The Ward of King Canute A Romance of the Danish Conquest. By OTTIUE A. ULJENCRAMTZ author of The Thrall of Lief the Lucky. Copyright, 1903, by A. C. McCLURG & CO. CHAPTER Vi The Trifnfng of Frldtjof the Page. Who that has youth and a healthy body is not made a new being by a night of dreamless slumber? Wak ened by the sun's caress, to the morn ing song of blowing trees, Randalin faced her future as became the kins woman of warriors. The tent was empty, though scat tered furs along the benched showed where sleepers might hayfc rested. But from outside, a clatter of hurry ing feet and excited voices broke sud denly upon her. Did it mean a battle? She sat up, straining eye and ear. The jubilant voices shouted greetings that lust missed being intelligible. • While she was trying to unravel it all, one pair o'f the hurrying feet halted before the entrance. After a muttered word with the sentinel, they came on and brought the son of Lod- broi into view. The girl started up with a gasp of alarm, then made the strange dis covery that she was no longer afraid of him. Though he showed against the linen wall as brawny and big of Jowl as he had loomed up the night before, she found herself moved only to dislike. What had been the matter last night? Understanding nothing of the clairvoyant p^wer of sharpened nerves, she set it down to cowardice, and put on an extra swagger now as her eye met his. Rothgar surveyed the sprig of defi ance with no more than a perfunc tory interest. "It seems that you are the son of Frode the Dane/' he said in his heavy voice, "Frode was a mighty raven- feeder; for his sake I am going to support you until you can go well on your legs. Have you had anything to eat?" As she shook her head, Randalin's heart rather softened toward him. But it hardened again when the "Do you not fed that you are wound* ed?" Following his eyes down to her hand, she found blood trickling from her sleeve. Oh, and pain! Now that she had wakened to it--pain! prick ing, stinging, stabbing. Dropping her sword, she caught at her wrist. '"How did it happen? I thought a pin had pricked me!" Roaring with laughter, he caught her under the arms and totted her in the air. , "A pin!" he shouted. "A pin! That is Frode himself! A beard on your chin, and you also will be a feeder of wolves! For that you shall have a share in the battle. I swear it by the hilt of the Hanger!" For a moment the girl forgot her wound and hung limp in the great hands. "The battle?" she gasped. "I --I fight?" Roaring afresh, the Jotun.^ gave her another jubilant toss. "Yo£ bluster ing field-mouse! Showing your teeth already? Why knows? If you meet a blind Englishman without a wea pon, you may even kill him. Here," he tumbled her roughly to the ground, "tie up your pin scratch and then come after me. I must go up yonder to Canute, under the oak tree." Putting out one great hand, he patted her soft curls as though she were some shaggy dog, then hurried out to his chief. Ss a respite to be alone, and she 3 it gratefully. But it was only te^, she never for a moment lost sigWjgf jhat. The battle must be faced, anf faced boldly. One word of reluctance would be the surest be trayal of her secret. A betrayal meant Rothgar! She shivered as she fancied she still felt his greasy touch upon her hair. To become his property that he might even kiss! With a gasp of relief, she turned her thoughts back to the battle. None too soon; above the outside din a horn clarioned, loud and clear. * 8h« was kept turning, twisting, dodging, till her breath began to come in gasps. thralls had brought the food, and he sat down and begun to share it. His thick lips, his heavy breathing--bah, he was revolting! Before she had fin ished the meal she had come to the conclusion that she hated him. As he swallowed his last mouthful of food, Rothgar said abruptly, "Ca nute has put your training into my hands. It is his will that I find out how much skill you hate with weap ons. Can you handle a sword?" Randalin hesitated, uncertain how far her idle play at fencing with her brother would bear her out. "I think you will find my skill slight. I have-- I have grown so. fast that I lack strength in my arms. And I have not exercised myself as much as I should nave done." "It is in my mind that you have been a lazy cub," the warrior pro- aounced deliberate sentence, as he eet down his goblet. "It is easily seen that Frode has been over-gentle with you. Stand forth and show what your skin is worth. This sword will not be too heavy," Selecting the smallest of the jeweled blades upon the floor, he thrupt it into her hands. It W good to have in one's veins the liquid fire of the North, blood to which the presence of peril is like the touch of the Ice King to water. At the