you, una you to yoo wait F? , * ' „ __ 't know how 1 shall t̂pttght I don't know J5PC4iCeO(Oe S l̂ has be 11> from North- . . . . .£* : • : : •- -- • ' - ' Janstta gave an involuntary start; the man's destination was the same as ^'/'ftarmnk ,, f \ "Ton eu ttln ay logcvt, if you ; like. It's at * koa» hard by. I've fi"r>a case there tfcftt'wfB detain me for ?;- *' the night," rtfelfcatftke doctor curtly. ^ "Thanks, ever so much. I believe y „ ' I'll be off then. Your patient Is open- , tog her eyes; the rest of the passen- S^rs seem sorting themselves. Let me ~**X. see, there's a child that belongs to this |l§|f^ woman somewhere." And, glancing rX^** round, he saw Janetta, faithful to her Igl?#* trust, seated on the bank with the £ child he sought in her arms. - jj^ ' . He smiled and lifted his hat* .̂ "Let me relieve you of your burden," ^ said, a certain tenderness in his ||% voice as he looked at the little child. Ipg"There, don't cry"--to the little one-- "mammy's all right." •0 He carried it off as gently as a ' woman would have done; then he re- K"/ turned to Janetta, standing by her with a certain hesitation. "I have turned up a friend here who tfj?kindly offers his dogcart to forward me to my destination. Can I be of any service to you? I expect there $ .j will be a train presently to carry on the' passengers. "Is it an Impertinence to ask where you are going?" pT^~ Janetta rose, with a feeling of stiff lyy ness in her limbs and some unsteadi- IS '> ness of motion. The shock had half dazed her. "I'm going to the Grange, , Northcliff," she said.. Mj "How very odd! I'm bound .for the ,> same place. Under the circumstances, t'-'y we had better go on together. I'll "V. speak to Drake about it. Sit down «' , again a minute. Ton look as if the accident had been too much for your nerves," he said, smiling pleasantly. : "Kindly tell me your name, and I'll - see that your luggage and my own are forwarded to us later." "I'm Miss Howard." "Thank you. Then I'll see If there is luggage for the names of Howard and Merivale to be rescued from the debris, and then we'll get on as fast as we can. As Miss Seymour is deli cate, it might be serious if she heard rumors of an accident to our train be fore we arrived. "Invalid!" ejaculated Janetta, as her companion hurried off to complete his preparations; "and I should not won der If this Mr. Merivale were a nephew old ladjr. Very likely has ex- o n s ! " . . . " . ' ' r ' V " fairly started in the brisk air, Janetta's courage and began to revive, and she could help smiling at the curious po- in which she found herself, seat- tiriNMa by aide with a complete stran- In a borrowed dogcart/going to a ifeftf of whom she knew absolutely nothlngfrat the name. "It la certainly a curious coincidence that ydji and I should be bound for ttt same house," began Mr. Merivale; '"1MU. It is still more curious to me that, ^llta as I am down at the Orange, I *mtn not heard your name mentioned W,im I. " ,: "That is easily explained. I an swered Miss Seymour's advertisement lor a companion, and she is kind enough to give me a trial. We have not met," said Janetta simply. Her comfdfflfon turned quickly, and, in the half light, gave a swift, scruti nising glance, accompanied by a smile, of which Janetta found it hard to ex plain the meaning. It was half amused and half incredulous^ He made no sort of comment upon her explana tion, but turned the conversation rap idly to other channels. "He knows,all about that eccentric Old lady's advertisement," she thought ; Mr. Merivale chatted away so agree ably on many topics and the ten miles' drive passed so quickly that Janetta gave a little start of astonishment When Mr. Merivale pointed with his Whip to the twinkling lights of the little harbor, and told her that they were within half a mile of their des tination. It was quite dark as they drove through the cobbled streets of the little town; then, by a sharp ascent, they climbed the hill just outside it, and, turning into a drivegate set open to receive them, drew up at the door of a long, low, irregularly built house. Mr. Merivale jumped to the ground and threw the reins to the groom, gently lifting Janetta out of the cart The next instant they were admitted by an extremely smart parlormaid into