===== Ix\ the Fowler's 1 By M. M. HAIfWCLL I CjaJUPTBR X.--(Continued.) ; *Bstter aend the young people to It Is now daylijfht almost," suf- pvabfeu felclei-w, uis'l Uit>y cwcf^'l? j Mtttiefi looking at each other. tfhat some terrible calamity had nod even Lady Jane, whose fiwt bad been that the bride had ran was fully convinced. » $But» Leila, you will stay by me?" fevered the mistress of the house, •Utdenly transformed into a broken- fkfWn old Woman. 4 will, dear aunty," gravely said Ml*. "I shall see little Syb safe in |xsd, then I shall return to you." r Leila Desmond, slenderly graceful, jko$ and caressing, womanly to the Baser-tips, was yet one of those loyal, •tfong natures we turn to lean upon |&ithe "day of trouble." ttervls gave her one look of rever- enee, then he placed his arm round jthiit mother for wnom he and this "'pirfect woman, nobly planned" had sacrificed themselves so fatally. Every hour was bringing home to the terrible blunder he had made In his life. Love between man and woman was God-given, to be prized as sacred; but under the specious pre test of sacrificing himself for the good of his house, he had torn love from hill heart, and then sold that empty shall for gold. That it had been a bit ter, sinful bargain he now knew. ferhaps this impending calamity which he was helplessly waiting for the new day to discover might be heaven's punishment for what he had dOM. It was still and quiet in the old koaie. There was a lull of expectancy until the daylight should come to al low action to be resumed. In Leila's room it was silent as the grave. Beside the white-draperied bed knelt Leila herself. She was praying, with frightened tears now no one was lqr'to see them--praying earnestly for the hapleaa girl who had shadowed her m That something dire had happened LeUa instinctively knew; bat all she could do was to pray for help from above. ^Leila! Sis!" A hoarse, shrill Togbe made her spring to her feet. Qktee at her side stood Syb, shiver- lag in her little blue dressing-gown, Mr face working convulsively. "X can't keep it from you any long- «rt I dare not, though I do hate her «o!" the deformed girl was saying, her teeth chattering as much from terror as from cold. j8peak, Syb!" gripped the thin wrist, her coming thick and fast Syb then! "I heard a cry, a smothered scream the old oak cheat, as 1 walked id the gallery; but 1 hated her so that I would not speak before! And when I saw you, through the open door between our rooms, praying with sobs, I knew it must be for her. So I must till, and you'd better be quick!" Syb slipped to the floor in a swoon. But Leila was already gone. With flying feet she was rushing downstairs from the third floor, where her bed room and Syb's were. "Gervis! Gervis! Come, and come quickly! Bring Barnes!" When she bad reached the gallery she shrieked Solidly. Her voice, sharp with fear, tang through the old house and made Gervis leap to his feet. "It's Leila! She haa found out some thing! Mother dear, stay here, I pray |w!" He pressed Lady Jane back on her at the on of 1I» jr br4th Infer, t "No one knows what we hare got to face!" "Bring Barnes! Oh, be quick!" Le ila's voice cried again in an agony of baste. Barnes, the white-haired old bailer, was stiff sad rheumatic. It seemed as though he would never reach the t*p of the wide, crimson-covered stair case, and yet the old man was doing his best, though Gervis would fain .have dragged him up two steps at a time. "Where are yoo, Leila?" he hoarsely •houted. "Here! here! Quick!" ^Round the curve of the gallery they found Leila, tearing frantically the holly and moss decorations from what' bad been a bank of greenery. The blood was trickling down her bands and wrists, as the .holly tore them cruelly.. But, unconscious of Vain, Leila continued to pull, until the old black-oak chest, which had been the foundation of the green bank, wa* displayed. "PreBs the spring, Barnes! Nobody in Temple-Dene knows the secret bat you. Press, for Gladdy's dear sake! panted the girl, madly beside herself. "Whatever " Barnes was begin ning, and fumbling with his specta cles. "Man, do as you're bid!" shouted Gervis, catching the infection of Le ila's frengy. And he dragged Banes forward. • • Something in his blazing 'eyes made jtjie old man pull himself together. • He stooped forward. With aiming binds, he felt along the carvings; but bow slow he was! The watchers caught their breaths and shivered. Tis in the shamrock, I do mind ate. 