first clash of the blades, strange tingling fires began to flash through Randalin --and then a hardness that burnt while it froze. The first pass, her hands had parried seemingly by their own instinct; now she flung back her tumbling curls and proceeded to give those hands the aid of her eyes. Three times her blade met Rothgar's square ly, and deftly turned it aside. The big warrior gave a grunt of approval and tried a more complicated pass. Her backward leap, the sudden dou bling of her body, and the excited clawing of her free hand, were not graceful swordsmanship, certainly; but her steel was in the right place. The next instant, she even drew a lit tle clink from one of the Jotun's sil ver buttons. As she was recovering herself, she felt something like a pin prick her wrist; and she wondered vaguely 'what brooch had become unfastened. But 'she gave it scant attention, for the big blade was threatening her from a new direction. She leaped to meet it, and for the next minute was kept turning, twisting, dodging, till her breath began to come in gasps, and her exhausted hand to relax its hold. Her weapon was almost falling from it by the time the son of Lod- brok lowered his point. Imitating him, 6he stood leaning on her sword, making futile gasps after her lost breath. A grin slowly wrinkled his face as he watched her. "It appears that one who is no big ger around than a willow twig may be capable of a berserk rase." he said. Through the nush that followed could be heard the voice of Canute, assign ing their positions to the different bands. "I and my kinsman, Ulf Jarl, shall be foremost. To the right of my stand ard Edric Jarl shall stand, and the men with whom he joined us. He Bhall have another standard. To the left of my bodyguard shall stand the men of Eric of Norway. Friends and kinsmen shall stand together. There each will defend the other best." Then Rothgar's harsh voice sounded, shouting her name--Fridtjof's name. Giving her scarf a haBty twist about her1 arm, ehe knotted it with her teeth; and seizing the sword in her little brown hand clotted with her own blood, she ran out into the tumult Shrill and clear from the opposite hills came the" notes of the Engli!** horns, as down the green slope movea the ranks of English bowmen. The hum of Danish voices sank in a breathless hush. Down the line came the young King upon his white war- horse, clad for the battle as for a feast. The sun at noonday is not more fleroely bright than was his face. His Hong locks flowed behind him on the wind like tongues of yel low flame; and like northern lights in a blue northern sky, the leader's fire flashed in his eyes. As he came, he was calling out terrible reminders; words that were to?1 the ears of bis champing host what the smell of blood is to the nostrils of fwolves. His answer was the bursting roar of the Danish battle-cry. Like an ava lanche loosed from its moorings, they swept down the hillside upon the Eng lish bowmen. From that moment, Randalin rode in a dream. The soil, of Lodbrok was beside her, singing as he went, and tossing his great battle- axe in the air, to catch it again by the handle. In front of them rode Canute the King; in his hand his gleaming blade, whose thin edge he tried now and again on a lock of his floating hair, while he laughed with boyish delight. On, till the bowmen's faces were plain before them; then suddenly it began to hail--"the hail of the string." Arrows! One hissed by the girl's ear, and one bit her cloak, to hang there quivering with impotent fury. The man on her right made a terrible gur gling sound and put up his hand to tear a shaft from his throat. Would they be slain before--Canute rose in his stirrups with a great shout. The horns echoed it; the trot became a gallop, and the gallop a run. On, on, into the very heart of the hail-cloud. How the stones rattled on the armor! And hissed! There! a man was death-doomed; he was falling. To tfee side ol the young leader, Thorfiel the Tall was spurring, bend ing urgently from his saddle. "Craft, my King! Craft! Why spill so much good blood? Listen to Edric the Qata- Canute's furious curse cut him short. "To the Troll with your craft! Swords shall make us, or swords shall mar us. Use your blade, or I will sheathe it in you." Only the wind that took it from his lips heard the Tall One's answer; for at that moment his horse reared and sheered away before a spear-prick, and into the rift a handful of English rushed with shouts of triumph. There were no more than half-a- dozen of them, and all were on foot, the two whose gold-hilted swords pro claimed their nobility of birth sharing the lot of their lesser comrades, ac cording to the old Saxon war-custom; bift it needed not the daring of the at tack to