Mistress Rosemary Allyn By M1LLICENT E. MANN Copyright, 1904, by LUCAS-LINCOLN OO. CHAPTER XXII.--Continued. I sat down on the boulder outside of the postern gat*. How lotig ago It i X jseemed--though in reality not so I;?./ many weeks--since I had sat in that same pl*c<^, and unconsciously I as- ffeumed the same attitude of that other ' time when I hadvwatehed and waited "if even as a Silvius for his Phoebe. . Here Nell Gwyn, in all a serving !*-•'• taiaid"? masqueradery, had purposely ^ .surprised me. Had I then seen her p. as I did later up the stage doing her j?,, Inimitable mirnicry I had not been so " taken in, for once seen she was never 1 p-'t to be mistaken for anyone else; Stjjj;' I called to mind another and a pret-> tier picture--sweet Rosemary in her |tU farthingales! Rosemary (had ever []|f 'tame So pleasant a sound?) as she a|11 • ^appeared when I killed; her .falcon. P j . Some day she should hate another i'1" /'like unto it. I thought fondly,, rind nfy &f'*:"lips curved-as I recalled how she •Mhad flouted me. "the rose in her hair had paled in, beauty beside her, Us * y': cream tint not so delicate as the skin which i-t caressed. • * I heard a little quiveritig sigh or sob. It was so like that other day of which I was thinking that I started up. There in the pathway she stood; out of the mist she grew, until from a wraith in pale cerements she came to be Rosemary of flesh and blood. Rosemary with eager eyes dilated and hands fluttering toward me. "You!" she whispered. "They told me you were dead.1' "Quick enough, love," I cried, as I took her trembling hands in mine and drew her to my breast. For a mo- » nient she lay there. "I felt you were alive," she cried •Joyfully. "Would earth be so sweet, if you were dead? Oh, no! I told my self so Again and again, while I yet chided myself fpr being gay when they assured' me that you were no #more!" ' I would Jiave taken her again to 5 toy heart, but she held me off. "You are pale and thin--you have been ill?" she asked. White Swan and passed you, we were on our guard, for from the window we had seen you enter the court yard. Immediately I gave the order for our coach to be gotten ready, although we had intended to rest there most oi. the day. How we chuckled when you let us go, for in my pocket snug and safe lay the little paper you had won in so disgraceful a manner--fie, sir, how could you?" She shook her finder at me, and before I could reply in a man ner that permitted of no words, she added: "I thought, we shall see whether Mister Quentin Waters gets so much enjoyment out of that piece of paper as he expects to In L - hdon toWn. . I will acknowledge; sir, that I did itot love you then." "And I loved you from the first mo ment my eyes lighted upon you," I said, reproachfully. "And I. sir. I know not when," she said. "There is an old verse, old but true; I have oft heard it , I wil l /re peat it for you: ; ' "Pray how comes love? Love comes unsought, unsent.. Pray,how goes love?" That was ndt love that went." "Now it is proverbially known that we .Feltons are good "haters, still this is the time when the exception proves, the rule. I began by being angry with yon about the falcon, and when I found the paper on the "floor--oh, I assure you I was wild! I decided to punish you by not letting you know who I really was. The fops of Lon don thought it a good joke and en tered into the sport with a zest, even Nell lent a hand. . ' - <"It <gaight have had a sad ending had I killed Raoul Dwight in that duel wflieh we were to fight," I said. "Ah! I believe in the luck of the Feltons," she laughed. "Nevertheless, I thank God, provi dence, or the King, that it never came to pass," I said heartily. "I think you have to' thank my fath er for that," she returned dryly; "he it was who induced the King to forget his promise and have you impris- m •You!" she whispered. been on learn all." "It is dangerous," she returned; "for If the men see yon they would set upon you and--" she shuddered. "I shall try to hold my own,' I grim ly said; "but against Raoul Dwight I will never lift hand nor sword--I j would be no second Cain." "Ah, you would not, but would not he?" she asked. "He hates you!" "Yes," I sighed, "we were ever bit ing and snarling. I would I had known sooner that he was my brother. I long to take his hand in good fellow ship." "With him love and hate war equal* ly, as good and evil do, but then, you must remember he thinks he loves me," she whispered. "I would he did not--I would he did not," I said. "Then it would be comparatively easy sailing. He would understand when he knew all. But how can he help it?" I looked at her with all a lover's fondness. I deemed the world might envy me and with cause. She laughed deliciously at my look, whereat I took her into my arms and lifted her high (I was *not such a weakling but I oould do that) and kissed her