'Tis b'und to be in the sham- tock, the spring," he was mattering. In an Instant Leila was on her \ ipees, and there, among the- earved llaTOR and flowers of oak, was a single 4kla.tr snamrock. ' / It was the spring! Pressing it hard as she could, the 4prrsd lid clicked as it opened about 'inch. Then Gervis, with strong Arms, forced it back on its hinges, and M muffled cry broke from his lips. CHAPTER XI. Lying huddled in the musty chest a little figure in gleaming silver btocade, stained here and there with bunches of crushed holly berries. I It vm Gladdy, stiffened and immov able, bat with widely opened, round blue eyes. That she waa dead was the first >b^>ght oi buik 0;er» **3 Lena. No! 'Tain't death!" qaickly said old Barnes, glancing at their white faces. "See ye, Mr. Uervia, there's a row of air-holes down each side o' the chest I saw 'em made myself in the old squire's time, purpose-like, in case o' this very kind o' thing that's bap* pened now!" But Gervis was not listening. He and others who had rushed to the gal lery were carefully lifting the small, stiffened form. A mounted groom had already been dispatched for a doctor. But something must be done at once," said Gervis, as they laid the unconscious girl on an Indian rug on the polished floor of the gallery. Somebody was trying to force brandy through the marble white lips. Not a drop will go down! What are we to do until the doctor comes?" piteously cried Leila, who, kneeling down, had slipped her arm under the little sunny-brown head. Fetch Mr. Ansdell!" commanded Gervis, with a sudden inspiration. Surely the American could give some help in the pressing emergency, other wise, what was the value of his so- called scientific reputation? Mr. Ansdell! Everybody then res membered that, oddly enough, the sci entist had not been once seen during the hours of anxious search. It was curious, to say the least of it. And still more curious did it appear that no Mr. Ansdell hurried to the gallery in answer to the summons. Never mind, here's young Doctor Goring himself, which is better," ejac ulated Lady Jane, who had struggled upstairs more dead than alive frem sheer fright, and looked on helplessly. It's a trance!" at last pronounced the doctor, a young man, with all the latest medical and scientific theories at his Qnger-endSs "She has been hypnotised! Who" has done this mis chief?" He stood up and glanced round upon the awe-struck group sternly. There was no answer, and Doctor Goring went on wrathfully: Somebody has got to answer for this night's work! The poor young lady has been brought to death's door, evidently, by some vile experiment. Now, then, clear out of this every one of you! Excuse my bluntness. Lady Jane, but this is not a moment for po lite speech. I've got a life to win back if I can, and I can't have a crowd round me. Your ladyship can remain, and, yes, I must have Miss Desmond, if I've anybody." One by one the spectators departed from the gallery, and the young med ical enthusiast set to work, with the result that in a quarter of an bour Gladdy feebly opened her lips and spoke. - I Want Leila," was the whisper. And when the aw that it was Leila herself who wss supporting her bead the bride's round eyes closed content edly. She will sleep now. We must carry her to her bed," said Doctor Goring, well satisfied. You are wanted, sir, at once," came an argent whisper; while Gervis, lift ing his wife in his arms, carried her away. "What! another case?" The doctor wheeled around, and he was silently beckoned to the quarter of the house known as the bachelors' wing. Lying back in his chair in front of a writing table, and grasping a folded paper, was a dead man. 1 The room was in perfect order. There had been no assault, no murder, mo suicide, so far as one could judge at the moment. But that death had entered the half- open stare of the black eyes, the dropped jaw, < and the marble hue of the long, lean fingers gripping the sheet of paper spoke all too clearly. Little wonder that Paul Ansdell had failed to join in the search for the missing bride, failed to obey the sqa%-» mons for his helpful skill. ' ' "He has been dead quite a-couple of houre," said Doctor Goring gravely, secretly wondering what would be the outcome of this double tragedy. "You mu&Jtkeep this business from the ladies as long as you can," he said, turning to Gervis, who had been hast ily sent for. "Th^re must be an in quest, of course; and, meantime, I should take possession of that folded paper. See, Tvq managed not to tear it. You'd best lock it away until you hand it . to the coroner, Mr. Temple- ton."- .