mark them as the very flower of English chivalry. The young no ble, who hovered around his chief much as Rothgar circled about Canute, would have been lordly in a serf's tu nic; and the leader's royal bearing distinguished him even more than hia mighty frame. At the sight of him Rothgar uttered a great cry of "Edmund!" and moved forward, swinging his uplifted axe. But the Ironside caught it on his shield and delivered a sword-thrust In return that dropped the Dane's arm by his side. As it fell, Rothgar's left hand plucked forth his blade, but the English king had pressed him toward his master. Canute's weapon had need td dart like a northern light. The noble and one of the soldiers had forced their way to the side from which Thorkel had been riven, and a third threatened Itfm- from the rear. Three blades stab bing at him as with one motion. "It^was a strange thing that saved him--Randalin could explain it least of all. But in a lightning flash it was burnt into her mind that, while her king's sword was a match for the two in front of him, the one be hind was going to deal him his death. And even as she thought it, she found that she had thrown herself across her horse's neck and thrust out her sword arm--out with the force and frenzy and down into the shoulder of the Englishman. In a kind of dazed won der, she saw his blade fall from his grasp and his eyes roll up at her, as he staggered backward. Canute laughed out, "Well done, Berserker!" and redoubled his play against those before him. A turn of his wrist disarmed the soldier, and his point touched the young noble's breast; but before he tould lunge, the mighty figure of Ed mund rose close at hand, his blade heaved high above his head. 0 (To be continued.) & SACRED CACTUS OF INDIANS. Plant Once Important Object to In dian Aborigines. The chief Sabbath attraction in an uptown church recently was a pyra mid cactus. It held the most con spicuous place on the altar, and scores of strangers visited the church to see it. "It was given to our home mission ary," said one of the members, "by an Indian convert in New Mexico. The cactus grows only in caverns, and is found in the Gaudalupe mountains. The beautiful vase-shaped maroon blooms develop to over two inches in diameter, and there are as many as 120 on a mature plant. In early times the faithful Indians used the caverns as churcheB, and beautiful places of worship they must have made, with majestic walls of variegated lime stone wreathed in flowering juniper and mountain laurel. They marched over the mountafn trails in spring chanting seasonal songs to their gods. When they reached the mouth of th£ cavern the chiefs were decorated with the pyramid cacti, and a dance was performed. "Then chanting, dancing, and the sacrifice of animals took place in the cave. Often the redskins, worn out with their exertions, fell asleep and stayed through the day and night of devotion within the mysterious walls. To sleep near the sacred cactus plants was the same to the aborigines as a visit to Mecca is to the Mohammedan. The touching of its leaves was a puri fication In itself. From some mys terious part of the plant a liquid was extracted to serve for medicine, and the flower petals were placed upon a babe's forehead at christenings.--New vork Times. Calunwt Baking Powder MOTH CAU8E OF EPIDEMIC. In quality. Moderate In price. Cure for Tardiness. /• Before Charles A. Rice became pre siding judge of tAe superior court of Pennsylvania he served on the com mon pleas bench for several terms. A venerable lawyer of great local prom inence named Farnham frequently ap peared before him. Mr. Farnham very seldom arrived in the court room at the appointed hour, but so great was his prestige that the court would patiently await his arrival. One day an important case was on the calendar which Mr. Farnham was to open; but Mr. Farnham was not present when the court should have convened. For fifteen minutes JudgV Rice waited, and then in hustl' ' Mr. Farnham. The judge then arose' and an nounced solemnly: "Now that the late Mr. Farnham has arrived, the court can convene." Mr. Farnham did not like the laugh which followed, but since then he has been very prompt with his court ap pointments.