lingeringly on her mouth. "Come let us to Lady Dwight," I said soberly, when I had put her down.,: . . . • •• She led the way through a disused kitchen and! I followed. We met no one. The few servants were busy in the rear. We could hear them talk ing as we mounted the staircase. We had hardly reached the landing when Rosemary cried: "Quick, in here." She opened the door of a large room and we passed hurriedly in. Then I heard the sound of a man's heavy tread. She pushed me behind a hanging arras and stepped beside me, pulling the curtains together. I could almost hear her heart beat. "I say you do wrong," said a high voice. It was Lady Dwight who was speaking. "I care not if'he is my son--you shall not force her into a distasteful marriage--I shall not con sent to it." "Wrong! not at all, Madame," the strenuous voice of Lord Felton re plied. "You should be pleased--she will bring to your empty coffers much gold." His tone was ironical in the ex treme. "Gold--gold is not all in this world, let me tell you, my Lord Felton," she said. "Moreover, it is outrageous to keep, us here in this ruinous old place. The damp is like to kill us--I felt a twinge of rheumatism yester day." "I am sorry, Madame," he said po litely. "Why need you stay? The door is open." t (To be continued.) They tcdd me you were dead!' "A fever from the blow I received . on t.^e head after I left you--the night of the London fog," I explained. "I - am well now." , "111!" she repeated, "ill!--and they would have wedded me to Cousin Raoui--even Aunt Elaine forsook me. Oh, it has been a hateful time! Dreading the worst for you--spirited away, at first I knew not where--shut up in yonder house--subject to sur veillance most of the time--I came near to hating them all! What is that?" she added in a whisper. "Come .back in here among these bushes. If they find you here, I doubt not but they'll km you." "Rosemary, be not afraid for me," I said. "I would not. Indeed; I would match you against them all," she said with a proud toss of her head. Then, noting my pale face, "if you were yourself." To satisfy her I drew back in among the bushes, while she walked a. short way off and listened. Hear ing nothing, she came back. "But you have not told me how it happened?" she said. "I know very little myself," i re plied, "I was found unconscious out side of Dream House the night after I left you." "Some rascallion about town, bent v on robbery?" she suggested. "I think not," I said, "for I was robbed of nothing. I remember pass ing the pillars at the entrance. I be lieve on them are carved the armonial bearings of the Dwight's and its motto, 'I strike hard,'" I added dryly. "I had been followed--the blow was Intended for me--there is no doubt ot that" "You did not recognize anyone?" ike queried. "No," I replied. "The men were masked; I saw so much from the light of a torch which was swung before my eyes, and it blinded me so I could not grasp my sword ere the blow fell." "Oh, no!" she cried. Her tone was %lea4ing. "It could not be?" "What distresses yon, dear?" I "No, I will not think of It," she said proudly. "One could not be so cow ardly." **You suspect someone?" I inquired. ~ "Do not ask me, sir." she answered. "We Feltons are not loath to stand up before one we deem our enemy--but we could not strike a blow in the dark." "No donbt of that, love," I said to still her suspicions, which, while she yet silenced, cut her to the heart; . "witness how a slender youth sfc^pd before my long,.arm and rapier, and made me do penance for the killing of a falcon." "Yes," she cried, throwing off her depression; "and to think you did not recognize me. I- trembled in my boots for fear you might. The next time'when Nell and I were at the oned." Then she added tenderly: "I shall have to make amends to you, Quentin"--my name fell softly from her lips--"all my life, if you please." "Ah, Rosemary!" I cried, "your name fits you like the petals of the rose its golden center." I drew her to me and kissed her blushing face. For awhile we stood hand in hand absorbed in each other. Then I bethought me of Gil and his' chagrin over the missing paper; also the vow I had made at my father's grave CHAPTER XXIII. the Senile Conceit. James B. Hammond of New York, the noted typewriter inventor, was de scribing a conceited man. "He Is as conceited," Mr. Hammond said, "as an old fellow who lived in Germany while I was a student at the University of Halle. "This old fellow sat one night In conversation with a group of men, and the talk turned to greatness. "Numerous Instances were men tioned in proof of the fact that the great die young. Finally It was agreed that there was more truth in this claim than there is in most prov erbs. " 'Yes.' said the leading spirit of the party, 'it ought to be a proverb, for it is true. The great die young. There is no doubt of it. The great, alas, die young.' "The