steamship and the locomotive. Like results are sought in " medicines and Dr. Williams' Pink Pills / for Pale People are astonishing the world % ~ f>y the triumphs they axe winning in the * - ?,. tapid cure of obstinate maladies, such as *'f-- "Rheumatism. With speed thef combine .. .. Convenience, perfect safety and cheap- •f" iaess. Here is fresh proof of their conoen- " frated virtues: Mrs. Margaret Gautz, ;*! i- :<j>f No. 1527 Bodeman street, Burlington, f Iowa, is an industrious German woman, * - %ho about two find a half years ago "" l found herself in danger of losing her V~ jpower to work altogether. She says : *' I got rheumatism which made Tny r Jkuees and elbows very stiff and painful. "' 1 had difficulty in raising tny arms and . J could hardly lift my feet over my • • -doorstep. I Ought to have gone to bed, •|>ut I couldn't afford to do that, sol ' . forced myself to work in spite of the pain •' aud stiffness. After suffering for about * . fix mouths, I was told about Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills for Pale People by ft ^ friend, who said she had been cured by iihem. On her advice, I bought one box '•y *nd in two weeks after I began to use .fhem I was well and I h^ve had no need : • to use them now for nearly two years. - J)r. Williams' Pink PilLs are a good med icine and if I ever have rheumatism again I will get a box right away. I Nfeave told many friends what they did V'?- for me audi am glad to have everybody jf; * faipw." jl « This is valuable news to all who suf- S;" ter from rheumatism. These pills have r *lso cured stubborn cases of locomotor H Ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, iciatica, neuralgia, nervous headache, <f ' palpitation of the heart and all forms of 'k\ . .weakness in male or female. - They are sold by all dmggists, or Vill be sent directly from the Dr. Wil liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N.Y., n receipt of the price, fifty cents per tmr; six boxes for two dollars and a '•, Look for the full name on every box. : - ' Reaction Against Easy Divorce. „ * The country as a whole is experieae- t.r""^":|ng a wholesome reaction against t6«' free and easy divorce system which fcas brought so much reproach on * i America. States are modifying 7jthe laws which in so many 'Instances have practically invited the filing of petitions. Even South Dakota 'I,. / |^as lengthened the timfe necessary to -* i •' "•ecure residence. Courts, responding K' to the general impulse, are being more - careful against abusing the discretion ... lodged in them--are more vigilant T "igainst collusion--more insistent that * - proof shall be complete. In social life , fhere is a tendency to go back to the •' ®ld opinion which regarded divorce as F> - ' •' a disgrace and visited obloquy on the "V^ divorced. The pendulum which so long swung one way is now swinging -..*'-*iihe other.--New York Globe. ... GUARANTEED MINING INVEST* i'*?' MENT8. We are the largest mine operators in the weet and cordially invite yon to write for prospectus and full partic ulars about OUR NINE ASSOCIATED COMPANIES, which have Joined la "forming our INVESTORS' GUARAN- •p^fEB ASSOCIATION, with $5,000,000 capital, TO GUARANTEE ALL OF •fr", - OUR INVESTORS AGAINST LOSS. Write for free information and be con vinced. ARBUCKLE-GOODE COMMISSION COMPANY, S25 Olive Street, St. Louis, Ma Easily Managed. Anxious wife--Mr. Dunner 1ms failed again for that money you owe. I wish you'd see about it, or some thing dreadful will happen. He says he won't wait--any--'longer--as-- time--is--money. Calm husband--So It is, my love. I'd forgotten. Tell him 111 pay him--in time. ' Important Co Mothers. F"**1* carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a nte and sure remedy to lafSsta tad children, and pee that ft Bears the (Signature of |a Use For Over SO Years. Iht Kind You Have ihnji BemgH Others Would Like To. "She married a foreign nobleman in disguise." "Yes, but she left him in disgust" 'Single Binder" straight & Ml Lewis' " cigar. Made by hand of ripe, thorough], cured tobacco, which insures a rich, s&ti* fying smoke. You pay 10c for cigars not so good. Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. The man who frequently gives him self away isn't necessarily charitable. V A GTTARANTKKD CURK FOR PILES. -Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Pile*.T«( ;,-;2®ruKsHet will refund money if PAZO OINTMENT rS^fail® to cure you in 6 to 14 days. 50c. -: i Too many things we wait for are not f^rorth the delay. - *'lt Cures Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat , Croup, In- . Juenza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis arid Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first " . • -stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect after (iking the first dose. Sold by dealers every- jjfliere. Large bottles 25 cents and 50 oca«& t^AKTED -- LADIES EVERYWHERE 5 share our big profits on specialties for women. Territory granted. |HE LADIES' SUPPLY CO.. BOYNE, MICHKUW. a^EiaaaHEns CBIlS MEM f LSEFJILJ act Cough 8yrup. Tastea Good. ui time. Sold by dmtnrieu. The Ward of King Canute A Romance of the Danish Conoijesi By OTTILIE A. LILJEWCRANTZ, sirthor of Ifce Thrali sf 1M ttstaefcy. Copyright, 1903, toy A. C. McCLURG & CO. CHAPTER XXIII--Continued. The guard discreetly held his tongue--but he likewise held his po sition. Elfgiva's bosom was begin ning to heave in hysterical menace when a second soldier, lounging against the wall behind the first, ven tured a soothing word. "For your own safety, noble, one, ask it not. The King is listening to a quarrel between an Englishman and a Dane; and by reason of it, there are many In the room whose tempers may-- Randalin, who alone of all the maid ens had remained undauntedly at her mistress' elbow, caught that elbow in a vice-like grip. "Take the gallery, then, lady!" she urged in a piercing whisper. "The gallery--as quick as you can." After a moment's bridling, Elfgiva whirled back with an angry flounce of her draperies. "The gallery, then, dog! I shall reach my lord's ear from that, which will be an unlucky thing for you." , Whatever its shortcomings as a show-case, the balcony was excellent ly adapted )>oth for spectators and for eavesdroppers, its distance from the floor being little more than twice a man's height, while the fire which doled its light so stingily, lavished a glory of brightness on the spot where ^he King's massive chair stood beside the chimney-piece. Encircled by a martial throng, so massed and indistinct that they made a background like embroidered tap estry, three figures were the center of attention--the figure of the young King in his raised chair, and the forms of the Dane and the Angle who fronted each other before his foot stool. Shielded from the heat by his palm, Canute's face was in the shadow, and the giant shape of the son of Lod- brok was a blot against the flames, curl to his lips that could hardly be called a smile; but Canute gave him command to finish, and he obeyed with rising color. "If your messen gers had not come upon me as I was riding on the Watling street and brought me here, a prisoner, I would have argued the matter with arrows, and you would needs have battsred down the defense of stone walls to convince me." Mutters of mingled admiration and censure buzzed around. Through it all Canute sat motionless, studying the Etheling' with-his bright colorless •eyes. '• ! At last he said unexpectedly, "If you would not; obey my summons until my men had dealt with you by force, it cannot be said that you have much respect for my authority. Do you not then acknowledge me as king of the English?" Rothgar betrayed impatience at this branching aside. Sebert himseh showed surprise. * He said hesitatingly, "I--I cannot deny that. Tou have the same right that Cerdic had over the Britons. Nay, you have more, for you are the for mal choice of the Witan. I cannot rightly deny that you are king of the Angles." "Ii you acknowledge me to be that," Canute said, "I do not see why you have not an argument for your de fense." . While all stared at him^he rose slowly and stood before them, a daz zling figure as the light caught the steel of his ring-mail and turned his polished helm to a fiery dome. "SebePt Oswaldsson," he said slow ly, "I did not feel much love toward you the first time I saw you, and it is hard for me not to hate you now, when I see what you are going to le the cause of. If your case had come be fore Canute the man, oU would have received the answer you expect. But Fancy placed a scarlet-cloaked figure at his feet and raised at his knee a * face of sweetest friendliness. but the glare lay strong on Sebert of Ivarsdale, revealing a picture that caused one spectator to catch her breath in a sob. Equally aloof from English thane and Danish noble, the Etheling in the palace of his native