the low, oak-pannelled hall, where a log-fire blazed cheerily on the hearth. A lady of between sixty and seventy, whose gown rustled as she moved, ad vanced to meet her "Allow me to introduce Miss How ard," said Mr. Merivale. •• • < ' ' .CHAPTER JR. l*s heart sank. The stern fea tures of the lady to whom she was in troduced scarcely relaxed into a smile, aad a cold hand held her own. "Come in, Miss Howard. Your train must have been very late; we expected you more than an hour ago." "There was an accident. The train ran off the line, I think, and we were landed. Mr. Merivale and I " "Captain Merivale," corrected her fNteuor. Janetta glanced round quickly to see if Captain Merivale had followed, and Wtts listening to the correction; bnt ha Was nowhere to be seen. '••• "We had not met before. I did not know that he was Captain Merivale Iff intuition; but he was very anxious that you should not be frightened on hte account, Miss Seymour. He told lie that you were not strong." A smile crossed the narrow face--a Mirthless smile. . * "I am not Miss Seymour. It is years since any one troubled to consider my feelings. I am Mortimer, Miss Seymour's lady ekeeper. Until lately I believed also to be her companion; bal £&'} • »S®t® /.'a ... ^^mtfjl.jftflparently, and getting old. fitt not enough for her, and I am to be you.**;- Janetta stretched out her hands eagerly, appealingly, a great sorrow billing her heart tor the woman before her, with whom the world had evi dently dealt so hardly. "Not supplanted," she said, "only supplemented, i don't know what Miss Seymour's wants may be, but let toe help you any way I can. I dent care what I do. You can put me into the way of things, tell me my duties, and give me a hint when i make a mistake." "You will have no duties," replied the elder woman coldly, looking at the outstretched hands, but not taking t.hem into her own. "You are young; and good-looking; they are the only qualifications which Miss Seymour jseems to require. She will sea yoa, ishe says, after dinner. Shall I show you to your room?" . Janetta followed her up the i&lck- ly-carpeted stairs tnto a room so lux uriously furnished that she couid .hardly believe that it was the one intended for her, jexcept that her fur coat had been already carried up there, with such other possessions as she had with her in the carriage.' She found Mrs. Mortimer still alone 'when she went downstairs. "Captain Merivale dines tonight with Miss Seymour in her boudoir," .she explained as she led the way into the dining room. "Sometimes Miss; Seymour is well enough to dine with jus, but today she has been overrent ing herself, and was so tired that I advised her remaining upstairs." Janetta would have liked to have asked a hundred questions about Miss Seymour, but the presence of the par lormaid and the forbidding manner of s her companion made her curb her curi-; osity. | They had scarcely returned to the- drawing room before a message was delivered to Janetta to demand her presence in Miss Seymour's room. "You can show Miss Howard the way to your mistress' room, Mason," said Mrs. Mortimer. And Janetta fol lowed the maid. She was ushered into a sitting room more perfect in detail than any she had ever entered. It was a general sense of beauty and luxury that struck her at first, for her attention centered itself at once upon its only occupant, a fragile, fair little lady, quite young, who lay upon the couch that was drawn near the fire. • She raised herself to a sitting pos ture, and held out her hand with a smile of welcome. • "I'm afraid you hiust c&me to me, Miss Howard, I'm too tired to get up to greet you. Sit down near me, will you? I sent Harry off to the smoking room, as I told him I wanted to talk to you alone for a ,bit." Janetta shook hands, seated herself in the easy chair to wh'ich Miss Sey mour pointed, and wondered if she dreamed. This, then, was the Miss Seymour she had pictured as an ec centric old maid, devoted to poodles! and parrots! * Even her views about Captain Meri vale needed readjusting. Clearly he was not a nephew with expectations! More probably a cousin, possibly a lover. The thoughts passed rapidly through her mind until, raising her eyes, she: was conscious that she was being watched eagerly by her