--Denver Republican. Residents of Boston Suburbs Smart* ing Under Visitation. A new epidemic from a wholly no- looked for quarter has, for the past Cow weeks, been spreading among the people in the more open sections of Somerville, the Newtons, Arlington, Watertown, Waltham and nearly the whole of the rural locality north of Boston, until hundreds of people liv ing in the vicinity of the swarming places of the brown-tail caterpillars are already suffering from its ravages, and recently so many new cases have been added to the list that the epi demic has now begun to be regarded most seriously. Reports from the board of health In Newton, from Somerville and from Ar lington all agree that the painful skin disease caused by the flying spines of the thousands of caterpillars swarm ing in those districts has already been FREE TO TWENTY-FIV<i LADIES. The Defiance Starch Co. wili give 26 ladies a round trip ticket to the St. Louis Exposition, to five ladies in each of the following states: Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas and Mis souri who will send in the largest number of trade marks cut from a ten-cent, 16-ounce package of Defi ance cold water laundry starch. This means from your own home, any* where In the above named states. These trade marks must be mailed to and received by the Defiance Starch (bo., Omaha. Nebr., before Sep tember 1st, 1904. October and Novem ber will be the best months• to visit the Exposition. Remember that Defi ance is the only starch put up 16 os. (a full pound) to the package. Tou get one-third more starch for the same money than of any other kind, and Defiance never sticks to the Iron. The tickets to the Exposition will be sent by registered mail September 5th. Starch for sale by all dealers. * Trouble at Sea. Harry Lehr and John Jacob- Astor, visited Philadelphia recently In a mo tor car. They stayed overnight in Philadelphia, and during -the evening a number of young men called on them,. Uir. Lehr was In good spirits. Hia conversation was amusing. The talk happened to turn on sea voyaging, and he said1* "Once, crossing the Atlantic, a tre mendous row arose among the sailors. They fought down In the forecastle like a lot of beasts. Luncheon was going on at the time, and the first offi cer lef* the table to see if he could quell the disturbance. "He had only been gone a little while when the hubbub began to die down. Everything was quiet when he returned. The captain called across the saloon to him in an approving tone: " 'Things seem to be smoother now.* " 'Yes,' returned the first officer. 'We have ironed the sailors, sir.'" A Change for the Worse. Jacob H. Schiff, the New York bank er, was talking about plain and -direct speech. "To be plain and direct is always best," he said, "but to be too plain and direct is to be uncouth--to be ludi crous. "A good example of that was afford ed by a clergyman. He was address ing a congregation of fishermen, and he wanted to be sure they would un derstand him. " 'The Bible tells us,' said this cler gyman, 'that it is as- difficult for a camel to pass through a needle's eye as for a rich man to enter the kinfc. dom of heaven. That, though, is a roundabout, confused way of stating the case. I should state it like thiB: " 'It is as difficult for a ich man to enter the kingdom of heaven as for a shad to go up a smooth-bark afiple tree tall foremost'" ^ 1 A Strange Accident. Some time ago a man fell dead in a crowded street of San Francisco. The hospital surgeons were astonished to find that he had died of what appeared to be a bullet wound in his temple A hundred people who witnessed the accident were ready to testify that no firearm had been discharged at the time. An examination exposed a small pebble in the man's brain. For a long time the case was a mystery, until an ingenious detective solved it with an explanation which he proved by ex periment. The wheels of a heavy dray, had jammed the pebble against the steel rails of the car track, and then dis charged it up into the air with such terrific force that it crashed into the brain of the passer-by as if it had been a bullet Magnified Spines of Brown-Ta!led Moth. the cause of great annoyance and suf fering. The epidemic is caused by the minute spiked hairs of the brown- tailed caterpillar coming In contact with the skin of people living In the Infested districts. DENIED BURIAL IN SIBERIA. Appreciated the Whisky. A Plainfield, R. I., street car con ductor was recently presented with a quart of gilt edge whisky. As his fam ily are much opposed to the use of liq uor he hid the bottle snugly away in the car stable. The other morning he felt the need of stimulant and slyly sought his hidden supply. To his sur prise he found the bottle empty, but with It was a slip of paper on which was written the following: "The best we ever drank. Please leave another hottle of the same sort to-night." BACK LICK Settled the Case With Her. Many great ( discoveries have been ade by accident and things better than gold, "mines have been found in this Way, for example when even the accidental discovery that coffee Is the real cause of one's sickness proves of most tremendous value because it lo cates the cause and the person has then a chance to get well. "For over 25 years," says a Missouri