king stood a stranger and alone, while his swordless sheath showed him to be also a prisoner. He bore himself proudly, one of his blood could scarcely have done otherwise, but his fine face was white with mis ery, and despair darkened his eyes as they stared unseeingly before him. Answering a question from the King, Rothgar began to -speak, his heavy voice seeming to fill all the space from floor to ceiling: "By all the laws of war, King Canute, the Odal of Ivarsdale should come to me. The first son of Lodbrok took the land before ever this Angle's kin had seen it. He built the tower that stands on it, and the name it bears to this day is the name of his giving. Under Guthrum, a weak-kneed son of his son erf his lost it to the English Alfred, and we fell out of our fortunes with the tipping of the scales, and Angles have sat since then in the seat of Lod- brok's sons. But now the scales have risen again. Under Canute, Ivars dale, with all other English property, comes back to Danish hands. By all the laws of war, my kinsman's inheri tance should be my share of the spoil." Ending roundly, he drew himself up in an attitude of bold assurance. Wherever a group of scarlet cloaks made a bright patch upon the human arras, there was a flutter of approval. In the shadow of his hand, Canute nodded slowly. "By all the laws of "war," he affirmed, "your kinsman's in heritance should be your share of the spoil." Again an approving murmur rose from Danish throats; and Rothgar was opening his lips to voice a grate ful answer, when a gesture of the royal hand checked him. "Recollect, however, that Just now I am not only a war-chief, but also a law-man. I think it right, therefore, to hear what the Englishman has to say for his side. Sebet Oswaldsson, speak in your defense." x "I have nothing to say. Your Jus tice may most rightly be meted out." "Nothing to say?" The King's measured voice sounded sharply through the hush. For the lirst time, he lowered his hand and bent for ward where the fire-glow could touch him. As she caught sight of his face Elf giva shrank and clutched at her wom en. "Ah, Saints, I am thankful now that it is dark!" she murmured. Sebert sustained the look with proud steadiness. "Nothing that would be of use to me," he said; "and I do not choose to pleasure you by setting up a weak plea for you to knock down again. If your messen gers had Hot taken me by sur- prlse--He paused, with an odd it is your luck that Canute is dead, and yeu stand before Caafite the King. Hear then my answer: By all the laws of war, the land belongs to Ivar's son; and had he regained it while war ruled, I had pot taken it Jfrom him, though tj>,e Witan itself commanded me. Bt» instead of re gaining it, he lost it. ' He stretched a forbidding hand toward Rothgar, feeling without seeing his angry im pulse. 'JBy what means matters not; battles nave turned on ' a smaller thing, and the loyalty of those we have protected is a lawful weapon to defend ourselves with. The kinsman of Ivar a second time lost his inheri tance, and the opportunity passed-- forever. What concerns war-time is a thing by itself; as ruler over laws and land-rights, I cannot give one man's lands to another, though the one be a man I care little for, and the other is my foster-brother. Go back therefore, unhindered, Lord of Ivars dale, and live in peace henceforth. Or- var, I want you to restore to him his weapon and see him on his way in safety. Your life shall answer for any harm done to him." With one hand, he-struck down the murmur that was rising; with the other he made an urgent gesture of haste, which Orvar seemed to under stand. Even while he was returning to the Lord of Ivarsdale his sword, he seized him by the arm and hurried him down the room, the Etheling walking like a man in a dream. From the dusk of the rafters, the girl who loved him stretched out her hands to him in tender farewell, but there was no more of anguish in the gesture. Gazing after him, the tears rose slowly to her eyes and rolled slowly down her cheeks, but on her mouth was a little smile whose won dering Joy mounted to exaltation. The murmur below was growing, despite the king's restraining hand; and now, crashing through it In hide ous discord, came a Durst of jeering laughter from the Jotun. What words he also spoke they could not catch, but they heard the Danish cries sink and die, aghast, and they saw a score of English thanes spring upon him and drag