••••si •- "Why," gasped Gervis, as he caught sight of the close, upright handwrit ing, "my wife wrote that! What vil lainy is this? See here!" It was the last will lend testament of Gladys Templeton, and, in correct legal form it assigned everything the testator possessed to Paul Ansdell of Montreal, revoking all former wills and codicils. The document was duly signed, and the signatures and ad dresses of two Americans were append ed. Not a flaw was there from beginning to end of the deed. You hold the key that unlocks the whole of this night's mystery," briefly Baid the young doctor. "This unfortu nate man must be a reckless adven turer, whose wits have put in his hands a most dangerous weapon. He is, we will discover, a criminal hypno tist, a so-called scientist, seeking some tool to further his own ends. Yes yes; you'll see we'll find out that'll what he is--was, I mean," said the medical man. He was right in bis surmise, as the inquest brought out, bit by bit, partly from papers belonging to the dead man, partly from the unwilling evi dence of Gladdy, who had been more or less under hypnotic influence since the night of the lire in the snow-shed. As for the villain's own death, was proved to be from natural and due to long-standing heart disease, But the jury's tar ooe--"By the Flwi yearsli»f%lftwld away. So many changes bate hap Temfflf-Dine and tils Templetoas Lat# iant has coiae t#looi iMfcfpfc the days wh«i die wore faded and lived a sorely pinched life •• happiest she has known. * Today she no longer wean bar b- vorite .blue, for Francis &vue to hits jcravfe, Lis h*art by the melancholy nothing would dis- pel. So Lady Jane wears widow's weods and has learnt the old lesson tbat "contentment is great gain." The dainty American bride, so'life- file and highly strung, never managed While not a larg* place it it very progressive. Some time ago to weather the repeated shocks tofeer frail syDReiB. Like a broken flower Withered, until decline set in. In Leila's tender, supporting arms, her weak bands clinging tight round Leila's soft tbroat, Gladdy died peace fully. "Take care of my Gervis, Leila. Tou will do it better than I,**, with the won drous intuition of the dying she whis pered at the last. And now that the years have goae round, Gervis begins to think . it la time Leila was taking care of him. Between thp two there is a perfect understanding, and by and by their wedding bells Will ring out; for though "sorrow endureth for the night, Joy is bound to come in the morning.** (The End.) ' POPULAW <PBCA» ' • K«»latiMa ow*eea*i* runttsg «e«--i Oat, is a eitr eriMOO •Wi e time the Woodstock Electric -Light Com pany. was called to sell its plant to the city, and after demurring the deal was effected and the business was passed oyer to the municipality. Hereafter the plant will be run as a city under taking. Kingston, Ont, with a popu- I in of SHj/fiiU. has notified the Kings ton Light, Heat and Power Company of its intention to proceed in a lawful manner to arbitrate to acquire the whole plant. The company's contracts expire in 1901. The property, valued at 9800,000, will probably soon be in the* possession of the municipal au thorities. If Kingston can own its electric light plant there is no reason why Bridgeport should not also go into the same kind of business. The city of Winnipeg, Manitoba, has been carrying on Its electric light plant very successfully during the past year. Consumers are receiving a cheaper and better service that when a private cor poration was in control. fe w 4?ir; • i ' k - : WICKED CITIBS. Borgian and Hlshwmyme* fcirw In Gay Paris. Highway robberies have multiplied of late in Paris to so alarming an ex tent that It is scarcely an exaggeration to say that we live at present under reign of terror. Every morning the papers publish a fresh list of victims, says a correspondent in the Pall Mall Gazette. The main thor oughfares are somewhat safer, of course, than the more out of the way streets, but even on the chief boule vards the belated pedestrian runs no inconsiderable risk as soon as the rush of traffic from the theaters is over. Bagshot Heath in the palmiest days of highwaymen must have been a delecta ble spot after dusk compared with some of the most respectable districts of Paris at present. In the olden days you were at least allowed to save yoar skin by parting with your purse, whereas the modern Parisian footpad does his best in nine cases out of ten to murder his victim either before, or after he has robbed him. The un speakable ferocity of the Parisian ruf fian is, perhaps, the ugliest feature of the situation. He is seldom or never content with merely easing the "pante" of hiB property. His usual mode of proceeding is to begin by half killing his prey as the readiest way of pro- venting anything in the nature of re sistance. Revolvers, knives, bludgeons, os de mouton" and knackle dusters do their work effectually before there Is any