woman, "I suffered untold agonies in my stomach and even the best phy sicians disagreed as to the cause with out giving me any permanent help, different ones saying it was gastritis, indigestion, neuralgia, etc., so I dragged along from year to year, al ways half sick, until finally I gave up all hopes of ever being well again. "When taking dinner with a friend one day she said she had a new drink which turned out to be Postum and I liked it so well I told her I thought I would stop coffee for awhile and use it, which I did. "So for three months we had Pos tum in place of coffee without ever having one of my old spells but was always healthy and vigorous. "Husband kept saying he was con vinced it was coffee that caused those spells, but even then I wouldn't be lieve it until one day we got out of Postum and as we lived two miles from town I thought to use the coffee we had In the bouse. "The result of a week's use of cof fee again was that I had another ter rible spell of agony and distress, prov ing that it was the coffee and nothing else. That settled it and I said good bye to Coffee forever and since then Postum alone has been- pur hot meal time drink. "My friends all say I am looking worlds better and my complexion Is much improved. All the other mem bers of our family have been benefit ed, too, by Postum in place of the old drink, coffee." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Ten days trial of Postum in place of coffee or tea is the wise thing for every coffee drinker. Such a trial tells the exact truth often where cof fee is not suspected. Look in each pkg. for the famous little book, "The Road to Wellvllle." Body of an Unfortunate Is Shipped • Thousands of Miles. ' The unidentified body of a man killed on the Trans-Siberian Railroad near Tomsk last summer is still un- buried. He was believed to have come from Irkutsk, whither the fibdy was sent, only to be returned to Tomsk by the police. Once more it was sent to Irkutsk and once more returned by the police as being unknown in that town. Innumerable telegrams were sent and replied to, no town would receive the body, which was sent hither and thither by railway, always being re turned to Tomsk. At last it was of fered to the Anatomical Museum at Tomsk, where' it was preserved for nine months, no one daring to dissect it without permission from the higher government. Now the museum is being rebuilt and the body has been once more handed over to the Tomsk police. They again refuse to bury it without the documents without which nothing can be done in Russia, and the un happy body, which is said to have al ready traveled over 11,000 miles, is once more upon its unending travels. No Rose is Pure White. Probably the largest rose cut in tills city this season is a specimen of the Marchioness of Londonderry, which Major Barnhart has had in a vase at his residence. This Bpecies is credited .with pro ducing larger blooms than any other, specimens six inches across being not uncommon, but the specimen produced by Major Barnhart is only a trifle less than seven Inches across, and contains a double handful of petals beauti fully Imbricated and appearing pure white, but there Is a slight tinge of yellow discernible about the base. Mr. Barnhart says there is no really pure white rose, the whitest known when placed alongside snow showing a tinge of some color. This huge bloom was not the result of disbud ding of other forcing, but was pro duced on a shoot which came up in the center of the bush, and so was well shaded during the late warm weatlfer, which caused it to attain tb'e extra size and its perfection.--Portland Oregonian. Had No Need to Peep. E. E. Rice is famous in theatrical annals for the "Aqiazooian Marches" which he featured In his various at tractions. One night there was a great commotion behind the scenes, and Mr. Rice went back to investi gate. He found a scared youth in peril of rough usage at the hands of an indignant mob of scene shift ers. "Now what is the trouble?" de manded the mana ger, after effecting a heroic rescue. "I--I was only peeping into one of the dressing rooms," gasped the terrified youth. "Humph!" commented the manager, who perceived that the offender had be^n sufficiently punished. "I will make you out a pass for a seat in the parquet You will have a better Tiew there."