companion. There was something intensely at tractive in the face that looked into her own. It must have been very pretty until ill-health and delicacy had written their lines on it. Even now the shape of it was charming. The flaxen hair that waved on the forehead was abundant and beautifully dressed, the folds of white silk and soft-fall ing lace were becomingly arranged round the tiny throat; but oh! how delicate she looked. Something of the pity that Janetta felt must have found expression in her face, for Miss Sey mour broke the silence with petulant laugh. "You are sorry for me, like every one else--I read it in your eyes; but I'm not going to die. I'm going to get well, or all the doctors lie." "I devoutly hope you will, and quickly," replied Janetta gently; "and you must tell me what I can do to help you. I'm sure I could carry you, you are so light and small." Miss Seymour broke into merry laughter. "I don't want you for hard labor. I wonder if you thought it was a lunatic who put that advertisement into the paper? Harry declared that nobody in her senses would answer it, but many did. "I had over two hundred answers, so many that I would not even open them all. I liked your photo. I thought you were pretty and looked true, so 1 told Mrs. Mortimer to take your letter and answer it, as if from me, and to .return all the others. "It was Doctor Drake's suggestion--• %he man you saw at the train tonight. Harry tells me that he scented the ac cident from afar, and was on the scene almost directly it happened. He is called clever, but he does not cure me. "Well, he found me crying one day, and he said I ought to have some one bright and young and good-tempered about me. You can't call Mrs. Morti mer any one of those things, can you?" Janetta did not answer; she felt that the remark was in bad taste. "I sha'n't like you if you look shocked every time I'm flippant. Where was I? So I advertised, half in fun and half in earnest, and of course Mrs. Mortimer is very cross, although it won't make the smallest difference in her lot, except that she will have to give orders for another place to be laid at every meal. "She is perfectly invaluable in her way--housekeeper, chaperon, compan ion, everything rolled into one; but she Is occasionally depressing." "You will give me something to do?" said Janetta, when Miss Seymour came to a pause. "Not the things that Mrs. Mortimer has done for you, it might her feelings." , die like do hope yom can arrange flowed* ales ly. Mrs. Mortimer makes bouquets as round as pumpkins, and Is so annoyed when I criticise. "I wonder," she said, with a rapid change of subject, "how you liked Cap tain Merivale? I'm enSUM to htm .yfftglkhr, and he h^ «(iiatft:^;i|iir here*#* a little bit before he goes oitt to India. He is ordered to. the front" "He was very kind," replead Janetta. "I scarcely know how 1 would have got here without him." ' "We were engaged before I had the tall from my horse which has made me what you see me," wyst on Miss Seymour, twisting her engagement ring round and ronhd upoft, her finger, :so that every diamond in it canght and reflected the light in a thousand rain' bow-colored hues. "It's hard luck that ii He here help less like this, isn't It, when there is such a life of happiness before me? I'm going to get well, but it's long to wait. Now you can guess how much I shall need cheering when Harry goes abroad. He's very good to me, and declares he's never dull When he comes; but you will try to make it more cheerful for hint. If yon wait a little while he'll be up again. "You will not need an introduction after'that long drive in the dark. He was pleased with you, because he said you were the only woman in the acci dent who did not scream.'