him backward. Above the noise of their scuffling, the king's voice sounded stern and cold-. "While I act as law-man in my Judgment hall, I will hear no disput ing of my Judgments. #hoeo comes to me In my private chamber, as friend to'friend, may tell his mind; but now I speak as king, and what I have spoken shall stand." Struggling with those who would have forced him from the room, Roth gar had no breath to retort with, but the words did not go unsaid because of that. Wherever scarlet cloaks made a bright patch, the human arras sway ed and shook violently, and then fell apart into groups of angry men whose voices rose in resentful chorus: "Such Judgment by a Danish king is unexampled!" -"King, are we to expect this treatment?" "This Is the third time you have ruled against your own men." "You are our chief, whose kingship we have held up with our lives." "What are these Eng lish to you?" Snarling more and more GpciiiJ, tu€/ fufgcu forward, CiOaiug around the dais in a fiery mass. Canute's sword was no more bril liantly hard than his face, and his eyes were glittering points. The ring of steel was in .his voice as he an swered: , "You spealt as you have a right- but you speak as men who have swines' memories. Was it your sup port or your courage that won me the English crown? It may be that if I had waited until py^e and fire you would have done so, buMt happened that before that' time the English Witan gave it to me as a gift, iu re turn for my pledge to rule them Just ly. My meaning In this Judgment, and the others that you dislike, is that I am going to keep that pledge. I tell you now, openly and without deceit, that henceforth there is to be but one. rule for Angle and Dane alike; and I shall be as much thetr king as. yours; and they shall share equally in my Justice. " You may like it or not, but that is what will take place." How they liked it was suggested by a bursting roar, and the scuffling of many feet as the English leaped for ward to protect their new king and the Danes whirled to meet them, but the women in the gallery did not wait to see the outcome. In a frenzy of terror, Elfgiva dragged up the kneel ing maids and herded them through tne door. "Go--before they get into the ante room!' she gasped. "Do yon not see that he is no longer human? We should be pleading with iron. Go! Before they tear down the walls!" j (To be continued.) EVENED UP THE SCORE. SAW VI8ION OF HIS DEATH. War Artist Believes He Has Had Pre- monition of His Fate. Friends of a distinguished war art ist now in Manchuria are said to be taking an almost uncanny interest in his return from the scene of war. It rises out of a strange story told by the artist himself. Years before the artist began his long record of cam paigns he was out walking along a quiet square in his native city when, looking down, he suddenly saw a pool of blood on the pavement. Instantly, the story goes, from the shock of th& sight, he went off into a sort of trance. He was on a bleal$ plain, runnfhg for his life from three pursuing horsemen.- He saw their faces, knew that his efforts to escape were hopeless and then a swtft blade descended and cut ofT his head. Af ter that he came to himself and re sumed his walk, but he has always had a conviction that this vision fore boded the manner of his death. Once during a campaign in the Su dan, when the British square was broken, he was pursued. It was with relief that he recognized that the mounted pursuers were not his men, the men of the vision. He wonders still when he will meet them. Flowers by the Thousand. The most inspiring floricultural idea of the last quarter of a centtiry is the naturalizing of flowers by the thou sand in situations where they need absolutely no care after planting, says Couatry Life in America. It is the easiest kind of gardening, for there is no weeding, watering, hoeing, stak ing or tying. It is the most artistie form of gardening, because the flow ers fit perfectly into the landscape. It is the most effective Icind of gar dening, because nothing can surpass in beauty a continuous sheet of flow ers all of the same variety. (No mat ter how numerous they may be, these wildlings never seem gaudy or vul gar.) And, finally, it is the least ex pensive way of getting hosts of flow ers--flowers like the stars of the Milky Way in multitude. A thousand narcissus bulbs! The thought takes one's breath away; yet a thousand bulbs of the poets' narcissus cost only |5--a mere nothing compared with the vision of loveliness which It makes possible. Various Kinds of Memory. Considering the kinds of memory, M. Menard states that some persons best remember Impressions received through the eyes; others, those com ing through the ears; and still other persons best keep in mind "what they have written out. We are all mors or less endowed with auditive and vis ual memory, while the former Is spe cially developed in musicians and the latter in painters. The thr^e classes --visual, auditive and motor--are Illustrated in the methods of study uy children, some of whom learn their lessons by reading a number of times, others only by hearing them recited, and still others must repeat the les son to themselves. Pupils who must recite to themselves in a high voice have auditive-motor memory, while those who must copy the lesson a number of times have visual-motor memory. The student adopts instinct ively the methods his memory re quires; Llnd Resembles Lincoln. Representative John Lind of Minne sota, who has twice been governor of that state and has been nominated for Justice of the Supreme Court, is said to bear a marked resemblance to Lincoln. In fact, he seems a per fect double of the martyred Presi dent; even the expression of his face is similar, as well as its contour. He is extremely tall and gaunt and has ft shambling gait. A Soldier's Busy Moment. Epiil Douche, sergeant of troop B at Fort Meade, while in a field was thrown to the ground and burned by a lightning bolt. While the soldier lay prostrate a cow, frightened by the flash, kicked him in the Jaw. His in juries are serious, but not' fatal.-- Milwaukee Wisconsin. . • The Woman of It. . I had a splendid half hour's chat with young Simpkins last even ing. ' He--Indeed! Why, everybody says he is stupid and never says anything. She--True; bn> he's an excellent •ft Jt , u -V* 2- Noisy Individual Squelched by Mild Mannered Nervous Man. The man with a mailing tube in his hand was walking through the car when in a spirit of too much exuber ance he brought the heavy tube down across the end of a seat occupied by the nervous man. "O, thank you!" called the nervous man after him; "I wish you could stay and do that a while longer. Can't you? --do!" The whole waiting car was attract ed in a moment, but the man with the mailing tube hadn't been feased. He turned on his heel in a flash and came back to the seat. "Certainly," he smiled, and the way he lay about him on the aisle end of the plush covered seat made it look easy for the car janitor. "You see," said the nervous man, rising in the dust and looking around over his glasses, "I used to be an at tendant in the Home for Feeble Mind ed, and when this fellow Came along with his idiot stick it carried me back to those old days until I--" But the man with the mailing tube was on his way rapidly into the smok ing car, and the speaker sat down, while the smile spread audibly all over the coach. ;v Food for the Elephant- ' WSlie Bourke Cock ran has few equals and hardly a superior in this country as an extemporaneous speak er, a great majority of his apparently impromptu utterances have been care fully prepared and memorized for days in advance of their delivery. "In dic tating one of my recent speeches, sub sequently delivered in Tammany hall," Mr. Cockran confided to a friend the other day, "there was a sort of climax in which occurred the words: 'This argument furnishes every kind of fuel that eloquence needs.' "But on sending to my stenographer for a transcript of the speech, imagine my emotions on seeing my climax transcribed: 'This argument furnishes every kind of food that elephants need.'--meaning the G. O. P., I sup pose."--New York Times. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local application!, as ther cannot reach the dta- eased portion of the oar. There la only one way to cure deafness, and that Is by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous llnlnur of the" Kustaehliui Tube. When this tube is Inflimed you have a rumbilun Koiind or Im perfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed. Deaf ness 1* the result, and unless the lnflanint.itIon can be taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condi tion, hesrliiK will be destroyed forever; nine caeca out of ten *re caused tiy < atarrh, which la nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces AVe will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free F. J. CMKXKY A CO., Toledo O. Bold br Dranciots, 75c, Take Hair* Family Fill* for constipation. Expensive." "McSpeeder is getting to be notor ious." "i should say so; why, the street car conductors charge him two fares now because they have heard that he is leading a double life."