old man. who had sat silent and impatient for a long time, now spoke up: " If I'm not dead already, Is It my fault?' he said." "It Was the Night Lord Waters Left Me." "Rosemary, tell me about locket," said I. "Ah there! it came near to being your undoing--a woman's vanity," she sighed, yet looked archly at 'me as though demanding that I contradict her. "Was the paper in it when you gave it to Gil?" I asked. "Did I tell Gil so when I gave it to him?" she replied. "It is lost, I said, "and Gil asserts that the locket never left his person until he placed it in my hands--and there was none in It then." "What matters it?" she asked light ly. "'Twas naught but an old bit of paper." "It was valuable to me," I said. "You would keep it?" she asked jealously. "Indeed I would, If I could but find it," I answered. * "Do you know who wrote it?" she questioned. "No," I replied. "My father gave it to me to find out, if possible, the writer--it Is strange where it could have disappeared to." I "I am sure I could not have lost it," she affirmed. "I slept with it at tached to a slender chain about my neck." "You-are sure you never laid it down?" I still persistently inquired. "Yes, sure," she began, and then stopped. "Once, now I remember, while at my bath it lay for a few mo ments on my dressing table,'" she added. "Could anyone have entered yoar room then?" I asked. "No one but my maid or Aunt Elaine," she admitted. "Then rest assured that one or the other of them have It," I returned. "What would either of them want with* that old love letter?" she said; "besides I heard no one at the time." "You say that Lady Dwight is with yon?" I said. "I must see her at once --I have a message from the dead which admits of no delay--I have also to claim Raoul Dwight as a brother. "Brother!" she exclaimed. "Yes," I nodded. "Let us hasten to the Castle--'too long has this news GLORIOUS FOURTH MEN OF BUSINESS RECOGNIZE ADVANTAGES OF ACETYLENE. Famous Summer Hotel, the Grand ' Union of Saratoga. Haa Installed ' This Best of Ail Artificial Lights- Means '.Health. lit Saratoga, June 27.--The very name, "Saratoga," brings to every mind health-giving springs, unsurpassed hotels and beautiful drives. It has been for many years the Mecca for all who admire nature, enjoy good living, and are searching for health, or are simply taking a va cation The Grand Union, the largest sum mer hotel In the United States, set among green trees with its long wings enclosing a court with fountains and flowers, grass and trees, music and light, is throughout the season throng ed with guests. With the progressive spirit always shown by its manage ment, the Grand Union ha$ again add ed to its attractiveness by introduc ing acetylene gas to make still more brilliant the evening hours. The ge nial proprietors believe in furnishing their guests with the best of every thing, and now, after investigating ip.nd _ finding that Artificial Sunlight can be had, they have installed a. com plete acetylene gas plant to produce It, and have connected upwards of six thousand acetylene burners in and about the house and grounds to this little gas plant. Like many discoveries of recent years, which are coming into popular favor, acetylene, one of the most re cent, is very simply produced. It is adapted for use wherever artificial light is needed and the necessary ap paratus can be understood and oper ated by anyone. r The generator in> which Acetylene is produced by the automatic contact of carbide and water might be termed a gas plant, as it performs all of the func tions of a city gas plant. The acet ylene generator can be purchased for a few dollars and in any size, from one adapted to furnish acetylene to ten or a dozen burners for a cottage, up to the large but still simple ma chine such as is now furnishing Acetylene for six thousand burners in the Grand Union. Outside of large citieB the use of Acetylene 4s quite common. The owner of the country home now de mands running water, gas and other conveniences which a few years ago were ' considered as luxuries, and acetylene gas has met his require ments, and gives him a better and cheaper light than is ordinarily fur nished in cities. It is well known that rooms lighted with Acetylene are more comfortable, because cooler, and more healthful be cause the air is not vitiated. ft Eight Centuries of History MAN UNFIT TO BE A HERMIT Bright Doggie. M. M. Williams, of this place, haa a very fine thoroughbred Fields water spaniel (imported) that Is truly a wonder in his way, says the Titus- ville (Fla.) Star. He can do almost anything except talk, and is able to find a lost article On being sent for it by his acute sense of smell. An ii- histr&Tion was given a member of the Star staff, who witnessed an exhibi tion of his acuteness in this direction recently. Mr. Williams took from his vest pocket a good sized roll of bills, and, going