question of securing the booty. Time after time it is the same old tale. The police come up, either attracted by the scuffle, or long afterward, on their beat, to find an unfortunate creature lying in a pool of blood, dead or in desperate straits. But there have been innumerable examples of late of vio lence being resorted to solely with a •lew of satisfying the most fiendish Instincts of cruelty. On the whole, the police do what they can, but there are far too few of them. Even when they catch their quarry red-handed, which is the exception, as their rounds ara few and far between, they are usually outnumbered and outarmed. Instances are common of their showing great bravery, but, as a rule, the best that happens is that they capture one or two of the ruffians, while the others make good their escape. Fortunately, the dotectives supplement their efforts to excellent purpose. When one or two members of a gang are arrested their accomplices are generally* run to ground before long. * The trouble is that the supply of desperadoes seems to be inexhaustible. One band Is no sooner under lock and key than an other is rivalling its exploits. PRES1PFNT Of PRESIDEN A Dbttantabltiicl I«dy lodttd, 1* Mary K. Poole, of Wbltbut, lad. Whiting, Ind., Feb. 4, 1901,--(Spe cial.)--The Presidents of the Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic have an association composed exclusively of the Presidents of the different State Associations. This Presidents' Asso ciation chooses a President, and to this very high and distinguished position Mrs. Mary B. Poole of this place has been elected. Mrs. Poole is thoroughly deserving of this great honor. Her devotion to* the interests of the Asso ciation is very marked, and her experi ence with the old soldiers of the G. A. R. is wide. Mrs. Poole is never slow to take advantage of anything that may benefit the veterans, and her teal has resulted in much that is good to these grand old men. She writes of her experiences: "Honor to whom honor is due, and having seen the nu merous cures effected through the use of Dodd's Kidney Pills, I gladly en dorse them as being particularly ef fective to cure that dreaded disease of so many of our old soldiers, Bright's Disease and Kidney Disorders of dif ferent kinds.' Kidney Disease soon poisons the entire system, and as a re sult the vital organs are attacked, and I have found that no remedy so surely, completely and quickly finds the weak spot and heals it as Dodd's Kidney Pills. "I have used them myself in slight attacks of biliousness and Indigestion, and usually find that from three to four pills do the work." Such evidence from a lady of so much distinction and experience should convince any sufferer from Kid ney Trouble that Dodd's Kidney Pills is the remedy that never fails. 50c a box, six boxes for |2.50. Buy them from your local druggist if you can. If he can't supply you send to tha Dodds Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Tind of Cktehlii A food story about De Wet is told in a letter received in Glasgow from an officer and published in M. A. P. Three yeomanry scouts were taken prisoners near Lindley. De Wet told them he had an Important dispatch for General Rundle and If they would undertake to deliver it they would be liberated. All three gave their words of honor to deliver the letter, which was as follows: "I^ear Sir: Please dhain up these three*aevils, as I ps^tch. them every day. Yours, De Wet.'* Deafneatfi Cannot B« Cnrefl ' 8till Digging for Gol<L Mrs. Sarah MacDonald, a prominent club woman of New York, who went to Alaska three years ago in search of fortune, writes to a friend that she was at the time, of writing, packing up to leave Nome, where she has been for the last two months, to start for the southern part of Alaska. She was going with a party to open a new camp and mining district. She Is to be the recorder, and she declares that she has great prospects and greater expectations. She will be in this com paratively unsettled country all w;ln- ter. Mrs. MacDonald was Chairman af the executive committee of the New York Women's Press club when she left. Her goodby was, "I'll never come back unless I strike It rich." Her address now is Muchagak, via Bristol Bay. 7*:"V. r-- 7;-' ' By actual experience the Ruskinltes, a colony of socialists near Waycroes, Ga., have demonstrated what Is prob ably the lowest possible daily cost of food. They live at an actual cost per capita of less than 10 cents a day. Of course this could not have t>een ac complished except through co-opera- tion. Everything they consume is bought at wholesale in large quantities and is cooked In the community. In the community dining room taibles are set for 300 people. Those who do not wish to eat with the crowd are allowed the privilege of purchasing company stores and cooking them at borne. jy , tutlonal remedies. Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucus lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hear ing, and when it is entirely cloaed deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing wilt be'destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucus surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for •irculars, free. ̂ CHENEY & CO f T0led0f Q, 'are the best, gold by Druggista, 7i Bail's nmliy Pills i Oao of tbe KaUer*» Games. The royal game of solta claims the many-sided German emperor as. a player. It somewhat resembles the game of checkers. Thirty pieces are used to play, and there are 100 squares on the table. There are at present on view in London the actual pieces and table used by the kaiser. The exhibit, which is valued at $30,000, is of deli cately enameled gold work, and is in- crusted w)th brilliants,while tiny royal guns, moons and stars surmount the royal arms in enamel. iMntf* Family Modioli**, Moves tne Dowels each aay. in order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and SOo. All that has made England famdns, and all that has made England wealthy, has been the work of minorfc, ties, sometimes very small ones.--Sir Henry Maine. "An open door will tempt a saint" This rather unusual proverb was en graved on a key-ring, the property of .a man found drowned in the Lea in Eng land. Many complicated diseases and much suffering result from constipation. Garfield Tea, the great Herb Tea, will cure the most obstinate case. .fnetomt Dood In Philadelphia. The first deed conveying property to the proprietor of Pennsylvania, Will- lam Penn, is written in old Dutch, and is now preserved in the city hall. The property was what is now known as Lemon hill, Including the mansion and the Schuylkill river front, where tbe old Fairmount waterworks was lo cated. There Penn kept his barge and some row boats, the barge carrying tm admiral's pennant. It is said there Is oniy one man lp ?hUad«M .̂ read this deed; When a.man goes to market and gets stock on a tough fowl he is very apt to lose his respect for old age. - < l««or to WhMi Tbe railroads have abused as ooulless were feeding th« life blood people. Tbe great Galveston has, however, revealed the fact that the managers of these corporations have bitrts which are susceptible of being touched by the cries of distress. Their trains were placed at the dis posal of all those engaged in relief work on tbe coast Provisions and supplies were carried forward free of chanr*. committees from every *»?- ilvE cf the Etuis Tcrc famished i portation, and when the refugees from Galveston began to pour into Houston and it became a serious question what was to be done with them the railroads solved the problem by furnishing transportation without charge to all who wished to leave and to any point they wished to go. Grand Master An derson informs us that but for this fact Houston would have been overrun with people who had to be cared for, and that suffering and distress would have been largely increased as well as the cost of meeting conditions which would have prevailed. Bro. Anderson desires us, through these columns, to thank the different roads for the great service rendered his committee at Houston. If it were possible we would be glad to see parallel columns, In one of which should appear the acts of these railroad corporations in a time of great calamity and distress, and in the other the amount contributed by the little two-by-four demagogues who are always trying to array the preju dices of the masses against any and every kind of enterprise.--From the Texas Odd Fellow. - ^ CAREER AND CHARACTER OP ABRAHAM LINCOLN. An address by Joseph Choate, Am bassador to Great Britain,on the career and character of Abraham Lincoln-- his early life--his early struggles with the world--his character as developed in the later years of his life and his administration, which placed his name so high on the world's roll of honor and fame, has been published by. the Chicago, Milwaukee «& St Paul Rail way and may be had by sending six (6) cents in postage to F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, ill. Alpine Tnanel Finished. After thirty months of continuous boring the two gangs of workmen en gaged in tunneling Mt Jamau recently met in the center, thus completing the work. Seven miles of galleries have had to be opened, and £18,000 worth of dynamite has been used. This tun nel will give direct communication from parts of Lake Geneva to Mon- treux valley without the necessity of climbing peaks 12,000 feet high. :• %-j Try Gr*ln-Ot Try Cteala-Og.ASSiSu Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delioate stomach receives it without di»- tress. the price of coffee. 