* Janetta laughed. "Terror does not take that form with me; it makes me feel incapable of uttering a sound. I expect I was just as frightened as any body else." "Well, at any rate, you kept it well under," said a voice behind her; and, looking round, Janetta saw thAt Cap tain Merivale had entered the room un percaived. (To be continuê }"'t *r v . - ' fir' *-4^ • . W O M E N T H R A S H W H E A T . Voar of Th«m Best u llqaal Nmbry of Men at Their Owo Work. "Yes, they certainly got through those hundred sheaves of wheat in mighty quick time," remarked Alvin D. Weller, who, with three assistants, was recently beaten in a wheat-thrash ing congest by four women. "And," he added, ruefully, "if I could only hire men who would work as the Women did farming might be brought back to the good old times when it paid to • engage in it." Mr. Weller, who lives near Shanesville, Pa., was at work with his men, says the Philadelphia Inquirer. Miss Laura Conrad, Miss' Sallie Noll, Mrs. Alvin D. Weller and Mrs. Hannah Weidner, after watching operations for awhile, remarked that rapidity did not seem to be much in evidence in their work. Mr. Weller said he thought they were getting on very well, when one of the women ventured the remark that they could beat the men at their own work. The challenge was accepted. It was agreed that Farmer Weller and his assistants should thrash a hundred sheaves of wheat and the four women an equal number. The women began the con- . test and cleaned up their share in rec ord-breaking tiipe. Miss Noll and Mrs. Weller fed the thrashing machine, while Miss Conrad and Mrs. Weidner Operated the gasoline engine. Weller and his men then took their turn at a hundred sheaves, but the women were easy victors." Mr. Weller. afterward remarked that their skill In keeping the thrashing machine just rightly filled With wheat was remarkable!- PIJRE-FOOD LAWl- ! Kmtaaky Testa Show Vralt JMly Wholly of Glue, The General Assembly of Kentucky recently enacted a law providing for the Inspection of food products sold in that state, and intrusted the work to the agricultural experiment station. The station submitted a report show ing that fully 40 per cent, of all sam ples of food taken were adulterated. Some of the adulterants used are in jurlous to health; others have been put in to cheapen articles of food. As examples of the former, the inspectors found so-called "fruit jellies" made wholly or in part of glue and artificial coloring and flavoring matters. They found salicylic acid, sometimes in large quantities, in tomato catsups, preserves and other food products which were sold as pure, and formalde hyde and other preservatives in milk, which perhaps in some cases was fed- to infants. The ,most striking example of all is in the case of essence of pep permint and essence of cinnamon. These extracts contained wood alcohol, a poisonous substance, as one of ihjs in; gredientg. In the preparation of these essences a mixture of wood alcohol and common alcohol was used in place of common alcohol, . presumably to avoid the government tax on alcohol. This condition of affairs is by no means confined to Kentucky. Equally flagrant instances of adulteration are reported in the publications of other stations engaged in the inspection of foods and from many other source 3^, 0mmt Fri(bt«a«d INVENTOR • OA1 IT Wifp.'Ml IB AI«r - &»«•* Bar Pbotfegmpher ClalM Mas. Solved » Vexed Problem -- flHS Hw > Presents the Virtue of tfco-"HewM?" V 'fwtai of lis Construction. , {Special Letter.) Photographer John B. Valinof Onset Bay thinks he has solved the prohlefn of aerial navigation. Mr. Valln is iiciM the only, man who has entertainedth*t Idea. There have been scores of otters none of whom have lived to see tmi. theories blossom Into facts. Mr. Valin's idea possesses at least the vir tue of nov&ty. He claims that a screw, or "Worm," propeller may be utilized for propulsion through the ether as it is commonly used in the denser element, water. The application of man-power by a hand and foot lever in the car of his ingenious outfit to the baltoopi of "worm" form is another striking fea ture. This is designed to apply by transmitting the power by aid o( a rope, or, preferably, a light linked steel chain, from the car to the balloon with a ratchet and spring at the point of contact This force is then ex pended by revolving the balloon, which screws its way forward through the air. Hydrogen gas is utilised to sustain the outfit in the air and to raise It. This is designed for use because of its great lifting power, although it is rather expensive. Hot air cannot readily be used, because it would com pel making the balloon very large, un- wieldly and to work at a disadvantage. With hydrogen gas long flights can be made and the utility of the. airship greatly enhanced. Mr. Valin, in describing from his model the ratchet and spring applica tion to the axis of the balloon, says: "It will be very greatly to the ad vantage, you will see, to employ ball bearings, which will save all possible loss of power In transmission, yet there will be a portion of loss of power then which it is impossible to over come through friction. 