--Cleveland Leader. v Ask Your Druggist for Alien's Foot-Ess* «1 tried ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE recent ly, and hav& just bought another supply It has cured my corns, and the hot, burning aud itching sensation in my feet which was almost unbearable, and 1 would not be with out it now.-- Mrs. W. J Walker. CamdiSBt N. J." Sold by all Druggists, 25a The Immutability of Temperament. "That man could own his own home if he were not so extravagant." "Yes, but what would be the use? If he owned his own home he would simply mortgage it." 1 Most town folks admire their coup- try relatives for visiting purposes only. TO CtTBE A COLD IN ONE DAT Take Laxative Bromu yulnlne Tablets. A11 drug- 6l«w refund the money If It falls to cure. K. W. rova's signature Is on each box. 25c. Never judge a man by his looks; judge him by the looks of his wife. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure.--J. W. O'BBIBR, 339 Third Ave. N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0,1800. .Of course marriage is a failure when the liabilities exceed the assets. Mrs. 'Window's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the (Turns, reduces SammsUon, allays pala, cures wind collu. 2Scabottla. During courtship they argue; after marriage they quarrel. Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, the Great Kidney Mid Liver Cure. World Famous. Write Or. Kennedy'* Sons, Kondout, N. Y., for free sample botUa. The zebra is born with stripes; man ^nust acquire them. ^ "National" Caskets are used Jor all State funerals. Even a blind man can feel with his feet /Vs MR •. •>* • 'Ay* _ * ! Miss Nettie Blackmore, Minneapolis, tells how any young woman may be per manently cured of monthly pains by taking Lydia E* Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.' M YOUNG WOMKN:--I had frequent headaches of a severe nature, dark spots before my eyes, and at my menstrual periods I suffered untold agony. A member of the lodge advised me to try Ijydia IS* Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, but I only scorned good ad Vice and felt that my case was hopeless, but she kept at me until I bought ft Txittle and started taking it. I soon had the best reason in the world to change my opinion of the medicine, as each day my health improved, and finally I was entirely without pain at my menstruation periods. I am most grateful."--- NSTTIE BLACKMORE, '23 Central Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Painful Periods •re quickly and permanently overcome by Lydia E. Pinkhara^j Vegetable Compound. The above letter is only one of hundreds off thousands which prove this statement to be a fact. Menstruation Is a severe strain on a woman's vitality, --if it is painful something is wrong. Don't take narcotics to deaden the pa|n, but remov® the cause -- perhaps it is caused by irregularity or womb displace- ments, or the development of a tumor. "Whatever it is, Lydia' IS. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is guaranteed to cure it. ^ | If there is anything- about your case about which you would like special advice, write freely to Mrs. Pinkhajn. She will treat your letter as strictly confidential. She can surely help you, for no person in America can speak from a wider experience in treating female ills. She has helped hundreds of thousands of women b%ck to health. Her address is Lynn, Mass., and her advice is free. You are very foolish if you do not accept her kind invitation. Details of Another Case. | ** DEAR MRS. PINKHAM : -- Ignorance and carelessness is the cause of most of the suffer ings of women. I believe that if we properly understood the laws of heaKh we wotild all be well, but if the sick women only knew the, truth about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, they would be saved much suffer ing and would soon be cured. * I used it for five months for a local diffi culty which had troubled me for yeara, and for which I had spent hundreds of dollars in the vain endeavor to rec tify. My life forces were being sapped, ind I was daily losing my vitality. M Lydia E. 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