--New York Times. Immense Cask Made in California. A cask recently constructed for a California firm has put the famous lun of Heidelberg completely in the background. It Is made of California red wood throughout, and the selec tion of the timber and making re- Quired two years. Eleven out of every twelve trees selected were re jected as unsuitable. Two entire trains of wagons were needed to con vey the selected timber to the vine yard. The hoops of the cask, which are of the finest steel, weigh eighteen tons, while the completed cask is 38 feet high and 78 feet in circumfer ence, and large enough to form a three-story house where S00 people could dine in comfort. - For Infants and Children. iuantwln mmui omnia The Kind You Havft Always Bought ' *m AVfetfefahle Preparationfor As similating the Food andBegula- lingtteStomedBandBowjlsof l M W l S . l H I I . D K L N Promotes Digestion.Cbeerful- neasatxi Rest .Con tains neither Opium.Morphinc nor "Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC Bt Wfif Ji"/- VSgXKnm A perfect Remedy forConsHpa Hon, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Vac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. M O i l l l l S o i l ! J - j 1 ) O S i s EXACT COPY QT WRAPPER. 4 VvV { j •a*.. t\ '*• , „ rtsHI | ' r f s l • V; <-C" THERES NO USE ARGUING DdLun Sbm ti at way If* a (ML HanMi ffl tesflff ti k Try 8 dncc fxndL W« You can't low. Dt&ancc Surdb b afenMr *•« fcm ffjis^nh It miko the dothakxAUj«Mfd il «f*nol rotthaa. Get k of your (TOO* ti asma for 16 emt* o--Airl *•» rou get of toy etber brand. * *4 '#'/• 4\'*\ Anh- •• v. • . W SiM'T f • ' Siriy.&is-V- V."K THE DERANGE STARGB CO., MUUUi. Kfc l . ; 'W ' i ,«Kv JiSW-WT'S Ti Vi DOMINION EXHIBITION WINNIPEG, MANITOBA, JULY 26th ta AUGUST 6th THE BEST EXPOSITION OF AGRICULTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL RESOUR CES OF CANADA EVER MADE. : : : : : An Aggregation of Attractions Never Before Equalled at an Exhibition of this Kind. - - - Ample Accommodation (or Visitors. Low Railroad Rates from oil United States Points. Partloulara Given by Canadian Government Agents or Nearest Ticket Agent. READ THIS The stock of the SOVEREIGN GOLD MINING COMPANY Of California is INSURED. Thi s means that your investment bears 21 interest unuuuliy uuu lu addition'to the interest the full amount you invest is returned to you at a definite time. Yon also reocive the dividends paid upon your stock by the Mining Company. In this case your Investment is insured by a paid-up interest-bearing policy (Coupon Bond) instead of your lite. Illustrated and descriptive pamphlet mailed upon appli cation. NEW HOMES IN THE WEST Almost a hall million acres of th« fertile *a4 well-watered lands of th© Rosebud Indian Id* ervatlon. In South Dakota, will be throw* op«B to settlement by the (iovernnunt in July. Tbes* lands are best reached by tlie Chicago & North- Western Railway's direct through lin«« from Chicago to Bonesteel, 8. D. All agent* MB tickets via this line. Special low rates. HOW TO GET A HOME ' Send for a «Ty 01 pamphlet giving tani^tOMfc tion as to dates of opening and how to secure IM acres of I and at nominal cost, with full descrlp tion of the soil, climate, timber and mineral resources, towns, schools and churches, opfW (unities for business openings, railway raM% etc., free on application. W. B. KNISKERN, Passenger Traffic Managar* ; , CHICAGO. ILL. Sovereign Gold Mining Co. B04 Mutual Bank Bids. BAN FRANCISCO, - CALIF. THE PROSPEROUS SOUTHWEST Ttie current iKsue'ot iho COMING roi'N i'RK, iMueil by tbe l'asMuner I>epartnient uf the SI. K. & T. K'y. St. toulg. gives • very ccnipiete dMrrlptton of tlie present d»y i-undliiun* and the many »U\ amazes that the Suuihww otter* to the iK'ineseeker and Inventor. The Government 1W3 crop and live stock reports show time lit Southweot 1* In a very prosperous and flourishing condition The pap«r Ik very uttractfvely lllu*- trattd w:ib farm and lire-mock ccenes. If yoa ar» c> nti :nplatlng a change and deolrr reliable Information relative to tbe t.reat bouikwaM, secure a copy by aM1*^ addressing MlmGEORGE MORTON, «. r. *t. a., a. k. a r. a*. ST. LOUIS, NO. THE DAISY FLY KILLER afford*comfort toevery *r fining-room, stop!nf-room ami place* wber« - f'.ee ar* trouble-TOIDT. Clean, neat and will not 1 or Injure anything- Try them one? aiid you WILL NEVER be wlthouitbeiu.Tfnol prt*istki for Mc. MiKOl.D Mllltra, Ub l»rk&ib Urwkl.va, 9* Y. LAND SR HN ACM, tq cash, balance 1b annual payments, interest annually, M0 Or will GIVE 40acrea and s«o In gold <or mor# ta same pro port Ion >.for one av» tgt crop rmu«4 •• fcatr ol the land wben put In good »tste of caltlvatta*. Is no take. If you want K. wrlte^ it mot, ta k 6.A. &AY8, laaniigiatien i(t, * Weber'• Arabian HeaT« ' Keinrdy for Horses vpurely vegetable) will ! iKn». I olds and Sumach j " r o u b l e » " ; also death to W1'rtce *1 per lb. pack- age. 6 packages for t5 ; wall or eipres* paid. Address, j M. Wtbsr * Co., 7.» Otorfe Bt., K(<rrutowa.*a. , HEAVES positively cure lleavsa. Cougb Trot W. N. ^ CHICAGO, No. 30, 1«M. When Answering Advertisement* Kindly Mention This Paper. ^ P I S O S C U R T aSSfcafi V.r 5-J ; ;