15c and 35 Ota per package. Sold by all grocers. ?. ' ' A man who neglects bis own business can't be trusted to look after other people's affairs. Maple City Self Washing Soap dees not shrink woolens nor will It Injur* tbe finest fabric. Just try it once. They're only truly great who ara truly good.--Chapman. When cycling take a bar of White's Ta> f You can ride further and easier. The first sugar mill was erected In Louisiana In 1768, Bather Hard to ProsouM| At the Neues theater in Berlin ' tomlme has Just been produced w.ith the title of "Zambomlrosolollbidlrut- sumutzlschlumpianowsky." Garfield Tea purifies tbe blood and cures all forms of Indigestion; good health and a clear complexion result from its use; it is made from HERBS. Any coward can fight a battle when he is sure of winning, but give me the man who has. the pluck to fight when he is sure of losing.--George Eliot We refund 10c for every package of PUTNAM FADELESS DYES that falls, to give satisfaction. Monroe Drug Co.* Unlonvllle, Mo. life is not a matter ov belief, but a seezon ov work; a bending ov the back too the plow, instead of bending the kneeze to yoore idols. TO CUBE A COLD IN OKU DAT. Take Laxative BBOMO QUININE TABLBTS. AH druggists refund the money if i t fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on the box. 2Bo. Laborers' Union No. 1 of Brooklyn reports that all of its employers are paying union wages. Poor Soap Spoils Clothes. Don't take chances. Buy the best. 11a- ]?le City Self Washing Soap Is guaran teed to be pure. All grocers sell it. The world Is a prison from which no man need hope to escape alive. FITS Permanently Cured. No fltg or narroosnes* after flrtt day's use of l)r. Kline's Great Nerre Restorer. Send for FREE S..OO trial bottle and treatise, na. B. H. Xuhe, Ltd., Ml Arch St., Philadelphia, ttu- The tailor-made girl is all right, buljf most men prefer the ready maid. AM, UP-TO-DATE PEOPLB. Use Batt's Caps for Colds. Act qnickly, cure promptly. Ail druggists. 25 cents. ~ Last year 337,838,000 whitefish fry; were liberated in the great lakes. Plso's Core is the best medicine we ever used tor all affections of the throat and lungs.--W*. O. Endslet, Vanburen. Ind., Feb. 10, 1000, The largest American fly is a, Uttto over half an inch in length. ^ • J Goo's Cough Balsam Ik the oldest and best. It will break up a cold quicker - than anything else. It Is always reliable. Try It. 1 Georgia sends thousands of peach4 trees to South Africa. Uncle Sam Alow to buy the best of everything which is why he OSes Carter's Ink. He knows what's good. Mayor Harrison of Chicago favors municipal ownership. When the hair Is thin and nay. Pause'I Sals BALSAM renews the growth snd color. •uwsaooRSS, the beat care (or cons. Mats. Cold tea is excellent for grained wood. cleaning Russia's pig iron output is steadily increasing. I am so nervous and wretched.** "I feel as if I should fly. How familiar these expressions are! Little things annoy you and make you irritable. You can't sleep, you are unfit for ordinary duties, and are subject to dizziness. That bearing-down sensation helps to make you feel miserable. Tou hare backache and pains low down in the side, pain In top of head, later on at the base of the brain. Such a condition points unerringly to serious uterine trouble. If you had written to Mrs. Pinkham when you first ex perienced impaired vitality, you would have been spared these hours of awful suffering. Happiness will be gone out of your life forever, my sister, unless you act promptly. Procure Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once. It is absolutely sure to help you. Then write to Mrs. Pinkham, nt Lynn, Mass., if there is anything about your case you do not understand. You need not be afraid to tell her the things you could not explain to the doctor--your letter is seen only by women and is absolutely confidential. Mrs. Pinkham's vast experi ence with such troubles enables her to tell you just what is best for you, and she will charge you nothing for her advice. Mn. Valentine Telia of Happy Results Accomplished by Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. " Dzar Mrs. Pinkham It is with pleasure that 1 add my testimony to your list, hoping it may 'induce others to avail themselves of the benefit of your val uable remedy. Before taking Lydia 12. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, I felt very bad, was terribly nervous and tired, had siok headaches, no appetite, gnawing pain in stomach, pain in my back and right side, and so weak I could scarcely stand. I was not able to do anything. Had sharp pains all through my body. Before I had taken half a bottle of your medicine, I found myself improv ing. I continued its use until I had taken four bottles, and felt so well that I did not need to take an} more. I am like a new person, and your medioine shall always have my praise."--MRS. W. P. VALENTINE, 666 Ferry Avenue, Camden, N. J. I MRS.WP. VALENTINE *5000 BPtAf Hill Owiwte the feet that MOM fostkal H p H| • HII people have from time to time questioned ff Hilly tha fcnuiaeocMof the totiraeaial letter* we are constaatly publishing, we have deposited with the National City Bank, of Lynn, Maaa.. $5,000, which will be paid to any person who can show that the above testimonial is not genuine, or was published before obtaining the writer's special permission.--I/tdia B. Pikkkam Mbdicxmb Co. | Cures Colds, Coughs, Sora Threat. Crete ln> mania. Whooping Coufh, Bronehlth and Asthma. A certain euro for lonsumptlon In Irst staios. and a sure relief In advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect, after talcing the drat dose. Sold by dealers every- , whsra. Largo bottles tS cents and SO cento. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine DrBull's Core* alt Throat and Lung Affections. COUGH SYRUP Getthejcenuiae. Refuse substitute*. IS SURE _ jslvttlosOUcuraaRheumatism. i|Si«cll> Carter's Little Liver Pills. Mutt Beaur Signature of ' P*/. - M }• §m Fer iBlaHo Wrapper Dilow. ' ̂ * Tear --11 aa4 as sssf tottkiMncn AirvrrnVim lEABACMb CARTERS rSSSIBINBS. FDR BlUQIItMEMs FOR TORPI* UVOL fBR 60MST1FATIM. FN SALLOW till. FOR TWCOMPtlXlta ••••.•wsynATWS. OURS SICK HEAPAOHIe OPIUM, EUREKA! Don't Walt, write for Information. Poeltttrely some- {Siilf Wa Smoke House. Smoke meat with KRAUSERS LIQUID EXTRACT OP SMOKE. Made fram hiekoiy wood. OWsa deltekms flavee. Cb»apsei_eleaaer than old war. Ssod for eir- enlar. fe» Kraswr Sc Br*., Mlltss, Pa. PNEUMONIA, DIPHTHERIA, GRIP* KSX" RUBEFACIENT It will "nip tm the bad" ant disease accompanied wtth Interna! soreness. One trial Is sufflclent M convince aay one of its wonderful merit Interest. <na booklet sent free. Address SabstMlsat Co., Newton Uppor Falls. Mass suzds siiis jj|| WILL MAKE YOU Kl< IjMM.MIHHIll (base of tho Wottln^SeTTon earth | to-day that we knnwof and we have sooared the world over to And Its equal. Orows where all others kill and burn •P from excessive heat and lack at sufficient moisture. Orows where all others winter kill and freese out. 3 to * tons of macnlfloent haj per aere and lots of na» turage besides. I1J9 ud u Barrel. Lanest potato 'and vegetable growers. Ckotoeet, rarest, heavfc eet/lektlllf etock. OstsUfu Tells. For 10 Gents «nd this Notloo Our big catalogue - with lSsa will be mailed ipto •ether' with 1* sample packages of the acre, the Peaeat a (tartling food, the Victoria Rape Kami, the astonishing aM bushel per acre, . Oat*, etc. la all. ie l fully worth 010 to get start for lOela stain; feandto-dajb G> you frse, to ot tha SO ha. J0HNA.5A1ZE An Attractive Investment Returns will be decidedly larger than on Bonds, Mortgages, Railroad and In dustrial Stocks. Company managed by competent and responsible business men. Stock ef $5.00 par value offered for a short time at $3.00 PER SHARE. Dividends in the near future. Further particulars upoa R^AVl DMPF ElF FIR. Dealer In Invoatmant Securities, IS Wall St.. New York. Investors: The oil wells of Ohio and Pennsylvania i made vast fortunes for the Standard Oil Co. i The newly discovered oil surrounding the gl- ! if untie coal fields of Montana will bring even *rpa.ter fortunes to those who develop them. Do You Want to Invest a Little Money " ground floor basis and make 'If so,write toSas your Qrest Falls.MooIsm AT ONCE with rig to sell our Poultry Mixture: straight salary 116.00 per week arid expenses; year's contract; weekly pa v. Address with stamp. Branca. Mrs. Co., Dept. P, East St, l<ouSa. Ifi. M ONEY in Sheep In Montana Is SAFE and pa*, INVESTED and he prepared for four -» Ce-0«er»t1». ptr rent liitmi Now 1« tbe time te Invent. Get III at bottom prices rears ef prosperity. Writ* .tiles Isrs. 1 Ca.. firrst Pails ManSaa* U>r our snQU.il report particular* PATENTS H TO Jt WITHOUT FEE unless auceesafal Send desurlptloa; and get free oplnlso. MILO B. 8TBTEK8 £ CO., Kstab. 1864. Dir. 8, 817--14th Street, WASHINGTON, D. C. Branch office*: Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit. ••NO us MatTaaT AND Aoeniaaiat _ I f&rm«ra I will mult t book free ) •BOYS a w»v.ill wall yea a valnablaM-pai OilUMi IicafetUr A Brtoder 4<; l£ik: T -