'If you make the balloon, or screw. Si l* ( train iiis BxprsML"- Til have added that this §wiai^t*»t» averages .afty»||g^ and one-third miles per hour lofT"* entire distance from New York telfe miles, including four atow-downs; tm - j i n % t r l y : m w n t r o ( jttWV ffce Ittonuoa which the attracted in «0tiatr<r of tfta world has proved o ê of the feijiiipt advertisements for American machinery and American methods that has ever been put fOKth, and thai the Nasr York Central Hudson River Railroad Companyltt ea- titled to the thanks of not only the en tire state of N«w York, but of every person in the united States front end of the land to the other for ing before the vrorld an object 1 without an equal.--From the Syracuse Post-Standard. > THE VALIN AlRSHtflS*. < as you may call it, revolve 200 times in a minute it would make the balloon, if forty feet long, go forward twenty feet for every turn. That is what a screw would do in a solid body. At 200 turns a minute it would go 2,009 feet, or about two-fifths of a mile, in one minute. Of course, out of that yoa have got to deduct fOr the friction of the air." ~ ' mmH CITY A rORfcg. ' HewSpeyer Comment on Actloa of Wan Point Catdeta. The voluntary pledge of the West Point cadets to refrain from hazing and class fighting in future is a grati fying termination of the agitation re> vlved by the World in connection with the death of ex-Cadet Booz. This ao- tion Is a distinct triumph for "public ity--the greatest moral foree in th« universe." Through the publicity given to the cowardly and brutal prac tices at the military school the people have learned exactly what the hazing and bullying there mean, and the ca dets have learned what the country thinks of the custom and of those who follow It. As a result these practices are abandoned--the class presidents realizing that "the deliberate judgment of the people should In a country Ilk* ours bs above all other considerar tions." It would have been better, from a disciplinary point of view, if hazing had stopped as the result of a rule of the academy, rigorously enforc ed. But this has been found difficult, and the country will perhaps be just as well satisfied to see It given up vol untarily by the members of a school which, in spite of this blemish, has turnea out some of the best soldiers and finest characters that ever honor ed the profession of arms.--New York World. Some boys in Macon, Mo., recently fed the contents of a box of seldtit* powders to a goat belong to a family which had recently moved into the neighborhood. Then taking ft foi granted that he was thirsty, thegr led Billy to a near-by trough and permit ted him to drink heartily. Soon the fizzing began and the goat tore down the street toward the woods at a reck less pace. Some negroes living sev eral miles out of town claim to have seen Old Nick himself, as they verily believed, rushing along the road io broad daylight. His majesty resem bled an enormous goat, they said, but they recognized him as the devil, be cause he was spitting fire and brim stone. • * :4'i *4, - . J iJt - f •d • •'*/ Will* Born lac of Her Corpse. The most novel provision mads in a will is that of a St. Louis woman that her remains bs Incinerated and the ashes mingled with those of her hus band in the urn where his already re pose. . . . An Ajrgresslve 'Freaeher-Sherlft^ - Rev. Samuel P. Pearson, the sheriff of Cumberland county, Me., is a of strong individuality. He is a re formed drunkard, and in his early days reached a level of degradation from which since his conversion to abstin ence he has done much to rescue oth ers. He was probably the first in Maine to vote the straight prohibi tion ticket. He voted it, indeed, if it be not paradoxical to say so, before there was a prohibition ticket in the field, by writing Neal Dow'g name on a slip of paper. One of the election offi cers held it up and said: "This is Pearson's