away from his dog a dis tance of 150 yards, hid his money and returned. Upon being told to bring jt back, the spaniel went straight and returned immediately to his master with the lost greenbacks intact, not a single bill missing. This fine specimen of canine intelligence recently recovered a very valuable and highly prized gold hunting case watch for Isaac Jenkins, a very heavy grain buyer of Jacksonville. Farming in the White House. Mrs. Jackson died Just before the general's first administration, and dur ing the eight years that he was at the White House he practically ^managed the plantation himself from Washing ton, says Oliver Bronson Capen in Country Life in America. As a farm er Andrew Jackson was more success ful than George Washington, and as a breeder of horses he was more suc cessful than Henry Clay. And yet, so great were his achievements in pur suits as far removed from the pastoral as the poles, that popular tradition does not reckon with one of the most Important sides of his character Lawyer, politician, judge, 'statesman soldier!--closer to his heart than all these were a country home and farm. No Veto Power in England* The king has really no power--as is commonly supposed--to veto a bill which was passed through both; houses of parliament. He can only exercise this privilege on the adYice of his ministers, in which case It Is not a merely personal act As a mat ter of fact, the royal assent to a bill is given as a matter of course, and has never been refused since Queen Anne put her royal foot down on Scotch militia bill nearly two cen turies ago. So really powerless is the sovereign in this matter that the au thor of "The English Constitution^ writng of Queen Victoria, said: "She must sign her own death warrant If the two houses unanimously send if up to her."--Philadelphia Ledff" Charles Warren Stoddard Recalls ̂ Prentice Mulford's Experiment. When he abandoned his hermitage he did it in this fashion: "I had im agined I could live happily alone with nature, and largely independent of the rest of the human race. I could not. I don't believe anybody can. Nature has taught me better. I found that the birds went In pairs and in flocks; that plants and trees grew in families; that ants live in col onies, and that everything of Its kind had a tendency to Jive and grow to gether. But here I was, a single bit of the human race, trying to live alone and away from my kind. The birds and trees were possibly glad of my admiration for them, but they said: You don't belong to us. You belong to your own race; go join them again; cultivate them. We live our own lives; you can't get wholly into our lives. You're not a bird, that you can live in a nest and on uncooked seeds; or a squirrel, that can live In a hole in a tree; or a tree, that can root it self In one place and stay there, at you've been trying to do. A hermit Is one who tries to be a tree, and draws nourishment from otae spot, when he is really a great deal more than a tree, and must draw life and recreation from many persons and placed A bear is not so foolish as to try to live among foxes; neither should a man try to live entirely among trees, be cause they cannot give him all that he must have to get the most out of life.' So I left my hermitage, I presume for ever, and carted,my bed and pots and pans to the house of a friend perched on the brink of the Palisades opposite Tinker's."--National Magazine. ELEPHANT HAD KIND HEART. But Nature Never Meant Her to Mother Young Partridge. Bishop W. N. McVickar of Rhode Island is a man of Titanic mold. Yet his every thought is kindly. When he steps It is with great care lest he crush a daisy under his weight. He will stop to let an ant pass before him. Bishop McVickar Is that sort of a man. He loves the dumb creatures and has learned much of their lives. He would dehy it from sheer modesty, but he is also a master at telling ani mal stories. Here is one: "There was once a kindly female elephant, strolling through a wheat field. How she happened to blunder so cruelly I don't know, but In her wanderings she stepped on a female partridge. With deep grief the ele phant saw what she had done and piti fully she looked at the little part ridges running about looking for their mother. ^ " 'Poor little orphans,' said the com passionate beast, 'I have made them orphans.' Then she gathered them all together with her trunk ,ahd having observed how mother partridges hover over their young, she carefully lay down upon the bereft brood to shel ter them for the night. All of which goes to prove that a woman is not necessary at the head ot an orphan asylum."--New York Times. /•?,:•- The Happy Ignoramus. "I wonder if there is any way to car ry explosives safely by rail?" "If there is, 1 don't care to know It "Why not?" "Because it would be Just my luck to get on a train where the safety sys tern wasn't in vogue. No, I'd rather take my chances in happy ignorance." ~ = .. 