vote; we'll count it scatter ing." And young Pearson answered with spirit: "We'll scatter it till the rum shops of Maine are closed." Mr. Pearson served with distinction in the civil war. After the war he settled in Portland. In 1872 he began his gospel mission work, and since that date hs has held 8,229 services, conducted 357 funerals and 229 marriage ceremonies aad, with Mrs. Pearson, has made 15,- 147 visits to the poor. In England hs secured over 100,000 pledges to temper ance. He is an indefatigable worker and a man of tremendous energy. Smallest of Hallways, Hie smallest railway has been built to the order of Perry H. Leigh la an annex of his residence at Brentwood, Worsley, neew Manchester, England. The little Sine la really toy, but one of the most marvelous toys ever made. In all respects except size it Is an exact replica of the track, locomotives, rolling stock and station equipment of the London and Northwestern railway;* It has been placed in a room ninety feet long and thirty feet wide, raised on trestles three feet high. , Try Gnln-OI Try Graln-O t " ' Ask your Grocer to-day to shoW yoU a Package of QRABST-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children onrdiinkitlinftimt injury as well ii the adult Ail who try it, like it. ORAIN-Ohas that rich sesl brown of Mocha or Java, bat it is made from pure grains, and the mo#k delicate stomach reosivee it without tth* tress, y the prias of coffee. 15cand fl5cfik fiviniitti Sold tir mil 0OC0ES* * • • 'fCM wrrraas JUUS inijiin irwccut SfV**, Mas. - • Bobbs--Bat, even if we couicf com- municate with Mars, what would we ask the people there, anyway? Dobbs--Might ask them if they had seen Pat Crowe.--Baltimore American. Coughing Loafls to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist today and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous. ^ i - , Mot Hard to Salt. * ' t , Executive--I would appoint your man, but he is too ignorant for the police force. Heeler--Den put hltt on de school board.--Moonshine. Sufferers from sick headaches ars not users of Garfield Tea, for this HERB TEA is a positive cure for sick headaches, constipation and liver dis orders. I will not affirm that women haye no character; rather, they have a new one every day.--Heine. According to the latest municipal figures New York city is growing in population at the rate of 90,000 a year. Poor Soep Spoils Clothes. Don't take chances. Buy the beat Ma ple City Self Washing Soap is guaran teed to be pure. All grocers sell It. A probability is something that may possibly happen. M Cares feMs, Cou|i», Sere Threat, Cieaa. h> SMnza.WhcMfMao Ceagh, BranchititaRdAtttiM. ft cariat ? cure fer < eatumpHen in first stages, sua a sure relief la advanced stages. Use at once. You will eee ths excellent elect, after taki iq th<> first dote. 9eM bf Sealers where. ever*. Large bottles 28 eents sad 60 cents Tletorla's Great Prime Klnlstefl* Among the greatest premiers of Queen Victoria's reign were Gladstone, Disraeli, Peel, Palmerston, Russell aad Derby. Derby, Palmerston and Disraeli attained their greatest distinction in the field of foreign relation, aad It is to Disraeli that the queen owed her title of Empress of India. Peel gave free trade to England and Russell a larger measure of political liberty. Among the achievements of Gladstone were ths estensions of the franchise, the disestablishment of the Irish church, ths abolition of purchase in the army the reform of the Irish land tew*. IHMP tQWEira S f c f l ' *'$H BRM^ BLACK oo.'WtlULSW WILL KEEP YOU DRY GOOTOQKI® UlLSE Wwjl TAKE NO SIMTITUTI . Fate CATALOGUE, SHOWING FUU. LINK or GARMENTS ANOHM3. A.J.TOWERCo. BOSTON. MASS. OKLAHOMA Offers Free Weiss to 50,000people onJ,000,-ooo acres of lands, soon to open to netUement. Opportunity of a lifetime. THE ICIOWA CHIEF, devoted to lnfor- aoation about these lands, will contain procla mation fctlng d»te of opening. One year Si.00; Sntoe. 00cents; 5 cents per COOT. MOMAM S MANUAL, (Complete Settler's Guide) with no tional map, ft.00. MANUAL. MAP and CHIEF, 6moe.Vl.fia For sale by Book and N< - - or address (NCR T. fc ORGAN, Perry, a T. DrBulgs CCfUGH^SYHUP Oetttegemilae. ReftnesabstHatM* UL.SHB*... "Icaanot sajenough in It has done me more good than all the doctors. I have been troubl female wcaknesa in ita worst ftmn for about tea jears. I had lencorrhoei and was ao weak that I could not do my housework i«w»rrnos» I also had falling of the womb and inflammation of the womb aad ovariok. I terribly. At times my back would achs very hard. I could not lift anything or do any lieavy work; was not able to stsad on my foet long at a time. My husband spent hundreds W dollars for doetors but they did me no good. My husband's sister Wrote what the Yeg»- table Compoimd had done for her, aad wanted ine to but I did not then think it troirid do me aar gpod. After a time, I eaaclndedto tnr it̂ and I caa truly say it does all that Is claimed for It. Tea bottlos of the \Wet*bla>Com- and seven paokag<MofSanative Wash havemadea new woman of me, Tfl>avs had no wotnb trouble since taking the fifth bottle. I weigh more than I have etableCorapotuadU I feel that it has saved nay life aad would not be wrfL- out I am aiwavs glad^^ ̂to rewrafnead it toaU mysei,fori know if they will follow Mrs. Pinlch*m's directions, they will be cured." • , Gratefully yours, MBS. Anam THOMPSOH, Scmtb Hot Springs, Ark. CHANOB OF LIF6. "I was taken sick five Vears ago with * The Grippe,' and had a relapse and was given up by the doctor ana my friends. Change of Life began to work on me. I flowed very badly until a year ago, then my stomach and lungs got so bad, 1 suffered terribly j the blood , went up in my lungs and stomach, and I vomited it up. I oonld not eat scarcely anything. X cannot tell what I suffered with my head. My hus band got me a bottle of LydlaS. Pink- ham's vegetable Oompotmd, aad before I had taken half of ft ! began to im- : prove»aadt(HlayI am another woman. Mrs. Plnkham's medieias has saved my life. I cannot Maise it enoogh.1* M. A. IBUport, K.Y. PROFUSE * **?/ commenced taking Lydia E. Plnkham's Vege- ta.ble Compound about 3 nK>hths ago, and can»»t express the won derful good it has done me. Men struations were so profuse as to leave me wry weak for some time after. Was also troubled withr leucbrrhoea, tired feeling, bearing down sensation, pain aoross the back and thighs. I- felt as though there was a heavy weight in my stomach all the tina|l X have taken two bottles of the medft* eiae, and now have better health tha|| I have had for four years." f '. T.tctt* THmrerrtf HODOB, ^ MKWAJUD.--We haved^Msitedwttk theKatioaalOltr«teak ot iBffcviw pmA toaaypstsoawhoeaa Sad that the shore JLY1KA1 W. L SIMS UNION MADE. tie real worth of W. I. thoea emuapace* with oths OmSMOGllf Ed« Una eanaot be eqnalled . prloo. Wd aatoaad MU mm S&Masd «MO sk. - thaa any other two maaufaotmiesslnSho United Mates. dMlcr Aoeklkwntkwai w*girt onSeSTSEtfgiire mle ia town. nwh yee Ê ssErs.*2r. 8ALZER'8 SEEPS " WIU. IMSS VM MSB* -J^1S!?USS7%Sr' rrroloWontee owra giwring. jggtt istoasef luurperaere. IM wopstx wesa attsr Kbit hit? tflh Ml Mtekf, ie £5 SontalMladacr' r^USlMUNrA) MS^«te.W«li|l A.ialser>sedOe> . IN 3 OR 4 YEARS HIIOEPENDEHOEISSNEO If you take up roar kraw in Western Can. ada, the land of jdentf. Illustrated pamphleta, giving experiences of fanners who have be come wealthy tar grow ing wheat, reports of delegates, etc., and full 3d railway rate* can bs had on application to the Superintendent of Immigration, Department of latwtor, C anada, or to C. XBrougHton. IStt Mi t anaaa, or to <J. J. Ii; Block, Ohicuo, 111.. Big Four" Building, Indianapolis.. Frilt Unit In C«itr«l 6aHf«r«te For men of modems means; wfeer* wages sWd aU kinds of trait grow to perlMtfam; deltehtfnl dlmate; nesr lsrge towm sad : market; meet prosperous. oaeunsattr States: ererybody asking MtaoB^TiTt •appoit • fsmllr, tan acres acres of peaches sols ~ H4IBBFAOIEWT Ityin'^ta the had" ^^bw^aeamgdaS rf'iisw&fBl swrltT aSaaS. row«M?»p«rKads. Wfmm. 5 Grand New Sweet Peas. Aaaerlea--Blood red striped * Cents fitaatUhlH^Thetiest white....* " OoBBteM #fCadegsa-BlM- • • " " tarn rose..« " ...........4 All for IO Cts. ruumwr «r»W an niiht ef ttsw GUaaiUag Nastnrtiums if yon SwsSSa tts aasse of paper. I. Y. HAINES ii CO., Misuse -if DO YOU want to make moeey aol a little, hetaataasaefor TO* .Address scaw,Mii«M»aadiiai. a jetr. a.w. SUUBU •ARRYRIOHî VALLEY Vineyard mmmmtsm Swowatjri reportjadpsrHcalsnT " liatasafi Biisiliii Im Cs., Orsst Mh, Msrtaaa. m I Ski.