1097--Decisive victory for the Christian crusaders at Dorylaeum, Phrygia. 1187--Saladin defeats the Christians at Tiberias. 1215---England's barons force King John to sign the Magna Charta. 1553--Discovery of the islands of Nova Zembla. 1584--Discovery of the American coast to the north of Florida by Amidias ^ a n d B a r l o w . / 1591--Henri IV. of France revokes the edicts against the Protestants. 1653--Oliver Cromwell made Lord Protector of England. 1648-^-Indian massacre at St. Joseph. 1754--Colonel George Washington forced to surrender to the French atsFort Necessity. . 1754--Benjamin Franklin's plan of Colonial union adopted at Albany. 1776--The Declaration of Independent gigned at Philadelphia. > 1778--Clark takes Kaskaskia. 1778--The massacre at Wyoming. 1780--French fleet, under De Ferney, arrives off the Virginia coast. 1781--Williamburg evacuated by thte British. - 1788--Federal procession in Philadelphia to celebrate the ratification of the National Constitution. 1802--John Qulncy Adams' first speech in the National Senate. 1804--Birth of Nathaniel Hawthorne. 1804--First weekly mail stage makes its trip frim Philadelphia to Pitts burg. y 4 . 1807--Birth of Garibaldi, the Italian patriot. 1817--Work inaugurated on the Erie Canal. 1826--Death of Thomas Jefferson. 1826--Death of John Adams. ' 1826--Birth of Stephen Foster, author of "Old Kentucky Home," "Suwanee River," etc. 1828--The first rail laid for the Baltimore and Ohio ifailway. 1831--Death of James Monroe. 1833--Birth of Carolus Duran, the French artist 1840--Birth of Marcus Stone, R. A. 1845--Texas annexed to the United States. 1848--Proclamation of peace between the United States and Mexico. 1848--Cornerstone of the Washington Monument laid at the national cap ital. 1851--Cornerstone for the extension of the Capitol Building laid at Wash ington. 1856--Abortive meeting of the "Kansas Free State Legislature." 1856--Dedication of the Washington statue in Union Square, New York. 1857--Birth of Pierre Loti. 1863--Union victory at Helena, Arkansas. 1863--Vicksburg surrenders to General Grant. 1868--The Burlingame treaty between the United States and China signed. 1868--Amnesty proclamation Issued in Washington. 1874--The Eads Bridge opened to traffic in St. Louis. 1884--Dedication of the monument to Francis Scott Key la San Francisco. 1894--Proclamation of the Hawaiian Republic. 1898--Spanish-American War. SENT OUT THE DECLARATION flow Copies of Immortal Document Were Distributed. it is on record that the congress sitting in Philadelphia in 1776 adopted the following resolution on the 5th of July: "Resolved, That copies of the Declaration be sent to the several as semblies, conventions and councils of safety, and to the several commanding officers of continental army corps, that it be proclaimed in each of the United States and at the head of the army." In accordance with this resolution, John Hancock, president of the con gress, enclosed a copy of the Declara tion to which of the states and to the various organizations named in the resolution. With the Declaration was sent the following letter: "I do my self the honor to enclose. In obedience to the command^ of congress, a copy of the Declaration of Independence, which you will please to hare pro claimed in your colony in such a way and manner as you shall judge best. The important consequences resulting to the America states from this Dec laration of Independence, considered as the ground and foundation of a fu ture government, will naturally sug gest the propriety of proclaiming it in such a mode that .the pople may be informed of it." It was on the sixth day of July when President Hancock sent the fol lowing very dignified communication to Gen. George Washington: "The congress have adjudged it necessary to dissolve the connection between Great Britain and the American col onies, and to declare them free and Independent states, as you will per ceive by the enclosed Declaration, which I am directed to transmit to you, and to request you will have it proclaimed at the head of the army in the way you shall think most proper." Y O U N G A M E R I C A Fourth of July, they say. air, la Independence Day, sir. But really I am certain that there must be some mistake; For people say. Be eoj®4 And, "I won't have such rtotl • t avonr teeny-weeny noise that I At every teeny-weeny chance to make. "VlTiy. when my run exploded, (I thought It wasn't loaded). _ Mv mother said. "You naughty IWi stop that fearful noise!" And then our cannon -cracky (And myt but they were whaakewrt) Made grandma aay. Oh, ni«]"cy met T mustn't do that, bey*!" "You're much too young to handle A bomb or Roman candle," Tbey always say when I get near to where the fireworks1 are; And for a little rocket I put In Bobby's pocket ' My lather just now set me down inside the "family Jar." The caution and the warning Begin at early morning: It's "Don't do this!" and "Don't de tbatl" and so. unless I may * Chooae my own celebration Per the birthday «$ oar nation, I den't see why I ought to call it Inde pendence Dayi MISS 6ENEVIVE MAY. Jilsa Genevive May, 1317 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind., Member Second High School Alumni Ass'n, writes: "Peruaa is the finest regulator ot a disordered stomach I have ever fmsod. It certainly deserves high praise, for It is skillfully prepared. "I was in a terrible condition from & neglected case of catarrh of the stomach. My food had long ceased to be of any good land only distressed me after eating. I was nauseated, had heartburn and headaches, and felt run down completely. But in two weeks after I took Peruna I was a changed person. A few bottles of the medicine made a great change, and in three months my stomach was cleared of catarrh, and my entire system in a better condition."--Genevive May. Write Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio, for free qaedical advice. All corres pondence held strictly confidential. Howells Highly Complimented. The most conspicuous of this year's academic decorations are the LL. D. conferred by Princeton on George Brinton McClellan, mayor, of New York, who Is scholar and writer as well as man of affairsppud Columbia's Litt. D for William Dean Howells. In presenting Mr. Howells' name Prof. Peck spoke of him as having, through "fiction as true as truth itself," be come "the Interpreter of his own countrymen to themselves." To the housewife who has fUVft yet become acquainted with the new things of everyday use in the market and who is reasonably satisfied with tho old. we would suggest that a trial of Defiance Cold Water Starch be made at once. Not alone because it is guar anteed by the manufacturers to be su perior to any other brand, but because each 10c package contains 16 oss., while all the other kinds contain but 12 ozs. It is safe to say that the lady who once uses Defiance Starch will use no other. Quality and quantity must win. , Old "Sweethearts" United. Angela R. Kilbourn and John F. Johnson of Winsted, Conn., were schoolmates and sweethearts fifty years ago. They quarreled and sepa rated and each married another. Death broke in upon their domestic lives; one became a widow, the oth er a widower. Recently they met, "made up" the old quarrel and mar ried. the World Goes Around. Yeast--"Do you believe that world moves?' Crimsonbeak--"I certainly do. Why, I can't find the keyhole in the same place two nights in succession." WHY THEY ARE HAPPT TWO NOTABLE EE00VERIES FROM EXTEEME DEBILITY. i --St. NlntS j • „ *•.*> v, y -' » H j Hatband's Strength Had Been Waning for Thre« Tears, Wife a Soflfcrer from Female Weakness. " My strength had dwindled so that I couldn't apply myself to my business with any snap but was tired aud listless all the time," said Mr. Goldstein. 441 went to bed completely used up by my day's work, and when I got- up in the morning I didn't feel rested a bit. I had awful headaches too, and my kid neys got out of order and caused me to have severe pains in the back. At one time I became so feeble that I could not stir from bed for three weeks." Mr. Goldstein is a young man and had then but recently established a home of his own. His anxieties were increased by the fact that his wife was far from being robust. Mrs. Goldstein says: " For two years I had been ill most of the time. Sometimes I was coufined to bed for weeks iu successiou under a phy sician'8 care. I had headaches, kidney trouble, pain about the heart and many more uncomfortable symptoms con nected with that weakness to which my sex is peculiarly subject." Trouble had invaded Ihis household and settled iu it in just the years that ought to be the very happiest. Physicians could not tell them how to get rid of it. " I was utterly discouraged, "said Mr. Goldstein. "Then the urgency of some friends led me to try a blood aud nerve remedy which was said to be wonder fully successful. Within a mouth there were unmistakable signs of improvement in my condition, aud within a year I was completely well. Through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I have now as good health as lever had iu my life," Mrs. Goldstein adds: *' The wonderful effect that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills bad in the case of my husband led me to try them and they helped me even more quickly than they did him. One box made me decidedly better and a few mouths' treatment cured me." Dr. Williams' Pink PUls are the best toaio and regulator, they make pure, rioh blood and when there is general weakness and disorder that is what the system needs. Mr. and Mrs. H Goldstein live at 88 Gove street, East Boston, Mass. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold bF tovggist* everywhere,